(1582,'2014-08-26','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',303,'Tesla\'s patent decision, 12 challenges, and an update on the GNU Health project','

\r\nIn this episode: An analysis of Tesla\'s patent decision, the 12 most pressing challenges for open source projects, and an update on the GNU Health project.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',280,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Tesla,patent,GNU Solidario,GNU Health',0,0,1), (1561,'2014-07-28','How I got into Accessible Computing',427,'How I got into Accessible Computing including definition of \'accessible\'','

\r\nAccessibility tools for the visually impaired\r\n

\r\n

\r\nA short explanation of how I personally got involved with accessible computing,\r\na definition of the term \'accessible\' as it is applied to anything in relation\r\nto persons with physical or cognitive impairment, and very short list of the most\r\ncommonly used adaptive tools to improve accessibility to Windows and Linux.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Windows

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Linux

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nMike Ray. June 2014\r\n

\r\n',282,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','accessible, NVDA, Orca, brltty, Vinux, Talking Arch, Ubuntu Accessibility, Debian Accessibility',0,0,1), (1403,'2013-12-18','hiro from GamingGrannar at Retrospelsmässan',841,'Today on #HPR we talk to @grannen_hiro from @GamingGrannar about retro games at @RSMGBG.','

Today on Hacker Public Radio, we will talk about old games, and interview an expert from Sweden.

\n

\"GamingGrannar\" and \"Spelklassiker Musik\"

\n

In 2012, the Swedish gaming community \"Level 7\" voted for the blog Gaminggrannar to become \"Gaming Blog of the year\". Gaminggrannar (or \"Gaming Neighbours\") consists of David \"Dave\" Boström, Emelie \"Ekken\" Karlsson and Andreas \"hiro\" Karlsson.

\n

Dave won the Swedish Championship in Nintendo, in 2003, and has a great Metroid collection. Ekken is an acomplished gamer, creates edible game cakes and also has a newly started collection of games with pink cartridges. hiro can be recognized by his retro game inspired tatoos, and is known for his love for series like Mega Man X and Castlevania.

\n

Together the three neighbours release a video blog about everything and anything gaming related, but often with a focus on older games.

\n

The podcast that hiro hosts together with Tobias Jensen, a NES and Amiga 500 gamer who wished he had more time for games, hit the 200th episode in november 2013.

\n

Retrospelsmässan

\n

hiro and I met at Retrospelsmässan 2013. This retro game convention is on its fourth year, and has grown considerably. Now in the second largest exhibition hall in Gothenburg, with roughly 2.000 visitors, and a three hour queue to get in. Competitions in old games, buy retrogames and consoles, cosplay competition, and so on. \"Retrospelsmässan is a yearly event with focus on consoles and computers that was released before the year 2000.\" -- Markus Swerlander, one of the organisers.

\n

The date for the 2014 edition of Retrospelsmässan is already set, saturday the 3rd of may in Eriksbergshallen, Gothenburg.

\n

\"Game and have fun!\"
-- hiro

\n

Stuff referenced in the episode

\n \n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n \n',192,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','games, retro, gaminggrannar, retrospelsmassan, interview, hiro',0,1407,1), (1408,'2013-12-25','Drupal in Gothenburg with Addison Berry and others',1102,'Today on #HPR we have a conversation with @add1sun from @lullabot about #Drupal at @DrupalGBG.','

In a sunny Gothenburg, the spring of 2012, we find a lot of happy web developers attending DrupalCamp. This is the second show with conversations from that event. This time you will hear Addison Berry from Lullabot, Henrik from All In IT Radio as well as Patrik and Cornelius.

\n

If you want to hear what Henrik and I thought about this years DrupalCamp, then you should have a listen to the episode \"Con of the Year\" over on our podcast. There we talk about all the conferences we have attended in 2013, including DrupalCamp, FSCONS and Retrospelsmässan.

\n

Participants in todays show

\n \n

References

\n \n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n ',192,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Drupal,DrupalCamp, lullabot, add1sun, drupalgbg, interview',0,1394,1), (1411,'2013-12-30','ohmroep live 1, 31-06-2013, pirate parties',3590,'A live report from OHM2013 in the Netherlands. Speaking to Pirate Party members','

\r\nNido Media reporting Live from OHM2013 in the Netherlands. He is joined\r\nby a group of Pirate Party members including Fabricio Martins do Canto,\r\nDirk Poot, Jonas Degrave, Thomas Gordon. They discuss how their pirate\r\nparty chapters were started, how to start your own. What it means to be\r\na pirate party, the goals of pirate parties. Later we are joined by\r\nChristopher Clay who tells us about the situation over there.\r\n

',214,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OHMRoep, HPR Live',0,1549,1), (1412,'2013-12-31','ohmroep hpr live 2, 31-06-2013, advancing local communities',3312,'A live report from OHM2013 in the Netherlands','

\r\nNido Media reporting Hacker Public Radio Live. Starring Cecile Langhorst\r\nas co-host who saves the show, and two guests. Civardi from Rhizomatica,\r\nwho is active in installing GSM networks in rural areas in Mexico tells\r\nus of his experiences with GSM technologies and Mexican villagers.\r\nBicycle Mark relates about his work training people from war or post-war\r\ncountries to become reporters.\r\n

',214,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OHMRoep, HPR Live',0,1501,1), (1413,'2014-01-01','ohmroep hpr live 3, 01-08-2013, (Power)DNS',3490,'A live report from OHM2013 in the Netherlands. PowerDNS and DNSSec; collapsing tent','

Today Nido Media is joined by Ken Fallon as cohost. Bert Hubert from PowerDNS joins us and talks with us about what DNS actually is. What it does, how it is used, how it is implemented. What information DNS holds and what it works. He also explains what PowerDNS and we go into DNSSec a bit. Our conversation is pre-empted right at the very end because the tent was about to collapse. No comments are made about the vicinity of Bind developers.

',214,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OHMRoep, HPR Live',0,1653,1), (1414,'2014-01-02','ohmroep hpr live 4, 31-06-2013, operating lights at Observe Hack Make',3546,'A live report from OHM2013 in the Netherlands: Lighting','

Doing the Lights on OHM2013. (shownotes donated by HobbyBob)

\r\n

During the interview i mention the LOC controller. The LOC controller was designed by Bob from Bitlair Hackerspace in Amersfoort, The Netherlands.

\r\n

Here you can find all the info on the controller:

\r\n \r\n

My username is hobbybob there, so if you have any questions just ask me in a pm. It is good habit that you introduce yourself on the forum, this will get you more credits when you start asking questions. Just introduce yourself, what you want to built and what you already have done/tried in the past.

\r\n

Ohh and BTW i sound a bit dull because i was very tired. As the Light team, we worked from 9AM to 3AM every day during OHM to make the experience a colorful one for everyone!

\r\n

We hope you enjoy(ed) our effort and start building cool stuff yourself !

\r\n

If you want to make your own LOC controllers, LED effects or Lasers i am very interested to know. You can mail me: hobbybob at bitlair dot nl

',214,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OHMRoep, HPR Live',0,1432,1), (1406,'2013-12-23','ORCA fundraiser',2084,'Ahuka talks to Jonathan Nadeau about the campaign to improve the Orca Screen Reader','

In today\'s show Ahuka tracks down Jonathan Nadeau, from the Accessible Computing Foundation to discuss the running campaign to improve the Orca Screen Reader.

\r\n
    \r\n
  1. ORCA fundraiser: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/orca-bringing-digital-sight-to-the-vision-impaired
  2. \r\n
  3. Accessible Computing Foundation https://theacf.co/
  4. \r\n
  5. Sonar https://sonargnulinux.com/
  6. \r\n
',198,79,1,'CC-BY-SA','accessibility,orca',0,1404,1), (1407,'2013-12-24','Mars Needs Women, and Hacker Public Radio Needs Shows',1551,'The many ways you can record a show for Hacker Public Radio and get involved.','

Hacker Public Radio welcomes everyone to record shows and contribute them to the network. In this show we discuss the many ways you can do that. It is very easy to contribute a show and get involved, so we encourage everyone to join in.

',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Hacker Public Radio, shows, recording',0,1379,1), (1421,'2014-01-13','Statistics and Polling',2427,'Polling and the statistical background behind it','

\r\nWe are given polling results constantly in news stories, and even more so when an election is near. But how accurate are these polls? What are the limitations? And what kinds of questions should you have when looking at these surveys? I will attempt to answer these questions in this podcast.\r\n

',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Statistics,polling,politics,surveys',0,1425,1), (1440,'2014-02-07','Creating a Key Pair - GUI Client',966,'Using a GUI client (KGpg) to generate an RSA key pair.','

In the previous program we explained how to use the command line tools to generate encryption keys. This time we look at the GUI clients that some people may prefer. Using KGpg as an example, we can see that it does all the things we did last time on the command line.

',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Security, encryption, keys, GUI',0,1564,1), (1416,'2014-01-06','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show Part 1 2013-12-31T10:00:00Z to 2013-12-31T16:00:00Z',21595,'New Year Show 2014, part 1','

2013-12-31T10:00:00Z

\r\n\r\nGeneral links / references mentioned on the show for the show notes:\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T10:15:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T11:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T12:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T12:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T13:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T13:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T14:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T14:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T15:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T15:15:00Z

\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1554,1), (1417,'2014-01-07','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show Part 2 2013-12-31T16:00:00Z to 2013-12-31T21:00:00Z',19158,'New Year Show 2014, part 2','

2013-12-31T16:00:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T17:00:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T17:30:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T18:00:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T18:15:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T18:30:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T19:00:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T19:30:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T20:00:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T20:30:00Z

\n \n

2013-12-31T21:00:00Z

\n
\n

HPR COMMUNITY NEWS DECEMBER 2013

\n
A monthly look at what has been going on in the HPR community. This is on the Saturday before the first Monday of the month.
\n

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts: Honkeymagoo, and Thaj Sara.

\n

Show Updates

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
iddatetitlehost
13912013-12-02Google Play Music All AccessAhuka
13922013-12-03Beginner\'s guide to the night skyAndrew Conway
13932013-12-04Audio Metadata in Ogg, MP3, and othersEpicanis
13942013-12-05Setting Up Your Own BlogKeith Murray
13952013-12-0617 - LibreOffice Writer Overview of Page Layout OptionsAhuka
13962013-12-09First Thoughts of the Google ChromecastCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
13972013-12-10HPR Community News for November 2013Various Hosts
13982013-12-11Batteries Part 1MrX
13992013-12-12Interview with Ben Everard https://www.linuxvoice.comCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
14002013-12-13How We Use LinuxHonkeymagoo
14012013-12-16Huawei Mate reviewKnightwise
14022013-12-17How I Started Using Linux and Free and Open Source SoftwareThaj Sara
14032013-12-18hiro from GamingGrannar at RetrospelsmässanSeetee
14042013-12-19Editing pre-recorded audio in AudacityKen Fallon
14052013-12-2018 - LibreOffice Writer Page Styles IntroducedAhuka
14062013-12-23ORCA fundraiserAhuka
14072013-12-24Mars Needs Women, and Hacker Public Radio Needs ShowsAhuka
14082013-12-25Drupal in Gothenburg with Addison Berry and othersSeetee
14092013-12-26Xircom PE pocket ethernet adapterKen Fallon
14102013-12-27Generating Keys on the Command LineAhuka
14112013-12-30ohmroep live 1, 31-06-2013, pirate partiesNido Media
14122013-12-31ohmroep hpr live 2, 31-06-2013, advancing local communitiesNido Media
\n

Other News

\nDownloads in 2013 = 1,134,478\nPer episode download = 4,364\n

Other News

\n \n
\n ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1380,1), (1418,'2014-01-08','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show Part 3 2013-12-31T22:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T04:00:00Z',20552,'New Year Show 2014, part 3','

2013-12-31T22:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2013-12-31T23:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T00:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T01:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T02:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T03:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T03:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','ORCA,FocusWriter,DarkTable,LightZone,GIMP,Sound Converter,Maelstrom,TuxPaint,mtpaint,Jitsi,kid3,EasyTag,Audacity,gPodder,PuddleTag,avidemux,OpenShot,EtherPad,WordPress,Abiword,gnumeric,LibreOffice',0,1672,1), (1419,'2014-01-09','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show Part 4 2014-01-01T04:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T10:00:00Z',18739,'New Year Show 2014, part 4','

2014-01-01T04:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T04:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T05:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T06:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T07:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T08:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T09:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T09:30:00Z

\r\n\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1377,1), (1420,'2014-01-10','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show Part 5 2014-01-01T10:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T12:00:00Z',6699,'New Year Show 2014, part 5','

2014-01-01T10:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T11:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

2014-01-01T12:00:00Z

\r\n\r\n

\r\nShould auld acquaintance be forgot,
\r\nand never brought to mind?
\r\nShould auld acquaintance be forgot,
\r\nand auld lang syne*?

\r\n\r\n

CHORUS

\r\n

\r\nFor auld lang syne, my jo,
\r\nfor auld lang syne,
\r\nwe’ll tak a cup o’ kindness yet,
\r\nfor auld lang syne.

\r\n\r\n

And surely ye’ll be your pint-stowp!
\r\nand surely I’ll be mine!
\r\nAnd we’ll tak a cup o’ kindness yet,
\r\nfor auld lang syne.

\r\n\r\n

CHORUS

\r\n

We twa hae run about the braes,
\r\nand pu’d the gowans fine;
\r\nBut we’ve wander’d mony a weary fit,
\r\nsin auld lang syne.

\r\n\r\n

CHORUS

\r\n

We twa hae paidl’d i\' the burn,
\r\nfrae morning sun till dine;
\r\nBut seas between us braid hae roar’d
\r\nsin auld lang syne.

\r\n\r\n

CHORUS

\r\n

And there’s a hand, my trusty fiere!
\r\nand gie\'s a hand o’ thine!
\r\nAnd we’ll tak a right gude-willy waught,
\r\nfor auld lang syne.

\r\n\r\n

CHORUS

\r\n

',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1419,1), (1423,'2014-01-15','Monty - The man behind your databases',843,'Tune in to today\'s episode of #HPR and hear Monty talk about YOUR database!','

Listen to the man who created the database YOU use every day, today on Hacker Public Radio.

\n

\"There\'s no reasons to use MySQL anymore.\"
-- Monty

\n

Michael Widenius at FSCONS 2013

\n

A couple of months ago I attended FSCONS 2013. There I met Michael \"Monty\" Widenius, the driving force behind both MySQL and MariaDB. This is a guy who loves being a developer and he loves Open Source software. He named MySQL after his daughter My, and the new fork MariaDB got its name from his other daughter Maria.

\n

Monty was invited to FSCONS 2013 to give a speech entitled \"The MySQL and MariaDB story\", and the synopsis on fscons.org says:

\n
\"The story of how MySQL was created, why it was successful and how it grew until it was sold to Sun, who was then overtaken by Oracle.
It will also cover how and why MariaDB was created and what we are doing to ensure that there will always be a free version of MySQL (under the name of MariaDB).
The talk will also explain the challenges we have had to do this fork, especially the merge with MySQL 5.5, and the various systems (like buildbot) that we used to build the binaries and how we are working with the MariaDB/MySQL community.\"
\n
-- https://frab.fscons.org/en/fscons13/public/events/51

That presentation can be found on YouTube, and I encourage you all to have a look at it. \"Michael Monty Widenius: The MySQL and MariaDB story\": https://youtu.be/JxyBNdwmpzM
\n

\n

If you have not yet made the switch to MariaDB, now is the time!

\n

Monty also asks everyone who uses MariaDB to activate the anonymous plug-in, so that the developers might know what to focus their attention on.

\n

If you wish to look Monty in the eyes, you have the opportunity to do so, as this interview was video recorded and will be released on YouTube or similar. Follow All In IT Radio on Google+, Twitter and Identi.ca for updates on when that will be released.

\n

Stuff referenced in the episode

\n \n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n \n',192,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','fscons, monty, mysql, mariadb, oracle, interview',0,1555,1), (1592,'2014-09-09','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',782,'Open source CMS, tools for making presentations, WikiProject Med','

In this episode: Open source CMS applications go head-to-head, open source tools for making presentations, and WikiProject Med.

\n

Links:

\n ',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','CMS,presentation software,Wiki Project Med',0,0,1), (1428,'2014-01-22','Coffee Stain Studios and the Sanctum games',757,'Will #Sanctum2 come to #Linux? Hear @ArminPosts\' answer in the latest #HPR!','

Do you know the Sanctum games? You should! Listen to Armin from Coffee Stain Studios on todays episode of Hacker Public Radio!

\n

\"We\'re actually working on Linux support. *pause* I don\'t know if I\'m supposed to say that.\"
-- Armin

\n

Coffee Stain Studios

\n

In 2010 a few students from the University of Skövde created the Indie game developing company \"Coffee Stain Studios\". In 2011 they released the game \"Sanctum\" on Steam, and in May of 2013 they released \"Sanctum 2\". These games are most often described as a mix between First-person shooter and Tower defense. You find yourself in a futuristic setting, fighting aliens with a fair bit of humor. The player chooses how much resources to distribute on automatic towers or his or her own weapons. Both games featured the possibility to collaborate with your friends to beat the levels.

\n

One of the founders, Armin Ibrisagic, was at DreamHack in November 2013, where I got a chance to talk to him.

\n

DreamHack

\n

\"What is DreamHack?\" you ask? Only the world\'s largest computer festival, held multiple times a year in Jönköping, Sweden. According to Wikipedia \"It holds the world record (as recognized by the Guinness Book of Records and Twin Galaxies) for the world\'s largest LAN party and computer festival, and has held the record for the world\'s fastest Internet connection, and the record in most generated traffic.\"

\n

I also got an interview with one of the organizers of DreamHack, but that you will hear another day. Today we focus on Sanctum, and how the market looks for smaller game developers.

\n

Stuff referenced in the episode

\n \n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n \n',192,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','dreamhack, coffee stain studios, sanctum, games, indie, interview',0,1611,1), (1422,'2014-01-14','Setting up and using SSH and SOCKS',1432,'Advice on setting up and using SSH and SOCKS proxy','

\r\nIn this episode I go through how I set up SSH and SOCKS. This is very useful when you need to feel a bit more secure in your internet traffic and need to keep out of prying eyes. I also go over some tools used to access your home network from a Windows computer.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','SSH,SOCKS proxy,DynDNS,DDClient,PuTTy',0,1588,1), (1445,'2014-02-14','22 - LibreOffice Writer Other Frame Styles',606,'This continues our look at frames by looking at frame styles for things other than text.','

\r\nThis continues our look at frames by looking at frame styles for things other than text.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

LibreOffice Writer Other Frame Styles

\r\n

In the previous tutorial we looked at using the frame style for text, which is not called the Text style, but the Frame style, which may be confusing. This is a very common use of frames, but there are others. To start the discussion, let’s get back to the basic concept of objects. LibreOffice is an object-oriented program and you should keep this in mind when dealing with this software.

\r\n

A piece of text can be an object, and it can contain other objects (paragraphs, sentences, words, characters), or it can be contained within other objects (section, chapter, document). In the case we are looking at, a frame is an object, which contains other objects, and is in turn contained within larger objects (page, section, document). Depending on the objects being contained, the frame styles can be different, and that is what we need to look at now.

\r\n

\r\nPlease see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=671 for the rest of the article\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Writer, Word Processing, Page Layout',0,1312,1), (1465,'2014-03-14','24 - LibreOffice Writer A Brochure Project',1572,'This concludes our look at page layout by showing these techniques at use in creating a Tri-fold bro','

\r\nThe written version of this show can be found at https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=676\r\nThe European version of the brochure.\r\nThe American version of the brochure.\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Writer, Word Processing, Page Layout',0,1339,1), (1475,'2014-03-28','25 - LibreOffice Calc What Is A Spreadsheet',820,'The origins and history of the spreadsheet','

LibreOffice Calc: What is a Spreadsheet?

\r\n

There are different ways to answer this question. Functionally, spreadsheets are a tool for mathematical calculations, but have branched out into related areas like data analysis. Some people even use them as a quick-and-dirty database tool. If you are in a financial profession of some kind you probably live in spreadsheets all day.

\r\n

Spreadsheets are original “killer app”. Early examples were implemented on mainframe computers in the 1960s, but the big step was the creation of VisiCalc for the Apple II in 1979, which was then ported to the IBM PC in 1981. VisiCalc set the conventions that guided all subsequent spreadsheets, and the essential methods have not changed since then. VisiCalc was called the first killer app because people would buy the computer just to run the program, and the usefulness of spreadsheets is what promoted the initial entry of personal computers into the corporate world, with all of the change that has caused.

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of this article please see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=699\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet',0,1454,1), (1455,'2014-02-28','23 - LibreOffice Writer Other Page Layout Options',952,'This continues our look at page layout by looking at ways to do this other than by using frames.','

Other Page Layout Options

\r\n

As we mentioned in beginning our look at Page Layout, you have some options other than just Page Styles and Frame Styles, useful though they are. So let’s spend a few moments looking at these other options and see how they work.

\r\n

Tables

\r\n

Tables can be a useful tool for more than just displaying tabular data. You can place different object in each cell of a table and so have some control over how things are laid out on the page. You could, for instance, place your sub-heads in a left-hand column, and the associated text in an adjoining column, which gives you the same effect as using the Marginalia style. And you can add pictures, charts, and other objects as well. You can even insert a table into a cell of another table to get more fine-grained control. In fact, in the days before Cascading Style Sheets and Javascript, tables were the primary way of laying out Web pages, though these days that is frowned upon, and in any case most Web pages are now created using some kind of CMS software like WordPress, or Drupal. The idea of using tables was more attractive when we realized you could turn-off the cell borders and make them invisible. Of course, in Writer documents that only works when they are printed. When opened on a computer the table borders are still visible, as indeed they would have to be for you to edit the document.

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of this article please see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=676\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Writer, Word Processing, Page Layout',0,1325,1), (1485,'2014-04-11','26 - LibreOffice Calc Cells',1275,'This episode looks at the fundamental unit of a spreadsheet, the cell, and introduces addressing and','

LibreOffice Calc: Cells

\r\n

All spreadsheets have the same basic structure, a table of rows and columns. Columns are headed up A, B, C, and so on. After Z, the next column is AA, then AB, AC, AD, and so on. The maximum number of columns is 1024. Rows are numbered 1,2,3 and so on, and the maximum number of rows is 1024*1024, or 1,048,576. At this time I am not aware of any plans to increase these numbers, though that could change if competitive pressures make it necessary.

\r\n

Where a row and column intersect, there is a cell, which is given the address of the column followed by the row, e.g. A1, but never 1A. This is very useful since you can use the contents of a cell in a calculation by simply using the cell address. For example, to add the value of cell B4 to the value in cell C3 and store it, you would write “=B4+C3″ in the cell where you want to store the sum. Learning to use cell addresses is extremely important, so get in the habit of doing this at every opportunity.

\r\n

\r\nFor the rest of this article see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=706\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet',0,1389,1), (1424,'2014-01-16','ohmroep hpr live mini, 03-08-2013, Censorship and Hacking in the Netherlands',2620,'ohmroep hpr live mini, 03-08-2013, Censorship and Hacking in the netherlands','

Nido Media invades the Early Morning Show hosted by colleague host Brenno de Winter to talk about his talk on Censorship and Hacking in the Netherlands.

\n

We discuss the situation of Alberto Stegeman, who proved the lack of security on Schiphol by touching the plane of the Queen.

\n

Brenno\'s own adventures with the Dutch transportation card.

\n

Henk Krol showed a medical system\'s security, a system considered to be \"Top Notch Security\", hinged on a (shared) password consisting of 5 numbers.

\n

He also talks about the Dutch Responsible Disclosure procedure and what is wrong with it, including examples such as Hans Scheuder who found a flaw in Habbo Hotel.

\n

Ilyam saw his little brother and sister taken away by the Child Protection Services by accident and decided to film it and go public with it.

\n

Indigo - system for registering people immigrating to the netherlands. Contains markers like \"You are ready to be removed\".

\n

Russian Activist fled to the Netherlands after he was let out of jail. Here he got cought in a system named \'Indigo\' which is used by the immigration service. One of the flags this system can set on people is \'you are ready to be removed\'.

',214,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OHMRoep HPR Live',0,1354,1), (1426,'2014-01-20','A Visit to Reglue',971,'Reglue gives free Linux computers to under privileged children and their families','

\r\nRecycled Electronics and Gnu/Linux Used for Education. Reglue, in a nutshell, gives free Linux computers to under privileged children and their families. From their website:\r\n

\r\n
\r\nAccording to our estimates and those of the Austin Independent School District, there are over 5000 Austin students who cannot afford a computer or Internet access. Reglue wants to reduce that number by as much as we can. Since 2005 we have provided 1102 disadvantaged Austin-area kids and their families a computer. These kids cannot grow and compete with their peers unless they have a computer and Reglue focuses on giving these kids the tools they need. \r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.reglue.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nTo find out more about Ken Starks - Find him on Google+\r\n

\r\n

\r\nKen\'s Blog https://linuxlock.blogspot.com/2009/08/let-their-eyes-be-opened.html\r\n

',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, BBQ, Ken Starks, Taylor Texas, Helios Project, yummy',0,1397,1), (1427,'2014-01-21','Decoding HPR1216 the easy way and a bit more',1450,'An alternative method of decoding audio containing Morse Code into text','

\r\nThis Episode is kind of a direct response to HPR1343 by Laindir, where he explains his awesome way to decode the morse code in HPR1216. For the fun of it, I start right out by digressing into a memory of mine. It is about how I tried to decode morse code telemetry from the AO-21 amateur radio satellite some 20 years ago by using a CBM-8032 computer. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nAfter that I reveal the easy way to decode HPR1216 by using the CW mode of the program FLDIGI. Along the way, I mention the use of \"monitors\" in pulse audio, which are selectable in pavucontrol as input sources for audio applications. This is an easy way to loop back sound output from other applications. This method also combines nicely with WEBSDR, web accessible software defined receivers, all over the world. These may be used if you want to throw some real world signals at FLDIGI to play with the different modes. For listening to amateur radio communication I recommend to start out with one of these modes: CW (morse telegraphy), PSK > BPSK31 (very common, narrow band tele type mode) and RTTY > RTTY-45 (\"original\" radio tele type). For the typing modes you might want to check also \"View>Waterfall>Docked scope\" or activate \"View>View/Hide Channels\".\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFinally I add a tip about using OSS-wrappers like aoss, from alsa-oss, and padsp from the pulseaudio-utils package, to run old OSS applications. I use this primarily for siggen, a suit of command line / curses applications for generating audio signals like sine wave, rectangle and so on. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nNOTE: There is one stumbling block with pavucontrol, which I forgot to mention in the recording. Applications will only show up as playback sources or recording sinks when they actively use the interface. That is, the alsa player source will only be visible while playing, in the same way as an audacity sink can only be seen while the recording is going on. \r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n\r\n',271,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','fldigi,PulseAudio,OSS-wrapper,padsp,aoss',0,1345,1), (1429,'2014-01-23','Debian sources.list',2499,'Personalize your Debian distro through the sources.list file','

\r\nHonkeymagoo and Kevin Wisher discuss the Debian GNU Linux sources.list file, and the many ways\r\nit can be used to personalize your Debian distro\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe site that gives most of the information about the sources.list file:\r\nhttps://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ch-archive.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nMirror sites list:\r\nhttps://www.debian.org/mirror/list\r\n

\r\n

\r\nA site that can help you make a sources.list file:\r\nhttps://debgen.simplylinux.ch/\r\n

\r\n

\r\n2 good sites to learn about apt-pinning:\r\nhttps://jaqque.sbih.org/kplug/apt-pinning.html\r\nhttps://www.howtoforge.com/a-short-introduction-to-apt-pinning\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe Debian multimedia repository: https://www.deb-multimedia.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDefault sources.list file for US:\r\n

\r\n
\r\ndeb https://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main\r\ndeb-src https://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main\r\n\r\ndeb https://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main\r\ndeb-src https://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main\r\n\r\ndeb https://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main\r\ndeb-src https://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main \r\n
',269,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Debian,sources.list,apt-pinning',0,1584,1), (1431,'2014-01-27','Talking Twenty Fourteen',2260,'New Year predictions from Jezra and NYbill','

\r\nIn what has become an annual thing, Jezra and NYbill talk about their New Years predictions past and future. Better late then never, I guess...\r\n

',235,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014,prediction',0,1465,1), (1432,'2014-01-28','Fahrenheit 212',1148,'A discussion of temperature systems: Fahrenheit, Celsius (Centigrade) and Kelvin','

Please consider recording an episode for Hacker Public Radio. We are a you-contribute podcast. :)

\r\n

Ken requests an episode on Fahrenheit, which really requires discussion of the two temperature systems, and how they are quantified.

\r\n

Terminology

\r\n

Centigrade: old fashioned term for Celsius
Kelvin (K): less common measurement of temperature used for Science
Thermal Equilibrium: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermodynamic_equilibrium
Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeroth_law_of_thermodynamics
Absolute zero: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero
\r\n

\r\n

My personal preference is Celsius. Less numbers to deal with in everyday use.
Really Cold – Temperatures below 0°C
Really Hot – Temperatures above 30°C
The \"American\" thinking is temperatures go in 20\'s, 30\'s, 40\'s...etc. more work!
Obligatory gun discussion
Indirect conversation about PV = nRT formula
Correction: the absence of pressure (vacuum) causes water to boil.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are \"measured\" by the states of water boiling/freezing.
\r\n

\r\nCelsius\r\nfreezes at 0°\r\nboils at 100°\r\n\r\nFahrenheit\r\nfreezes at 32\r\nboils 212°\r\n\r\n1 (K) Kelvin = -273.15°C\r\n
',272,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Science, temperature',0,1432,1), (1433,'2014-01-29','Ubuntu Quickly Ebook Template',660,'The Quickly Ubuntu eBook Template allows the user to create and manage eBooks','

\r\nIn this episode Mike Hingley talks about his Ubuntu Quickly Ebook Template project. Whilst it is still in development, it allows authors the ability to publish epub style books through the ubuntu packaging system.\r\n

\r\n',185,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','content packaging,Ebook ',0,1441,1), (1434,'2014-01-30','Why I made an account free android ',568,'Account Free Android Tablet: minimal Google/Ads without Rooting','

\r\nWhy I built an Account Free Google tablet. Including links of what was done. Some basic criteria. No accounts created for downloading, installing or configuring except for mail accounts. No rooting. No pirated apps. Something that can be easy for a user to do including installing and updating apps. One ad supported app installed, but hope to find an alternative. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://james.toebesacademy.com/Account_Free_Android_Device.html\r\n

',273,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Android,tablet,F-Droid,OwnCloud',0,1638,1), (1436,'2014-02-03','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 1 of 4',12207,'After show part 1/4 following the 2013-2014 New Year Show','

\r\nFollowing on from the end of the \"official\" recorded session, the HPR community were not talked out and continued on for another 26 hours.\r\n

',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1386,1), (1437,'2014-02-04','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 2 of 4',13762,'After show part 2/4 following the 2013-2014 New Year Show','

\r\nFollowing on from the end of the \"official\" recorded session, the HPR community were not talked out and continued on for another 26 hours. \r\n

',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1325,1), (1438,'2014-02-05','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 3 of 4',14029,'After show part 3/4 following the 2013-2014 New Year Show','

\r\nFollowing on from the end of the \"official\" recorded session, the HPR community were not talked out and continued on for another 26 hours. \r\n

',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1298,1), (1439,'2014-02-06','2013-2014 HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 4 of 4',18639,'After show part 4/4 following the 2013-2014 New Year Show','

\r\nFollowing on from the end of the \"official\" recorded session, the HPR community were not talked out and continued on for another 26 hours. \r\n

',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2014',0,1383,1), (1441,'2014-02-10','Jono Bacon and Stuart Langridge talk with pokey',7821,'Jono Bacon @jonobacon and Stuart Langridge @sil talk with pokey about how they think he got it wrong','

Jono Bacon and Stuart Langridge were not entirely pleased with the things pokey had to say about them in the Hacker Public Radio New Years Eve Show episode 1418. They graciously contacted HPR and asked for a chance to clear the air. In this episode pokey has a chat with them about their views on Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) and advocacy.

\n ',128,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Open Source,GUI,CLI',0,1657,1), (1450,'2014-02-21','My Mobile digital life',1587,'Knightwise shows us how he stays sane during 3 hour commutes and how he safely tunes tech into his d','

\r\nPodcasting from the car Knightwise shows us what his morning routine looks like and how he uses technology during his daily 3 hour commute. With some clever tips on using audio and voice technology to stay in touch with tech, stay sane and more importantly, stay safe.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nShownotes My Mobile Life.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',111,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','knightwise, hacks, lifehacks, howto, mobile, car, drive, safe, technology',0,1510,1), (1460,'2014-03-07','The road warrios command line combat life.',989,'Podcasting from the car Knightwise shows us his favorite command line applications and how he connec','

\r\nPodcasting from the car Knightwise shows us his favorite command line applications and how he connects to them from anywhere.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nShownotes \r\n

\r\n\r\n',111,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','knightwise, hacks, lifehacks, howto, technology, linux, ssh',0,1564,1), (1470,'2014-03-21','Learn to read time with ccClock',1442,'A teaching tool for children learning to read an analogue clock','

Over the years the image of the clock has been abstracted and stylized to\r\na point where a long and a short line inside a circle, or even inside four\r\ndots on the ordinals, can be instantaneously recognized as a clock. This is\r\nperfectly fine if you already know how to read the analog clock but it makes\r\nno sense to use such a design as a teaching aid.

\r\n
\r\n\"oval \r\n\"Creative\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n

As a teaching device, you need to make sure all the information that has been abstracted away has been put back.

\r\n

That is the basic principle of the ccClock

\r\n

Links

\r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','analogue clock,telling time',0,1541,1), (1480,'2014-04-04','Continuous Ink Supply System',1200,'How goibhniu got Ken to use a Brother MFC-J5910DW with a Continuous Ink Supply System','

The cost of printing

\n

The reason that printers are so affordable is because like game consoles, they are not. They are sold at cost or below cost. The printer manufacturers make their money by selling you replacement ink cartridges that are very expensive. While you can use replacement cartridges, the manufactures will try and dissuade you from using them by displaying messages in the screens to \"alert\" you to the fact, or will include chips in their printers to prevent you from refilling or swapping their cartridges for cheaper alternatives. You should consider a laser printer option as while the toner cartridges are more expensive, even those supplied by the manufacturers work out cheaper over time. But if you wish to use a Ink Jet, then a serious alternative to lower the cost of printing is to use a CISS, Continuous ink supply system.

\n

CISS, Continuous ink supply system

\n

A CISS, Continuous ink supply system, is a system where you use cheaper non brand ink in your printer, just like you would with replacement no-name brand cartridges. Instead of having to refill the cartridges as they empty you supply them via a thin hose to an external reservoir. The advantage is that you can buy your ink in bulk and refill it without having to open the printer. This brings the cost of printing down considerably.
\"link

\n

Now to pick a printer

\n
    \n
  1. What Functions would you like ?
    In the Netherlands there is an excellent site called Tweakers.net that allow you to select devices by their features without having to gather all the information from various review sites that may/may not be influenced by outside forces. Although the site is in Dutch it should be fairly obvious what\'s being asked.
    https://tweakers.net/categorie/922/printers/producten/ (Google Translate version)
  2. \n
  3. Will it work with Linux
    Once you short list the printer(s) you like, head over to https://www.openprinting.org/printers to find out if it\'s supported by Linux and by extension Mac/iOS. Do this even if you plan to run Windows as it proves that the printer is popular and is likely to be supported.
  4. \n
  5. Will it really work with Linux
    Support is a big word and while it may be trivial for some to recompile a Kernel and X to get the thing working. It saves a lot of time and effort if you look around on the Linux Distributions forums to see if there are reported problems installing the printer. A good search is \"${your printer model number} linux howto\", check the dates on the posts as well paying more attention to the newer ones. Don\'t worry if you find a HowTo on another distribution than the one you are using as the chances are good that it will also apply to your install.
  6. \n
  7. Can you easily use replacement cartridges ?
    For to answer this, you will need to search in your local stores and on-line to see if there is a popular replacement option available. You should pay particular care to whether the cartridges require a chip or not.
  8. \n
  9. Is there a CISS option
    Now you need to check for a CISS supplier and to see whether they have a supported model for your printer and if there is instruction videos on how to install them
    For my purposes \"City Ink Express\" https://www.cityinkexpress.co.uk/ciss fitted the bill on both counts. They are a UK store and the only purchase I made arrived before the printer I ordered and the ink system seems to work fine.
  10. \n
\n

Brother MFC-J5910DW

\n

I ended up going with the \"Brother MFC-J5910DW\" as we were looking for a printer that could scan to the network, print A3, A4 duplex, as well as supporting Linux. At the time of writing the Brother printers do not use any chips and allow you to replace the cartridges. One annoying thing was that when the ink in one of the supplied cartridges went empty (after printing 10 A3 pages), it no longer allowed me to scan to the network. Fortunately I had the CISS system ready to rock and to be honest I was dreading installing it.

\n

Even if you don\'t want to purchase your CISS system from City Ink Express, you should have a look at their videos. For my printer there were three that were appropriate, namely how to Fill and prime it, how to install it and (for the future) how to refill it. I\'m not going to waste time on my experiences as I have nothing to add to the videos other than to say, you may want to put on a pair of gloves and do your work over a news paper to capture any ink that spills.

\n

How to fill and prime brother Ciss for LC980 -LC985 - LC1100 -LC1240 - LC1280

\n

Ciss continuous ink system for Brother LC1220, LC1240, LC1280 Printers

\n

how to top up a brother ciss

\n

Result

\n

I\'m not using the system or the printer long enough to give a full review but the CISS system has saved two birthday parties so not a bad start.

\n

\"The

\n

\"CISS

\n

Links

\n\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','printer,inkjet,continuous ink supply system,ciss',0,1428,1), (1449,'2014-02-20','Timelapse Video',698,'A quick introduction to timelapse video and some of the tools used in linux to help create them. ','

\r\nA quick introduction to timelapse video and some of the tools used in linux to help create them. \r\n

\r\n

\r\ncd to dir that holds the images\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCreate a directory called resize and run\r\n

\r\n

\r\n \"mogrify -path resize -resize 1920x1080! *.JPG\" \r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf you need to Deflicker your images place the script in your resize directory \r\nand run\r\n

\r\n

\r\n \"./timelapse-deflicker.pl -v\"\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThis will create a dir called deflickered\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf you use mencoder to create your video you need to use ls and make a text \r\nfile with the files listed in sequential order\r\n

\r\n

\r\n \"ls -1tr | grep -v files.txt > files.txt\"\r\n

\r\n

\r\nthen\r\n

\r\n

\r\n \"mencoder -nosound -noskip -oac copy -ovc copy -o outputfile.avi -mf fps=25 \'mf://@files.txt\'\r\n

\r\n

\r\nif you use ffmpeg something like this should get you out of trouble, though \r\nyour files need to be named in sequential order starting with img(number 1 2 etc).jpg \r\n

\r\n

\r\n \"ffmpeg -f image2 -i img%d.jpg -vcodec libx264 outputfile.mp4\"\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYoutube links\r\n

\r\n

\r\n Milkyway \r\n

\r\n

\r\n https://youtu.be/VeGM7iEBUT0\r\n

\r\n

\r\n Construction\r\n

\r\n

\r\n https://youtu.be/-9iCGD6Ielw\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDeflicker script\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://tinyurl.com/p7ffof7\r\n

',232,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','time lapse,linux,ffmpeg,cameras,photography,mencoder',2,224,1), (1444,'2014-02-13','What is Firefox OS?',805,'A short introduction to Mozilla\'s Firefox OS mobile operating system and what it is','

\r\nA short introduction to Mozilla\'s Firefox OS mobile operating system and what it is. Discussed are what devices are available and what devices Firefox OS can run on.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',274,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Firefox OS',0,1585,1), (1443,'2014-02-12','Fahrenheit 0-100',1033,'The Fahrenheit scale DOES make sense! Just don\'t add water.','

\r\nThe Fahrenheit scale DOES make sense! Just don\'t add water.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nComparing temperature points:\r\n  ºC      ºF     ºK       ºR\r\n-273    -460      0        0  Absolute zero\r\n -40     -40    233      420  C = F\r\n -18       0    255      460  Coldest of the year?\r\n   0      32    273      492  Water freezes\r\n  10      50    283      510  Spring or Fall day?\r\n  23      73.4  296      533  Better room temp\r\n  25      77    298      537  Room temp\r\n  37      98.6  310      558  Human body temp\r\n  38     100    311      580  Hottest of the year?\r\n  85     185    358      645  This one sticks with me\r\n 100     212    373      672  Water Boils\r\n 125     257    398      717  Maximum silicon chip\r\n 371     700    644     1160  Soldering iron tip\r\n
\r\n\r\n

\r\nThe scales and the people:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',275,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','temperature scale,Fahrenheit,Celsius,centigrade,Kelvin,Rankine',0,1359,1), (1446,'2014-02-17','Interview with Fernando H. F. Botelho from the F123 group',2817,'In today\'s show Ken talks to Fernando H. F. Botelho from the F123 group.','

\r\nIn today\'s show Ken talks to Fernando H. F. Botelho from the F123 group.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nThe F123 Group, which includes Botelho & Paula Consultoria Empresarial Ltda., F123 Consulting, and F123 Software, designs and manages projects in the areas of poverty reduction, technology, and disability. The group provides NGOs, educational institutions, foundations, government agencies, individuals, and international organizations with project management and technical development services, as well as professional low-cost software and training for blind and visually impaired persons.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nDuring the discussion we discuss the different approaches to helping accessibility on Linux. You can email them on info@f123.org, or by following them on twitter: https://Twitter.com/F123org\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interview,accessibility,Sonar Linux,Vinux,eSpeak,Festival,MARY TTS',0,1286,1), (1447,'2014-02-18','HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 1/5',5925,'FOSDEM 2014 Report, part 1','

HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014

\r\n

\r\nThe following are a series of interviews recorded at FOSDEM 2014.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nFOSDEM is a free event that offers open source communities a place to meet, share ideas and collaborate.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nFor more information see the website https://fosdem.org/2014/, where you can watch a recording of the many talks https://video.fosdem.org/2014/\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
An example of one of the many FOSDEM signs.

\r\n

Day1

\r\n

00:00:30 Introduction

\r\n

Ken and Dave introduce the show

\r\n\r\n

00:01:55 FOSDEM Volunteers

\r\n

\r\nThe first chat was with Kristof Provost. By day a Embedded Software Engineer, but at fosdem he transforms into a cloak room attendant and we chat about how you can help out at FOSDEM.
\r\nhttps://www.codepro.be\r\n

\r\n

00:04:52 OSGeo project

\r\n

\r\nNext was a chat with Anne Ghisla from the OSGeo project.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nThe Open Source Geospatial Foundation
\r\nOSGeo was created to support the collaborative development of open source geospatial software, and promote its widespread use. Join us by signing up to our mailing lists or check out the Getting Started page to become more involved.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.osgeo.org/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

\"\"
Dirk Frigne and Anne Ghisla

\r\n\r\n

00:08:29 Geomajas

\r\n

\"\"
Sample folders at the booth

\r\n

\r\nFollowing on we talk to Dirk Frigne\r\n

\r\n
\r\nWhat is Geomajas?
\r\nGeomajas is an enterprise-ready open source GIS framework for the web. It has client-server integration for displaying and editing of geographic data.
\r\nGeomajas has integrated security and is endlessly scalable. It is compliant with OGC standards such as WMS, WFS, etc and also supports spatial databases.
\r\nIt integrates with your system and provides out-of-the-box functionality through plug-ins. By leveraging GWT on the client, development is all-Java making it easier and more efficient for your team.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://geomajas.org/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

00:16:09 OpenStreetMap

\r\n

\r\nLast in the mapping trio we speak to Gaël Musquet, président d\'OpenStreetMap France.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
Open Street Map demos Sat devices

\r\n

\"\"
The tuner referred to in the interview

\r\n

\"\"
The pc referred to in the interview

\r\n
\r\nOpenStreetMap powers map data on hundreds of web sites, mobile apps, and hardware devices. OpenStreetMap is built by a community of mappers that contribute and maintain data about roads, trails, cafés, railway stations, and much more, all over the world.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.openstreetmap.org/about
\r\nhttps://learnosm.org/en/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

00:39:46 Libre Graphics magazine

\r\n

\r\nChanging the pace from mapping we get to talk with ginger \"all-lower-case\" coons :) about producing the Libre Graphics magazine using all Free Software\r\n

\r\n
\r\nA Libre Graphics Magazine is long overdue. In a market dominated by magazines devoted to design discourse built around proprietary tools and the latest computer graphics tricks and techniques, users of Libre Graphics software are underserved and unrecognized. We know that these users exist, both professionally and as hobbyists. We know this because we are they. We are graphic designers, media artists, photographers and web designers. We use Libre Graphics software, quietly and without regard. Our peers, used to proprietary alternatives, question our choice of tools. Our work, when executed well, is indistinguishable from work produced by more traditional means. Thus, our choices are invisible, unless we make an issue of them.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://libregraphicsmag.com\r\n

\r\n\r\n

00:45:18 openSUSE

\r\n

\r\nNext we talk to Richard Brown one of the board members of the openSUSE team.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nopenSUSE is a free and Linux-based operating system for your PC, Laptop or Server. You can surf the web, manage your e-mails and photos, do office work, play videos or music and have a lot of fun!\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.opensuse.org/en/
\r\nhttps://sysrich.co.uk/
\r\nhttps://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Board\r\n

\r\n\r\n

00:56:48 The Debian Project

\r\n

\r\nDebian developer and T-Shirt salesman, Joost van Baal-Ilić takes some time away from the booth to give us the run down on Debian.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nThe Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian.\r\n\r\nAn operating system is the set of basic programs and utilities that make your computer run. At the core of an operating system is the kernel. The kernel is the most fundamental program on the computer and does all the basic housekeeping and lets you start other programs.\r\n\r\nDebian systems currently use the Linux kernel or the FreeBSD kernel. Linux is a piece of software started by Linus Torvalds and supported by thousands of programmers worldwide. FreeBSD is an operating system including a kernel and other software.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.debian.org/
\r\nhttps://ad1810.com/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

01:08:04 HelenOS

\r\n

\r\nGoogle Summer of Code mentors Martin Děcký, and Jakub Jermář talk to us about HelenOS, a project which has mentored GSOC student coders.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
Martin Děcký, and Jakub Jermář

\r\n

\"\"
HelenOS Screen Shot

\r\n\r\n
\r\nHelenOS is an operating system based on a multiserver microkernel design. Rather sooner than later, HelenOS will become a complete and usable modern operating system, offering room for experimenting and research. HelenOS uses its own microkernel written from scratch and supports SMP, multitasking and multithreading on both 32-bit and 64-bit, little-endian and big-endian processor architectures, among which are AMD64/EM64T (x86-64), ARM, IA-32, IA-64 (Itanium), 32-bit MIPS, 32-bit PowerPC and SPARC V9. Thanks to the relatively high number of supported architectures and suitable design, HelenOS is very portable. On top of the microkernel, HelenOS provides services such as file systems, networking, device drivers and user interface. Most of these services are composed of multiple independent server processes, which makes HelenOS one of the most modular operating systems.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.helenos.org/
\r\nhttps://jakubsuniversalblog.blogspot.nl/
\r\nhttps://twitter.com/mdecky\r\n

\r\n\r\n

01:23:28 CAcert

\r\n

\r\nI took Michael Tänzer away from checking passports and drivers licenses to explain to us what\'s the idea behind CACert.org\r\n

\r\n
\r\nCAcert.org is a community driven Certificate Authority that issues certificates to the public at large for free. CAcert\'s goal is to promote awareness and education on computer security through the use of encryption, specifically with the X.509 family of standards. We have compiled a document base (Wiki) that has helpful hints and tips on setting up encryption with common software, and general information about Public Key Infrastructures (PKI). CAcert Inc. is a non-profit association, incorporated in New South Wales, Australia.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.cacert.org/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Music

\r\n
\r\nTrack name                               : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer                                : Fenster\r\nRecorded date                            : 2002\r\nCopyright                                : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM,2014,interviews',0,1622,1), (1442,'2014-02-11','Google Summer of Code',1318,'Google Summer of Code is a global program that pays students to write code for open source projects','

\r\n\r\n[GSoC 2014] Mentoring organization application deadline. Fri Feb 14, 2014 11am – 12pm Pacific Time\r\n\r\n

\r\n

Google Summer of Code is a global program that offers students stipends to write code for open source projects. We have worked with the open source community to identify and fund exciting projects for the upcoming summer.

\r\n

\r\nFor more information see: https://www.google-melange.com/\r\n

\r\n ',161,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Google,GSoC,Summer of Code',0,1363,1), (1448,'2014-02-19','Intro to cable cutting',1633,'Moving away from Cable or Satellite TV','

\r\nMy Antenna - LAVA HD2605 Motorized Outdoor HDTV Antenna\r\n

',190,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Cable Cutting, cord cutting',0,1516,1), (1451,'2014-02-24','Jeremy Allison ~ the SAMBA project',4462,'FOSDEM 2014 Report, part 2','

HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014

\n

The following are a series of interviews recorded at FOSDEM 2014.

\n
FOSDEM is a free event that offers open source communities a place to meet, share ideas and collaborate.
\n

For more information see the website https://fosdem.org/2014/, where you can watch a recording of the many talks https://video.fosdem.org/2014/

\n

Jeremy Allison ~ the SAMBA project

\"Ken

For some reason my Zoom H2 failed to record this interview. Based on past experience I\'m more inclined to blame the operator than the device so the audio is taken from the backup recording device, a Sansa Clip. As we say at HPR, any recording is better than no recording so any strange audio artefacts are a result of that.

\n \n

From wikipedia:
Jeremy Allison is a computer programmer known for his contributions to the free software community, notably to Samba, a re-implementation of SMB/CIFS networking protocol, released under the GNU General Public License.

\n \"LNUX\n

\"\"
Jeremy working the booth.

',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM,2014,interview,Jeremy Allison,SAMBA',0,1560,1), (1452,'2014-02-25','HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 3',8189,'FOSDEM 2014 Report, part 3','

HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014

\n

\nThe following are a series of interviews recorded at FOSDEM 2014.\n

\n
\nFOSDEM is a free event that offers open source communities a place to meet, share ideas and collaborate.\n
\n

\nFor more information see the website https://fosdem.org/2014/, where you can watch a recording of the many talks https://video.fosdem.org/2014/\n

\n\n

\"\"
A properly stocked fridge.

\n\n

Day 1 Part 3, Day 2 Part 1

\n\n

00:00:30 The TOR Project

\n

\nThe next on our list of booths to visit was the Tor project at the Mozilla stand.\n

\n
\nTor is free software and an open network that helps you defend against traffic analysis, a form of network surveillance that threatens personal freedom and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security.\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

00:13:22 EPFSUG, Free Software User Group inside the European Parliament

\n

\nNext we spoke to the Erik Josefsson about the need for as many people as possible to register as a Supporter of Free Software on the spfsug website. Please take some time to do that now.\n

\n
\n

The European Parliament Free Software User Group is an open community of staff, assistants and Members of the European Parliament, and of supporters from the free software community. Its goals are to:

\n\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

00:27:07 KDE

\n

\nOver at the KDE booth, I managed to track down Jonathan Riddell about the KDE project. From Wikipedia:\n

\n
\nKDE is an international free software community producing an integrated set of cross-platform applications designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, Microsoft Windows, and OS X systems. It is known for its Plasma Desktop, a desktop environment provided as the default working environment on many Linux distributions, such as openSUSE, Mageia and Kubuntu and is default desktop environment on PC-BSD a BSD operating system.
\n\nThe goal of the community is to provide basic desktop functions and applications for daily needs as well as tools and documentation for developers to write stand-alone applications for the system. In this regard, the KDE project serves as an umbrella project for many standalone applications and smaller projects that are based on KDE technology. These include Calligra Suite, digiKam, Rekonq, K3b, and many others.
\n\nKDE software is based on the Qt framework. The original GPL version of this toolkit only existed for the X11 platform, but with the release of Qt 4, LGPL versions are available for all platforms. This allows KDE software based on Qt 4 to also be distributed to Microsoft Windows and OS X.\n
\n

\nAbout KDE\n

\n
\nThe KDE Community is an international technology team dedicated to creating a free and user-friendly computing experience, offering an advanced graphical desktop, a wide variety of applications for communication, work, education and entertainment and a platform to easily build new applications upon. We have a strong focus on finding innovative solutions to old and new problems, creating a vibrant atmosphere open for experimentation.\n
\n

\nAbout Kubuntu\n

\n
\nKubuntu is an operating system built by a worldwide team of expert developers. It contains all the applications you need: a web browser, an office suite, media apps, an instant messaging client and many more. Kubuntu is an open-source alternative to Windows and Office.\n
\n\n

Links

\n\n\n

00:50:13 Drupal

\n

\nBumping into old friends is all part of the FOSDEM experience. Never one for missing an opertunity to turn a chat into an episode, I catch up with Paul Krischer, who tells us about his work with Drupal. Keep your diary clear for drupalcon Amsterdam, which will be held 29 SEP - 03 OCT.\n

\n
\nDrupal is an open source content management platform powering millions of websites and applications. It\'s built, used, and supported by an active and diverse community of people around the world.\n
\n\n

Links

\n\n\n

00:55:00 Mozilla

\n

\nAfter a long night \"discovering\" Brussels using the public transport system, we track down Brian King the European Community Builder for Mozilla. We talk about the Mozilla phone.\n

\n

\"\"
The mozilla team.

\n
\nAt Mozilla, we\'re a global community of technologists, thinkers and builders working together to keep the Internet alive and accessible, so people worldwide can be informed contributors and creators of the Web. We believe this act of human collaboration across an open platform is essential to individual growth and our collective future.\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

01:07:09 GNOME

\n

\nWe talk to Tobias Müller who is on the board of directors for the GNOME project.\n

\n
\nGNOME 3 is an easy and elegant way to use your computer. It is designed to put you in control and bring freedom to everybody. GNOME 3 is developed by the GNOME community, a diverse, international group of contributors that is supported by an independent, non-profit foundation.\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

01:12:52 CentOS

\n

\nStarting a series of RedHat interviews we interview Jim Perrin Governing Board member of the CentOS project.\n

\n\n

\"\"
The CentOS trio.

\n
\nThe CentOS Linux distribution is a stable, predictable, manageable and reproduceable platform derived from the sources of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). We are now looking to expand on that by creating the resources needed by other communities to come together and be able to buld on the CentOS Linux platform. And today we start the process by delivering a clear governance model, increased transparency and access. In the coming weeks we aim to publish our own roadmap that includes variants of the core CentOS Linux.\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

01:23:08 RedHat: Foreman, oVirt, and Open Stack

\n

\nDaniel Lobato and Doran Fedu help me understand what Foreman, oVirt, and OpenStack is all about.\n

\n

Foreman

\n
\nForeman is an open source project that gives system administrators the power to easily automate repetitive tasks, quickly deploy applications, and proactively manage servers, on-premises or in the cloud. (From Wikipedia) Foreman (also known as The Foreman) is a complete life cycle systems management tool for physical and virtual servers with deep integration to configuration management software, specifically Puppet. The Foreman provides provisioning on bare-metal (through managed DHCP, DNS, TFTP, and PXE-based unattended installations), virtualization and cloud. The Foreman provides comprehensive, auditable interaction facilities including a web frontend, command line interface and robust, REST API.\n
\n

oVirt

\n
\noVirt manages virtual machines, storage and virtualized networks. (From Wikipedia) oVirt is a free platform virtualization management web application community project started by Red Hat. oVirt is built on libvirt which could allow it to manage virtual machines hosted on any supported backend, including KVM, Xen and VirtualBox. However, oVirt is currently focused on KVM alone. oVirt is an open source software with backing from Red Hat and it is the base for Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization.\n
\n

OpenStack

\n
\nOpenStack is a cloud operating system that controls large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources throughout a datacenter, all managed through a dashboard that gives administrators control while empowering their users to provision resources through a web interface.\n
\n

Links

\n\n\n

01:48:17 Fedora

\n

\nCompleting (for the most part) the RedHat thread we head over to the Fedora Project booth and talk to Jiří Eischmann and Jaroslav Řezník. Jiří is the chair of the Fedora Ambassador Steering Committee, and works for RedHat as a Community Manager. Jaroslav is the Fedora Program Manager.\n

\n

\"\"
Fedora Friends

\n
\nFedora is a fast, stable, and powerful operating system for everyday use built by a worldwide community of friends. It\'s completely free to use, study, and share.\n
\n

Links

\n\n

Music

\n
\nTrack name : Free Software Song\nPerformer : Fenster\nRecorded date : 2002\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002,\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium,\nprovided this notice is preserved.\nPerformers:\nPaul Robinson (vocals),\nRoman Kravec (guitar),\nEd D\'Angelo (bass),\nDave Newman (drums),\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet),\nTony Moore (trumpet).\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\n
\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM,2014,interviews',0,1565,1), (1453,'2014-02-26','HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 4',3979,'FOSDEM 2014 Report, part 4','

HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014

\n

The following are a series of interviews recorded at FOSDEM 2014.

\n
FOSDEM is a free event that offers open source communities a place to meet, share ideas and collaborate.
\n

For more information see the website https://fosdem.org/2014/, where you can watch a recording of the many talks https://video.fosdem.org/2014/

\n

Day 2 Part 2

\n

00:00:30 OpenEmbedded

\n

We talk to Intel employee Paul Eggleton, who talked to us about OpenEmbedded and the yocto project.

\n

\"\"
Paul Eggleton and Apelete Seketeli at the OpenEmbedded booth

\n
The Yocto Project is an open source collaboration project that provides templates, tools and methods to help you create custom Linux-based systems for embedded products regardless of the hardware architecture. OpenEmbedded offers a best-in-class cross-compile environment. It allows developers to create a complete Linux Distribution for embedded systems
\n

\"\"
00:02:48 ODROID with external display showing a waterfall display as described in the interview.

\n

\"\"
00:03:25 The Galileo board as described in the interview.

\n

\"\"
00:05:16 The Intel MinnowBoard as described in the interview.

\n

\"\"
00:06:57 Industrial controller from a cable layer as described in the interview.

\n

\"\"
00:06:57 Industrial controller buttons

\n

\"\"
00:07:40 Toshiba arm development board with a smaller lcd screen

\n

\"\"
00:08:04 OUYA console out of case

\n

Links

\n \n

00:10:17 BSD

\n

We chat to Daniel Seuffert about the various BSD\'s.

\n

About FreeBSD:

\n
FreeBSD is an advanced computer operating system used to power modern servers, desktops and embedded platforms. A large community has continually developed it for more than thirty years. Its advanced networking, security and storage features have made FreeBSD the platform of choice for many of the busiest web sites and most pervasive embedded networking and storage devices.
\n

About OpenBSD:

\n
The OpenBSD project produces a FREE, multi-platform 4.4BSD-based UNIX-like operating system. Our efforts emphasize portability, standardization, correctness, proactive security and integrated cryptography. As an example of the effect OpenBSD has, the popular OpenSSH software comes from OpenBSD.
\n

About NetBSD:

\n
NetBSD is a free, fast, secure, and highly portable Unix-like Open Source operating system. It is available for a wide range of platforms, from large-scale servers and powerful desktop systems to handheld and embedded devices. Its clean design and advanced features make it excellent for use in both production and research environments, and the source code is freely available under a business-friendly license. NetBSD is developed and supported by a large and vivid international community. Many applications are readily available through pkgsrc, the NetBSD Packages Collection.
\n

About PC-BSD®:

\n
PC-BSD® is a user friendly desktop Operating System based on FreeBSD. Known widely for its stability and security in server environments, FreeBSD provides an excellent base on which to build a desktop operating system. PC-BSD uses a host of popular open source window managers and uses a custom-tailored application installer that puts popular applications in easy reach of users.
\n

Links

\n \n

00:27:16 Olimex Ltd

\n

Tsvetan Usunov was giving away small penguin shaped arduino computers for free. The snag, you had to solder them yourselves. On day 1 over a hundred boards were soldered by programmers and all worked.

\n
Olimex Ltd is a leading provider for development tools and programmers for embedded market. The company has over 20 years’ experience in designing, prototyping and manufacturing printed circuit boards, sub-assemblies, and complete electronic products. We are established in 1991 in Plovdiv - the second largest city in Bulgaria.
\n

\"\"
Tux powered led strips

\n

\"\"
Tux measuring the temprature

\n

\"\"
Tux led strips overview

\n

\"\"
A10-OLinuXino, the small pc refered to in the openstreetmap interview

\n

\"\"
Panel with keyboard

\n

\"\"
A13-OLinuXino is a small server...

\n

\"\"
.. with hard disk

\n

\"\"
.. on it\'s side

\n

Links

\n \n

00:36:09 Pandora

\n

Next a chat with an Evildragon aka Michael Mrozek who talks to us about the OpenPandora device, and what\'s coming next.

\n
The Pandora is a handheld game console designed to take advantage of existing open source software and to be a target for homebrew development. The first copy was released in May 2008 and others in May 2010, and is developed by OpenPandora, which is made up of former distributors and community members of the GP32 and GP2X handhelds. When announcing the system, the designers of Pandora stated that it would be more powerful than any handheld video game console that had yet existed. It includes several features that no handheld game consoles have previously had, making it a cross between a handheld game console and a subnotebook.
\n

Links

\n \n

00:44:40 Python

\n

We stop by the Python booth and find out how to tame the beast.

\n
Python is a programming language that lets you work more quickly and integrate your systems more effectively. You can learn to use Python and see almost immediate gains in productivity and lower maintenance costs.
\n

Links

\n \n

00:49:55 Jenkins

\n

We talk to Kohsuke Kawaguchi the lead developer of Jenkins.

\n

\"\"
KK and the Jenkins mascot

\n

\"\"
The Jenkins mascot

\n

From Wikipedia:

\n
Jenkins is an open source continuous integration tool written in Java. The project was forked from Hudson after a dispute with Oracle. Jenkins provides continuous integration services for software development. It is a server-based system running in a servlet container such as Apache Tomcat. It supports SCM tools including AccuRev, CVS, Subversion, Git, Mercurial, Perforce, Clearcase and RTC, and can execute Apache Ant and Apache Maven based projects as well as arbitrary shell scripts and Windows batch commands. The primary developer of Jenkins is Kohsuke Kawaguchi. Released under the MIT License, Jenkins is free software.
\n

Links

\n \n

00:56:14 Puppet

\n

Over at the Puppet booth we talk to Eric Sorenson from PuppetLabs and Bert Van Vreckem from the Belgium Puppet user group.

\n
Puppet Open Source is a flexible, customizable framework available under the Apache 2.0 license designed to help system administrators automate the many repetitive tasks they regularly perform. As a declarative, model-based approach to IT automation, it lets you define the desired state - or the “what” - of your infrastructure using the Puppet configuration language. Once these configurations are deployed, Puppet automatically installs the necessary packages and starts the related services, and then regularly enforces the desired state. In automating the mundane, Puppet frees you to work on more challenging projects with higher business impact. Puppet Open Source is the underlying technology for Puppet Enterprise and runs on all major Linux distributions, major Unix platforms like Solaris, HP-UX, and AIX, and Microsoft Windows.
\n

Links

\n \n

Music

\nTrack name                               : Free Software Song\nPerformer                                : Fenster\nRecorded date                            : 2002\nCopyright                                : Copyright (C) 2002, \nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \nprovided this notice is preserved. \nPerformers: \nPaul Robinson (vocals), \nRoman Kravec (guitar), \nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \nDave Newman (drums), \nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \nTony Moore (trumpet). \nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\n
\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM,2014,interviews',0,1362,1), (1454,'2014-02-27','HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 5',6030,'FOSDEM 2014 Report, part 5','

HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014

\r\n

\r\nThe following are a series of interviews recorded at FOSDEM 2014.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nFOSDEM is a free event that offers open source communities a place to meet, share ideas and collaborate.\r\n
\r\n

\r\nFor more information see the website https://fosdem.org/2014/, where you can watch a recording of the many talks https://video.fosdem.org/2014/\r\n

\r\n

Day 2 Part 3

\r\n

\"\"
Free as in BEER

\r\n\r\n

00:00:28 Perl Community

\r\n

\r\nI chat with Wendy G.A. van Dijk who, while not selling cute camels, is promoting the Perl Community.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
perl nlpw::2014 Dutch Perl Workshop 25 April Utrecht

\r\n
\r\nPowerful, stable, mature, portable. Perl 5 is a highly capable, feature-rich programming language with over 26 years of development. Perl 5 runs on over 100 platforms from portables to mainframes and is suitable for both rapid prototyping and large scale development projects.\r\n
\r\n

\"\"
A big camel

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:07:42 RedHat

\r\n

\r\nFredric Hornain talks to us about G6 Containers, AS7, Qpid and much more.\r\n

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:12:19 OpenOffice

\r\n

\r\nOliver-Rainer Wittmann from IBM takes some time to chat with us about OpenOffice.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
Swag at the OpenOffice booth

\r\n
\r\nApache OpenOffice is the leading open-source office software suite for word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, graphics, databases and more. It is available in many languages and works on all common computers. It stores all your data in an international open standard format and can also read and write files from other common office software packages. It can be downloaded and used completely free of charge for any purpose.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:24:07 Elasticsearch

\r\n

\r\nHonza Kral takes some time out to chat with us about the Elasticsearch ELK Stack. \r\n

\r\n

\"\"
Honza Kral from Elasticsearch

\r\n
\r\nBy combining the massively popular Elasticsearch, Logstash and Kibana we have created an end-to-end stack that delivers actionable insights in real-time from almost any type of structured and unstructured data source. Built and supported by the engineers behind each of these open source products, the Elasticsearch ELK stack makes searching and analyzing data easier than ever before.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:33:25 LibreOffice

\r\n

\r\nWe have a great conversation with Cor Nouws, who proves that you can earn a living supporting Free Software.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
The hard working Libreoffice booth team

\r\n
\r\nLibreOffice is the most widely used free open source office software. It is a community-driven project of The Document Foundation. LibreOffice is developed by professionals and by users, just like you, who believe in the principles of free software and in sharing their work with the world in a non-restrictive way. At the core of these principles is the promise of better-quality, highly-reliable and secure software that gives you greater flexibility at zero cost and no end-user lock-in. LibreOffice works natively with the Open Document Format, but also brings you support for by far the most file types for office-documents. It comes with support for over 80 languages and with a whole amount of other unique features to work with your texts, spreadsheets, presentations, drawings and data.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:47:34 guifi.net

\r\n

\r\nRogier Baig talks to us about the roll out of peer to peer networks.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nguifi.net is a telecommunications network, is open, free and neutral because is built through a peer to peer agreement where everyone can join the network by providing his connection, and therefore, extending the network and gaining connectivity to all. guifi.net is owned by all who join. Is a collaborative project horizontally managed composed by individuals, organizations, enterprises, education institutions and universities and government offices. Is open so everyone can participate in same terms and conditions within the scope of the Wireless Commons.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

00:58:01 Bareos

\r\n

\r\nJörg Steffens explains that bareos is not \"bare os\" but rather Bareos - Backup Archiving REcovery Open Sourced. \r\n

\r\n
\r\nBareos is a 100% open source fork of the backup project from bacula.org. The fork is in development since late 2010, it has a lot of new features. The source has been published on github, licensed AGPLv3.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

01:05:30 XMPP realtime lounge

\r\n

\r\nLights, Sensors, Switches, Dimmers and of course the obligatory RaspberryPi and a bread board. So what is this you ask ? Well Ralph Meijer, Edwin Mons and Joachim Lindborg explain the \"Internet of things\" and how they want to use the XMPP protocol to \"chat\" with your devices. The plan is simple: set-up each device so it can talk to XMPP, then you can use Jabber or any other XMPP client to talk to them.\r\n

\r\n

\"\"
The lads from the XMPP realtime lounge

\r\n
\r\nThe Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is an open technology for real-time communication, which powers a wide range of applications including instant messaging, presence, multi-party chat, voice and video calls, collaboration, lightweight middleware, content syndication, and generalized routing of XML data. The technology pages provide more information about the various XMPP “building blocks”. Several books about Jabber/XMPP technologies are available, as well.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

01:24:09 Jitsi

\r\n

\r\nWe have a chat with Emil Ivov, the project lead of Jitsi.\r\n

\r\n
\r\nJitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is an audio/video and chat communicator that supports protocols such as SIP, XMPP/Jabber, AIM/ICQ, Windows Live, Yahoo! and many other useful features. Jitsi is Open Source / Free Software, and is available under the terms of the LGPL.\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

01:31:09 FOSDEM

\r\n

\r\nTo wrap up the show I managed to track down Jan-Frederik Martens from the FOSDEM team.\r\n

\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n

01:36:36 Music - Entire Song

\r\n
\r\nTrack name                               : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer                                : Fenster\r\nRecorded date                            : 2002\r\nCopyright                                : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM,2014,interviews',0,1364,1), (1458,'2014-03-05','Free Culture and Open Animation',2550,'fscons, interview, anime, creative commons, free culture, animation','

This interview with Julia Velkova and Konstantin Dimitriev will shed some light on free culture, open animation, Synfig Studio and the Russian animé being developed by the Morevna Project. Today, on Hacker Public Radio.

\n

\"Support Open Animation projects! Because they cary a lot of potential for inovation.\"
-- Julia

\n

FSCONS 2012: \"Open animation projects: state of the art, problems and perspectives\"

\n

We all know of the Blender Projects, like Elephants Dream, Big Buck Bunny and Sintel, but do you know of any more? Creating an animated movie is hard. Many enthusiasts start projects up that soon thereafter unfortunately die off.

\n

The state of this area of interest is what Julia Velkova has concentrated her research on. At FSCONS 2012 she gave the first part of a presentation, painting a picture of the state of matters, then followed by open animator Konstantin Dimitriev who introduced both the Morevna Project and the free and open source tool Synfig Studio.

\n

At this presentation Konstantin showed the premiere trailer for his animé movie \"The Beautiful Queen Marya Morevna\", a modernized version of a traditional Russian tale. Both the trailer and Julia and Konstantins presentations are available on YouTube.

\n

Konstantin has used indiegogo to crowdfund a full time developer for Synfig Studio. He wrote: \"I am mentoring a full-time developer Ivan Mahonin, who is working on Synfig code. We have funded his work in previous months by running similar fundraising campaigns for October, November, December, January and February.\" So go help them with the rest of 2014 as well!

\n

Go help the Morevna Project and Synfig Studio, follow both Julia and Konstantin on Twitter to get updates on this very interesting part of the free and open community that I suspect we sometimes might forget.

\n

Stuff referenced in the episode

\n\n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n\n',192,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FSCONS',0,1440,1), (1456,'2014-03-03','HPR Community News for January 2014',3190,'HPR Community News for January 2014','A monthly look at what has been going on in the HPR community. This is on the Saturday before the first Monday of the month.\n

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
\nmirwi, \ncyan, \nToeJet, \nJ. A. Mathis, and \nBill_MI.

\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
iddatetitlehost
1413ohmroep hpr live 3, 01-08-2013, (Power)DNSNido Media
1414ohmroep hpr live 4, 31-06-2013, operating lights at Observe Hack MakeNido Media
141518 - LibreOffice Writer Working with Page StylesAhuka
1416HPR New Year Show Part 1 2013-12-31T10:00:00Z to 2013-12-31T16:00:00ZVarious Hosts
1417HPR New Year Show Part 2 2013-12-31T16:00:00Z to 2013-12-31T21:00:00ZVarious Hosts
1418HPR New Year Show Part 3 2013-12-31T22:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T04:00:00ZVarious Hosts
1419HPR New Year Show Part 4 2014-01-01T04:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T10:00:00ZVarious Hosts
1420HPR New Year Show Part 5 2014-01-01T10:00:00Z to 2014-01-01T12:00:00ZVarious Hosts
1421Statistics and PollingAhuka
1422Setting up and using SSH and SOCKSCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
1423Monty - The man behind your databasesSeetee
1424ohmroep hpr live mini, 03-08-2013, Censorship and Hacking in the NetherlandsNido Media
1425Ahuka 20 LibreOffice Writer FramesIntroduction and the Type TabAhuka
1426A Visit to ReglueDavid Whitman
1427Decoding HPR1216 the easy way and a bit moremirwi
1428Coffee Stain Studios and the Sanctum gamesSeetee
1429Debian sources.listHonkeymagoo
1430thebestofyoutube.com download scriptKen Fallon
1431Talking Twenty FourteenNYbill
1432Fahrenheit 212cyan
1433Ubuntu Quickly Ebook TemplateMike Hingley
1434Why I made an account free androidToeJet
143521 - LibreOffice Writer Frame Properties CompletedAhuka
\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1360,1), (1611,'2014-10-06','HPR Community News for September 2014',3506,'Dave is at OggCamp, Ahuka and Ken struggle through the news.','

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nWelcome to our new hosts:
\r\n Steve Smethurst, \r\n 2BFrank, \r\n goPhir.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
IdDateTitleHost
15862014-09-01HPR Community News for August 2014HPR Volunteers
15872014-09-02Beginner\'s guide to the night sky 3 - A wee dot on a dark skyAndrew Conway
15882014-09-03HPR AudioBookClub-09-Down And Out In The Magic KingdomHPR_AudioBookClub
15892014-09-04KC MakerFair 2014MrGadgets
15902014-09-05The xfs File SystemJWP
15912014-09-08The Ultimate Cooking DevicePipeManMusic
15922014-09-09An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
15932014-09-10Why C++?garjola
15942014-09-11Steam and wine with linuxAndrew Conway
15952014-09-1237 - LibreOffice Calc - More Financial FunctionsAhuka
15962014-09-15About the Word \"Hack\"klaatu
15972014-09-16Extravehicular ActivitySteve Smethurst
15982014-09-17Hashing and Password SecurityAhuka
15992014-09-18Interview with Ingmar Steiner from the MaryTTS projectKen Fallon
16002014-09-19The zfs File SystemJWP
16012014-09-22Howto Install LAMPklaatu
16022014-09-23An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
16032014-09-24GUADEC 2014: Matthew Garrett Interview2BFrank
16042014-09-25How I Got Into LinuxgoPhir
16052014-09-2638 - LibreOffice Calc - simple Descriptive StatisticsAhuka
16062014-09-29Howto VNCklaatu
16072014-09-30Migrating from Drupal 6 to Nikolajohanv
\r\n\r\n

Comments this month

\r\n\r\n

There are 27 comments:

\r\n\r\n\r\n

HPR At OggCamp

\r\n

\r\n\"HPR\r\n

\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1461,'2014-03-10','FOSDEM Keysigning Event',1457,'I wanted to get my GPG key signed so I joined the FOSDEM 2014 keysigning event','

\r\nI attended FOSDEM 2014 in Brussels, Belgium. During the conference there was a key signing event which I attended. These are my impressions of the process and the follow-up.\r\n

\r\n

Detailed notes:

\r\n

\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1461/FOSDEM_Keysigning_Event.html\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',225,74,1,'CC-BY-SA','Security,Privacy,PGP,key,key signing',0,1314,1), (1457,'2014-03-04','Xubuntu, Kali on EeePc, Markdown Stuff, Pogoplug 4, and more.',3103,'A review of several topics including Linux bug community participation and Markdown','

\r\nThis episode is a review of several topics ranging from linux bug community participation, linux installation experiences, hosting services, and blogging using Markdown.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHere is a brief list of the topics covered in this episode:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',231,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Xubuntu,Kali Linux,Markdown,PogoPlug,Hosting Services',0,1499,1), (1459,'2014-03-06','Locational Privacy with retrotech-the lowly pager',1138,'deepgeek advocates the use of a pager for privacy reasons','

\r\nIn this episode, deepgeek suggests that adding and old, and perhaps laughable\r\nby modern standards, device to your mobile lifestyle. Deepgeek reveals that\r\nsaid device is the pager, but he eventually gives good reasons for doing so.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe primary reason is that the paging company does not know where you are, \r\nso they can\'t tell \"the man\" where you are. Other reasons are redundancy \r\nand trouble interpreting audio. But in the end, you find out why first \r\nresponders and medical and fire personal still use these devices, and how you, \r\nas a privacy lover, may reap benefits from using this technology also.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSome links mentioned in case you want to follow them...\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDuck Duck Go search on locational privacy\r\nhttps://duckduckgo.com?q=locational+privacy\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"privacy is dead\" audio\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nUSA\'s two remaining paging companies\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

don\'t forget to check out resellers for deals, like \"free pager with one year prepaid

\r\n\r\n

\r\nA good sms via email webpage\r\n

\r\n\r\n',73,74,1,'CC-BY-SA','pager,privacy',0,1581,1), (1483,'2014-04-09','HPR Community News for March 2014',3886,'HPR Community News for March 2014','\"\"\r\n

In today\'s community news we discuss the happenings in the HPR community. On the mumble were Dave Morriss and Ken Fallon, while we were joined by Pokey and NYBill from the North East Linux Fest. During the show we also heard from Bruce Patterson formally of the Distro weekly podcast. x1101 a HPR listener and soon to be new contributor and finally Paul from paul dot com Paul\'s Security Weekly.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nThere were no new hosts this month.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Running out of shows

\r\n

We got very few shows lately and were it not for the backup shows been moved into the main queue we would be in trouble.

\r\n\r\n\"Queue\r\n\r\n

Last Months Shows

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n
id\r\ntitle\r\nhost\r\n
1456HPR Community News for January 2014HPR Admins
1457Xubuntu, Kali on EeePc, Markdown Stuff, Pogoplug 4, and more.Beto
1458Free Culture and Open AnimationSeetee
1459Locational Privacy with retrotech-the lowly pagerdeepgeek
1460The road warrios command line combat life.Knightwise
1461FOSDEM Keysigning EventDave Morriss
1462Encryption and Email with ThunderbirdAhuka
1463Code Is a Life Sucking Abyss, Also My Story sigflup
1464HPR Audiobook Club: Space CaseyHPR_AudioBookClub
146524 - LibreOffice Writer A Brochure ProjectAhuka
1466Thoughts on GPSpokey
1467How to win Find-The-Difference gamespokey
1468A Whole Lot of Nothing: Chromebook EOL, CentOS WTF, Non Mainstream GNU/Linux Distros and more...Beto
1469HPR Community News for February 2014HPR Admins
1470Learn to read time with ccClockKen Fallon
1471Encrypt Your Stuff With Blowfish sigflup
1472How I Found LinuxCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
1473FOSDEM DiscussionDave Morriss
1474A behind the Curtian Look at OsmAnd (OSM Automated Navigation Directions) with Pokey and DavidDavid Whitman
147525 - LibreOffice Calc What Is A SpreadsheetAhuka
1476Sega Genesis Music Driversigflup
\r\n\r\n

Mailing List discussions

\r\n

\r\nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the Gmane archive.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDiscussed this month was:\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Backup Shows

\r\n

\r\nIn a discussion started by Dave Morris. Some felt that the content was getting stale, and keeping shows for 2 years or even 3 months was too long. Others felt that these shows were contributed with the purpose of been used in an emergency and therefore should be timeless.
\r\nEventually it was left to each of the contributors that had shows in the backup queue to release them, or to set them as emergency shows. The website has been updated to reflect this change.
\r\nSummary\r\n

\r\n\r\n

HPR_AudioBookClub

\r\n

\r\nThe next audiobook is Shaman Tales Book 1: South Coast by Nathan Lowell. It\'s available on https://podiobooks.com/title/shaman-tales-1-south-coast/. \r\n

\r\n
\r\nwget https://podiobooks.com/rss/feeds/episodes/shaman-tales-1-south-coast/ -O - | xmlstarlet sel -T -t -m \'/rss/channel/item/enclosure\' -v \"@url\" -n - | grep \'PB-\'| while read chapter;do wget $chapter;done\r\n
\r\n\r\n

New Podcasts

\r\n\r\n\r\n

Round table

\r\n

\r\nThe mumble server is still available for Recording round table discussions mumble.openspeak.cc Port: 64747\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Reserved slots

\r\n

\r\nJuly 8 is reserved by davidWHITMAN\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Usefulness of the Community News Show/Reserved Slot

\r\n

\r\nLast month we asked if the community news should continue - and yes it should. We are open to suggestions on how to improve it.
\r\nIt was also agreed to allow this show to be reserved.\r\n

\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1323,1), (1462,'2014-03-11','Encryption and Email with Thunderbird',1421,'Ahuka discusses using Thunderbird and Enigmail to send and receive encrypted email','

\r\nNow it is time to take a look at practical uses of encryption, and the number one use is for e-mail. Encrypted communication via e-mail is very desirable if you want to keep a secret. In the U.S. the current legal precedents say that any e-mail left on a server is not protected since you would have no expectation of privacy. This precedent was set many years ago when POP3 was the standard for all e-mail and people did not usually leave e-mail on a server. These days, many people use web-based e-mail or use a newer standard called IMAP which by default stores everything on the server. Perhaps you are one of these people, and thought that you had a right to expect privacy, but in the U.S. you dont, and I would expect that in many other countries the situation is no better.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThere have been attempts to provide encrypted e-mail service from a service provider, but the problem here is that the provider usually has to have to the key in order to encrypt the e-mail, and if they have the key they can be compelled to give it up. Recently in the U.S. there was a case involving Ladar Levison who ran such a service called Lavabit. Lavabit encrypted mail in transit using TLS encryption, and he had the keys. When his service was used by Edward Snowden, the government came to get the keys. Now, Levison would have given them the key for Snowdens e-mail if he had been served a warrant, as he always made clear to his customers that he would obey proper legal demands. But in this case the government demanded that he turn over all of the keys for all his customers, and this was too far for Levison. He shut down his service rather than cooperate, and is a bit of a hero for that. But it illustrates that you are at the mercy of the service provider. If the government made this demand to Lavabit, you are safe in presuming they had made the same demand to other providers, and that they all cooperated with the government and said nothing to their customers. So it would be mistake to rely on 3rd party mail service providers to give you privacy. You need to control it yourself. But of course, after the last few lessons you know how to do that, and have your secure keys created. You just need to put them to use.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of the show notes please see https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=547\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','encryption, email',0,1471,1), (1481,'2014-04-07','Encryption and Gmail',987,'This looks at how you can use encryption to sign email and to privately secure it in Gmail.','

\r\nLast time we looked at how you can use GPG and Enigmail to digitally sign or encrypt messages in Thunderbird. But today many people use web-based mail, and one of the most popular is Googles Gmail. Others include Outlook.com and Yahoo, but using any of them is pretty similar. So since I have a Gmail account handy, I will use that to demonstrate encryption in web mail accounts.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe important thing you must keep in mind is that this relies on you using your GPG keys to either sign or encrypt the message before it leaves your computer, what Steve Gibson calls Pre-Interent Encryption, or PIE. The flaw in what Lavabit did (discussed in previous lesson) was to use keys that the mail provider controlled, and these keys could be (and were) demanded by the the government.. If you use your own GPG keys that you control, no provider (Google, in this case) is even capable of giving anything to the government other than a blob of random nonsense.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nTo do this, I will use an extension for Googles Chrome Browser called Mailvelope. This is also available for Firefox, but in my case I use Chrome to access my Gmail account., so using a Chrome extension makes sense for me. The first thing to do is go to the Chrome store, search for Mailvelope, and install it.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of the show notes please see https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=546\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','encryption, email',0,1474,1), (1500,'2014-05-02','Key Signing',1733,'Ahuka and Tony Bemus discuss key signing and how you build a web of trust.','

\r\nOne of the issues in using public key encryption is ensuring you know who you are communicating with, and that you have correctly matched the owner to the key. Otherwise, your communication could be intercepted and decrypted by a third-party. The way we solve this problem is with key signing, which is often done at key signing parties. We discuss all this with Tony Bemus of the Sunday Morning Linux Review. \r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','public key encryption,GPG,keyring,key signing,Mailvelope',0,1651,1), (1495,'2014-04-25','27 - LibreOffice Calc - Calculations and the Formula Bar',1401,'This episode looks at the creating and using formulas in spreadsheets.','

Since the main purpose of a spreadsheet is to perform calculations it is appropriate that we consider just how this is done.

\r\n

In general, a cell of a spreadsheet can contain one of three things:

\r\n\r\n

All calculations are done using formulas. A formula occurs whenever a cell has contents that begin with an equals sign, which is the signal to Calc that it needs to perform a calculation. For instance, if a cell contains \"A3+B3\", Calc would examine this, see the letters and the plus sign, and decide that the contents of the cell were a text string. After all, it cannot be a pure number with those other things there. But place an equals sign in front, so that the contents now read \"=A3+B3\" and Calc knows that this is formula, and will perform the calculation. And one of the best ways to interact with a cell that contains a formula is to use the Formula Bar, which normally appears just above the cells of the spreadsheet proper:

\r\n

For the remainder of the show notes please read: https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=723\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, formulas',0,1455,1), (1515,'2014-05-23','29 - LibreOffice Calc - Models and \"What-If\" Analysis',774,'This episode looks at building models and doing \"What-If?\" Analysis.','

\r\nThe next topic is extremely important because it addresses where most beginning users of spreadsheets get into trouble. First, understand that building models and doing \"What-If\" analysis is fundamental to the success and widespread adoption of spreadsheets all over the world. A model can be thought of as a mathematical representation of a process of some kind. It could be financial, such as projecting my sales over the next year, or perhaps working out when my car loan will be paid off. Or it could be scientific, such as projecting out the reaction times and quantities in a chemical reaction. The only real requirement is that whatever you are modeling has to be something that can be represented using mathematical formulas of some kind.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"What-If\" analysis takes this model and lets you experiment to see how how changes in different variables affect the results in your model. If I am figuring out when my car loan will be paid off, I might ask how paying an extra $20 per month against the principle would affect my results (presumably, it should lead to getting it paid off sooner if I set the model up correctly.) Or in the case of the chemical process, how would different temperatures or pressures affect the reaction times and quantities? By experimenting with different values in my model I can do this comparison easily. But only if I built the model properly in the first place.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of the show notes please see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=752\r\n

',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc',0,1427,1), (1505,'2014-05-09','28 - LibreOffice Calc - Fills, an Introduction',903,'This episode looks at the filling rows and columns using click-and-drag.','

\r\nOne of the key techniques in using a spreadsheet is to master the art of fills, which lets you fill a column or a row with data without having to type in every cell individually. And this technique requires that there be a predictable pattern to the contents of each cell as you fill them. But you can do a lot with this technique, and we will want to use this when we do our first model, which will be a simple savings model.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nBut first we need to build the tools in our tool kit, and fills are a big one. To begin with, you can fill either rows or columns, though columns are more frequently filled using this technique. Still, it is good to know you can do either. The simplest fill begins with a cell that has some kind of contents. For example, lets say that cell B1 contains the word \"Rain\". If you click on the cell, you will see it highlighted with a thick black border\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor the remainder of the show notes please see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=734\r\n

\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, fills',0,1431,1), (1525,'2014-06-06','30 - LibreOffice Calc - A Savings Model',1252,'LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, models, what-if analysis, savings','

In the previous tutorial we discussed the fundamental ideas of building models and doing “What-If?” analysis. Now we need to take these ideas and put them into practice so you can see how this works. To do this I will create a simple model of savings over time. Now, I do want to be clear that this is a very over-simplified model and should not be taken as a good predictor of actual results. The idea is to illustrate the techniques involved in building a model and doing “What-If?” analysis.

So. what are the variables, parameters, assumptions, etc. that we need? I have identified these in my model:

For the remainder of the show notes please see https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=761

A copy of the spreadsheet created for this program can be found at https://www.ahuka.com/?attachment_id=763

\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc',0,1387,1), (1464,'2014-03-13','HPR Audiobook Club: Space Casey',5892,'A discussion of Space Casey written and produced by Christiana Ellis','

\r\nIn this episode of the HPR Audiobook Club Broam, Jonathan Nadeau, pokey and Christiana Ellis discuss the podiobooks.com presentation of Space Casey written and produced by Christiana Ellis. This episode contains spoilers in the second half, so please listen to the audiobook for yourself before listening to the podcast all the way through. This audiobook was liked by all of the panellists on this episode.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"Book\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYou can download this audiobook for free (or voluntary donation) from https://podiobooks.com/title/space-casey/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYou can buy a hard copy of the script-book used by the actors in this audiobook at https://www.lulu.com/shop/christiana-ellis/space-casey/paperback/product-15736459.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYou can buy the ebook version at https://www.lulu.com/shop/christiana-ellis/space-casey/ebook/product-17352326.html\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Beverages

\r\n\r\n

\r\nDuring this show the hosts also discuss beverages.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Next Book

\r\n\r\n

\r\nOur next audiobook will be Shaman Tales 1: South Coast by Nathan Lowell. It is available at podiobooks.com The direct link is: https://podiobooks.com/title/shaman-tales-1-south-coast/ \r\nThis audiobook was suggested to us by Christiana Ellis, who liked it very much.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Christiana Ellis

\r\n\r\n

\r\nYou can find more content (including podcasts) from Christiana Ellis at:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nJonathan Nadeau\'s website is https://accessiblefreedom.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe all had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR_AudioBookClub\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','audiobook',0,1455,1), (1469,'2014-03-20','HPR Community News for February 2014',4711,'HPR Community News for February 2014','

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nThere were no new hosts this month.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n
id\r\ntitle\r\nhost\r\n
1436HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 1 of 4Various Hosts
1437HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 2 of 4Various Hosts
1438HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 3 of 4Various Hosts
1439HPR New Year Show 2013-2014 After Show 4 of 4Various Hosts
1440Creating a Key Pair - GUI ClientAhuka
1441Jono Bacon and Stuart Langridge talk with pokeypokey
1442Google Summer of CodeJonathan Nadeau
1443Fahrenheit 0-100Bill_MI
1444What is Firefox OS?J. A. Mathis
144522 - LibreOffice Writer Other Frame StylesAhuka
1446Interview with Fernando H. F. Botelho from the F123 groupKen Fallon
1447HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 1/5Ken Fallon
1448Intro to cable cuttingTracy Holz_Holzster
1449Timelapse VideoPeter64
1450My Mobile digital lifeKnightwise
1451Jeremy Allison ~ the SAMBA projectKen Fallon
1452HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 3Ken Fallon
1453HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 4Ken Fallon
1454HPR Coverage at FOSDEM 2014 Part 5Ken Fallon
145523 - LibreOffice Writer Other Page Layout OptionsAhuka
\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1356,1), (1463,'2014-03-12','Code Is a Life Sucking Abyss, Also My Story ',925,'@sigflup','

\r\nIn this episode of Hacker Public Radio @sigflup talks about some of the pitfalls of programming as well as her story as a programmer.\r\n

',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','programming',0,1592,1), (1466,'2014-03-17','Thoughts on GPS',1837,'pokey meanders through his thoughts on GPS.','

\r\nI\'ve always liked maps. Since getting a few GPS enabled devices maps have become even more useful to me, and I like them more and more all the time. Here is a brief episode on the GPS devices and map software that I use most often. I hope you enjoy my episode, and find something useful in it. The outro is a remix of Downright by Broam and Klaatu.\r\n

',128,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','GPS,TomTom,OSM Tracker,OsmDroid,OsmAnd,WAZE',0,1491,1), (1467,'2014-03-18','How to win Find-The-Difference games',358,'pokey is probably better than you at \"Find The Difference\" games, but he won\'t be after this','

\r\nThis is a neat little trick that I discovered that you can use to get really high scores on those \"Find The Difference\" games that they have at some bars (there\'s at least one in the Google Play store too). After I recorded this show I played to see just how high I could score, and I turned the score over.\r\n

',128,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,Find The Difference',0,1349,1), (1468,'2014-03-19','A Whole Lot of Nothing: Chromebook EOL, CentOS WTF, Non Mainstream GNU/Linux Distros and more...',3545,'Beto covers a wide range of subjects in this episode','

\r\nThis episode covers a little bit of everything. The end of life for Chromebooks and how that hurts in some ways, hacker public radio topics, CentOS and Red Hat joining, participate with a non mainstream GNU/Linux Distros, and much more.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHere is a brief list of the topics and links covered in this episode:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',231,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','XFCE,Debian,CentOS,Bridge Linux,Bedrock Linux,Ansible',0,1559,1), (1471,'2014-03-24','Encrypt Your Stuff With Blowfish ',300,'@sigflup tells us how to Encrypt Your Stuff With Blowfish with openssl on the command line','
\r\nencrypting:\r\n$ openssl bf -e < my_file > my_file.bf\r\n\r\ndecrypting:\r\n$ openssl bf -d < my_file.bf > my_file\r\n
',115,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','openssl,BlowFish,encryption',0,1576,1), (1543,'2014-07-02','What\'s in my bag',1154,'The contents of Ken\'s bag as he prepares for OHM 2013','

Items

\n
\n$ cat pringbooklet\n#!/bin/bash\n\n#HTML Input --> HTML 2 PS --> PS 2 PDF --> PDF Output\n#lpstat -p |awk \'{print $2}\'\n\nif [ $# -lt 2 ]\nthen\n  echo \"\"\n  echo \"Usage: `basename $0` {pdf file} {printer name}\"\n  echo \"\"\n  echo \"Available printers: \\\"$(echo $(lpstat -p |awk \'{print $2}\' ) )\\\"\"\n  echo \"\"\n  exit\nfi\n\nFILE=$1\nPRINTER=$2\n\n\nif [ $# -eq 3 ]\nthen\n  COPIES=\"$3\"\nelse\n  COPIES=\"1\"\nfi\n\nif [ ! -e $FILE ];\nthen\n  echo \"Can\'t find the PDF file $1\"\n  exit\nfi\n\npdftops -level3 $FILE - | ps2ps - - | psbook | psnup -2 -Pa4 | ps2pdf - |\\\n    lp -d $PRINTER -o media=a4 -o sides=two-sided-short-edge -n $COPIES -\n
',30,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','laptop backpack,OHM 2013',0,1325,1), (1474,'2014-03-27','A behind the Curtain Look at OsmAnd (OSM Automated Navigation Directions) with Pokey and David',5303,'David and Pokey talk about the OsmAnd app','

\r\nThanks to Pokey for being the expert in this oggcast. \r\nNote: The song \'Do The Hokey Pokey is copyrighted\'\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://osmand.net\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Functionality

\r\n\r\n

\r\nOsmAnd (OSM Automated Navigation Directions) is a map and navigation application with access to the free, worldwide, and high-quality OpenStreetMap (OSM) data. All map data can be stored on your device\'s memory card for offline use. Via your device\'s GPS, OsmAnd offers routing, with optical and voice guidance, for car, bike, and pedestrian. All the main functionalities work both online and offline (no internet needed). Some of the main features:\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Navigation

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Map Viewing

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Use OpenStreetMap and Wikipedia Data

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Safety Features

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Bicycle and Pedestrian Features

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

Directly Contribute to OpenStreetMap

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nOsmAnd is open source and actively being developed. Everyone can contribute to the application by reporting bugs, improving translations, or coding new features. The project is in a lively state of continuous improvement by all these forms of developer and user interaction. The project progress also relies on financial contributions to fund the development, coding, and testing of new functionalities. By buying OsmAnd+ you help the application to be even more awesome! It is also possible to fund specific new features, or to make a general donation on osmand.net. \r\nhttps://osmand.net\r\n

\r\n

\r\nOsmAnd (OSM Automated Navigation Directions)\r\n

\r\n

\r\nGPL \r\n

',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OSM,map,GPS,OsmAnd',0,1473,1), (1476,'2014-03-31','Sega Genesis Music Driver',1188,'@sigflup interviews kubilus1 about his VGM driver for the Sega Genesis/Megadrive','

\r\nsigflup and kubilus1 talk about kubilus1\'s vgm driver for the Sega Genesis/Megadrive. \r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Sega Genesis,Sega Megadrive,VGM,Video Game Music,SDCC,Small Device C Compiler',0,1351,1), (1472,'2014-03-25','How I Found Linux',839,'CPrompt^ goes into how he found linux and never looked back...','

\r\nCPrompt^ goes into how he found linux and never looked back...\r\n

\r\n\r\n',252,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Mandrake,Mandriva,OpenMandriva,Slackware,Debian,Ubuntu',0,1512,1), (1473,'2014-03-26','FOSDEM Discussion',1384,'Dave chats with his friend Tom about their experiences of FOSDEM 2014','

\r\nI decided to attend FOSDEM 2014 this year. I had thought about going\r\nto last year\'s conference but didn\'t get organised enough to make it.\r\nWhen I mentioned my plans to my friend Tom, he thought he\'d attend\r\ntoo, and we agreed to meet up there.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWhen we got back from the conference I wanted to record a conversation\r\nwith Tom about our impressions of the event. We tried to do this four\r\ntimes before we finally managed it. We struggled through one recorder\r\nbattery failure and two Mumble failures before we achieved success.\r\nThis is the result of our conversation.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nApologies for the phone interference in the background, I hadn\'t\r\nrealised the recorder (a Tascam DR-07) would pick it up.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',225,97,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM',0,1357,1), (1477,'2014-04-01','OSI layer 3',1720,'OSI layer 3','

Spoiler

\r\n

Yes we would listen to them reading a phone book. A link for the younger listeners that may have never seen a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_directory.

\r\n\r\n

\r\nIn today\'s show we continue our look at The OSI model for network communications, with examples of Layer 3 been given with particular focus on Geography diverse Host addressing. \r\n

From Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSI_layer_3

\r\n\r\n

In the seven-layer OSI model of computer networking, the network layer is layer 3. The network layer is responsible for packet forwarding including routing through intermediate routers, whereas the data link layer is responsible for media access control, flow control and error checking.

\r\n\r\n

Functions

\r\n

The network layer provides the functional and procedural means of transferring variable-length data sequences from a source to a destination host via one or more networks, while maintaining the quality of service functions.

\r\n

Functions of the network layer include:

\r\n\r\n
\r\n
For example, IP is connectionless, in that a datagram can travel from a sender to a recipient without the recipient having to send an acknowledgement. Connection-oriented protocols exist at other, higher layers of the OSI model.
\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n
Every host in the network must have a unique address that determines where it is. This address is normally assigned from a hierarchical system. For example, you can be \"Fred Murphy\" to people in your house, \"Fred Murphy, 1 Main Street\" to Dubliners, or \"Fred Murphy, 1 Main Street, Dublin\" to people in Ireland, or \"Fred Murphy, 1 Main Street, Dublin, Ireland\" to people anywhere in the world. On the Internet, addresses are known as Internet Protocol (IP) addresses.
\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n
Since many networks are partitioned into subnetworks and connect to other networks for wide-area communications, networks use specialized hosts, called gateways or routers, to forward packets between networks. This is also of interest to mobile applications, where a user may move from one location to another, and it must be arranged that his messages follow him. Version 4 of the Internet Protocol (IPv4) was not designed with this feature in mind, although mobility extensions exist. IPv6 has a better designed solution.
\r\n
\r\n

Within the service layering semantics of the OSI network architecture, the network layer responds to service requests from the transport layer and issues service requests to the data link layer.

\r\n
',109,83,0,'CC-BY-SA','April Fools',0,1470,1), (1478,'2014-04-02','Batteries Part 2',2883,'My early experience with batteries & memorable battery operated devices','

\r\nA show about batteries - Part 2\r\n

\r\n

\r\nMy Slow Battery Charger\r\nHahnel Powerstation TC Max, provides gentle overnight trickle charging \r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nPowerbase battery electric drill, had difficult finding a good link to an example of the drill. \r\nIt came with a selection of drill bits, sockets and two double ended screwdriver bits.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nCannon A80 digital Camera\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nA picture of my trusty Philips 5890 Shaver\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nGarmin Streetpilot i3 GPS Navigation System\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nSansa Clip+\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','battery,charger,trickle charger',0,1396,1), (1548,'2014-07-09','Heyu and X10',1780,'Peter64 and Jonathan Nadeau talk about Heyu and X10','

\r\nIn today\'s backup show, Peter64 submits a devrandom segment about Heyu and X10 he did with Jonathan Nadeau. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.sonar-project.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://accessiblecomputingfoundation.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nA good place to look at modules ie the CM11 computer module, light \r\nmodules, appliance modules etc\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.x10controller.com/kit.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHeyu\r\nhttps://www.heyu.org/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDomus Link\r\nhttps://domus.link.co.pt/ \r\n

\r\n

\r\nAndroid App\r\nhttps://www.appszoom.com/android_applications/tools/domuslink_yjlt.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDoor Locks/strikes\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://tinyurl.com/c3j654a\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://tinyurl.com/d7ckcde\r\n

',232,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Heyu,X10',0,1330,1), (1568,'2014-08-06','Blather Speech Recognition for Linux',399,'Jon has a conversation with his computer','

Blather Speech Recognition for Linux: Jon has a conversation with his computer

\r\n

In this episode I have a blather conversation with my computer. This is a sort of appendix to an episode I released earlier (hpr 1284 https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1284) which was a conversation with Jezra, the lead developer of the blather speech recognition program for Linux. The current episode will make much more sense if you listen to the previous one first.

\r\n

For the most part I use blather as an accessibility tool, to manipulate my desktop and generally to save myself hundreds of keystrokes a day. This is important because of my repetitive strain injuries. Blather allows me to do many “productivity” tasks using only my voice. I also like to have fun with it, though, and this “conversation” is an example of the sort of goofy stuff I like to do. When the computer hears me say certain predefined phrases, it runs commands. For example when I say “what’s for dinner,” it shuffles the contents of a plaintext file that has about 20 options for dinner, chooses the top option and pipes it through my default text-to-speech program, which is either espeak or festival, depending on what I set as the environment variable in my blather startup script. When it hears me ask for certain other information, such as “what day is it?” and “what’s today’s date?”, it runs the appropriate system command and pipes the output through the text-to-speech program. For information about blather, the various back-end things that make it work, examples of my blather scripts and configuration files, visit the links below.

\r\n
\r\n

Links

\r\n ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Speech Recognition, Speech Recognition In Linux, bash scripting, GNU/Linux (Operating System), sphinx, pocketsphinx, automation',0,0,1), (1651,'2014-12-01','HPR Community News for November 2014',3800,'HPR Community News for November 2014','

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
pyrrhic, Al.

\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
IdDateTitleHost
16312014-11-03HPR Community News for October 2014HPR Volunteers
16322014-11-045150 Shades of Beer: 0002 Wichita Brewing CompanyFiftyOneFifty
16332014-11-05The OggCamp organizersbeni
16342014-11-06How I got into Linuxpyrrhic
16352014-11-0741 - LibreOffice Calc - Data Manipulation 1: Sorting and AutoFilterAhuka
16362014-11-10How I make coffeeDave Morriss
16372014-11-11Communities Are Made of PeopleFiftyOneFifty
16382014-11-12Surviving A Roadtrip: FoodWindigo
16392014-11-13Ken Starks at Ohio Linux Fest 2014Ahuka
16402014-11-14Symmetric vs. Asymmetric EncryptionAhuka
16412014-11-17The real reasons for using Linuxjohanv
16422014-11-18Frist Time at OggcampAl
16432014-11-19Unison Syncing UtilityFiftyOneFifty
16442014-11-20Opensource.com: Benetech, OpenStack and Kumushasemioticrobotic
16452014-11-2142 - LibreOffice Calc - Data Manipulation 2: Standard and Advanced FiltersAhuka
16462014-11-245150 Shades of Beer 0003 River City Brewing Company and Wichita Brewing CompanyFiftyOneFifty
16472014-11-25Oggcast Planet Live 2014: The Cooking ShowFiftyOneFifty
16482014-11-26Bash parameter manipulationDave Morriss
16492014-11-27Raspberry Pi Accessibility BreakthroughMike Ray
16502014-11-28OCPLive2014 Night Life In Elysburg PAFiftyOneFifty
\n

Comments this month

\n

There are 25 comments:

\n ',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1676,'2015-01-05','HPR Community News for December 2014',12060,'HPR Community News for December 2014 and part 3 of the New Year Show 18 to 20 Hundred.','

HPR Community News for December 2014

\n

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
Rill, Michal Cieraszynski.

\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
IdDateTitleHost
16512014-12-01HPR Community News for November 2014HPR Volunteers
16522014-12-02GeekSpeak 2013-06-01Various Creative Commons Works
16532014-12-03Ruth Suehle at Ohio Linux Fest 2014Ahuka
16542014-12-04Using AS numbers to identify where you are on the InternetKen Fallon
16552014-12-0543 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating Pivot TablesAhuka
16562014-12-08My audio player collectionDave Morriss
16572014-12-09Hacking Gutenberg eBooksJon Kulp
16582014-12-10Cool Stuff Part 2Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
16592014-12-11OggCamp Interview with Jon Archercorenominal
16602014-12-12Trying out Slackwarebeni
16612014-12-15OggCamp Interview with Paul Tansomcorenominal
16622014-12-16LinuxLugCast Episode-001 OuttakesKevin Wisher
16632014-12-17Interview with Greg Greenlee Founder of Blacks In TechnologyKen Fallon
16642014-12-18Life and Times of a Geek part 1Dave Morriss
16652014-12-1944 - LibreOffice Calc - Working With Pivot TablesAhuka
16662014-12-22Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 3)Gabriel Evenfire
16672014-12-23How to start a BlogRill
16682014-12-24Nixstallerklaatu
16692014-12-25New Retro ComputingNYbill
16702014-12-26Digital Signatures and CertificatesAhuka
16712014-12-29LinuxLugCast Episode-002 OuttakesKevin Wisher
16722014-12-30Systemd for Learner DriversSteve Smethurst
16732014-12-31How I use ZFS on LinuxMichal Cieraszynski
\n

Comments this month

\n

There are 31 comments:

\n \n 2014-12-31T20:00:00Z
\n
\n 2014-12-31T20:30:00Z
\n
\n 2014-12-31T21:00:00Z
\n
\n Mumble-2014-12-31-10-03-18-ch1.teamspeak.cc-Mixdown.ogg
',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1593,'2014-09-10','Why C++?',745,'Introduction to the C++ programming language main features','

\r\nIn this episode, Garjola presents the C++ programming language by\r\nintroducing its main features for object orientation, generic\r\nprogramming and functional style.\r\n

',197,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','programming languages, c++',0,0,1), (1479,'2014-04-03','01 What is on my podcast player',974,'Ahuka begins to tell us about the podcasts he listens to','

\r\nWhat is on my podcast player\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n

My web site is at https://www.zwilnik.com/.

\r\n\r\n

Remember to support free software!

\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,recommendations ',0,1420,1), (1482,'2014-04-08','02 What is on my podcast player',938,'Ahuka continues with the list of podcasts he listens to','

What is on my podcast player

\r\n\r\n

My web site is at https://www.zwilnik.com/.

\r\n

Remember to support free software!

\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,recommendations',0,1398,1), (1484,'2014-04-10','TuxJam31',4878,'Andrew Conway presents TuxJam episode 31, a special for HPR','

\r\nTuxJam is a podcast that reviews lesser known Free and Open Source Software\r\nprojects interspersed with Creative Commons licensed music. TuxJam 31\r\nis a special for HPR.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSee https://unseenstudio.co.uk/tuxjam-ogg/tuxjam-episode-31/\r\n

',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','astronomy',0,1421,1), (1486,'2014-04-14','Linux Luddites Episode 11 - Interview with Rob Landley',7222,'Ken Fallon promotes the \"Linux Luddites\" podcast','

\r\nThis show is is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

\r\nAs stated on the HPR Contribution page\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe will continue to promote new podcasts and other creative commons material but due to a lack of slots, we are only releasing material created exclusively for HPR. If there is a piece of creative commons content that you would like to promote, then feel free to record a regular show where you introduce the content and explain why it is important, providing links to where we can get more information. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nToday I am doing just that. As a member of the HPR community, I would like to bring the podcast LINUX LUDDITES with the tag line \"Not all change is progress\". Taking their name from \"Linux\" the an operating system kernel by Linus Torvalds, and \"Luddites\" from the 19th-century English textile artisans who protested against newly developed labour-saving machinery.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nI am submitting Episode 11 as it includes a fascinating interview with Rob Landley, former maintainer of BusyBox and covers among other things his experiences of GPL enforcement. For complete episode show notes see https://linuxluddites.com/shows/episode-11/ \r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf this podcast is not in your feed, you would do very well to add it.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf there is a show is new to the scene, ie not on the linuxlink.net, then contact us about it and also consider submitting an episode as a featured podcast.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-NC','linux,busybox,podcast',0,1457,1), (1487,'2014-04-15','How I Found Linux',376,'New host x1101 describes how he got into Linux','In today\'s show new host x1101, fulfils his promise made at NELF on the Community News and submits his first show on on how he got into Linux.',276,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux',0,1479,1), (1488,'2014-04-16','What\'s on My Podcatcher',1116,'Keith Murray talks about his favourite podcasts','

\r\nAfter listening to Ahuka describe his favourite podcasts on HPR1479 and HPR1482 I was surprised to see how few of the shows we listen to overlap. There are so many podcasts out there it\'s always good to be able to get recommendations. I present to you my list of 30 podcasts (I had to cull the list down a bit).\r\n

\r\n\r\n',266,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,feed',0,1433,1), (1489,'2014-04-17','Setting up a Raspberry Pi and RaspBMC',3076,'Putting together a Raspberry Pi, installing the OS and setting up RaspBMC','

\r\nIn this episode CPrompt and his friend Matt go through their entire process of putting together a Raspberry Pi, \r\ninstalling the OS and setting up RaspBMC.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,RPI,RaspBMC',0,1496,1), (1491,'2014-04-21','Heartbleed',1297,'A summary of the \"Heartbleed\" OpenSSL vulnerability','

\r\nThe \"Heartbleed\" vulnerability in OpenSSL (CVE-2014-0160) is a bounds checking\r\nerror in the heartbeat implementation that could return up to 64K of private\r\ndata to the client. This can lead to server certificate private keys, session\r\ncookies, clear text passwords, or other sensitive data being leaked from the\r\nserver to the client. This vulnerability exists in OpenSSL versions 1.0.1 through 1.0.1f and 1.0.2 beta.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIt is important for server administrators to update OpenSSL as soon as possible\r\nand take steps to secure any private data which may have been leaked. This may\r\ninclude updating server certificates and revoking certificates that may have\r\nbeen compromised.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nUsers should ensure that web sites they use have been secured and should update\r\npasswords or other authentication information.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCVE info: https://www.cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2014-0160\r\n

\r\n\r\n

\r\n\"Heartbleed\r\n

\r\n\r\n',257,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','heartbleed,openssl,vulnerability,security',0,1559,1), (1501,'2014-05-05','AWK',1165,'A cursory introduction to the AWK programming language','

\r\nFirst of all, a correction. In the podcast, I mistakenly refer to one of the\r\ncoauthors of the language as Kevin Weinberger. My humblest apologies to Mr.\r\nWeinberger, whose actual first name is Peter. I also neglected to mention one\r\nof AWK\'s most interesting features: its automatic field splitting. I hope to\r\nsubmit a followup podcast soon in order to rectify these two glaring mistakes.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nAWK is a loosely typed interpreted programming language. Many useful functions\r\nin a UNIX programming environment, such as reading files, looping over input,\r\nmatching regular expressions, and splitting strings into fields have been\r\nabstracted and are presented to the programmer as native parts of the language.\r\nThis makes AWK ideal for text processing.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe basic structure of an AWK program is a list of rules. Each rule is made up\r\nof an optional pattern and an optional action. If the pattern is matched, the\r\ncorresponding action is run. When AWK starts up, it loads the supplied program\r\ntext, runs any rules with the special BEGIN pattern, then in turn, opens each\r\nfile supplied on the command line (or stdin if no files or a - are specified).\r\nEach file is split into records based on the value in the RS (record separator)\r\nvariable. AWK then loops through each record, splits it into fields based on\r\nthe value in the FS (field separator) variable, and loops through each rule in\r\nthe program. An empty pattern matches all records, so actions with no pattern\r\nrun for every record. An empty action causes the current record to be printed.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe operator most unique to AWK is the $ (field access) operator. When followed\r\nby an integer literal or variable holding an integer value, it returns the\r\ncorresponding field in the current record (counting from 1 up to NF, the number\r\nof fields special variable). $0 returns the entire record. If the supplied\r\ninteger is greater than NF, it is treated as an uninitialized variable, which,\r\nin AWK, is treated dually as either the empty string, or the number 0,\r\ndepending on the context in which it is referenced.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe most common type of pattern used in AWK (excepting, perhaps, the empty\r\npattern) is a regular expression literal. It consists of a regular expression\r\nenclosed in forward slashes. This syntax is inherited from ed, the standard\r\ntext editor, and has been passed down all the way to javascript. In AWK, a\r\nregular expression literal, alone as a pattern, is shorthand for $0 ~ /regex/,\r\nwhere ~ is the regular expression match operator (the string $0, current\r\nrecord, matches the supplied regular expression).\r\n

\r\n\r\n',257,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','AWK,text processing,rule,pattern,action,regular expression',0,1513,1), (1490,'2014-04-18','HPR at NELF 2014 Part1',1443,'Conference interviews','

In this episode, nybill and pokey conduct interviews and generally have a good time at the 2014 Northeast GNU/Linux Fest.

\n

Some links to follow for things that were discussed in this episode:

\n\n

We all had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. Please join us at the next Northeast Gnu/Linux Fest if you can. Thank you very much for listening.

\n

Photos from NELF 2014

\n

Sincerely, The HPR conference crew

\n

P.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.

\n',128,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','interviews',0,1473,1), (1492,'2014-04-22','HPR at NELF 2014 Part2',2115,'Conference Interviews','

\r\nIn this episode, nybill and pokey continue conducting interviews and having a good time at the 2014 Northeast GNU/Linux Fest.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSome links to follow for things that were discussed in this episode:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nWe all had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. Please join us at the next Northeast Gnu/Linux Fest if you can. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nPhotos from NELF 2014\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR conference crew\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',235,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','interviews',0,1344,1), (1493,'2014-04-23','The Next Gen is You (1/2)',2105,'Klaatu talks about Steam on Linux and building a system to run it - part 1','

Steam OS or Steam on Linux, anti-micro for game controller optimisation.\r\n

\r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','steam, games, hardware',0,1508,1), (1494,'2014-04-24','The Next Gen is You (2/2)',1516,'Klaatu talks about Steam on Linux and building a system to run it - part 2','

\r\nSteam OS or Steam on Linux, anti-micro for game controller optimisation.\r\n
\r\nPart 2 of 2
\r\nhttps://straightedgelinux.com/blog/opinions/box.html\r\n

\r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','steam,game,hardware',0,1443,1), (1496,'2014-04-28','wiki on the raspberry pi',1128,'My experience of playing with wiki software on the raspberry pi','

\r\nMy experience of playing with wiki software on the raspberry pi, I forgot to mention I run the standard Raspbian distribution on my pi\r\nif you run something else your mileage may vary.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWhen I listened to the show I noticed a few mistakes, there may be others as the show was pulled together rather hastily\r\n

\r\n

\r\n1. The raspberry pi has either 256 or 512 MB of memory Not KB\'s oops\r\n

\r\n

\r\n2. You can automatically create pages using camel-case words they don\'t need to start with the word wiki so in my example the page WikiNotes\r\ncould just as easily be called GuffNotes. This is because at first I didnt appreciate the meaning of the word camelcase, you learn something \r\nnew every day!\r\n

\r\n

\r\n3. Wikidot still provides a free account, oops again!\r\n

\r\n

\r\nwikidot\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\ndokuwiki\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\ndidiwiki\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nsed man page\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nsome sed tutorial and examples\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,Wikidot,DokuWiki,Apache,DidiWiki,sed',0,1459,1), (1497,'2014-04-29','Practical Math - Units - Distances and Area, Part 1',2288,'Charles in NJ continues his Practical Math series with an episode on units of distance','
\r\nHPR Episode: Using and Converting Between Units of Distance\r\n\r\nIntro: Last time, we talked in general terms about units, numbers and\r\nhow they might be useful in practice.  In this episode, we address some\r\nspecific measurement units that apply to distance and area, and how we\r\nmight convert from one system to another to better understand both.\r\n\r\nEntire point of this episode is this: Carry units in calculations on \r\n  distances and areas, and you\'ll have more success in using them in \r\n  your life.  \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nSegment 1:  Distance and Area in the English system\r\n\r\n1. Series will focus on English and Metric systems.\r\n   a. Basic units of distance: inch, foot, yard, mile\r\n   b. Basic units of area: square inch, square foot, acre, square mile\r\n\r\n\r\n2. Other units of distance and area do exist\r\n   a. Barleycorn for shoe sizes (1/3\")\r\n   b. Hand for describing horses (4\")\r\n   c. Rod for surveying (16-1/2 feet)\r\n   d. Chain, also for surveying (4 linear rods, 66 feet, 22 yards)\r\n   e. Furlong from horse racing and agriculture (220 yards, 10 chains)\r\n   f. League (about an hour\'s walk) usually assumed to be 3 miles\r\n      - Nautical: technical unit that\'s exactly 3 knots\r\n   g. Square yard may be used in quotes for carpet installations\r\n\r\nTable of Units: https://www.csgnetwork.com/converttable.html\r\n\r\n\r\nBrilliant Insight #1: Units of distance were originally arbitrary.  We \r\n  did not standardize on inches, feet, miles, and so on because these \r\n  are magical units with special merits.  They were convenient at the \r\n  time and place where they were invented. \r\n  \r\n  Standards let us talk to each other about distance without having to \r\n  be in the same place at the same time.  We\'d have trouble if builders\r\n  builders had to ask for boards \"as long as my arm\", or a plank \r\n  that\'s \"Yea long\". \r\n\r\n\r\n3. Bizarre properties of some English units explained:\r\n\r\n   a. Rod/Chain: Used in measuring farmland and building plots\r\n      - Rod is 5-1/2 yards, or 16-1/2 feet.\r\n      - Chain is 4 linear rods, or the length of a surveyor\'s chain\r\n      - Could have been longer or shorter.  Standard emerged from usage.\r\n      \r\n   b. Furlong: Longest row you can plow without resting the animals\r\n      - Defined as 10 chains (220 yards)\r\n      \r\n   c. Acre: If you are on a quiz show, it\'s 43,560 square feet.  Huh?\r\n      - Defined as the area of a plot that\'s 1 chain wide by a furlong \r\n      - Putting definitions together, we peek ahead to make sense of it.\r\n      \r\n        1 acre = 1 chain x 1 furlong x 10 chains   <--- multiply by 1\r\n                                       ----------       (1 furlong is \r\n		                       1 furlong         10 chains)\r\n      \r\n        Cancelling out furlongs upstairs and downstairs, we get\r\n	\r\n            1 acre = 1 chain x 10 chains = 10 \"square chains\"\r\n      \r\n      - So the square feet in an acre is not (completely) arbitrary\r\n      - It\'s just mostly arbitrary, but consistent with shorter units.\r\n\r\n   d. Mile: Why is it 5,280 feet?  Similar story [Simplified version!]\r\n      - Roman occupation brought in a 5,000 foot mile (\"mille passus\")\r\n        Warning!  The Roman mile was defined in Roman feet, so it was\r\n           a bit shorter than I\'ve painted it.  \r\n      \r\n      - Originated as 1,000 double-steps or \"paces\"\r\n      - Since 1,000 was \"mille\", unit naturally became \"mile\" in English\r\n      \r\n      - Elizabeth I (1603, or was it 1593?): \r\n        * Statute mile set to 8 furlongs (1,760 yds; 5,280 ft)\r\n        * Why 8 furlongs?  Why not 10 furlongs?\r\n\r\n        * Goal: Set new mile close to existing mile, but as N furlongs.\r\n	    * New \"statute mile\" only about 5% longer than Roman mile\r\n	      Note: Similar analysis could be used with other \"miles\".\r\n	      \r\n	    * Setting a mile to a even multiple of a furlong had practical \r\n	        benefits, and keeping it close to the old unit reduced \r\n	        conversion costs for \"legacy users\".\r\n	        \r\n      - That\'s why we\'ve inherited a mile that measures 5,280 feet.\r\n\r\n   To see why the story is tremendously more complicated than my account\r\n      https://en.wikipedia.com/wiki/Mile\r\n\r\n   Fun article on the mile.\r\n      https://www.sizes.com/units/mile.htm\r\n   \r\n   High school student theme on the furlong.\r\n      https://www.writework.com/essay/history-furlong by silverAlex2000\r\n\r\n   Brief dictionary article on the mile, referenced by Dr. Math \r\n      https://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictM.html#mile \r\n      Referred by https://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/61126.html\r\n\r\n   Resource: StackExchange Physics and Maths sections (\"mile\" question)\r\n      https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/57785/difference-between-nautical-and-terrestrial-miles\r\n\r\n\r\n4. Converting between units\r\n   a. Units of distance usually defined as multiples of each other\r\n      - 1 mile = 5,280 feet            - 1 hand = 4 inches\r\n      - 1 foot = 12 inches             - 1 yard = 36 inches\r\n      \r\n      Skipping ahead to look at the metric system, we now have:\r\n      - 1 inch = 2.54 centimeters (exact). Regularized in recent years.\r\n\r\n   b. This works because there\'s consensus on Zero distance, so we don\'t\r\n         have to adjust for differing origins, as we do with the \r\n         non-absolute temperature scales like Fahrenheit and Celsius. \r\n      \r\n      - We\'ll get to temperature, non-absolute scales in a later show.\r\n\r\n   c. For absolute scales, we can convert from one unit to another using\r\n         a \"conversion factor\".  That is, we can convert a measurement \r\n         expressed in one unit to its equivalent in another unit by \r\n         multiplying or dividing by some number to stretch or compress \r\n         the original unit to match the target unit.\r\n	 \r\n      - Example: I know that 1 foot is 12 inches, so how many inches are\r\n          there in 10 feet?  How feet are there in 660 inches?\r\n      \r\n      - It is clear that a factor of 12 ought to be involved, but how do\r\n          I know when to multiply or divide by 12 in the conversion?\r\n      \r\n      - Wait!  I\'m serious.  When you see this problem for the first \r\n          time, you have to think this through to get it right.  \r\n        * Without a system in place, you always have to think about it.\r\n      \r\n      - Answers in naive setup:\r\n          (i) 10 feet = (12 * 10) inches = 120 inches\r\n         (ii) 660 inches = (660 / 12) feet = 55 feet\r\n\r\n5. Having a system.  Or units conversion as \"multiplying by One\"\r\n   \r\n   a. In each of the solutions I wrote down above, I start with an \r\n         equation that looks like this: X inches = Y feet.\r\n\r\n   b. Inches are not feet, and this way of writing down the calculation \r\n        does NOT help you figure you how the conversions should work, or\r\n        whether you should multiply or divide to get the right answers.\r\n\r\n   c. Here\'s a system for creating conversion factors that tell you what\r\n        to do at each step in the units conversion process.  It is based\r\n        on the very obvious fact that when I multiply any number by \'1\',\r\n        its value remains unchanged.\r\n	\r\n      - Start with one of the identities we wrote down at the beginning.\r\n	    In this case, let\'s use:  12 inches = 1 foot\r\n	  \r\n      - If I divide equals by equals, the results are equal.\r\n	    So I can write:\r\n	  \r\n	                                   12 inches      1 foot\r\n	  12 inches = 1 foot implies that  ---------  =  --------- = 1\r\n					     1 foot      12 inches\r\n      \r\n      -	Get the first term by dividing my original identity by (1 foot).\r\n      - Get the second term by dividing my original identity by (12 in).\r\n\r\n\r\n   d. To make a conversion from feet to inches, I use:\r\n   \r\n			   12 in    10 ft \r\n      10 ft * 1 = 10 ft * ------- = ------ * 12 in = 10 * 12 in = 120 in\r\n                           1 ft      1 ft\r\n      \r\n      - Note: In the fraction (10 ft) / (1 ft), the units \"cancel out\", \r\n                which leaves a unitless number.\r\n	      \r\n      - Suppose we start with the other form for the conversion factor:\r\n   \r\n	                       1 ft    10 square feet \r\n      10 feet * 1 = 10 feet * ------ = -------------- = ???\r\n                              12 in       12 inches\r\n      \r\n      - See?  When I use the form where the units don\'t cancel each \r\n          other, I get a resulting equation that is still correct.  It \r\n          just doesn\'t make much sense to me as a reader.\r\n      \r\n      - This is what you get when you \"divide by 12\" to convert feet to \r\n          inches, but the difference is that you KNOW something\'s wrong.  \r\n      \r\n      - You do not have to even look at the numbers to know that this \r\n         could not possibly be the right number of inches in 10 feet.\r\n\r\n\r\nBrilliant Insight #2: When you use unit conversion factors, you help \r\n  your cause by carrying along both sets of units in the form of a \r\n  fraction as you go through your calculation.  \r\n  \r\n  - If the units on the right-hand side of your final equation don\'t \r\n    match the units you want (after everything else cancels out), your \r\n    numerical answer is almost certainly WRONG.\r\n  \r\n  - The implication here?  To convert units of distance, you need to \r\n       multiply or divide by a \r\n       \r\n       conversion factor = (X New_Units) / (Y Old_Units).  \r\n       \r\n    When you do this, write the conversion factor in its full fractional\r\n       form, and carry out all of the multiplications and cancellations.\r\n  \r\n  - If you do the conversion this way, and the units match, you only \r\n       have to check your arithmetic to be sure you\'ve got it right.\r\n\r\n  - If the units you want do not match those on the right side of the \r\n       equal sign, you are solving the wrong problem.  The equation may \r\n       be correct, but it is not expressed in the units you wanted.\r\n\r\n\r\n 6. Let\'s use the system to solve the second example:\r\n  \r\n                               1 ft       660 in * 1 ft \r\n      660 in * 1 =  660 in *  -------  = --------------- = 55 feet\r\n                               12 in        12 in\r\n \r\n      Why?  The \"inches\" units cancel out because they appear in both \r\n        numerator and denominator (top/bottom, upstairs/downstairs) of\r\n	    the fraction in the next to last term, leaving only \"feet\".\r\n\r\n  Why people hate units and conversion problems:\r\n  https://www.regentsprep.org/regents/math/algebra/am2/leseng.htm\r\n\r\n  Comment: The \"algebraic\" approach suggested here is ugly, ad hoc in\r\n    nature, and unnecessarily complicated.  Forget about setting up\r\n    equations and going through formal operations to solve them.\r\n    \r\n    Choose your conversion factors so that the units work out properly\r\n    as a straight multiplication problem with cancellation of all the\r\n    units you don\'t want.  You may have to \"divide\" numbers, but you\r\n    can use your calculator for working through the numbers.\r\n    \r\n  Cranky Summary: You should not have to solve equations to convert\r\n    between units. Phooey on anyone who says otherwise. :-)\r\n \r\n\r\nSegment 2: Conversions using compound conversion factors.\r\n\r\n1. Suppose I want to find the number of inches in a furlong, or the \r\n   number of acres (or hectares) in a square mile?\r\n   \r\n   - My almanac doesn\'t carry these conversion factors, so I start with \r\n       what I do have and work my way through it.\r\n       \r\n                                       4 rods    16.5 ft    12 in\r\n   1 furlong = 10 chains = 10 chains * ------- * ------- * -------\r\n                                       1 chain    1 rod      1 ft\r\n	\r\n	     = 10 * 4 * 16.5 * 12 inches = ... = 7920 inches \r\n\r\n\r\n2. For acres in a square mile (1 mi^2), we have a bit more to do.\r\n\r\n     Abbreviations used: miles = mi, furlong = fur, chain = ch\r\n     \r\n     Area means that we are dealing in two dimensions, so we have to \r\n        convert the lengths in each dimension.  An acre is already a \r\n        measure of area, so we\'re good.\r\n	\r\n                       1 acre    10 ch    8 fur   10 ch   8 fur\r\n   1 sq mi = 1 mi^2 * -------- * ------ * ----- * ----- * -----\r\n                       10 ch^2   1 fur    1 mi    1 fur   1 mi\r\n		      \r\n	   = (1 mi * 1 mi) * 1 acre * 10 ch * 10 ch   8 fur * 8 fur\r\n	                              ------------- * -------------\r\n					10 ch * ch     1 mi * 1 mi\r\n     \r\n   Units cancel, leaving this:\r\n   \r\n   1 sq mi = 1 acre * (100/10) * (8 * 8) = 10 * 64 acres = 640 acres\r\n  \r\n   \r\nNext time:  \"Hey!  Ready to try metric?\"\r\n\r\n
',229,72,0,'CC-BY-SA','mathematics,units,distance,area',0,1402,1), (1502,'2014-05-06','Practical Math - Units - Distances and Area, Part 2',1834,'Charles in NJ continues Practical Math with an episode on units of distance and area','
\r\nHPR Episode: Using and Converting Between Units of Distance\r\n\r\nIntro: Last time, we talked in general terms about units, numbers and\r\nhow they might be useful in practice.  In this episode, we address some\r\nspecific measurement units that apply to distance and area, and how we\r\nmight convert from one system to another to better understand both.\r\n\r\nEntire point of this episode is this: Carry units in calculations on \r\n  distances and areas, and you\'ll have more success in using them in \r\n  your life.  \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nSegment 1:  Review of Distance and Area conversions in the English system\r\n\r\n1. Links from last time\r\n\r\n   Table of Units: \r\n      https://www.csgnetwork.com/converttable.html\r\n\r\n   To see why the story is tremendously more complicated than my account\r\n      https://en.wikipedia.com/wiki/Mile\r\n\r\n   Fun article on the mile.\r\n      https://www.sizes.com/units/mile.htm\r\n   \r\n   High school student theme on the furlong.\r\n      https://www.writework.com/essay/history-furlong by silverAlex2000\r\n\r\n   Brief dictionary article on the mile, referenced by Dr. Math \r\n      https://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictM.html#mile \r\n      Referred by https://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/61126.html\r\n\r\n   Resource: StackExchange Physics and Maths sections (\"mile\" question)\r\n      https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/57785/difference-between-nautical-and-terrestrial-miles\r\n\r\n\r\n2. Converting between units\r\n   a. Units of distance usually defined as multiples of each other\r\n      - 1 mile = 5,280 feet            - 1 hand = 4 inches\r\n      - 1 foot = 12 inches             - 1 yard = 36 inches\r\n      \r\n      Skipping ahead to look at the metric system, we now have:\r\n      - 1 inch = 2.54 centimeters (exact). Regularized in recent years.\r\n\r\n   b. This works because there\'s consensus on Zero distance, so we don\'t\r\n         have to adjust for differing origins, as we do with the \r\n         non-absolute temperature scales like Fahrenheit and Celsius. \r\n      \r\n      - We\'ll get to temperature, non-absolute scales in a later show.\r\n\r\n   c. For absolute scales, we can convert from one unit to another using\r\n         a \"conversion factor\".  That is, we can convert a measurement \r\n         expressed in one unit to its equivalent in another unit by \r\n         multiplying or dividing by some number to stretch or compress \r\n         the original unit to match the target unit.\r\n	 \r\n      - Example: I know that 1 foot is 12 inches, so how many inches are\r\n          there in 10 feet?  How feet are there in 660 inches?\r\n      \r\n      - It is clear that a factor of 12 ought to be involved, but how do\r\n          I know when to multiply or divide by 12 in the conversion?\r\n      \r\n      - Wait!  I\'m serious.  When you see this problem for the first \r\n          time, you have to think this through to get it right.  \r\n        * Without a system in place, you always have to think about it.\r\n      \r\n      - Answers in naive setup:\r\n          (i) 10 feet = (12 * 10) inches = 120 inches\r\n         (ii) 660 inches = (660 / 12) feet = 55 feet\r\n\r\n3. Having a system.  Or units conversion as \"multiplying by One\"\r\n   \r\n   a. In each of the solutions I wrote down above, I start with an \r\n         equation that looks like this: X inches = Y feet.\r\n\r\n   b. Inches are not feet, and this way of writing down the calculation \r\n        does NOT help you figure you how the conversions should work, or\r\n        whether you should multiply or divide to get the right answers.\r\n\r\n   c. Here\'s a system for creating conversion factors that tell you what\r\n        to do at each step in the units conversion process.  It is based\r\n        on the very obvious fact that when I multiply any number by \'1\',\r\n        its value remains unchanged.\r\n	\r\n      - Start with one of the identities we wrote down at the beginning.\r\n	    In this case, let\'s use:  12 inches = 1 foot\r\n	  \r\n      - If I divide equals by equals, the results are equal.\r\n	    So I can write:\r\n	  \r\n	                                   12 inches      1 foot\r\n	  12 inches = 1 foot implies that  ---------  =  --------- = 1\r\n		                                 1 foot      12 inches\r\n      \r\n      -	Get the first term by dividing my original identity by (1 foot).\r\n      - Get the second term by dividing my original identity by (12 in).\r\n\r\n\r\n   d. To make a conversion from feet to inches, I use:\r\n   \r\n                           12 in    10 ft \r\n      10 ft * 1 = 10 ft * ------- = ------ * 12 in = 10 * 12 in = 120 in\r\n                           1 ft      1 ft\r\n      \r\n      - Note: In the fraction (10 ft) / (1 ft), the units \"cancel out\", \r\n                which leaves a unitless number.\r\n	      \r\n      - Suppose we start with the other form for the conversion factor:\r\n   \r\n                               1 ft    10 square feet \r\n      10 feet * 1 = 10 feet * ------ = -------------- = ???\r\n                              12 in       12 inches\r\n      \r\n      - See?  When I use the form where the units don\'t cancel each \r\n          other, I get a resulting equation that is still correct.  It \r\n          just doesn\'t make much sense to me as a reader.\r\n      \r\n      - This is what you get when you \"divide by 12\" to convert feet to \r\n          inches, but the difference is that you KNOW something\'s wrong.  \r\n      \r\n      - You do not have to even look at the numbers to know that this \r\n         could not possibly be the right number of inches in 10 feet.\r\n\r\n\r\nBrilliant Insight #2: When you use unit conversion factors, you help \r\n  your cause by carrying along both sets of units in the form of a \r\n  fraction as you go through your calculation.  \r\n  \r\n  - If the units on the right-hand side of your final equation don\'t \r\n    match the units you want (after everything else cancels out), your \r\n    numerical answer is almost certainly WRONG.\r\n  \r\n  - The implication here?  To convert units of distance, you need to \r\n       multiply or divide by a \r\n       \r\n       conversion factor = (X New_Units) / (Y Old_Units).  \r\n       \r\n    When you do this, write the conversion factor in its full fractional\r\n       form, and carry out all of the multiplications and cancellations.\r\n  \r\n  - If you do the conversion this way, and the units match, you only \r\n       have to check your arithmetic to be sure you\'ve got it right.\r\n\r\n  - If the units you want do not match those on the right side of the \r\n       equal sign, you are solving the wrong problem.  The equation may \r\n       be correct, but it is not expressed in the units you wanted.\r\n\r\n\r\n 6. Let\'s use the system to solve the second example:\r\n  \r\n                               1 ft       660 in * 1 ft \r\n      660 in * 1 =  660 in *  -------  = --------------- = 55 feet\r\n                               12 in        12 in\r\n \r\n      Why?  The \"inches\" units cancel out because they appear in both \r\n        numerator and denominator (top/bottom, upstairs/downstairs) of\r\n	    the fraction in the next to last term, leaving only \"feet\".\r\n\r\n  Why people hate units and conversion problems:\r\n  https://www.regentsprep.org/regents/math/algebra/am2/leseng.htm\r\n\r\n  Comment: The \"algebraic\" approach suggested here is ugly, ad hoc in\r\n    nature, and unnecessarily complicated.  Forget about setting up\r\n    equations and going through formal operations to solve them.\r\n    \r\n    Choose your conversion factors so that the units work out properly\r\n    as a straight multiplication problem with cancellation of all the\r\n    units you don\'t want.  You may have to \"divide\" numbers, but you\r\n    can use your calculator for working through the numbers.\r\n    \r\n  Cranky Summary: You should not have to solve equations to convert\r\n    between units. Phooey on anyone who says otherwise. :-)\r\n \r\n\r\nSegment 2: Conversions using compound conversion factors.\r\n\r\n1. Suppose I want to find the number of inches in a furlong, or the \r\n   number of acres (or hectares) in a square mile?\r\n   \r\n   - My almanac doesn\'t carry these conversion factors, so I start with \r\n       what I do have and work my way through it.\r\n       \r\n                                       4 rods    16.5 ft    12 in\r\n   1 furlong = 10 chains = 10 chains * ------- * ------- * -------\r\n                                       1 chain    1 rod      1 ft\r\n	\r\n	     = 10 * 4 * 16.5 * 12 inches = ... = 7920 inches \r\n\r\n\r\n2. For acres in a square mile (1 mi^2), we have a bit more to do.\r\n\r\n     Abbreviations used: miles = mi, furlong = fur, chain = ch\r\n     \r\n     Area means that we are dealing in two dimensions, so we have to \r\n        convert the lengths in each dimension.  An acre is already a \r\n        measure of area, so we\'re good.\r\n	\r\n                       1 acre    10 ch    8 fur   10 ch   8 fur\r\n   1 sq mi = 1 mi^2 * -------- * ------ * ----- * ----- * -----\r\n                       10 ch^2   1 fur    1 mi    1 fur   1 mi\r\n		      \r\n	   = (1 mi * 1 mi) * 1 acre * 10 ch * 10 ch   8 fur * 8 fur\r\n	                              ------------- * -------------\r\n                                       10 ch * ch     1 mi * 1 mi\r\n     \r\n   Units cancel, leaving this:\r\n   \r\n   1 sq mi = 1 acre * (100/10) * (8 * 8) = 10 * 64 acres = 640 acres\r\n  \r\n   \r\n\r\nSegment 3: Hey!  Ready to try metric?\r\n\r\n1. Metric system never caught on in the US, although most of English-\r\n     speaking world has adopted it.  Units conversion is easy in the \r\n     metric system, because everything is in powers of 10.\r\n   \r\n   - But you still need to carry along units in calculations!\r\n   \r\n2. Area and distance units in the metric system\r\n\r\n   - Basics of distance: Centimeter is easy for us to see, and now the \r\n       factor to convert centimeters to inches is exact.\r\n       \r\n       1 inch = 2.54 centimeters (cm) exactly\r\n       \r\n                                    1 inch\r\n       1 meter = 100 cm = 100 cm * --------- = 39.37 in (approximate)\r\n                                    2.54 cm \r\n\r\n       1 kilometer = 1,000 meters\r\n       \r\n\r\n   - Basics of area:\r\n \r\n       1 are = 100 sq meters  (area of a square that\'s 10m on each side)\r\n       \r\n                                          100 sq m\r\n       1 hectare = 100 ares = 100 ares * ---------- = 10,000 sq meters\r\n                                           1 are\r\n\r\n3. For short distances, we should do our conversions fairly precisely.\r\n\r\n   - There\'s usually a higher relative error from rounding off too soon.\r\n   - If you measure wood for a small project, you want to be \"close\".\r\n\r\n                        2.54 cm\r\n   So 1 foot = 12 in * --------- = 30.48 cm exactly.  Cut carefully!\r\n                        1 in\r\n			    \r\n4. For larger distances, like distances covered in track and field, or\r\n     the length of a football pitch (to a spectator), approximations can \r\n     give you a nice intuition for comparing units you know and a new\r\n     set of units that you don\'t know as well.\r\n     \r\n   - 1 meter is around 39.37 inches.  Suppose I call it about 1.10 yards\r\n        as a kind of approximate benchmark (39.60 in), so each meter in \r\n        my reckoning is about a quarter of an inch too long?  \r\n   \r\n   - If I\'m planning a space mission, I could be in trouble. \r\n       But how bad would this be for getting an intuitive feel of the \r\n       distances covered by the athletes in the Olympic Games?\r\n\r\n   - Error at  100 meters is about 0.23 in (0.6 cm) * 100 = 60 cm over\r\n           at  200 meters, it\'s 1.1 m over.\r\n           at 1 kilometer, it\'s 5.6 m over.\r\n	   \r\n     Unless you\'re a long-range sharpshooter, 5.6m off in 1 km seems OK.\r\n\r\n\r\n5. Bonus: The news talked about a wildfire that burned 100,000 hectares.\r\n      What kind of area are we talking about?\r\n\r\n   - Let\'s use our approxmation of 1 meter is about 1.1 yards.\r\n   \r\n   - Acres are defined in terms of \"square chains\", so let\'s look at \r\n        meters vs chains to see what we get.\r\n	\r\n	                                               1 m\r\n     1 chain = 4 linear rods = 22 yds = 22 yds * -------- = about 20m\r\n                                                  1.1 yd\r\n\r\n                                                 20m     20m\r\n     1 acre = 10 square chains = 10 ch * 1 ch * ----- * ------\r\n                                                1 ch     1 ch\r\n						       \r\n	    = 10 * 1 * 20m * 20m = 4,000 square meters, or 0.4 hectares\r\n\r\n   - Wow!  An acre\'s about 0.4 hectares, or 1 hectare\'s about 2.5 acres.\r\n\r\n\r\n   So what\'s the answer?\r\n                                               2.5 acres   \r\n      a) 100,000 hectares = 100,000 hectares * --------- = 250,000 acres\r\n                                               1 hectare \r\n\r\n\r\n                                            1 sq. mi    250,000\r\n      b) 100,000 hectares = 250,000 acres * --------- = ------- sq. mi\r\n                                            640 acres     640\r\n					    \r\n	                  = 391 sq. miles (about 400 sq miles)\r\n\r\n   Note: This suggests a shortcut conversion (hectares to square miles).\r\n\r\n                                 640 acres   1 hectare\r\n    1 square mile = 1 sq. mile * --------- * --------- = 256 hectares\r\n                                 1 sq. mi.   2.5 acres\r\n\r\n\r\n6. Final check: Error analysis on this approximate conversion from \r\n      hectares to acres or square miles.\r\n\r\n   - Using Google or \'units\' in the shell, we have:\r\n   \r\n     1 sq mi = 259 hectares to 6 significant digits, versus 256 (1%)\r\n\r\n     Note: If we used 250 hectares per square mile, the relative error \r\n       is 3.5%.  That\'s less than the error in the news report.\r\n\r\n     1 hectare = 2.47105 acres, versus 2.5 (1% error)\r\n\r\n   Units shell command: Dann Washko did a really nice job on \'units\' for HPR.\r\n    * Linux in the Shell #26: https://www.linuxintheshell.org/\r\n    * HPR Episode #1213: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1213\r\n\r\n\r\nFinal word: Unless you are buying, selling or cultivating land, use the \r\n  cruder approximations here to understand the relationships between \r\n  acres, hectares and square miles.  It will make you seem smarter.\r\n  \r\n  - If someone calls you out and says it\'s wrong, blame \"that guy on HPR.\"\r\n\r\n\r\nNext Topic?  Volumes and recipes, other than medicines (separate topic)\r\n  - Volumes are the bottom line in cooking, unless they aren\'t.\r\n  - Hint: You should weigh some items, like some kinds of flour.\r\n
',229,72,0,'CC-BY-SA','mile,furlong,foot,hand,yard,conversion,metric system',0,1344,1), (1499,'2014-05-01','How I Got Into Computers',3597,'linux, computing, minicomputers, Fortran, COBOL, Pascal, Basic','
\r\nHPR Episode: How I Got Into Computers\r\n\r\n1. Got into computers in 1974 in high school.\r\n - School had a DEC PDP-11/20 minicomputer\r\n   * Two ASR-33 Teletype terminals, keypunch, line printer, card sorter\r\n   * Ran older operating system RSTS-11 v4a\r\n     - Too low-end to run anything more recent.\r\n     - 16K words of core memory: point-to-point wired \"cores\"\r\n\r\n - The system was somewhat rudimentary.  It\'s idea of a prompt was:\r\n \r\n READY\r\n \r\n - A Teletype terminal does not have a screen, so the print head \r\n     was the only \"cursor\" to let you know where you are. \r\n \r\nHardware:\r\nPDP-11/20: Computer Museum \r\n  https://www.computerhistory.org/revolution/minicomputers/11/366/1946\r\n  \r\nPDP-11/20: Retro Technology\r\n  https://www.retrotechnology.com/pdp11/exhibit/PDP_11_infoage_1.htm\r\n\r\nASR Model 33 Teletype with PDP-11 model computers\r\n  https://www.retrotechnology.com/pdp11/\r\n  \r\nOperating System:\r\nRSTS-11 System Managers Guide\r\n  https://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/dec/pdp11/rsts/V04/DEC-11-ORSMA-B-D_RSTSmgr_73.pdf\r\n  \r\nRSTS-11 System Users Guide\r\n  https://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/dec/pdp11/rsts/V06/DEC-11-ORSUA-D-D_RSTS_SystemUserGuide_Jul75.pdf\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n2. Learned BASIC-Plus to get anywhere, starting with 1/2-year course\r\n\r\nDEC BASIC Plus Language Manual\r\n  https://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/dec/pdp11/rsts/V04/DEC-11-ORBPA-A-D_BASIC-PLUS_LangMan_Oct72.pdf  \r\n\r\n * Course was taught by a math teacher who was not an amazing programmer, \r\n     but he was a great teacher.  He enabled us to get going with BASIC. \r\n\r\n * Anticipated pairs programming by working on programs with a friend as\r\n    \"Chuck and Duck Enterprises\", but we were mainly having fun.\r\n   - Started by necessity (1 TTY), but we got satisfying results faster\r\n   - Both of us could write code, but we learned about using\r\n       complementary strengths to get cool stuff done.\r\n\r\nPairs programming:\r\n  Pairs Programming, from XP\r\n  https://www.extremeprogramming.org/rules/pair.html\r\n  \r\n  Laurie Williams (Her other stuff is good, too)\r\n  https://collaboration.csc.ncsu.edu/laurie/publications.html\r\n\r\n   \r\n * Small memory --> innovation\r\n   - ASCII Art \"Poster\" Program: \r\n     Create banner with block letters on LP based on terminal input.\r\n   - Developed a mini-language to encode characters, white space, \r\n       newlines for each supported character.\r\n   - This was a special-purpose language used to compress data, rather\r\n       than a cool Domain-Specific Language (DSL).\r\n   - We just wanted to make cool banners to come off the line printer.\r\n\r\nDomain Specific Languages:  Why ours wasn\'t a DSL\r\n  Martin Fowler on DSLs\r\n  https://martinfowler.com/tags/domain%20specific%20language.html\r\n  \r\n\r\n\r\n3. Did a math major in college, after switching away from Comp. Sci.\r\n\r\n * Math had advantages for me\r\n   - More flexible curriculum \r\n   - Abstractions of the time were more fun to play with\r\n \r\n * I used the University computers on jobs as research assistant, tutor, typist\r\n   - Used them in course work, too.\r\n   - Planning my code carefully let me use my excess CPU seconds for fun\r\n   - Rule of Thumb: 1 hour in library is worth 12 hours at the terminal.\r\n\r\n\r\n4. Branching out in hardware, systems and programming languages\r\n\r\n* We learned FORTRAN in the programming courses\r\n   - I resisted the temptation to \"think in FORTRAN\" \r\n   - More general approach felt slower for getting individual jobs done.\r\n   - Working from first principles seemed more reliable\r\n   - Often gave me better solutions than following my nose in FORTRAN\r\n\r\n   Quirky FORTRAN Preprocessor for Structured Programming (SF/K)\r\n   https://www.worldcat.org/title/fundamentals-of-structured-programming-using-fortran-with-sfk-and-watfiv-s/oclc/301094243\r\n\r\n * Later, I picked up Pascal and TOPS-20 Assembly Language\r\n   \r\n   Pascal: From the source\r\n   Pascal User Manual and Report (Springer)  Trade paperback (1975)\r\n   by Kathleen Jensen, K Jensen, N Wirth\r\n\r\n   Trade paperback, Springer, 1975.  English  2nd ed. 167 pages\r\n   ISBN: 0387901442      ISBN-13: 9780387901442\r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n5. Gear and software rundown:\r\n\r\n * Xerox/Honeywell Sigma Six (descended from Scientific Data Systems)  \r\n    (1977 to 1979)\r\n     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP-V_operating_system\r\n     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SDS_Sigma_series\r\n\r\n * DEC System 2060 (relabeled PDP-10) running TOPS-20 on a 36-bit machine\r\n    (1979 to 1981)\r\n     https://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/dec/pdp10/TOPS20/DECnet-20/AA-5091B-TM_TOPS-20_DECnet-20_Programmers_Guide_Jan80.pdf\r\n     https://pdp10.nocrew.org/docs/ad-h391at1.pdf  DECsystem-10 and -20 Processor Ref.\r\n\r\n\r\n6. Summer and Night Job\r\n * The Duration Caper:\r\n   Friend fixing a Fortran program to compute bond duration on a large portfolio.\r\n   - Answers weren\'t coming out, so he printed out several subtotals in his calculation.\r\n   - \"Extend the line\" to include the last term in the numerator of one big fraction \"and you\'ll have it\"\r\n   \r\n   Found a typo in the Jack Clark Francis \"bible\" of investments theory\r\n   - Throwaway question: \"What\'s this duration stuff, anyway?\"\r\n   - Question got me hired as a research assistant by Finance department in Business school\r\n   \r\n   Investments: Analysis and Management, First Edition Hardcover(1972)\r\n   by Jack Clark Francis.  McGraw-Hill Book Company\r\n   ISBN: 0070217858             ISBN-13: 9780070217850\r\n   \r\n\r\n * The \"Sure!  I Know Assembly Language\" Caper\r\n   Offered a job with Finance, conditional on first assignment.\r\n   - Take over maintenance of a Fortran program with inline Assembly Language\r\n   - Original developer was a senior Computer Science major I knew.\r\n   - Gambled that his code was solid.  And won in the end.\r\n   \r\n   Got paid 3 times minimum wage ($7.50/hour versus $2.30) to look up and read research papers.\r\n   - I\'d have done it for free, so this was a sweet gig.\r\n   \r\n   \r\n * Other jobs:\r\n   - Tutoring math, computer science for food or cash\r\n   - Programming jobs\r\n   - Teaching assistant jobs for statistics, finance courses\r\n   - Security and management of student-run darkroom in Summer months == \"reading\"\r\n   - Typing papers on a typewriter\r\n \r\n      \r\n7. After college, started working in non-life insurance.\r\n\r\n * End user computing in actuarial group was in BASIC-Plus on PDP-11s\r\n   - Word processing was in DECword or the WPS-8 dedicated machine.\r\n   - After first year, moved to department-level PDP-11/44\r\n   - For heavy-duty jobs, we also had timesharing access to VAX-11/780\r\n   \r\n * First project was building a database from mainframe data dump\r\n   - EBCDIC data conversion to ASCII led to my education about signed\r\n       data fields in COBOL.\r\n   - I knew hexadecimal math from my assembly language course\r\n   - I\'d seen EBCDIC in dumps while writing FORTRAN on CP-V\r\n   \r\n    Data dumps from 9-track to PDP-11/70 led to Overpunch field conversion\r\n      https://www.3480-3590-data-conversion.com/article-signed-fields.html\r\n\r\n * Note: When you have curly braces at the end of a signed number field, \r\n     the brace opens in the direction of the positive or negative end of\r\n     the number line.\r\n   - Open brace ({): Value ends in zero and has positive sign.  Zero < X\r\n   - Closing brace (}): Value ends in zero and is negative. Zero > X\r\n\r\n * If field ends in A, the value\'s final digit is 1, and it\'s positive\r\n   - B means positive value that ends with a 2, C is 3, ... I is 9.\r\n   - So \"00003757D\" is $   +375.74.\r\n   \r\n * If the field ends in J-R, the value is negative and ends in 1-9.\r\n   - So \"00000255R\" is the value $   -25.59.\r\n   \r\n\r\n\r\n8. Irony: I was asked to help troubleshoot a program that was crashing\r\n     as it was automatically converting the rates and rules manuals away\r\n     from Unix with \'nroff\' to DECword on RSTS in 1982.\r\n  - This may have delayed my adoption of Linux\r\n  - Used Unix (Ultrix) in early 1990s to preprocess data for use in OS/2\r\n  - Had to move to Win 95 and Win NT for work\r\n\r\n\r\n****** Skipping the Dark Period of DOS/Windows and OS/2 Computing ******\r\n  - Turbo Pascal, APL, PICK, QuickBasic, Visual Basic, Excel with VBA\r\n  - Learned SQL dialects, COM, .Net, and scripting languages\r\n\r\nMore from Dark Period: Less Slackware\r\n\r\n\r\n8. Gave Linux a try with Quantian Live CD in 2006 (Thanks, Dirk!)\r\n   https://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/quantian.html \r\n   https://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/quantian-tmp.pdf (PDF description)\r\n   https://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/quantian/quantian_0.7.9.2.quantian.packages.txt\r\n   \r\n * Used Live CDs to try Debian packages, repair PCs, and do math stuff\r\n  - Liked Gnumeric, Python, R, and educational software\r\n  - Wiped my Vista laptop in April, 2008 to install Ubuntu full-time\r\n  - Music, checking, and photo editing kept me from switching other PCs\r\n\r\n9. Tried Ubuntu \"Feisty\" using WUBI on Windows XP on Racing Cow\r\n * Trouble-free install, mainly because I was on an Ethernet cable\r\n   - Tried out Linux software in a risk-free environment to find what I liked\r\n   - GNOME 2 was close enough to Windows and Mac, so no problems with UI\r\n   - Command line was similar to Ultrix and even to DOS, so not so bad.\r\n\r\n * WUBI let me try Ubuntu without having to dual boot or use Live CDs\r\n   - Easy to install and remove, like a Windows application\r\n   - No messy virtualization setup\r\n   - Linux could see and use files on my Windows partition seamlessly\r\n\r\n * Ubuntu \"Hardy\" on \"Titanic\" (retired Dell Latitude D820 laptop)\r\n   - Install was easy, except for wireless networking\r\n   - Had to use NDISWRAPPER at first, but everything worked.\r\n\r\n * Switched my main home desktop (Racing Cow) in April, 2011\r\n  - Just in time for Unity, which would not run on my gear.\r\n  - Gnome 2 ran well on my computers, and they choked on Unity and Gnome 3.\r\n  - Taste and older machines led me to go distro hopping.\r\n  - Dan Lynch of Linux Outlaws pointed me to CrunchBang.  Try it.\r\n      https://crunchbang.org\r\n\r\n\r\n9. Other distros I\'ve tried:\r\n\r\n * Gentoo (June 2011):  https://www.gentoo.org \r\n \r\n   Note: It is not as super-hard as you\'ve been told.\r\n   \r\n   Installed it in three 4-hour sessions after reading docs on train\r\n    - Compiled kernel on first shot\r\n    - Added modules for devices I liked, and that recompile worked\r\n    - Got X working enough to use a browser and a window manager\r\n    - Gave up only because I had not decided on my workflows\r\n    - Was afraid to mix GTK and QT or KDE packages at that stage\r\n    - Unsure about reversing wrong choices \r\n    - Unfamiliar toolkits scared me, although I had no real problems\r\n  \r\n   Conclusion: My problem with Gentoo?  Between keyboard and chair. \r\n\r\n\r\n * Slackware (several times):  https://www.slackware.org\r\n   \r\n   Always installs on first try for me, with huge kernel\r\n    - Knowing what to do after initial install was the problem here, too\r\n    - To remove fear, I updated my 13.37 with all patches by hand\r\n    - Manual updates after install took 2 hours, including learning pkgtool\r\n    - Using generic or custom kernels is only hard when I\'m stupid\r\n      * Be sure the drivers to operate your boot disk are compiled in\r\n   \r\n   Conclusion: After hating older versions, it\'s KDE 4 for the win!\r\n   \r\n     \r\n * SlackerMedia book:  https://slackermedia.info\r\n   \r\n   Helpful tips on designing workstation around workflows\r\n    - Uses SlackBuilds and SlackBuild queues for repeatable configuration\r\n    - Gave me idea for groups working on math software-in-progress\r\n    - Slackware package format is simple, easy to grasp (for binaries)\r\n    - SlackBuilds: close to a universal format for sharing program source\r\n   \r\n   Why Slackware?\r\n    - There are SlackBuild scripts for Sage and other packages I like\r\n    - Slackware comes with support for TeX for math writing\r\n    - SlackerMedia has queues for audio, video, web editing, publishing\r\n   \r\n   Conclusion: SlackerMath is born.  Still needs to be fleshed out.\r\n    - Slackware distribution-from-scratch based on SlackBuilds\r\n    - Set it up as you wish using your own custom queues\r\n    - Suggested packages would include Sage, R, Octave, GSL, QuantLib,\r\n        Grass GIS, kile, gretl, Tux Racer, euler, gnucap, and others\r\n    - Languages: Python with NumPy/SciPy/matplotlib and bindings to \r\n        other languages/libraries, Scheme, Perl, Lua, C and Fortran\r\n        \r\n * Also tried the following, but didn\'t stay with them\r\n   - Slax (www.slax.org)\r\n   - \r\n11. Right now: \r\n  * Five of our six former Windows computers have switched to Linux.\r\n    - \"Surfing Cow\" decommissioned with CrunchBang as its final O/S.\r\n    - \"Racing Cow\" still going strong with CrunchBang\r\n    - Sony FE laptop \"White Cloud\" running Ubuntu 13.04\r\n    - Derringer is my audio editing machine, because it\'s under 3 lbs.\r\n    - Laptop \"Titanic\" died after a baptism in red wine\r\n      Back to life with new keyboard, disk, and name -- \"Lazarus\"\r\n      \r\n  * Number six (\"Dawn Pixie\") about to go to a Linux \"granny\" distro\r\n    - Linux Mint or PCLinuxOS (KDE version)\r\n    - Need a \"granny\" distros for generic use by all comers\r\n\r\n
',229,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','DEC,PDP-11/20,ASR-33,RSTS-11,BASIC,FORTRAN,Pascal,VAX-11/780,Ultrix,Linux,Ubuntu,Gentoo,Slackware',0,1491,1), (1498,'2014-04-30','Personal OpenVPN',2295,'John Duarte talks about setting up OpenVPN','

Personal OpenVPN

\r\n

\r\nThis guide will walk you through setting up an OpenVPN server as well as a client.\r\n

\r\n

OpenVPN Server Setup

\r\n

\r\nHere is how to install OpenVPN on Centos6. Other RedHat derivatives should be similar.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/6/i386/epel-release-6-8.noarch.rpm\r\n    rpm -Uvh epel-release-6-8.noarch.rpm\r\n    yum install openvpn -y\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHere is how to install OpenVPN on a Debian server. Other Debian derivatives should be similar.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    apt-get install openvpn\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nAfter the server is installed, the server certificate authority and keys must be generated.\r\nThis will be followed by the client keys, and then the server configuration file.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCopy the easy-rsa scripts into /etc/openvpn\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    cp -rf /usr/share/doc/openvpn/examples/easy-rsa/2.0/* /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa  # on Debian\r\n
\r\n
\r\n    cp -rf /usr/share/openvpn/easy-rsa/2.0/* /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa  # on Centos6\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSet Environmental variables\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    cd /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa\r\n    vim vars\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nChange the following variables to meet your needs. These are used for your\r\nconvenience. They will be used as the defaults during the interactive key\r\ngeneration session to set the keys attributes.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    export KEY_COUNTRY=\"US\"\r\n    export KEY_PROVINCE=\"CA\"\r\n    export KEY_CITY=\"SanFrancisco\"\r\n    export KEY_ORG=\"Fort-Funston\"\r\n    export KEY_EMAIL=\"me@myhost.mydomain\"\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSource the variables to the current shell\r\n

\r\n

\r\n . ./vars\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCreate certificate authority\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    ./clean-all\r\n    ./build-ca\r\n    ./build-dh\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCreate keys for the server and clients\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    ./build-key-server server\r\n    ./build-key client1\r\n    ./build-key client2\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSetup the server configuration file\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n  cd /etc/openvpn\r\n  gunzip /usr/share/doc/openvpn/examples/sample-config-files/server.conf.gz  # on Debian\r\n  vim /etc/openvpn/server.conf\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nServer settings\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    port 1194\r\n    proto udp\r\n    dev tun\r\n    ca     /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa/keys/ca.crt\r\n    cert   /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa/keys/server.crt\r\n    key    /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa/keys/server.key\r\n    dh     /etc/openvpn/easy-rsa/keys/dh2048.pem\r\n    server 10.10.42.0 255.255.255.0\r\n    ifconfig-pool-persist ipp.txt\r\n    client-config-dir ccd\r\n    route 10.10.42.0 255.255.255.0\r\n    client-to-client\r\n    keepalive 10 120\r\n    cipher AES-256-CBC   # AES\r\n    comp-lzo\r\n    user nobody\r\n    group nogroup\r\n    persist-key\r\n    persist-tun\r\n    status openvpn-status.log\r\n    verb 3\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nRestart VPN Service\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    service openvpn restart\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf the service fails to start, try starting openVPN manually.\r\nThe resulting errors will allow you to see what item in the\r\nconfiguration file is incorrect.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    openvpen server.conf\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nOnce you are able to get openVPN to start without error,\r\nkill it and restart it using the service command above.\r\nYou can verify that the vpn is successfully running by\r\nlooking at the configured interfaces using the following\r\ncommand.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    ifconfig\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYou should now see an entry like the following:\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\ntun0      Link encap:UNSPEC  HWaddr 00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00\r\n          inet addr:10.10.42.1  P-t-P:10.10.42.2  Mask:255.255.255.255\r\n          UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING NOARP MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1\r\n          RX packets:622255 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0\r\n          TX packets:986993 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0\r\n          collisions:0 txqueuelen:100\r\n          RX bytes:40649523 (38.7 MiB)  TX bytes:1344026670 (1.2 GiB)\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

OpenVPN Client Setup

\r\n

\r\nThe installation of OpenVPN for linux is the same as described above for\r\nthe server. For Windows, Download and run the OpenVPN installer from the\r\nOpenVPN Community Downloads.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nNOTE: On Windows, User Account Control (UAC) must be turned\r\noff in order to allow OpenVPN to execute the necessary network\r\ncommands to bring up the VPN. Open Start > Control Panel >\r\nUser Accounts and Family Safety > User Accounts > Change User\r\nAccount Control Settings. Set to Never Notify, click OK,\r\nand reboot the machine.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nClient Configuration file\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor linux, the client config file would go in `/etc/openvpn` just like\r\nthe server config. We will name it `client.conf` to clarify that the\r\ndevice is being configured as an OpenVPN client.\r\nOn Windows, the keys and client config files go in the\r\n`C:\\Program Files (x86)\\OpenVPN\\config`. The config file has\r\nto have an `.ovpn` suffix.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    client\r\n    dev tun\r\n    proto udp\r\n    remote myvpn.example.org 1194\r\n    resolv-retry infinite\r\n    nobind\r\n    user nobody\r\n    group nogroup\r\n    persist-key\r\n    persist-tun\r\n    ca     /etc/openvpn/keys/ca.crt\r\n    # on Windows, the format is:\r\n    # ca \"C:\\\\Program Files (x86)\\\\OpenVPN\\\\config\\\\ca.crt\"\r\n    # Windows may also change the file suffix on the crt files to cer.\r\n    # So, If Windows complains that it cannot find the file,\r\n    # examine its properties to verify the suffix.\r\n    # The logs are stored at C:\\\\Program Files (x86)\\\\OpenVPN\\\\log\r\n    cert   /etc/openvpn/keys/client1.crt\r\n    key    /etc/openvpn/keys/client1.key\r\n    ns-cert-type server\r\n    cipher AES-256-CBC\r\n    comp-lzo\r\n    verb 3\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nCopy client key and server ca files onto client\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    scp  ca.crt  user@client1:.openvpn/\r\n    scp  client1.crt  user@client1:.openvpn/\r\n    scp  client1.key  user@client1:.openvpn/\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nOn the server create the ccd directory to assign static addresses to clients.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    mkdir /etc/openvpn/ccd\r\n
\r\n

\r\n

\r\nFor each device, add a file with the CN name of the key.\r\nIn that file, you will indicate the static address to be used and the server IP\r\nFor linux, the server IP will be the VPN address of your VPN server. On Windows, the VPN client\r\nwill set up a local TAP interface that must be used as the server IP. See the OpenVPN docs for available\r\nclient and TAP server IP pairs.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nExamples:\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n    cat /etc/openvpn/ccd/linux-client\r\n    ifconfig-push 10.10.42.10 10.10.42.1\r\n    cat /etc/openvpn/ccd/windows-client\r\n    ifconfig-push 10.10.42.13 10.10.42.14\r\n
\r\n

\r\n\r\n

References:

\r\n\r\n\r\n',277,74,1,'CC-BY-SA','OpenVPN,Centos6,Debian',0,1567,1), (1503,'2014-05-07','Making Waves-The DSO Pocket Oscilloscope',1280,'NYbill discusses the DSO Pocket Oscilloscope v3. A few circuits are set up to test it','

\r\nNYbill discusses the DSO Pocket Oscilloscope v3. A few test circuits are set up to put the scope through its paces. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe DSO at Adafruit:\r\nhttps://www.adafruit.com/products/468\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe 555 timer chip:\r\nhttps://electronicsclub.info/555timer.htm#astable\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe script used to blink the Teensy:\r\nhttps://www.pjrc.com/teensy/loader_linux.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nPictures for the episode:\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/collection/pics-for-an-hpr-ep-making-waves/\r\n

\r\n ',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','electronics,oscilloscope,555 timer,teensy',0,1402,1), (1504,'2014-05-08','HPR at NELF 2014 Afterparty',2358,'In this episode, Members of the HPR community, and attendees of NELF share their thoughts about the ','

\r\nIn this episode, Members of the HPR community, and attendees of NELF share their thoughts about the 2014 Northeast GNU/Linux Fest. Sorry for the dynamic range of this one. I levelled it out the best I could. Also sorry for getting this out so late. RL has been kicking my ass lately.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSome interesting things that were mentioned that may be worth checking out:\r\nThe NELF talks and website:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nThe Zoom H1 Recorders are fantastic devices, and we need to thank the HPR community for chipping in to buy one. They definitely pick up more sound than I did when the podcast was being recorded. I heard things in playback that I wish I had heard and addressed during the live recording. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nThanks to Richard Stallman for the lyrics to the Free Software Song\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThanks to The GNU/Stallmans for their performance of the Free Software Song on the RevolutionOS documentary. https://www.revolution-os.com/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe all had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. Please join us at the next Northeast Gnu/Linux Fest if you can. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR conference crew\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',109,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Conference Interviews',0,1335,1), (1535,'2014-06-20','31 - LibreOffice Calc - Sheet Editing and Navigation',1238,'Editing and navigating sheets, rows and columns in LibreOffice Calc','\n

This episode covers various editing techniques you might use, including multiple sheets, and adding, removing and hiding rows and columns. We also discuss how to navigate around a multiple sheet spreadsheet.

\n

LibreOffice Calc, like all spreadsheets, contains a large number of cells in various rows, columns, and sheets, and navigating that can get a little tricky. As we saw previously, each cell has an address, which is marked by the column (letters) and the row (numbers), always in that order. But in fact the address can be larger because we never discussed sheets.

\n

By default, when you create a new Calc spreadsheet you will have three sheets in it, which you see as tabs along the bottom of the screen. They will be called Sheet 1, Sheet 2, and Sheet 3 at this point. But these defaults can be changed by going to Tools–>Options–>LibreOffice Calc–>Defaults. On this screen you can decide how many sheets you want to have on a new document. While the default as it comes is three (similar to Microsoft Excel) you can change it. On my copy of Calc I changed it to 1, because most of the time I never need more than one sheet for my work. I can also change the default naming of new sheets here. Instead of each sheet being “Sheet 1″, Sheet 2″, etc. I could make it something else, like “Tab 1″, “Tab 2″. and so on. I never bother with this though, because I will always name my sheets for what they are doing in a given spreadsheet (e.g. look at what I did when I created the simple model for “What-If” analysis.) And if I need to add a sheet, I can just go to Insert–>Sheet to bring up a window to specify where the sheet should go, what it should be named, or even insert a sheet from a file . A CSV file would be a very good choice here, such as if you wanted to bring in data from a database or another spreadsheet for use in the current spreadsheet.

\n\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc',0,1309,1), (1545,'2014-07-04','32 - LibreOffice Calc - Introduction to Charts and Graphs',1184,'LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, chart, graph','

There are many Charts and Graphs available in LibreOffice Calc, but choosing the right one makes a difference. In this episode we review your options and help you to make the right choice.

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc',0,1279,1), (1555,'2014-07-18','33 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating Charts',881,'Creating Charts with LibreOffice Calc','

\r\nIn creating a chart or graph you have a number of options that can make your chart easier to read and understand. In this episode we look at these options and explain what each of them does.\r\n

\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, chart, graph',0,1242,1), (1506,'2014-05-12','HPR AudioBookClub 6 Shaman Tales Book 1 South Coast',3595,'In this episode, the hackerpublicradio.org Audiobook Club reviews Shaman Tales Book1: South Coast.','

\r\nIn this episode, the hackerpublicradio.org Audiobook Club reviews Shaman Tales Book1: South Coast. You can download this audiobook for free (or voluntary donation) from https://podiobooks.com/title/shaman-tales-1-south-coast/ and available in paperback on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Crown-Conspiracy-Michael-J-Sullivan/dp/0980003431\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDuring this show the hosts also discuss beverages.\r\nColin was drinking a Badger Brewery Golden Glory, and quite enyoyed it. https://www.hall-woodhouse.co.uk/beer/golden-glory \r\npokey drank a Fosters Lager, and he didn\'t like it very much. Thankfully he only wanted it for the can. Sadly, it really seemed to go straight to his head. https://www.fostersbeer.com/ \r\nAccording to Fosters\' website, \"You need to upgrade your Flash Player.\" Good luck with that.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nOur next audiobook will be The Crown Conspiracy by Michael J. Sullivan\r\nhttps://podiobooks.com/title/the-crown-conspiracy/\r\nThis book was suggested by pokey. pokey likes The Crown Conspiracy very much and has found it appropriate to suggest to both his mother and his daughter.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYou can find more content (including podcasts) from Nathan Lowell https://nathanlowell.com/\r\nWe discussed looking up interviews with Nathan Lowell, and as it turns out he has links to lots of them on his website https://nathanlowell.com/multimedia/interviews-articles/ If you\'re a Nathan Lowell fan, you\'ve got many hours of enjoyment ahead of you. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nColin welcomes your feedback via email to gigasphere\"nineteeneighty\" at gee mail dot com\r\npokey prefers his feedback to come via the hacker public radio comment system.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nPlease remember to visit the HPR contribution page. We could really use your help right now. https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe both had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR_AudioBookClub\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub',0,1339,1), (1507,'2014-05-13','HPR Community News for April 2014',4059,'Website changes, comment systems, Series help, Ham Radio, Show tagging','

HPR Community News for April 2014

\r\n\r\n

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nWelcome to our new hosts:
\r\n x1101, \r\n John Duarte.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
IdTitleHost
1477OSI layer 3Various Hosts
1478Batteries Part 2MrX
147901 What is on my podcast playerAhuka
1480Continuous Ink Supply SystemKen Fallon
1481Encryption and GmailAhuka
148202 What is on my podcast playerAhuka
1483HPR Community News for March 2014HPR Admins
1484TuxJam31Andrew Conway
148526 - LibreOffice Calc CellsAhuka
1486Linux Luddites Episode 11 - Interview with Rob LandleyKen Fallon
1487How I Found Linuxx1101
1488What's on My PodcatcherKeith Murray
1489Setting up a Raspberry Pi and RaspBMCCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
1490HPR at NELF 2014 Part1pokey
1491Heartbleedlaindir
1492HPR at NELF 2014 Part2NYbill
1493The Next Gen is You (1/2)klaatu
1494The Next Gen is You (2/2)klaatu
149527 - LibreOffice Calc - Calculations and the Formula BarAhuka
1496wiki on the raspberry piMrX
1497Practical Math - Units - Distances and Area, Part 1Charles in NJ
1498Personal OpenVPNJohn Duarte
\r\n\r\n

Mailing List discussions

\r\n

\r\nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes \r\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\r\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\r\nGmane\r\narchive.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDiscussed this month was:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1384,1), (1508,'2014-05-14','In Defense of Play',1593,'Just a few words in defense of play. It is the best way to learn new things.','

\r\nThis episode is a just-for-fun show in which I make a few observations in defense of just playing around. We need to \r\nstop worrying about work and to-do lists every once in a while in order to just get up off our chairs and do something\r\nthat is fun. It doesn\'t have to have a structure at first, but it should involve a challenge or exposure to at least\r\none new thing, or place, or person, or idea.\r\n\r\nI think it is the best way to learn, because the knowledge and acquisition of skills sneak up on you while you are\r\nhaving fun. It may be the only way to make learning really stick, and to stick with the learning process.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Links

\r\n

\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDr. Peter Gray on the Play Deficit: https://aeon.co/magazine/being-human/children-today-are-suffering-a-severe-deficit-of-play/\r\n

\r\n\r\n

\r\nArticles from the Journal of Play: https://www.ecswe.org/wren/researchpapers_theimportanceofplay.html\r\n

',229,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','play, learning, fun',0,1431,1), (1509,'2014-05-15','HPR Needs Shows',181,'HPR is short of shows and we need you to send in some today','

\r\nHPR is short of shows and we need you to send in some today\r\n

',159,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','HPR, shows, request, call to action, community, contribute',0,1366,1), (1510,'2014-05-16','What\'s in My Bag?',1858,'Just a few words about what\'s in my bag(s).','

\r\nThis episode is a just-for-fun show in which I walk systematically through\r\nthe bags I was carrying to work on a particular day, and describe what I\r\nhave found inside.\r\n

',229,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','play, learning, fun',0,1513,1), (1513,'2014-05-21','Stir-Fried Stochasticity: Bio-Boogers',877,'Epicanis demonstrates a show concept: REAL science news, direct from a scientific journal articles','

\r\nThis is a show concept I came up with half a decade ago, as the show itself explains. The journal article may be found as PubMed ID#19323757 ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19323757 ) if you want to follow along.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHopefully the updated time references below for the show-note comments are now correct for this version of it. They should be close, anyway. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nAlso, I\'m oddly pleased at how inferior the \"old\" part of today\'s episode sounds: it means I\'ve actually gotten a lot better at recording and editing.\r\n(It\'s quite listenable still, I think, it just doesn\'t sound as good as the newer stuff.)\r\n

\r\n\r\n',182,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Stir-Fried Stochasticity, science, microbiology, food science, polysaccharides, food, probiotics, snot, boogers, digestion',0,1358,1), (1511,'2014-05-19','How to skin a snake',962,'How to skin a snake, and cure the skin for later use','

\r\nHow to skin a snake, and cure the skin for later use\r\n

',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','snake,skin,curing',0,1353,1), (1512,'2014-05-20','Adopting and Renovating a Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook',1252,'I discuss one of my latest projects, a digital overhaul of a 100+ year old counterpoint textbook','

\r\nIn this episode I discuss the problem of increasingly expensive college textbooks, and share with you the solution I devised to combat the problem in my counterpoint class at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nPart of the solution is to adopt a public-domain textbook that\'s more than 100 years old, and to give the text a 21st-century makeover that I believe will make it even better-suited for the digital age than any other comparable book in the market at any price.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://jonathankulp.org/gratis.html: \r\nThe counterpoint page on my website, with source files and information about my creative-commons counterpoint workbook, \"Gratis ad Parnassum,\" as well as links to the 1910 counterpoint textbook by\r\nPercy Goetschius: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percy_Goetschius entitled \"Exercises in Elementary Counterpoint.\"\r\n

\r\n

\r\nMy html version of the Goetschius textbook (in progress): https://jonkulp.net/350/Goetschius/goetschius.html\r\n

',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','public-domain, textbooks, music, counterpoint, Lilypond, html, scripting',0,1356,1), (1514,'2014-05-22','Give The Small Guy A Try',730,'Beeza and seeing if there is software which may suit your needs better than the mainstream','

\r\nBeeza hates being told what to do. When he moved over to Linux he noticed how most users were barely scratching the surface of the huge choice of software offered by the repositories. Rather than just go with the flow and settle for what everybody else was using, it was in his nature to look for alternatives to the most popular applications.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHe discovered some total rubbish, but also some real gems which deserve far greater exposure than they receive. Reviews of some of these excellent but relatively unknown packages will form the basis of future HPR episodes.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIn this episode Beeza makes the case for investing a little time digging around in the repositories to see if there is software which may suit your requirements better than the mainstream applications.\r\n

\r\n',246,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Libre Office,mhWaveEdit,Decibel Audio Player',0,1528,1), (1520,'2014-05-30','The Ext File System',313,'The Ext File System','The Ext File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,extended file system,ext,inode',0,1654,1), (1530,'2014-06-13','The Ext2 File System',326,'The Ext2 File System','The Ext2 File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,second extended filesystem,ext2,ext2fs,inode table',0,1509,1), (1540,'2014-06-27','The Journaling File System',326,'The Journaling File System','The Journaling File System\n',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,journaling file system,inode',0,1479,1), (1550,'2014-07-11','The Ext3 and 4 File System',476,'The Ext3 and 4 File System','The Ext3 and 4 File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','filesystem,ext3,ext4',0,1543,1), (1560,'2014-07-25','The reiserfs File System',212,'The reiserfs File System','The reiserfs File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,journaling,reiserfs',0,0,1), (1570,'2014-08-08','The JFS File System',329,'The JFS File System','The JFS File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,journaling file system,JFSA,B+ tree',0,0,1), (1580,'2014-08-22','The FAT and NTFS File Systems',563,'The FAT and NTFS File Systems','The FAT and NTFS File Systems\n',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,FAT,NTFS',0,0,1), (1590,'2014-09-05','The xfs File System',326,'The xfs File System','The xfs File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,journalling,64-bit,B+ tree',0,0,1), (1600,'2014-09-19','The zfs File System',436,'The zfs File System','The zfs File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,copy-on-write,snapshot,RAID-Z',0,0,1), (1610,'2014-10-03','The BTRFS File System',534,'The BTRFS File System','The BTRFS File System',129,77,1,'CC-BY-SA','file system,copy-on-write,B-tree file system',0,0,1), (1516,'2014-05-26','01 The podcasts I listen to',1439,'I listen to a lot of podcasts and thought it might be interesting if I shared them on HPR','

I listen to a lot of podcasts. I started listening to them back in around 2005 after buying my first portable player.

\n

I now listen to podcasts to the exclusion of just about everything else and have several players which I rotate between. I gave up watching TV over two years ago. I have written my own podcatcher software based upon Bashpodder, with a PostgreSQL database to manage everything, which holds feed, episode, playlist and player details.

\n

My interests range from Astronomy to Virology with a bias towards IT-related subjects. I currently subscribe to 85 feeds, which I present to you here in two batches. I have attached my own category to each feed, so I can load all the Science episodes on one player, and Documentary episodes on another, and so forth. I have added the category to the list as well and have sorted the list by category and the title.

\n

Note: The list below is generated by a script which performs a query on my database. I have relied on parsing the feeds themselves for the websites, using the link value. In a few cases the value is unfortunately incorrect or missing because the feed is mis-configured.

\n

I have included an OPML version of the list in case you want to load it or part of it into your podcatcher. Find it at https://www.hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1516.opml

\n
    \n
  1. \n

    Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4

    \n \n
  2. \n
  3. \n

    Geologic Podcast

    \n \n
  4. \n
  5. \n

    Documentary of the Week

    \n \n
  6. \n
  7. \n

    In Our Time With Melvyn Bragg

    \n \n
  8. \n
  9. \n

    Lives in a Landscape

    \n \n
  10. \n
  11. \n

    The Radio 3 Documentary

    \n \n
  12. \n
  13. \n

    Costing the Earth

    \n \n
  14. \n
  15. \n

    Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo\'s Film Reviews

    \n \n
  16. \n
  17. \n

    The Film Programme

    \n \n
  18. \n
  19. \n

    Escape Pod

    \n \n
  20. \n
  21. \n

    PodCastle

    \n \n
  22. \n
  23. \n

    CCHits.net

    \n \n
  24. \n
  25. \n

    Best of Natural History Radio

    \n \n
  26. \n
  27. \n

    Coast and Country

    \n \n
  28. \n
  29. \n

    From Our Own Correspondent

    \n \n
  30. \n
  31. \n

    Peter Day\'s World of Business

    \n \n
  32. \n
  33. \n

    A Point of View

    \n \n
  34. \n
  35. \n

    Moral Maze

    \n \n
  36. \n
  37. \n

    Thinking Allowed

    \n \n
  38. \n
  39. \n

    365 Days of Astronomy

    \n \n
  40. \n
  41. \n

    Astronomy Cast

    \n \n
  42. \n
  43. \n

    AWESOME ASTRONOMY

    \n \n
  44. \n
  45. \n

    BBC Inside Science

    \n \n
  46. \n
  47. \n

    Click

    \n \n
  48. \n
  49. \n

    Discovery

    \n \n
  50. \n
  51. \n

    Dr Karl and the Naked Scientist

    \n \n
  52. \n
  53. \n

    Inside Health

    \n \n
  54. \n
  55. \n

    Naked Astronomy - From the Naked Scientists

    \n \n
  56. \n
  57. \n

    Naked Genetics - Taking a look inside your genes

    \n \n
  58. \n
  59. \n

    Naked Neuroscience - From the Naked Scientists

    \n \n
  60. \n
  61. \n

    Naked Oceans from the Naked Scientists

    \n \n
  62. \n
  63. \n

    Science for the People

    \n \n
  64. \n
  65. \n

    Science in Action

    \n \n
  66. \n
  67. \n

    The Digital Human

    \n \n
  68. \n
  69. \n

    The Infinite Monkey Cage

    \n \n
  70. \n
  71. \n

    The Life Scientific

    \n \n
  72. \n
  73. \n

    - The Naked Scientists Podcast - Stripping Down Science

    \n \n
  74. \n
  75. \n

    This Week in Microbiology with Vincent Racaniello

    \n \n
  76. \n
  77. \n

    This Week in Parasitism

    \n \n
  78. \n
  79. \n

    This Week in Virology with Vincent Racaniello

    \n \n
  80. \n
  81. \n

    Doctor Who: Radio Free Skaro

    \n \n
  82. \n
\n',225,75,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,recommendations',0,1446,1), (1557,'2014-07-22','Encrypting E-mail on Android; Importing Keys',1865,'This episode looks at a sensible model of obtaining the right amount of security for your needs.','

We have looked at e-mail encryption on both Thunderbird and G-Mail, and that is good, but in 2014 a lot of people use mobile phones and tablets for their e-mail. So it makes sense to look at how we can do this. The solution I am going explore here involves two components, the K-9 Android mail client, and APG, the Android Privacy Guard. I am going to stick to what I know, so if you are looking for help with iPhone or iPad, the best I can do is suggest that you try a Google search. On Android, while many people use Gmail, K-9 is a very popular client for people looking for a more traditional POP3 or IMAP client to handle their e-mail needs. So this should be a good solution for many people. As regards APG, I am not aware that anyone has done an audit of this program. It seems to be the most widely recommended, and is probably OK, but I am making no larger claims for it. - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=602

\n

Links:

\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','Security and Privacy series, cost/benefit',0,1248,1), (1572,'2014-08-12','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',287,'Fedora Scientific, pharmaceutical research, Apache Open Climate workbench.','

\r\nIn this episode: The new Fedora Scientific Spin, open source approaches to pharmaceutical research, and the Apache Open Climate workbench.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','Fedora Scientific,pharmaceutical research,Apache Open Climate workbench',0,0,1), (1581,'2014-08-25','Sensible Security: The Schneier Model',1698,'This episode looks at a sensible model of obtaining the right amount of security for your needs.','

Back in 2001 there was a certain incident on September 11 that lead many people to go OMG! We are doomed! We must increase security! Do whatever it takes! And the NSA was happy to oblige. And on 7/7/05 an attack in London added to the frenzy. I think it is fair to say that these security agencies felt they were given a mandate to do anything as long as it stops the attacks, and thus was the overwhelming attack on privacy moved to a whole level higher. To be clear, security agencies are always pushing the limits, it is in their DNA. And politicians have learned that you never lose votes by insisting on stronger security and appearing tough. - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=577

\n

Links:

\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','Security and Privacy series, cost/benefit',0,0,1), (1605,'2014-09-26','38 - LibreOffice Calc - simple Descriptive Statistics',1149,'Descriptive statistics is how we make basic measurements about a population','

In Statistics there are generally speaking two types of analysis, broken down between Descriptive and Inferential statistics. The difference has to do what what claims you are making about the data. If you are simply stating something about the data (e.g. there were more men than women in the sample) that is descriptive. But if you make a claim that something is not likely to occur by chance, for instance, or that something is statistically significant (and both of those statements are essentially the same thing) then you are in the realm of inferential statistics. Calc has functions to do both kinds of analysis, and this tutorial will examine some of the common descriptive statistics in Calc and how they are used. - For more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=844

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, functions, descriptive statistics',0,0,1), (1615,'2014-10-10','39 - LibreOffice Calc - Inferential Statistics Functions',1212,'Inferential statistics is how we draw conclusions from data and make predictions.','

Inferential statistics is what you do to say that something is likely, or that it is not due to chance, or things of the sort. It goes beyond simply describing what is in the numbers and lets you say something about what the numbers in a sample might mean for the population that generated the sample. There are several type of Inferential Statistics that I want to address in this tutorial, beginning with the idea of a confidence interval. - For more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=861

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, functions, inferential, statistics',0,0,1), (1625,'2014-10-24','40 - LibreOffice Calc - Other Functions',913,'A quick look at some miscellaneous functions in Calc.','

We spent a lot of time looking at some Financial and Statistical functions. I don\'t propose to go into the remaining types of function in nearly the same depth. That would draw out the series without benefit to most people. But I do want to highlight some of the functions in the other categories so that you have an idea of what is possible in Calc. Remember that if you need to know more about them Google is your friend. - For more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=875

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, functions',0,0,1), (1517,'2014-05-27','The set of prime numbers is infinite',443,'johanv talks about prime numbers','

\r\nIn this short article I want to talk about prime numbers. In particular:\r\nabout the fact that there exist an infinite number of prime numbers. This\r\nhas been proven more than 2000 years ago, but I noticed that a lot of\r\nmy friends that don\'t have a mathematical background, aren\'t aware of\r\nthis fact.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYet it is rather easy to prove. So that is what I\'ll be doing in this\r\narticle. If you are afraid of math, don\'t worry, it won\'t take more than\r\n10 minutes.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nA transcript of this show can be found on my blog:\r\nhttps://www.johanv.org/node/211\r\n

',233,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','math,prime numbers',0,1451,1), (1518,'2014-05-28','02 The podcasts I listen to',1658,'I listen to a lot of podcasts and thought it might be interesting if I shared them on HPR','

I listen to a lot of podcasts. I started listening to them back in around 2005 after buying my first portable player.

\n

This is a continuation of the 85 podcast feeds I subscribe to. In my last show I reported on the first 41 of the set. Here are the remaining 44 feeds.

\n

Note: The list below is generated by a script which performs a query on my database. I have relied on parsing the feeds themselves for the websites, using the link value. In a few cases the value is unfortunately incorrect or missing because the feed is mis-configured.

\n

I have included an OPML version of the list in case you want to load it or part of it into your podcatcher. Find it at https://www.hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1516.opml

\n
    \n
  1. \n

    Amateur Skeptics

    \n \n
  2. \n
  3. \n

    Geeks Without God

    \n \n
  4. \n
  5. \n

    InKredulous

    \n \n
  6. \n
  7. \n

    Rationally Speaking

    \n \n
  8. \n
  9. \n

    Skepticality:The Official Podcast of Skeptic Magazine

    \n \n
  10. \n
  11. \n

    Skeptics with a K

    \n \n
  12. \n
  13. \n

    Skepticule

    \n \n
  14. \n
  15. \n

    The Pod Delusion

    \n \n
  16. \n
  17. \n

    The Pod Delusion » Pod Delusion Extra

    \n \n
  18. \n
  19. \n

    The Skeptics\' Guide to the Universe

    \n \n
  20. \n
  21. \n

    The Skeptic Zone

    \n \n
  22. \n
  23. \n

    2600 - 2600: The Hackers Quarterly

    \n \n
  24. \n
  25. \n

    bsdtalk

    \n \n
  26. \n
  27. \n

    /dev/random Cast

    \n \n
  28. \n
  29. \n

    FLOSS Weekly (MP3)

    \n \n
  30. \n
  31. \n

    Free as in Freedom

    \n \n
  32. \n
  33. \n

    Frostcast OGG

    \n \n
  34. \n
  35. \n

    Full Circle Magazine » podcast

    \n \n
  36. \n
  37. \n

    GNU World Order

    \n \n
  38. \n
  39. \n

    Hacker Public Radio

    \n \n
  40. \n
  41. \n

    KernelPanic Oggcast

    \n \n
  42. \n
  43. \n

    Knightwise.com Audio Feed.

    \n \n
  44. \n
  45. \n

    Linux Basement Podcast

    \n \n
  46. \n
  47. \n

    Linux In Da House Ogg-Vorbis Feed

    \n \n
  48. \n
  49. \n

    Linux Luddites » Ogg

    \n \n
  50. \n
  51. \n

    LinuxLUGcast – Ogg

    \n \n
  52. \n
  53. \n

    Linux News Log (ogg)

    \n \n
  54. \n
  55. \n

    Linux Outlaws

    \n \n
  56. \n
  57. \n

    Linux Voice Podcast

    \n \n
  58. \n
  59. \n

    mintCast » OGG

    \n \n
  60. \n
  61. \n

    Network Security Podcast

    \n \n
  62. \n
  63. \n

    Security Now (MP3)

    \n \n
  64. \n
  65. \n

    SourceTrunk

    \n \n
  66. \n
  67. \n

    Sunday Morning Linux Review – OGG Feed

    \n \n
  68. \n
  69. \n

    The Command Line Podcast

    \n \n
  70. \n
  71. \n

    The Linux Link Tech Show Ogg-Vorbis Feed

    \n \n
  72. \n
  73. \n

    The Mind Tech Podcast

    \n \n
  74. \n
  75. \n

    The Techie Geek Podcast

    \n \n
  76. \n
  77. \n

    The Wired.co.uk Podcast

    \n \n
  78. \n
  79. \n

    This Week in Tech (MP3)

    \n \n
  80. \n
  81. \n

    TuxRadar Linux Podcast (mp3)

    \n \n
  82. \n
  83. \n

    Ubuntu Podcast » MP3

    \n \n
  84. \n
  85. \n

    Unseen Studio » Crivins (OGG)

    \n \n
  86. \n
  87. \n

    Unseen Studio » TuxJam (OGG)

    \n \n
  88. \n
\n',225,75,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,recommendations',0,1451,1), (1519,'2014-05-29','What\'s in My Bag',682,'Today I am going to be going over my main bag that I carry most days.','

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',270,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','MOLLE,Pilot G2,Kindle Touch,Moleskine,Sansa Clip Zip,Lenovo Y580,ASUS Transformer TF101',0,1398,1), (1521,'2014-06-02','Cardboard Greeting Cards',544,'Shane Shennan explains why he makes greeting cards out of pieces of cardboard boxes','

\r\nShane Shennan explains why he makes greeting cards out of pieces of cardboard boxes. He lists the supplies he uses and talks through his 3-step process.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks: https://bit.ly/cardboardcards\r\n

\r\n',250,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','cardboard,greetings card',0,1303,1), (1522,'2014-06-03','How to Use Docker and Linux Containers',1899,'How to use Docker and Linux Containers','

\r\nHow to use Docker and Linux Containers\r\n

',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','container,Docker,Linux container,LXC,bridge interface',0,1561,1), (1524,'2014-06-05','WASHLUG 20150515 GPG and E-mail',5379,'Using GPG to encrypt or sign e-mail','

\r\nThis is a recording of a talk I gave at my local Linux Users Group, the Washtenaw Linux Users Group, or LUGWASH. In this talk I cover some of the theory of encryption, how to generate keys, and using this with Thunderbird, with Gmail, and on an Android phone. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','GPG,email,Thunderbird,Enigmail,encrypt,sign',0,1501,1), (1547,'2014-07-08','My Linux Experience Birthday Special',922,'The cake is not a lie, I tell how I got into Linux and what my favorite Birthday Cake is.','The cake is not a lie, I tell how I got into Linux and what my favorite Birthday Cake is.',209,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','birthday,Atari,Macintosh Classic,Ubuntu,Mint',0,1310,1), (1523,'2014-06-04','HPR Community News for May 2014',1293,'Charles in NJ uses the call in line to give us the April news','

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nThere were no new hosts this month.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
IdTitleHost
1499How I Got Into ComputersCharles in NJ
1500Key SigningAhuka
1501AWKlaindir
1502Practical Math - Units - Distances and Area, Part 2Charles in NJ
1503Making Waves-The DSO Pocket OscilloscopeNYbill
1504HPR at NELF 2014 AfterpartyVarious Hosts
150528 - LibreOffice Calc - Fills, an IntroductionAhuka
1506HPR AudioBookClub 6 Shaman Tales Book 1 South CoastHPR_AudioBookClub
1507HPR Community News for April 2014HPR Admins
1508In Defense of PlayCharles in NJ
1509HPR Needs ShowsHPR Admins
1510What's in My Bag?Charles in NJ
1511How to skin a snakeJezra
1512Adopting and Renovating a Public-Domain Counterpoint TextbookJon Kulp
1513Stir-Fried Stochasticity: Bio-BoogersEpicanis
1514Give The Small Guy A TryBeeza
151529 - LibreOffice Calc - Models and "What-If" AnalysisAhuka
151601 The podcasts I listen toDave Morriss
1517The set of prime numbers is infinitejohanv
151802 The podcasts I listen toDave Morriss
1519What's in My BagThaj Sara
1520The Ext File SystemJWP
\r\n\r\n

Mailing List discussions

\r\n

\r\nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes \r\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\r\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\r\nGmane\r\narchive.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nDiscussed this month was:\r\n

\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1279,1), (1526,'2014-06-09','Penguicon 2014',1617,'I review the Penguicon 2014 event with a focus on the technology talks','

Show notes: In late fall 2013 I became involved in the Penguicon\n convention, which combines Open Source technology with Science Fiction to\n create something that I believe to be unique. I ended up taking\n responsibility for organizing the Tech Track, and we ended up with around 70\n hours of programming. I recap some of the highlights of my own personal\n experience of this event, both as a participant and as an organizer.

\n

Links:

\n \n',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon',0,1269,1), (1529,'2014-06-12','TrueCrypt, Heartbleed, and Lessons Learned',1117,'What is needed to have security in Open Source projects.','

\r\nTwo recent events have shed light on some fundamental issues in getting security in Open Source projects. One of them is a serious bug referred to as \"Heartbleed\", and the other is the first part of a security audit of the TrueCrypt encryption program. By looking at both of these together and doing a Lessons Learned we can draw some conclusions about what is needed to have security in Open Source projects.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','security, Open Source',0,1521,1), (1565,'2014-08-01','34 - LibreOffice Calc - More on Chart Editing',793,'Editing charts, Calc','

\r\nIn this episode we review the options for editing your chart, do a brief recap of the object model, and create an example of a chart with a secondary Y-axis.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, chart, graph',0,0,1), (1575,'2014-08-15','35 - LibreOffice Calc - Introduction to Functions',714,'Introduction to working with functions in LibreOffice Calc','

In this episode we review what a function is, discuss the different types of functions available in LibreOffice, discuss the concept of arguments in mathematics, and present a general process for using functions in Calc.

\n

Links:

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','Calc, Spreadsheet, function',0,0,1), (1585,'2014-08-29','36 - LibreOffice Calc - Financial Functions - Loan Payments',1346,'Financial Functions in LibreOffice Calc','

In this episode we discuss the function for determining the loan payments on a car loan, compare a manual calculation with the use of the PMT function, and derive some useful lessons.

\r\n

Links:

\r\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','spreadsheet,financial function',0,0,1), (1595,'2014-09-12','37 - LibreOffice Calc - More Financial Functions',1038,'A look at financial functions and constructing a mortgage repayment schedule','

We take a look at a number of related financial functions in this episode, and discover that they are strongly related by using the same variables over and over. We construct a Mortgage Repayment Schedule, and look again at the principles of good spreadsheet construction.

\n ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, functions, finance, mortgage',0,0,1), (1527,'2014-06-10','Surviving A Roadtrip: GPS',1110,'A few GPS tricks that can help survive a roadtrip.','

\r\nI have spent many, many hours in a vehicle driving around. While travelling,\r\nI\'ve found a GPS to be one indispensable tool. These are some of the\r\nGPS-related tips that I have discovered:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',196,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','gps',0,1323,1), (1528,'2014-06-11','Wildswimming in France',2891,'Take a break from the hacking, get on your bike and go wildswimming in a local river.','

In this episode I take a swim along a section of the Charente river near\r\n Chatain in the Poitou-Charente region of France. I start upstream at the\r\n bridge and go down as far as the weir, then back. On the way I describe some\r\n of the things I am seeing, I pass some cows and a couple of French fishermen.

\r\n

Apologies for the audio quality and panting, this was recorded by an old\r\n MP3 player cable-tied to a woolly hat.

\r\n

\"A

\r\n \r\n

Mark Waters https://about.me/markwaters

\r\n',279,101,1,'CC-BY-SA','wildswimming, swimming, france, health, exercise, nature',0,1260,1), (1531,'2014-06-16','How I use Linux ',943,'jezra talks about using Linux','

\r\nHere is a list of OSs, software, and hardware that was mention. If I missed\r\nanything, please let me know.\r\n

\r\n\r\n',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Geany,nano,virtualbox,glmr,Ruby Web Alarm,blather,MuttonChop,Raspberry Pi,Beaglebone,Nokia N900',0,1596,1), (1532,'2014-06-17','Project Idea - White-Hat Spam Bot',959,'Knightwise and Keith discuss their fledgling open-source project to manage social media promotion.','

If you run a blog or a podcast, promoting your material can take as much time (or more) than content creation itself. Just like a small business marketing and promoting your efforts take time, effort and energy that can take you away from what you\'d rather be doing: making great stuff.

\n

This podcast discusses the germ of an idea, and its fledgling implementation, for creating an open-source tool for managing the distribution of posts to social media and doing it in as non-spammy a way as possible.

\n

The premise is simple: take information from a number of disparate sources, and promote it to a number of disparate destinations. The challenge is doing it without violating the social norms of the destination networks, and without crossing the line between promotion and spaminess.

\n',266,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','social media,schedule,distribution',0,1322,1), (1533,'2014-06-18','Beginner\'s guide to the night sky 2',1499,'A review of some astronomy software, as used on the planet Earth, by a geeky chap.','

\r\nThis is a review of some astronomy software, as used\r\non the Earth in the early 21st Century, by a somewhat\r\ngeeky chap. In this episode, I talk a little about two astronomy apps\r\navailable for Android and another two available for GNU/Linux (and other)\r\ndesktops.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nErratum: I referred to Star Map but I meant Star Chart. Doh!\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIn reverse order of how much I use and like them (most used/liked last):\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://www.stellarium.org - Available for all major operating systems.\r\nThis link shows you how to add your own comets: https://www.wikihow.com/Add-Comet-ISON-to-Stellarium\r\n

\r\n

\r\nhttps://edu.kde.org/kstars/ - KStars is part of the KDE SC Software Compilation) and so will be easy to install if you\'re a KDE user, or if you\'re not, \"easy\" after a few dependencies are installed.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nGoogle Sky Map can be installed on your mobile device using either f-droid or Google Play: https://f-droid.org/repository/browse/?fdfilter=sky&fdid=com.google.android.stardroid\r\nhttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.stardroid\r\n

\r\n

\r\nIf you like eye-candy, then Star Chart may be for you, get it on Google Play here:\r\nhttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.escapistgames.starchart\r\n

',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','astronomy,Stellarium,KStars,Google Sky Map,Star Chart',0,1318,1), (1556,'2014-07-21','Screenplay Writing On Linux and Chromebooks',789,'ThistleWeb explores a couple of screenplay writing solutions for Linux and Chromebooks','

Writing screenplays for TV or movies is a very precise thing. The industry expects a standardised style and format. ThistleWeb explores a couple of dedicated screenplay writing solutions. Both are dedicated applications that do one job and do it very well. The first is Trelby. It\'s a GPL cross platform application. It has lots of additional features such as auto completion of character names, summaries and stats.

\n

The second application is a cloud service called Raw Scripts. It\'s a Chrome extension although I think that\'s just a link to the site. You log in with a Google or Yahoo account. It\'s like a dedicated Google Docs web app. It does most of the things Trelby does. It also exports to Google if you want. You can share and collaborate with Raw Scripts. It\'s hosted on their server, although it\'s AGPL going forward, so it shouldn\'t be long before you can host it on your own server.

\n

I\'ve just started to explore screenplay writing as a writing skillset. Both of these applications make the styling and formating incredibly easy, allowing me to concentrate on the actual story.

\n

Links:

\n ',106,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','screenplay,writing,Trelby,Raw Scripts',0,1159,1), (1576,'2014-08-18','How I got into Linux',1674,'This is my story about how I got into computers, computing and GNU/Linux.','

\r\nShort Summary: This is my story about how I got into computers, computing and GNU/Linux.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',283,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, FLOSS, Mac',0,0,1), (1534,'2014-06-19','My Introduction to HPR',269,'semioticrobotic talks about himself and his involvement with opensource.com','

\r\nIn this episode, I introduce myself to the Hacker Public Radio community and discuss a website to which I contribute: opensource.com. \r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',280,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','introduction',0,1326,1), (1597,'2014-09-16','Extravehicular Activity',850,'NASA guidelines for EVA from spacecraft are detailed and painstaking, not so films.','

EVA - The Rules for Extravehicular Activity

\n

Here I dip into the NASA experience of and rules for Extravehicular Activity, prompted at first by watching a film called The Europa Report, directed by Sebastian Cordero (2013).

\n

WARNING - THIS PODCAST CONTAINS SPOILERS

\n

While I have some gripes about the film, I was impressed by its general failfulness to the science

\n \n

Science consultant on the film was Kevin Hand, an astrobiologist and expert on Europa at NASA\'s Jet Propulsion Laboratory

\n

To my mind, the scientists were behaving like scientists and the engineers behaved like engineers. To follow along it might help to recall their names

\n \n

All was going scientifically until the director drove the plot forward with two EVA incidents

\n

EVA-1 : Flash back episode, engineers James and Andre go out to fix a failed communications circuit

\n \n

I have problems with this because it\'s just too clumsy for trained professional astronauts. Where are the decontamination procedures, the tethers, the special tools?

\n

EVA-2 : Down on the surface, Marine biologist Katya decides to walk out alone

\n \n

With this I am shouting at the screen \"No Way! Where\'s the fracking operating manual? No one goes EVA on their own\"

\n

So, that is why I researched the NASA rules for Extravehicular Activity. And I found that none of these events would have happened the way they were shown, had the crew, who were so professional in every other way, followed the NASA procedures.

\n

The two astronauts issue

\n \n

NASA procedures

\n

NASA documents on the internet discuss in exhaustive detail all considerations for EVA. What I present is a cherry-picked handful. I could not cover all of it

\n \n

International Space Station (ISS) EVA Procedures Checklists

\n \n

Although this podcast is about EVA, it does reference the science in a film that I enjoyed and respect very much, so here is a gem that I only came across while researching the landing site. In the scientific journal Nature, Volume 479, 16 November 2011, Britney Schmidt et al, of University of Texas, Austin, published a paper titled \"Active formation of \'chaos terrain\' over shallow subsurface water on Europa.\" In the paper these authors suggest that in the Conemara zone of the Chaos Terrain, an area on the surface of Europa, the ice may be as little as 3 km thick. Then in the film the Conemara Chaos was the targetted landing zone and the drill broke through the ice at a depth of 2800m.

\n

Well there is one more thing that the podcast says, but it is the ultimate spoiler. So if you have not already listened to the podcast, I highly recommend that you watch the film first.

\n
\n

Links

\n ',284,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','extravehicular, space, spacewalk, spaceship, nasa, movie, film, science fiction, science',0,0,1), (1539,'2014-06-26','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',277,'An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com','

\r\nIn this episode: an ethical cryptocurrency, open source resources for learning Old English, and an interview with the Director of New Media Technologies at the Executive Office of the President in the United States.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','newscast,Opensource.com',0,1364,1), (1536,'2014-06-23','The 150-in-1 Electronic Project Kit',716,'CPrompt talks about the Science Fair 150-in-1 Electronic Project Kit.','

In this episode CPrompt travels down a little memory lane and talks about a childhood favorite, the Science Fair 150-in-1 Electronic Project Kit.

Links:

\r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Science Fair,Radio Shack,electronic project kit,150-in-1,DuinoKit',0,1347,1), (1558,'2014-07-23','Lunch Breaks',1505,'Break out of your brown bag or greasy box and explore the world around your workplace!','

Back after a year of HPR silence, I\'ll talk a little about how I like to spend my lunch breaks and how you can explore your workplace. Put down those tater tots, we\'re going on an adventure!

\n

In this episode I\'ll give some information about my lunch history, ways you can maximise your time, gear you\'ll need to start short stealth/urban exploration, techniques for finding places to explore, and ways to handle being spotted.

\n

If this goes well enough and the audio isn\'t too garbled, I\'ll record episodes for the \"How I Got Into (GNU) Linux\" series.

\n

Here are a few links related to the episode. Note that I link to Amazon and Google. I don\'t necessarily condone or endorse either service, I just didn\'t know of any better sources for product information.

\n \n

Links

\n \n

Sample sit pads:

\n ',241,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','urban exploration, lunch, leisure, stealth',0,1206,1), (1537,'2014-06-24','How I make Coffee',411,'x1101 explains how he makes coffee','

\r\nx1101 explains how he makes coffee\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',276,88,0,'CC-BY-SA','coffee,coffee grinder,coffee beans,percolator',0,1322,1), (1546,'2014-07-07','HPR Community News for June 2014',5739,'Ahuka, Dave and Ken, review the happenings for the month.','

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
Mark Waters, semioticrobotic.

\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
IdTitleHost
1521Cardboard Greeting CardsShane Shennan
1522How to Use Docker and Linux Containersklaatu
1523HPR Community News for May 2014HPR Admins
1524WASHLUG 20150515 GPG and E-mailAhuka
152530 - LibreOffice Calc - A Savings ModelAhuka
1526Penguicon 2014Ahuka
1527Surviving A Roadtrip: GPSWindigo
1528Wildswimming in FranceMark Waters
1529TrueCrypt, Heartbleed, and Lessons LearnedAhuka
1530The Ext2 File SystemJWP
1531How I use LinuxJezra
1532Project Idea - White-Hat Spam BotKeith Murray
1533Beginner\'s guide to the night sky 2Andrew Conway
1534My Introduction to HPRsemioticrobotic
153531 - LibreOffice Calc - Sheet Editing and NavigationAhuka
1536The 150-in-1 Electronic Project KitCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
1537How I make Coffeex1101
1538Overhauling the School of Music websiteJon Kulp
1539An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
1540The journeling File SystemJWP
1541How I Came To LinuxClaudio Miranda
\n

Mailing List discussions

\n

Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the Gmane archive.

',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,1324,1), (1566,'2014-08-04','HPR Community News for July 2014',2350,'Dave reviews the happenings for the month, with a brief visit from pegwole.','

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
Scyner, Mike Ray.

\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
IdDateTitleHost
15422014-07-01Agnes is an IT LawyerSeetee
15432014-07-02What\'s in my bagKen Fallon
15442014-07-03An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
15452014-07-0432 - LibreOffice Calc - Introduction to Charts and GraphsAhuka
15462014-07-07HPR Community News for June 2014HPR Admins
15472014-07-08My Linux Experience Birthday SpecialDavid Whitman
15482014-07-09Heyu and X10Peter64
15492014-07-10Cool Stuff Pt.1Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
15502014-07-11The Ext3 and 4 File SystemJWP
15512014-07-14Bitcoin MiningScyner
15522014-07-15An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
15532014-07-16TuxJam 33.333 - How we got into LinuxAndrew Conway
15542014-07-1707 - The Crown ConspiracyHPR_AudioBookClub
15552014-07-1833 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating ChartsAhuka
15562014-07-21Screenplay Writing On Linux and ChromebooksThistleweb
15572014-07-22Encrypting E-mail on Android; Importing KeysAhuka
15582014-07-23Lunch BreaksChristopher M. Hobbs
15592014-07-24We don\'t always need new gear.Knightwise
15602014-07-25The reiserfs File SystemJWP
15612014-07-28How I got into Accessible ComputingMike Ray
15622014-07-29Android For The cli/c Junkiesigflup
15632014-07-30Starting Programs at boot on the Raspberry PiMrX
15642014-07-31An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
\n

Mailing List discussions

\n

Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the Gmane archive.

\n

Discussed this month were:

\n \n

Comments this month

\n

There are 13 comments:

\n ',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1538,'2014-06-25','Overhauling the School of Music website',1740,'I discuss how I overhauled an outdated website for my employer.','

\r\nI discuss the process of overhauling a badly out-of-date website to make it conform to accessibility standards and give it a responsive design. I also discuss how I came up with my own content management system by Bash scripting.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','CSS, html, scripting, accessibility',0,1257,1), (1541,'2014-06-30','How I Came To Linux',2179,'ClaudioM talks about how he came to computers and to Linux','

\r\nClaudioM talks about how he came to Linux beginning with an introduction on how he came to computers and how a simple advertisement for an UNIX book would eventually lead to his love for Linux.\r\n

\r\n

Helpful Links

\r\n

\r\nMattel Aquarius:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nFamily Computing:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nSEFLIN Freenet:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nLinux/PowerPC:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',152,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','BASIC,Mattel Aquarius,Apple IIe,Macintosh,RedHat,SUSE,Mandrake,Slackware',0,1453,1), (1542,'2014-07-01','Agnes is an IT Lawyer',748,'Today on #HPR; listen to @IT_Advokaten talk about the change in EU law regarding personal data!','

Today on Hacker Public Radio, we will talk to an IT lawyer about the new EU regulations regarding personal data.

\n

\"One thing I think you should be aware of is a principle called \'Privacy by Design and Privacy by Default\'!\"
-- Agnes

\n

IT Solutions Expo 2014

\n

In April 2014 I visited the \"IT Solutions Expo\" at the conference centre known as \"The Swedish Fair\" in Gothenburg. The tagline of the IT Solutions Expo was \"The fair that shows you how to make money on tomorrow\'s IT solutions\".

\n

So a lot of corporate propaganda and sales people. To be totally honest, I hesitated going there. But I am glad I did. There where some really interesting talks concerning privacy and technology that I would not have liked to miss.

\n

Agnes Andersson Hammarstrand, IT Lawyer

\n

The real highlight of the fair was the talk by Agnes Andersson Hammarstrand, a lawyer specialised in information technology. She covered the new laws that will come to pass in the European Union regarding how we are allowed to handle personal data.

\n

I was very happy that she was willing to give a short interview for Hacker Public Radio.

\n

It is interesting to see that it is not only consumers who are starting to think that information about us should be kept safe, it is also slowly becoming the law. If your work in or with companies in the European Union, this is definitely a heads-up, something to take notice of. In a couple of years time you must be ready to follow the new legislation.

\n

In her talk Agnes also mentioned that companies should have someone who is responsible for privacy issues. Perhaps this is an opportunity for the HPR listeners? Most of you probably feel that this is an important topic already, so why not make it a part of your job description?

\n

You find all the relevant links down below. If you want to send feedback or get in touch with either Agnes or me, please do not hesitate to do so. If you have any thoughts on the subject at hand or regarding the show, use any of the means below and speak your mind.

\n

Stuff referenced in the episode

\n \n

How to reach me

\n

You should follow me and subscribe to All In IT Radio:

\n ',192,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','it solutions expo 2014, interview, personal data, eu, law',0,1283,1), (1544,'2014-07-03','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',264,'An overview of open source news stories recently published on Opensource.com','

In this episode: The true value of open source, an introduction to the new Authors Alliance, and an OpenStack challenge.

\n

Links:

\n ',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','Authors Alliance, OpenStack',0,1294,1), (1549,'2014-07-10','Cool Stuff Pt.1',1507,'In this episode CPrompt covers some pretty cool stuff that he has found over the last few days.','

In this episode CPrompt covers some pretty cool stuff that he has found over the last few days.

\n

Links: Beyond Pod

\n \n

You\'re Listening To

\n \n

Wallet Ninja

\n \n

Dream The Electric Sleep

\n ',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','beyondpod,youarelistening.to,Wallet Ninja,Dream The Electric Sleep',0,1477,1), (1631,'2014-11-03','HPR Community News for October 2014',3124,'Discussions on the New Year show and more','

New hosts

\r\n

\r\nWelcome to our new hosts:
\r\n corenominal, \r\n beni.\r\n

\r\n\r\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
IdDateTitleHost
16082014-10-01Interviews at Lincoln LUGcorenominal
16092014-10-02Sigil And The Process Of The Epub In FOSSlostnbronx
16102014-10-03The BTRFS File SystemJWP
16112014-10-06HPR Community News for September 2014HPR Volunteers
16122014-10-07Don\'t Forget the ReferbsNYbill
16132014-10-08What\'s in a nickname?Inscius
16142014-10-09An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
16152014-10-1039 - LibreOffice Calc - Inferential Statistics FunctionsAhuka
16162014-10-13Howto Use Webfontsklaatu
16172014-10-14Spaceteambeni
16182014-10-15OggCamp Attendeesbeni
16192014-10-16Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 1)Gabriel Evenfire
16202014-10-17Passwords, Entropy, and Good Password PracticesAhuka
16212014-10-20OggCamp Interview with James Taitcorenominal
16222014-10-21An interview with Michael Tiemannsemioticrobotic
16232014-10-22Tech and Coffee at OggCampbeni
16242014-10-23Penguicon 2015 Call for TalksAhuka
16252014-10-2440 - LibreOffice Calc - Other FunctionsAhuka
16262014-10-27Opensource.com: Recalling OSCON 2014.semioticrobotic
16272014-10-285150 Shades of Beer: 0001 He\'Brew Hops Selection from Smaltz Brewing CompanyFiftyOneFifty
16282014-10-29OggCamp Interview with Peppertop Comicscorenominal
16292014-10-30Banana Pi - First ImpressionsMike Ray
16302014-10-31Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 2)Gabriel Evenfire
\r\n\r\n

Comments this month

\r\n\r\n

There are 26 comments:

\r\n\r\n\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1551,'2014-07-14','Bitcoin Mining',510,'This is a short summary of what steps I took to get a set and forget bitcoin mining station going','

\r\nThis is a short summary of what steps I took to get a set and forget bitcoin mining station going. Using a asicminer cube eruptor and an odroid u2.\r\n

\r\n',281,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','bitcoin,bitcoin mining,ASICMiner Block Erupter Cube,odroid u2',0,1383,1), (1586,'2014-09-01','HPR Community News for August 2014',4346,'Dave and Ken review the happenings for the month.','

New hosts

\n

Welcome to our new hosts:
Inscius.

\n

Last Month\'s Shows

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
IdDateTitleHost
15652014-08-0134 - LibreOffice Calc - More on Chart EditingAhuka
15662014-08-04HPR Community News for July 2014HPR Volunteers
15672014-08-05Multiboot Partitioning with LinuxMatt McGraw (g33kdad)
15682014-08-06Blather Speech Recognition for LinuxJon Kulp
15692014-08-07Many-to-many data relationship howtoMike Ray
15702014-08-08The JFS File SystemJWP
15712014-08-11Yahoo Mail ForwarderToeJet
15722014-08-12An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
15732014-08-13Make your own t-shirt with bleachQuvmoh
15742014-08-14Arts and Botsklaatu
15752014-08-1535 - LibreOffice Calc - Introduction to FunctionsAhuka
15762014-08-18How I got into LinuxInscius
15772014-08-19Introducing Nikola the Static Web Site and Blog Generatorguitarman
15782014-08-20AudioBookClub-08-How to Succeed in Evil:The NovelHPR_AudioBookClub
15792014-08-21Crowd Sourced Air Quality Monitoringklaatu
15802014-08-22The fast and ntfs File SystemJWP
15812014-08-25Sensible Security: The Schneier ModelAhuka
15822014-08-26An Open Source News Break from Opensource.comsemioticrobotic
15832014-08-27Podcast GeneratorAukonDK
15842014-08-28An interview with Josh Knapp from AnHonestHost.comKen Fallon
15852014-08-2936 - LibreOffice Calc - Financial Functions - Loan PaymentsAhuka
\n

Comments this month

\n

There are 17 comments:

\n \n

Apologies

\n ',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1552,'2014-07-15','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',267,'An interview with Mark Johnson of OSS Watch, Open Source Seed Initiative, and more','

In this episode: An interview with Mark Johnson of OSS Watch, the Open Source Seed Initiative, and a video game that asks to be hacked.

\n

Links:

\n ',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','newscast,Opensource.com',0,1305,1), (1553,'2014-07-16','TuxJam 33.333 - How we got into Linux ',4077,'Kevie and Andrew release TuxJam episode 33 1/3 as an exclusive to HPR on how they got into Linux','

Kevie and Andrew release TuxJam episode thirty three and a third as an exclusive to HPR on how they got into Linux, interspersed with a few Creative Commons licensed tunes. The story begins in the mid-1990s and some credit is given to a Microsoft product. At no point do they put on terrible Irish accents and discuss the spelling of whisk(e)y*. If you like what you hear then you might like to listen to other TuxJam episodes here: https://unseenstudio.co.uk/category/tuxjam-ogg/
* This may not be entirely true.

',268,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','FOSS,software,creative commons,music',0,1362,1), (1554,'2014-07-17','07 - The Crown Conspiracy',4548,'The Crown Conspiracy gets thumbs up from the HPR Audiobook Club ','

\r\nSPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT HPR_AudioBookClub SNEAK PREVIEW!!! \r\nSometime in the not-too-distant future we\'ll be reviewing Street Candles by HPR\'s very own David Collins Rivera (aka Lostinbronx). Street Candles is not finished yet, but is available via RSS and Lostinbronx publishes a new episode each week. This book is excellent, and you\'ll want to say you were there to see it happen. Head over to LNB\'s site for all the details https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/ and remember to subscribe to his RSS feed:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nIn this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews The Crown Conspiracy by Michael J. Sullivan. This book received thumbs up from all of this month\'s participants. You can download this audiobook for free (or voluntary donation) from https://podiobooks.com/title/the-crown-conspiracy/ and it\'s also available in paperback on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Crown-Conspiracy-Michael-J-Sullivan/dp/0980003431 . You can find more content (including podcasts) from Michael J. Sullivan https://riyria.blogspot.com/ Many of his books are also available in paper and ebook editions on amazon.com.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nAs usual, during this episode of the AudioBookClub the hosts have each reviewed a beverage of their choice.\r\nMorgellon drank a Bourbon and soda, but not during the show because he was driving. He recommends both Woodford Reserve https://www.woodfordreserve.com/ and Evan Williams Bourbons https://www.evanwilliams.com/\r\nx1101 drank Wild Turkey 101 proof Bourbon https://wildturkeybourbon.com/\r\npokey drank a cup of Oolong tea. It was probably a little stale, but pokey is a knuckle dragger, so he didn\'t notice at all. https://www.foojoyteas.com/teabag.php . This was the first time that pokey has reviewed an NA beverage for the AudioBookClub, so we apologize if the show has suffered because of it.\r\nThaj won the Non-Alcoholic division hands down with a glass of fresh squeezed lemonade.\r\nColin couldn\'t make it to this recording because of time zone differences, but he did write in. I\'ll add his note to the episode comments. Please add your own comment as well. His beverage however was an Innis and Gunn Original https://www.innisandgunn.com/the-range/core-range/original/ to which he gives his thumb up.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nOur next audiobook will be How to Succeed in Evil: The Novel by Patrick E. McLean https://podiobooks.com/title/how-to-succeed-in-evil-the-novel/\r\n(not to be confused with How To Succeed in Evil: The Original Podcast Episodes by Patrick E. McLean)\r\nThis book was suggested by Morgellon. Our next book club recording will be 2014/06/10T23:00:00+00:00 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times)\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThere are several ways to submit feedback for this episode including the HPR mail list hpr@hackerpublicradio.org, and the episode\'s comment section\r\nMorgellon is reachable via twitter @lowtekmorgellon or email morgellon@gmail.com\r\nx1101 can be reached via twitter @x1101, StatusNet @x1101/micro.fragdev.com and email x1101@gmx.com\r\nThaj can be reached by email thajasara@gmail.com\r\npokey prefers his feedback to come via the HackerPublicRadio comment system, but is also usually available on StatusNet @pokey/micro.fragdev.com\r\n

\r\n

\r\nPlease remember to visit the HPR contribution page. We could really use your help right now. https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR_AudioBookClub\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub,The Crown Conspiracy',0,1305,1), (1602,'2014-09-23','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',1069,'Data-driven journalism, open source password management, and open electronics','

\r\nIn this episode: Data-driven journalism with Journalism++, open source password management, and open electronics with Spark.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','data journalism,password management,Spark Core',0,0,1), (1571,'2014-08-11','Yahoo Mail Forwarder',624,'Build, configure and deploy a self maintaining Yahoo mail forwarding virtual client.','

\r\nBuild, configure and deploy a self maintaining Yahoo mail forwarding virtual client.\r\n
\r\nNeeded\r\n

\r\n\r\n

\r\nSince it will be virtual, isolated, single purpose machine, Security is minimal.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nStep by step instuctions at https://james.toebesacademy.com/YahooMailForwarder.html\r\n

    \r\n
  1. Build VM
  2. \r\n
  3. Configure Applications and AutoStart
  4. \r\n
  5. Configure Mail Forwarding
  6. \r\n
  7. Configure Automatic Maintenance
  8. \r\n
  9. Test
  10. \r\n
  11. Deploy to Virtual Server.
  12. \r\n
\r\n

Known Issues:

\r\n

\r\nOccasionally bulk forwards spam folder....\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLet me know your thoughts and if you want to hear more about my home server configuration.\r\n

\r\n',273,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','email,IMAP,Thunderbird',0,0,1), (1573,'2014-08-13','Make your own t-shirt with bleach',298,'Making T-shirts with bleach and freezer paper','

\r\nMaking T-shirts with bleach and freezer paper\r\n

\r\n\r\n

links

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nbe sure to check out side bar at /r/bleachshirts for more tutorials\r\n

',110,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','t-shirt,bleach',0,0,1), (1577,'2014-08-19','Introducing Nikola the Static Web Site and Blog Generator',936,'I explain how to use the Nikola Static Web Site and Blog Generator to make a simple site with a page','

Nikola - The Static Web Site and Blog Generator - https://getnikola.com

\n

Note: Please see developer notes below

\n

What is it? A Static Website and Blog Generator based on Python.
What is a Static Website Generator? It generates posts and pages via commands. You edit those posts and pages in a text editor, then run a command to build the site, and finally, deploy/upload the generated html etc files to your webhost.
That sounds kinda old school are you sure thats web 3.0? Its old and new school. Nikola gives you CMS like features without the overhead of the database server and page rendering engine.
How can I install it? Use PIP and follow the handbook on the getnikola.com website. NOTE: Python 2.6 or newer or Python 3.3 or newer is required

\nsudo pip install nikola\nsudo pip install nikola[extras]\n

You should be good to go if you can enter nikola help in a terminal and get a list of nikola commands.
Lets create our skeleton website:

\nnikola init mysite \n

You will need to answer some questions now (NOTE a directory to cd into called mysite will be created if you issue mysite.. You should enter your domain name instead - mysite is just an example).
The questions it asks will help populate the conf.py file in the mysite directory.

\nSite Title: \nSite Author:\nSite Author Email:\nSite Description:\nSite URL:\nLanguages to support: (default en)\nTime zone: \nWhich comments system to use:\n

Once complete your site will be created and in the directory you named the site as - in my case, mysite.
cd into that and take a look at the files with ls.
you will have:

\n \n

Lets create a blog post.

\nnikola new_post\n

Type in the title of your blog post and hit enter. I will use foobar in this example
It will report the new post is in posts/foobar.rst
fire up your text editor and edit that file.

\n

There is a header area at the top of the file - most of it is already filled in and you wont need to change it but you should add a Tag because you can see posts by Tag once the site is generated and it gives your readers a way to find all items on that subject. These are separated by commas so enter as many or few as you like. Enter a Description in the Description area.
Now move into the Write your post here area and go to town - erase that or it shows up in your post.
You should read the page on ReStructuredText here: https://getnikola.com/quickstart.html but also just look at the source by clicking \'Source\' on the getnikola website and you can see the markup they used. Some basics are

\n*word*\n
for italics,
\n**word**\n
for bold, a single * space item for bullet points and for hyperlinks
\n`Tree Brewing Co: <https://treebeer.com/>`_.\n
a Tree Brewing Co hyperlink which will bring you when clicked to treebeer.com. Lastly issue:
\n.. image:: /files/imagefilename.jpg\n
to point to an image file that you have placed into the files directory.
Ok lets say you are done your post, save it and exit. Lets now build your site and fire up the built in webserver to display it.
\nnikola build\nnikola serve -b\n

Your default web browser will launch and you will see your site with blog post. Savour the moment - you have just created your first blog post. Note all the generated files you would upload to your webhost are in the output folder.
Ok so thats great but I want to add pages and have it in my navigation window Ok lets do that.

\nnikola new_post -p\n
Enter a name for it and press Enter. In my case I created MyPage

It tells you your page is in the stories directory and shows you how it named the file. In my case its mypage.rst
Open that in a text editor and compose the page - save it when complete.
So that would be great but its not showing up in your navigation yet. You need to put that in your conf.py file.
Open conf.py in a text editor, look for NAVIGATION_LINKS. Observe how the existing pages are linked and follow that format. Here is how I would add mypage: (/stories/mypage.html, MyPage), any page you create will show up in stories so dont forget to put that in the path.

\nNAVIGATION_LINKS = {\n    DEFAULT_LANG: (\n        (\"/archive.html\", \"Archive\"),\n        (\"/categories/index.html\", \"Tags\"),\n        (\"/rss.xml\", \"RSS feed\"),\n        (\"/stories/mypage.html\", \"MyPage\"),\n    ),\n}\n

Save that and rebuild your site.
NOTE:: As of Today Nikola v7.0.1 requires a special command to include the new pages in navigation. This has been fixed in git but currently you must issue:

\nnikola build -a\nnikola serve -b \n

Now you are viewing it - nice work - you have a page now.
This site seems a bit plain, how can I theme it? Glad that you asked - issue this command.

\nnikola bootswatch_theme -n custom_theme -s slate -p bootstrap3\n

Now you have set it to use the slate bootswatch theme. Review the bootswatch themes on: https://bootswatch.com/
In order to let Nikola know to use this new theme you need to edit the conf.py file and look for THEME and change the value from bootstrap3 to custom_theme.
Now issue these commands at the command line to view the changes:

\nnikola build\nnikola serve -b \n

You can modify the themes to your liking and there is guidance on changing the theme on the nikola website.
There are ways to depoly your site via rsync or ftp commands in the conf.py file. There are also other things you can set in the conf file such as google analytics, add an embeded duckduckgo or google search engine, specify options for the image galleries etc.
More things you can do to spify up your posts / pages are to do with using shortcode like sytax for ReStructuredText. You can embed soundcloud, youtube videos etc - here is a list of these: https://getnikola.com/handbook.html#restructuredtext-extensions

\n

I hope this helps you get started on using Nikola and hope you enjoy using it as much as I do. If you have questions or comments, find me in the oggcastplanet.net irc chat room on freenode, or go to https://stevebaer.com click Tags and click HPR and leave a comment on this episodes blog post. Until next time, Cheers!

\n

Corrections to this episode provided by Chris Warrick

\n

https://stevebaer.com/posts/hpr-episode-on-using-the-static-web-site-and-blog-generator-called-nikola.html

\n

Some small corrections:

\n
    \n
  1. it is recommended to use a virtualenv, `sudo pip` can be dangerous
  2. \n
  3. `pip install nikola[extras]` is enough, no need to do both steps
  4. \n
  5. new pages can be created with `nikola new_page`, too (both ways are equally supported)
  6. \n
  7. \n missing quotes around \"MyPage\" in example navbar codeFixed
  8. \n
  9. you can get rid of /stories/ if you change PAGES[*][1] from \"stories\" to an empty string.
  10. \n
  11. bootswatch themes are not everything, there is also install_theme that uses a more varied collection from https://themes.getnikola.com/
  12. \n
',137,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Nikola,static website,ReStructuredText',0,0,1), (1604,'2014-09-25','How I Got Into Linux',1096,'I sum up my experience with linux from 0 to 1!','I sum up my experience with linux from 0 to 1!',286,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','windows,Ubuntu,Puppy,Crunchbang,Arch',0,0,1), (1578,'2014-08-20','AudioBookClub-08-How to Succeed in Evil:The Novel',7213,'The HPR_AudioBookClub reviews How to Succeed in Evil: The Novel by @PatrickEMcLean. ','

\r\nIn this episode, the hackerpublicradio.org Audiobook Club reviews How to Succeed in Evil: The Novel by Patrick E. McLean. \r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nThree out of four of us liked this book, and we all had some good things to say about it. While it\'s true that this is an entertaining story set in a super hero world, we found it it more amusing and more thought provoking than your average super hero story.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nAs usual, during this episode of the AudioBookClub the hosts have each reviewed a beverage of their choice.\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

\r\nOur next audiobook will be Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Corey Doctorow https://podiobooks.com/title/down-and-out-in-the-magic-kingdom/ \r\nOur next book club recording will be 2014/07/15T23:00:00+00:00 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times)\r\nIf you\'d like a Google calendar invite, or if you\'d like to be on the HPR_AudioBookClub mailing list, please get in contact with us on the HPR mailing list \'hpr at hackerpublicradio dot org\'\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThere are several ways to submit feedback for this episode including the HPR mail list hpr@hackerpublicradio.org, and the episode\'s comment section\r\n

\r\n

\r\npokey prefers his feedback to come via the HackerPublicRadio comment system, but is also usually available on StatusNet @pokey/micro.fragdev.com\r\n

\r\n

\r\nPlease remember to visit the HPR contribution page. We could really use your help right now. https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Thank you very much for listening.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nSincerely,\r\nThe HPR_AudioBookClub\r\n

\r\n

\r\nP.S. Some people enjoy finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we have included a few.\r\n

',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub',0,0,1), (1583,'2014-08-27','Podcast Generator',223,'Easy software to host a podcast.','

\r\nPodcast Generator - Software which can host your podcast and generate all the RSS feeds.\r\nhttps://podcastgen.sourceforge.net/\r\n

\r\n

\r\nBlue Drava Podcast - a little show I\'m working on, hosted using the software.\r\nhttps://podcast.bluedrava.com\r\n

',191,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Podcast, Webapp, PHP',0,0,1), (1584,'2014-08-28','An interview with Josh Knapp from AnHonestHost.com',3165,'We talk to Josh Knapp about his new business AnHonestHost.com','

\r\nFor years our own Josh Knapp has been the real Server Administrator behind Hacker Public Radio, and has been subsidising it out of his own pocket for some time.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nHe and a few of his colleagues have decided to branch off and set up their own company. AnHonestHost.com is based on a simple idea; Better web hosting that\'s honest and fair.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nWe discuss the past, the future and how it affects HPR.\r\n

',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','AnHonestHost.com,shared hosting',0,0,1), (1587,'2014-09-02','Beginner\'s guide to the night sky 3 - A wee dot on a dark sky',1809,'A ramble about stars, by a geeky chap who resides on planet Earth.','

\r\nA ramble about stars, by a geeky chap who resides on planet Earth. This episode\r\nis entitled a wee dot on a dark sky.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nI comment briefly on why it\'s remarkable\r\nthat the night sky is dark. I then go on to talk about the colour of stars,\r\nwhich we can just perceive with the naked eye. To learn more you need to use\r\na prism, or, as professional astronomers prefer, a diffraction grating to\r\nobtain a spectrum of a star. I talk a little too much about the mathematics\r\nof diffraction gratings but eventually get back to talking about\r\nspectrum of the Sun which in overall shape is very close to what physicists\r\ncall a black body spectrum (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_body)- the spectrum any object will have at a given\r\ntemperature. Astronomers and physicists prefer to measure temperature\r\nin units of kelvin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelvin),\r\nand to convert to it you only need to add 273 to the\r\ncelsius temperature. Conversion from Fahrenheit is left as an exercise\r\nto the listener.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe Sun shows spectral lines, specifically dark lines on the broad spectrum\r\ncalled absorptions lines. This is caused by atoms in a cooler layer of gas\r\n(called the chromosphere) that\'s just above the bright surface of the Sun\r\n(called the photosphere). In fact, Helium is named as such because it was\r\nfirst discovered by its absorption lines in the solar spectrum (Helios\r\nis Greek for Sun). Many other elements can be found in the spectrum of\r\nthe Sun and other stars, but most of the mass of all stars is made up\r\nof hydrogen and helium.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe temperature of a star is correlated with colour, with blue stars being\r\nhotter than red stars. This was originally measured by astronomers by\r\nsomething called colour or B-V (B minus V) index.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nThe luminosity of a star is the rate\r\nat which it emits energy as light, and can be measured in the same units\r\nas light bulbs, i.e. watts (W). But to estimate the luminosity we need\r\nto know the distance to a star which, for nearby stars, can be \r\nfound by the parallax method. By plotting colour index (a proxy\r\nfor temperature) against luminosity we can form a key piece of empirical\r\nevidence - the Hertzsprung Russell diagram: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hertzsprung%E2%80%93Russell_diagram \r\n

\r\n

\r\nIt turns out that our nearest star - the Sun - is quite unremarkable. It is neither very hot or cool, nor\r\nvery bright or dim - it\'s a fairly typical star.\r\n

',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','astronomy,star,hydrogen,helium',0,0,1), (1588,'2014-09-03','HPR AudioBookClub-09-Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom',8952,'In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow.','

SUMMARY

\r\n

In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow. You can download this AudioBook for free (or voluntary donation) from podiobooks.com. https://podiobooks.com/title/down-and-out-in-the-magic-kingdom/ and it\'s also available in just about every ebook format you can imagine on Cory\'s website craphound.com. https://craphound.com/down/?page_id=1625 and as a paperback through various booksellers. We found this AudioBook enjoyable and thought provoking. The general consensus that we seem to have reached is that while the book left the reader with many unanswered questions about the world in which the book was set, they are welcome questions. It\'s brain bending fun.

\r\n

FiftyOneFifty (the link-king) found some cool links relating to the Haunted House and how it works. Check these out!

\r\n \r\n

gigasphere wrote in to say,

\r\n
I listened to this book in the space of a couple of days mostly. At first it took some time to get into but then was quite enjoyable, however in the second half I started to find it a bit hard going. The story is told exclusively in the first person (I think that\'s right) and as the story went on I found it quite difficult not having external points of view or reference. This is probably also due to good story telling as the main Character Jules is also getting frustrated and is increasingly isolated. The book was interesting and unique even before you got to the plot line and aspects of the world the characters were living in. I would recommend the book as an example of an interesting method of story telling and I\'m keen to pick up the other big Cory Doctorow book, \"Little Brother\".
\r\n

gigasphere\'s spoilers (Highlight to read)

\r\n
\r\n

From having read the wikipedia page on Cory I can see that Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, which is Cory\'s first novel, seems to have a trademark extrapolation with our own reality. The concept of backing up you mind and being brought back from the dead in a clone seems an excellent example of hyper-our-reality at the moment, but to then have everyone capable of being online using implants is also amazingly realistic when you consider the almost boom in wearables going on and the ubiquity of smartphones. I am reminded of the xkcd comic where the guy was having a USB port implanted.
https://xkcd.com/644/
The whuffie aspect of the book which replaces money, reminds me a lot of the social media thing of being rated by how many \'followers\' or \'likes\' or may be even \'hits\' you get. This also oddly reminds me of the download stats discussion on the mailing list at the moment.
I\'m not sure I\'ll add much to the overall discussion of the book from here as my no spoiler summary really rounds up the book for me. I would have liked to have a broader telling of the story, particularly from Lil\'s perspective, but the restrictions placed on the story also work to make it great, in that you are forced, as in real life, to view the world through only one person\'s eyes.

\r\n
\r\n

BEVERAGE REVIEWS

\r\n

We think you\'ll agree that the HPR_AudioBookClub really showed up for this one and they brought some all-star beverages. Please enjoy this episode responsibly.

\r\n \r\n

OUR NEXT TWO AUDIOBOOKS

\r\n

Revolution Radio by Seth Kenlon
https://aesdiopod.com/books/

\r\n

AND

\r\n

Street Candles by David Collins-Rivera
https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/stardrifter.html

\r\n

We\'re really excited about these two AudioBooks because both of these authors are HPR community members! We\'re assigning both at once because one is pretty short, and one is pretty long. We were a little worried that people might not finish Street Candles in time to participate, and we think this scheme may buy participants the time they they/we need.

\r\n

Seth Kenlon\'s personal profile page: https://seth.kenlon.usesthis.com/
Seth Kenlon\'s HPR correspondent page: https://hackerpublicradio.org/correspondents/0078.html

\r\n

David Collins-Rivera\'s personal blog: https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/index.html
David Collins-Rivera\'s HPR correspondent page: https://hackerpublicradio.org/correspondents/0107.html

\r\n

NEXT RECORDING

\r\n

Our next book club recording will be 2014/08/12T23:00:00+00:00. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times If you\'d like a Google calendar invite, or if you\'d like to be on the HPR_AudioBookClub mailing list, please get in contact with us on the HPR mailing list \'hpr at hackerpublicradio dot org\'

\r\n

FEEDBACK

\r\n

Thank you very much for listening to this episode of the HPR_AudioBookClub. We had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We also hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Please leave a few words in the episode\'s comment section.
As always; remember to visit the HPR contribution page HPR could really use your help right now.

\r\n

https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

\r\n

Sincerely,
The HPR_AudioBookClub

\r\n

P.S. Some people really like finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we always include a few.

\r\n

1: The HPR_AudioBookClub doesn\'t laugh at anyone for reviewing tea, nor any other drink. We intentionally call the segment a \"beverage review,\" not a \"beer review\" so that no one should feel alienated. Also because some of us drink wine.

\r\n

2: The HPR_AudioBookClub does laugh when people try to spell flavor with a \"u\"

',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub',0,0,1), (1644,'2014-11-20','Opensource.com: Benetech, OpenStack and Kumusha',954,'Benetech CEO opens up, the challenge of OpenStack product management, and Kumusha Takes Wiki.','

In this episode

\r\n\r\n

Open source product development most effective when social

\r\n

Benetech started out in the 90s without even understanding the meaning of the term open source. They just \"needed an easy way to interface with different voice synthesizers\" to develop readers for people who are blind and \"shared the code to be helpful.\"

\r\n

\r\n

Sound familiar? Opensource.com started covering stories like in 2010 and they recur more often than you might think. Stories of people sharing the code to help others—but sharing code to get help developing better code. When code is open, a community has the opportunity to form around it.

\r\n

Read this interview about what Benetech CEO Jim Fruchterman learned by adopting open source philosophy and furthering technology-for-good.
\r\nRead more: \r\nhttps://opensource.com/business/14/7/interview-jim-fruchterman-benetech

\r\n\r\n

OpenStack product management: wisdom or folly?

\r\n

Two recent, excellent, blog posts have touched on a topic I\'ve been wrestling with since May\'s OpenStack Summit: What is the role of the Product Management function, if any, in the OpenStack development process?

\r\n

The first article, \"Calling all \'User Landians\' to lead OpenStack above the cloud,\" by Evan Scheessele, talks about the \"real user\" of OpenStack—those people that need to deliver a solution that brings some sort of value to their organization. The other article, \"Who\'s In Charge Here Anyway?…,\" by Rob Hirschfeld, speaks to the dynamics of how decisions—which OpenStack features are in in or out—get made in the OpenStack ecosystem.
\r\nRead more: https://opensource.com/business/14/7/openstack-product-management-wisdom-or-folly

\r\n\r\n

Giving Sub-Saharan African communities an online presence

\r\n

People in Sub-Saharan Africa face hurdles to get online. Despite some progress, the region lags behind in Internet connectivity due to the high costs of service and poor infrastructure, according to a recent World Economic Forum report.

\r\n

\r\n

This digital divide means some African communities are underrepresented on the web. Without a well-developed online presence, misinformation about them can spread relatively unchallenged.
\r\nRead more: https://opensource.com/life/14/7/giving-sub-saharan-african-communities-online-presence\r\n

',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','Benetech,OpenStack',0,0,1), (1591,'2014-09-08','The Ultimate Cooking Device',1539,'Using a Weber grill to cook all your food.','

\r\nUsing a Weber grill to cook all your food.\r\n

\r\n\r\n',134,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,grill',0,0,1), (1589,'2014-09-04','KC MakerFair 2014',2749,'A rundown on all the cool things to see at the KC MakerFair 2014','

Mr. Gadgets calls in another show and this time he has been to Kansas City Maker Faire.

\n

Maker Faire: Kansas City celebrates things people create themselves — from new technology and electronic gizmos to urban farming and “slow-made” foods to homemade clothes, quilts and sculptures. This family-friendly event demonstrates what and how people are inventing, making and creating. It brings together Makers, Crafters, Inventors, Hackers, Scientists and Artists for a faire full of fun and inspiration.

\n

Links

\n ',155,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','maker faire,Kansas City',0,0,1), (1614,'2014-10-09','An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com',1265,'K-12 computer education, Karen Sandler on open source identity crisis, ChickTech\'s outreach efforts','

\r\nIn this episode: An open-minded curriculum for K-12 computer education, Karen Sandler on open source\'s \"identity crisis,\" ChickTech\'s outreach efforts.\r\n

\r\n

\r\nLinks:\r\n

\r\n\r\n',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','K-12 computer education,open source,ChickTech',0,0,1), (1622,'2014-10-21','An interview with Michael Tiemann',3668,'An Open Source News Break from Opensource.com: An interview with Michael Tiemann','

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n',280,28,1,'CC-BY-SA','interview,open source',0,0,1), (1626,'2014-10-27','Opensource.com: Recalling OSCON 2014.',1301,'The Opensource.com team recalls its experience at OSCON 2014','

In this episode: Recalling OSCON 2014.

\n

18 interviews with speakers of upcoming OSCON 2014

\n

The O\'Reilly Open Source Convention—or OSCON, as it\'s popularly known—is one of the world\'s premier open source events. For more than a decade, open-minded developers, innovators, and business people have gathered for this weeklong event, which explores cutting edge developments in the open source ecosystem. This year, Opensource.com visited OSCON, held July 20–July 24 at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland, OR (USA).

\n

Read more: https://opensource.com/business/14/7/speaker-interview-series-oscon-2014

\n

Open source talks: OSCON 2014 speaker interviews

\n

Eagerly awaiting another year of open source wonders, the Opensource.com community caught up with a handful of notable OSCON speakers to gather behind-the-scenes stories about their passions for open source. Our eBook book collects the interviews we conducted.

\n

Read more: https://opensource.com/resources/oscon-2014-interviews

\n

Keynotes from OSCON 2014 Day 1

\n

Our own Jason Hibbets and Jen Wike were live blogging from OSCON 2014! Day 1 talks include:

\n \n
Read more: https://opensource.com/life/14/7/oscon-2014

Keynotes from OSCON 2014 Day 2

\n

We\'re back with keynote coverage on Day 2 of OSCON 2014! Day 2 talks include:

\n \n
Read more: https://opensource.com/business/14/7/keynotes-day-2-oscon-2014

Keynotes from OSCON 2014 Day 3

\n

We\'re back with keynote coverage on Day 3 of OSCON 2014! Day 3 talks include:

\n \n
Read more: https://opensource.com/business/14/7/keynotes-oscon-2014-day-3',280,28,0,'CC-BY-SA','OSCON 2014,open source',0,0,1), (1674,'2015-01-01','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 1 of 8',12840,'The first 4 hours of the 2014 to 2015 New Year Show.','2014-12-31T10:00:00Zhpr1674 :: New Year Show Part 1 of 8https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1674Welcome to the 4th Annual Hacker Public Radio show. It is December the 31st 2014 and the time is 10 hundred hours UTC. We start the show by sending Greetings to Christmas Island/Kiribati and Samoa Kiritimati, Apia.Announcements: Even with editors  volunteering, we need some folks to record as backup (Ken said ogg is  fine). Bruce Patterson is looking for a new host for the Distrowatch  Weekly Podcast fixing 5150s mike problems because he was half alseep.   Talking new PC and components prices and construction theory2014-12-31T10:15:00ZIt is December the 31st 2014 and the time is 10 15 hundred hours UTC 
  • Greetings to Chatham Islands/New Zealand Chatham Islands.
  • Marcus cobra2 and 5150 talk  movies, the ease of use of HPR, focusing on one topic when podcasting   We talk Canadian and New Zealand TV.  Steam on Linux. 2014-12-31T11:00:00Z
    • Greetings to New Zealand with exceptions and 5 more  Auckland, Suva, Wellington, Nukualofa.
    • FiftyOneFifty and Dudeman discuss single board computers, being on fire, and herding cattle.  The cameras dude-man uses with Zone-Minder https://www.hikvision.com/Es/Products_show.asp?id=7326  Various old man ailments, diet and exercise.2014-12-31T12:00:00Z
      • Greetings to small region of Russia, Marshall Islands and 5 more Anadyr, Funafuti, Yaren, Tarawa.
      • Time zones again tailoring your distro to get what you want2014-12-31T12:30:00Z
        • Greetings to Norfolk Island, Kingston.
        • Efficient Ubuntu spins to put on older hardware2014-12-31T13:00:00Z
          • Greetings to much of Australia and 5 more  Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, Honiara.
          • Announcement: Bruce Patterson is looking for a new host for the Distrowatch Weekly Podcast  The N900, and mobile Linux computing2014-12-31T13:30:00Z
            • Greetings to small region of Australia Adelaide, Broken Hill.
            • Zoneminder and a Pi connected to a webcam',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1675,'2015-01-02','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 2 of 8',11580,'New Year Show Part 2 from 14:00 to 18:00','2014-12-31T14:00:00Z
              hpr1675 :: New Year Show Part 2 of 8
              https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1675
              \n
                \n
              • Greetings to Queensland/Australia and 5 more Brisbane, Port Moresby, Guam, Cairns.
                \n
                \n
              • \n
              2014-12-31T14:30:00Z
              \n
              \n
                \n
              • Greetings to Northern Territory/Australia, Darwin, Alice Springs, Uluru.
              • \n
                      Flying Rich arrives!
              \n 2014-12-31T15:00:00Z
              \n
              \n 2014-12-31T15:15:00Z
              \n
              \n 2014-12-31T16:00:00Z
              \n
              \n 2014-12-31T17:00:00Z
              \n
              \n
                \n
              • Greetings to much of Indonesia, Thailand and 7 more: Jakarta, Bangkok, Hanoi, Phnom Penh.
              • \n
              • We\'re off by one!
              • \n
              • Broam pokes Pegwole for some photography gear talk
              • \n
              • Etymology of IRC handles / nicknames
              • \n
              • RP - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Received_Pronunciation
              • \n
              • Which shortcut key to use in mumble?
              • \n
              • thistleweb sayings \"
                \n
                \n
              • \n
              2014-12-31T17:30:00Z
              \n
              \n
                \n
              • Greetings to Myanmar and Cocos Islands, Yangon, Naypyidaw, Mandalay, Bantam.
              • \n
              • Dude man has us wondering what \"1 inch below is worth 2 above\" 
              • \n
              • \"its connected with cutting hay... when your using a scythe which is really advanced tech and basicly led to the masive dependance on grain consumption believe it or not. But when cutting grass for hay for winter feed... cutting lower at the bottom by 1 inch gave bigger return for your effort and quality than have the grass 2 inches tailer
                \n
                \n
              • \n
              ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1677,'2015-01-06','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 4 of 8',8224,'New Year Show Part 4 of 8 22:00 to 00:30 UTC','2014-12-31T22:00:00ZMumble-2014-12-31-14-00-23-ch1.teamspeak.cc-Mixdown.ogg
              • Greetings to Greece and 30 more: Cairo, Ankara, Athens, and Bucharest.
              • kinda quiet
              • camera buying with dann.... kinda
              • topic hopping
              • speculation on how windows will work without IE.
              • proprietary marketing skills
              • mass brainwashing of the world (Apple, anyone?)


              • 2014-12-31T23:00:00Z
                • Greetings to Germany and 43 more: Brussels, Madrid, Paris, and Rome.
                • Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, Coppies, coppyright, 
                • we are living the future, we are all our own gutenbergs
                • The wave is really the Mexican Wave!
                • George Orwell was an incredible human being
                • Was George Orwell a time traveler who invented the salng word \"Pig\" for police?
                • Star wars discussion
                • Dr. Who talk
                • Distribution of entertainment media around the world shouldn\'t be delayed
                • Best comic book remakes
                • 2015-01-01T00:00:00Z
                  • Greetings to United Kingdom and 24 more: London, Casablanca, Dublin, and Lisbon.
                  • ...continuing the Dr. Who / media distribution discussion
                  • ThistleWeb watches Dawson\'s Creek 
                  • Bluetooth controllers, Bethoven and jousting https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2014/12/microsoft-tells-j-s-joust-devs-their-game-is-not-possible-on-windows/
                  • Lord Drakenblut Has a crowd funding campaign to get to SCALE. https://www.gofundme.com/gysc0o . Sadly, he is ill.
                  • I (JonTheNiceGuy) joined the feed, and the podcast I produce (CCHits.net *plug*) was mentioned ;)
                  • KLAATU IS HERE!!!!
                  • now we are talking about things that he cannot speak about. 
                  • reading the books is faster than watching the movies?
                  • Book and movie spoiler time =D yolo
                  • Books, Movies...
                  • Bad cantina music


                  • ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1678,'2015-01-07','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 5 of 8',8239,'New Year Show Part 5 of 8 00:30 to 03:00 UTC','2015-01-01T00:00:00Z
                    • Greetings to United Kingdom and 24 more: London, Casablanca, Dublin, and Lisbon.
                    • ...continuing the Dr. Who / media distribution discussion
                    • ThistleWeb watches Dawson\'s Creek 
                    • Bluetooth controllers, Bethoven and jousting https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2014/12/microsoft-tells-j-s-joust-devs-their-game-is-not-possible-on-windows/
                    • Lord Drakenblut Has a crowd funding campaign to get to SCALE. https://www.gofundme.com/gysc0o . Sadly, he is ill.
                    • I (JonTheNiceGuy) joined the feed, and the podcast I produce (CCHits.net *plug*) was mentioned ;)
                    • KLAATU IS HERE!!!!
                    • now we are talking about things that he cannot speak about. 
                    • reading the books is faster than watching the movies?
                    • Book and movie spoiler time =D yolo
                    • Books, Movies...
                    • Bad cantina music


                    • 2015-01-01T01:00:00Z
                      • Greetings to Cape Verde, some regions of Greenland and 1 more: Praia, Ponta Delgada (Azores), Ittoqqortoormiit, and Mindelo.
                      • Podcast recommendations:
                      • Crivens - https://unseenstudio.co.uk/category/crivins-ogg/
                      • The Linux Link Tech Show - https://tllts.org got that one already
                      • The Crab Feast - https://www.thecrabfeast.com/
                      • Tech Snap - https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/
                      • Linux in the Ham Shack - https://lhspodcast.info/
                      • Linux Action Show (total shite)
                      • Keith and the Girl - https://www.keithandthegirl.com/
                      • Podnutz.com - if you need a link..... https://justfuckinggoogleit.com/  {NSFW}
                      • Distorted View - https://www.distortedview.com/show
                      • Tux Jam - https://unseenstudio.co.uk/category/tuxjam-ogg/
                      • Bad Voltage - https://www.badvoltage.org/
                      • the Changelog - (better than FLOSS Weekly) https://thechangelog.com/
                      • Knightcast by Knightwise
                      • The No Agenda Show - https://www.noagendashow.com/
                      • Stuff You Should Know - https://www.stuffyoushouldknow.com/
                      • \"No such thing as a fish\" - https://qi.com/podcast/ 
                      • Tank Riot - https://www.tankriot.com/
                      • Raspi today - https://www.raspi.today/
                      • Linux Voice - https://linuxvoice.com
                      • Going Linux - https://goinglinux.com
                      • DVDASA - https://dvdasa.com watch the videos uncensored on https://vid.me/u/dvdasa
                      • Linux Luddites - https://linuxluddites.com
                      • mintCast - https://mintcast.org
                      • The Adam Carolla Show - https://adamcarolla.com/
                      • Ace on the House - https://aceonthehouse.adamcarolla.com/
                      • CC Hits - cchits.net
                      • Youtube mini cooper build with 200 HP 4WD Celica running gear https://www.youtube.com/attribution_link?a=zjG9fRWFnag&u=/playlist?list%3DLLHvBHWBzzB7NyU5tIiEZHBg
                      • Just general talking about commercial media. 
                      • Jim Henson series - The Story Teller https://thetvdb.com/?tab=series&id=77747&lid=7
                      • LEX - https://thetvdb.com/?tab=series&id=72854&lid=7


                      • 2015-01-01T02:00:00Z
                        • Greetings to regions of Brazil, Uruguay and 1 more: Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Brasilia, Montevideo.
                        • 5150 has shitty audio again
                        • Favorite Hardware purchases of 2014
                        • cobra2 - Duracell powermat (inductive portable backup)  $10 USD https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0082YVBO0/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
                        • pokey: Gorilla Drive USB flash memory (thumb drive), $200 Wally World HP laptop
                        • SndChaser: ZaReason laptop https://zareason.com/shop/home.php
                        • back to tvshows
                        • Starship titanic https://www.starshiptitanic.com/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starship_Titanic
                        • FOOD!!!
                        • genetically modified crops discussion (pretty good)

                        • ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1679,'2015-01-08','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 6 of 8',7967,'New Year Show Part 6 of 8 from 03:00 to 05:30 UTC','2015-01-01T03:00:00Z
                          • Greetings to regions of Brazil, Argentina and 7 more: Buenos Aires, Santiago, Asuncion, Paramaribo.
                          • SoundChaser doesn\'t sound pasty white. 
                          • Genetically modified discusion continues (not as good the second time)
                          • Genetically modified discusion continues (time to fast forward)
                          • 2015-01-01T03:30:00Z
                            • Greetings to Newfoundland and Labrador/Canada  St. John\'s, Conception Bay South, Corner Brook,Gander.
                            • Systemd discussion about server logs
                            • we still don\'t understand why they do time on a 30 min break.... come on people just use UTC
                            • UTC FTW
                            • Watch chat
                            • Drink-o-meter chat this is a fabulous idea, 50 should do it. 
                            • guns and good chinchillas


                            • 2015-01-01T04:00:00Z
                              • Greetings to Atlantic Canada and cobra2 and 26 more: Saint John, La Paz, San Juan, Santo Domingo, Halifax.
                              • guns... again pokey talks about how he rebuilt an air gun to something special that ended in epic fail (bent barrel)
                              • Pokey has a Bad Barrel
                              • pokey has a new job!!!
                              • pokey is building the internet at his new job. Trans-oceanic cables don\'t build themselves afterall.
                              • books
                              • 2015-01-01T04:30:00Z
                                • Greetings to Venezuela Caracas, Barquisimeto, Maracaibo, Maracay.
                                • retro games that are must plays
                                • Metroid NES
                                • Super Metroid SNES
                                • Legend of Zelda NES
                                • Ninja Gaiden
                                • Lolo Land NES
                                • You Don\'t Know Jack PC
                                • Delwin makes a cameo appearance
                                • 2015-01-01T05:00:00Z
                                  • Greetings to the eastern region of the United States,regions of Canada and 12 more: New York, Boston, Rochester NY, Rochester NH, Millinocket, Maryland, Washington DC, Detroit, Havana, Atlanta.
                                  • fireworks and meth labs go up in celebration of the new year. Pgggy went to watch...
                                  • and we are really not family friendly now
                                  • Kerbal Space Platform is a game. People like it.
                                  • notKlaatu didn\'t get busted transproting lockpick tools from the US to New Zealand
                                  • OpenSource HTML5 IRC client: https://kiwiirc.com/
                                  • Gnu Social servers: https://quitter.se and https://micro.fragdev.com/


                                  • ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1680,'2015-01-09','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 7 of 8',8518,'New Year Show Part 7 of 8 from 05:30 to 08:00 UTC','2015-01-01T05:00:00Z
                                    • Greetings to the eastern region of the United States,regions of Canada and 12 more: New York, Boston, Rochester NY, Rochester NH, Millinocket, Maryland, Washington DC, Detroit, Havana, Atlanta.
                                    • fireworks and meth labs go up in celebration of the new year. Pgggy went to watch...
                                    • and we are really not family friendly now
                                    • Kerbal Space Platform is a game. People like it.
                                    • notKlaatu didn\'t get busted transproting lockpick tools from the US to New Zealand
                                    • OpenSource HTML5 IRC client: https://kiwiirc.com/
                                    • Gnu Social servers: https://quitter.se and https://micro.fragdev.com/


                                    • 2015-01-01T06:00:00Z
                                      • Greetings to the midwest region of the United States, some regions of Canada and 8 more  Mexico City, Chicago, Guatemala, Dallas.
                                      • Hillbilly Tracking of Low Earth Orbit [30c3]
                                      • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ktnQ7nBCuqU
                                      • Etherpad is the BOMB!
                                      • arrrr
                                      • No more possum drops in Brasstown, NC
                                      • fecal matter.... lots of it.... don\'t listen to this hour...
                                      • Threethirty\'s S2 has epic audio over 3G
                                      • Summer/Winter breaks
                                      • What we did when we were kids.
                                      • Best memories of 2014
                                      • 5150 fire
                                      • NSFW..... NSFAA
                                      • NSFBWA
                                      • well cobra2 attempted to reign in the chaos.... bah... this is pointless. 
                                      • ehhh, warn them I hate being the judgemental type.
                                      • I\'m not logged in as an admin. else I\'d do it myself
                                      • pokey considers banishing people to the competitive drinking room...
                                      • if you can\'t beat em... join em? That was reeling it in.Might bring it  to stories
                                      • HPR NYE goes off the rails for a bit, and Cobra2 dropps the gentile hammer.
                                      • then we find out just how drunk 50 is.....
                                      • 2015-01-01T07:00:00Z
                                        • Greetings to the mountain region of the United States, some regions of Canada and 1 more: Calgary, Denver, Edmonton, Phoenix.
                                        • cobra2 injests first cup of coffee that is needed to stay awake
                                        • Weak
                                        • This hour is NSFW too.
                                        • More Copyright discussion.
                                        • finally coffee.......
                                        • Coffee in New Zealand is pretty darn good ~ Klaatu
                                        • OMG there was an alien in the Navy. robot.
                                        • and someone prods the bear

                                        • ',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1596,'2014-09-15','About the Word \"Hack\"',811,'Klaatu muses about the word \"hack\"','

                                          Klaatu muses about the word \"hack\" and what it means, what it should mean, and how we can keep it meaningful.

                                          ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hack,hacker',0,0,1), (1601,'2014-09-22','Howto Install LAMP',937,'Klaatu introduces new web developers to LAMP.','

                                          If you\'re just starting out as a web developer or\r\ndesigner, you should know about LAMP and how to use it. This episode\r\nintroduces you to the basics.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nLAMP (software bundle)
                                          \r\nFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
                                          \r\nLAMP is an acronym for an archetypal model of web service solution stacks, originally consisting of largely interchangeable components: Linux, the Apache HTTP Server, the MySQL relational database management system, and the PHP programming language. As a solution stack, LAMP is suitable for building dynamic web sites and web applications.\r\n
                                          \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAMP_%28software_bundle%29\r\n

                                          ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','LAMP',0,0,1), (1606,'2014-09-29','Howto VNC',843,'Klaatu talks about how to get VNC up and running.','

                                          Klaatu talks about how to get VNC up and running. It focuses on x11vnc but basically it applies to any variety.

                                          \n

                                          Virtual Network Computing
                                          From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
                                          \n
                                          In computing, Virtual Network Computing (VNC) is a graphical desktop sharing system that uses the Remote Frame Buffer protocol (RFB) to remotely control another computer. It transmits the keyboard and mouse events from one computer to another, relaying the graphical screen updates back in the other direction, over a network.
                                          VNC is platform-independent – There are clients and servers for many GUI-based operating systems and for Java. Multiple clients may connect to a VNC server at the same time. Popular uses for this technology include remote technical support and accessing files on one\'s work computer from one\'s home computer, or vice versa.
                                          VNC was originally developed at the Olivetti & Oracle Research Lab in Cambridge, United Kingdom. The original VNC source code and many modern derivatives are open source under the GNU General Public License.
                                          There are a number of variants of VNC which offer their own particular functionality; e.g., some optimised for Microsoft Windows, or offering file transfer (not part of VNC proper), etc. Many are compatible (without their added features) with VNC proper in the sense that a viewer of one flavour can connect with a server of another; others are based on VNC code but not compatible with standard VNC.
                                          VNC and RFB are registered trademarks of RealVNC Ltd. in the U.S. and in other countries.

                                          \n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','VNC,Virtual Network Computing',0,0,1), (1616,'2014-10-13','Howto Use Webfonts',1236,'Klaatu reveals the secret of webfonts WITHOUT using Google','

                                          Klaatu reveals the secret of webfonts WITHOUT using Google. How can this be? Listen and find out.

                                          \r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','font,CSS,font-face',0,0,1), (1594,'2014-09-11','Steam and wine with linux',1033,'How to coax a windows-only steam game to work under steam in GNU/Linux.','

                                          This isn\'t about my worshiping of Bacchus by playing games on linux in a sauna (that\'s for a future show) but instead about getting a Windows-only Steam game to work on a recent 64 bit linux distro. I\'m using Slackware, but I suspect the pitfalls and solutions I encountered would be similar on other distros.

                                          \n

                                          Links relevant to this adventure:

                                          \n ',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux,gaming,wine,steam,slackware',0,0,1), (1670,'2014-12-26','Digital Signatures and Certificates',1060,'This episode looks at secure connections between users and Web sites.','

                                          \r\nDigital Signatures are something that is very important in understanding security on the Internet. While we have seen it in the context of personal e-mail, the applications are much broader, in particular to the use of certificates to establish communication.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nRecall from our discussion of e-mail that there are two things you can do with an e-mail using PGP or GPG. First is you can encrypt the message, which you do using the public key of the recipient, and then they can decrypt the message using their private key. The other was putting a digital signature on a message. But how does that work? - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=655\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','TLS, SSL, Certificates',0,0,1), (1640,'2014-11-14','Symmetric vs. Asymmetric Encryption',1231,'This episode looks the two kinds of encryption keys, and why to use each one.','

                                          \r\nPreviously we looked at Public Key encryption, which is also called Asymmetric Encryption because it uses two different keys for the encryption and decryption. This allows us to solve one of the biggest problems in secure encrypted communication, which is key distribution. Because the public key can be freely distributed, you dont need to maintain security around the process of distributing keys. Symmetric encryption, on the other hand, relies on a shared key that is used for both encryption and decryption. An example of this is the one-time pad, where you printed up a pad of paper that contained various keys, and each one was used only once. As long as no one can get the key, it is unbreakable, but the big weakness was key distribution. How do you get the one-time pad into the hands of your correspondent? And you would need to do this with separate one-time pads for each person you needed to communicate with. These are the kinds of problems that made asymmetric encryption so popular. Finally, symmetric key crypto cannot be used to reliably create a digital signature. The reason should be clear. If I have the same secret key you used to sign a message, I can alter the message, use the shared secret key myself, and claim you sent it. - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=650\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','symmetric, asymmetric, encryption',0,0,1), (1620,'2014-10-17','Passwords, Entropy, and Good Password Practices',1293,'This episode explores the best password practices from a mathematical viewpoint with recommendations','

                                          \r\nRight now for most of us the key to any security in our online life is the degree of entropy in our passwords. So what is entropy, and how does it affect our passwords?\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nEntropy is in general the degree of randomness or disorder in any given system. Sometimes it is very easy to assess, such as a password of 1234, which all too many people use. Because it is a simple sequence, there is no real randomness at all, and would be quickly guessed. And as we saw in the last tutorial, such passwords are quickly discovered in a dictionary attack. There are things you can do to make it less likely that your password will be cracked and used against you. - For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=530\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','passwords, entropy',0,0,1), (1598,'2014-09-17','Hashing and Password Security',1588,'Understanding password security begins with understanding hashing.','

                                          Today, the most common way of providing security in giving access to data or systems is through the use of passwords. Practically every online site now expects you to create an account with a password, which will let you post comments, order products, conduct business, or just post to social media. The implication is that insisting on passwords provides some level of security. Now, following on our last tutorial we should ask a few questions about just how effective this measure is, since someone posting in your name to Twitter is significantly different from someone accessing your bank account. And since the assets being protected are very different, it would be reasonable to approach the problem of security somewhat differently in these cases. But given the ubiquity of passwords as the authentication for online accounts, we need to look at the security involved. Note that I am approaching this from the standpoint of the owner of the site in question for this tutorial, and will follow up with a look at your own role in this.
                                          For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=640

                                          \n

                                          Links:

                                          \n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','hashing, passwords',0,0,1), (1599,'2014-09-18','Interview with Ingmar Steiner from the MaryTTS project',5148,'Ken interviews Ingmar Steiner from the MaryTTS text to speech project.','

                                          In today\'s show Ken interviews Ingmar Steiner who is the lead developer for the mary text to speech project. MaryTTS is an open-source, multilingual text-to-speech synthesis system written in pure java and is released under the LGPL. During the interview we get a history of the project, and dive into speech synthesis and we look at how to make your own voices.

                                          \"Photo

                                          Links

                                          \n ',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','text to speech,MaryTTS,ORCA',0,0,1), (1603,'2014-09-24','GUADEC 2014: Matthew Garrett Interview',890,'I was able to ask GUADEC Keynote Speaker and free software activist Matthew Garrett a few questions.','

                                          This year\'s GUADEC, the Gnome Users and Developers Conference was held in Strasbourg, France. Keynote Speaker was free software activist Matthew Garrett. He held an inspiring speech on the Linux and Gnome desktop and laid out his vision for both. Afterwards, I was able to ask him a few questions.

                                          \n

                                          For any reactions, mail me at mail (at) linuxohneangst.net

                                          \n

                                          Enjoy.

                                          \n

                                          Links

                                          \n ',285,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Gnome, Guadec, Desktop, Garrett',0,0,1), (1607,'2014-09-30','Migrating from Drupal 6 to Nikola',573,'I explain how I migrated my Drupal 6 blog to Nikola.','

                                          \r\nI talk about the migration of my blog from Drupal 6 to Nikola. I explain\r\nwhy I wanted to migrate, and I tell about the script I used.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nDetails and scripts can be found on my blog:\r\nhttps://blog.johanv.org/posts/drupal-nikola.html\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nSee also:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',233,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','drupal,nikola,blogging',0,0,1), (1608,'2014-10-01','Interviews at Lincoln LUG',2707,'A collection of short interviews with Lincoln LUG members. ','

                                          In today\'s show, Philip Newborough interviews fellow members of Lincoln LUG. Each interviewee is asked 3 simple questions:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          1. What was your first experience of Linux?
                                          2. \n
                                          3. What distro and desktop environment/window manager are you currently using?
                                          4. \n
                                          5. What tools/utilities/applications can you not live without?
                                          6. \n
                                          \n

                                          The participating LUG members were not given the questions in advance and the resulting answers were quite varied. Hopefully, this collection of interviews will provide you, the listener, with a good understanding of the broad mix of Linux users who attend Lincoln LUG.

                                          \"Members

                                          The members who were interviewed, in order, were:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          1. Dave Armour
                                          2. \n
                                          3. Myles Thaiss
                                          4. \n
                                          5. Phil Gobbett
                                          6. \n
                                          7. Jo Minchin
                                          8. \n
                                          9. Graham Markall
                                          10. \n
                                          11. Sarah Markall
                                          12. \n
                                          13. Becky Newborough
                                          14. \n
                                          15. Darren Scott
                                          16. \n
                                          17. Adrian Farrow
                                          18. \n
                                          19. Emma Martin
                                          20. \n
                                          \n

                                          Note: Lincoln LUG meets on the 3rd Wednesday of each month at the Lincoln Bowl. The interviews were conducted outside the bowl and some background noise can be heard, we hope this does not affect your enjoyment of this episode.

                                          ',287,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interviews,linux,lug',0,0,1), (1612,'2014-10-07','Don\'t Forget the Referbs',1211,'NYbill talks about a refurbished Lenovo and modifying it to his liking.','

                                          \r\nNYbill talks about getting a refurbished Lenovo X61 and making it more functional with a tool or two. There is also some talk of PLC\'s (Programmable Logic Controllers). A more in depth explanation of PLC\'s could be an episode in itself and might be some day. Stay tuned...\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nPics for the episode:\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/collection/hacking-a-lenovo-x61/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nLenovo after market BIOS. Allows Ctrl-Fn swap in older systems. (Use at your own risk!):\r\nhttps://forum.notebookreview.com/lenovo/474396-fn-ctrl-swap-all-lenovo-laptops-solved.html\r\n

                                          ',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Lenovo,Lenovo X61,modification',0,0,1), (1609,'2014-10-02','Sigil And The Process Of The Epub In FOSS',2282,'lostnbronx rambles on and on about his current process for creating epubs using FOSS tools','

                                          \r\nHere are some links to the software discussed in this episode\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',107,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','sigil, epub',0,0,1), (1613,'2014-10-08','What\'s in a nickname?',505,'Mikael talks about his Internet nickname.','

                                          \r\nHow I came to use Inscius as my Internet nickname.\r\n

                                          Links:

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/inscius\r\n

                                          ',283,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','nickname,handle,name,domain',0,0,1), (1617,'2014-10-14','Spaceteam',629,'A game of Spaceteam ','

                                          If this show only confuses you, search the Internet for the Android app Spaceteam, have some friends install it and start playing. To maximize the fun you preferably play in a public place.

                                          \n

                                          https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sleepingbeastgames.spaceteam&hl=en

                                          ',288,62,1,'CC-BY-SA','OggCamp, Spaceteam, Android, Game',0,0,1), (1618,'2014-10-15','OggCamp Attendees',839,'The first two interviews with OggCamp attendees ','

                                          \r\nThis show includes two interviews with OggCamp attendees this year. \r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe first interview is with TDTRS co-host Peter Cannon, who is convinced that his podcast is the best Linux podcast there is and he is sure going to tell you why.
                                          \r\nhttps://tdtrs.co.uk\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nIn the second interview I talked to Alistair (whose name I hopefully spell correctly), who told me that he would like to be a HPR host himself. So this ist his first appearance on HPR and hopefully not the last. \r\n

                                          \r\n',288,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp, interviews',0,0,1), (1623,'2014-10-22','Tech and Coffee at OggCamp',1295,'Another set of OggCamp interviews. I talk to Keith Milner and George Doscher from Tech and Coffee.','

                                          In this episode of interviews from OggCamp 2014 I talk to George Doscher who co-founded (or founded, I really don\'t know) the Tech and Coffee Google Plus hangout. You\'ll find him at

                                          \n

                                          https://plus.google.com/+GeorgeDoscher

                                          \n

                                          and on Tech and Coffee under

                                          \n

                                          https://techandcoffee.info/

                                          \n

                                          In the second interview I talk to Keith Milner who has some interesting and fairly technical stuff to tell you about mobile networks. He also talks about unencrypted traffic on the carrier networks and why it\'s even more important for you to use encryption when using the web on your mobile. You find him under

                                          \n

                                          https://plus.google.com/+KeithMilner

                                          ',288,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp, G+, Tech and Coffee',0,0,1), (1621,'2014-10-20','OggCamp Interview with James Tait',737,'A short interview with James Tait of Canonical. ','

                                          In today\'s show, Philip Newborough interviews James Tait of Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu.

                                          \n

                                          James talks about his work on the now defunct Ubuntu One project, and his current work with Ubuntu Phone. James is a super-nice guy, knowledgeable and very gracious. He was a pleasure to interview.

                                          \"James

                                          PICTURED: James Tait (right) with Mark Shuttleworth (left).

                                          \n

                                          The interview was conducted at OggCamp 14, a free culture unconference, held in Oxford UK on the weekend of October 4th-5th 2014.

                                          ',287,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interviews,linux,ubuntu,oggcamp',0,0,1), (1630,'2014-10-31','Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 2)',3024,'This episode discusses interrupt handling, and program loading using the Xmodem protocol','

                                          \r\nThe second episode in a series on bare metal programming on the Raspberry Pi. This episode builds on part 1 by showing how interrupts work on the RPIs ARM chip and the framework I created to manage them. It then goes on to describe\r\nhow an interrupt-enabled serial driver works. From there, the episode\r\nshows how we can use the serial cable in conjunction with a loader program\r\nto enable us to load bare-metal programs onto the RPI without having to\r\ncopy them to the SD card each time. In the process, the episode describes the\r\nXMODEM protocol that the loader users for the file transfer process.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHere is some of the source material that I used while working on this\r\nlittle learning experience.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',259,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','programming, embedded systems, raspberry pi',0,0,1), (1619,'2014-10-16','Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 1)',3734,'This show is about how to program a Raspberry Pi with no operating system and no libraries.','

                                          \r\nThis show is about programming on a Raspberry Pi with on operating\r\nsystem or libraries. In this programming environment, the only software\r\nthat the CPU executes is the software that you write. This episode\r\nintroduces how to configure the build environment and get a basic\r\napplication up and running. From here one can leverage these techniques\r\nto build more sophisticated applications and deepen ones knowledge of\r\nsystems programming.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHere is some of the source material that I used while working on this\r\nlittle learning experience.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\ndwelch67\'s bare metal repository\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nCATRPI\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Homepage: https://gitorious.org/catrpi\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Git repo: git://gitorious.org/catrpi/catrpi.git\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • My own repository of code that I wrote during this little project.\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nAdafruit USB to TTL cable\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nScript to build the ARM toolchain\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nARM ARM\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nARM TRM\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nRPI Schematics\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nRPI Peripherals\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',259,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','programming,embedded systems,raspberry pi',0,0,1), (1624,'2014-10-23','Penguicon 2015 Call for Talks',963,'I am looking for people who can present tech/FOSS talks at Penguicon 2015','

                                          I am the coordinator for the Tech Track at Penguicon 2015, which is a combined FOSS/Science Fiction convention held every spring in the Metro-Detroit area. The 2015 event will happen April 24-26 at the Westin Hotel in Southfield, MI. The theme for the upcoming year\'s event is Biotechnology and medicine, looking at how technology is affecting our health and life. But we want a lot of different talks as well, so I will be happy to accept proposals that look at things like cloud computing, security, hardware hacks, and anything else that would be of interest to geeks and hackers.

                                          \n

                                          Links:

                                          \n ',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon',0,0,1), (1655,'2014-12-05','43 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating Pivot Tables',950,'How to create a Pivot Table','

                                          \r\nWe take a look at one of the most powerful, but somewhat frightening, features of modern spreadsheets. But knowing the basics of pivot tables should make themn a bit less frightening to the newcomer.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, pivot, tables',0,0,1), (1665,'2014-12-19','44 - LibreOffice Calc - Working With Pivot Tables',652,'When you have a pivot table, what are some of the things you can do with it to analyze your data?','

                                          We take a look at one of the most powerful, but somewhat frightening, features of modern spreadsheets. But knowing the basics of pivot tables should make them a bit less frightening to the newcomer.

                                          \n ',198,70,1,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, pivot, tables',0,0,1), (1685,'2015-01-16','45 - LibreOffice Calc - Styles and Templates Introduced',905,'How the concepts of Styles and Templates can be useful in Spreadsheets','

                                          \r\nWhen we were looking at Writer we saw that Styles and Templates are key concepts to using any word processor. They are not quite as central in spreadsheet use, and one can be a proficient user without resort to them, but they do give you control over the appearance of your spreadsheets, and can give the sheets you create uniform appearance. We discussed these ideas in great detail in our Writer tutorials, so I am going to hope that some of that knowledge has carried over here. Still, lets get to some basic concepts:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, Styles, Templates',0,0,1), (1627,'2014-10-28','5150 Shades of Beer: 0001 He\'Brew Hops Selection from Smaltz Brewing Company',943,'Beer, drinking same','

                                          \r\nSmaltz Brewing Company - He\'Brew (The Chosen Beer) Hops Collection\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nDavid\'s Slingshot - Pours golden, like an American lager, large head that subsides, rye aroma. Blend of multi-grain malts, an emphasis on hops w/o being excessively hoppy. Citrus taste from the hops. Malts: Specialist 2-row, Carmel Pils, Rye Ale, Crystal Rye, Vienna, Wheat, Flaked Oats Hops: Cascade, SAAZ, Summit, Citra, Crystal\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nGenesis Dry, so dry you could be excused for wanting a glass of water to go with your beer. Bready, not biscuity, like a fresh sourdough loaf, almost makes you want to spread butter over your beer. Just enough hops to be interesting rather than annoying. Just a little sweet on the back end, so subtle you\'ll likely miss it on the first sip. Watery mouth feel. 5.5% ACL. Malts: Specialty 2-row, Munich, Core Munich 40, Wheat, Dark Crystal Hops: Warrior, Centennial, Cascade, Simcoe\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBittersweet Lenny\'s R.I.P.A. Double Rye (an ode to comedian Lenny Bruce). Pours very dark amber, small head. Aroma of sweet rye bread. Sweet honey taste w/o being cloying, washed away by the hops. Strong rye flavor, much more than Slingshot. Malts: 2-row, Rye Ale Malt, Torrified Rye, Crystal Rye 75, Crystal Malt 80, Wheat, Kiln Amber, Core Munich 60 Hops: Warrior, Cascade, Simcoe, Saaz, Crystal, Chinook, Amarillo, Centennial\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHop Manna IPA Pours medium amber with a good head. Little distinct aroma. For the hops enthusiast who doesn\'t want other flavors getting in the way, but still not so hoppy that the hops get in the way of the hops. Hoppy enough to satisfy most hops heads without making your tongue feel like it is under assault from the Hop High Command. Malt: Specialty 2-row, Wheat, Munich, Vienna, Core Munich 60 HOPS: Warior, Cascade, Citra, Amarillo, Crystal, Centennial Dry Hop: Centennial, Cascade, Citra\r\nEven though hoppy beers aren\'t my preference, Smaltz/He\'Brew were 4 out of 4 winners. If you see this brand, grab it with both hands. Even if I hated the beer, I\'d be a fan because each bottle lists the malts and hops, giving the home brewer a shot at replicating the brew and the expert consumer a hint of what the beer is going to taste like before purchasing.\r\n

                                          ',131,14,0,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer,beer,ale',0,0,1), (1632,'2014-11-04','5150 Shades of Beer: 0002 Wichita Brewing Company',3084,'Beer, drinking same part 2','\r\n

                                          \"beer\"

                                          ',131,14,0,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer, beer, Wichita, fire',0,0,1), (1695,'2015-01-30','46 - LibreOffice Calc - The Object Model and Using Templates',1520,'Ubderstanding the Object Model and how Templates work. ','

                                          \r\nAs I said in the last tutorial, Templates can be understood as a container for a number of settings, most particularly Styles. This follows the object model, which is a lot like those Russian dolls inside of each other. The File for your spreadsheet is an object, and it contains individual Sheets which are objects. Each Sheet contains Cells which are objects. And each Cell contains various Characters which are objects, which can be used to represent numbers, formulas, addresses, labels, etc. Objects exhibit two features we always want to keep in mind. First, objects have properties that are particular to the kind of object. The properties of a file might include who the author is, where the file resides on the system, any access restrictions (like making the file password-protected), and so on. \r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe properties of each sheet might include things like the name of the sheet, the orientation (landscape vs. portrait), headers and footers, etc. Then the properties of the cell might include the type of cell and how \r\nit is formatted (text, currency, general number, etc.). And finally the properties of the Character include the font family, font style, font size, and so on.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, Objects, Templates',0,0,1), (1715,'2015-02-27','48 - LibreOffice Calc - Cell Styles',897,'How to use Cell Styles to control the appearance of your cells.','

                                          \r\nOur next topic is Cell Styles. If you are already familiar with Styles from Writer, think of Cell Styles as the equivalent of Writers Paragraph Styles. Just as a single Writer document can have a variety of Paragraph Styles applied to different paragraphs (e.g. Headings, Lists, Paragraphs), a single spreadsheet can have multiple Cell Styles. And the same arguments for using Styles also apply. If you have consistently used Cell Styles in your spreadsheet, you can update the appearance easily just by changing the Style instead of needing to go through the file looking for every cell that needs to be adjusted. And by using Styles you can apply a large number of formatting choices to many cells with just a few mouse clicks. So it really does pay to learn how to use Cell Styles.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, Cells, Styles',0,0,1), (1705,'2015-02-13','47 - LibreOffice Calc - Page Styles and Page Settings',1234,'How to control the overall appearance of a worksheet using Page Styles and Page Settings.','

                                          \r\nPage Styles in LibreOffice Calc set the properties for entire sheets of your workbook file. In any given Template you can have different sheets with different Page Styles if you wish, but for any given sheet you can only have one Page Style. And dont be confused by the difference between a sheet in the file and a page when printed. One single sheet may take many physical pages to print, but it is all one sheet and it is all governed by a single Page Style.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, Sheets, Styles',0,0,1), (1725,'2015-03-13','49 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating a Template with Styles',838,'We create Template (recording Billable Time) using Styles to illustrate the usage.','

                                          \r\nThe last few tutorials have looked at the techniques you need to master to use Styles and Templates effectively, but putting these into practice is essential to understanding them, I believe. So it is time for us to actually built a Template that incorporates a few styles and put the whole package together. For my example, I am going to create something useful for a consultant who needs to keep track of time for billing customers.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Calc, Spreadsheet, Styles, Templates',0,0,1), (1637,'2014-11-11','Communities Are Made of People',2804,'Zuckerberg, Facebook, friends having you back','

                                          https://facebook.com

                                          ',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Zuckerberg, Facebook, friends having you back',0,0,1), (1696,'2015-02-02','HPR Community News for January 2015',3651,'Live community recording from FOSDEM 2015.','

                                          New hosts

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                          \r\n Rho`n, \r\n daw, \r\n Cibola Jerry.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Last Month\'s Shows

                                          \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
                                          IdDateTitleHost
                                          16742015-01-01New Year Show Part 1 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16752015-01-02New Year Show Part 2 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16762015-01-05HPR Community News for December 2014HPR Volunteers
                                          16772015-01-06New Year Show Part 4 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16782015-01-07New Year Show Part 5 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16792015-01-08New Year Show Part 6 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16802015-01-09New Year Show Part 7 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16812015-01-12New Year Show Part 8 of 8HPR Volunteers
                                          16822015-01-13Introduction to the Netizen Empowerment Federationdaw
                                          16832015-01-14Theater of the Imagination: Part 06lostnbronx
                                          16842015-01-155150 Shades of Beer Jacob Leinenkugels Winter Explorer PackFiftyOneFifty
                                          16852015-01-1645 - LibreOffice Calc - Styles and Templates IntroducedAhuka
                                          16862015-01-19Interview with Joel Gibbard of OpenHandSteve Bickle
                                          16872015-01-20Podcast recommendationsThaj Sara
                                          16882015-01-21Some useful tools when compiling softwareRho`n
                                          16892015-01-22Linux Voice magazine at OggCampbeni
                                          16902015-01-23Arduino 101 Breadboardklaatu
                                          16912015-01-26Arduino 101 Arduino IOklaatu
                                          16922015-01-27Boulevard Brewing Company \"Sample Twelve\"FiftyOneFifty
                                          16932015-01-28DD funCibola Jerry
                                          16942015-01-29My APOD downloaderDave Morriss
                                          16952015-01-3046 - LibreOffice Calc - The Object Model and Using TemplatesAhuka
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Comments this month

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          There are 17 comments:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • hpr1693\r\n(2015-01-28) \"DD fun\"\r\nby Cibola Jerry.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Dave on 2015-01-29:\"Great tutorial\"
                                            2. \r\n
                                            3. incandenza on 2015-01-29:\"My favorite so far\"
                                            4. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1691\r\n(2015-01-26) \"Arduino 101 Arduino IO\"\r\nby klaatu.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. mcnalu on 2015-01-27:\"Arduislack\"
                                            2. \r\n
                                            3. archer72 on 2015-01-29:\"[no title]\"
                                            4. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1690\r\n(2015-01-23) \"Arduino 101 Breadboard\"\r\nby klaatu.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Mike Ray on 2015-01-22:\"3v3\"
                                            2. \r\n
                                            3. Tcuc on 2015-01-23:\"Nice, great quality :-) \"
                                            4. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1683\r\n(2015-01-14) \"Theater of the Imagination: Part 06\"\r\nby lostnbronx.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Epicanis on 2015-01-22:\"Timely information!\"
                                            2. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1673\r\n(2014-12-31) \"How I use ZFS on Linux\"\r\nby Michal Cieraszynski.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Klaatu on 2015-01-07:\"great episode!\"
                                            2. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1672\r\n(2014-12-30) \"Systemd for Learner Drivers \"\r\nby Steve Smethurst.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Steve Smethurst on 2015-01-04:\"Correction\"
                                            2. \r\n
                                            3. Alison Chaiken on 2015-01-04:\"Thanks for informative episode\"
                                            4. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1667\r\n(2014-12-23) \"How to start a Blog\"\r\nby Rill.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Rill on 2014-12-31:\"T for the tip.hanks\"
                                            2. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1665\r\n(2014-12-19) \"44 - LibreOffice Calc - Working With Pivot Tables\"\r\nby Ahuka.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Steve Bickle on 2015-01-18:\"What version of LibreOffice was the example created in?\"
                                            2. \r\n
                                            3. Steve Bickle on 2015-01-18:\"Last comment really belongs on ep 1655\"
                                            4. \r\n
                                            5. Kevin O\'Brien on 2015-01-19:\"LibreOffice Version\"
                                            6. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1660\r\n(2014-12-12) \"Trying out Slackware\"\r\nby beni.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Klaatu on 2015-01-07:\"slacker\"
                                            2. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1654\r\n(2014-12-04) \"Using AS numbers to identify where you are on the Internet\"\r\nby Ken Fallon.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Klaatu on 2015-01-07:\"Very informative\"
                                            2. \r\n

                                          • \r\n
                                          • hpr1643\r\n(2014-11-19) \"Unison Syncing Utility\"\r\nby FiftyOneFifty.\r\n
                                              \r\n
                                            1. Ken Fallon on 2015-01-06:\"Workaround to my unison issues\"
                                            \r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1716,'2015-03-02','HPR Community News for February 2015',5292,'Dave and Ken host the Community News','

                                          New hosts

                                          \n

                                          Welcome to our new hosts:
                                          Kevie, swift110.

                                          \n

                                          Last Month\'s Shows

                                          \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          IdDateTitleHost
                                          16962015-02-02HPR Community News for January 2015HPR Volunteers
                                          16972015-02-03FOSDEM 2015 Friday Night and Saturday Morning 1 of 5Ken Fallon
                                          16982015-02-04FOSDEM 2015 Part 2 of 5Ken Fallon
                                          16992015-02-05FOSDEM 2015 Part 3 of 5Ken Fallon
                                          17002015-02-06Today with a Techie episode two thousandKen Fallon
                                          17012015-02-09FOSDEM 2015 Part 4 of 5Ken Fallon
                                          17022015-02-10FOSDEM 2015 Part 5 of 5Ken Fallon
                                          17032015-02-11Open Source CD RippersKevie
                                          17042015-02-12Introducing Jeffrey Powers aka Geekazinedaw
                                          17052015-02-1347 - LibreOffice Calc - Page Styles and Page SettingsAhuka
                                          17062015-02-16Cross-compilers part 1Mike Ray
                                          17072015-02-17A tour round my desktopBeeza
                                          17082015-02-18GNU/Nano EditorJWP
                                          17092015-02-19Hacking Your TeethMrX
                                          17102015-02-20Windows Remote Desktop on GNU/LinuxKen Fallon
                                          17112015-02-23Problems with video software in Linuxswift110
                                          17122015-02-24What\'s in my CrateMike Ray
                                          17132015-02-25Fosdem 2015: Surveillance vs. Free Software2BFrank
                                          17142015-02-26Vim Hints 001Dave Morriss
                                          17152015-02-2748 - LibreOffice Calc - Cell StylesAhuka
                                          \n

                                          Mailing List discussions

                                          \n

                                          Policy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the Gmane archive.

                                          \n

                                          The main threads this month were:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          1. From: Charles Thayer <catintp@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-01 03:59:07 UTC
                                            Subject: HackerPublicRadio.com (squatter-occupied look-alike site): Domain Available?
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/712
                                            Messages: 3
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          2. \n
                                          3. From: Patrick Dailey <pdailey03@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-04 22:04:43 -0500
                                            Subject: AudioBookClub
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/714
                                            Messages: 4
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          4. \n
                                          5. From: Ivan Privaci <epicanis+hpr@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-08 21:23:54 -0500
                                            Subject: I ain\'tnt dead yet: quick question (well, a couple)
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/718
                                            Messages: 15
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          6. \n
                                          7. From: Ivan Privaci <epicanis+hpr@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-09 19:14:56 -0500
                                            Subject: \"HPR Dodgers, in the 21th-and-a-half centuryyyyy.....\" (Future HPR features)
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/726
                                            Messages: 2
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          8. \n
                                          9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-11 13:34:35 +0100
                                            Subject: Wed 2015-04-01: hpr1738 Reserved: Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model (ISO/IEC 7498-1).
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/736
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          10. \n
                                          11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-12 15:08:12 +0100
                                            Subject: Fwd: Cross-Promotional Opportunties
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/737
                                            Messages: 14
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          12. \n
                                          13. From: \"O\'Brien, Kevin\" <zwilnik@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-12 14:03:18 -0500
                                            Subject: Kudos for FOSDEM coverage
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/741
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          14. \n
                                          15. From: lostnbronx <lostnbronx@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-12 15:31:56 -0700
                                            Subject: Re: Cybrary Cross-Promotional Offer
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/745
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          16. \n
                                          17. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-14 15:05:04 +0100
                                            Subject: hobbypublicradio.[com|net|org]
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/750
                                            Messages: 2
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          18. \n
                                          19. From: Ivan Privaci <epicanis+hpr@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-19 11:10:33 -0500
                                            Subject: Minor website bug report
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/752
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          20. \n
                                          21. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-19 21:09:49 UTC
                                            Subject: Topic request
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/753
                                            Messages: 7
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          22. \n
                                          23. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-23 07:55:12 UTC
                                            Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-02-28T18:00:00Z
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/760
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          24. \n
                                          25. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-25 01:58:02 -0600
                                            Subject: Is anyone else having trouble submitting shows?
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/761
                                            Messages: 10
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          26. \n
                                          27. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                            Date: 2015-02-26 09:03:38 -0800
                                            Subject: Added some firewall rules and IDS to the server
                                            Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/771
                                            Messages: 1
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          28. \n
                                          \n

                                          Total messages this month: 63

                                          \n

                                          Comments this month

                                          \n

                                          There are 17 comments:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • hpr1522 (2014-06-03) \"How to Use Docker and Linux Containers\" by klaatu.
                                              \n
                                            1. Windigo on 2015-02-16:\"Creating a bridge interface\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1636 (2014-11-10) \"How I make coffee\" by Dave Morriss.
                                              \n
                                            1. 1093i3511 on 2015-02-19:\"[no title]\"
                                            2. \n
                                            3. Dave Morriss on 2015-02-20:\"Rommelsbacher EKO 366/E\"
                                            4. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1683 (2015-01-14) \"Theater of the Imagination: Part 06\" by lostnbronx.
                                              \n
                                            1. Charles on 2015-02-27:\"Patronage as an alternative to marketplaces?\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1687 (2015-01-20) \"Podcast recommendations\" by Thaj Sara.
                                              \n
                                            1. Mark Waters on 2015-02-03:\"Thanks\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1699 (2015-02-05) \"FOSDEM 2015 Part 3 of 5\" by Ken Fallon.
                                              \n
                                            1. FiftyOneFifty on 2015-02-05:\"Play dat funky music\"
                                            2. \n
                                            3. Mike Ray on 2015-02-05:\"Thanks for asking the right questions\"
                                            4. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1700 (2015-02-06) \"Today with a Techie episode two thousand\" by Ken Fallon.
                                              \n
                                            1. Mike Ray on 2015-02-06:\"Such a parcel of rogues\"
                                            2. \n
                                            3. FiftyOneFifty on 2015-02-06:\"Thanks for the memories\"
                                            4. \n
                                            5. Mikael on 2015-02-10:\"Thank you, Ken\"
                                            6. \n
                                            7. Epicanis on 2015-02-11:\"Not what I was expecting...\"
                                            8. \n
                                            9. JM on 2015-02-12:\"great work!!\"
                                            10. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1702 (2015-02-10) \"FOSDEM 2015 Part 5 of 5\" by Ken Fallon.
                                              \n
                                            1. borgu on 2015-02-11:\"reactos moar!\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1703 (2015-02-11) \"Open Source CD Rippers\" by Kevie.
                                              \n
                                            1. Ken Fallon on 2015-02-13:\"K3b\"
                                            2. \n
                                            3. Charles on 2015-02-25:\"[no title]\"
                                            4. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1707 (2015-02-17) \"A tour round my desktop\" by Beeza.
                                              \n
                                            1. Marshal Mellow on 2015-02-22:\"Good job\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1710 (2015-02-20) \"Windows Remote Desktop on GNU/Linux\" by Ken Fallon.
                                              \n
                                            1. johanv on 2015-02-26:\"Nice!\"
                                            2. \n
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          ',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1628,'2014-10-29','OggCamp Interview with Peppertop Comics',793,'A short interview with Mark of Peppertop Comics.','

                                          In today\'s show, Philip Newborough interviews Mark of Peppertop Comics. Peppertop Comics create free, open-source web comics. The comics are produced on Linux using Inkscape and MyPaint.

                                          \"The

                                          The interview was conducted at OggCamp 14, a free culture unconference, held in Oxford UK on the weekend of October 4th-5th 2014.

                                          \n',287,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interviews,comics,oggcamp',0,0,1), (1634,'2014-11-06','How I got into Linux',1053,'How I discovered Linux ','

                                          I have been an HPR listener for many years, and I really like the episodes on how people discovered and learn to use Linux. So this is my first HPR contribution. I recorded this on a Sansa Clip on a saturday afternoon. It\'s not heavily edited, but i did use audacity to remove a few errors I had made. Please excuse the uhhs and umms.

                                          \r\n',289,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','Sansa Clip,Audacity',0,0,1), (1629,'2014-10-30','Banana Pi - First Impressions',1012,'Banana Pi first impressions','

                                          The Banana Pi - First Impressions

                                          \r\n

                                          They say duplication is the sincerest form of flattery, substitute the word of your choice for \'duplication\'.

                                          \r\n

                                          The Banana Pi is made in China and bears an uncanny resemblance to the Raspberry Pi.

                                          \r\n

                                          Not just the name, the board is fractionally larger, some of the features on the board are similarly placed:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • 26-pin GPIO
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 3.5mm analogue audio jack
                                          • \r\n
                                          • RCA composite video jack
                                          • \r\n
                                          • SD card slot
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          There are things the RPI does not have:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Power button
                                          • \r\n
                                          • uBoot button
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Microphone
                                          • \r\n
                                          • USB-otg port (otg = on-the-go, a bi-directional USB port)
                                          • \r\n
                                          • SATA connector
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          The processor is a dual-core running slightly faster than the Raspberry Pi, although to be fair, of course, the RPI can be over-clocked.

                                          \r\n

                                          The Banana Pi has twice the RAM and a dual-core processor.

                                          \r\n

                                          The SoC is the ARM Allwinner A20.

                                          \r\n

                                          Getting my Hands on a Banana Pi

                                          \r\n

                                          My first Banana dropped through the letterbox a couple of days ago.

                                          \r\n

                                          Thanks to some kind soul on the Raspberry Pi Facebook group who described the connectors on the edges of the board I narrowly avoided plugging the power supply into the USB-otg port. The power micro-USB is on the underside of the board between the SATA power and data connectors which are on the upper side of the board.

                                          \r\n

                                          Can\'t really say much about it because I can\'t actually see the build quality, but it feels nice. The PCB is fractionally thinner than the RPI.

                                          \r\n

                                          Problems

                                          \r\n

                                          I had an initial struggle to find a download link for any images.

                                          \r\n

                                          The downloads page of lemaker.org has a two row table on it which appears to be upside-down and it has links to Google-drive, two different public DropBox links, a MS One-Drive link, and something I didn\'t initially find, an FTP link.

                                          \r\n

                                          Both of the DB links are duff because they have suspended the account because of excessive traffic.

                                          \r\n

                                          This is the FTP download link:

                                          \r\n
                                          https://filez.zoobab.com/bananapi/mirror/
                                          \r\n

                                          Available Images

                                          \r\n

                                          When I found the FTP page I grabbed images for:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Arch Linux
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Bananian-latest
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Lubuntu
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Raspbian
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          I downloaded and extracted all of these images to my Debian desktop machine and tried to write and boot them in succession.

                                          \r\n

                                          The first I tried was Arch, on the assumption that would not have a desktop installed.

                                          \r\n

                                          After writing the card I looked at it on my Debian machine with parted and it appeared to have two partitions. As with the Raspberry Pi there is a small FAT16 partition and a bigger ext4 partition.

                                          \r\n

                                          The FAT partition contained the same files as the Raspberry Pi:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • config.txt
                                          • \r\n
                                          • cmdline.txt
                                          • \r\n
                                          • kernel.img
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          And some others I can\'t remember.

                                          \r\n

                                          In addition it contained:

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • uEnv.txt
                                          • \r\n
                                          • uImage
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          It appears uEnv.txt is equivalent to the Raspberry Pi cmdline.txt file, and uImage is, of course, the kernel.

                                          \r\n

                                          So oddly it has the files for the RPI and it\'s own in the FAT partition.

                                          \r\n

                                          Then I tried Bananian, and this appears to be Debian Wheazy for ARM.

                                          \r\n

                                          Similar story with the FAT partition.

                                          \r\n

                                          It is a very minimal installation which has little more than the Linux Standard Base (LSB) packages. I like this because I like to have control.

                                          \r\n

                                          Sound and Stuff

                                          \r\n

                                          I found a review from April this year that said the sound driver snd-bcm2835 was not available. At the name snd-bcm2835 my heart sank because I expected the BPI to have the same stuttering text-to-speech problems as the RPI.

                                          \r\n

                                          Not expecting much I did, as root:

                                          \r\n
                                          apt-get install alsa-base alsa-utils
                                          \r\n

                                          Looking through /lib/modules/... blah blah I found a driver called:

                                          \r\n
                                          snd-aaci.ko
                                          \r\n

                                          I did:

                                          \r\n
                                          modprobe snd-aaci
                                          \r\n

                                          And then:

                                          \r\n
                                          speaker-test
                                          \r\n

                                          And I got pink noise!

                                          \r\n

                                          Next I did:

                                          \r\n
                                          apt-get install espeakup\r\nupdate-rc.d espeakup defaults\r\nmodprobe speakup_soft
                                          \r\n

                                          And speakup burst into life with no stuttering!

                                          \r\n

                                          Immediate Conclusions

                                          \r\n

                                          The online community and code-base for the Banana Pi is not yet very mature, and because the origin of the beast is China, a lot of what\'s out there is in Chinese.

                                          \r\n

                                          But it is growing. And after all, it took the RPI a while to take off and go ballistic.

                                          \r\n

                                          At the moment I would say the Banana Pi is not for the faint-hearted or the total newbie, although, a lot of newbie questions are generic and don\'t have machine-specific answers.

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n

                                          LeMaker page:

                                          \r\n
                                          https://www.lemaker.org/
                                          \r\n

                                          Australian community page with forums:

                                          \r\n
                                          https://www.bananapi.com/
                                          \r\n

                                          The worst thing about the Banana Pi is, when writing emails about it, and these show-notes, typing the word \'banana\' and knowing when to stop!

                                          \r\n',282,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Banana Pi, Raspberry Pi, Linux',0,0,1), (1633,'2014-11-05','The OggCamp organizers',1712,'I talk to Dan Lynch and Fabian Scherschel and Mark Johnson','

                                          In this set of OggCamp interviews I talk to Dan Lynch and Fabian Scherschel from Linux Outlaws and Mark Johnson, who was the man on the ground this year, organizing OggCamp in Oxford Hotel this year. We talk about organizing OggCamp and podcasting and small, unknown Universities in little Towns like Oxford. ;)

                                          \n

                                          Links

                                          \n ',288,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp, Linux Outlaws, Ubuntu UK, Fab, Dan, Mark',0,0,1), (1636,'2014-11-10','How I make coffee',957,'I\'m a great lover of coffee. This is how I make mine','

                                          My Coffee History

                                          \n

                                          I\'m a coffee lover. I have tried many ways of making coffee.

                                          \n

                                          When I was a child my parents made their coffee in a percolator on the stove top. I remember how great it smelled though it tasted awful to me at that age.

                                          \n

                                          I have owned a variety of filter machines over the years, and these have also been available at the places I have worked. They seemed to do a reasonable job, but nothing special.

                                          \n

                                          One time I owned an all-glass Cona coffee maker, which was very fancy and expensive. It was too fragile for me and eventually met its end while being washed. I don\'t recall it making particularly wonderful coffee, but it would also make tea, which was a novelty.

                                          \n

                                          I made a number of visits to Indonesia several years ago. There are a lot of pretty good coffee beans available there but the way of making a cup of coffee is not really to my taste. A good dollop of ground coffee in a large cup with boiling water added and large quantities of sugar. Straining those coffee grounds out through your teeth is not a pleasant experience.

                                          \n

                                          As the fashion for the Cafetiere or French Press developed I acquired a number of these. Until recently these were all glass. I found I invariably broke them either by being over zealous when pressing down the plunger or being clumsy when washing them up. It\'s not a bad way of making coffee, but I have an alternative that I much prefer - the Moka Pot.

                                          \n

                                          Moka Pot

                                          \n

                                          A few years ago I bought a Bialetti Moka Pot. I had never heard of these before, but my son, another avid coffee drinker, pointed me to them. I bought a three-cup pot to start with. This is a small pot; the three refers to three 50ml espresso cups. I also bought a 9-cup pot which is much bigger.

                                          \n

                                          \"My
                                          Picture: My Bialetti 3-cup and 9-cup pots

                                          \n

                                          The pot consists of three main elements: a base which holds the water, a funnel which holds the ground coffee and the top which holds the coffee once made. There is a gasket and a metal filter on the underside of the top part to prevent coffee grounds entering.

                                          \n

                                          \"A
                                          Picture: A disassembled Bialetti

                                          \n

                                          The Bialetti is heated on a gas or electric stove and forces boiling water through ground coffee under steam pressure. It makes coffee similar to but not the same as espresso coffee.

                                          \n

                                          The base is filled with water just under the level of the pressure release valve.

                                          \n

                                          \"Bialetti
                                          Picture: Bialetti filled with water

                                          \n

                                          I use Italian coffee for the Bialetti since it seems to taste better than any others I have tried.

                                          \n

                                          \"My
                                          Picture: My current favourite coffee

                                          \n

                                          Once opened I keep my coffee in a vacuum container.

                                          \n

                                          \"Coffee
                                          Picture: Coffee in a vacuum container

                                          \n

                                          The funnel is placed into the water-filled base.

                                          \n

                                          \"Bialetti
                                          Picture: Bialetti ready for coffee

                                          \n

                                          The funnel takes about two scoops of coffee

                                          \n

                                          \"Bialetti
                                          Picture: Bialetti being filled with coffee

                                          \n

                                          The pot is placed on the stove. I have a gas stove and so I use a trivet for stability. I have to take care that the gas flame is not too high or the handle will melt, as has happened in the past!

                                          \n

                                          \"Bialetti
                                          Picture: Bialetti in action

                                          \n

                                          You need to listen out for the bubbling sound the pot makes when the water has passed through the coffee into the top compartment. Letting the remaining steam pass through will over-heat the coffee which you do not want to happen.

                                          \n

                                          \"Coffee
                                          Picture: Coffee is brewed

                                          \n

                                          I make a cup of coffee consisting of one part coffee, one part cold milk and one part boiling water. This makes a large cup of pretty strong yet very smooth coffee which helps to wake me up each morning.

                                          \n

                                          \"A
                                          Picture: A comforting brew - in the wrong cup!

                                          \n

                                          The Bialetti usually gets one use per day, after which it is washed up. Some purists say that it should only be rinsed out so that the coffee residues on the inside are not removed. I have not noticed any difference personally.

                                          \n

                                          Links

                                          \n \n',225,88,1,'CC-BY-SA','coffee,moka pot,espresso,cafetiere',0,0,1), (1638,'2014-11-12','Surviving A Roadtrip: Food',874,'A few tricks about food and eating that can help you survive a roadtrip.','

                                          As we are all human to some degree, we require sustenance. When on a roadtrip, this can prove to be challenging - but it is also an opportunity to save money and enjoy yourself!

                                          \nBringing Food\n---\n\n- Buying all your food on the road is a good way to empty your pockets\n- Convenience stores do not have your health in mind; their food is generally\n  over-salty or over-sugary\n- Stopping for snacks can add lots of extra time to a trip\n- A quick stop at the grocery store before your trip is not a bad idea\n        - Stock up on non-perishable snacks\n        - Nuts and trail mix are a classic for a reason. They\'re full of protein and\n          fiber, and easy to munch on in a vehicle\n        - Fruit are sweet, healthy, and also usually easy to eat in a vehicle.\n          Apples and grapes are super easy, bananas less so, and oranges are tricky.\n          You can pre-peel fruit to make it more accessible, but it won\'t last as long.\n- Water is important. Make sure to have a gallon jug with you, and refill as\n  necessary. I don\'t mind tap water, but if you\'re picky, there are water\n  filters designed for camping that are compact and quick. Keep yourself\n  hydrated!\n- Your options for variety of food increase a lot with a cooler\n        - Things like cheese and sandwich meats should do fine\n        - Make sure to fill it with ice or freezer packs when you set out in the\n          morning, and maybe during the afternoon depending on weather\n        - Check to see if your lodgings have refrigeration; your cooler will be\n          useless if you don\'t have something more substantial to use in-between\n          legs of your journey.\n  \n\nStopping To Eat\n---\n\n- Saving money and being efficient is all well and good, but roadtrips are not\n  all about getting from point A to point B.\n- A great way to experience an area is by ingesting a small part of it\n- Add an hour or two to your travel time for a meal stop\n- Pick lunch or dinner\n        - Lunch may suit your timetable better if you are an early riser\n        - Lunch menus often offer slightly less food for a reduced price\n        - Restaurants may be less crowded for lunches\n        - Dinner might be a better choice if you like waking and driving late\n        - Dinner menus are more comprehensive, but often more on the expensive side\n- Avoid chain restaurants all the time, but especially on a roadtrip\n- Local restaurants and eateries are usually found in downtown areas, away from\n  highways. They are well worth the diversion.\n- Different areas have vastly different cuisines, and trying new things can be\n  very rewarding. Crawfish: who knew?\n- Find something on the menu that you don\'t recognize, and eat it.\n- If you are a picky eater, try not to let your preconceptions stop you from\n  trying something. For instance, coconut soup is surprisingly unlike any other\n  coconut dishes that I\'ve had.\n- Be polite, be patient. Many tourists are rude, and there is a chance that\n  the person helping you gets to deal with those tourists frequently.\n- Do not be afraid to ask questions. Figure out what you can, but ask for\n  clarification if something on the menu is unusual.\n- If you have food-based allergies or special dietary requirements, these might\n  not be accommodated in all areas. If you are a vegetarian or vegan, or are \n  allergic to gluten, peanuts, or dairy, your options may change drastically\n  depending on the region you are in.\n  - A little research into local restaurants  could help you determine which\n        places you can eat without stopping at each restaurant in town.\n- Overall, try to enjoy yourself. Roadtrips can be high-stress affairs, and a\n  meal break can do wonders to relieve some of the stress that\'s built up over\n  the day. Relax, and give yourself plenty of time to eat\n
                                          ',196,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','food,roadtrip,travel,health,restaurant,cuisine',0,0,1), (1639,'2014-11-13','Ken Starks at Ohio Linux Fest 2014',2428,'Ken Starks builds computers for kids who need a hand.','

                                          Ken Starks gave the closing keynote at Ohio LinuxFest 2014 on 10/25/14. In this talk he discusses his work with the REGLUE project (formerly the Helios Project) which bulds computers to give to disadvantaged kids in Texas. And if you look there may be something like this in your town that you can help with. And if not, why not start one? This talk was recorded by Randy Noseworthy, and he asked me to post it to HPR.

                                          ',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Reglue, Helios, kids',0,0,1), (1641,'2014-11-17','The real reasons for using Linux',1068,'The real reasons for using Linux','

                                          \r\nI am a Linux user since the end of 1999. Which is 15 years already. I\'ve\r\nalso been trying for almost 15 years to convince other people to try Linux.\r\nAnd I must confess that I very often used wrong arguments doing this.\r\nAfter 15 years it is time to ditch some fake arguments,\r\nand to tell you the real reasons why you should switch to Linux. :-)\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nI apology for the bad audio quality. A full transcript of this episode\r\ncan be found on my blog.
                                          \r\nhttps://blog.johanv.org/posts/why-linux.html\r\n

                                          ',233,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, open source',0,0,1), (1664,'2014-12-18','Life and Times of a Geek part 1',1614,'I\'ve been using computers for more than 40 years. This is part 1 of my story','

                                          Life and Times of a Geek - part 1

                                          \r\n

                                          I really liked David Whitman\'s idea of doing a show on his birthday https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1547, so I\'m borrowing the idea.

                                          \r\n

                                          This show is being released on my 65th birthday, and I decided to use this opportunity to tell you about my long experience with computational devices as part of the series "How I Found Linux". Thinking about what I want to cover, I realise that it might be quite a lot, so I\'m organising the shows into a collection of short episodes.

                                          \r\n

                                          I have been thinking about doing this for a while. Up until now I was concerned that it would be a bit self-indulgent, but I have been advised to just go ahead and do it. I hope you find the shows interesting.

                                          \r\n

                                          The full notes for this episode are to be found here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1664_full_notes.html

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',225,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','computer,mainframe,programming,punched card,paper tape,teletype,graph plotter,ALGOL 60',0,0,1), (1643,'2014-11-19','Unison Syncing Utility',2084,'Review of the Unison graphical Syncing Utility','

                                          Unison is a file syncing/backup utility, similar to SyncBack on Windows, available in most repros.

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          1. The graphical interface requires the installation of unison, and unison-gtk.. Unison may be installed w/o the graphical component, but all operations must be initiated from a system running the GUI.
                                              \n
                                            • Network backups require RSH or SSH to be installed on both machines
                                            • \n
                                            \n
                                          2. \n
                                          3. The standard wisdom seems to be the rsync does not do a true 2 way sync, i.e., to sync to the newest file version going both ways you would have to do rsync ~/LocalFolder you@server:/home/you/RemoteFolder then turn around and do rsync you@server:/home/you/RemoteFolder ~/LocalFolder. Add that to the fact that like cp, or scp, rsync requires separate commands for files with extensions, files without, and hidden files, creating a bash script for syncing files is more complex than creating a Unison profile.
                                          4. \n
                                          5. Step One: If, like me you are syncing only Documents, make your subfolder structure the same on both machines, ergo, if one PC has /home/you/Documents/recipe and second PC has /home/you/Documents/Recipes, edit your folder structure to be the same on both PCs to avoid duplicate files and folders
                                          6. \n
                                          7. Launch Unison and create a backup profile First use, create a profile
                                            \n
                                              \n
                                            • Name of profile
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • Synchronization kind (Local, SSH, RSH, TCP)
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • \"First\" Directory (you can browse your mounted volumes)
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • \"Second\" Directory, if you chose Local
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • Host Machine Name (or IP Address)
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • User Name (If you haven\'t registered SSH keys, you will be prompted for a password on every synchronization.
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • Check whether you want to use compression, (on fast networks or slow processors, compression may create more overhead than it\'s worth).
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • Target directory (If it\'s on a remote server, you will need to type the full path, there is no browsing to the folder.)
                                              \n
                                            • \n
                                            • Tell Unison if either folder uses FAT (say an un-reformatted USB stick)
                                            • \n
                                            \n
                                              \n
                                            • If you are backing up to another system, Unison needs to be installed on both. If you are backing up to a server with no GUI desktop manager, you can install just the unison package without unison-gtk, but all the syncs will have to be initiated from the machine with a GUI. (Of course, if you back up to a remote volume that is mounted locally, it should be completely transparent to Unison). If you choose to sync via ssh (recommended), you will need ssh and ssh-server installed appropriately on each machine.
                                            • \n
                                            \n
                                          8. \n
                                          9. Select and run your profile.
                                              \n
                                            • The first time, expect to get a warning that no archive files (index files that speed up the synchronization scan) were found. They will be created on the first sync.
                                            • \n
                                            • Unison will look for differences between the files in the two selected directories. The differences will be displayed graphically, with arrows pointing left or right, indicating which directory contains the most current version of the file (by modification date). You can choose to merge files either left or right (a conventional backup), do a merge (i.e., Unison itself decides how to combine data from files with the same name (obviously, that could be messy), or to do a sync (ergo, the most current version of a file overwrites older version, regardless of location). Click \"Go\" to do a true sync.
                                            • \n
                                            \n
                                          10. \n
                                          ',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Unison,file synchronisation,rsync',0,0,1), (1646,'2014-11-24','5150 Shades of Beer 0003 River City Brewing Company and Wichita Brewing Company',2174,'FiftyOneFifty explores Wichita Brew Pubs, v2','\"Image\r\n\r\n

                                          links

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',131,14,0,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer, Wichita Brewing Company, River City Brewing Company',0,0,1), (1642,'2014-11-18','Frist Time at Oggcamp',842,'Join Al and Jerry where we discuss are first visit to oggcamp','

                                          \r\nThis episode is about how Al and Jerry Meet at Oggcamp. What we enjoy about the event,what to expect and encourage people to attend next year.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThis is my second HPR episode after beni recorded a interview with me at oggcamp and said I should submit my own episode\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\nhttps://adminadminpodcast.co.uk\r\n',290,62,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp,oggcamp14',0,0,1), (1647,'2014-11-25','Oggcast Planet Live 2014: The Cooking Show',1285,'OggCast 2014. we cook dinner, I drink beer, a time is had by all.','

                                          \r\nOggCast 2014. we cook dinner, I drink beer, a time is had by all. I\'d like to amp this, but Audacity won\'t let me, so listen carefully.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBroam, Briptastic, and FiftyOneFifty talk about the meal they are making for Saturday Night at Oggcast Planet Live 2014 from when they thought about it until dinner was served, as well as that day\'s fun at Knoebels theme park at Elysburg PA and the plans to visit the ghost town of Centralia the following day.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"

                                          \r\n',131,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','Elysburg, oggcastplanet, Centralia, cooking, Knoebels, OggCastPlanet Live, OCP Live, 2014',0,0,1), (1648,'2014-11-26','Bash parameter manipulation',2433,'A summary and aide memoire of Bash parameter expansion methods','

                                          Bash parameter manipulation

                                          \r\n

                                          I\'m a great fan of using the Linux command line and enjoy writing shell scripts using the Bash shell.

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • BASH (or more usually Bash or bash) is the name of a Unix shell. The name stands for Bourne Again SHell, which is a play on words. Bash is an extension of the shell originally written by Stephen Bourne in 1978, usually known as SH.

                                          • \r\n
                                          • Bash was written as part of the GNU Project which forms part of the Linux Operating System.

                                          • \r\n
                                          • A shell is the part of the operating system that interprets commands, more commonly known as the command line.

                                          • \r\n
                                          • A knowledge of Bash is very helpful if you would like to be able to use the power of the command line. It is also the way to learn how to build Bash scripts for automating the tasks you need to perform.

                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          In this episode we look at what parameters are in Bash, and how they can be created and manipulated. There are many features in Bash that you can use to do this, but they are not easy to find.

                                          \r\n

                                          As I was learning my way around Bash it took me a while to find these. Once I had found them I wanted to make a "cheat sheet" I could stick on the wall to remind me how to do things. I am sharing the result of this process with you.

                                          \r\n

                                          The version of Bash which I used for this episode is 4.3.30(1)-release

                                          \r\n

                                          The full notes for this episode are to be found here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1648_full_notes.html

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,script,parameter,variable',0,0,1), (1650,'2014-11-28','OCPLive2014 Night Life In Elysburg PA',10935,'The real Elysburg experience','

                                          A running commentary by FiftyOneFifty and Tankenator on the nightlife in Elysburg PA

                                          \r\n',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','OCP Live, oggcastplanet, 2014, nightlife',0,0,1), (1652,'2014-12-02','GeekSpeak 2013-06-01',3843,'Showcasing the Central Coast Public Broadcasting radio show slash podcast, Geek Speak','

                                          As part of Hacker Public Radio\'s continuing effort to showcase Creative Commons Works, we are proud to present GeekSpeak. GeekSpeak is produced as a radio show for community based station KUSP in Monterey CA, and rebroadcast as podcast, available from GeekSpeak.org. It is a generally a lighthearted and humorous general technology news show, with topics including electronics, computing, robotics, and green tech. Often guest speakers and authors from the technology world will come on for interviews. The shows are just about an hour long.

                                          \n

                                          The regular hosts are Bonnie Jean Primbsch, Lyle Troxell, Miles Elam, and Ben Jaffe (see GeekSpeak.org/geeks/for the full roster). You can often hear them thanking the \"Puppetmaster\" for letting them continue to use the name GeekSpeak. After broadcasting for several years, it was discovered the term \"GeekSpeak\" had been registered as a service mark by David Lawrence for a podcast of his own. You might remember Lawrence as the actor who played the character on \"Heroes\" with the telekinetic ability to physically manipulate other characters against their will.

                                          \n

                                          GeekSpeak has a long standing tradition of using Devo\'s \"Through Bein\' Cool\" as intro music, so only those episodes that employ user contributed music instead are actually released Creative Commons. What you are about to hear, from the 1st of June of 2013, is just such an episode.

                                          \n

                                          Links

                                          \n ',158,0,0,'CC-BY-NC-ND','Geek Speak, KUSP, Creative Commons, community radio, GeekSpeak.org',0,0,1); INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hostid`, `series`, `explicit`, `license`, `tags`, `version`, `downloads`, `valid`) VALUES (1741,'2015-04-06','HPR Community News for March 2015',4618,'HPR Community News for March 2015','\n

                                          New hosts

                                          \n

                                          \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                          \n tcuc, \n Fin, \n b-yeezi.\n

                                          \n\n

                                          Last Month\'s Shows

                                          \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          IdDayDateTitleHost
                                          1716Mon2015-03-02HPR Community News for February 2015HPR Volunteers
                                          1717Tue2015-03-03Visualizing electricitytcuc
                                          1718Wed2015-03-04What's In My Pickup ToolboxFiftyOneFifty
                                          1719Thu2015-03-05The Linux Tree CommandJWP
                                          1720Fri2015-03-0615 Certificate Issues and SolutionsAhuka
                                          1721Mon2015-03-09Cross-compilers Part 2Mike Ray
                                          1722Tue2015-03-10Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KSFiftyOneFifty
                                          1723Wed2015-03-11Success With StudentsKevie
                                          1724Thu2015-03-12Vim Hints 002Dave Morriss
                                          1725Fri2015-03-1349 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating a Template with StylesAhuka
                                          1726Mon2015-03-1615 Excuses not to Record a show for HPRKnightwise
                                          1727Tue2015-03-17Basic MuttFrank Bell
                                          1728Wed2015-03-18Requested Topic: Favourite Browser ExtensionsFin
                                          1729Thu2015-03-19Shield's Up - Wood Stove Heat Shield ProjectDavid Whitman
                                          1730Fri2015-03-205150 Shades of Beer 0005 River City Brewing Company RevisitedFiftyOneFifty
                                          1731Mon2015-03-23Upgrading an old laptopswift110
                                          1732Tue2015-03-24Renovating another Public-Domain Counterpoint TextbookJon Kulp
                                          1733Wed2015-03-25LinuxLugCast Episode-003 OuttakesKevin Wisher
                                          1734Thu2015-03-26Vim Hints 003Dave Morriss
                                          1735Fri2015-03-27Free tutorials for teachersAhuka
                                          1736Mon2015-03-30How I run my small business using Linuxb-yeezi
                                          1737Tue2015-03-31Five Steps to VimFrank Bell
                                          \n

                                          Mailing List discussions

                                          \n

                                          \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                          \n

                                          \nThe main threads this month were:\n

                                            \n
                                          1. From: sigflup synasloble <pantsbutt@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-01 21:00:10 -0600
                                            \n Subject: logo
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/775
                                            \n Messages: 2

                                          2. \n
                                          3. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-02 23:29:57 -0600
                                            \n Subject: Is anyone attending LibrePlanet? If not, I think KLF is our next event.
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/777
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          4. \n
                                          5. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-03 13:59:57 UTC
                                            \n Subject: Fear and Lothian?
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/778
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          6. \n
                                          7. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-05 15:07:44 -0500
                                            \n Subject: Show Synopis
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/780
                                            \n Messages: 2

                                          8. \n
                                          9. From: Patrick Dailey <pdailey03@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-10 23:07:29 -0400
                                            \n Subject: Next HPR_AudioBookClub
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/783
                                            \n Messages: 6

                                          10. \n
                                          11. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-11 23:50:04 -0500
                                            \n Subject: HPR banner for KLF
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/784
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          12. \n
                                          13. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-15 12:19:58 +0100
                                            \n Subject: Change to the calendar page
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/785
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          14. \n
                                          15. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-18 09:02:44 +0100
                                            \n Subject: Call for shows
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/786
                                            \n Messages: 4

                                          16. \n
                                          17. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-18 09:07:09 +0100
                                            \n Subject: Fwd: Podcast Interview
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/787
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          18. \n
                                          19. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-19 01:29:30 -0500
                                            \n Subject: Bad e-mail ediquette
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/790
                                            \n Messages: 4

                                          20. \n
                                          21. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-03-30 09:57:14 +0100
                                            \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-04-04T18:00:00Z
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/800
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          22. \n
                                          \nTotal messages this month: 26\n

                                          \n\n

                                          Comments this month

                                          \n\n

                                          There are 40 comments:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • hpr1178\n(2013-02-06) \"Interviews with Laura Creighton and Armin Rigo\"\nby Seetee.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nTomas on 2015-03-29:\n\"Broken links\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1430\n(2014-01-24) \"thebestofyoutube.com download script\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                            • Comment 8:\nIan on 2015-03-02:\"[no title]\"
                                            • Comment 9:\nKen Fallon on 2015-03-05:\"[no title]\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1496\n(2014-04-28) \"wiki on the raspberry pi\"\nby MrX.\n
                                            • Comment 2:\nJPRedonnet on 2015-03-04:\n\"Ciwiki\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1690\n(2015-01-23) \"Arduino 101 Breadboard\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                            • Comment 3:\nMirwi on 2015-03-19:\n\"Great show!\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1702\n(2015-02-10) \"FOSDEM 2015 Part 5 of 5\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                            • Comment 2:\nAlison Chaiken on 2015-03-04:\n\"Thanks for these segments\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1712\n(2015-02-24) \"What's in my Crate\"\nby Mike Ray.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nBeeza on 2015-03-02:\n\"Follow-up Episode Please\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-03-02:\n\"Follow up to "what's in my crate"\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1714\n(2015-02-26) \"Vim Hints 001\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-03-26:\"[no title]\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-26:\n\"Stripped down Vim\"
                                            • Comment 3:\n0xf10e on 2015-03-29:\"[no title]\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1716\n(2015-03-02) \"HPR Community News for February 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-03-02:\n\"'Parcel of Rogues' and access tech\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-02:\n\"Robert Burns\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-03-02:\n\"Also in the parcel\"
                                            • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-02:\n\"Fear and Lothian\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1718\n(2015-03-04) \"What's In My Pickup Toolbox\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-03-03:\n\"Great podcast\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1720\n(2015-03-06) \"15 Certificate Issues and Solutions\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nEllusionSK on 2015-03-28:\n\"Great show\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1721\n(2015-03-09) \"Cross-compilers Part 2\"\nby Mike Ray.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nARMed on 2015-03-08:\n\"Part 1\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nPhalax on 2015-03-16:\n\"Good job\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1722\n(2015-03-10) \"Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nmike dupont on 2015-03-09:\n\"https://kansaslinuxfest.us\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-03-10:\n\"I'm a big dummy and got the URL wrong\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1723\n(2015-03-11) \"Success With Students\"\nby Kevie.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-03-10:\n\"I listen to all shows\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-12:\n\"Excellent show\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1724\n(2015-03-12) \"Vim Hints 002\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nPhalax on 2015-03-16:\n\"Great series\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-16:\n\"Thanks Phalax\"
                                            • Comment 3:\njohanv on 2015-03-17:\n\"You always learn new things\"
                                            • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-17:\n\"Thanks johanv\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1726\n(2015-03-16) \"15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR\"\nby Knightwise.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\njohanv on 2015-03-17:\n\"LOL!\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nanonymous on 2015-03-21:\n\"good points\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1727\n(2015-03-17) \"Basic Mutt\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\narcher72 on 2015-03-17:\"[no title]\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nJonas on 2015-03-19:\"[no title]\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nrstackhouse on 2015-03-21:\n\"Automating alias file creation\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1728\n(2015-03-18) \"Requested Topic: Favourite Browser Extensions\"\nby Fin.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nzloster on 2015-03-18:\n\"Other useful browser extensions for Firefox\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1729\n(2015-03-19) \"Shield's Up - Wood Stove Heat Shield Project\"\nby David Whitman.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-03-19:\n\"Beautiful!\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1730\n(2015-03-20) \"5150 Shades of Beer 0005 River City Brewing Company Revisited\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-03-21:\n\"Arch Linux on RPI\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1732\n(2015-03-24) \"Renovating another Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nDaniel Worth on 2015-03-24:\n\"Best Show This Year.\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1736\n(2015-03-30) \"How I run my small business using Linux\"\nby b-yeezi.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJonathan Kulp on 2015-03-30:\"[no title]\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1737\n(2015-03-31) \"Five Steps to Vim\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nzloster on 2015-03-31:\n\"Small problem\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-31:\n\"Re: Small problem\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-03-31:\n\"Great show!\"
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1761,'2015-05-04','HPR Community News for April 2015',4000,'HPR Community News for April 2015','\n

                                          New hosts

                                          \n

                                          \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                          \n amp, \n Stilvoid.\n

                                          \n\n

                                          Last Month\'s Shows

                                          \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          IdDayDateTitleHost
                                          1738Wed2015-04-01Credit Card PIN breachVarious Hosts
                                          1739Thu2015-04-02Theater of the Imagination: Part 07lostnbronx
                                          1740Fri2015-04-03Mailing List EtiquetteDave Morriss
                                          1741Mon2015-04-06HPR Community News for March 2015HPR Volunteers
                                          1742Tue2015-04-07How to Get Yourself On an Open Source Podcast - Presentation for Kansas Linux Fest, 22 March 2015FiftyOneFifty
                                          1743Wed2015-04-08Scale 13x Part 1 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1744Thu2015-04-09Scale 13x Part 2 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1745Fri2015-04-1051 - LibreOffice Impress - Overview and GuidanceAhuka
                                          1746Mon2015-04-13Scale 13x Part 3 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1747Tue2015-04-14Scale 13x Part 4 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1748Wed2015-04-15Scale 13x Part 5 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1749Thu2015-04-16Scale 13x Part 6 of 6Lord Drachenblut
                                          1750Fri2015-04-17xclip, xdotool, xvkbd: 3 CLI Linux tools for RSI sufferersJon Kulp
                                          1751Mon2015-04-20How I got into LinuxSteve Bickle
                                          1752Tue2015-04-21Penguicon 2015 PromoAhuka
                                          1753Wed2015-04-22Introducing a 5 year old to Sugar on Toastamp
                                          1754Thu2015-04-23D7? Why Seven?Jon Kulp
                                          1755Fri2015-04-2452 - LibreOffice Impress - Moving AroundAhuka
                                          1756Mon2015-04-27Ranger File Managerb-yeezi
                                          1757Tue2015-04-28Useful Bash functionsDave Morriss
                                          1758Wed2015-04-29Cool Stuff part 3Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                          1759Thu2015-04-30A brief review of Firefox OSStilvoid
                                          \n

                                          Mailing List discussions

                                          \n

                                          \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                          \n

                                          \nThe main threads this month were:\n

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          1. From: James Toebes <james@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-01 09:58:54 -0400
                                            \n Subject: hpr1738 :: Credit Card PIN breach - THANK YOU HPR!
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/801
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          2. \n
                                          3. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-02 11:07:50 +0100
                                            \n Subject: Site links
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/802
                                            \n Messages: 4

                                          4. \n
                                          5. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-02 23:16:34 +0100
                                            \n Subject: Off-topic: LibreOffice Calc questions
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/804
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          6. \n
                                          7. From: Jon Kulp <jonlancekulp@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-02 20:16:51 -0500
                                            \n Subject: HPR Email Bot malfunctioning?
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/807
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          8. \n
                                          9. From: David Whitman <davidglennwhitman@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-04 12:08:23 -0700
                                            \n Subject: Please reserve July 8 for davidWHITMAN
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/812
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          10. \n
                                          11. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-04 14:56:04 -0500
                                            \n Subject: Who needs the Zoom H1 interview recorder next?
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/813
                                            \n Messages: 4

                                          12. \n
                                          13. From: Jon Kulp <jonlancekulp@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-04 15:29:32 -0500
                                            \n Subject: Screencast: putting embedded audio into the ebooks
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/817
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          14. \n
                                          15. From: Jonathan Kulp <jonlancekulp@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-07 10:08:48 -0500
                                            \n Subject: Reserve May 11?
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/820
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          16. \n
                                          17. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-08 22:59:32 +0100
                                            \n Subject: LibreOffice Font Question
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/821
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          18. \n
                                          19. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-14 23:03:39 +0100
                                            \n Subject: archive.org API?
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/824
                                            \n Messages: 6

                                          20. \n
                                          21. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-16 20:04:21 +0200
                                            \n Subject: Disabling CSS on HPR for some tests
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/830
                                            \n Messages: 3

                                          22. \n
                                          23. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-24 13:31:56 +0200
                                            \n Subject: FTP Password has been Changed
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/833
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          24. \n
                                          25. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-28 21:52:55 +0100
                                            \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-05-02T18:00:00Z
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/834
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          26. \n
                                          27. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                            \n Date: 2015-04-29 09:50:05 +0200
                                            \n Subject: Re: Hack in the Box Amsterdam security conference
                                            \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/835
                                            \n Messages: 1

                                          28. \n
                                          \n

                                          \nTotal messages this month: 35\n

                                          \n\n

                                          Comments this month

                                          \n\n

                                          There are 24 comments:

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • hpr1726\n(2015-03-16) \"15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR\"\nby Knightwise.\n
                                            • Comment 3:\nAndres on 2015-04-06:\n\"I uploaded one as a result of this\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1732\n(2015-03-24) \"Renovating another Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                            • Comment 2:\nRobert Stackhouse on 2015-03-31:\n\"Slashes\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nJonathan Kulp on 2015-04-05:\n\"How do I do this? Watch this screen capture and see\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1738\n(2015-04-01) \"Credit Card PIN breach\"\nby Various Hosts.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJimZat on 2015-04-01:\n\"Enlightening!\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1741\n(2015-04-06) \"HPR Community News for March 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-04-06:\n\"Pearls before swine\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1749\n(2015-04-16) \"Scale 13x Part 6 of 6\"\nby Lord Drachenblut.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-16:\n\"inspirational!\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1750\n(2015-04-17) \"xclip, xdotool, xvkbd: 3 CLI Linux tools for RSI sufferers\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-17:\n\"Correction/Improvement\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-04-21:\n\"Fascinating stuff\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-04-21:\n\"Terrific podcast\"
                                            • Comment 4:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-21:\n\"Thanks Mike; Response to Dave\"
                                            • Comment 5:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-22:\n\"Mike: ping me for help\"
                                            • Comment 6:\nMike Ray on 2015-04-23:\n\"Blather and xvkbd as shortcuts in Debian\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1754\n(2015-04-23) \"D7? Why Seven?\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-04-10:\n\"Disapointed\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-22:\n\"confused\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nthelovebug on 2015-04-28:\n\"Dmaj7\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1756\n(2015-04-27) \"Ranger File Manager\"\nby b-yeezi.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-28:\n\"Ranger is phenomenal\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1757\n(2015-04-28) \"Useful Bash functions\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nBill Ricker on 2015-04-28:\n\"epub\"
                                            • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-04-28:\n\"Re: epub\"
                                            • Comment 3:\n0xf10e on 2015-04-28:\n\"exitcodes\"
                                            • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-04-28:\n\"Re: exitcodes\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1758\n(2015-04-29) \"Cool Stuff part 3\"\nby Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^).\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-04-15:\n\"KITT\"
                                            • Comment 2:\n0xf10e on 2015-04-29:\n\"VCS!\"
                                            • Comment 3:\nCprompt^ on 2015-04-29:\n\"Re: VCS\"
                                            • \n

                                          • \n
                                          • hpr1759\n(2015-04-30) \"A brief review of Firefox OS\"\nby Stilvoid.\n
                                            • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-04-30:\n\"Welcome Aboard \"
                                            \n
                                          • \n
                                          \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1653,'2014-12-03','Ruth Suehle at Ohio Linux Fest 2014',2779,'Ruth Suehle reminds us all that hardware needs to be open too.','

                                          \r\nRuth Suehle gave the next-to-last keynote at Ohio LinuxFest 2014 on 2014-10-25. In this talk she discusses the significance of open hardware and maker culture, and how this is something we all should participate in. Maker culture is an essential part of the free and open culture we belive in when we talk about open source. And we need to be vigilant to protect our values in the hardware space. As an example she tells us about Bre Pettis and Makerbot, which at one time were very open, but have turned aginst this value as they became more successful. In the final analysis, it is up to us to protect open hardware by voting with our dollars/euros/whatever.\r\n

                                          ',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Open Hardware, Open Source, Open Specifications',0,0,1), (1735,'2015-03-27','Free tutorials for teachers',897,'Professor Bernard Poole makes free tutorials available aimed at teachers','

                                          \r\nI have received a very generous offer from Bernard J. Poole, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh. He has a series of LibreOffice Tutorials and has asked me to publicize that they are available free of charge to all of our LibreOffice fans on Hacker Public Radio. You can find his tutorials on his web site at https://www.pitt.edu/~poole/. He is particularly aiming his tutorials at educators who might use LibreOffice in the classroom\r\n

                                          ',198,70,1,'CC-BY-SA','Teachers, tutorials',0,0,1), (1649,'2014-11-27','Raspberry Pi Accessibility Breakthrough',1036,'How I fixed the stuttering text-to-speech on a Raspberry Pi','

                                          \r\nSince April last year the text-to-speech using eSpeak in the Raspberry Pi\r\nconsole has stuttered very badly and regularly crashes the kernel.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHere\'s how I fixed it.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nCloning my github repo:\r\n

                                          \r\n
                                          \r\ngit clone https://github.com/cromarty/ttsprojects.git\r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nInstallation:\r\n

                                          \r\n
                                          \r\ncd ttsprojects/raspberry-pi/libilctts/build\r\nsudo ./build.sh\r\ncd ../../piespeakup\r\nsudo ./build.sh\r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBingo! Speech should work.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThis has only just been released and there is still work to do on the\r\ndocumentation.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nNote: I am not connected to the Raspberry Pi Foundation in any way\r\nand anything I say or do is not endorsed by them.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nMy email address is connected with a Freelists email list I set up and\r\nan accompanying web site:\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://www.raspberryvi.org/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe \'VI\' is for \'Visually Impaired\' and I DID check with the\r\nFoundation about the similarity of the web address before I created it.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nTo join our email list send an email to:\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nraspberry-vi-request@freelists.org\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nWith \'subscribe\' in the subject.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nMike\r\n

                                          ',282,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi, Accessibility, console, speakup, kernel oops, fixed',0,0,1), (1738,'2015-04-01','Credit Card PIN breach',5240,'We expose a well known but ignored security breach','\r\n

                                          Spoiler

                                          \r\n

                                          Your passwords are as secure as they ever were

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nOn September the 10th, 2012 an anonymous malicious hacker released 10,000 pin codes onto the site paste bin dot com. How the attacker gained access to the codes is not known, but it is thought that it may be linked to a breach that occurred at the end of March 2012 to the Credit card processor Global Payments. That attack exposed 1.5 million consumers financial data. These codes have been confirmed by security experts to be legitimate and in wide spread use even today. Despite this exposure been \"common knowledge\" among the security community, major banks and credit card companies have yet to issue any statement on the breach.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nTired of waiting for action by big business, we bring you a list of the codes so you can check for yourself if your data is compromised.\r\n

                                          ',109,83,0,'CC-BY-SA','April fools, credit card pin, security',0,0,1), (2000,'2016-04-01','How to Point a Satellite Dish',3958,'After 10 years, 3 months, 19 days of Procrastination, Ken finally delivers droops a show','\r\n

                                          Spoiler

                                          \r\n

                                          Ken did not fall of the roof in a storm

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          This show is dedicated to Procrastination, the avoidance of doing a task which needs to be accomplished.

                                          \r\n

                                          I\'ve been trying to record this particular show for ages but I can never seem to finish it. I find the topic just too interesting. When I start then I get distracted by some other aspect. Every time I try to record it Murphy gets in the way, with lost recordings and broken cards etc. This is the email that prompted this show.

                                          \r\n
                                          -------- Forwarded Message --------\r\nSubject: TWT - Satellite communications\r\nDate: Tue, 13 Dec 2005 12:00:54 +0100\r\n\r\nHi Droops,\r\n\r\nI heard your call for content and I\'d like to send you some shows. I\r\ndon\'t have a lot of spare time with work and a young family so I can\'t\r\ndo a regular show but I can send you a series on a topic. I was\r\nthinking of doing a series on Satellite Communications.\r\n...\r\nKen\r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy%27s_law

                                          \r\n

                                          So after eleven years, I set the deadline of episode 2000 to force myself to finish this show.

                                          \r\n

                                          Let\'s start.

                                          \r\n

                                          What are orbits ?

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit

                                          \r\n

                                          In physics, an orbit is the gravitationally curved path of an object about a point in space, for example the orbit of a planet about a star or a natural satellite around a planet. Orbits of planets are typically elliptical, and the central mass being orbited is at a focal point of the ellipse.

                                          \r\n

                                          Newton\'s cannonball was a thought experiment Isaac Newton used to hypothesize that the force of gravity was universal, and it was the key force for planetary motion. It appeared in his book A Treatise of the System of the World.

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton%27s_cannonball

                                          \r\n

                                          https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Newton_Cannon.svg

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • No orbit
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Suborbital trajectories, trajectory intersects the atmosphere so that it does not complete one orbital revolution.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Orbital trajectories (or simply \"orbits\")
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Open (or escape) trajectories
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          It is worth noting that orbital rockets are launched vertically at first to lift the rocket above the atmosphere (which causes frictional drag), and then slowly pitch over and finish firing the rocket engine parallel to the atmosphere to achieve orbit speed.

                                          \r\n

                                          Once in orbit, their speed keeps them in orbit above the atmosphere. If e.g., an elliptical orbit dips into dense air, the object will lose speed and re-enter (i.e. fall). Occasionally a space craft will intentionally intercept the atmosphere, in an act commonly referred to as an aerobraking maneuver.

                                          \r\n

                                          Types of orbits

                                          \r\n

                                          There are many ways to classify orbits

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_orbits

                                          \r\n

                                          The choice of which orbit to use is based on the intended purpose of the satellite.

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Centric classifications: Based on what they orbit
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Altitude classifications: Based on how high they are
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Inclination classifications: Based on the angle of rotation with respect to the Equator.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Eccentricity classifications: Based on their path
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Synchronicity classifications: Based on how often they rotate
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          Low Earth orbit (LEO)

                                          \r\n

                                          0 to 2,000 km (0–1,240 miles).

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • 0 km / mi - Sea Level.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 37.6 km / 23.4 mi - Self Propelled Jet Aircraft Flight Ceiling (Record Set in 1977).
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 215 km / 133.6 mi - Sputnik-1 The first artificial satellite of earth.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 340 km / 211.3 mi - International Space Station.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 390 km / 242.3 mi - Former Russian Space Station MIR.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 595 km / 369.7 mi - Hubble Space Telescope.
                                          • \r\n
                                          • 600 - 800 km / 372.8 - 497.1 mi - Sun-synchronous Satellites.
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          These satellites orbit the Earth in near exact polar orbits north to south. They cross the equator multiple times per day and each time they are at the same anglewith respect to the sun. Satellites on these types of orbits are particularly useful for capturing images of the Earth’s surface or images of the sun

                                          \r\n

                                          Medium Earth orbit (MEO)

                                          \r\n

                                          Geocentric orbits ranging in altitude from 2,000 km (1,240 miles) to just below geosynchronous orbit at 35,786 kilometers (22,236 mi).

                                          \r\n

                                          GPS (Global Positioning System) Satellites reside here. These Satellites are on a Semi-synchronous Orbit (SSO) meaning that they orbit the earth in exactly 12 hours (twice per day)

                                          \r\n

                                          Geosynchronous orbit (GSO) and Geostationary orbit (GEO)

                                          \r\n

                                          Orbits around Earth matching Earth\'s sidereal rotation period. 42,164 km (26,199 mi). Sidereal time is a \"time scale that is based on the Earth\'s rate of rotation measured relative to the fixed stars\" rather than the Sun.\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_time

                                          \r\n

                                          Geosynchronous satellites orbit the Earth at the same rate that the Earth rotates. Thus they remain stationary over a single line of longitude. A geostationary satellite will remain in a fixed location as observed from the surface of the earth, allowing a satellite dish to be alligned to it.

                                          \r\n

                                          \"File:Geostationaryjava3D.gif\"

                                          \r\n

                                          High Earth orbit

                                          \r\n

                                          Geocentric orbits above the altitude of geosynchronous orbit 35,786 km (22,240 miles).

                                          \r\n

                                          Polar orbits

                                          \r\n

                                          They are often used for earth-mapping, earth observation, capturing the earth as time passes from one point, reconnaissance satellites, as well as for some weather satellites. The Iridium satellite constellation also uses a polar orbit to provide telecommunications services. The disadvantage to this orbit is that no one spot on the Earth\'s surface can be sensed continuously from a satellite in a polar orbit.

                                          \r\n

                                          Molniya orbit

                                          \r\n

                                          Orbita was a system that consisted of 3 highly elliptical Molniya satellites, Moscow-based ground uplink facilities and about 20 downlink stations, located in cities and towns of remote regions of Siberia and Far East. Each station had a 12-meter receiving parabolic antenna and transmitters for re-broadcasting TV signal to local householders.

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molniya_orbit

                                          \r\n

                                          \"A

                                          \r\n

                                          https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/Orbitalaltitudes.jpg

                                          \r\n

                                          Atmospheric electromagnetic opacity

                                          \r\n

                                          \"Atmospheric

                                          \r\n

                                          Satelites

                                          \r\n

                                          Sputnik 1

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sputnik_1

                                          \r\n

                                          Sputnik 1 was the first artificial Earth satellite. The Soviet Union launched it into an elliptical low Earth orbit on October 4, 1957. It was a 58 cm (23 in) diameter polished metal sphere, with four external radio antennae to broadcast radio pulses. It was visible all around the Earth and its radio pulses were detectable. This surprise success precipitated the American Sputnik crisis and triggered the Space Race, a part of the larger Cold War. The launch ushered in new political, military, technological, and scientific developments.

                                          \r\n

                                          ProtoStar II Mission Overview

                                          \r\n

                                          https://www.ilslaunch.com/sites/default/files/pdf/A2G_MO.pdf

                                          \r\n

                                          ASTRA 2G SATELLITE MISSION

                                          \r\n

                                          ASTRA 2G is the third spacecraft of a three satellite investment programme (ASTRA 2E, 2F and 2G) that SES contracted with Airbus Defence and Space in order to provide replacement as well as incremental satellite capacity in the orbital arc of 28.2/28.5 degrees East.

                                          \r\n

                                          ASTRA 2G carries 62 Ku-band transponders as well as 4 Ka-band transponders. The different beams provide coverage over the UK and Ireland, Europe and West Africa.

                                          \r\n

                                          \"The

                                          \r\n

                                          https://www.ses.com/4628824/astra-2g

                                          \r\n

                                          Components of a Communications Satelites

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Rocket motors
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Fuel tanks
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Solar panels
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Batteries
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Computer
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Antennas and transceivers/transponders
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transponder_%28satellite_communications%29

                                          \r\n

                                          The word \"transponder\" is derived from the words \"transmitter\" and \"responder.\"

                                          \r\n

                                          A communications satellite\'s transponder is the series of interconnected units that form a communications channel between the receiving and the transmitting antennas. It is mainly used in satellite communication to transfer the received signals.

                                          \r\n

                                          A transponder is typically composed of

                                          \r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • An input band limiting device (a band pass filter)
                                          • \r\n
                                          • An input low-noise amplifier (LNA), designed to amplify the (normally very weak, because of the large distances involved) signals received from the earth station
                                          • \r\n
                                          • A frequency translator (normally composed of an oscillator and a frequency mixer) used to convert the frequency of the received signal to the frequency required for the transmitted signal
                                          • \r\n
                                          • An output band pass filter
                                          • \r\n
                                          • A power amplifier (this can be a traveling-wave tube or a solid state amplifier)
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          https://www.jsati.com/why-satellite-how-Spacesegment4.asp

                                          \r\n

                                          Boeing commercial communications satellites geosynchronous orbit

                                          \r\n

                                          \"boeing

                                          \r\n

                                          https://www.boeingimages.com/Docs/BOE/Media/TR3_WATERMARKED/1/a/2/a/BI231995.jpg

                                          \r\n

                                          Finding Astra 28.2E

                                          \r\n

                                          This is one of the many sites that will give you a birds eye view of where you need to point your dish.

                                          \r\n

                                          https://www.dishpointer.com/

                                          \r\n

                                          Terms needed when pointing a dish

                                          \r\n

                                          \"The

                                          \r\n

                                          https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Azimut_altitude.svg

                                          \r\n

                                          \"screen

                                          \r\n

                                          The Dish, on Kens Roof.

                                          \r\n

                                          \"Ken

                                          \r\n

                                          Reading the elevation from the dish assembley.

                                          \r\n

                                          \"\"/

                                          \r\n

                                          FreeSat

                                          \r\n

                                          Freesat is broadcast from the same satellites (Astra 28.2E and Eurobird 1) as Sky Digital.

                                          \r\n

                                          This is a list of all of the free-to-air channels that are currently available via satellite from SES Astra satellites (Astra 2E/2F/2G) located at 28.2 °E.

                                          \r\n

                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_free-to-air_channels_at_28%C2%B0E

                                          \r\n

                                          Here is a link to a page on how to get mythtv working with FreeSat.

                                          \r\n

                                          https://parker1.co.uk/mythtv_freesat.php

                                          \r\n',30,83,1,'CC-BY-SA','procrastination,orbit,satellite,satellite dish',0,0,1), (1654,'2014-12-04','Using AS numbers to identify where you are on the Internet',1204,'ASN uniquely identifies each network on the Internet','

                                          \r\nI have a laptop and I want it to use different configurations depending on where I am. If I’m on wifi at home, I don’t want my NAS mounted, but if I’m on a wired connection I do. If I’m at work I want to connect to various servers there. If I’m in the train I want to setup a vpn tunnel. You get the idea.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nMy solution to this was to approach it from the laptop and go out. So to look around and see what network I was on. There are a few ways to approach this, you could look at your IP address, the arp tables, try and ping a known server in each location. The issue with looking at an IP address is that most networks use Private Networks. Very soon you will find that the wifi coffee shop happens to have picked the same range as you use at home and now your laptop is trying to backup to their cash register.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThen I was thinking that I’m approaching this problem from the wrong angle. Why not start with my public IP address range, which has to be unique, and work back from there to my laptop. From there I was planning on maintaining a look-up table of public IP addresses, along the lines of the GeoIP tools developed by MaxMind.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBy Accident I found out that geoiplookup supports AS Number\r\n

                                          \r\n
                                          \r\nFrom WikiPedia: Autonomous System (Internet)
                                          \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autonomous_System_%28Internet%29
                                          \r\nISP must have an officially registered autonomous system number (ASN). A unique ASN is allocated to each AS for use in BGP routing. AS numbers are important because the ASN uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.\r\n
                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nSo what that is saying is that every network in the Inter(connected)Net(work), must have it’s own unique AS Number. From there I was able to write a script to easily manage my laptops behaviour based on both location and connection type

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nSee https://kenfallon.com/scripts-based-on-your-network-location/ for the complete article and scripts.

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Autonomous System Number,ASN,geoiplookup',0,0,1), (1656,'2014-12-08','My audio player collection',1278,'I describe the collection of audio players I use for listening to podcasts','

                                          My Audio Player Collection

                                          \r\n

                                          I got broadband installed in my house in 2005 after I\'d bought my first PC. I\'d owned a lot of PCs before that, but they had all been cast-offs from the university I was working at, and I accessed the Internet via dial-up to my work.

                                          \r\n

                                          This was around the time I got sick of listening to the radio and first discovered podcasts, and so I decided I wanted a portable audio player (or MP3 Player as they tended to be called back then).

                                          \r\n

                                          Since then I have been listening to podcasts pretty much all of the time and have worked my way through a number of players. I thought it might be interesting if I chronicled the devices I have owned in the past 9-10 years.

                                          \r\n

                                          The full show notes for this episode are available at: hpr1656_full_shownotes.html

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','audio player,podcast,Rockbox',0,0,1), (1657,'2014-12-09','Hacking Gutenberg eBooks',1623,'I talk about ebook formatting and how to customize an ebook from Project Gutenberg','

                                          Links to stuff I mentioned in the podcast:

                                          \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ebooks, html, css, hacks',0,0,1), (1658,'2014-12-10','Cool Stuff Part 2',1177,'CPrompt talks about some more cool stuff that he has discovered','

                                          \r\nToday I Found Out: https://www.todayifoundout.com/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nDaily Knowledge Podcast: https://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/category/podcast/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nCommand Line Tips: using CTRL + Left / Right arrow will allow you to move through a long command word by word instead of moving through each letter. Makes making adjustments to a long command much quicker.
                                          \r\nUse the \"cd -\" to move back and forth between previous directories. cd into a directory, then cd into a different one. Now do \"cd -\" and you will be back to the first directory. \r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nXFCE : script that uses xdtool to move window from one monitor to the next https://makandracards.com/makandra/12447-how-to-move-a-window-to-the-next-monitor-on-xfce-xubuntu\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHyperkin Pixel Art Controller: https://hyperkin.com/hyperkin-pixel-art-controller-for-pc-mac-computers-1265.html. Use with the SNES9x emulator. Works very well\r\n

                                          \r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Today I Found Out,Daily Knowledge Podcast,command line,XFCE,Hyperkin Pixel Art Controller',0,0,1), (1659,'2014-12-11','OggCamp Interview with Jon Archer',564,'A short interview with Jon Archer, UK Fedora Ambassador. ','

                                          In today\'s show, Philip Newborough interviews Jon Archer, the UK Fedora Ambassador.

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          In the interview, Philip and Jon discuss:

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Jon\'s role as a Fedora Ambassador
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Recent happenings in the land of Fedora
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Jon\'s involvement with the new UK Fedora Podcast
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          The interview was conducted at OggCamp 14, a free culture unconference, held in Oxford UK on the weekend of October 4th-5th 2014.

                                          \r\n',287,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp,oggcamp14',0,0,1), (1661,'2014-12-15','OggCamp Interview with Paul Tansom',701,'A short interview with Paul Tansom of Code Club.','

                                          In today\'s show, Philip Newborough interviews Paul Tansom, a regional co-ordinator for Code Club.

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          In the interview, Philip and Paul discuss:

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • What\'s involved in being a Code Club volunteer
                                          • \r\n
                                          • How to get involved
                                          • \r\n
                                          • How Code Club and the UK national curriculum compliment each other
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Code Club Pro
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          The interview was conducted at OggCamp 14, a free culture unconference, held in Oxford UK on the weekend of October 4th-5th 2014.

                                          \r\n',287,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','oggcamp,oggcamp14',0,0,1), (1660,'2014-12-12','Trying out Slackware',3926,'Slackware-newbie Beni is talking to long time Slackware user mcnalu','

                                          \r\nmcnalu wrote a article about Slackware in Linux Voice, Issue 6.\r\n

                                          \r\n\"tux\r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://www.linuxvoice.com/issue-6/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBeni read this article which lead to him trying out Slackware and being very\r\nimpressed by its simplicity.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThat\'s why he asked mcnalu to do a HPR episode about Slackware, which is\r\nprobably the oldest Linux Distro that\'s still around and whose developer follows\r\na no-nonsense strategy and is very conservative when it comes switching to new\r\nstuff that comes up in the Linux world (like PAM or systemd)\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe distro is one of the if not the most Unix-like Linux distro. It uses a BSD\r\nstyle init system instead of widely used sysvinit.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBeni and mcnalu talk about the installation process, finding dokumentation and\r\nwhy the website is outdated.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nFurther they discuss the package manager and what it means that it doesn\'t\r\nresolve dependencies. They also explain why this isn\'t necessariliy a bad\r\nthing and where to find binary packages.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nIn the end they talk about where the Slackware community meets and who is in\r\ncharge of Slackware.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://www.slackware.com/\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slackware\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nSlackware documentation isn\'t as good the BSDs dokumentation or the Arch\r\nWiki. But it\'s definitely getting better\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://docs.slackware.com/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nand there is also \'Slackware essentials\', a book that\'s also available online:\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://www.slackware.com/book/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe Slackware forum on Linux Questions is pretty much the official Slackware\r\nforum:\r\nhttps://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nmcnalu announced his Article in the Linux Questions forum:\r\nhttps://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/linux-voice-issue-6-a-4175513762/\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nTo support the development of Slackware you could buy yourself a Christmas\r\npresent from the Slackware store:\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://store.slackware.com\r\n

                                          \r\n',288,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','slackware, distro, linux',0,0,1), (1662,'2014-12-16','LinuxLugCast Episode-001 Outtakes',5122,'Preshow and aftershow banter that does not get published through our normal feeds.','

                                          \r\nSome good content that we do not publish.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://linuxlugcast.com/
                                          \r\nhttps://linuxlugcast.com/?p=75\r\n

                                          ',265,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','linuxlugcast,outtakes',0,0,1), (1663,'2014-12-17','Interview with Greg Greenlee Founder of Blacks In Technology',3749,'Blacks In Technology is a tech focused community focused on increasing diversity in technology.','

                                          \r\nIn todays show, Ken interviews Greg Greenlee Founder of Blacks In Technology\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThe RSS Feed: https://www.spreaker.com/user/6698969/episodes/feed\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nBlacks In Technology is a tech focused community and media organization focused on increasing diversity in technology. Blacks In Technology\'s mission is to increase visibility, participation, and change the perception of people of African descent in technology through community focused activities, events and media. Blacks In Technology (BIT) is \"Stomping the Divide\" by establishing a blueprint of world class technical excellence and innovation by providing resources, guidance and issuing a challenge to our members to surpass the high mark and establish new standards of global innovation.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Blacks in Technology,diversity,technology',0,0,1), (1666,'2014-12-22','Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi (Part 3)',4158,'This episode, embedded programming, ARM co-processors and the ARM memory management unit.','

                                          \r\nThis is the third episode in a series on bare metal programming on the Raspberry\r\nPi. This episode rounds out my initial stab at doing a series on RPI embedded\r\nprogramming based on my summer vacation project. This episode discusses how to \r\nwrite code with an eye towards using it in an embedded environment. It \r\ncontinues with a discussion of how coprocessors fit into the ARM architecture.\r\nIt also describes how to manage coprocessors programatically in a very hackerish\r\nway using self-modifying code. Finally, the episode describes how to enable the\r\nvirtual memory subsystem in the ARM as well as the cache. It includes some\r\nperformance measurements of my code both with and without the cache enabled.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHere is some of the source material that I reference in this episode. See\r\nthe previous episode show notes for information on how to get your own\r\nbare metal Raspberry Pi setup up and running.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          CATRPI

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Homepage: https://gitorious.org/catrpi\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Git repo: git://gitorious.org/catrpi/catrpi.git\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • My own repository of code that I wrote during this little project.\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Hacker\'s Delight by Henry S. Warren Jr.

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • https://www.hackersdelight.org/\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • A fantastic book on low level computer mathematics. I find it a joy to read.\r\n I cannot recommend it highly enough. It belongs on anyone\'s shelf next\r\n to Knuth and other \"programming bibles\".\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          ARM ARM

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          ARM TRM

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          dwelch67\'s bare metal repository

                                          \r\n\r\n',259,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,programming,ARM,co-processor,memory management unit',0,0,1), (1667,'2014-12-23','How to start a Blog',798,'How to start a blog and why you might want to','

                                          \r\nSo you want to start a blog?\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nHere are some of the tings to think about:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n
                                            \r\n
                                          • Why do you want to do a blog?\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • What do you want to say?\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Who are your audience?\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          • Do you mean to promote the blog to a wider audience or do you just want to write?\r\n
                                          • \r\n
                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nThere are a number of popular and well known blogging engines and \r\nservices, these are just some of them:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nNikola is an excellent system for creating a web-site that includes \r\nboth static pages and a blog. It has been covered before on HPR and \r\nit was that show that started me using it.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nHere are links to a couple of my blogs:\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n',291,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Blog, wordpress, drupal, nikola, journal',0,0,1), (1668,'2014-12-24','Nixstaller',3016,'Klaatu talks about Nixstaller. Packaging applications for GNU Linux and BSD','

                                          \r\nCross-distro and -POSIX packages are easy with Nixstaller. (Note that\r\nthis pre-dates and is entirely unrelated to NixOS or Nix packages.)\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nDownload Nixstaller from https://nixstaller.sourceforge.net and read\r\nthe docs there.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nReview the sample package templates included in the examples dir.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nGenerate an empty template dir with genprojdir.sh\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nModify the config.lua and run.lua files to suit your needs.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nPlace your payload(s) into the appropriate folders.\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nGenerate your re-distributable install file with geninstall.sh:\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\ngeninstall foo-1.0.0 foo.run\r\n

                                          \r\n

                                          \r\nThat\'s it!\r\n

                                          ',78,63,0,'CC-BY-SA','Nixstaller,packaging,GNU Linux,BSD',0,0,1), (1669,'2014-12-25','New Retro Computing',1053,'NYbill talks about building a Micromite Companion ','

                                          \r\nSorry for the bad audio in places here. My mic was giving me troubles. Also, I know I called MythTV, Mythbox. (Mythbox was the name I gave the computer that ran MythTV here way back when.)\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Micromite Companion,BASIC',0,0,1), (1671,'2014-12-29','LinuxLugCast Episode-002 Outtakes',4913,'Some good content that we do not publish','

                                          \r\nPreshow and aftershow banter that does not get published through our normal feeds. \r\n

                                          \r\nhttps://linuxlugcast.com/?p=115',265,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','linuxlugcast,outtakes',0,0,1), (1672,'2014-12-30','Systemd for Learner Drivers ',1288,'How to drive systemd, without crashing the vehicle through arguing with your passenger.','

                                          systemd For Learner Drivers

                                          \n

                                          A graphic to help out: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1672.svg

                                          \n

                                          This is a subject that attracts controversy, but I am not today going to be controversial, I hope. Many Linux systems are moving away from SysV Init and adopting systemd instead; both Linuxes that I use, Fedora and Mint have adopted systemd, and I understand that Debian has now forked to allow both sides of the argument to have their way. I am not going to get into the debate here. My personal stance is that I see both sides of the argument and I will continue to perch on top of the fence until systemd either proves itself or fails to do so.

                                          \n

                                          In this HPR I am going to try to fill a gap that I have seen in the systemd discussion; that is - how to operate it. I am not an expert on systemd, I have just tried to work it, and in doing so I have fished around in my file system and in the documentation. If you want to know what I found, then keep on listening. By way of opening I will remind myself, and you also, what systemd is replacing.

                                          \n

                                          SysV initd works with runlevels, the most common being

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • 5 for graphical multiuser networked
                                          • \n
                                          • 3 for cli multiuser networked
                                          • \n
                                          • 1 for single user
                                          • \n
                                          • 6 for reboot
                                          • \n
                                          • 0 for halt
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          In moving to a runlevel, unwanted services are shut down and wanted services are started up. For most users on most systems the most appropriate default runlevel is 5 giving multiuser, GUI & networking. Services can be started and stopped on demand by inetd.

                                          \n

                                          systemd works differently. It has target units. For most users on most systems the most appropriate default target is the graphical.target, which does a similar thing to runlevel 5 . Units are configured by unit configuration files. These files may start other units and stop other units. They can impose sequence and dependancies. There is a lot of cascading going on, with unit launching unit launching unit. Units also can be started and stopped on demand by systemd.

                                          \n

                                          Units

                                          \n

                                          The term Unit refers to a resource that systemd is taking under its control. There are 12 different types of Unit.

                                          \n
                                          \n
                                          systemd.service
                                          \n
                                          that starts/stops daemons
                                          \n
                                          systemd.socket
                                          \n
                                          activates network connections
                                          \n
                                          systemd.device
                                          \n
                                          activates kernel devices
                                          \n
                                          systemd.mount
                                          \n
                                          controls mount points
                                          \n
                                          systemd.automount
                                          \n
                                          provides on-demand mounting of file systems
                                          \n
                                          systemd.swap
                                          \n
                                          does for swap what systemd.mount does for filesystems
                                          \n
                                          systemd.scope
                                          \n
                                          starts/stops external processes
                                          \n
                                          systemd.target
                                          \n
                                          groups of services akin to init level 3, init level 5
                                          \n
                                          systemd.snapshot
                                          \n
                                          saves/restores the momentary state of other units
                                          \n
                                          systemd.timer
                                          \n
                                          triggers units based on date/time
                                          \n
                                          systemd.path
                                          \n
                                          trigger units based on changes in file system objects
                                          \n
                                          organises units in a hierarchical tree of cgroups, for resource management purposes
                                          \n
                                          \n

                                          Units files called by systemd live in /etc/systemd/system. But these are symbolic links to the real ones stored in /usr/lib/systemd/system

                                          \n

                                          There is a parallel /etc/systemd/user structure which does not seem to do anything on my computers, so I work for now like its not there.

                                          \n

                                          There is also a /run/systemd/system structure which appears to contain runtime configuration files with names like session-xxxx.scope. These are the unit type for external processes.

                                          \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          Table 1. Directory structure for systemd
                                          PathDescription
                                          /etc/systemd/systemLocal configuration
                                          /etc/systemd/userUser configuration
                                          /run/systemd/systemRuntime units
                                          /usr/lib/systemd/systemUnits of installed packages
                                          \n

                                          Directives

                                          \n

                                          The next thing we need is Directives.

                                          \n

                                          The unit configuration files contain directives to start/stop a unit, and directives that cascade to other unit configuration files that start/stop dependant units. Directives may impose conditions on whether or when to call a unit. There are a whole bunch of different directives listed in man systemd.unit. These are a few.

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • Requires= list of units to start. If any required units fail then abort this one
                                          • \n
                                          • Conflicts= list of units to stop
                                          • \n
                                          • After= the order in which units will start
                                          • \n
                                          • Before= the order in which units will start
                                          • \n
                                          • Wants= list of units to start. If any fail just continue anyway
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          As well wanted units listed by the WANTS directive, there may also be a \'wants\' directory below the unit directory. So the unit conf file /etc/systemd/system/default.target will cause two further unit conf files to be read in from the /etc/systemd/system/default.target.wants/ directory.

                                          \n

                                          Each required unit and wanted unit from the directives, as well as those in the wants directory are added to a job queue. If directives cascade to other unit files containing more directives then all of these dependences are also added to the job queue. A directive may start or stop another unit, or that change the detail of a job already in the queue. All directives ultimately cascade down to starting or stopping one of the base units in /usr/lib/systemd/system.

                                          \n

                                          To get a feel for how this all pans out in practice I will walk us through the cascade of unit files from bootup.

                                          \n

                                          From Bootup

                                          \n

                                          First, the default.taget is activated, which on my system is just a link to graphical.target

                                          \n

                                          graphical.target

                                          \n[Unit]\nDescription=Graphical Interface\nDocumentation=man:systemd.special(7)\nRequires=multi-user.target\nAfter=multi-user.target\nConflicts=rescue.target\nWants=display-manager.service\nAllowIsolate=yes\n

                                          Cascades to

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • start multi-user.target
                                          • \n
                                          • start display-manager.service
                                          • \n
                                          • stop rescue.target
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          Also we have a wants directory /etc/systemd/system/graphical.target.wants/ that

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • starts accounts-daemon.service (for logging)
                                          • \n
                                          • starts rtkit-daemon.service (for realtime scheduling)
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          multi-user.target

                                          \n

                                          graphical target cascaded to multi-user.target.

                                          \n[Unit]\nDescription=Multi-User System\nDocumentation=man:systemd.special(7)\nRequires=basic.target\nConflicts=rescue.service rescue.target\nAfter=basic.target rescue.service rescue.target\nAllowIsolate=yes\n

                                          Cascades to

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • start basic.target
                                          • \n
                                          • stop rescue.service
                                          • \n
                                          • stop rescue.target (again)
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          Also we have a wants directory /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/ that

                                          \n- abrt-ccpp.service\n- abrtd.service\n- abrt-oops.service\n- abrt-vmcore.service\n- abrt-xorg.service\n- atd.service\n- auditd.service\n- avahi-daemon.service\n- chronyd.service\n- crond.service\n- cups.path\n- irqbalance.service\n- libvirtd.service\n- mcelog.service\n- mdmonitor.service\n- NetworkManager.service\n- nfs.target\n- remote-fs.target\n- rngd.service\n- rpcbind.service\n- rsyslog.service\n- smartd.service\n- vmtoolsd.service\n

                                          display-manager.service

                                          \n

                                          graphical.target also cascaded to display-manager.service which is not present on F20 so I guess we don\'t need it.

                                          \n

                                          basic.target

                                          \n

                                          So multiuser.target cascaded to basic.target, which itself cascades to

                                          \n- sysinit.target\n- sockets.target\n- timers.target\n- paths.target\n- slices.target\n- firewalld.service\n

                                          sysinit.target

                                          \n

                                          basic.target cascaded to sysinit.target which itself cascades to

                                          \n- local-fs.target \n- swap.target\n- dmraid-activation.service\n- iscsi.service\n- lvm2-monitor.service\n- multipathd.service ( which looks like all the file system daemons)\n

                                          sockets.target

                                          \n

                                          basic.target also cascaded to sockets.target which itself cascades to

                                          \n- avahi-daemon.socket\n- cups.socket\n- dm-event.socket\n- iscsid.socket\n- iscsiuio.socket\n- lvm2-lvmetad.socket\n- rpcbind.socket\n

                                          End point

                                          \n

                                          Now we start reaching the end-points of this trail at

                                          \n- systemd.sockets\n- systemd.timer\n- systemd.path\n- systemd.slice\n- systemd-fstab-generator\n

                                          By the time all of that has finished, if I type the command

                                          \n

                                          # systemctl list-units --type service

                                          \n

                                          I see that 58 services are listed as running

                                          \n

                                          Running and Configuring Services

                                          \n

                                          If we are going to work with systemd we will have to give it instructions. In systemd parlance

                                          \n
                                            \n
                                          • active = running, currently in use
                                          • \n
                                          • loaded = enabled, available for use
                                          • \n
                                          \n

                                          These terms crop up in the output from commands

                                          \n

                                          Many instructions are given to systemd by the systemctl command.

                                          \n

                                          Now to compare line up some common SysV init tasks with their systemd equivalent

                                          \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          Table 2. SysV init commands and their systemd equivalents
                                          commandSysV Initsystemd
                                          Check status# service bluetooth status# systemctl status bluetooth
                                          Start# service bluetooth start# systemctl start bluetooth
                                          Stop# service bluetooth stop# systemctl stop bluetooth
                                          Enable# chkconfig --level 35 ntpd on# systemctl enable ntpd
                                          Disable# chkconfig --level 35 ntpd off# systemctl disable ntpd
                                          \n

                                          Journalctl Logging

                                          \n

                                          Much has been said about the desirability or otherwise of binary logs, but systemd gives us these so we had better know what to do with them.

                                          \n

                                          Journal instructions are given to systemd by the journalctl command

                                          \n
                                          \n
                                          To view all log entries in one go. This is verbose, mine came out at ~9000 lines
                                          \n
                                          # journalctl
                                          \n
                                          To view from a specific date
                                          \n
                                          # journalctl --since=\"2014-05-07\"
                                          \n
                                          To view kernel logs
                                          \n
                                          # journalctl -k
                                          \n
                                          To follow a log in realtime ... and then to close
                                          \n
                                          # journalctl -f
                                          ...
                                          # ctl-c
                                          \n
                                          To view log entries associated with a given PID
                                          \n
                                          # journalctl _PID=1
                                          \n
                                          To view log entries associated with a given service
                                          \n
                                          # journatlctl -u bluetooth
                                          \n
                                          \n

                                          Interrogating the system

                                          \n

                                          More systemd information

                                          \n
                                          \n
                                          Get/Set system information. Works like uname, but is more verbose
                                          \n
                                          # hostnamectl
                                          \n
                                          Get/Set timezone & timedate info
                                          \n
                                          # timedatectl
                                          \n
                                          \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                          Table 3. SysV init information and their systemd equivalents
                                          SysV Init InfoSysV Init commandsystemd infosystemd command
                                          What services are available for init.d to manage# ls /etc/init.dWhat service units are available for systemd to run# systemctl list-units --type service --all
                                          What services are configured to be run by init.d for each run level# chkconfig --listWhat service units are currently active# systemctl list-units --type service
                                          \n

                                          References

                                          \n ',284,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','systemd, tutorial, howto',0,0,1), (1700,'2015-02-06','Today with a Techie episode two thousand',619,'TWT started 9 years, 3 months, 27 days ago and today we celebrate the first 2000 episodes','

                                          Hacker Public Radio (HPR) is an Internet Radio show (podcast) that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. HPR has a long lineage going back to Radio FreeK America, Binary Revolution Radio & Infonomicon, and it is a direct continuation of Twatech radio. Please listen to StankDawg's "Introduction to HPR" for more information.

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Knowing how much I hate editing, I hope everyone can get a sense for how much I appreciate all the people who took the time to contribute to the project.

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          \r\nIf you haven\'t contributed a show yet, well today is a perfect day to get involved. Just click our contribute link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

                                          ',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','today with a techie,hacker public radio,hosts',0,0,1), (1673,'2014-12-31','How I use ZFS on Linux',1037,'The ZFS file system and how I use it under Linux.','

                                          \r\nOn the show today, I will tell you about how I use the ZFS file system on my home server. I also go into some details about how I came to use the ZFS, especially under Linux. I also tell you about a certain pitfall I ran into with the hard drives I chose for ZFS. And finally, I will refer you back to HPR episode 1600 by JWP for more information about ZFS, as he goes into great detail about it and its history.\r\n

                                          \r\n\r\n

                                          Links

                                          \r\n\r\n',292,77,0,'CC-BY-SA','ZFS, zfsonlinux, linux',0,0,1), (1681,'2015-01-12','2014-2015 New Year Show Part 8 of 8',13080,'New Year Show Part 8 from 08:00 to 12:00','2015-01-01T08:00:00ZMumble-2015-01-01-00-04-59-ch1.teamspeak.cc-Mixdown.ogg
                                          • Greetings to the western region of the United States, some regions of Canada and 2 more: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Seattle.
                                          • pants.... really this is intelligent conversation
                                          • Pants are optional, I think. It\'s -20C.... pants are not optional
                                          • kilts are kreepy? or not. No they are not.
                                          • cobra2 thinks that ken should pay attention to show notes for editing lol. 
                                          • pokey thinks this may be the show that finally convinces Ken to edit.
                                          • 2nd there is a good hour that should not go onto the feed. it was rough on the stream
                                          • YAY TMI!!!
                                          • This is not the creamy part of the oreo. :(
                                          •  this is the creamy salty part... of the oreo. 
                                          • Sliders - tvshow added late by pegwole
                                          • dogs giving birth sounds better than singing over mumble


                                          • 2015-01-01T09:00:00Z
                                            • Greetings to Alaska and French Polynesia: Anchorage, Fairbanks, Unalaska, Juneau.
                                            • pokey  issues a challenge to the NYE participants: Judging by the show notes, we\'ve spent the last 6 hours taking every joke to the lowest common denominator. I\'d like to see an hour of greatest common factor.
                                            • Ken Talks about xmlstarlet and converting xml
                                            • 2015-01-01T09:30:00Z
                                              • Greetings to Marquesas Islands/France. Taiohae.

                                              • \r\n
                                                • handsome_pirate talks about his model trains; he models the original Norfolk Southern in N scale
                                                • Some talks about about Scottish things, innacuracies in Braveheart, Gaidhligh has no \'W\'
                                                • 2015-01-01T10:00:00Z
                                                  • Greetings to small region of the United States and 2 more: Honolulu, Rarotonga, Adak, Papeete.
                                                  • Youngins!
                                                  • Kens Children talk about taking hard disks apart and put together an Ikea bookshelf.
                                                  • Discussion on accessability in mumble Emil Ivov, the project lead of Jitsi. https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1454 Jits


                                                  • 2015-01-01T11:00:00Z
                                                    • Greetings to American Samoa, Midway Atoll and 1 more: Alofi, Midway, Pago Pago.
                                                    • Use of federated tools like gnusocial quitter.se 
                                                    • Tech in Hungary - Internet tax
                                                    • Irish expats can\'t vote
                                                    • Scottish independance
                                                    • https://duffercast.org/about/the-hosts/
                                                    • Ken shares his saga on getting a Linux Laptop
                                                    • UK Support say \"Lenovo UK does not restrict anything on the unit. You can install any  Operating system on the unit however we can only support the original  configuration of the unit. \"
                                                    • Ken Asked \"Lenovo have shipped the IdeaPad Flex 10, without the ability to boot other operating systems, restricting the owner to running only the installed Windows 8.0 operating system.\"
                                                    • Lenovo Replies: \"The first wave of this CPU model from Intel can only support Windows, this is not Lenovo design, all product with this wave CPU were not able to support other OS except Windows. After this wave, the follow on Flex10 will support other operating systems.\"
                                                    • Open phones. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source_mobile_phones
                                                    • 2015-01-01T12:00:00Z
                                                      • Greetings to small region the United States: Baker Island, Howland Island.
                                                      • \r\n
                                                      • Script to convert url lists to OPML: https://gitlab.anhonesthost.com/HPR/HPR_Public_Code/blob/master/misc/convert-mashpodder-to-opml.bash
                                                      • \r\n
                                                      • The End!
                                                      •  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auld_Lang_Syne


                                                      • Auld Lang SyneShould auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind? Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o’ lang syne!Chorus:For auld lang syne, my dear For auld lang syne, We’ll tak a cup o’ kindness yet For auld lang syne!               We twa hae run about the braes, And pu’d the gowans fine, But we’ve wander’d mony a weary foot Sin’ auld lang syne.             We twa hae paidl’t in the burn Frae morning sun till dine, But seas between us braid hae roar’d Sin’ auld lang syne.             And there’s a hand, my trusty fiere, And gie’s a hand o’ thine, And we’ll tak a right guid willie-waught For auld lang syne!             And surely ye’ll be your pint’ stoup, And surely I’ll be mine! And we’ll tak a cup o’ kindness yet For auld lang syne!Count down script$ while [[ $(date +%Y) -ne 2015 ]];do figlet $(($(date -d 2015-01-01  +%s)-$(date +%s)));sleep 1;clear;done;figlet \'Happy New Year!\'Thanks To:Mumble Server: John NeusteterHPR Site/VPS: Joshua Knapp - AnHonestHost.comStreams: Kevin Wisher - https://www.linuxlugcast.comAdmin Support: cobra2    EtherPad: Russ Woodman - K5TUXPeak Listeners on stream: 45Mumble Participants: 74Arjun.extbbambikerBeezaBill_MIBroamchalkahlomclaudiomcobra2cogsColindannsDanyel_TigerdavidWHITMANdeltaraydelwinDrSeussOfPorndude-manEpicanisfatherfinchFiftyOneFiftyFlyingRichHCSCfredmorcosFXBOY4EVAHarryGuerrillahonkeymagoohpiratejkibjnadeaujneusteterJoeRessJonDoeLocksmithJon-KT4KBJonTheNiceGuyK5TUXken_fallonKnightwisekt4kb_KWisherlgxlinuxinsiderLord_DMarkWatersmcnaluMikeRayMint-JackmpbairdMrGadgetsmrxn0wjeneurosisnotklaatuperlistpokeypopeyriddleboxRobHSamWhitedschismsebsebsebMageia4SeeteeShadowSndChaserTallyThajthelastknowngodThistleWebthreethirtytjwehrleyUnderrunerUrugamiuseruserVelkroPodcasts:https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/show/techsnap/ (TechSNAPP - sysadmin techy stuff)https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/show/unfilter/ (political media coverage)https://www.dancarlin.com/common-sense-home-landing-page/ (politicial media)https://www.dancarlin.com/home-hh-54/ (hardcore history, for history buffs)https://podcasts.joerogan.net/ Joe Rogan interviews all types of peoplehttps://www.linuxlugcast.comhttps://duffercast.org/about/the-hosts/https://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/category/podcast/\r\n
                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1681_mumble.log
                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1681_irc.log
                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2015',0,0,1), (1686,'2015-01-19','Interview with Joel Gibbard of OpenHand',1619,'An interview with Joel Gibbard founder of the prize winning Openhand project','

                                                        \r\nThis show is an interview with Joel Gibbard founder of the OpenHand project. \r\nThe interview was recorded on my phone which unfortunately created a few glitches. \r\nI\'ve cleaned the audio up as best I can. Although frustrating, the occasional glitches have not caused anything to be missed that cannot be inferred from the context of the recording. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"photo\r\n

                                                        \r\nAfter creating an artificial hand for his degree project Joel Gibbard wanted to continue the work on the hand with the goal of producing a workable prosthetic hand for $1000, so he launched the OpenHand project with a succesful IndieGoGo fundraiser. In this interview we learn more about the Dextrus hand, the project\'s \r\nprogress to date, and hear of Joel\'s vision of affordable prosthetics for amputees worldwide.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor a short 4 minute introduction to the project see Joel\'s video at \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe openhand designs and more information are available at \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',240,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Open Source, Robotics, 3D Printing',0,0,1), (1687,'2015-01-20','Podcast recommendations',1290,'Thaj goes through his podcast list and shares the shows that he finds to be the most interesting. ','

                                                        Linux / Floss Podcasts

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Pop Culture General Podcasts

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Podculture: Local folks who talk about nerdy things. (https://www.podculture.com/feed/)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The Mindrobbers: This show is run by a writer from my gernal area named Scott Carelli. I orginially heard of him through Podculture. I\'ve followed his various podcasts for many years and this is the most recent incarnation. Although sometimes I don\'t always agree with his opinions I do always look forward to hearing them. (https://www.mindrobber.net/feed/)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Trekcast: My first undying love in this world is Star Trek. (https://trekcast.podbean.com/feed/)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The Doctor\'s Companion: Another podcast by Scott Carelli and gang. Good American centreic view of Doctor Who, another of my favorite shows. (https://www.thedoctorscompanion.us/?feed=rss2)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The Babylon Podcast: This show isn;t in production anymore, but if you are a fan of Babylon 5 (which I am) this is a great show that breaks down each episode, and interviews many of the stars from the show. (https://www.babylonpodcast.com/category/shows/feed/)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fear the Boot: A great tabletop role playing game podcast (https://www.feartheboot.com/ftb/?feed=rss2)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Hiyaa Martial Arts Podcast: Must listening for martial artists (especially of the chinese martial arts persuasion). There are very few good martial arts podcasts out there that are not style specific. This fits the bill. One of the host practices the same style of kung fu that I do (although through a different branch of the family tree) and it\'s nice to see that perspective on other arts. (https://feeds.feedburner.com/HiyaaMartialArtsPodcast)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • This American Life: NPR.. used to be an addict. (https://feeds.thisamericanlife.org/talpodcast)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Unfilter: Jupiter Broadcasting\'s version of No Agenda. I used to listen to No Agenda but I find that it has become too long, and they tend to go off the deep end on some of their annalysis in my opinion. I find Unfilter to be a little more grounded, and it\'s an hour and a half once a week. I\'ll still listen to No agenda from time to time, but not regularly since I found this. (https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/feeds/unfilterogg.xml)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Ham Radio Podcasts

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Science Podcast

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Buddhism

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nI listen to a lot of random budhism podcasts but this is the must listen to.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Buddhist Geeks: Modern take on culture, science and society\'s impact on Budhism. Tends to be academic, but I enjoy it. (https://feeds.feedburner.com/BuddhistGeeksPodcast)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Vedic Mythology and Mantras Podcast: While not Buddhist specifically I have always loved Vedic mythology and Indian music. In my mind the relationship between the Vedic traditions and Buddhist are similar to Judaism to Christianity. This podcast gies a short mythological story and a chant that goes along with it. It\'s no longer being produced but it has lots of episodes to listen to. (https://www.puja.net/wordpress/category/mythologypodcast/)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        TWiT Shows

                                                        \r\n\r\n',270,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts',0,0,1), (1688,'2015-01-21','Some useful tools when compiling software',766,'Useful tools I found when compiling software, and creating a debian package.','

                                                        introduction

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHi this is Rho`n and welcome to my first submission to Hacker Public Radio. I have been working on an application using the Python programming language with the Enlightenment Foundation Libraries (EFL) libraries for the GUI interface. After acquiring a new laptop and installing a fresh copy of Ubuntu on it, I decided to set up the build environment I needed to be able to work on my project. I have been building from source the EFL libraries along with the Python-EFL wrapper libraries. For the last couple machines on which I have built the software, I would use the standard configure, make, and make install procedure. This time around I decided to create a debian package to use for installing the libraries. It had been a few years since I had created a .deb, so I googled for some tutorials, and found mention of the checkinstall program. After reading a couple blog posts about it I decided to try it out. checkinstall is run instead of \"make install\" , and will create a .deb file, and then install the newly created package.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        cut and tr commands

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nTo help speed up the configure process, I had previously created a file from my other builds that is a grep of my history for all the various \"apt get install\" commands of the libraries the EFL software needs to compile. Since my current operating system was a freshly installed distribution of Ubuntu, I needed to install the build-essential package first. After looking through my install file, and I decided to create a single apt-get install line with all the packages listed, instead of running each of the installs seperately. I knew I could grep the file, and then pass that to awk or sed, but my skill with either isn\'t that great. I did a little searching to see what other tools were out there and found the cut command and the tr command. Cut lets you print part of a line. You can extract set a field delimeter with the -d option and then list a range of fields to be printed with the -f option. The tr command can replace a character. I used this to replace the new line character that was printed by the cut command to generate a single line of packages which I piped to a file. A quick edit of the file to add \"sudo apt-get install\" at the beginning, add execute permissions to the file, and now I have a nice, easy way to install all the needed libraries.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        apt-file and checkinstall

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAt least that was the idea. After installing the libraries, and running configure, I still received errors that libraries were missing. The machines from which my list of libraries was generated, had all been used for various development purposes, so some needed libraries were already installed on them, and so their installation had passed out of my history. Besides echoing to standard out the file configure can\'t find, it also creates a log file: config.log. Between the two it is relatively easy to figure out what library is needed. Often the libraries needed included their name in the .deb which has to be installed, and finding them is easy with an apt-cache search and grep of the library name. The hardest ones to find were often the X11 based references. In this case, I needed the scrnsaver.h header file. After googling, I found a reference to the needed package (libxss-dev) on Stack Exchange. The answer also showed how to use the apt-file command to determine in which package a file is included. I wish I had run into this before, there a few times where it took a number of searches on the internet to figure out which package I needed to install, and \"apt-file find\" would have saved time and frustration. A very handy tool for anyone developing on a debian based distribution. As it turns out, that was the last dependency that needed resolved. After a successful configure, and successful compile using the make command, I was ready to try out checkinstall. Running sudo checkinstall, brings up a series of questions about your package, helping you fill out the needed .deb meta-data. I filled out my name and email, name for the package, short description of the package, and let everything else go to the suggested defaults. After, that hit enter and checkinstall will create a debian package and install it for you. If you run \"apt-cache search <name of package>\" you will see it listed, and \"apt-cache show <name of package>\" will give you the details you created for the package. There are warnings on the Ubuntu wiki not to use this method for packages to be included in an archive or in a ppa. It does work great for a local install, and would use it to install on machines on my local network.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        conclusion

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAfter a short side trip into development setup, I\'m back writing my application on my new laptop. While I am a big fan of binary packages, Debian being the first GNU/Linux distribution I ever used, sometimes you need to dive in and compile software from source. For me running configure, make, make install has been the easiest way to do this, and these days it usually isn\'t too difficult to get even moderately complex applications and libraries to build. The most tedious part can be resolving all the dependencies. Now, with apt-file in my tool belt, it will be even faster and easier. I will also be using checkinstall for future compiles. I do like being able to use package management tools to install, and un-install software.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI hope others find these tools useful. I have posted links in the show notes to the pages about cut, tr, apt-file and checkinstall that led me to these tools. If you\'ve made it this far, thanks for listening to my first post to HPR. As Ken Fallon points out, it\'s not an HPR episode until you have uploaded it to the server. So let those episode ideas flow from your brain, into your favorite recording device, and up to the HPR server. Let\'s keep HPR active, vibrant, and a part of our lives for years to come. \r\n

                                                        ',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','cli, deb, compile',0,0,1), (1689,'2015-01-22','Linux Voice magazine at OggCamp',676,'Another interview from OggCamp with the guys from Linux Voice ','

                                                        \r\nCorenominal and Beni talking to the guys of the newly founded Linux Voice magazine. It\'s a British Linux publication that\'s less than a year old. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWe talked to them about why you would found a magazine these days, why their magazine is still relevant in the digital age and why kinds won\'t beat them at mario cart.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Linux\r\n

                                                        \r\nYou find their magazine here:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.linuxvoice.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nand their superb Linux postcast by the same name here:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.linuxvoice.com/category/podcasts/\r\n

                                                        \r\n',288,62,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux Voice, oggcamp, interview',0,0,1), (1684,'2015-01-15','5150 Shades of Beer Jacob Leinenkugels Winter Explorer Pack',814,'fifty tries the Leinenkugels Explore pack','

                                                        \r\nJacob Lienenkugels Winter Explorer Pack \"Chippewa Falls, WI since 1867\"\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWinters Bite - Do you know what it smells like when you open a tin of cocoa (the semi-sweet kind, not the unsweetend) and no matter how you do it, a litle of the powder puffs out? The best descrition I can give this beer is it tastes just like that smell, even down to the dryness. Neither cloyingly sweet or leaving you wondering who mixed the chocolate syrup into you beer, just a sublte taste of dry cocoa. This lager pours dark with very little head. This beer (my favorite it this group) is only available in the Explorer pack, and it\'s ABV and ingredients are not featured on leinie.com.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHelles Yeah - (German blonde lager, Helles means \"light\" in German, but unlike American beers, it refers only to color). Straw color, very clear, moderate head that disapears w/o lacing. Sublte flavor, a hit of hops and just slightly more than a pinch of pepper. 5.5 ABV Malts: Pale malts Hops: Five All-American hops including Simcoe and Citra \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCranberry Ginger Shandy - [From Wikipedia, Shandy is beer mixed with a soft drink, carbonated lemonade, ginger beer, ginger ale, or apple juice or orange juice.] Pours cloudy yellow amber, moderate head that disapears w/o lacing. Leinenkugel managed to resist the urge to color it red. Not as syrupy as Shock Top\\\'s Cranberry Belgian Ale, but unlike many fruit adjunct brews, neither is the flavor so subtle you have to go searching for it. I like to use ginger in cooking, and I can also detect the taste of that sweet spice in this weiss beer as well. 4.2% ABV \r\nMalts: Pale and Wheat Hops: Cluster Other: Natural cranberry and ginger flavors\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSnowdrift Vanilla Porter - Pours dark brown with just a litle carmel color head that disipates imediately. Vanilla bean aroma. Vanilla flavor is perhaps more subtle than Breckenridge\'s Vanilla Porter, but there will be know doubt you are enjoying a beer flavored by vanilla and roasted malts, with a hint of chocolate to keep it from being too sweet. 6.0 ABV \r\nMalts: Two- and six- row Pale Malt, Caramel 60, Carapils, Special B, Dark Chocolate and Roasted Barley Hops: Cluster & Willamette Other: Real vanilla\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBONUS ROUND -Leinenkugels Orange Shandy - Wheat beer, likely exactly the same one that\'s in the Cranberry Ginger Shandy, but in this case the tart/sweet orange juice taste dosn\'t completely obscure the flavor of the beer. I like them both, but I think I would grab the orange shandy on a hot day. 4.2% ABV \r\nMalts: Pale and Wheat Hops: Cluster Other: Natural orange flavor\r\n

                                                        \r\n',131,14,1,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer,beer,drinking beer',0,0,1), (1781,'2015-06-01','HPR Community News for May 2015',4021,'Dave and Ken waffle on and on','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n Alpha32.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1760Fri2015-05-01pdftk: the PDF ToolkitJon Kulp
                                                        1761Mon2015-05-04HPR Community News for April 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1762Tue2015-05-05HPR Audio Book Club 10HPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        1763Wed2015-05-06Intro to HomebrewingAlpha32
                                                        1764Thu2015-05-07Introduction to Rogue Class LinuxFrank Bell
                                                        1765Fri2015-05-0853 - LibreOffice Impress - Outlining and Blank PresentationsAhuka
                                                        1766Mon2015-05-11Sox of SilenceKen Fallon
                                                        1767Tue2015-05-12An interview with Ed Cable of the Mifos InitiativeDavid Whitman
                                                        1768Wed2015-05-13An Intro To C Episode 1 : Introduction and Typescjm
                                                        1769Thu2015-05-14A Demonstration of Dictation Software on my Office ComputerJon Kulp
                                                        1770Fri2015-05-15The OpenDyslexic FontJon Kulp
                                                        1771Mon2015-05-18Audacity: Label TracksJon Kulp
                                                        1772Tue2015-05-19Random thoughtsswift110
                                                        1773Wed2015-05-20LFNW 2015 interview with Deb NicholsonDavid Whitman
                                                        1774Thu2015-05-21Router HackingJon Kulp
                                                        1775Fri2015-05-22Sonic PiSteve Bickle
                                                        1776Mon2015-05-25Vim Hints 004Dave Morriss
                                                        1777Tue2015-05-26Magnatune FavouritesDave Morriss
                                                        1778Wed2015-05-27Nethack and Vi cursor keysSteve Bickle
                                                        1779Thu2015-05-28Cowsay and FigletJon Kulp
                                                        1780Fri2015-05-2916 - TrueCrypt and GnuPG - An UpdateAhuka
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-08 19:32:30 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Call for Shows - this is not a drill
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/836
                                                          \n Messages: 11

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-23 15:12:01 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Adding new pre-formatted sheets to LibreOffice Calc
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/847
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Lord Drachenblut <lord.drachenblut@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-25 06:04:13 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Video series on using the zoom H1
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/850
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-25 11:52:59 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Issues with GMail marking all HackerPublicRadio.org emails as SPAM
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/851
                                                          \n Messages: 8

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-28 19:21:14 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - Saturday on 2015-05-30T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/859
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-28 21:30:05 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: LibreOffice Calc cell style; background and 'no fill'
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/860
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: David Whitman <davidglennwhitman@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-05-29 13:45:41 -0700
                                                          \n Subject: Updated Presentation for HPR?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/862
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        14. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 27
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 24 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1726\n(2015-03-16) \"15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR\"\nby Knightwise.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nEpicanis on 2015-05-22:\n\"I should do an episode nominating myself for an award...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1754\n(2015-04-23) \"D7? Why Seven?\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-05-09:\n\"Explaining myself\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nJon Kulp on 2015-05-10:\n\"I kinda see the resemblance...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1759\n(2015-04-30) \"A brief review of Firefox OS\"\nby Stilvoid.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nStilvoid on 2015-05-03:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1760\n(2015-05-01) \"pdftk: the PDF Toolkit\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-05-02:\n\"video demo: embedding table of contents in PDF\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1762\n(2015-05-05) \"HPR Audio Book Club 10\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-05-08:\n\"Blade Runner\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1766\n(2015-05-11) \"Sox of Silence\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-05-10:\n\"Haulin'\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1767\n(2015-05-12) \"An interview with Ed Cable of the Mifos Initiative\"\nby David Whitman.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-05-12:\n\"MIFOS, great initiative\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1768\n(2015-05-13) \"An Intro To C Episode 1 : Introduction and Types\"\nby cjm.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsigflup on 2015-05-12:\n\"Right awesome!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nSteve Smethurst on 2015-05-14:\n\"Thanks, and more plase\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKete on 2015-05-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nkdmurray on 2015-05-25:\n\"A Good Start\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1769\n(2015-05-14) \"A Demonstration of Dictation Software on my Office Computer\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMoralVolcano on 2015-05-20:\n\"Dragon?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-05-21:\n\"Nope\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1770\n(2015-05-15) \"The OpenDyslexic Font\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njezra on 2015-05-18:\n\"For Arch Linux, this is in the AUR\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1771\n(2015-05-18) \"Audacity: Label Tracks\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-05-18:\n\"Very useful\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nkdmurray on 2015-05-25:\n\"Can't believe I've never seen this\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1774\n(2015-05-21) \"Router Hacking\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-05-22:\n\"You say Tomato\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMark on 2015-05-27:\n\"Wanted to try this before.\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1775\n(2015-05-22) \"Sonic Pi\"\nby Steve Bickle.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nkdmurray on 2015-05-25:\n\"SonicPi Releases\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1776\n(2015-05-25) \"Vim Hints 004\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nthelovebug on 2015-05-25:\n\"1776\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-05-28:\n\"Re: 1776\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1777\n(2015-05-26) \"Magnatune Favourites\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ninscius on 2015-05-28:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1780\n(2015-05-29) \"16 - TrueCrypt and GnuPG - An Update\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-05-29:\n\"Thanks for this update\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1806,'2015-07-06','HPR Community News for June 2015',6069,'HPR Community News for June 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n kurakura, \n GNULinuxRTM, \n cheeto4493.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1781Mon2015-06-01HPR Community News for May 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1782Tue2015-06-02ChorusText - a Non-visual Text Editor Open Assistive Device Projectkurakura
                                                        1783Wed2015-06-03Windows To Linux - Better Late Than Never.GNULinuxRTM
                                                        1784Thu2015-06-04Intro to the Fugue and the Open Well-Tempered ClavierJon Kulp
                                                        1785Fri2015-06-0554 - LibreOffice Impress - Creating a PresentationAhuka
                                                        1786Mon2015-06-08What is MapReduce?Charles in NJ
                                                        1787Tue2015-06-09A Beginner with a WokFrank Bell
                                                        1788Wed2015-06-10Podcrawl Glasgow 2015Kevie
                                                        1789Thu2015-06-11The Ubuntu Quickly Ebook Template and Ebooks in GeneralJon Kulp
                                                        1790Fri2015-06-12Penguicon 2015 ReportAhuka
                                                        1791Mon2015-06-15Organizing Photos with BashTony Pelaez
                                                        1792Tue2015-06-16An Interview with Andrea FrostDavid Whitman
                                                        1793Wed2015-06-17Some thoughts about the Go languageStilvoid
                                                        1794Thu2015-06-1812-Tone Music and My Random 12 Tone Row of the DayJon Kulp
                                                        1795Fri2015-06-1954 - LibreOffice Impress - Templates and Master PagesAhuka
                                                        1796Mon2015-06-22Audacity - Chains, Notches and Labelscheeto4493
                                                        1797Tue2015-06-23An Interview with Aaron Wolf of the Snowdrift Co-op ProjectDavid Whitman
                                                        1798Wed2015-06-24Machine learning and service robots.mirwi
                                                        1799Thu2015-06-25Posting From the Command Line on Open Social NetworksJon Kulp
                                                        1800Fri2015-06-26YouTube Video SubscriptionsAhuka
                                                        1801Mon2015-06-29How to tell your left earbud from your rightKen Fallon
                                                        1802Tue2015-06-30An Interview with Emily Hampton a LinuxFest Northwest VolunteerDavid Whitman
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-02 11:01:26 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Comment form and edit field accessibility
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/863
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-03 08:50:04 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Git repository
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/869
                                                          \n Messages: 21

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-03 08:52:14 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: PHP Developers
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/870
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-11 08:23:31 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: Ohio LinuxFest 2015 Call for Presentations
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/891
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-22 11:13:58 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: New linux podcast #SYSTEMAU
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/892
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-24 12:41:04 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Help with shownotes, tags and summaries
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/895
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-06-29 15:51:27 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-07-04T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/897
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        14. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 35
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 48 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1728\n(2015-03-18) \"Requested Topic: Favourite Browser Extensions\"\nby Fin.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBob Evans on 2015-06-01:\n\"Ad-Block Edge discontinued\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1766\n(2015-05-11) \"Sox of Silence\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nUrugami on 2015-06-12:\n\"Can it do this....\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1771\n(2015-05-18) \"Audacity: Label Tracks\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nUrugami on 2015-06-12:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1774\n(2015-05-21) \"Router Hacking\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-06-01:\n\"Single board options\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nUrugami on 2015-06-12:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1780\n(2015-05-29) \"16 - TrueCrypt and GnuPG - An Update\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nAlison Chaiken on 2015-06-10:\n\"TrueCrypt vs. GPG\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-06-17:\n\"Audited\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1782\n(2015-06-02) \"ChorusText - a Non-visual Text Editor Open Assistive Device Project\"\nby kurakura.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-06-02:\n\"Chorustext!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-02:\n\"Awesome in Many Ways\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-06-08:\n\"Smashing the monopoly of commercial gadgetry\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1783\n(2015-06-03) \"Windows To Linux - Better Late Than Never.\"\nby GNULinuxRTM.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-02:\n\"Updates Pain! \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\n0xf10e on 2015-06-06:\n\"Entertaining episode!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nStilvoid on 2015-06-07:\n\"Seconded\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1784\n(2015-06-04) \"Intro to the Fugue and the Open Well-Tempered Clavier\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-06-04:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-04:\n\"Open Scores\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nRobert Douglass on 2015-06-04:\n\"Lady Gaga - fan of Bach and the Well-Tempered Clavier\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-04:\n\"Gaga Bach\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2015-06-06:\n\"Now I'm "seeing" this everythere \"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-06:\n\"Feature, not a bug\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nFrank on 2015-06-07:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDaniel Worth on 2015-06-08:\n\"Fantastic\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nAlison Chaiken on 2015-06-28:\n\"Heard "Fugue for Friday"?\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-28:\n\"Dragnet Fugue\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1787\n(2015-06-09) \"A Beginner with a Wok\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-09:\n\"What about broccoli?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-06-10:\n\"And baby corns\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2015-06-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-10:\n\"Hollandaise??\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-10:\n\"Thinks to stir-fry\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-10:\n\"Things not thinks\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nMike Ray on 2015-06-10:\n\"Round-bttomed woks\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-10:\n\"Wok rings\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nFrank on 2015-06-11:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\njezra on 2015-06-11:\n\"chicken and woks\"
                                                          • Comment 11:\nFrank on 2015-06-12:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 12:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-06-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 13:\nFrank on 2015-06-16:\n\"Thanks for the suggestion\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1788\n(2015-06-10) \"Podcrawl Glasgow 2015\"\nby Kevie.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-06-11:\n\"So near and yet so expensive\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1791\n(2015-06-15) \"Organizing Photos with Bash\"\nby Tony Pelaez.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-23:\n\"Yay for Bash scripts!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Pelaez on 2015-06-28:\n\"Google CL is broken\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1793\n(2015-06-17) \"Some thoughts about the Go language\"\nby Stilvoid.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2015-06-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-19:\n\"Thanks for the show \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nStilvoid on 2015-06-22:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1794\n(2015-06-18) \"12-Tone Music and My Random 12 Tone Row of the Day\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-06-19:\n\"Interesting lesson\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-19:\n\"Still Ugly \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-06-20:\n\"Atonal music vs. Unrepresentative visual art\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2015-06-24:\n\"RSS feed\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nJon Kulp on 2015-06-24:\n\"Enjoy pain?\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1800\n(2015-06-26) \"YouTube Video Subscriptions\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-06-29:\n\"Links\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1826,'2015-08-03','HPR Community News for July 2015',4974,'HPR Community News for July 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1803Wed2015-07-01What's In My Bag?Matt McGraw (g33kdad)
                                                        1804Thu2015-07-02What's in my Bicycle Repair Tool BoxJon Kulp
                                                        1805Fri2015-07-0356 - LibreOffice Impress - Styles and Objects 1 - Presentation StylesAhuka
                                                        1806Mon2015-07-06HPR Community News for June 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1807Tue2015-07-07Arch Linux Development Environment: Ep1cjm
                                                        1808Wed2015-07-08David Whitman reads 'The Shooting of Dan McGrew' written by Robert W ServiceDavid Whitman
                                                        1809Thu2015-07-09My "New" Used Kindle TouchJon Kulp
                                                        1810Fri2015-07-1017 - LastPass Hacked - What Does It Mean?Ahuka
                                                        1811Mon2015-07-13Life and Times of a Geek part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        1812Tue2015-07-14Headphones and a $2 MicrophoneJon Kulp
                                                        1813Wed2015-07-15Apt Spelunking: surf, lightyears, and fbtermWindigo
                                                        1814Thu2015-07-16Custom Context Menus in GNU/Linux GUI File ManagersJon Kulp
                                                        1815Fri2015-07-1757 - LibreOffice Impress - Styles and Objects 2 - Drawing Object StylesAhuka
                                                        1816Mon2015-07-20Visualising HPR tagsDave Morriss
                                                        1817Tue2015-07-21Gathering PartsNYbill
                                                        1818Wed2015-07-22Review of HPR's Interview Recorder: Zoom H1FiftyOneFifty
                                                        1819Thu2015-07-23LibreOffice Tips: Horizontal Lists and Headless OperationJon Kulp
                                                        1820Fri2015-07-24Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS, Interview 1 of 2FiftyOneFifty
                                                        1821Mon2015-07-27James Beard's Never-Fail Blender Hollandaise SauceFrank Bell
                                                        1822Tue2015-07-28Some tips on using ImageMagickDave Morriss
                                                        1823Wed2015-07-29Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS, Interview 2 of 2FiftyOneFifty
                                                        1824Thu2015-07-30I'm Learning Some PythonJon Kulp
                                                        1825Fri2015-07-3158 - LibreOffice Impress - Creating a Template for Hacker Public RadioAhuka
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-07-04 23:49:27 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Pictures for uploads
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/898
                                                          \n Messages: 4

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-07-11 18:21:44 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: [FOSDEM] Next FOSDEM: 30 & 31 January 2016
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/902
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-07-25 15:33:26 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: The Admin email account
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/903
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-07-27 09:23:43 -0700
                                                          \n Subject: Enabled Outbound Spam filtering on Server
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/904
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-07-30 11:29:54 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-08-01T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/905
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        10. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 8
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 19 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1784\n(2015-06-04) \"Intro to the Fugue and the Open Well-Tempered Clavier\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 11:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-07-07:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1794\n(2015-06-18) \"12-Tone Music and My Random 12 Tone Row of the Day\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 6:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-07-07:\n\"Forbidden Planet\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1800\n(2015-06-26) \"YouTube Video Subscriptions\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-07-04:\n\"Here you go!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1806\n(2015-07-06) \"HPR Community News for June 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-07-06:\n\"Sorry I missed it\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1808\n(2015-07-08) \"David Whitman reads 'The Shooting of Dan McGrew' written by Robert W Service\"\nby David Whitman.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike on 2015-07-08:\n\"More, more\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1811\n(2015-07-13) \"Life and Times of a Geek part 2\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCharlie Ebert on 2015-07-12:\n\"hpr 1811 Dave Morriss\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-07-13:\n\"Control Data etc\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-07-13:\n\"Punched cards in a box\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-07-13:\n\"Notched cards and COBOL\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1812\n(2015-07-14) \"Headphones and a $2 Microphone\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-07-15:\n\"Loved the ambient sounds\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-07-15:\n\"Heavy Breathing \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-07-15:\n\"Breathing\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJohn Corless on 2015-07-17:\n\"Great\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1813\n(2015-07-15) \"Apt Spelunking: surf, lightyears, and fbterm\"\nby Windigo.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-07-14:\n\"grumpyness\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nwindigo on 2015-07-15:\n\"Re: Grumpyness\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1817\n(2015-07-21) \"Gathering Parts\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCPrompt^ on 2015-07-24:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2015-07-25:\n\"A series on Electronic Components\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2015-07-27:\n\"Thanks guys\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1823\n(2015-07-29) \"Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS, Interview 2 of 2\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nAnon on 2015-07-31:\"[no title]\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1682,'2015-01-13','Introduction to the Netizen Empowerment Federation',620,'Introduction to Netizen Empowerment Federation. It is short, so let me know if you\'d like detail.','

                                                        \r\nThis is my first HPR release and I\'m going to keep it short. If anyone is intertested in hearing more about any of the projects I mention here, I\'m happy to do another show.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFirst, I just want to say that everything on Netizen Empowerment Federation (NEF) is released under a free culture license, though not all of the music selected by our presenters is free culture. Right now we are blog and podcast focused, but we would like to add digital creators of all types.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://opensourceplayground.org/\r\nI\'m doing these sites in the order they were created, though I\'m not sure if OSP or Sportazine was created first. Since OSP is the most closely related to HPR, I\'m going to start with that. OSP started as a shared hosting gift for new developers. The idea was I could make people accounts on Dreamhost and they could test the latest free software. Since it wasn\'t a business, I didn\'t really promote it. It never took off. I had a few people in Wisconsin make accounts, but they barely used them. It\'s not really important why that idea failed, but eventually it just became a place for me to talk tech. lnxw48 aka lnxwalt is our current systems administrator and occasionally writes pieces for the site. Like all of our sites, we are always looking for contributors! \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://sportazine.com/\r\nAs far as I\'m aware, Sportazine is the only site dedicated to sports and free culture. This means a lot of things. First it means, making sure online sports viewing works in free formats. It also means that there are free software fantasy sports implementations and that sports journalism happens under free culture licenses. Sportazine is a weird beast because we partnered with JMP Enterprise. \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://www.musicmanumit.com/\r\nThis is a collection of shows about remixable music. The main show features me and Tom of the band Lorenzo\'s Music. You can find his band on Jamendo, Spotify, Free Music Archive, and I\'m sure plenty of other places.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://law.musicmanumit.com/\r\nThe Lawcast is on hiatus and when it comes back will likely be less law focused and more just a catchall for more academic and policy-related stuff than we do on the main show. I\'ll probably talk a lot more about free software on the reboot, because it\'s not a topic Tom really cares much about. Tom is a GNU/Linux user, but he refuses to use anything but Skype or Hangout for recording the shows. I\'ll probably have on musicians that we wouldn\'t otherwise have on and thus a topic of conversation on those shows will be \"Why won\'t you use Skype or Hangout?\" I suspect most of the reasons will be free software focused, but they may also be privacy focused (not that they are unrelated).\r\n

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • https://punk.musicmanumit.com\r\nThe punkcast is pretty much what it sounds like it is. Eventually I want to bring it back. Right now though, I need to focus on finding funding, because if I don\'t, my wife is going to kick me out. I hope this is resolved by the time you hear this. I\'m recording on December 19.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://cyberunions.org/\r\nI think Cyberunions.org may have started before any of these, but I put it here due to the start of the Cyberunions podcast, which is currently on hiatus. Stephen now works for the FSF, so you know free software is important to him. I\'m not going to say much about the show, because aside from being a one-time guest, I\'m not involved in the project. If people want to know more about Cyberunions, I suggest you pester Stephen (aka mv) about doing a show.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • https://rynothebearded.com/\r\nRTB really refers to two music shows, one called OO (pronounced \"oh-oh\") and one called Unformatted. The site also has a stream that carriers a variety of shows, including Cerebral Mix, Rage and Frustration, and the last NEF show I am going to discuss.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',294,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','music, free software, open source, sports, law, copyright, patents, punk, unions, workers, nef',0,0,1), (1683,'2015-01-14','Theater of the Imagination: Part 06',2757,'lostnbronx interviews Julie Hoverson, a modern audio drama enthusiast','

                                                        \r\nIn this installment, lostnbronx interviews Julie Hoverson, a modern audio drama enthusiast of great experience and insight.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCheck out Julie\'s wonderful audio content at:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.19nocturneboulevard.net/Episodes.htm\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nand (primarily)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.nineteennocturne.libsyn.com/\r\n

                                                        ',107,52,1,'CC-BY-SA','audio,drama,audio drama',0,0,1), (1691,'2015-01-26','Arduino 101 Arduino IO',2583,'In this episode, learn how to read and write input and output from the Arduino.','

                                                        In this two-part series, Klaatu introduces you to the Arduino. First, learn about the breadboard and how to make electricity course through it in order to power your very own simple circuit.

                                                        \n

                                                        To follow along with what Klaatu is talking about, refer to these two graphics:

                                                        \n \n

                                                        And here are diagrams of the simple circuits that Klaatu constructs.

                                                        \"image:

                                                        The simple code to reset the servo:

                                                        \n#include <Servo.h>\nServo myservo;\n\nint servoPosition;\n\nvoid setup()\n{\n  myservo.attach(13);\n  myservo.write(90);\n}\n\nvoid loop() {}\n

                                                        And the code that responds to input:

                                                        \n#include <Servo.h>\nServo myservo; \n\nint servoPosition;\nint servoMax = 180;\nint servoMin = 0;\n\nint value;\nint valMax = 600;\nint valMin = 50;\n\n\nvoid setup()\n{\n  myservo.attach(13);\n}\n\nvoid loop() \n{\n  value = analogRead(0);\n  servoPosition = map(value, valMin, valMax, servoMax, servoMin);\n  servoPosition = constrain(servoPosition, servoMin, servoMax);\n  myservo.write(servoPosition);\n}\n

                                                        And here is a bonus diagramme that you can try to create, using a light sensor, servo, and resistor.

                                                        \"image:\n',78,91,0,'CC-BY-SA','Arduino,Arduino 101',0,0,1), (1690,'2015-01-23','Arduino 101 Breadboard',1700,'learn how to use a breadboard.','

                                                        \r\nIn this two-part series, Klaatu introduces you to the Arduino. First, learn about the breadboard and how to make electricity course through it in order to power your very own simple circuit.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nTo follow along with what Klaatu is talking about, refer to these two\r\ngraphics:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd here are diagrams of the simple circuits that Klaatu constructs.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"image:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"image:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',78,91,0,'CC-BY-SA','Arduino',0,0,1), (1692,'2015-01-27','Boulevard Brewing Company \"Sample Twelve\"',1190,'FiftyOneFifty explores nature and Kansas City brews while celebrating juke box heroes','

                                                        \r\nUnrelated tech stuff: \r\nRecently, Knightwise showed me a link to use a Raspberry Pi as a streaming music box, much like a Sonos player https://www.woutervanwijk.nl/pimusicbox/ . I looked at the enclosures people had come up with and saw transistor radios from the 40s and 50s which were true works of art, but don\'t provide a great selection of controls. It was then I remembered seeing a 1950\'s juke box wallbox control ( https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2050601.m570.l1313.TR2.TRC1.A0.H0.Xjuke+box+wallbox&_nkw=juke+box+wallbox&_sacat=0 ) in a local \"antique\" shop. I\'m never sure when addressing our European friends what parts of the American experience they are familiar with, but in the 40s to the 70s, in just about every American diner with a jukebox, at every booth there would be a remote console with a coin slot. Usually, you would have card tiles that could be rotated by a knob or by tabs, and each song would have a code made up of a letter and a number. Dropping in the required currency and making a selection would cause the song to be played on the jukebox (and sometimes on a set of stereo speakers in the wall unit). As you may see from the eBay link in the shownotes, wall boxes progressed from just a dozen titles in the 40s to far more complex systems, some with digital read out in the 80s. Most were marvels of late art deco design.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy parents were far to frugal to let me drop coins into one of these pioneering marvels of analog networking, but thanks to a couple modders who have tied their panels into a Raspberry Pi, I can give you a general overview of how these units communicated with the central jukebox via primitive serial protocols. First off, if you have the expectation of following in Phil Lavin\'s or Stephin Devlin\'s footsteps, be prepared to pay more for a wallbox certified to be ready to connect and work with the same brand\'s jukebox (while all wallboxes seemed to communicate by serial pulse, each company employed a different scheme). Wallboxes of all conditions seem to start around $50 on eBay, but can go into the thousands. As I said, all of the wallboxes are marvels of art deco design if they have no other purpose than to occupy your space and become a conversation piece. Right now on eBay, there is an example of a wallbox converted into a waitorless ordering system (this looks like it is from the 70s, only now do we have this functionallity with iPads at every table). In other words, where once was \"Stairway to Heaven\", now there was \"Steak and Eggs: $4.95\". The add on plaque covering the face of the unit identified the system as T.O.B.Y., for Totally Order By Yourself. I could find nothing on the tech on Google, but I really hope it was successful, because it truly would have been a master hack.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFirst step. most wallboxes were powered from the jukebox, you can\'t just plug them into 120v alternating current, you will likely need a 25 or 30v adapter (research your model). If everything works, you should be able to drop your quarter, punch a letter number combo (which will stay down), then a motor will whir and you selected keys will punch back out. What happens in the background, the motor will cause an energized arm to sweep in a circle, making a circuit with electrodes in it\'s path. They keys selected determine how many pulses go down the output line, like a finger dialing a rotary phone.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nEach manufacturer used a different code. In the case of Steve Devlin\'s Rowe Ami, there would be an initial set of pulses for the number, a pause, then a more complex set for characters A-V (earlier wallboxes had 10 letters and 0-9 to create 100 selections, later boxes had as many as 200). Phil Lavin\'s Seeburg uses pulses corresponding to two base 20 digits, both protocols were discovered through trial and error. Each gentleman uses a different method to protect his Pi from overvolt. Devlin uses a 3.5v voltage regulator, which also makes the pulses appear more \"square\", Lavin uses an optical relay to electrically separate the Pi from Seeburg console entirely.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBoth Lavin and Devlin use there wallboxes to control Sonos streaming players. My idea is more flexible, I\'d like the Pi to be able to launch either streaming podcasts, or play the last ep of a selection of podcasts, or launch various home automation processes. I didn\'t think this talk warranted it\'s own podcast yet because it is clearly an unfinished idea, but I thought this application of old tech was too cool to wait until I was actually motivated to do something with it. If I get a wallbox, I might be inclined instead to connect each button to a momentary switch and wire each in turn to one of the Pi\'s 40 I/O pins for an even more flexible instruction set.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://wallbox.weebly.com/index.html\r\nhttps://phil.lavin.me.uk/2013/11/raspberry-pi-project-a-1960s-wallbox-interfaced-with-sonos/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBoulevard brewing Company \"Sample Twelve\" \r\nhttps://www.boulevard.com K.C. Mo\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a unique marketing campaign from my favorite K.C. brewer. The twelve pack contains four varieties of beer, two are established Boulevard offerings, and the other two are bottled with non gloss \"generic\" labels that appear to have been hand typed. In other words, we are to believe we have been sold two prototype beers for our approval.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n80 Acre \"Hoppy\" Wheat Beer (the quotes are mine). The graphics consist of an old Farmall tractor towing a pickup trailer carrying a gigantic hops bud. From this presentation, one would expect an oppressivly hoppy beer, fortunately for the hop timid this is a rather satisfying abulation that only registers 20 IBUs. I detect a distinct citrus taste, so I suspect Citra or related hops but Boulevard is keeping the exact specs closer to the vest than some other brewers. The brewers escription of the beer may be found here (link in the shownotes) https://www.boulevard.com/BoulevardBeers/80-acre-hoppy-wheat-beer/ Pours corn silk yellow with lots of head but not a lot of lacing. Damp wheat aroma.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOatmeal Stout: This is the first of the \"generic\" label \"test\" beers. Pours opaque dark brown with a very small lite brown head that disappears. Milk chocolate aroma. Thin mouth feel, choclately after taste that lasts more than a flavor washing over your tongue (i.e., you drink it, then you taste the chocolaty/coffee like essence). For locally brewed Oatmeal Stouts, I\'d give the nod to Free State in Lawrence KS, but I wouldn\'t turn down the brew from K.C. if they decide to produce it. As it is not yet an \"official\", they don\'t document this beer on the Boulevard web page.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nUnfiltered Wheat Beer: There is a graphic of a farmer gathering wheat bundles to build shocks, surrounded by hops vines. Pours the color of cloudy golden wheat straw, lots of persistent head that leaves little lacing. Slight biscuity aroma. Distinctly more citrusy than the 80 Acre. Not much malt and just a little hops bitterness. Despite the name, you can safely drink this beer to th bottom without winding up with a mouthful of particulates.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMid Coast IPA: The last \"experimental\" beer. At 104 IBUs, this is where all the hops you expected from 80 Acre went. Pours wheat straw golden, thick white head that leaves little lacing, with a hoppy aroma. Even at 104 IBU, its has a slight sweet taste and doesn\'t seem to be one of those \"my hops can beat up your hops beers\". The label states: \"The hoppiest thing we have ever brewed. Pretty nervy for a bunch of midwesterners\". It\'s a great complement to the baked ham and spicey glaze I\'m having for dinner (link in the show notes, even though I had to improvise somewhat).\r\nhttps://www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/apple-cider-glazed-ham\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBefore I leave you, I wanted to play the sounds of dusk from my new homesite. I can think of no more eloquent argument why living on the lake is better than living in town.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNote: Recorded with 2.4Ghz Creative Labs GH0220B headset. I am not happy with the result.\r\n

                                                        ',131,14,0,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer,jukebox, beer, Kansas City, geese',0,0,1), (1694,'2015-01-29','My APOD downloader',1320,'My simple Perl script to download the Astronomy Picture of the Day each day','

                                                        My APOD Downloader

                                                        \n

                                                        Astronomy Picture of the Day

                                                        \n

                                                        You have probably heard of the Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) site. It has existed since 1995, is provided by NASA and Michigan Technological University (MTU) and is created and managed by Robert Nemiroff and Jerry Bonnell. The FAQ on the site says \"The APOD archive contains the largest collection of annotated astronomical images on the internet\".

                                                        \n

                                                        The Downloader

                                                        \n

                                                        Being a KDE user I quite like a moderate amount of bling, and I particularly like to have a picture on my desktop. I like to rotate my wallpaper pictures every so often, so I want to have a collection of images. To this end I download the APOD on my server every day and make the images available through an NFS-mounted volume.

                                                        \n

                                                        In 2012 I wrote a Perl script to perform the download, using a fairly primitive HTML parsing method. This script has been improved over the intervening years and now uses the Perl module HTML::TreeBuilder which I believe is much better at parsing HTML.

                                                        \n

                                                        The version of the script I use myself also includes the Perl module Image::Magick which interfaces to the awesome ImageMagick image manipulation software suite. I use this to annotate the downloaded image with the title parsed from the HTML so I know what it is.

                                                        \n

                                                        The script I am presenting here is called collect_apod_simple and does not use ImageMagick. I chose to omit it because the installation of this suite and the related Perl module can be difficult. Also, I do not feel that the annotation always works as well as it could, and I have not yet found the time to correct this shortcoming.

                                                        \n

                                                        A version of the more advanced script (called collect_apod) is available in the same place as collect_apod_simple should you wish to give it a try. Both scripts are available on GitLab under the link https://gitlab.com/davmo/hprmisc.

                                                        \n

                                                        The Code

                                                        \n

                                                        The script itself is described in the full show notes, available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1694_full_shownotes.html

                                                        \n

                                                        Links

                                                        \n \n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','NASA,astronomy,picture,Perl',0,0,1), (1739,'2015-04-02','Theater of the Imagination: Part 07',1654,'Episode 07 of lostnbronx\'s series about dramatic audio media.','

                                                        In Part 07, lostnbronx talks about his Tascam DR-40 solid state recording device, covers an OTR show of particular note, along with a new show that\'s also extremely cool, and then makes a plea for you to support your favorite artists.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        MUSIC IN THIS EPISODE

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        The Tascam DR-40

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The Zoom H4n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        AUDIO CLIPS

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The Lives of Harry Lime

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        The Wireless Theater Company

                                                        \r\n\r\n',107,52,0,'CC-BY-SA','audio drama, lostnbronx, recording, hardware, art',0,0,1), (1693,'2015-01-28','DD fun',1412,'Having some Fun with the DD command.','

                                                        \r\nStoring info outside the file system with the DD command.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',295,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DD command,partition,sector',0,0,1), (1710,'2015-02-20','Windows Remote Desktop on GNU/Linux',679,'A wrapper script for xfreerdp to make connecting to windows servers painless','

                                                        \r\nRecorded using Easy Voice Recorder Pro\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I wrote a bash script to connect to various different windows servers from my GNU/Linux desktops. I had a few different requirements:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • I should be able to call it based on hostname.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • All windows should be 90% smaller than my screen.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • It should map my keyboard.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • It should map my local disk.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • It should quickly timeout if the port is not available.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can get the full script here, but let’s walk through it:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first line calls bash and then gets the server name from the symlink that is calling the script. The port is set as “3389”, but you can change that if you like.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\nSERVER=`basename $0`\r\nPORT=\"3389\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The next few lines finds the smallest vertical and horizontal sizes, even if you are running multiple screens. Then it calculates 90% of that to use as the size.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nh=$(echo \"scale=0;(($(xrandr | grep \'*+\' | sed \'s/x/ /g\' | awk \'{print $1}\' | sort -n | head -1 )/100)*90)\" | bc)\r\nv=$(echo \"scale=0;(($(xrandr | grep \'*+\' | sed \'s/x/ /g\' | awk \'{print $2}\' | sort -n | head -1 )/100)*90)\" | bc)\r\nSIZE=${h}x${v}\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we set the default username and password. I have it ask me for my password but I put it in here as an example.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPASSWORD=\'defaultpassword\'\r\nUSERNAME=\'administrator\'\r\nWORKGROUP=\'workgroup\'\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In some cases the credentials may be different, so I have a case statement that will cycle through the servers and apply the differences. Depending on your naming schemes you may be able to use regular expressions here to filter out groups of servers.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ncase \"${SERVER}\" in\r\n  *server*) echo \"Server ${SERVER}\"\r\n    PASSWORD=\'work_password\'\r\n    USERNAME=\'administrator\'\r\n    WORKGROUP=\'WORKGROUP\'\r\n    ;;\r\n \r\n  *colo*) echo \"Server ${SERVER}\"\r\n    PASSWORD=\'colo_server_password\'\r\n    USERNAME=\'administrator\'\r\n    WORKGROUP=\'COLODOMAIN\'\r\n    ;;\r\n     \r\n  some_server ) echo \"Server ${SERVER}\"\r\n    PASSWORD=\'some_server_password\'\r\n    USERNAME=\'some_server_password\'\r\n    ;;\r\n  *) echo \"No match for ${SERVER}, using defaults\"\r\n    ;;\r\nesac\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we use an inbuilt bash command to see if a remote port is open and timeout after one second.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ntimeout 1 bash -c \"echo >/dev/tcp/${SERVER}/${PORT}\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I used to connect to rdp using the program rdesktop, but it is now of limited value due to the fact that there are many open bugs that are not getting fixed. Bugs such as Bug 1075697 - rdesktop cannot connect to systems using RDP version 6 or newer and Bug 1002978 - Failed to negotiate protocol, retrying with plain RDP . I then switch to using xfreerdp. This is the client that is behind remmina.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can use xfreerdp /kbd-list to get a list of the available keyboard layouts.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nif [ $? -eq 0 ]; then\r\n  echo \"${SERVER}:${PORT} is open\"\r\n  xfreerdp /v:${SERVER} /size:${SIZE} /kbd-type:0x00000409 /t:${SERVER} /d:${WORKGROUP} /u:${USERNAME} /p:${PASSWORD} /a:drive,pc,/ /cert-ignore &\r\nelse\r\n  echo \"${SERVER}:${PORT} is closed\"\r\nfi\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Next you will need to be sure that your host names are available, either in dns or in your /etc/hosts/ file. For example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        10.1.0.1 server1\r\n10.1.0.2 server2\r\n10.1.0.3 server3\r\n10.2.0.1 coloserver1\r\n10.2.0.2 coloserver2\r\n10.2.0.3 coloserver3\r\n192.168.1.1 some_server\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Edit the script to your liking and then put it into your a directory in your path, possibly /usr/local/bash or ~/bin/. You can then make symbolic links to the servers to the bash script, also in a directory in your path, using the command:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        ln -s /usr/local/bash/rdp.bash ~/bin/some_server\r\nchmod +x ~/bin/some_server\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Which links the global rdp.bash script to your personal symlink, and makes it executable.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All that you need to do then is type the name of the server and a rdp screen should pop up.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In our example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ some_server\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        From there your Windows Server session should pop up.

                                                        ',30,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','bash,xfreerdp,rdesktop,remmina',0,0,1), (1720,'2015-03-06','15 Certificate Issues and Solutions',1091,'A look at the problems that SSL certificates can have, and offers some solutions','

                                                        \r\nLast time we looked at some basics about how TLS and SSL work, and saw that this is basically an application of the same technology used to encrypt e-mails. But we also noted that there are some problems with this approach. We need to recognize that in security there is never a permanent solution, and that vulnerabilities are constantly being discovered, and ideally then being fixed. Some of these may involve highly technical issues about cryptographic methods, but I think the largest category of issues is about the processes around the use of certificates.\r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=686\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','TLS, SSL, Certificates',0,0,1), (1745,'2015-04-10','51 - LibreOffice Impress - Overview and Guidance',673,'Introduction to making Presentations, with some good advice.','

                                                        \r\nWe begin the discussion of Impress, the Presentation Graphics (i.e. slide deck) component of Libre Office. In this episode we look at some of the basic issues around presentations that you need to consider *before* you open up the software. Constructing a good presentation is not easy, and there are some good principles that the masters of the art can impart. WE discuss some of these here and provide links to good resources. \r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1087\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations',0,0,1), (1755,'2015-04-24','52 - LibreOffice Impress - Moving Around',814,'Introduction to the Impress application screen layout.','

                                                        \r\nNow we can start to take a look at the actual Impress application, and we begin by looking a how the program is laid out on the screen. Knowing where to find key features is important in using the program efficiently.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1112\r\n

                                                        ',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, navigation',0,0,1), (1765,'2015-05-08','53 - LibreOffice Impress - Outlining and Blank Presentations',829,'Learning to start with the content and not the eye candy.','

                                                        \r\nHaving looked at the screen layout, now we can look at how to build a presentation by focusing on the content first, and not the eye candy. This can be done by creating an outline, or by beginning with a blank presentation. We discuss both and give some ideas on which to use in each situation.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1100\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','Libreoffice,Libreoffice impress,outline',0,0,1), (1718,'2015-03-04','What\'s In My Pickup Toolbox',1587,'What\'s In Fifty One Fifty\'s Pickup Toolbox','

                                                        \r\nThe mystery of my pickup toolbox.\r\n

                                                        ',131,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','tools,toolbox',0,0,1), (1719,'2015-03-05','The Linux Tree Command',848,'The Linux Tree Command and its uses','

                                                        tree - list contents of directories in a tree-like format.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Synopsis

                                                        \r\n

                                                        tree [-adfghilnopqrstuvxACDFNS] [-L level [-R]] [-H baseHREF] [-T title] [-o\r\nfilename] [--nolinks] [-P pattern] [-I pattern] [--inodes] [--device] [--noreport]\r\n[--dirsfirst] [--version] [--help] [--filelimit #] [directory ...]\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Description

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Tree is a recursive directory listing program that produces a depth indented listing of files. Color is supported ala dircolors if the\r\nLS_COLORS environment variable is set, output is to a tty, and the -C flag is used. With no arguments, tree lists the files in the current\r\ndirectory. When directory arguments are given, tree lists all the files and/or directories found in the given directories each in turn. Upon completion\r\nof listing all files/directories found, tree returns the total number of files and/or directories listed.\r\n

                                                        By default, when a symbolic link is encountered, the path that the symbolic link refers to is printed after the name of the link in the format:\r\n\r\n

                                                        name -> real-path\r\n

                                                        If the \'-l\' option is given and the symbolic link refers to an actual directory, then tree will follow the path of the symbolic link as if it\r\nwere a real directory.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://linux.die.net/man/1/tree\r\n

                                                        ',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','tree command',0,0,1), (1697,'2015-02-03','FOSDEM 2015 Friday Night and Saturday Morning 1 of 5',3068,'Bradley M. Kuhn, Karen Sandler, Sriram Ramkrishna, Matthew Miller, Rich Bowen, Karanbir Singh','

                                                        FOSDEM 2015 Friday Night and Saturday Morning 1 of 5

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://fosdem.org/2015/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFOSDEM is a two-day event organised by volunteers to promote the widespread use of open source software. Videos of the talks refered to in this show are made available on their website.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Software Freedom Conservancy

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://sfconservancy.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSoftware Freedom Conservancy is a not-for-profit organization that helps promote, improve, develop, and defend Free, Libre, and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects. Conservancy provides a non-profit home and infrastructure for FLOSS projects. This allows FLOSS developers to focus on what they do best - writing and improving FLOSS for the general public - while Conservancy takes care of the projects\' needs that do not relate directly to software development and documentation.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Free as in Freedom

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://faif.us/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFree as in Freedom is a bi-weekly oggcast, hosted and presented by\r\nBradley M. Kuhn and Karen Sandler.\r\nThe discussion includes legal, policy, and many other issues in the Free, Libre,\r\nand Open Source Software (FLOSS) world. Occasionally, guests join\r\nBradley and Karen to discuss various topics regarding FLOSS.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"***An\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Bradley M. Kuhn

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Karen Sandler

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        GNOME

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Sriram Ramkrishna

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://gnome.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        GNOME 3 is an easy and elegant way to use your computer. It is designed to put you in control and bring freedom to everybody. GNOME 3 is developed by the GNOME community, a diverse, international group of contributors that is supported by an independent, non-profit foundation.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Fedora

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Matthew Miller

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://getfedora.org/en/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Fedora Project is a partnership of free software community members from around the globe. The Fedora Project builds open source software communities and produces a Linux distribution called \"Fedora.\" The Fedora Project\'s mission is to lead the advancement of free and open source software and content as a collaborative community. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenStack

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Rich Bowen

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://openstack.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOpenStack software controls large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources throughout a datacenter, managed through a dashboard or via the OpenStack API. OpenStack works with popular enterprise and open source technologies making it ideal for heterogeneous infrastructure.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        CentOS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Karanbir Singh

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.centos.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The CentOS Linux distribution is a stable, predictable, manageable and reproduceable platform derived from the sources of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). We are now looking to expand on that by creating the resources needed by other communities to come together and be able to build on the CentOS Linux platform. And today we start the process by delivering a clear governance model, increased transparency and access. In the coming weeks we aim to publish our own roadmap that includes variants of the core CentOS Linux.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Music

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTrack name : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer : Fenster\r\nRecorded date : 2002\r\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Software Freedom Conservancy,Free as in Freedom,GNOME,Fedora,OpenStack,CentOS,Fenster',0,0,1), (1698,'2015-02-04','FOSDEM 2015 Part 2 of 5',2758,'OpenMandriva, Mageia, KDE, Debian, Puppet, OwnCloud, Diaspora','

                                                        FOSDEM 2015

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://fosdem.org/2015/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFOSDEM is a two-day event organised by volunteers to promote the widespread use of open source software. Videos of the talks refered to in this show are made available on their website.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenMandriva

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Bernhard Rosenkränzer

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://openmandriva.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We are a 100% community-driven association that believes in the values of free software & collaboration. We fight to protect these values and promote solutions anyone can use, change and distribute. OpenMandriva believes in creating, improving, promoting and distributing free software in general, and its projects in particular. We also crave for promoting free exchange of knowledge and equality of opportunity in software access and development, as well as in education, science and research. Our products are developed with passion by the community and aim to be flexible in use by all.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenMandriva represents the paradigm: from community to community, with passion, fun and dedication.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Mageia

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Anne Nicolas

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://mageia.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMageia is a GNU/Linux-based, Free Software operating system. It is a community project, supported by a nonprofit organisation of elected contributors. Our mission: to build great tools for people.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        KDE

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jonathan Riddell

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.kde.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKDE is an international team co-operating on development and distribution of Free, Open Source Software for desktop and portable computing. Our community has developed a wide variety of applications for communication, work, education and entertainment. We have a strong focus on finding innovative solutions to old and new problems, creating a vibrant, open atmosphere for experimentation. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Debian

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with David Bremner

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.debian.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Puppet

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Johan De W.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://puppetlabs.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPuppet Labs is the leader in IT automation. Our software helps sysadmins automate configuration and management of machines and the software running on them. With our software, businesses can make rapid, repeatable changes and automatically enforce the consistency of systems and devices, across physical and virtual machines, on prem or in the cloud.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OwnCloud

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jan-Christoph Borchardt

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://owncloud.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAccess, Sync and Share your data, under your control!\r\nownCloud provides access to your data through a web interface or WebDAV while providing a platform to view, sync and share across devices easily, all under your control. ownCloud\'s open architecture is extensible via a simple but powerful API for applications and plugins and works with any storage. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Diaspora

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jason Robinson

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://diasporafoundation.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        diaspora* is a true network, with no central base. There are servers (called \"pods\") all over the world, each containing the data of those users who have chosen to register with it. These pods communicate with each other seamlessly, so that you can register with any pod and communicate freely with your contacts, wherever they are on the network.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Music

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTrack name : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer : Fenster\r\nRecorded date : 2002\r\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','OpenMandriva, Mageia, KDE, Debian, Puppet, OwnCloud, Diaspora',0,0,1), (1707,'2015-02-17','A tour round my desktop',2821,'A look at the applications I use, why I use them and the alternatives I\'ve tried.','',246,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Desktop, applications, software, Linux',0,0,1), (1699,'2015-02-05','FOSDEM 2015 Part 3 of 5',2876,'Wikimedia, Hack the Knit, Jitsi, XMMP, Kolab, DoudouLinux','

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://fosdem.org/2015/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFOSDEM is a two-day event organised by volunteers to promote the widespread use of open source software. Videos of the talks refered to in this show are made available on their website.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Wikimedia

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Quim Gil

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit charitable organization dedicated to encouraging the growth, development and distribution of free, multilingual, educational content, and to providing the full content of these wiki-based projects to the public free of charge. The Wikimedia Foundation operates some of the largest collaboratively edited reference projects in the world, including Wikipedia, a top-ten internet property. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Constant Association for Art and Media ~ Hack the Knit

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Andz and Chris

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.constantvzw.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Constant is a non-profit association, an interdisciplinary arts-lab based and active in Brussels since 1997. Constant works in-between media and art and is interested in the culture and ethics of the World Wide Web. The artistic practice of Constant is inspired by the way that technological infrastructures, data-exchange and software determine our daily life. Free software, copyright alternatives and (cyber)feminism are important threads running through the activities of Constant. Constant organizes workshops, print-parties, walks and \"Verbindingen/Jonctions\"-meetings on a regular basis for a public that\'s into experiments, discussions and all kinds of exchanges.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Libre Graphics magazine

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with ginger

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://libregraphicsmag.com\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        A Libre Graphics Magazine is long overdue. In a market dominated by magazines devoted to design discourse built around proprietary tools and the latest computer graphics tricks and techniques, users of Libre Graphics software are underserved and unrecognized. We know that these users exist, both professionally and as hobbyists. We know this because we are they. We are graphic designers, media artists, photographers and web designers. We use Libre Graphics software, quietly and without regard. Our peers, used to proprietary alternatives, question our choice of tools. Our work, when executed well, is indistinguishable from work produced by more traditional means. Thus, our choices are invisible, unless we make an issue of them.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Jitsi

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ingo Bauersachs

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://jitsi.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nJitsi is an audio/video Internet phone and instant messenger written in Java. It supports some of the most popular instant messaging and telephony protocols such as SIP, Jabber/XMPP (and hence Facebook and Google Talk), AIM, ICQ, MSN, Yahoo! Messenger.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        XMPP

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Joachim Lindborg

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://xmpp.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is an open technology for real-time communication, which powers a wide range of applications including instant messaging, presence, multi-party chat, voice and video calls, collaboration, lightweight middleware, content syndication, and generalized routing of XML data.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Kolab, MyKolab, Roundcube

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Robin Edgar

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://mykolab.com\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWe offer secure email accounts including calendars and address books that synchronize to all your devices. The data is stored in our very own data center in Switzerland and cannot be accessed by spy programs such as PRISM, so there will be no spying. There is also no corporate spying, because we show no advertisements. Enjoy the convenience of the Cloud without compromising freedom and openness.
                                                        \r\nKolab is a free and open source groupware suite. It consists of the Kolab server and a wide variety of Kolab clients, including KDE PIM-Suite Kontact, Horde Webfrontend, Mozilla Thunderbird and Mozilla Lightning with SyncKolab extension and Microsoft Outlook with proprietary Kolab-Connector PlugIns.
                                                        \r\nRoundcube is a web-based IMAP email client. Roundcube\'s most prominent feature is the pervasive use of Ajax technology to present a more fluid and responsive user interface than that of traditional webmail clients. After about two years of development, the first stable release of Roundcube was announced in early 2008.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIt is also time to mark the 2nd and 3rd of May 2015 in your calendars: the inaugural Kolab Summit will be held in The Hague on those dates. Come and join us for two days jam-packed full with talks, code sprints and social events!\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKolab Summit and openSUSE Conference\r\nDen Haag / Netherlands \r\nMay 01 - 04, 2015\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        DoudouLinux

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Xavier Brusselaers

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.doudoulinux.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDoudouLinux is a system targeting young children. It aims at making computer use as simple and pleasant as possible; while also making computer use more accessible to all children on earth, without discrimination, in order to favor their self-fulfillment. In this section you will learn more about how it works, how it is designed, who developed it, how it came to be, why, and so on.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Music

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTrack name : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer : Fenster\r\nRecorded date : 2002\r\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Wikimedia, Hack the Knit, Jitsi, XMMP, Kolab, DoudouLinux',0,0,1), (1701,'2015-02-09','FOSDEM 2015 Part 4 of 5',2576,'Agora Voting, DIYBookScanner, OpenEmbedded, Amateur Radio, kodi formerly XBMC','

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://fosdem.org/2015/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFOSDEM is a two-day event organised by volunteers to promote the widespread use of open source software. Videos of the talks refered to in this show are made available on their website.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Agora Voting

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Eduardo Robles

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://agoravoting.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAgora Voting is an open source voting software that allows any organization to carry out secure, flexible, transparent and cost-effective electoral processes.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        DIYBookScanner

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Johannes Baiter

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://github.com/DIYBookScanner/spreads\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nspreads is a software suite for the digitization of printed material. Its main focus is to integrate existing solutions for individual parts of the scanning workflow into a cohesive package that is intuitive to use and easy to extend. At its core, it handles the communication with the imaging devices, the post-processing of the captured material and its assembly into output formats like PDF or ePub. On top of this base layer, we have built a variety of interfaces that should fit into most use cases: A full-fledged and mobile-friendly web interface that can be served from even the most low-powered devices (like a Raspberry Pi), a graphical wizard for classical desktop users and a bare-bones command-line interface for purists.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenEmbedded

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ulf Samuelsson

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.openembedded.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWelcome to OpenEmbedded, the build framework for embedded Linux. OpenEmbedded offers a best-in-class cross-compile environment. It allows developers to create a complete Linux Distribution for embedded systems. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        UBA Royal Belgian Amateur Radio Union/Deutscher Amateur-Radio-Club e. V.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Kristoff Bonne

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.uba.be/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Royal Union of Belgian Radio Amateurs (UBA) (in Dutch, Koninklijke Unie van de Belgische Zendamateurs, in French Union Royale Belge des Amateurs-Emetteurs, in German Königliche Union der Belgischen Funkamateure) is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Belgium. UBA is the national member society representing Belgium in the International Amateur Radio Union.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.darc.de/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Deutsche Amateur-Radio-Club e.V. (DARC) (in English, German Amateur Radio Club) is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Germany. As of 1 January 2008, the organization had 44,246 members, approximately 60% of all licensed amateur radio operators in Germany. Key membership benefits of the organization include QSL bureau services, a monthly membership magazine called CQ DL, and the promotion and sponsorship of radio contests. DARC promotes amateur radio by organizing classes and technical support to help enthusiasts earn their amateur radio license. The DARC also represents the interests of German amateur radio operators and shortwave listeners before German and international telecommunications regulatory authorities. DARC is the national member society representing Germany in the International Amateur Radio Union.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        kodi formerly XBMC

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ejal de Klerk

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://kodi.tv/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKodi (formerly known as XBMC) is an award-winning free and open source (GPL) software media player and entertainment hub that can be installed on Linux, OSX, Windows, iOS, and Android, featuring a 10-foot user interface for use with televisions and remote controls. It allows users to play and view most videos, music, podcasts, and other digital media files from local and network storage media and the internet.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Music

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTrack name : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer : Fenster\r\nRecorded date : 2002\r\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\nFree software info at www.gnu.org speeches at audio-video.gnu.org/audio\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Agora Voting, DIYBookScanner, OpenEmbedded, Amateur Radio, kodi formerly XBMC',0,0,1), (1702,'2015-02-10','FOSDEM 2015 Part 5 of 5',3733,'ReactOS, CoreOS, WolfSSL, PicoTCP, Ultimaker, CoreBoot and Flashrom, SatNOGS','

                                                        ReactOS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Aleksey Bragin

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.reactos.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nReactOS® is a free open source operating system based on the best design principles found in the Windows NT® architecture (Windows versions such as Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows Server 2012 are built on Windows NT architecture). Written completely from scratch, ReactOS is not a Linux based system, and shares none of the UNIX architecture. The main goal of the ReactOS® project is to provide an operating system which is binary compatible with Windows. This will allow your Windows® applications and drivers to run as they would on your Windows system. Additionally, the look and feel of the Windows operating system is used, such that people accustomed to the familiar user interface of Windows® would find using ReactOS straightforward. The ultimate goal of ReactOS® is to allow you to use it as alternative to Windows® without the need to change software you are used to.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        CoreOS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Kelsey Hightower

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://coreos.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nCoreOS is a new Linux distribution that has been rearchitected to provide features needed to run modern infrastructure stacks. The strategies and architectures that influence CoreOS allow companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter to run their services at scale with high resilience.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        WolfSSL

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Chris Conlon

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://wolfssl.com/yaSSL/Home.html\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nwolfSSL focuses on providing lightweight and embedded security solutions with an emphasis on speed, size, portability, features, and standards compliance. Dual licensed to cater to a diversity of users ranging from the hobbyist to the user with commercial needs, we are happy to help our customers and community in any way we can. Our products are Open Source giving customers the freedom to look under the hood.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        PicoTCP

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Maarten Vandersteegen

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.picotcp.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\npicoTCP is a TCP/IP stack developed from scratch for embedded devices with an eye on the Internet of Things revolution.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Ultimaker

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Olliver Schinagl

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.ultimaker.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWe wanted everyone to be able to enjoy the experience of making. Whether it was a cat dressed as an astronaut or a mechanical masterpiece. We set it as our goal to enable you to make those things. So we built a pioneering device that everyone could use and enjoy. We made it open source so everyone really could pitch in. And we started to grow.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        coreboot + flashrom

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Carl-Daniel Hailfinger

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.coreboot.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ncoreboot is an extended firmware platform for delivering lightning fast and ultra secure boot experience on modern computers and embedded systems. As an Open Source project it provides auditability and helps regaining control over technology.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        SatNOGS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Pierros Papadeas

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://satnogs.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSatNOGS project is a complete platform of an Open Source Networked Ground Station. The scope of the project is to create a full stack of open technologies based on open standards , and the construction of a full ground station as a showcase of the stack.\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','ReactOS, CoreOS, WolfSSL, PicoTCP, Ultimaker, CoreBoot and Flashrom, SatNOGS',0,0,1), (1704,'2015-02-12','Introducing Jeffrey Powers aka Geekazine',1543,'Jeffrey Powers talks \"*azines\" and his other tech sites','

                                                        \r\nI was asked to do a followup to my Introduction to the Netizen Empowerment Federation. Specifically, I was asked to talk a bit more about the goals of Sportazine.com and how it fits into free culture. I thought the best way to do that was to introduce my Sportazine.com co-founder, Jeffrey Powers. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA May 2011 estimate puts the sports industry at 350-450 billion ($480-$620 billion) https://www.atkearney.com/en_GB/paper/-/asset_publisher/dVxv4Hz2h8bS/content/the-sports-market/10192 -- it is inarguably foolish to ignore it. I don\'t think you are going to convince anyone to change their ways by shouting at them, or quietly being condescending.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nListen to find out Jeff\'s answers!\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHow has Sportazine changed from your initial vision when we created it almost 5 years ago?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat is JMP?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWe\'re recording on Jan 16. What\'s the tech history bit people should check out on your site for today?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDo you do interviews for any of your sites? \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHow do you vet interviewees?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat is the best way for someone to get in touch with you if they\'d like to be an interviewee?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhere are you speaking to you today from Jeff?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat are your favorite sports to watch or play?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHow far do you think the Packers will go this year? We\'re recording on Jan 16, but there aren\'t open slots on HPR for a while, so people may get to see if you are right.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nProfessional video game players get athletic visas in the US, and are covered by ESPN (https://kotaku.com/some-sports-fans-upset-espn-is-airing-video-game-tourna-1608298005) so I suppose we might as well. How much do you cover video games on your various sites?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat is the name of your band, and where can people find the band?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIs there anything else you would like to tell the listeners?\r\n

                                                        ',294,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','tech, apps, ipad, android',0,0,1), (1703,'2015-02-11','Open Source CD Rippers',1579,'Kevie takes a look at a variety of CD ripping software available on Linux','

                                                        \r\nFor a first attempt at flying solo for an episode of HPR, Kevie takes a look at a variety of open source CD ripping software. Looking at graphical applications \r\nhttps://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/SoundJuicer: Sound Juicer and\r\nhttps://littlesvr.ca/asunder/: Asunder along with the command line tools\r\nhttps://bashburn.dose.se/: Bashburn and\r\nhttps://bach.dynet.com/crip/: Crip. Along with considering if it is worth having a dedicated ripping tool when a fully fledged audio suite\r\nhttps://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Rhythmbox/: Rhythmbox and\r\nhttps://www.videolan.org/vlc/: VLC will also allow ripping.\r\n

                                                        \r\nRegular listeners to the https://unseenstudio.co.uk/category/tuxjam-ogg/: TuxJam podcast will know that Kevie is a big fan of creative commons music and this episode is no different with the tracks by https://20lb.net/: 20lb Sounds and https://bridgesplosion.bandcamp.com/: Blowing Up Bridges.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMusic included in this episode:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',296,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Sound Juicer,Asunder,Bashburn,Crip,Rhythmbox,VLC',0,0,1), (1708,'2015-02-18','GNU/Nano Editor',693,'JWP emails in an episode on the Editor GNU/Nano','JWP Editor GNU/Nano\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n                :::                         The                   \r\n  iLE88Dj.  :jD88888Dj:                                           \r\n.LGitE888D.f8GjjjL8888E;        .d8888b.  888b    888 888     888 \r\niE   :8888Et.     .G8888.      d88P  Y88b 8888b   888 888     888 \r\n;i    E888,        ,8888,      888    888 88888b  888 888     888 \r\n      D888,        :8888:      888        888Y88b 888 888     888 \r\n      D888,        :8888:      888  88888 888 Y88b888 888     888 \r\n      D888,        :8888:      888    888 888  Y88888 888     888 \r\n      D888,        :8888:      Y88b  d88P 888   Y8888 Y88b. .d88P \r\n      888W,        :8888:       \"Y8888P88 888    Y888  \"Y88888P\"  \r\n      W88W,        :8888:                                         \r\n      W88W:        :8888:      88888b.   8888b.  88888b.   .d88b. \r\n      DGGD:        :8888:      888 \"88b     \"88b 888 \"88b d88\"\"88b\r\n                  :8888:      888  888 .d888888 888  888 888  888\r\n                  :W888:      888  888 888  888 888  888 Y88..88P\r\n                  :8888:      888  888 \"Y888888 888  888  \"Y88P\" \r\n                    E888i                                         \r\n                    tW88D             Text Editor       \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.nano-editor.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nnano is a text editor for Unix-like computing systems or operating environments using a command line interface. It emulates the Pico text editor, part of the Pine email client, and also provides additional functionality. In contrast to Pico, nano is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). Released as free software by Chris Allegretta in 1999, today nano is part of the GNU Project.\r\n
                                                        ',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','editors,nano,gnu/nano,pico,GPL',0,0,1), (1709,'2015-02-19','Hacking Your Teeth',1250,'Advice on hacking your teeth','

                                                        \r\nThis podcast details my experiences with dentists along with a smattering of free advice.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLink to the commonly known sunscreen song \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wear_Sunscreen\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWikipedia article about gum disease\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodontitis\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWikipedia page on Interdental tooth brushes\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toothbrush#Interdental_brush\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTeeth with gum disease, notice that the gum doesn\'t form a sharp point between the teeth\r\nhttps://www.kmperio.co.uk/editor/assets/049B193B-857E-4FE7-BAC6-48F695DEFCBE.JPG\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHealthy gums, gum forms a sharp point between teeth.\r\nhttps://www.wisdomtoothbrushes.com/sites/default/files/styles/475_width/public/wisdom-oral-health-healthy-gums.jpg?itok=-KhFJ6Pb\r\n

                                                        ',201,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','gum disease,Periodontitis,Interdental tooth brush',0,0,1), (1711,'2015-02-23','Problems with video software in Linux',827,'A person new to Linux is introduced to video software that was unimpressive','

                                                        \r\nCheese:
                                                        \r\nGuvcviewer:\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, video software, ubuntu',0,0,1), (1706,'2015-02-16','Cross-compilers part 1',1609,'What is cross-compiling, and why I might want/need to do it','

                                                        \r\nCross-compilers, Part 1\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn this show I\'ll introduce the concept of cross-compiling software, explain what it\r\nis and why you might want/need to do it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI\'ll also talk about a great piece of kit for creating cross-compiler tool-chains\r\non Linux; crosstool-ng.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAs with most of my shows, the show notes are far too long to fit into the restricted size, so there\'s an HTML version as well, at:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1706/index.html\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHere are some bullet-points:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • cross-compilers, why and what?\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • crosstool-ng\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Cross-compiler tool-chain generation gotchas\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Raspberry Pi cross-compiling tool-chain generation with crosstool-ng\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Compiling a kernel on a Pi takes 15 hours\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • On my not-so-screaming quad-core Debian machine it takes 15 minutes\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThere are a few files for this show, the ct-ng .config files downloaded from Arch Linux ARM and a README.md about them. The original\r\nmarkdown source of the full show notes is in the tarball as well https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1706/282-Mike_Ray-hpr1706-Cross-compilers_Part_1.tar.gz.\r\n

                                                        ',282,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','cross-compile, crosstool-ng, Raspberry Pi',0,0,1), (1712,'2015-02-24','What\'s in my Crate',1228,'What was in my crate when I went to a LUG to give a a11y presentation','

                                                        \r\nBack in the summer of 2014 I started going to the Surrey Linux User Group.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI was asked to give a short presentation about Linux accessibility and how,\r\nalthough I am totally blind, I still write code and muck about with Linux.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI was then asked to give the same presentation at the Portsmouth LUG.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis time I made it more comprehensive and took more kit.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSo I take this opportunity to give my version of the \"What\'s in my bag\"\r\nshows that some folks have been doing. As I am unemployed, like a lot of blind\r\nfolks, I have been unable to justify this before now because I don\'t lug\r\nan interesting collection of stuff to and from work.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHere\'s a simple bullet list about the crate and it\'s contents:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The crate is a 35 litre capacity \'Really Useful Box\'\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • First in were 2 Dell Latitude D630 (64-bit) laptops\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Next in was a Dell Inspiron (32-bit) laptop, clunky and slow\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The three laptops were sandwhiched between 3-ply layers of bubble-wrap\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Next in was a Seika 40-cell refreshable Braille display\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Next was a clear polycarbonate, zip-up pencil case stuffed with audio leads\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Then a \'Mesh\' Bluetooth and line-in external speaker\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • And a Braun external speaker/FM radio/micro-SD boom-box\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • A four-way mains power splitter\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The three AC adaptors for the laptops\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • On the top of the box, because it was too wide to go in, was a USB keyboard\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Mobile phone charging battery \'brick\', for the Raspberry Pi\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • A Raspberry Pi, a Banana Pi and some Arduino bits and pieces\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHere\'s what I demonstrated with two of the laptops:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Trisquel Linux and accessibility in the Gnome desktop with Orca\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Accessibility in the console with Debian and the Braille display on the Inspiron\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe second Latitude was with me so I could get some sighted help with\r\nBIOS settings.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy thanks have to go to Tony Wood for the lift to and from both of these\r\naccessibility presentations. I could not have done either, especially the Portsmouth one without his help.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThanks also to Lisi, the coordinator of the Portsmouth LUG and to the folks of that LUG for their enthusiasm.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHere\'s the link to the HPR show about my Raspberry Pi tts code fix:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1649\r\n

                                                        ',282,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','Accessibility, Linux, LUG',0,0,1), (1713,'2015-02-25','Fosdem 2015: Surveillance vs. Free Software',1246,'Interviews at the Free and Open Source devleopers meeting FOSDEM in Brussels.','

                                                        Aaron Williamson

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nFree Software Law Expert Aaron Williamson held a brilliant talk on the history of internet surveillance in the USA at FOSDEM 2015. \r\nAfter the Paris terror attacks, many politicians want to increase surveillance. British Prime Minister David Cameron wants to read all our emails - even the encrypted ones. Is this the only answer to terror attacks? Aaron has a very strong opinion on this. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Mathias Kirschner, Free Software Foundation Europe

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nMatthias is the Vicepresident of the Free Software Foundation Europe. In our interview at Fosdem 2015, he explains the work and the goal of the foundation and how they do lobbying for Free Software in parliaments and government bodies.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Torproject - nos ognions

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nA member of nos-ognions.net, which is part of the Tor project, explains about exit nodes, transparency and surveillance.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',285,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Fosdem, Surveillance, Free Software',0,0,1), (1714,'2015-02-26','Vim Hints 001',1070,'Hints and Tips for Vim users - part 1','

                                                        Introduction to Vim

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the start of the Vim Hints series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As a Linux user there are many editors available to you. Which one you want to use depends on your needs and the amount of time you want to dedicate to learning how to use it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One of the editors from the early days of Unix is vi, written in 1976. Contemporary with it is Emacs, also originating in 1976. However, it seemed to become the norm (in my experience anyway) that vi rather than Emacs was provided as standard with versions of Unix, and this has often continued into Linux.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I originally started using Unix around 1988 and found vi available to me. I learnt how to use it in a rudimentary way since I knew I\'d find it on any Unix systems I came across.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Many derivatives and clones of vi have been created. The one which has become the most popular and available is Vim, the name of which is an acronym for Vi IMproved, created in 1991 by Bram Moolenaar. This is what I use, and I have not wanted to learn another editor since adopting it, even though I have experimented with several. This is the editor we will be looking at in this series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What\'s the series about?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The thinking behind this series is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • You may already be using Vim; there are features you may not be aware of that can be revealed here
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • You may be using a different, simpler editor; you might want to use Vim and gain from its advanced features
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Of course, you may prefer to learn Emacs instead. That\'s fine; you should choose the tool that best suits your needs. Both Emacs and Vim have quite steep learning curves, but the broad range of capabilities you gain from knowing either is considerable.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I am not an expert in Vim. In fact I am continuing to learn new Vim features on a regular basis. However, I have been using it for many years and would like to share some of what I have learnt.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Why use Vim?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With simpler editors you can move about a file, add, remove and change text and save the results. The editor might have syntax highlighting and some degree of knowledge of the programming language you are typing. You might have spell checking as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With Vim and other more advanced editors you have all of this and a lot more. You can perform global changes throughout a file, process many files at once, add plugins to the editor to change its behaviour, and so on. Also, there is a language behind the scenes which can be used to build extensions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using Vim

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Usually, typing the command vi at the command line actually invokes vim. Vim runs in vi-compatible mode by default, which results in Vim enhancements being unavailable.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim uses a configuration file, which is called .vimrc on Linux. (Vim will also run on Windows, OSX and other operating systems but we will not be covering these implementations in this series.) Vim also has a GUI interface invoked by the command gvim, and it has its own configuration file .gvimrc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I you don\'t have a .vimrc create one with touch ~/.vimrc before you start. This will stop Vim running in vi-compatible mode. We will look at what the .vimrc can be used to do later.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can start Vim on its own without pointing at a file, but normally you use it to edit a file, which need not already exist. So, to create a new file called testfile invoke Vim with the command: vim testfile

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once running, Vim shows the contents of the file. All the lines on the screen where there is no content are marked with a tilde "~" character. If you are creating a file the first line on the screen will be blank, and last line will contain the name of the file followed by "[New File]" and some other details which we will examine later:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        "testfile" [New File]       0,0-1         All
                                                        \r\n

                                                        All the rest of the lines will contain a tilde.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim is a modal editor. The mode you usually start in is normal mode where you can move around the lines of the file and perform actions, but nothing you type is actually written to the file. In fact, the keys you type are actually editing commands. This is one of the features of Vim that causes problems for new users.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since this is a new file there is not much you can do other than enter text, and to do this you need to switch to insert mode. Do this by pressing the i key. The message -- INSERT -- will appear on the bottom line of the screen. Now type some text, pressing the Enter key at the end of each line.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You might notice that in insert mode you can press the arrow keys and move back to text you have already typed. This is a Vim feature and was not available in the original vi editor.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When you have finished entering text, press the Esc key to exit from insert mode. Now you can move around in normal mode, but remember that the keys you press are now commands not data to be entered into the file.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To move around in normal mode use the arrow keys or the home row keyboard keys: k to move up, j to move down, h to move left and l to move right.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This brings us to the last mode we\'ll look at: command mode. To enter this mode press the : (colon) key in normal mode. This moves the cursor to the last line of the screen, which starts with the colon you just typed. Here you can enter another class of commands. This time, we\'ll just look at how you can save the file and exit Vim.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Saving the file is achieved with the w command, and to exit from Vim the q command is used. These can be typed together, so :wq writes the file and exits.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you were to use :q on its own, having entered data into Vim, this would not work. Vim prevents you from throwing away your work this way. If you really meant to quit without saving then the q must be followed by an exclamation mark ("!"). So :q! lets you exit Vim without saving.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Summary so far

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Vim usually starts in normal mode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arrow keys or h, j, k and l for left, down, up and right for navigation in normal mode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • i enters insert mode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Esc exits from insert mode and reverts to normal mode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • : in normal mode enters command mode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • :w in normal mode writes the file
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • :wq in normal mode writes and exits
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • :q in normal mode exits but only if nothing was changed or added
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • :q! in normal mode exits regardless of any changes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Errata

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • I was wrong about the contents of the last line of the Vim screen in the audio. The notes have been corrected.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n

                                                        History

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Books

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Other resources

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vim,gvim,editor',0,0,1), (1717,'2015-03-03','Visualizing electricity',687,'Trying to understand electricity.','

                                                        Current

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Amps (what it\'s measured in)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • amount of water. (what i compare it to)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Volts

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • voltage (what its measured in)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pressure (what i compare it to)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Resistor

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Ohms (what it\'s measured in)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • valve (what i compare it to)\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',298,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','amps,voltage,ohms',0,0,1), (1724,'2015-03-12','Vim Hints 002',1540,'Hints and Tips for Vim users - part 2','

                                                        Vim Ate my Homework

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I want to look at how to keep your work secure with Vim. Next episode we will look at how to create and edit files.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Avoiding data loss with a backup

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The best place to start is with the configuration file which we met last episode. As we saw, this is usually $HOME/.vimrc. However, it can also be $HOME/.vim/vimrc, which is actually recommended since it keeps all Vim files in the same place. I use the former, since that\'s the way I have always done it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Let\'s add some options to this file. Configuration options consist of command mode commands. Actually, to be precise about it, any Vim Script expression may be written there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First it\'s a good idea to ensure that Vim runs with all of its standard features enabled. The option for this is called compatible (meaning compatible with Vi), which we need to turn off. This is done with the option:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        set nocompatible
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next, it\'s highly advisable to make Vim generate a backup file whenever it opens a file for editing. The backup file has the same name as the original file with a tilde appended. The configuration command is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        set backup
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The backup file is a copy of the file which existed before editing started.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        By default the backup file is saved in the same directory as the file being edited. If this is a problem (and to me this is not), then it is possible to tell Vim to save backups in a fixed place. This is done with the command set backupdir= followed by a list of directories. For example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        set backupdir=~/.backup,.,/tmp
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you were to add this to your configuration file, Vim would save backups in a top-level directory ~/.backup (which must already exist), then if this fails it will save in the current directory, falling back to /tmp if all else fails. Whether you do this is up to you. I would suggest you do not, at least not until you are more experienced with Vim.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Undoing and redoing changes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim can undo changes you make to a file. This is useful if a change was the wrong change or in the wrong place. It can also redo the undone change.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The u command in normal mode undoes the last change. The redo function is invoked by pressing the Ctrl key while pressing r. This key sequence is normally represented as CTRL-R.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim keeps a record of the changes, so successive u commands undo successive changes back in time. Conversely, CTRL-R redoes the undone changes forward in time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Normally the change history is lost when Vim exits, but two configuration options can be used to save it. The undofile option ensures change history is written to a file and undodir shows the (pre-existing) directory which is to hold these files.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        set undodir=~/.vim/undodir\r\nset undofile
                                                        \r\n

                                                        It can be a little surprising if you press u in a file you have just opened in Vim to find that it undoes something you changed last time you edited it! However, on the whole I think this is a great feature.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        File recovery

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Swap File

                                                        \r\n

                                                        By default Vim uses a recovery mechanism where it generates a swap file. Under Unix and Linux this file has a name built from the name of the file being edited with a dot prepended (making it a hidden file) and with the extension ".swp". So, if you were editing the file testfile the swap file would be a file called .testfile.swp in the same directory.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It is possible to make Vim write the swap file elsewhere, such as on another partition. You can also turn this recovery capability off. It is probably advisable to use the default settings while you are learning Vim.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The swap file is updated after typing 200 characters or when you have not typed anything for four seconds. The swap file is deleted as soon as Vim stops editing the file.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recovery

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Case 1: there are changes in the swap file
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If something bad happens during an editing session, such as the loss of power, the swap file will remain after the event. If you know that you need to recover your edit session then you can simply type the following in the directory where the file you were editing exists:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        vim -r filename
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You will see a message such as the following:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        Using swap file ".testfile3.swp"\r\nOriginal file "~/testfile3"\r\nRecovery completed. You should check if everything is OK.\r\n(You might want to write out this file under another name\r\nand run diff with the original file to check for changes)\r\nYou may want to delete the .swp file now.\r\n\r\nPress ENTER or type command to continue
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        See the explanation on the Vim wiki.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Alternatively, when you try to edit a file you were editing at the time of the failure Vim will detect the presence of a swap file and alert you with a message such as:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        E325: ATTENTION\r\nFound a swap file by the name ".testfile2.swp"\r\n          owned by: hprdemo   dated: Fri Feb 13 15:33:41 2015\r\n         file name: ~hprdemo/testfile2\r\n          modified: YES\r\n         user name: hprdemo   host name: i7-desktop\r\n        process ID: 16181\r\nWhile opening file "testfile2"\r\n             dated: Sat Dec  6 18:34:32 2014\r\n\r\n(1) Another program may be editing the same file.  If this is the case,\r\n    be careful not to end up with two different instances of the same\r\n    file when making changes.  Quit, or continue with caution.\r\n(2) An edit session for this file crashed.\r\n    If this is the case, use ":recover" or "vim -r testfile2"\r\n    to recover the changes (see ":help recovery").\r\n    If you did this already, delete the swap file ".testfile2.swp"\r\n    to avoid this message.\r\n\r\nSwap file ".testfile2.swp" already exists!\r\n[O]pen Read-Only, (E)dit anyway, (R)ecover, (D)elete it, (Q)uit, (A)bort:
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim here is indicating that there are unsaved changes that can be recovered. It is also warning that if someone is editing the same file (such as you in another window) this might account for the presence of the swap file.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Assuming it\'s appropriate, you can recover the changes and continue editing by pressing r at the above prompt. You will see messages such as the ones above relating to the vim -r filename example.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Be aware that if you continue editing the original swap file will continue to exist and you will get the same message again next time you edit the file. Vim will create a new swap file (called /home/hprdemo/.testfile2.swo in this case) to protect the new editing session.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This situation can be a little confusing if you have not encountered it before. There are a number of ways you can resolve this:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. You can save the recovered file and exit Vim (type :wq). You can then edit the same file all over again. You will see almost the same message as before, but you can now delete the swap file by pressing d. The message you see the second time round will contain the additional warning that the file you are editing is newer than the swap file - that is because you just saved a new copy of it!

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. You can save the file and exit Vim as above, but then explicitly delete the swap file. In the example you would do this by typing: rm .testfile2.swp

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. As before you can save the file but this time without exiting Vim (type :w). Then tell Vim to re-edit the current file with the command :e. You will then see the warning about there being a swap file, and you can type d to delete it.

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        Case 2: there are no changes in the swap file
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If, when you see the message about finding a swap file you see that there are no changes to recover you can just delete the swap file by pressing d. You can then continue with editing the file as normal.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Don\'t Panic!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This recovery process is complex because Vim is trying to ensure that you are protected against losing your changes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As it says in the Vim manual DON\'T PANIC!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Summary

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The configuration file should contain the following:
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        set nocompatible\r\nset backup\r\nset undodir=~/.vim/undodir\r\nset undofile
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Use u in normal mode to undo a change
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Use CTRL-R in normal mode to redo an undone change
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Re-starting Vim after a crash will invoke a recovery dialogue
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vim,gvim,editor,backup,undo,redo,crash recovery',0,0,1), (1721,'2015-03-09','Cross-compilers Part 2',2832,'Using one of our cross-compilers to compile a Raspberry Pi kernel','

                                                        \r\nIn part 1 I described cross-compiling, what it means and why you might\r\nwant to, or even need to use it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI also described how to create a cross-compiler tool-chain using crosstool-ng.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn this show I will demonstrate using one of the cross-compilers which\r\nI created as described in the last show to compile a Raspberry Pi Linux kernel.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAs usual with my shows the show-notes can\'t be squashed into 4k, so there is an HTML version at:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',282,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','raspberry pi,kernel,cross-compilation,make',0,0,1), (1851,'2015-09-07','HPR Community News for August 2015',6867,'HPR Community News for August 2015','

                                                        \nIn today\'s show Jon, Dave and Ken discuss some topics such as, \n

                                                        \n
                                                        \n\nHi All,\n\nI am concerned as to the health of HPR, and I touched (went on a rant to\nbe honest) on this in the Community News show that will be released\ntomorrow.\n\nWe have 16,495 subscribers and 260 slots per year, so we need to have\nonly 2.5% subscribers contributing to have a different host for every\nday. Unfortunately only 62 managed to contribute a show in the last 365\ndays. I don\'t need Charles in NJ to tell me that that\'s only 0.38% of\nour subscriber base.\n\nAs a project that is supposed to be a \"Community Podcast\", but we\'re\nlooking less like a bar camp and more like a TED talk.\n\nIt gets worse. Dave ran the query of how many shows were contributed by\neach host over the last 365 days. It shows that 50% of the shows have\nbeen contributed by just 5 hosts. This is not to say that submitting\nmultiple shows is bad, far from it. But it\'s the difference between\nwanting to submit multiple shows and *needing* to submit multiple shows,\nthat I\'m concerned about.\n\nSo a few questions for the list:\n\n- Is this a problem ?\n- If so, how do we fix it ?\n\n*Please* do not derail this discussion about your intentions to record a\nshow. I have a in box full of \"I plan to do a show about this\" or \"I\'m\ndefinitely doing a series on that\". More than one are from myself.\nBasically if it\'s not on the server, it\'s not a show.\n\nYou can always add a topic to the requested topic page.\nhttps://gitlab.anhonesthost.com/HPR/HPR_Public_Code/blob/master/www/reque\nsted_topics.html\n\n\n\nMore Info: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1851_HPR_Health_2015-09-06.ods\n\nRaw SQL Dump here: \n\n+--------+--------------------------------+-------+\n| hostid | host                           | shows |\n+--------+--------------------------------+-------+\n|    198 | Ahuka                          |    38 |\n|    238 | Jon Kulp                       |    24 |\n|    159 | HPR Volunteers                 |    18 |\n|    225 | Dave Morriss                   |    17 |\n|    131 | FiftyOneFifty                  |    17 |\n|     30 | Ken Fallon                     |    14 |\n|     78 | klaatu                         |     7 |\n|    209 | David Whitman                  |     7 |\n|    280 | semioticrobotic                |     6 |\n|    235 | NYbill                         |     6 |\n|    288 | beni                           |     6 |\n|    195 | Frank Bell                     |     6 |\n|     24 | Lord Drachenblut               |     6 |\n|    287 | corenominal                    |     5 |\n|    282 | Mike Ray                       |     5 |\n|    129 | JWP                            |     4 |\n|    265 | Kevin Wisher                   |     4 |\n|    240 | Steve Bickle                   |     4 |\n|    297 | swift110                       |     4 |\n|    286 | cjm                            |     3 |\n|    285 | 2BFrank                        |     3 |\n|    107 | lostnbronx                     |     3 |\n|    259 | Gabriel Evenfire               |     3 |\n|    215 | Windigo                        |     3 |\n|    296 | Kevie                          |     3 |\n|    300 | b-yeezi                        |     3 |\n|    284 | Steve Smethurst                |     2 |\n|    233 | johanv                         |     2 |\n|    252 | Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)       |     2 |\n|    294 | daw                            |     2 |\n|    302 | Stilvoid                       |     2 |\n|    197 | garjola                        |     1 |\n|    134 | PipeManMusic                   |     1 |\n|    268 | Andrew Conway                  |     1 |\n|    283 | Inscius                        |     1 |\n|    289 | pyrrhic                        |     1 |\n|    290 | Al                             |     1 |\n|    158 | Various Creative Commons Works |     1 |\n|    109 | Various Hosts                  |     1 |\n|    291 | Rill                           |     1 |\n|    292 | Michal Cieraszynski            |     1 |\n|    270 | Thaj Sara                      |     1 |\n|    293 | Rho`n                          |     1 |\n|    295 | Cibola Jerry                   |     1 |\n|    246 | Beeza                          |     1 |\n|    201 | MrX                            |     1 |\n|    298 | tcuc                           |     1 |\n|    111 | Knightwise                     |     1 |\n|    299 | Fin                            |     1 |\n|    301 | amp                            |     1 |\n|    157 | HPR_AudioBookClub              |     1 |\n|    303 | Alpha32                        |     1 |\n|    306 | GNULinuxRTM                    |     1 |\n|    305 | kurakura                       |     1 |\n|    229 | Charles in NJ                  |     1 |\n|    263 | Tony Pelaez                    |     1 |\n|    307 | cheeto4493                     |     1 |\n|    271 | mirwi                          |     1 |\n|    255 | Matt McGraw (g33kdad)          |     1 |\n|    308 | A Shadowy Figure               |     1 |\n|    309 | folky                          |     1 |\n|    115 | sigflup                        |     1 |\n+--------+--------------------------------+-------+\n\nRegards,\n\nKen Fallon\nhttps://kenfallon.com\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/correspondents/0030.html\n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n A Shadowy Figure, \n folky.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1826Mon2015-08-03HPR Community News for July 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1827Tue2015-08-04How I make breadDave Morriss
                                                        1828Wed2015-08-05Multimeter Mod's Part 1NYbill
                                                        1829Thu2015-08-06My "New" Used Kindle DXJon Kulp
                                                        1830Fri2015-08-07How Holland Works: GreenWheelsKen Fallon
                                                        1831Mon2015-08-10Are speed listening and slow background music compatible?A Shadowy Figure
                                                        1832Tue2015-08-11Simplify writing using markdown and pandocb-yeezi
                                                        1833Wed2015-08-12Resurrecting an IBM T40swift110
                                                        1834Thu2015-08-13Password CardsJon Kulp
                                                        1835Fri2015-08-1459 - LibreOffice Impress - PicturesAhuka
                                                        1836Mon2015-08-17The Statusnet ShuffleNYbill
                                                        1837Tue2015-08-18Put an SSD in your Linux Box2BFrank
                                                        1838Wed2015-08-19Waking up with WindigoWindigo
                                                        1839Thu2015-08-20My "New" Used Pickup TruckJon Kulp
                                                        1840Fri2015-08-21Running external commands in KateKen Fallon
                                                        1841Mon2015-08-24My way into Linuxfolky
                                                        1842Tue2015-08-25TiT Radio 20 You've Been Pwned (probably)FiftyOneFifty
                                                        1843Wed2015-08-26Some Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        1844Thu2015-08-27The Marantz PMD 660 Professional Solid State RecorderJon Kulp
                                                        1845Fri2015-08-2860 - LibreOffice Impress - The Gallery and ThemesAhuka
                                                        1846Mon2015-08-31UNI-T UT61E ReviewNYbill
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-08-15 14:57:43 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Help with tags and summaries
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/906
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Kevin O'Brien <zwilnik@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-08-15 19:17:10 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Jon Kulp and group efforts
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/907
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-08-19 11:48:59 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Do you owe me a show ?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/909
                                                          \n Messages: 2
                                                        6. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 5
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 36 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1612\n(2014-10-07) \"Don't Forget the Referbs\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 5:\nNYbill on 2015-08-15:\n\"Sorry I'm late...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1810\n(2015-07-10) \"17 - LastPass Hacked - What Does It Mean?\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\namp on 2015-08-08:\n\"but it is not free software\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1827\n(2015-08-04) \"How I make bread\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCharlie Ebert on 2015-08-03:\n\"Me.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDaniel Worth on 2015-08-07:\n\"Great!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-08-10:\n\"Thanks for the feeedback\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1828\n(2015-08-05) \"Multimeter Mod's Part 1\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-05:\n\"Awesome\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2015-08-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1829\n(2015-08-06) \"My "New" Used Kindle DX\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFweeb on 2015-08-07:\n\"BQ Cervantes?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ncybergrue on 2015-08-07:\n\"One thing you missed\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-07:\n\"good catch (PDFs)\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-07:\n\"Cervantes Reader\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1830\n(2015-08-07) \"How Holland Works: GreenWheels\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2015-07-16:\n\"I thought this was about the dikes\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-08-11:\n\"Thanks for the insight\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1831\n(2015-08-10) \"Are speed listening and slow background music compatible?\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-09:\n\"1.7x\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-08-10:\n\"1.7x works for me\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-08-10:\n\"Thanks, now I have a starting point\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nWindigo on 2015-08-17:\n\"Normal - 1.5x\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1832\n(2015-08-11) \"Simplify writing using markdown and pandoc\"\nby b-yeezi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-08-11:\n\"thx, very useful\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-12:\n\"plus HTML as needed\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-08-17:\n\"Excellent episode\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1836\n(2015-08-17) \"The Statusnet Shuffle\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-08-17:\n\"you should put up some VPS based blog ;)\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2015-08-18:\n\"maybe some day...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1837\n(2015-08-18) \"Put an SSD in your Linux Box\"\nby 2BFrank.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-08-18:\n\"correction on TRIM\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nnoah on 2015-08-21:\n\"minimizing writes\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1838\n(2015-08-19) \"Waking up with Windigo\"\nby Windigo.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-19:\n\"The Very Essence\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-08-19:\n\"I wouldn't have done it that way...\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2015-08-20:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nBeeza on 2015-08-20:\n\"Geekdom At Its Very Best\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1841\n(2015-08-24) \"My way into Linux\"\nby folky.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2015-08-31:\n\"Great first episode!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1842\n(2015-08-25) \"TiT Radio 20 You've Been Pwned (probably)\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-08-25:\n\"Re: Car Malware \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-08-25:\n\"We're doomed I tell eee\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1843\n(2015-08-26) \"Some Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-08-26:\n\"Obsolete ?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-08-28:\n\"Maybe obsolescent or outmoded\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1844\n(2015-08-27) \"The Marantz PMD 660 Professional Solid State Recorder\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-08-29:\n\"Quality\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-08-30:\n\"Open Goldberg!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-08-31:\n\"Agree with Mike\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        ',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (3973,'2023-10-25','Creating an equalizer preset for your episodes of HPR',938,'A method of creating repeatable processing for your podcasts','

                                                        Here I describe my method for creating a macro using equalizer,\ncompressor and normalize presets in Audacity, which can be used\nrepeatedly to get consistent results, as long as you use the same voice,\nmicrophone and recording location.

                                                        \n

                                                        This is the sample of the equalizer setting I use with a Sennheiser\nMB2 Pro headset:

                                                        \n

                                                        \n

                                                        This is the waveform for this episode before applying the\nCompressor.

                                                        \n

                                                        \n

                                                        This is the waveform for this episode after applying the\nequalizer discussed earlier, the Compressor at threshold -31dB, noise\nfloor -40dB and ratio 2:1. No make-up gain at the Compressor. Finally,\nNormalize to peak amplitude of -12dB. I was wrong in the show to say\nthat I had been using \"Amplify,\" in fact I have been using\n\"Normalize.\"

                                                        \n

                                                        \n',399,45,0,'CC-BY-SA','audacity,equalizer,compressor',0,0,1), (1722,'2015-03-10','Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS',367,'We wish to announce a new Linux Fest to serve the Midwest','

                                                        \r\nWe are pleased to announce the first annual Kansas Linux Fest (https://KansasLinuxFest.us), hashtag #KLF15. It will be hosted by the Lawrence Public Library, Lawrence Kansas, March 21-22, 2015. The Kansas Linux Fest is a project of the Free/Libre Open Source and Open Knowledge Association of Kansas (https://www.openkansas.us) and other organizations. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSpecial recognition needs to be paid to Hacker Public Radio contributor James Michael DuPont for taking point in making a community event in the central United States a reality. Speakers (https://www.kansaslinuxfest.us/pages/schedule.html ) include Open Source Advocate Dave Lester, Hal Gottfried, cofounder of the Open Hardware Evangelist Kansas City Open Hardware Group, David Stokes, MySQL Community Manager at Oracle, Ben C. Roose, Technology Consultant for Live Performance, Kevin Lane, Technical Consultant IV at HP Enterprise Services, Jonathan George, CEO @boxcar, and podcaster and open source evangelist, FiftyOneFifty.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRegistration for conference tickets can be found on the KLF website. Fan tickets are free, but supporter level tickets may be purchased with a free will donation which will go towards marketing and food.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou will find links on the https://KansasLinuxFest.us homepage that will allow you to follow the conference on social and other media, as well as an RSS feed. There is also information on how to become involved with Free/Libre Open Source and Open Knowledge Association of Kansas.\r\n

                                                        ',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','#KLF15, Kansas Linux Fest, KLF',0,0,1), (1723,'2015-03-11','Success With Students',1648,'From taking a podcasting course, students learn the benefit of Creative Commons and open source','

                                                        \r\nFor his second attempt at a solo episode of HPR, Kevie talks about a very positive experience he had introducing school pupils to podcasting. From this he was able to discuss the benefits of Creative Commons music and using open source, cross platform software. The ultimate success came when three students took the plunge and installed Linux on their own computers.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Music included in this episode:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',296,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','open source, ccmusic, audacity, school, education',0,0,1), (1726,'2015-03-16','15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR',1137,'Inspired by a recent meeting with Ken Fallon, Knightwise presents 15 excuses not to record a show.','

                                                        \r\nInspired by a recent meeting with Ken Fallon at Fossdem, Knightwise presents 15 excuses not to record for Hacker Public Radio.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. I don\'t have the right Gear
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. It doesn\'t sound so polished
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. I don\'t know how to upload
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. I don\'t have a radio voice
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. I don\'t have the time
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. I\'m shy
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. I don\'t have anything to say
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. The stuff I know about is realy niche and noone will be interested
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. What if I get negative comments
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Who would listen to my show anyway
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. I\'ve never done this before
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. I\'ll get around to it someday
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. I recorded a show but I\'m too afraid to submit it
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        27. It takes me a long time to edit out the \"um\" and \"er\"
                                                        28. \r\n
                                                        29. I don\'t know enough about audio editing yet
                                                        30. \r\n
                                                        ',111,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hpr,podcasting,tips,techniques,kw,knightwise,excuses',0,0,1), (1727,'2015-03-17','Basic Mutt',1902,'Frank Bell discusses setting up and using Mutt as an email client.','Using a text email client such as Mutt is quite a learning experience. Here is some information to help you get started.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe programs that Frank used to set up Mutt:
                                                        \r\n\r\nGetting and Sorting Mail:
                                                        \r\nFetchmail https://sourceforge.net/projects/fetchmail/
                                                        \r\nProcmail and Formail https://www.procmail.org/
                                                        \r\n\r\nReading and Composing Mail: Mutt https://www.mutt.org/
                                                        \r\n\r\nSending Mail: msmtp https://msmtp.sourceforge.net/
                                                        \r\n\r\nThese are the references that Frank found most helpful:
                                                        \r\n\r\nConfiguring Mutt:
                                                        \r\nQuickstart Guide to Mutt: https://docs.huihoo.com/gentoo/resources/document-listing/guide-to-mutt.html
                                                        \r\n\r\nCalmar on Mutt: https://www.calmar.ws/mutt/
                                                        \r\nFeeding the Cloud: Handling multiple identities/accounts in mutt: https://feeding.cloud.geek.nz/posts/handling-multiple-identitiesaccounts-in/
                                                        \r\n\r\nProcmail (the UMBC link is a great introduction to procmail and procmail\'s regex):
                                                        \r\nMail Filtering with Procmail: https://userpages.umbc.edu/~ian/procmail.html#example
                                                        \r\nhttps://www.linux-mag.com/id/826/
                                                        \r\n\r\nSome Text Browsers (for help in parsing HTML emails)
                                                        \r\nLynx https://lynx.isc.org/
                                                        \r\nLinks https://www.jikos.cz/~mikulas/links/
                                                        \r\nelinks https://elinks.or.cz/
                                                        \r\nw3m https://w3m.sourceforge.net/
                                                        \r\n',195,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Mutt,email,procmail,fetchmail',0,0,1), (1729,'2015-03-19','Shield\'s Up - Wood Stove Heat Shield Project',957,'David Whitman builds a safety heat shield for a wood stove in his shop','

                                                        \r\nThe Problem: Wood stoves get really hot
                                                        \r\nThe solution: metal heat shield and airspace
                                                        \r\nI describe how I used common materials and self designed a wood stove heat Shield.
                                                        \r\nHopefully there are pictures attached to this episode show notes so you can see just how well I described my project
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1729-Pictures_Shield_Up-Wood_Stove_Heat_Shield.pdf\r\n

                                                        ',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Shop, wood heat, Oregon, safety',0,0,1), (1728,'2015-03-18','Requested Topic: Favourite Browser Extensions',1204,'Fin talks about his favourite browser extensions.','

                                                        \r\nNoScript is great for blocking JavaScript that may be undesirable. Scripts tend to track users or load obtrusive or undesirable content in my experience.\r\nNoScript also blocks Adobe Flash and Java which can be resource hogs. A simple click will activate them. Scripts can be enabled or disabled by site.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHTTPS Everywhere will automatically direct your browser to a secure https version of sites you visit, if available. Great for security (obviously).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAdblock Edge is a great ad blocker. It blocks all ads no matter how obtrusive they are. Does not contain hidden white-list like more popular ad blocker: Adblock Plus.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLibreJS targets non free JavaScript. I think it is a fantastic idea but makes too many sites unusable. I prefer NoScript as I can more easily micro-manage scripts per domain.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',299,74,1,'CC-BY-SA','browser extensions,firefox,noscript,https everywhere,adblock edge,librejs',0,0,1), (1731,'2015-03-23','Upgrading an old laptop',719,'I put brand new parts into an old fujitsu lifebook 4215','

                                                        \r\nIn July of 2010 I was given a laptop to repair by one of my friends, I couldn’t figure out what was wrong with it despite hours of trial and error so eventually I got so frustrated with it that I just set it aside and forgot about for a while. Meanwhile my friend got another laptop so he told me I could keep it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nFor the rest of the post see:
                                                        \r\nhttps://anthonyvenable110.wordpress.com/2011/10/10/upgrading-my-laptop/\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hardware upgrade,laptop',0,0,1), (1730,'2015-03-20','5150 Shades of Beer 0005 River City Brewing Company Revisited',2295,'Fifty One Fity revisits an Air Capitol brewpub to try some new flavors','

                                                        \r\nThe great thing about brew pubs is that they always trying new beers so the customer experience doesnt become as stale asa half finished can of Budweiser let out overnight. That means I can return to the same place and experience a whole new vista of flavors. Such was the case last Sunday, when a social affair brought me withing blocks of the River City Brewing Company in Wichita Kansas. I had the forethought to be my three growlers for refilling, and by the time the meeting was of it was time for a burger and a beer anyway. Lets talk about the meal first.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHaving already tried their pizza and amazing Cuban sandwich on previous trips, this time a went for a burger. From the River City menu ( https://www.rivercitybrewingco.com/rcbmenu.pdf ) The Memphis Burger is topped with sweet pepper bacon, cheddar cheese, crispy onion strings and chipotle BBQ sauce. On top of all that, the hamburger was grilled to perfection, in my case that being exceedingly rare. (One of my Dads friends, every time he sees me eating a steak or a burger, always comments You know, Ive seen a critter hurt worse that that and live). I was most impressed by the onion strings. These are not the French fried onion rings that you find atop your green beans on Thanksgiving, but rather the most delicate strings of onion imaginable, battered and fried. I found myself wishing Id thought to order extra BBQ sauce for my French fries, which were hearty and sprinkled with fresh ground black pepper. Id never thought of peppering my fries before, but be assured Ill do so in the future.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTo accompany my burger, I selected the Breckenridge Bourbon Smoked Imperial Stout. It weighs in at 9.0%abv, so you get a smaller that average portion in an 11oz brandy snifter. While stouts are usually nearly as bitter as IPAs, I dont notice it as much when coupled with the beers bold flavor. Unlike IPAs, stouts tend to have enough malty richness to add balance. In the case of this beer, the barley is smoked over hazelnuts before fermentation, giving this beer its flavor and its name. Ive want to try a smoked stout since I heard Tracy Hotlz speak of them back on the old Podbrewers show. I dont think Id want to be restricted to an exclusive diet of smoked beers, but this was a welcome change from the ordinary, and a great compliment to my beefy repast. Truly an excellent brew.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNow, on to the contents of my three growlers. I wish I could give you first impressions, but come on, I just couldnt wait for you folks. It was hard enough to wait for the containers to chill overnight in the fridge. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe first beer is even more unique than the smoked stout. Donut Whole Love Affair #3 Pineapple Wit is made with actual pineapple donuts (from River Citys Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/RiverCityBreweryCo/photos/a.555320064516059.1073741826.194563133925089/796375363743860/?type=1 ). The first taste you encounter is tart pineapple on the tip of your tongue joined by powdered sugar as the beer washes towards the back of you mouth. The sugar taste tends to stay with you between sips, but the whole effect is subtle and wonderful, not fruit juicy like a shandy. The wheat beer hovers in the background, not enough to obscure the donut, but blending the pastry taste into the breadyness of the beer. I didnt know what to expect of this beer when I ordered it, but I am most pleased I did. 5.65abv 11 IBUs 16oz Weizen\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNext, we have Pryze Fyter Red Rye. By far, this is the smoothest and richest rye beer Ive ever tasted. Im a big fan of rye beers, but they tend to be a little more harsh than wheat beers, and are of course more bitter. Like rye whiskey, rye beer is an acquired taste for many people, and best suited for those with a palette that craves bold flavors. According to the menu, Carmel malts, a copious amount of rye. Spicy, floral, earthy, and ready to smack you in the kisser. 5.6%abv 55 IBUs 16oz Nonic\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFinally, we have the Buffeit Bourbon Baltic Porter. Of the two bourbon barrel aged porters on the menu, my barman described this slightly sweeter. While Ive never been a fan of the woody tasting bourbons of Tennessee, barrel aging lends a roundness to beers, and compliments the roasted malts and the hops. This is the strongest of the beers I brought home, at 7.2%abv, 47IBUs, and would be served in a 13z Tulip glass.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI made the mistake of not taking a beer menu home with me for documentation, as a list of currently available beers no longer appears on line. Chris Arnold took the time to scan a copy and send it to my e-mail. Thanks Chris. I dont think River City Brewing Company will mind me attaching the menu to my notes for you listeners to salivate over. There are two in particular Im sorry to have missed, the Stinky Pete Plum Saison (they always seems to be out of the raisin and plum beers) and the Emerald City Stout (a man has only so many growlers).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThat brings me to my next topic. Among the many interviews I want to do from Linux Fest next week, Im also going to visit the Free State Brewery, only a couple blocks away. I called ahead, and they wont fill other pubs growlers (thats going to cost you some points Free State). On the upside, Ill have a couple new growlers to add to my collection.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMenu: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1730.pdf\r\n

                                                        ',131,14,0,'CC-BY-SA','5150 Shades of Beer,beer,growler,stout,River City Brewing Company',0,0,1), (1732,'2015-03-24','Renovating another Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook',2014,'A follow-up to ep. 1512, I reflect on what I\'ve learned digitizing two Counterpoint textbooks.','

                                                        \r\nI mistakenly referred to episode 1516 while I was speaking. I meant to say 1512. The two musical bumpers I used in the show are by J.S. Bach, examples 90 and 91 in the textbook \"Applied Counterpoint,\" by Percy Goetschius. These are my own MIDI renditions so they have no copyright burden upon them. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy html-to-epub conversion command (requires calibre): \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nebook-convert foobar.html foobar.epub \\\r\n--output-profile=tablet \\\r\n--disable-font-rescaling \\\r\n--smarten-punctuation \\\r\n--change-justification=left \\\r\n--preserve-cover-aspect-ratio \\\r\n--cover=./pathto/cover.jpg \\\r\n--use-auto-toc \\\r\n--level1-toc \"//h:h1\" \\\r\n--level2-toc \"//h:h3\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','public-domain, textbooks, music, counterpoint, Lilypond, html, scripting, calibre, ebooks',0,0,1), (1734,'2015-03-26','Vim Hints 003',1562,'Hints and Tips for Vim users - part 3','

                                                        Moving Around

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I want to look at how you move around the file you are editing in Vim. I also want to add some more elements to the configuration file we started building in the last episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are long (the size limit is 4000 characters), they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1734_full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I usually create my notes with Markdown and pandoc. As an experiment this time I have used a pandoc template which uses the same CSS that provides the style for the main HPR pages. I hope it makes these notes look better than the very bare HTML I have produced in the past.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Vim Hints Episode 1 https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1714
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Vim Hints Episode 2 https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1724
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',225,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vim,editor,movement,configuration',0,0,1), (1740,'2015-04-03','Mailing List Etiquette',2744,'Some advice about best practices on mailing lists','

                                                        Mailing List Etiquette

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Overview

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In February 2015 I created a script to add a section to the monthly Community News show notes. The added section summarises the discussions on the HPR mailing list over the previous month. My script processes the messages archived on the Gmane site and reports on the threads it finds there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In writing this script I noticed the number of times people made errors in replying to existing message threads and initiating new threads on the list. I thought it might be helpful if I explained some of the do\'s and don\'ts of mailing list use to help avoid these errors.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are long (the size limit is 4000 characters), they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1740_full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Experimental EPUB Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For this show I have tried generating an EPUB version of the full notes. This can be found here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1740_full_shownotes.epub. Comments on this idea are welcome.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Gmane archive of the Hacker Public Radio mailing list: https://dir.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Wikipedia article on message groupings referred to as conversations, topic threads, or threads: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversation_threading
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. A brief note on how to punctuate the phrase "do\'s and don\'ts": https://www.visualthesaurus.com/cm/wc/dos-and-donts-or-dos-and-donts/
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Wikipedia article on Usenet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Thunderbird add-on ThreadVis: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/threadvis/
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Wikipedia article on the RFC document: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Request_for_Comments
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Text of RFC5322: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc5322.txt
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Wikipedia article on Email: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Wikipedia article on MIME used in email: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Description of a threading algorithm from Jamie Zawinski: https://www.jwz.org/doc/threading.html
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. Text of RFC1153: https://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1153.html
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. Wikipedia article on posting style: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. A recent large thread on the Mailman-Users mailing list discussing the subject of replying to lists: https://www.mail-archive.com/mailman-users%40python.org/msg66089.html
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        ',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','email,mailing list,thread,conversation,mail client',0,0,1), (1733,'2015-03-25','LinuxLugCast Episode-003 Outtakes',4261,'Preshow & aftershow banter that does not get published through our normal feeds.','

                                                        \r\nSome good content that we do not publish.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://linuxlugcast.com/?p=162\r\n

                                                        ',265,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','linuxlugcast,outtakes',0,0,1), (1736,'2015-03-30','How I run my small business using Linux',1139,'How I use Linux for my Business','

                                                        Hardware

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • System76 Galago Ultrapro - Ubuntu 14.04\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Synology DiskStation DS213j\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • LG G2\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Proprietary Applications

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Synology Cloud Station\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wireframe Sketcher\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Free Applications

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • pandoc\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • discount\r\n-firefox\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • chromium\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • gvim\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • libreoffice\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • planner\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • hamster\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • todo.txt\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • gnucash\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • virtualbox\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • thunderbird\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • enigmail
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • stationary
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • california\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ranger\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • L2TP/IPSEC vpn client\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • meld\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • deja-dup -> Box\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Systemback\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • rsync\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','linux, small business, open source',0,0,1), (1743,'2015-04-08','Scale 13x Part 1 of 6',4079,'Lord Drachenblut at Scale 13x. Today Docker, Fedora Activity Day, Matthew Miller Fedora Project Lead','

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Lord Drachenblut introduces himself

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.gofundme.com/gysc0o\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGreetings everyone. I\'m Matthew ”Lord Drachenblut\" Williams. I\'m currently working on gathering the fund to attend the Southern California Linux Expo aka SCALE. As many of you already know I have spent the last year struggling against esophageal cancer. I am nearing a point which I can start traveling and attending conferences again. My goal is to raise the funds so that in February of 2015 I can attend Scale. I am also working on a talk that I hope to give at SCALE. My sincerest thanks to the community that has been there for me during my recovery and to those that will help me in this endeavor. Should I raise more funds than needed to attend SCALE my goal will be to submit my talk to other conferences and to give my talk at those as well.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Docker

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jérôme Petazzoni.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.docker.com/
                                                        \r\nLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=18390427
                                                        \r\nTwitter: https://twitter.com/jpetazzo\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDocker is an open platform for developers and sysadmins to build, ship, and run distributed applications. Consisting of Docker Engine, a portable, lightweight runtime and packaging tool, and Docker Hub, a cloud service for sharing applications and automating workflows, Docker enables apps to be quickly assembled from components and eliminates the friction between development, QA, and production environments. As a result, IT can ship faster and run the same app, unchanged, on laptops, data center VMs, and any cloud.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Fedora Activity Day

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Fedora Activity Day (FAD) is a regional event (either one-day or a multi-day) that allows Fedora contributors to gather together in order to work on specific tasks related to the Fedora Project.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Fedora interview with Matthew Miller

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://getfedora.org/en/\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Fedora Project is a partnership of free software community members from around the globe. The Fedora Project builds open source software communities and produces a Linux distribution called \"Fedora.\" The Fedora Project\'s mission is to lead the advancement of free and open source software and content as a collaborative community. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,Docker,Fedora,Matthew Miller',0,0,1), (1744,'2015-04-09','Scale 13x Part 2 of 6',3770,' Postgres SQL in Space, Bryan Lunduke, and OpenSuSe Build Service','

                                                        Josh Berkus Postgres SQL in Space

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://www.postgresql.org/
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nJosh Berkus has been a member of the PostgreSQL Core Team since 2003 and has been working as a database consultant since 1995. Josh\'s work experience includes 8 years of independant consulting on database applications, primarily building applications for the legal and HR industries. He was also head of Sun Microsystem\'s PosgtreSQL support staff for 2 years and helped launch BI startup Greenplum.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Bryan Lunduke

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n
                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://lunduke.com/
                                                        \r\nLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryanlunduke
                                                        \r\nTwitter: https://twitter.com/bryanlunduke\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenSuSe Build Service with Markus Feilner and Lance Albertson

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"logo\"\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Markus Feilne

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://plus.google.com/+MarkusFeilner/about
                                                        \r\nLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markusfeilner
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOpen mind. Vigil. Proud citizen and honorable diplomat of the Conch republic. Minister of the Universal Life Church. Jedi knight. Owner of Lunar property. Linux and open source human, occasional and highly provocative Apple troll (#iTroll)\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Lance Albertson

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"headshot\"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWebsite: https://osuosl.org/about/people/lance-albertson
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDirector | Cat Herder
                                                        \r\nLance became OSL director in early 2013. He has managed all of the hosting activities that the OSL provides for more than 160 high-profile open source projects since joining the lab as lead systems administrator and architect in 2007. Lance’s involvement in the open source community began in 2003, when he became a developer and package maintainer with Gentoo Linux. Prior to joining the OSL, Lance was a UNIX Administrator for the Enterprise Server Technologies group at Kansas State University. In his free time he helps organize Beaver BarCamp and plays trumpet in local jazz group The Infallible Collective.\r\n
                                                        \r\nLance can be reached at lance-at-osuosl-dot-org\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,postgres sql,Bryan Lunduke,OpenSuSe',0,0,1), (1746,'2015-04-13','Scale 13x Part 3 of 6',3200,'Eight interviews from Scale 13x','',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,lpi,one course source,elementary OS,opensource robotics,syslogng,think penguin,kodi',0,0,1), (1747,'2015-04-14','Scale 13x Part 4 of 6',3150,'Five interviews from Scale x13','',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,perl,Open stack,Girls in tech LA,snowdrift.coop,SaltStack',0,0,1), (1748,'2015-04-15','Scale 13x Part 5 of 6',4106,'Four interviews from Scalex13','',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,LinHES,robots,Michael Hall,Ubuntu,ovirt project',0,0,1), (1749,'2015-04-16','Scale 13x Part 6 of 6',1425,'Justin King browser based emulated computer','

                                                        \r\nI am 13 years old and live in Santa Barbara. I have participated in the Open Source community for several years. My dad has been on the SCALE leadership team for a long time, and he introduced me to programming. My favorite programming languages are HTML and Javascript with Enyo because I like creating websites and webOS apps. I also program in Shell and some Python, and like making short animations using Blender. I have recently made the world\'s first emulator for the WITCH, the first currently working fixed-point decimal computer. I recently earned my Technician Amateur Radio license and enjoy attending radio club meetings. Besides geeking, I like to swim, act, and do fun events with the Boy Scouts.\r\n

                                                        ',24,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','scale 13x,young geeks,programming,amateur radio',0,0,1), (1737,'2015-03-31','Five Steps to Vim',1339,'Frank Bell discusses how he learned to stop worrying and love the vim','

                                                        \r\nThe vim editor is based on the venerable vi editor, which dates from the very\r\nearly days of Unix. Many persons find it intimidating for the absence of a\r\nmenu bar, a terse command set that is very much its own, and its \"modal\"\r\ndesign.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNevertheless, under its plain surface is a powerful and versatile tool. Frank\r\nBell describes his five steps to learning to use and love vim.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Use a .vimrc file.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Train yourself to change modes.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Learn and use a few basic commands. These should be enough to get you\r\ngoing: x, dd, dw (to delete text); cw (change a work); yy (\"yank\" or copy a\r\nline); p and P (to paste text); u (undo); w (\"write\") or save text; q (quit vim).
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Don\'t force yourself to move the cursor with the h-j-k-l keys if that doesn\'t feel natural.\r\nUse the arrow keys.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Use vim to write stuff.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,82,0,'CC-BY-SA','vim,text editor',0,0,1), (1742,'2015-04-07','How to Get Yourself On an Open Source Podcast - Presentation for Kansas Linux Fest, 22 March 2015',1786,'Re-recording of a presentation for KLF that went unrecorded','

                                                        \r\nHowdy folks, this is 5150 for Hacker Public Radio. What you are about to hear is a presentation titled \"How to Get Yourself on an Open Source Podcast\" that I delivered at Kansas Linux Fest on 22 March 2015. Since it was not recorded (I was told the SD card was full), and there has been interest expressed by my fellow podcasters, I thought it might be worth re-recording. I am afraid Mike Dupont is not satisfied with any of the video from KLF 2015, this may be the only talk from that event you get to hear. However, show notes are extensive, https://lanyrd.com/2015/klf15/schedule/ All I can tell you is, three out of the four audience members seemed to enjoy my presentation. I shall deliver the rest of this podcast as if you gentile listeners were my live audience.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA. Howdy folks, my name is Don Grier. I\'m an IT consultant and farmer from South Central Kansas. I am also a podcaster. You might recognize my voice from such podcasts as Hacker Public Radio, the Kernel Panic Oggcast, or Linux LUG Cast, where I use the handle, FiftyOneFifty.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. When fellow Hacker Public Radio host Mike Dupont told me KLF would be a reality, I struggled to find a topic that I knew well enough to give a talk about. It was almost in jest that I said I could talk about \"How to Get Yourself on an Open Source Podcast\". Actually, since that was as far as my proposal went, I was shocked and honored to find myself on the same roster with so many other speakers with impressive credentials and technical topics.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nII. This afternoon, I hope not only to chronicle my personal history with Linux and open source related podcasts, but to show you why I believe podcasting can be as an important part of giving back to the community as contributing code, or documentation, or cash. Linux podcasts bind the community by providing education, both as basic as Linux Reality or as specific as GNU World Order. Podcasts announce new innovations, and tell us of Free and Open Source software adoption and opposition in corporations and governments. Podcasts herald community events like this one, and provide a little humor at the end of a long day.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nB. Some of you may wonder why I\'m using old school technology to organize my notes at a high tech conference. At this point, 5150 holds up several stapled sheets of paper in large print. The plain and simple truth is that I can\'t read my phone or tablet with my glasses on; and I\'m already using bifocals. It just seems every time I get new glasses, the lower lenses work for about two weeks, then I have to take then off to see the phone. But this last time I figured I\'d outsmart my the system and just order a single focus lenses. I was still congratulating myself on my thriftiness when I put my new glasses on, sat down at the computer, and realized I couldn\'t read the keyboard.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nC. Before I talk about my history as a podcaster, I think I should tell you my history with Linux.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. My first experience with Linux was with a boxed set of Mandrake 7.2 around 2002. I always maintain at least a second running system in the house, in case the primary machine coughs up a hairball. I\'d always been a geek alternative OS\'s, and I wanted a tertiary machine on my network that wouldn\'t be affected by the propagation of Windows viruses. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\na. There wasn\'t much flash to Linux apps in those days, I recall I was not impressed by whichever browser shipped with Mandrake. I don\'t recall what I knew about installing additional applications from repositories, but in any case I was still on dialup. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nb. The Pentium I that I installed Mandrake on had both a modem and an Ethernet card. The installer asked which one I used to reach the Internet, and only set up one of the two devices. This annoyed me as I\'d planned to use the Linux box as a gateway to see if it would save a few CPU cycles on the P4 I used as a gaming machine back then. I really wouldn\'t have know where to go on the Internet for help, and I expect help would not be as forth coming 13 years ago.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nII. My next experience with Linux came around 2007. The school I consulted for had several Windows 98 machines not compatible with the software they wanted to run. Even though the machines were P4\'s, we determined the cost of XP plus memory upgrades could better be applied to new machines. As a result, I was able to bring several of the machines home. Over time, I boosted their memory with used sticks from eBay, and even the odd faster processor. As a noob, I installed Feisty Fawn on a system out in the machine shed, and spent a lot of that winter hacking on that box when I should have been overhauling tractors. Just as I was delving into NDIS wrappers, Gusty brought support for my Gigabyte wireless card, which combined with a double fork isolating power box, gave me reasonable certainty that the box out in the shed was safe from lightning storms. About six months later, I rescued up a refugee from a major meteorological event and set it up in my house running Mint. For the first time I didn\'t have to leave the house to get my Linux on.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nD. Just before I set up that first Linux box, we finally got broadband out to the farm, and I\'d discovered podcasts. I figured there must be Linux podcasts to go along the general tech and computing podcasts I followed, as well as a fondly remembered weekly SciFi revue show that started out as a Sunday afternoon show on a Wichita radio station, was canceled twice, and re-emerged as a semi weekly podcast, only to disappear forever a couple months after I started listening again, but not before I download all the episodes I missed.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. In my initial search for Linux related content, all I came up with were four drunk off their ass Scots discussing the minutia of Ruby on Rails. While I liked the format, I lacked the commitment to become a Ruby programmer so I could understand the show.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nII. A few days later I came across \"The Techie Geek\". Russ Wenner mixed tutorials with reviews of new applications and upcoming events. Better yet, he introduced me to a world of other Linux podcasts. Through \"The Techie Geek\", I learned of the irreverent banter of the \"Linux Outlaws\", the subdued studiousness of what was then called \"The Bad Apples\", the contained chaos of the \"Linux Cranks\", the classroom like atmosphere of the \"Linux Basement\" during Chad\'s Drupal tutorial period, tech hints and movie reviews delivered at the speed of 75 miles per hour by Dave Yates of \"Lotta Linux Links\", the auditory dissonance of \"The Linux Link Tech Show\", and the constant daily variety of \"Hacker Public Radio\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nE. In 2010, I made my first contribution to Hacker Public Radio. The great thing about HPR is that there is no vetting process, we only ask your audio be intelligible (not polished, not even good, we just have to be able to understand you) and that the topic be of interest to geeks. If you consider yourself a geek, any topic that interests you is welcome. There is no maximum or minimum runtime, just get the show uploaded on-time. While topics tend concern open source, this is not a requirement. I believe my second HPR concerned how to migrate Windows wireless connection profiles between systems. I\'d spent a few hours figuring it out one day for a customer and I thought I should consolidate what I learned in one place. HPR provides a podcasting platform at no cost to the podcaster. It serves as both a venue for broadcasters without the resources to host their own site or without the time to commit to a regular schedule. It can also serve as an incubator for hosts trying to find their own audience. It\'s never been easier to become a podcaster with HPR. I would start with an e-mail introduction (as a courtesy) to admin@HackerPublicRadio.org. Next, record you audio. When you have a file ready to upload, select an open slot in the calendar page and follow the instructions, be prepared to paste in your shownotes. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nF. I also credit HPR for getting me my first invite to participate in my first podcast with multiple hosts. Once a month, Hacker Public Radio records a Community News podcast, recorded on the first Saturday afternoon after the end of the previous month (exact times and server details are published in the newsletter). All HPR hosts, and indeed listeners are invited to participate, it is just asked that you have listened to most the the past month\'s shows so you can participate in the discussion. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. Like most multi-host audio podcast\'s, HPR uses Mumble to record shows, including the annual New Year\'s Eve show, which has dozens of participants. There is a Mumble tutorial on LinuxLUGCast.com to help you get started.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nII. I started to take part in Hacker Public Radio\'s Community News a few months after recording my first podcast. I did it because I wanted to take a greater part in HPR, not because I considered it an audition, but it is a good way to show other people that you can politely and intelligently participate in a group discussion. (Actually, I have a tendency to wander off into tangents and unintentionally dominate the topic, something I struggle with to this day).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIII. Another way to join in a round table discussion on HPR is to participate in the HPR Book Club. Once a month, we take an audio book that is freely available on the Internet and share our opinions. Recording schedules and the next book to be reviewed are available in the HPR newsletter.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nG. I believe sharing one or more Community News with Patrick Dailey (aka pokey) influenced him to invite me into the cast of Dev Random. The semi weekly Dev Random recorded of the Saturdays Kernel Panic didn\'t. While we sometimes accidentally talked about tech and open source, we always saved the most disturbing things we\'d seen on the Internet in the previous two weeks for discussion on the show, things that could not be discussed on other podcasts. Despite rumors to the contrary, dev random is not dead, only resting, and shall one day rise again to shock and disgust new generations of listeners.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nH. Sometimes you just have to be in the right place at the right time. I won\'t insult the Kernel Panic Oggcast by calling it a sister show to Dev Random, it just recorded on opposite Saturdays and had some of the same cast members in common. Anyway, I\'d been participating in the forum for a while, suggesting topics from FOSS stories I\'d come across in social media during the week. I was idling in #oggcastplanet on Freenode when Peter Cross asked for people from the channel to participate in the show on a day only a couple of the regular cast showed up. Dev Random used the same Mumble server, so I used my existing credentials to take Peter up on his offer, and for better or worse I\'ve been a KPO cast member ever since. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. While we are on the topic, having a presence on Freenode IRC chat is a great way to get your name or handle known in the podcasting world. Many podcasts have their own channel set up that listeners participate in during live streaming podcasts. Saying something helpful, (or more likely smart alecky) might get you mentioned on the show and make you familiar to the shows audience. I\'ve seen several individuals move from regular forum or chat participants to the hosts of their own show or contributors to HPR. From my own experience, after spending several weeks as silent participants in Podbrewers, listening to the stream and commenting in the chat, RedDwarf and myself were invited to bring our own beers and join the cast. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI. While many podcasts still have their own IRC channels, other than providing a conduit between the hosts, they are most active during live broadcasts. Between shows, many of the podcasters I listen to gravitate to hanging around in Freenode\'s #oggcastplanet , since podcasters typically have a chat client open during work and leisure hours. In fact, at KPO we use #oggcastplanet as our primary communications channel during live streaming. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nII. I still recall the day monsterb and Peter64 asked me about the origin of my handle, given it\'s similarity to their colleague, threethirty. I\'d heard both on podcasts I followed, and I felt like I was talking to rock stars.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIII. Now that I am a podcaster in my own right, with a presence in #oggcastplanet, I try to make a point to say hello when I see an unfamiliar handle in the channel. I expect the spambots consider me the nicest guy in IRC. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIV. As it happens, IRC was also responsible for my involvement in the Linux LUG Cast. LLC was conceived after the re-imaginging and final demise of Steve McLaughlin\'s project, \"Linux Basix\". Kevin Wisher, chattr, and honkeymaggo wanted to do a show along the same lines while incorporating the spirit of the unrecorded online LUG that always preceded it on the mumble server. I was brought along by the simple expediency of never having closed the #LinuxBasix channel in my chat client. We have been going for a little more than a year and have attracted a following, but frankly we have not found the listener participation we were looking for. This was meant to be a true online Linux Users Group for people couldn\'t travel to a LUG. So far, it\'s usually been the same four of five guys talking about what Linux projects succeed, what failed, and what we we\'re going to try next. I\'ve learned a lot in the past year, and I expect the listeners have as well, but we are always hoping to get more live participation. Rural areas like the midwest are our target audience. The details of the Mumble connection are posted at LinuxLUGCast.com, we always monitor the Freenode.org IRC channel #linuxlugcast while recording, and the Feedback link is posted on the website.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThank you for your time and attention this afternoon, especially considering the caliber of talks running in the other two channels. I can be contacted at FiftyOneFifty@LinuxBasement.com . Are there any questions?\r\n

                                                        ',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','#KLF15,KLF,Kansas Linux Fest',0,0,1), (1750,'2015-04-17','xclip, xdotool, xvkbd: 3 CLI Linux tools for RSI sufferers',1258,'3 command-line tools that save me hundreds of keystrokes a day.','

                                                        Basic commands

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Type the words \"foo bar\" with xvkbd:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -text 'foo bar' \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Types out the entire contents of the file \"foobar.txt\" with xvkbd:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -file "foobar.txt"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Send text to the clipboard:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n xclip -i\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Send clipboard contents to standard output:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n xclip -o\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Do virtual Ctrl+C key combination with xdotool:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n xdotool key Control+c\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Save this complicated command as an environment variable—then the variable \"$KEYPRESS\" expands to this command.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n export KEYPRESS="xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -text"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Examples

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        With virtual keystrokes and CLI access to the clipboard, you\'re limited only by your imagination and scripting ability. Here are some examples of how I use them, both for the manipulation of text and for navigation. The words in bold-face are the voice commands I use to launch the written commands.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Capitalize this. Copies selected text to the clipboard, pipes it through sed and back into the clipboard, then types fixed text back into my document:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nxdotool key Control+c && xclip -o \\
                                                        | sed \'s/\\(.*\\)/\\L\\1/\' \\
                                                        | sed -r \'s/\\<./\\U&/g\' \\
                                                        | xclip -i && $KEYPRESS "$(xclip -o)"
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Go to grades. This example takes advantage of Firefox \"quick search.\" I start with a single quote to match the linked text \"grades\" and press the Return key (\\r) to follow the link:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        $KEYPRESS "\'grades\\r"
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        First Inbox. From any location within Thunderbird I can run this command and it executes the keystrokes to take me to the first inbox and put focus on the first message:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        xdotool key Control+k && $KEYPRESS "\\[Tab]\\[Home]\\[Left]\\[Right]\\[Down]" && sleep .2 && xdotool key Tab\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        single ex staff. Type out an entire Lilypond template into an empty text editor window:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -file "/path/to/single_ex_staff.ly"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Paragraph Tags. Puts HTML paragraph tags around selected text:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash

                                                        KEYPRESS=\'xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -text\'

                                                        xdotool key Control+c

                                                        $KEYPRESS \'<p>\'
                                                        xdotool key Control+v
                                                        $KEYPRESS \'</p>\'
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Launching commands with keystrokes in Openbox

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I normally use blather voice commands to launch the scripts and keystroke commands, but I have a handful of frequently-used commands that I launch using keystroke combos configured in the Openbox config file (~/.config/openbox/rc.xml on my system). This block configures the super+n key combo to launch my examplelink.sh script.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n<keybind key="W-n">\r\n  <action name="Execute">\r\n	<startupnotify>\r\n	  <enabled>true</enabled>\r\n	  <name>special</name>\r\n	</startupnotify>\r\n	<command>examplelink.sh</command>\r\n  </action>\r\n</keybind>\r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Accessibility, Linux, scripting, command line',0,0,1), (1871,'2015-10-05','HPR Community News for September 2015',5519,'HPR Community News for September 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n Geddes.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1847Tue2015-09-01Client Side C- WTF Is Wrong With You?sigflup
                                                        1848Wed2015-09-02Introduction to w3m, a Command Line Web BrowserFrank Bell
                                                        1849Thu2015-09-03LinuxLugCast Episode-004 OuttakesKevin Wisher
                                                        1850Fri2015-09-0418 - ssh IntroductionAhuka
                                                        1851Mon2015-09-07HPR Community News for August 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1852Tue2015-09-08Operation WallaceaDave Morriss
                                                        1853Wed2015-09-09I <3 VistaAlpha32
                                                        1854Thu2015-09-10Installing Ubuntu on the Asus TP500LJon Kulp
                                                        1855Fri2015-09-1161 - LibreOffice Impress - Slide Layouts and AutoLayout Text BoxesAhuka
                                                        1856Mon2015-09-14ssh configklaatu
                                                        1857Tue2015-09-15Adventures In CoffeeCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                                        1858Wed2015-09-16Multimeter Mod's Part 2NYbill
                                                        1859Thu2015-09-17A Mouse in a Maze on the Raspberry PIGabriel Evenfire
                                                        1860Fri2015-09-18FiftyOneFifty interviews Chris Waid of Save WiFiFiftyOneFifty
                                                        1861Mon2015-09-21Cool Stuff pt. 4Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                                        1862Tue2015-09-22The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 1Geddes
                                                        1863Wed2015-09-23The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 2Geddes
                                                        1864Thu2015-09-24Turning an old printer into a network printerDave Morriss
                                                        1865Fri2015-09-2562 - LibreOffice Impress - Working With Text BoxesAhuka
                                                        1866Mon2015-09-28An awkward talk with two young computer usersQuvmoh
                                                        1867Tue2015-09-29The Lafayette Public Library Maker SpaceJon Kulp
                                                        1868Wed2015-09-30Glasgow Podcrawl reviewDave Morriss
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-01 07:56:04 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-09-05T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/911
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-06 17:41:07 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Test message. There seems to be a problem with the HPR list
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/914
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Charles Thayer <catintp@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-08 13:58:29 -0700
                                                          \n Subject: Markdown for HPR Show Notes
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/917
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-09 10:53:50 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Menus are not accessible
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/918
                                                          \n Messages: 7

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-09 10:56:42 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Mail list test with links - PLEASE IGNORE
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/919
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-12 17:08:25 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Submmiting markdown, WYSIWYG editors?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/932
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-14 09:55:26 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Getting in new contributors
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/934
                                                          \n Messages: 22

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: lostnbronx <lostnbronx@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-15 16:29:58 -0700
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 84, Issue 16
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/949
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-16 03:10:51 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: sounding stupid
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/952
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        18. \n
                                                        19. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-16 18:04:01 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 84, Issue 18
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/955
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        20. \n
                                                        21. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-18 01:04:19 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: The HPR Zoom H1
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/956
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        22. \n
                                                        23. From: "Thaj A. Sara" <thajasara@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-18 18:12:11 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 84, Issue 20
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/957
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        24. \n
                                                        25. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-22 21:53:09 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Re: [SPAM] HPR Menus are not accessible
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/958
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        26. \n
                                                        27. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-24 13:46:16 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Linux News Log coming to an end after 10 years
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/959
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        28. \n
                                                        29. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-28 11:15:19 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-10-03T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/965
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        30. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 56
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 43 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1739\n(2015-04-02) \"Theater of the Imagination: Part 07\"\nby lostnbronx.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFithty on 2015-09-08:\n\"Thanks for conpairing Zoom and Tascam\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1750\n(2015-04-17) \"xclip, xdotool, xvkbd: 3 CLI Linux tools for RSI sufferers\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 7:\nRob Blaine on 2015-09-27:\n\"Blather works great!\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nJon Kulp on 2015-09-27:\n\"Blather\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nRob Blaine on 2015-09-28:\n\"Blather and RSI\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1831\n(2015-08-10) \"Are speed listening and slow background music compatible?\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 5:\nfolky on 2015-09-07:\n\"It depends\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1834\n(2015-08-13) \"Password Cards\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-09-03:\n\"Very useful\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1837\n(2015-08-18) \"Put an SSD in your Linux Box\"\nby 2BFrank.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\n2BFrank on 2015-09-15:\n\"Good points\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1841\n(2015-08-24) \"My way into Linux\"\nby folky.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nfolky on 2015-09-02:\n\"Thank you\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1846\n(2015-08-31) \"UNI-T UT61E Review\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-01:\n\"Uni-T Meters\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2015-09-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-02:\n\"Unit-T meters and serial ports\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nNYbill on 2015-09-02:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-03:\n\"PL2303 USB-toRS232 and UT6?\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\ndavidWHITMAN on 2015-09-07:\n\"Damn You!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1847\n(2015-09-01) \"Client Side C- WTF Is Wrong With You?\"\nby sigflup.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2015-09-17:\n\"I always look forward to your shows...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1848\n(2015-09-02) \"Introduction to w3m, a Command Line Web Browser\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ntom_len on 2015-10-01:\n\"automatize login from command line\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1850\n(2015-09-04) \"18 - ssh Introduction\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-09-10:\n\"portable version of OpenSSH\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2015-09-17:\n\"This could be a very fruitful series.\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-09-20:\n\"Thank you\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1851\n(2015-09-07) \"HPR Community News for August 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-07:\n\"Markdown show notes\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-09-08:\n\"Markdown etc.\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2015-09-08:\n\"Electronics videos. \"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nNYbill on 2015-09-09:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1853\n(2015-09-09) \"I <3 Vista\"\nby Alpha32.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nAaronb483 on 2015-09-11:\n\"great name for podcast\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1856\n(2015-09-14) \"ssh config\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2015-09-14:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nb-yeezi on 2015-09-15:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2015-09-17:\n\"Identity file\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1857\n(2015-09-15) \"Adventures In Coffee\"\nby Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^).\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2015-09-17:\n\"A nice episode even for non-coffee people\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-09-18:\n\"I enjoyed this a lot\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMichael on 2015-09-24:\n\"You got my european mind.\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1858\n(2015-09-16) \"Multimeter Mod's Part 2\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-09-16:\n\"Thank you! \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-16:\n\"Hacking at it's best\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2015-09-16:\n\"Thanks, Jon. \"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nNYbill on 2015-09-16:\n\"Ha, thanks Mike. \"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nmirwi on 2015-09-24:\n\"Splitting hair...\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nNYbill on 2015-09-25:\n\"Transitors\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-26:\n\"Transistors\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1859\n(2015-09-17) \"A Mouse in a Maze on the Raspberry PI\"\nby Gabriel Evenfire.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-09-17:\n\"Welcome return\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1862\n(2015-09-22) \"The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 1\"\nby Geddes.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-09-28:\n\"I just enabled a load of these\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1863\n(2015-09-23) \"The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 2\"\nby Geddes.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-09-23:\n\"Probably still will not switch to KDE, but... \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1864\n(2015-09-24) \"Turning an old printer into a network printer\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-09-24:\n\"Whoa remote scanning! \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-09-27:\n\"Remote scanning, etc\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1866\n(2015-09-28) \"An awkward talk with two young computer users\"\nby Quvmoh.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2015-09-28:\"[no title]\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1891,'2015-11-02','HPR Community News for October 2015',2667,'HPR Community News for October 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n clacke, \n Moral Volcano, \n JustMe, \n thelovebug.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1869Thu2015-10-01Irssi ConnectbotNYbill
                                                        1870Fri2015-10-0219 - Home SSH ServerAhuka
                                                        1871Mon2015-10-05HPR Community News for September 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1872Tue2015-10-06Sim City BuildIt September 2015swift110
                                                        1873Wed2015-10-07TiT Radio 21 - I Thought I Had Better LinksFiftyOneFifty
                                                        1874Thu2015-10-08Interview with DroopsKen Fallon
                                                        1875Fri2015-10-0963 - LibreOffice Impress - Formatting TextAhuka
                                                        1876Mon2015-10-12MicrobeLog, or: On Shaving Yaks and Doing Thingsclacke
                                                        1877Tue2015-10-13Recording HPR on the fly on your Android phoneclacke
                                                        1878Wed2015-10-14What\'s In My Bagb-yeezi
                                                        1879Thu2015-10-15Hacking a Belt to Make it FitJon Kulp
                                                        1880Fri2015-10-16Arduino Bluetooth HOWTOklaatu
                                                        1881Mon2015-10-19My road to Linuxclacke
                                                        1882Tue2015-10-20How I Compute Away From My ComputerThaj Sara
                                                        1883Wed2015-10-21Don\'t Get Locked InKnightwise
                                                        1884Thu2015-10-22Some more Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        1885Fri2015-10-2364 - LibreOffice Impress - MultimediaAhuka
                                                        1886Mon2015-10-26Moral Volcano\'s Linux Tips & Tricks podcast for Hacker Public RadioMoral Volcano
                                                        1887Tue2015-10-27Coffee Making BasicsJustMe
                                                        1888Wed2015-10-28Diceware PassphraseJohn Duarte
                                                        1889Thu2015-10-29experiencing the meegopad T-02 part oneA Shadowy Figure
                                                        1890Fri2015-10-30A short walk with my sonthelovebug
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-09-28 11:15:19 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-10-03T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/965
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-10-26 08:56:11 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-10-31T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/973
                                                          \n Messages: 4
                                                        4. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 10
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 32 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1728\n(2015-03-18) \"Requested Topic: Favourite Browser Extensions\"\nby Fin.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFin on 2015-10-30:\n\"Ad-Block Edge Successor\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1828\n(2015-08-05) \"Multimeter Mod\'s Part 1\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNeandergeek on 2015-10-17:\n\"Great imprompto series\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1848\n(2015-09-02) \"Introduction to w3m, a Command Line Web Browser\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ntom_len on 2015-10-01:\n\"automatize login from command line\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2015-10-27:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1859\n(2015-09-17) \"A Mouse in a Maze on the Raspberry PI\"\nby Gabriel Evenfire.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nEric on 2015-10-07:\n\"A better maze\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2015-10-13:\n\"Maze generation\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1862\n(2015-09-22) \"The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 1\"\nby Geddes.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGeddes on 2015-10-16:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1863\n(2015-09-23) \"The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 2\"\nby Geddes.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGeddes on 2015-10-16:\n\"Thanks for the feedback\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1864\n(2015-09-24) \"Turning an old printer into a network printer\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nturtle on 2015-10-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-06:\n\"DEC-LN03\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nBob Evans on 2015-10-07:\n\"connecting to legacy printers\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-07:\n\"Re: connecting to legacy printers\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1866\n(2015-09-28) \"An awkward talk with two young computer users\"\nby Quvmoh.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\ncombiner on 2015-10-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1867\n(2015-09-29) \"The Lafayette Public Library Maker Space\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\namunizp on 2015-10-07:\n\"3D print\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1870\n(2015-10-02) \"19 - Home SSH Server\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nkdmurray on 2015-10-06:\n\"SSH Passwords\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1874\n(2015-10-08) \"Interview with Droops\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2015-09-27:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJ. on 2015-10-08:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-13:\n\"I loved this interview\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1880\n(2015-10-16) \"Arduino Bluetooth HOWTO\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-10-16:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1881\n(2015-10-19) \"My road to Linux\"\nby clacke.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFin on 2015-10-19:\n\"Music fail\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-23:\n\"Great episode\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2015-10-26:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1884\n(2015-10-22) \"Some more Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2015-10-27:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-27:\n\"Thanks Frank, glad you enjoyed it\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2015-10-28:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-10-29:\n\"Regular expressions\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1889\n(2015-10-29) \"experiencing the meegopad T-02 part one\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGNULinuxRTM on 2015-10-29:\n\"Execellent Episode.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2015-10-30:\n\"Tremendous! \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFin on 2015-10-30:\n\"Fantastic!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-10-31:\n\"Like your work as well GNULinuxRTM\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1890\n(2015-10-30) \"A short walk with my son\"\nby thelovebug.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-10-30:\n\"Up with the $2 lapel mic! \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-10-31:\n\"Audio Quality\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1916,'2015-12-07','HPR Community News for November 2015',6854,'HPR Community News for November 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Eric Duhamel, \n OnlyHalfTheTime.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1891Mon2015-11-02HPR Community News for October 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1892Tue2015-11-03my chicken coopJezra
                                                        1893Wed2015-11-04My LastPass AlternativeToeJet
                                                        1894Thu2015-11-05Interview with Davide Zilli and Dr Marianne Sinka of the HumBug ProjectKen Fallon
                                                        1895Fri2015-11-0665 - LibreOffice Impress - OLE Objects, Spreadsheets, and ChartsAhuka
                                                        1896Mon2015-11-09User Local SoftwareEric Duhamel
                                                        1897Tue2015-11-10Installing Windows 7 Ultimateswift110
                                                        1898Wed2015-11-11Free my music!Alpha32
                                                        1899Thu2015-11-12MyTinyTodo ListJon Kulp
                                                        1900Fri2015-11-1320 - SSH BasicsAhuka
                                                        1901Mon2015-11-16Instaling Linux programs without internetswift110
                                                        1902Tue2015-11-17My Linux Tool BoxFin
                                                        1903Wed2015-11-18Some further Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        1904Thu2015-11-19Windows Command Line Tips and TricksOnlyHalfTheTime
                                                        1905Fri2015-11-2066 - LibreOffice Impress - Built-In ChartsAhuka
                                                        1906Mon2015-11-23Apt Spelunking 2: tvtime, phatch, and xstarfishWindigo
                                                        1907Tue2015-11-24Charlie Reisinger and Penn Manorklaatu
                                                        1908Wed2015-11-25Arduino Pumpkindroops
                                                        1909Thu2015-11-26Creating an Open, Embedded-Media Music TextbookJon Kulp
                                                        1910Fri2015-11-27QMMP--The Qt-based MultiMedia PlayerFrank Bell
                                                        1911Mon2015-11-30Thoughts on GUI v CLI and the best distroKen Fallon
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-13 11:23:49 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: New Podcast: international open magazine
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/978
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-15 13:09:44 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: UK Table Kit
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/979
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-15 19:38:03 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: Re: 1. UK Table Kit (Dave Morriss)
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/980
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Patrick Dailey <pdailey03@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-16 08:27:32 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 86, Issue 4
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/985
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Lord Drachenblut <lord.drachenblut@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-18 07:28:42 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Zoom H1
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/986
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-21 13:11:26 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Wed 2015-12-02: hpr1913
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/987
                                                          \n Messages: 4

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Clinton Roy <clinton.roy@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-22 16:57:20 +1000
                                                          \n Subject: first update
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/988
                                                          \n Messages: 4

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: Kevin O'Brien <zwilnik@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-22 13:10:28 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Short break
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/992
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-28 07:00:11 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: Metadata bloat
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/995
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        18. \n
                                                        19. From: Mike Dupont <jamesmikedupont@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-28 10:40:56 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: 412 Precondition Failed
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/998
                                                          \n Messages: 8

                                                        20. \n
                                                        21. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-28 15:20:25 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: A Question about Shownotes
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1007
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        22. \n
                                                        23. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-29 15:21:14 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Wed 2015-12-02: hpr1913 - UPDATE TO SITE
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1012
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        24. \n
                                                        25. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-30 11:44:52 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: New Year Show ?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1014
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        26. \n
                                                        27. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-30 12:30:25 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2015-12-05T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1016
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        28. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 39
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 37 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1649\n(2014-11-27) \"Raspberry Pi Accessibility Breakthrough\"\nby Mike Ray.\n
                                                          • Comment 6:\nSteven on 2015-11-28:\n\"Question about your mods\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1828\n(2015-08-05) \"Multimeter Mod\'s Part 1\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nNYbill on 2015-11-02:\n\"USB cab;e prices went up. \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1887\n(2015-10-27) \"Coffee Making Basics\"\nby JustMe.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBob Jonkman on 2015-11-08:\n\"Aerating boiling water\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1889\n(2015-10-29) \"experiencing the meegopad T-02 part one\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 5:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-11-02:\n\"Wow, Just Wow..\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nAnon on 2015-11-03:\n\"Ocean Club...\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nCPrompt^ on 2015-11-04:\n\"Fantastic!\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nFrank on 2015-11-04:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nDavid Whitman on 2015-11-04:\n\"Nice\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nDennis Blanchard on 2015-11-04:\n\"Good job on mysterious technology.\"
                                                          • Comment 11:\n(Mad Dog?) Dave Morriss on 2015-11-05:\n\"Brilliant!\"
                                                          • Comment 12:\nREL on 2015-11-08:\n\"Mr\"
                                                          • Comment 13:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-11-09:\n\"Production has began on Pt.2\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1890\n(2015-10-30) \"A short walk with my son\"\nby thelovebug.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2015-11-03:\n\"Better is better\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1892\n(2015-11-03) \"my chicken coop\"\nby Jezra.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-11-03:\n\"Some Fowl Commentary\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2015-11-03:\n\"Kernel Sanders\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\njezra on 2015-11-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1894\n(2015-11-05) \"Interview with Davide Zilli and Dr Marianne Sinka of the HumBug Project\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve Bickle on 2015-11-15:\n\"Exellent episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-11-16:\n\"Great interview, great project\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1896\n(2015-11-09) \"User Local Software\"\nby Eric Duhamel.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nEric Duhamel on 2015-11-25:\n\"Other ideas\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1897\n(2015-11-10) \"Installing Windows 7 Ultimate\"\nby swift110.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGuy Watkins on 2015-11-10:\n\"Update the firmware\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nm l hunt on 2015-11-10:\n\"Enjoyed your show.\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1898\n(2015-11-11) \"Free my music!\"\nby Alpha32.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-11-10:\n\"By-Tor and the Snow Dog Approve\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1902\n(2015-11-17) \"My Linux Tool Box\"\nby Fin.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-11-23:\n\"Nice list\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nzloster on 2015-11-28:\n\"Nice list\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1903\n(2015-11-18) \"Some further Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2015-11-18:\n\"Another gem\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2015-11-23:\n\"Thanks Ken\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1904\n(2015-11-19) \"Windows Command Line Tips and Tricks\"\nby OnlyHalfTheTime.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2015-11-19:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2015-11-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1906\n(2015-11-23) \"Apt Spelunking 2: tvtime, phatch, and xstarfish\"\nby Windigo.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-11-28:\n\"Some interesting packages\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1907\n(2015-11-24) \"Charlie Reisinger and Penn Manor\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJonathan Kulp on 2015-11-25:\n\"Excellent \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1908\n(2015-11-25) \"Arduino Pumpkin\"\nby droops.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2015-11-28:\n\"Loved this!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1909\n(2015-11-26) \"Creating an Open, Embedded-Media Music Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2015-11-26:\n\"Calibre cli\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2015-11-26:\n\"Valuing Musicians\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nb-yeezi on 2015-11-26:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1910\n(2015-11-27) \"QMMP--The Qt-based MultiMedia Player\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMatt on 2015-11-27:\n\"I didn't know this project existed.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2015-11-28:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nAudiobooks lover on 2015-11-29:\"[no title]\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1936,'2016-01-04','HPR Community News for December 2015',5334,'HPR Community News for December 2015','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Clinton Roy, \n Archer72, \n The Linux Experiment, \n Cov.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1912Tue2015-12-01OpenNMS at All Things Open Conferenceklaatu
                                                        1913Wed2015-12-02The Linux ExperimentThe Linux Experiment
                                                        1914Thu2015-12-03Waking upJezra
                                                        1915Fri2015-12-0467 - LibreOffice Impress - TablesAhuka
                                                        1916Mon2015-12-07HPR Community News for November 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1917Tue2015-12-08OpenSource.comklaatu
                                                        1918Wed2015-12-09DerbyCon Interview with Dave KennedyXoke
                                                        1919Thu2015-12-10DerbyCon Interview with Paul KoblitzXoke
                                                        1920Fri2015-12-1121 - SSH Authentication - KeysAhuka
                                                        1921Mon2015-12-14How to run a conferenceClinton Roy
                                                        1922Tue2015-12-15The case to backup Google email.Archer72
                                                        1923Wed2015-12-16 Klaatu and System76klaatu
                                                        1924Thu2015-12-17Port ForwardingFiftyOneFifty
                                                        1925Fri2015-12-18Kdenlive Part 1: Introduction to KdenliveGeddes
                                                        1926Mon2015-12-21National Measurements InstitutesAmunizp
                                                        1927Tue2015-12-22Ansible Interviewklaatu
                                                        1928Wed2015-12-23Cov's JamsCov
                                                        1929Thu2015-12-24I Found a FlashlightJon Kulp
                                                        1930Fri2015-12-25A systemd primerClinton Roy
                                                        1931Mon2015-12-28Atomic force microscopyAmunizp
                                                        1932Tue2015-12-29Klaatu interviews Grafanaklaatu
                                                        1933Wed2015-12-30HPR AudioBookClub 11 Street CandlesHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        1934Thu2015-12-31Experiencing the Meegopad T-02 Part twoA Shadowy Figure
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-28 15:20:25 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: A Question about Shownotes
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1007
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-11-30 11:44:52 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: New Year Show ?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1014
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-02 21:50:45 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: FTP Password change
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1022
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-02 13:04:40 -0800
                                                          \n Subject: Gitlab Upgrade tomorrow
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1023
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-09 00:11:12 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Community News (Completely Off-Topic)
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1024
                                                          \n Messages: 8

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-14 10:47:25 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: SCALE 14x - PSA
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1032
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-15 22:27:31 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: Feedback needed now, Go/NoGo on New Years show
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1034
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: Andrew Neher <amneher007@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-16 14:10:31 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 87, Issue 9
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1036
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-18 07:42:09 -0800
                                                          \n Subject: Moving the site to New Server/IP today
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1037
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        18. \n
                                                        19. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-18 10:59:21 -0800
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Site move completed
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1038
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        20. \n
                                                        21. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-22 18:25:17 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: How to check if the intro and outro are added
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1039
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        22. \n
                                                        23. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-23 20:26:05 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: New Year's Show update
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1041
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        24. \n
                                                        25. From: honkey Magoo <honkeymagoo01@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-24 21:02:23 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: New Year's Show update
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1046
                                                          \n Messages: 19

                                                        26. \n
                                                        27. From: "Thaj A. Sara" <thajasara@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-25 10:35:15 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 87, Issue 15
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1051
                                                          \n Messages: 4

                                                        28. \n
                                                        29. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-28 16:43:50 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Changes to the upload process
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1063
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        30. \n
                                                        31. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-29 11:33:28 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: There may be issues with the FTP server
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1067
                                                          \n Messages: 22

                                                        32. \n
                                                        33. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-29 20:13:18 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-01-02T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1082
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        34. \n
                                                        35. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2015-12-30 09:09:29 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Requested Topic: IRC Etiquette
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1086
                                                          \n Messages: 2
                                                        36. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 84
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 26 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1649\n(2014-11-27) \"Raspberry Pi Accessibility Breakthrough\"\nby Mike Ray.\n
                                                          • Comment 7:\nMike Ray on 2015-12-01:\n\"Quiet boot\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1870\n(2015-10-02) \"19 - Home SSH Server\"\nby Ahuka.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\n0xf10e on 2015-12-10:\n\"yepp, no cleartext\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1878\n(2015-10-14) \"What\'s In My Bag\"\nby b-yeezi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nErik on 2015-12-28:\n\"Commands\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1894\n(2015-11-05) \"Interview with Davide Zilli and Dr Marianne Sinka of the HumBug Project\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nClinton Roy on 2015-12-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1898\n(2015-11-11) \"Free my music!\"\nby Alpha32.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2015-12-20:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1906\n(2015-11-23) \"Apt Spelunking 2: tvtime, phatch, and xstarfish\"\nby Windigo.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2015-12-01:\n\"Re: Phatch\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2015-12-02:\n\"Re: Phatch\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1907\n(2015-11-24) \"Charlie Reisinger and Penn Manor\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nCharles in NJ on 2015-12-23:\n\"Penn Manor\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1909\n(2015-11-26) \"Creating an Open, Embedded-Media Music Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2015-12-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1910\n(2015-11-27) \"QMMP--The Qt-based MultiMedia Player\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2015-12-02:\n\"Nostalgia\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nFrank on 2015-12-02:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1914\n(2015-12-03) \"Waking up\"\nby Jezra.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2015-12-04:\n\"One-upped\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1916\n(2015-12-07) \"HPR Community News for November 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCharles in NJ on 2015-12-21:\n\"Experts Exchange\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1917\n(2015-12-08) \"OpenSource.com\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2015-12-08:\n\"A possible outlet\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1918\n(2015-12-09) \"DerbyCon Interview with Dave Kennedy\"\nby Xoke.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2015-12-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1924\n(2015-12-17) \"Port Forwarding\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2015-12-16:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1928\n(2015-12-23) \"Cov's Jams\"\nby Cov.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-12-24:\n\"Nice mix Cov\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ntcuc on 2015-12-31:\n\"nice, i cant å wait for more.\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDavid L. Willson on 2015-12-31:\n\"Yes\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1929\n(2015-12-24) \"I Found a Flashlight\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-12-24:\n\"Thank you for this timely episode\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1930\n(2015-12-25) \"A systemd primer\"\nby Clinton Roy.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2015-12-29:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1931\n(2015-12-28) \"Atomic force microscopy\"\nby Amunizp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMysterio2 on 2015-12-27:\n\"Great show.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-12-28:\n\"Good job\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1932\n(2015-12-29) \"Klaatu interviews Grafana\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-12-30:\n\"Good interview\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1933\n(2015-12-30) \"HPR AudioBookClub 11 Street Candles\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nlostnbronx on 2015-12-10:\n\"Wow, Thanks So Much!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1934\n(2015-12-31) \"Experiencing the Meegopad T-02 Part two\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2015-12-15:\n\"Updated Show Notes\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (3963,'2023-10-11','Storytelling Games',1158,'Three storytelling-based games, and some thoughts on role-playing games','

                                                        The games mentioned were:

                                                        \n

                                                        Rory\'s\nStory Cubes
                                                        \nDark\nCults
                                                        \nOnce\nUpon a Time

                                                        \n

                                                        Examples\nof ending cards in the \"Dark Tales\" expansion of Once Upon a\nTime

                                                        \n

                                                        Klaatu\'s\nMastodon post about Dark Cults

                                                        \n',399,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','storytelling',0,0,1), (1751,'2015-04-20','How I got into Linux',1114,'How I got into linux, LFS and where I use Linux now.','

                                                        \r\nMy third show, its my How I got into Linux show, Crunchbang for the win, thank you Corenominal. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI actually wrote some of this up before I recorded my first show. I wasn\'t happy that I did a good enough job originally. However I decided to make use of a rainy day and get it updated and recorded. I cut out a chunk of rambling about floppy drive cleaners, and stuck some more up to date info on the end.\r\n

                                                        ',240,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Crunchbang',0,0,1), (1752,'2015-04-21','Penguicon 2015 Promo',1838,'Penguicon 2015 happens on April 24-26, 2015 in Southfield, Michigan','

                                                        \r\nPenguicon 2015 is a combined technology and sicence fiction convention in Southfield, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, and will present over 350 hours of programming over the entire weekend. Of this, around 100 hours are open source, tech-related. In this episode I try to cover the coming attractions of the weekend and maybe entice some people to come join us. It will be a great weekend.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon,Open Source,Science Fiction,Convention',0,0,1), (1753,'2015-04-22','Introducing a 5 year old to Sugar on Toast',901,'This is a podcast in Spanglish (some spanish, some english) with a 5 year old and a 1 year old.','

                                                        \r\nThis was me introducing my 5 year old to her new laptop with Sugar on Toast. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA family member had no use for an old 7 year old netbook so I installed the trisquel version of Sugar, the one laptop per child operating system.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a response to this episode: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1726 I find it ticks all the boxes. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRecorded with a phone and spoken mainly in a different language. I did conversion to FLAC from a mono mp3 probably the same if I just uploaded the MP3 directly. No editing was done. \r\n

                                                        ',301,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','5 year old',0,0,1), (1754,'2015-04-23','D7? Why Seven?',832,'I explain what 7th chords are and when to use them.','

                                                        In this episode I respond to one of the community-requested topics (\"Music Theory\") and try to explain what seventh chords are and why they are used. Below are some of the terms that I use in the course of the discussion.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Interval: The distance between two pitches (sounded either consecutively or simultaneously)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Consonance: Relatively stable sound between two or more pitches
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dissonance: Relatively unstable sound between two or more pitches. Dissonance often needs a "resolution" to consonance
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Chord: three or more notes sounded together
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Chord progression: a succession of chords
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Triad: a chord with 3 pitches, the adjacent pitches separated by the interval of the 3rd.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Seventh chord: a chord with 4 pitches, the adjacent pitches separated by the interval of the 3rd.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tonality: harmonic system that governs the use of major and minor keys
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tonic: the central tone of a piece of music
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Mode: major or minor [e.g. Symphony no. 5 in C minor]
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Modulation: the process of changing keys within a piece of music
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Scale: Ascending or descending series of notes that define a key or tonality, with a specific arrangements of half-steps and whole-steps. Major and Minor scales are most common in Western music
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Free public-domain music reference book: Music Notation and Terminology by Karl Wilson Gehrkens: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19499 (see ch. 18)

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Free Online Music Dictionary: https://dictionary.onmusic.org/

                                                        ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','chords, music theory, music, harmony',0,0,1), (1756,'2015-04-27','Ranger File Manager',1340,'Introduction to the ranger command line file manager','

                                                        From Man Page:

                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        DESCRIPTION
                                                        ranger is a console file manager with VI key bindings. It provides a minimalistic and nice curses interface with a view on the directory hierarchy. The secondary task of ranger is to figure out which program you want to use to open your files with.

                                                        \n

                                                        This manual mainly contains information on the usage of ranger. Refer to the README for install instructions and to doc/HACKING for development specific information. For configuration, see the files in ranger/config. They are usually installed to /etc/ranger/config and can be obtained with ranger\'s --copy-config option.

                                                        \n

                                                        Inside ranger, you can press 1? for a list of key bindings, 2? for a list of commands and 3? for a list of settings.

                                                        \n
                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Project page: https://ranger.nongnu.org/. Has pretty good documentation
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Available on Debian, Arch, Probably others, git and mailing list available as well.
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        \"screenshot\"

                                                        \n

                                                        Features

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • 3-pane view:
                                                            \n
                                                          • Previous -> current -> next
                                                          • \n
                                                          • When current is a file, uses file magic and other programs to preview the file
                                                          • \n
                                                          • optional dependencies for previews:
                                                              \n
                                                            • img2txt from caca-utils for ASCII-art
                                                            • \n
                                                            • highlight for syntax highlights
                                                            • \n
                                                            • atool for archives
                                                            • \n
                                                            • lynx/w3m/elinks for html
                                                            • \n
                                                            • pdftotext for pdfs
                                                            • \n
                                                            • transmission-show for bittorrent information
                                                            • \n
                                                            • mediainfo or exiftool for mediafile info
                                                            • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \n
                                                          • Color coded, with three themes to choose from
                                                          • \n
                                                          • One more over to the right opens the file from other programs
                                                          • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Configuration

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • located in ~/.config/ranger directory
                                                        • \n
                                                        • rc.conf = keybindings and settings
                                                        • \n
                                                        • commands.py = command-mode items
                                                        • \n
                                                        • rifle.conf = file launcher options, which let you make custom file opener commands
                                                        • \n
                                                        • scope.sh = custom file preview scripts, like mdview
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Navigation

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • up, down, left, right, or h,j,k,l
                                                        • \n
                                                        • gg top G Bottom
                                                        • \n
                                                        • E edit
                                                        • \n
                                                        • pageup/down
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Command commands

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • spacebar to mark or :mark for pattern
                                                        • \n
                                                        • dd, yy, pp
                                                        • \n
                                                        • :touch, :mkdir, :grep
                                                        • \n
                                                        • del
                                                        • \n
                                                        • rename and bulkrename (change from ranger.container.file import File to .fsobject.)
                                                        • \n
                                                        • zh - toggle hidden
                                                        • \n
                                                        • gn - new tab, gt or gT to navigate tabs
                                                        • \n
                                                        • / search vile
                                                        • \n
                                                        • V visual mode
                                                        • \n
                                                        • :open_with
                                                        • \n
                                                        • 1? = list key bindings
                                                        • \n
                                                        • 2? list commands
                                                        • \n
                                                        • 3? list settings
                                                        • \n
                                                        • ? main help
                                                        • \n
                                                        ',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ranger,file manager,console',0,0,1), (1760,'2015-05-01','pdftk: the PDF Toolkit',1254,'Intro to the command-line pdf toolkit','

                                                        Hacking Apart and Re-Assembling PDFs

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Extract pages 3–5 from file foobar.pdf:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk foobar.pdf cat 3-5 output excerpt.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Same thing but also grab the cover page:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk foobar.pdf cat 1 3-5 output excerpt.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Combine multiple PDFs:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk file1.pdf file2.pdf file3.pdf cat output combined.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Reassemble a 50-page document with all of the pages in reverse order (I once actually did this for my wife and she was very grateful—she had scanned an article at the library and it ended up with all of the pages in the wrong order from last to first. This command solved her problem in about one second.):

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk wrongorder.pdf cat 50-1 output rightorder.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Check the pdftk man page for all kinds of other manipulations you can do, including \"bursting\" a PDF into its component pages, rotating pages in any direction, applying password protection, etc.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Embedding “Bookmarks” as a Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can also use pdftk to embed a table of contents in a flat PDF file. This is incredibly useful, as it can make large, unwieldy files very easy to navigate. All you have to do is add some bookmark data in a fairly straightforward format as shown below. As a starting point you should that dump the current metadata content of the file with this command:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk foobar.pdf dump_data_utf8\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Save the contents of this data dump in a text file and then add bookmark information just below the NumberOfPages value. Here is an excerpt from the huge anthology of public-domain scores I assembled for my music history class:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nInfoBegin\r\nInfoKey: ModDate\r\nInfoValue: D:20150106100000-06\'00\'\r\nInfoBegin\r\nInfoKey: CreationDate\r\nInfoValue: D:20150106100000-06\'00\'\r\nInfoBegin\r\nInfoKey: Creator\r\nInfoValue: pdftk 2.02 - www.pdftk.com\r\nInfoBegin\r\nInfoKey: Producer\r\nInfoValue: itext-paulo-155 (itextpdf.sf.net-lowagie.com)\r\nPdfID0: ece858bf9affbcad3b575cf3891a187f\r\nPdfID1: 23f89459e103dd43c6e7bc92028245c0\r\nNumberOfPages: 765\r\nBookmarkBegin\r\nBookmarkTitle: Beethoven: Symphony no. 5 in C minor Op. 67\r\nBookmarkLevel: 1\r\nBookmarkPageNumber: 205\r\nBookmarkBegin\r\nBookmarkTitle: Beethoven 5: I. Allegro con brio\r\nBookmarkLevel: 2\r\nBookmarkPageNumber: 205\r\nBookmarkBegin\r\nBookmarkTitle: Beethoven 5: II. Andante con moto\r\nBookmarkLevel: 2\r\nBookmarkPageNumber: 235\r\nBookmarkBegin\r\nBookmarkTitle: Beethoven 5: III. Allegro\r\nBookmarkLevel: 2\r\nBookmarkPageNumber: 256\r\nBookmarkBegin\r\nBookmarkTitle: Beethoven 5: IV. Allegro\r\nBookmarkLevel: 2\r\nBookmarkPageNumber: 275\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And here is the command to update the PDF with the table of contents embedded. This tells it to take the input file foobar.pdf and update its metadata using the file foobar.info (with utf8 encoding) and output the results as foobar_with_toc.pdf.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk foobar.pdf update_info_utf8 foobar.info output foobar_with_toc.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Update

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I made a screencast as a follow-up, showing the process of embedding bookmarks to make a table of contents:\r\nhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5dv_02v0zzc

                                                        \r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','pdftk,pdf',0,0,1), (1770,'2015-05-15','The OpenDyslexic Font',1087,'Introduction to the OpenDyslexic font','

                                                        In this episode I talk about how you can take advantage of the OpenDyslexic font as a user, and also how as a content provider you can use it to help your readers. Incidentally, we also talked about this for a while during episode 1418, one of the 2013 New-Year shows.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Accessibility, Fonts, Typesetting, Web design, Dyslexia',0,0,1), (1779,'2015-05-28','Cowsay and Figlet',944,'Cowsay and Figlet: Two fun ASCII text commands','

                                                        Basic commands

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Make default cow speak:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n cowsay "Hacker Public Radio" \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Result:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n _____________________\r\n< Hacker Public Radio >\r\n ---------------------\r\n        \\   ^__^\r\n         \\  (oo)\\_______\r\n            (__)\\       )\\/\\\r\n                ||----w |\r\n                ||     ||\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Modes

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • -b Borg mode;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -d dead;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -g greedy mode;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -p causes a state of paranoia to come over the cow;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -s makes the cow appear thoroughly stoned;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -t yields a tired cow;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -w is somewhat the opposite of -t, and initiates wired mode;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • -y brings on the cow\'s youthful appearance.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Use \"tired\" cow mode:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\ncowsay -t "Ken is tired of begging for shows"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Result:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n ___________________________________\r\n< Ken is tired of begging for shows >\r\n -----------------------------------\r\n        \\   ^__^\r\n         \\  (--)\\_______\r\n            (__)\\       )\\/\\\r\n                ||----w |\r\n                ||     ||\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Specify different images with -f

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Threaten someone with a dragon:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\ncowsay -f dragon \'record and upload a show OR ELSE!\'\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Result:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n ___________________________________\r\n< record and upload a show OR ELSE! >\r\n -----------------------------------\r\n      \\                    / \\  //\\\r\n       \\    |\\___/|      /   \\//  \\\\\r\n            /0  0  \\__  /    //  | \\ \\    \r\n           /     /  \\/_/    //   |  \\  \\  \r\n           @_^_@\'/   \\/_   //    |   \\   \\ \r\n           //_^_/     \\/_ //     |    \\    \\\r\n        ( //) |        \\///      |     \\     \\\r\n      ( / /) _|_ /   )  //       |      \\     _\\\r\n    ( // /) \'/,_ _ _/  ( ; -.    |    _ _\\.-~        .-~~~^-.\r\n  (( / / )) ,-{        _      `-.|.-~-.           .~         `.\r\n (( // / ))  \'/\\      /                 ~-. _ .-~      .-~^-.  \\\r\n (( /// ))      `.   {            }                   /      \\  \\\r\n  (( / ))     .----~-.\\        \\-\'                 .~         \\  `. \\^-.\r\n             ///.----..>        \\             _ -~             `.  ^-`  ^-_\r\n               ///-._ _ _ _ _ _ _}^ - - - - ~                     ~-- ,.-~\r\n                                                                  /.-~\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On Linux, praise Ahuka with a Random Cow:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\necho \'Ahuka Rocks!\' | cowsay -f $(locate *.cow | shuf -n1)\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        One Result:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n ______________\r\n< Ahuka Rocks! >\r\n --------------\r\n        \\    ,-^-.\r\n         \\   !oYo!\r\n          \\ /./=\\.\\______\r\n               ##        )\\/\\\r\n                ||-----w||\r\n                ||      ||\r\n\r\n               Cowth Vader\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Figlet

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Make ASCII banner text with figlet. This one uses the default font and wraps the lines at 45 characters:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nfiglet -w 45 "Hacker Public Radio"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Result:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n _   _            _             \r\n| | | | __ _  ___| | _____ _ __ \r\n| |_| |/ _` |/ __| |/ / _ \\ \'__|\r\n|  _  | (_| | (__|   <  __/ |   \r\n|_| |_|\\__,_|\\___|_|\\_\\___|_|   \r\n                                \r\n ____        _     _ _      \r\n|  _ \\ _   _| |__ | (_) ___ \r\n| |_) | | | | \'_ \\| | |/ __|\r\n|  __/| |_| | |_) | | | (__ \r\n|_|    \\__,_|_.__/|_|_|\\___|\r\n                            \r\n ____           _ _       \r\n|  _ \\ __ _  __| (_) ___  \r\n| |_) / _` |/ _` | |/ _ \\ \r\n|  _ < (_| | (_| | | (_) |\r\n|_| \\_\\__,_|\\__,_|_|\\___/ \r\n                          \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Use an alternate font with -f option:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n figlet -f digital "Community News"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+\r\n|C|o|m|m|u|n|i|t|y| |N|e|w|s|\r\n+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, scripting, command line, ASCII',0,0,1), (1757,'2015-04-28','Useful Bash functions',1662,'Some Bash functions that may be of use in your scripts','

                                                        Overview

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I enjoy writing Bash scripts to solve various problems. In particular I have a number of scripts I use to manage the process of preparing a show for HPR, which I am developing at the moment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My more complex Bash scripts use a lot of functions to perform the various tasks, and, in the nature of things, some of these functions can be of use in other scripts and are shared between them.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I thought I would share some of these functions with HPR listeners in the hopes that they might be useful. It would also be interesting to receive feedback on these functions and would be great if other Bash users contributed ideas of their own.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are long, they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1757_full_shownotes.html, and an experimental ePub version is available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1757_full_shownotes.epub.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Bash Support Vim plugin: https://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=365
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. HPR episode Bash parameter manipulation: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1648
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. How to write functions (from The Linux Documentation Project):\r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Download the pad and yes_no functions: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1757_functions.sh
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        ',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','coding,Bash,script,function',0,0,1), (1758,'2015-04-29','Cool Stuff part 3',1543,'CPrompt talks about some more cool stuff for you to check out!','

                                                        Radiotopia

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.radiotopia.fm/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA part of PRX (Public Radio Exchange), they are a collection of story-driven podcasts sponsored in part\r\nby the Knight Foundation.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nPRX : https://www.prx.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nKnight Foundation : https://www.knightfoundation.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHeaded up by their flagship podcast 99% Invisible which is based on architecture and design and hosted by \r\nRoman Mars\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        urxvt256c

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nrxvt = Roberts XVT. X = X Window System, VT = VT102 terminal\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nVT Terminal : https://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VT100\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nrxvt started as a replacement for xterm. Written by Rob Nation\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rxvt\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nForked by Marc Lehmann and called rxvt-unicode or urxvt. \r\nGave features such as transparency, Perl extensions and better font support\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rxvt-unicode\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nUses the .xdefaults configuration file in your home directory for customizations.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Phil Plait\'s Crash Course Astronomy

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAlso known as The Bad Astronomer\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWikipedia : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phil_Plait\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBlogs at Slate : https://www.slate.com/authors.phil_plait.html\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTed Talks : https://www.ted.com/speakers/phil_plait\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCrash Course on YouTube:\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8dPuuaLjXtPAJr1ysd5yGIyiSFuh0mIL\r\n

                                                        ',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Radiotopia,urxvt256c,astronomy',0,0,1), (1759,'2015-04-30','A brief review of Firefox OS',1007,'I recently bought a Geeksphone Revolution and this is my review of running Firefox OS on it.','

                                                        \r\nThis is phone I\'m using: https://www.geeksphone.com/#the-phone\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd here are some useful links about Firefox OS:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe marketplace (app store): https://marketplace.firefox.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe marketing site: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/os/2.0/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDeveloper documentation: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Firefox_OS\r\n

                                                        ',302,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','mobile,firefox,operating system,review',0,0,1), (1762,'2015-05-05','HPR Audio Book Club 10',7043,'In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews Revolution Radio by Seth Kenlon','

                                                        SUMMARY

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews Revolution Radio by Seth Kenlon. You can download this AudioBook for free from https://aesdiopod.com/books/.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pre-Spoilers

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: I really loved this book. It hits me in a lot of the right spots as a person. I thought it had a very cinematic feel about it. I enjoyed the story, but in many ways I enjoyed the world it was set in even more.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • x1101: Slow start, but finally builds to a very engaging story exploring many interesting social and political issues
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pokey: Slow start, really liked the story right from the start, but found the setting a little far fetched.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We all liked the pace of the story, as well as the reading and the audio quality. Overall this is a very polished work, even though there is some noise intentionally added at times.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        BEVERAGE REVIEWS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As usual, the HPR_AudioBookClub took some time to review the beverages that each of us were drinking during the episode

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: I am a sad panda because they grocery store had no lemons to make my AWESOME homemade lemonade. Unfortunately, I had to resort to pre-made lemonade that tastes like sugar water. Check this nutritional information
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • x1101 Dogfish head 120 minute IPAThis beer has a nice hoppy and citrus nose to it with a smooth, silky mouth feel. This beverage features subtle hoppy notes and a slightly smoky finish. Also, ~15% ABV, so I might have been a touch loopy the rest of the show
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pokey had a Sam Adams Summer Ale. Nice flavor, but not a lot of it. Refreshing with a hint of citrus. Very drinkable, but not mind blowing. I suspect this beer appeals to a wide audience. I\'ve been on more of a \"specialty\" beer kick for a while, so this was almost disapointing.https://www.samueladams.com/craft-beers/summer-ale/
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Other Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OUR NEXT AUDIOBOOK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Street Candles by David Collins-Rivera\r\n
                                                        https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/stardrifter.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We\'re still really excited about this AudioBook not only because the author is an HPR community member (lostinbronx), but also because the book is really good!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        David Collins-Rivera\'s personal blog: https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/index.html\r\n
                                                        David Collins-Rivera\'s HPR correspondent page: https://hackerpublicradio.org/correspondents/0107.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        NEXT RECORDING

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our next book club recording will be 2014/09/09T23:00:00+00:00. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times If you\'d like a Google calendar invite, or if you\'d like to be on the HPR_AudioBookClub mailing list, please get in contact with us on the HPR mailing list \'hpr at hackerpublicradio dot org\'

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OUR AUDIO

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode was processed using Audacity https://audacity.sourceforge.net/. We\'ve been making small adjustments to our audio mix each month in order to get the best possible sound. It\'s been especially challenging getting all of our voices relatively level, because everyone has their own unique setup. Mumble is great for bringing us all together, and for recording, but it\'s not good at making everyone\'s voice the same volume. We\'re pretty happy with the way this month\'s show turned out, so we\'d like to share our editing process and settings with you and our future selves (who, of course, will have forgotten all this by then).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mumble uses a sample rate of 48kHz, but HPR requires a sample rate of 44.1kHz so the first step in our audio process is to resample the file at 44.1kHz. Resampling can take a long time if you don\'t have a powerful computer, and sometimes even if you do. If you record late at night, like we do, you may want to start the task before you go to bed, and save it first thing in the morning, so that the file is ready to go the next time you are.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we use the \"Compressor\" effect with the following settings:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Threshold: -30db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Noise Floor: -50db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ratio: 3:1
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Attack Time: 0.2sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Decay Time: 1.0 sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Make-up Gain for 0db after compressing\" and \"compress based on peaks\" were both left un-checked.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        After compressing the audio we cut any pre-show and post-show chatter from the file and save them in a separate file for possible use as outtakes after the closing music.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we listen back to the whole file and we work on the shownotes. This is when we can cut out anything that needs to be cut, and we can also make sure that we put any links in the shownotes that were talked about during the recording of the show. We finish the shownotes before exporting the .aup file to .FLAC so that we can paste a copy of the shownotes into the audio file\'s metadata. We use the \"Truncate Silence\" effect with its default settings to minimize the silence between people speaking. When used with its default (or at least reasonable) settings, Truncate Silence is extremely effective and satisfying. It makes everyone sound smarter, it makes the file shorter without destroying actual content, and it makes a conversations sound as easy and fluid during playback as it was while it was recorded. It can be even more effective if you can train yourself to remain silent instead of saying \"uuuuummmm.\" Just remember to ONLY pass the file through Truncate Silence ONCE. If you pass it through a second time, or if you set it too aggressively your audio may sound sped up and choppy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we add new, empty audio tracks into which we paste the intro, outro and possibly outtakes, and we rename each track accordingly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We adjust the Gain so that the VU meter in Audacity hovers around -12db while people are speaking, and we try to keep the peaks under -6db, and we adjust the Gain on each of the new tracks so that all volumes are similar, and more importantly comfortable. Once this is done we can \"Mix and Render\" all of our tracks into a single track for export to the .FLAC file which is uploaded to the HPR FTP server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember to save often when using Audacity. We like to save after each of these steps. Audacity has a reputation for being \"crashy\" but if you remember to save after every major transform, you will wonder how it ever got that reputation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FURTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you liked Pirate Radio, you may also like The movies THX-1137, Logan\'s Run or The Illustrated Man.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FEEDBACK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thank you very much for listening to this episode of the HPR_AudioBookClub. We had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We also hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Please leave a few words in the episode\'s comment section.\r\n
                                                        As always; remember to visit the HPR contribution page HPR could really use your help right now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sincerely,\r\n
                                                        The HPR_AudioBookClub

                                                        \r\n

                                                        P.S. Some people really like finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we always include a few.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        1: The HPR_AudioBookClub doesn\'t laugh at anyone for reviewing tea, nor any other drink. We intentionally call the segment a \"beverage review,\" not a \"beer review\" so that no one should feel alienated. Also because some of us drink wine.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        2: The HPR_AudioBookClub does laugh when people try to spell flavor with a \"u\"

                                                        \r\n',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub',0,0,1), (1763,'2015-05-06','Intro to Homebrewing',1209,'Beer! and the joy of making it.','

                                                        \r\nI talk a bit about homebrewing, how to do it, what it is, and how to get started. \r\nIf there is interest, I will do more in-depth shows on the topic, otherwise I will let it stand alone. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nI ramble on about brewing your own beer. Here are a few internet resources to help you along:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is my first episode ever, so any advice is greatly appreciated. My email is amneher007@gmail.com\r\n

                                                        ',303,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','brewing, beer, homebrewing',0,0,1), (1764,'2015-05-07','Introduction to Rogue Class Linux',990,'Rogue Class Linux is a specialty distribution of Linux for playing the old games.','

                                                        \r\nRogue Class describes itself as \"a toy Linux distribution for playing games and reading books. RCL favors turn-based games, such as puzzles and rogue-like games. \"\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat are Rogue Class games? According to a link at the Rogue Class website, Rogue Class games are characterized by\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \"Tactical play. The unit of action is based on the individual adventurer. The game is not twitch oriented (like Quake, rewarding reflexes & well trained actions) nor is it strategy oriented (like Civilizations or Warcraft, requiring working on the large picture)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Based in Hack and Slash. A roguelike isn\'t primarily about plot development or telling a story. It is about killing things and acquiring treasure.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Random games. A roguelike is a dungeon crawler where no two games are the same. The maps are different, the items are different, there are no guaranteed win paths.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Permadeath. You die, that is it. No restoring a savegame. Good roguelikes delete your save game after loading them. This is compensated by the replayability of the game.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Complex interactions of properties. While the commands for a roguelike are simple, the potential interactions are not. My favourite example is equipping a silver ring as a weapon in order to damage a creature vulnerable to silver, but not one\'s other weapons. [Editor: This matches the Hack branch of the roguelike tree, not the Angband branch]
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Steam rolling monsters. If a critter is in your way, and weak, you shouldn\'t even notice it is there.\"
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n(Source: https://www.zincland.com/powder/?pagename=about)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRogue Class contains four dozen or so games, two of which are actually categories which in turn contain additional games, as well as a number of utilities, including a network manager, an IRC client, and more. Some representative games include the following, picked quite at random: Angband, Fargoal, Magus, Moria, Nethack, and Tome. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nIf you liked the old games, give Rogue Class a spin.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nWebsite: https://rogueclass.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nThe Rogue Class forum is located at Linux Questions.org: https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/rogue-class-106/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nYou can see an interesting chart of Rogue Class\'s graphics subsystems at this link: \r\nhttps://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/rogue-class-106/rcl-graphics-sub-systems-4175522637\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n',195,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','games,Rogue Class,gamebooks',0,0,1), (1766,'2015-05-11','Sox of Silence',616,'Using SOX to speed up and remove silence in a podcast','

                                                        \r\nMany of you may be aware of the \"truncate silence\" filter in audacity. As I already use SOX to speed up my podcasts, I wanted to see if it could also remove silence as well. While the man page is detailed, it is difficult to follow. https://sox.sourceforge.net/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFortunately Jason Navarrete posted an excellent article on digitalcardboard.com called The SoX of Silence which went through the process step by step https://digitalcardboard.com/blog/2009/08/25/the-sox-of-silence/\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The Script

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n    # -S, --show-progress\r\n    # -V verbose\r\n    # tempo Change the audio playback speed but not its pitch. \r\n    # remix Select and mix input audio channels into output audio channels. \r\n    # remix - performs a mix-down of all input channels to mono.\r\n    # silence Removes silence from the beginning, middle, or end of the audio.\r\n    # https://digitalcardboard.com/blog/2009/08/25/the-sox-of-silence/\r\n    # \r\n    sox -S -v2 \"${FILENAME}\" \"${FILENAME}-faster-${SPEED}.ogg\" -V9 tempo ${SPEED} remix - silence 1 0.1 1% -1 0.1 1%\r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','sox, truncate silence',0,0,1), (1808,'2015-07-08','David Whitman reads \'The Shooting of Dan McGrew\' written by Robert W Service',467,'For his birthday David Whitman recites the Robert W Service ballad, ','

                                                        \r\nfrom The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of a Sourdough, by Robert Service\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with\r\nalmost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or\r\nre-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included\r\nwith this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe orginal work published 1907. Copyright expired in U.S. See the Project Gutenberg website for their copyright notices\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBibliographic Record
                                                        \r\nAuthor Service, Robert W. (Robert William), 1874-1958
                                                        \r\nTitle Songs of a Sourdough
                                                        \r\nLanguage English
                                                        \r\nLoC Class PR: Language and Literatures: English literature
                                                        \r\nSubject Yukon River Valley (Yukon and Alaska) -- Poetry
                                                        \r\nCategory Text
                                                        \r\nEBook-No. 25546
                                                        \r\nRelease Date May 20, 2008
                                                        \r\nCopyright Status Public domain in the USA.
                                                        \r\nDownloads 55 downloads in the last 30 days.
                                                        \r\nPrice $0.00\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTitle: The Spell of the Yukon\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAuthor: Robert Service\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nPosting Date: July 11, 2008 EBook https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/25546
                                                        \r\nRelease Date: January, 1995\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1808_Songs_of_a_Sourdough.pdf\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nInteresting Info at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shooting_of_Dan_McGrew\r\n

                                                        ',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Poetry, Birthday, Yukon',0,0,1), (1767,'2015-05-12','An interview with Ed Cable of the Mifos Initiative',704,'David Whitman interviews Ed Cable of the MIFOS Iniative at Linux Fest Northwest on April 25, 2015.','

                                                        \r\nDavid Whitman interviews Ed Cable of the MIFOS Initiative\r\nhttps://mifos.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFrom their website:\r\nMifos X is an extended platform for delivering the complete range of financial services needed for an effective financial inclusion solution.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAs the industrys only open platform for financial inclusion, we provide affordable, adaptable and accessible solutions for any segment of the market, new and small financial institutions can easily start with our community app in a hosted environment, medium and large institutions that are evolving into full-service providers of financial inclusion can use our global network of IT partners to configure a Mifos X solution, and innovators can build and scale entirely new solutions on our API-driven platform.\r\n

                                                        ',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Microfinance, LinuxFest Northwest',0,0,1), (1774,'2015-05-21','Router Hacking',1190,'A Quick What, Why, and How of Hacking Routers','

                                                        Router Hacking

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        What

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Flashing a router with alternate firmware
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Why

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Provide additional features
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Improve performance
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Privacy (gets rid of unwanted spyware)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fun
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Where

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        How: Steps for My Latest Hack

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Find used Netgear WNDR3400 router on shelf at local Goodwill store, priced at $3.99.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Use my smartphone to check the dd-wrt database to see if this router is hackable.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Grin broadly upon seeing the green \"Yes\" beside router WNDR3400.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Double-check that power supply is included, find an AC outlet and plug in to be sure it powers on and my phone sees its ESSID. Yep and yep.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Take router to cashier and purchase.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Do hard reset of router to clear any previous configuration.
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Hook a laptop up to router using ethernet patch cable (turning off WiFi adapter on laptop).
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Access router\'s configuration in web browser at default router address of 192.168.1.1 just to confirm that it works.
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Go back to the dd-wrt router database and find the router again, then download the corresponding \"mini\" and the \"mega\" versions of dd-wrt firmware (The mega version has the most features—including USB support, which I wanted—but on many routers, including this one, you have to install the mini version first or else you could brick the router)
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Read over the dd-wrt wiki page for this specific router just to see if there\'s anything unusual about the hack. There\'s not.
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. Go to the router\'s stock configuration page again and find the \"Firmware upgrade\" button.
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. Click the button and choose the \"mini\" version of the dd-wrt firmware, and click upgrade, then wait while crossing fingers until it says firmware successfully upgraded.
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. Refresh the configuration page at 192.168.1.1 and see the new dd-wrt configuration interface.
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        27. Pat myself on the back because I have just hacked another router. Hray!
                                                        28. \r\n
                                                        29. Find the upgrade firmware area on the new dd-wrt interface, and this time choose the \"mega\" firmware file and submit, then wait and cross fingers as before. Celebrate when it works.
                                                        30. \r\n
                                                        31. Configure newly hacked router as wireless bridge (this is NOT going to be my main router), enable the USB and printer support, hook up our formerly-usb-only printer to the router, and configure household computers to be able to print wirelessly to the newly-networked printer.
                                                        32. \r\n
                                                        33. Enjoy kudos from appreciative family.
                                                        34. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Networking, Routers, Printer Setup, dd-wrt, tomato, openwrt',0,0,1), (1784,'2015-06-04','Intro to the Fugue and the Open Well-Tempered Clavier',1826,'Inspired by the release of the Open Well Tempered-Clavier, I try to explain the Fugue.','

                                                        Intro to the Fugue

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        This episode of HPR is inspired by the recent release of a new recording by Kimiko Ishizaka of J.S. Bach\'s Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I. This is a very special recording because it is free and open, licensed to be shared freely forever. The recording was crowdfunded and immediately released with a public license after editing. This allows for legal remixing and sharing, and also makes it perfect for stuff like I do in this episode—cutting the recordings up for inserting as musical examples and then presenting the whole thing for your listening enjoyment.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Full Show Notes

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Please see the full show notes for detailed descriptions of the parts of a fugue and a few musical examples as well.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Fugue, J. S. Bach, Classical Music, Creative-Commons Music, Music, Counterpoint',0,0,1), (1789,'2015-06-11','The Ubuntu Quickly Ebook Template and Ebooks in General',2032,'Jon Kulp and Mike Hingley talk about ebooks in general and Mike\'s Quickly Ebook Template project','

                                                        Ubuntu Quickly Ebook Template

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I recorded this conversation with Mike Hingley about a year ago (12 June 2014) but never released it because I thought the audio didn\'t sound very good and I didn\'t feel like editing it at the time. Honestly I forgot all about it until now when the HPR queue is low again. I apologize for the slightly clippy quality of my audio, I must have had my microphone too hot on the mumble. It\'s really interesting to listen to this conversation a year later because I have worked out so many of the problems that I was mentioning to Mike, including the automation of the entire build process using command-line tools from Calibre.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ebooks, calibre, quickly, ubuntu',0,0,1), (1771,'2015-05-18','Audacity: Label Tracks',683,'Intro to my recent discovery of \"Label Tracks\" in Audacity','

                                                        Label Tracks in Audacity

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I don\'t know if I\'m ignorant and everyone else already knows about this, but I decided to record a quick show about Audacity \"Label Tracks,\" something I discovered while working on another HPR episode today.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The label track is one of the most useful things I\'ve found in a long time. It allows you to annotate your audio project so that you can quickly see important spots or summarize the contents of whole segments and see at a glance what they are about without hunting all over the place and playing things back, trying to find the part where you were talking about X,Y, or Z. You can also export the labels as a plain text file with exact timestamps. I have not tried this, but according to the documentation you can also use labels to mark the beginnings of separate songs in a long track and export multiple separate files at once from a single source based on the labels.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To add a label track, go to the Tracks menu and select Add New --> Label Track, and it will add the label track to the bottom of your list of tracks. To add a label, either stick the cursor where you want the label to be and press ctrl+b to add text, or select a region to label by clicking and dragging over a region in the label track, then do ctrl+b to start typing the label text.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,45,0,'CC-BY-SA','Audacity, audio editing, podcasting',0,0,1), (1772,'2015-05-19','Random thoughts',748,'I talk about some of the things I appreciate in life','

                                                        \r\nhttps://anthonyvenable110.wordpress.com\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://anthonyvenable110.wordpress.com/2014/05/07/lovely-walk-in-may-part-1/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy blogsite as well as just one of the many posts on my site that deal with what I appreciate about my life in general\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','life, random',0,0,1), (1773,'2015-05-20','LFNW 2015 interview with Deb Nicholson',1052,'David Whitman interviews Deborah Nicholson of the Open invention Network. Enjoy!','

                                                        \r\nDeb Nicholson:
                                                        \r\nhas been a free speech advocate, economic justice organizer and civil liberties defender. After working in Massachusetts politics for fifteen years, she then became involved in the free software movement at the Free Software Foundation. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDefensive Publications info: https://www.linuxdefenders.org/?page_id=150\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSeattle GNU/Linux Conference https://seagl.org/ IRC on Freenode in #seagl.\r\nWere very excited to be returning to Seattle Central College for SeaGL on Friday October 23rd and Saturday October 24th, 2015. \r\nSeaGL is a grassroots technical conference dedicated to spreading awareness and knowledge about the GNU/Linux community and free/libre/open-source software/hardware.\r\nCost of attendance is free.\r\nAttendee Registration will not require the use of non-free software.\r\nYou may attend SeaGL without identifying yourself, and you are encouraged to do so to protect your privacy. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Software Patents, Linux Fest, Mediagoblin, GNU',0,0,1), (1775,'2015-05-22','Sonic Pi',677,'A short review of sonic PI and programming the HPR theme','

                                                        \r\nIn this review of the Sonic Pi software I have mentioned a couple of programs that I wrote the listings are here:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n============================\r\nThe Hippopotamus Song\r\n============================\r\nuse_bpm 180\r\n# use_transpose -12\r\nuse_synth :fm\r\n2.times do\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:D3,:G3,:G3,:G3], [1,1,1,1]      # 1 extra note from bar an bar 2\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:G3,:D3,:B2,:G2], [0.5,0.5,1,1]  # 3\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a2,:b2,:c3], [1,1,1]            # 4\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:b2,:b2,:a2], [2,0.5,0.5]        # 5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g2,:g3,:g3], [1,1,1]            # 6\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:fs3,:g3,:e3], [1,1,1]           # 7\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:d3,:d3], [4,1]                  # 8 9\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:g3,:g3], [1,1,1]            # 10\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:d3,:b2,:g2], [0.5,0.5,1,1]  # 11\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a2,:b2,:c3], [1,1,1]            # 12\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:b2,:b3,:a3], [2,0.5,0.5]        # 13\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:fs3,:e3], [1,1,1]           # 14\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:fs3,:e3], [1,1,1]           # 15\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:d3,:d3], [4,1]                  # 16 17\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:a3,:a3], [1,1,1]            # 18\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:e3,:e3], [1,1,1]            # 19\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:a3,:a3], [1,1,1]            # 20\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:a3], [2,1]                  # 21\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c4,:b3,:a3], [1,1,1]            # 22\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:b3,:gs3], [1,1,1]           # 23\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:d3], [4,1]                  # 24 25\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:fs3,:g3], [1,1,1]           # 26\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:fs3,:d3,:d3], [1,1,1]           # 27\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:fs3,:g3], [1,1,1]           # 28\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:fs3,:d3,:d3], [1,1,1]           # 29\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c4,:b3,:a3], [1,1,1]            # 30\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:fs3,:e3], [1,1,1]           # 31\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:fs3],[1], sustain_level: 0.6, sustain: 1, decay: 3   # 32 sustain note into next bar\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:fs3], [1,1]                 # 32\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:d3,:fs3], [1,1,1]           # 33\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:d3],[3,3]                   # 34 35\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c3,:b2,:a2], [1,1,1]            # 36\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:d3],[3]                         # 37\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:fs3,:g3], [1,1,1]           # 38\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:a3,:g3], [1,1,1]            # 39\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:fs3,:e3,:fs3], [1,1,1]          # 40\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:d3,:d3],[2,1]                   # 41\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:b3,:b3,:a3], [0.5,1.5,1]        # 42\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g3,:d3,:d3], [0.5,1.5,1]        # 43\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c4,:c4,:b3], [1,1,1]            # 44\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a3,:e3,:d3], [0.5,1.5,1]        # 45\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:e3,:fs3,:g3], [1,1,1]           # 46\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:d3,:b2,:g2], [1,1,1]            # 47\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a2],[3], decay: 3               # 48\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a2,:b2,:a2], [1,1,1]            # 49\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g2],[3], decay: 3               # 50\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:g2],[1]                         # 51\r\nsleep 2\r\nend\r\n\r\n=======================================\r\nThe HPR Outro theme - hack on this improve it and make a show\r\n=======================================\r\nin_thread do\r\n  use_bpm 180\r\n  use_transpose 24\r\n  use_synth :beep\r\n  19.times do\r\n    play_pattern_timed [:a,:as,:a,:a], [0.5],release: 0.02, amp: 0.3 #\r\n    play_pattern_timed [:as,:f,:as,:a], [0.5],release: 0.02, amp: 0.3  #\r\n  end\r\nend\r\nuse_bpm 180\r\nsample :elec_hi_snare\r\nsleep 0.5\r\nsample :elec_hi_snare\r\nsleep 0.5\r\nsample :drum_bass_hard\r\nsleep 0.5\r\n\r\nuse_transpose -0\r\nuse_synth :saw\r\n2.times do\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:a,:a,:a,:a], [0.5,1,0.5,1] # 3\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:a,:as,:a], [1,1,1]\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:c5], [3], decay: 2   # 6\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:a,:a,:a,:a], [0.5,1,0.5,1] # 3\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:a,:as,:a], [1,1,1]    # 6\r\n  play_pattern_timed [:f], [3], decay: 2   # 6\r\nend\r\nuse_synth :dsaw\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:f],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:as,:a,:as],[1,1,1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:f],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:as,:a,:as,],[1,1,1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:f],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:f],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:as,:a,:as],[1,1,1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:a],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:f],[1]\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:c5],[2], decay: 1.5\r\nplay_pattern_timed [:as,:a,:as,:a],[1,1,1,1]\r\nplay_chord [:c4,:f], decay: 4\r\n===========================\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n------------------------------------------------------------\r\n',240,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry PI, music, programming, review',0,0,1), (1769,'2015-05-14','A Demonstration of Dictation Software on my Office Computer',825,'I record a whole show in dictation mode to demonstrate Dragon dictation software capabilities','

                                                        Transcript Performed by Dragon Dictate [dumped \"as is\"]

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Hi everybody! This is John Kulp In Lafayette, Louisiana. I am going to do a rather strange episode today. What I\'m doing is demonstrating the dictation software that I use on the office computer that I have here at work. If you listen to my previous episodes, then you have heard me speak of the blather speech recognition program that I use on my Linux desktop, but as you may also remember, blather is not a dictation tool. Blather is a tool where you have to set up commands that will run other commands. In other words, you have to configure everything from scratch. I do have some capabilities for dictation on my Linux desktop, but they involve using the Google Web speech API and a special dictation box that I have set up, and these are not at all good for longform dictation. For serious dictation, such as writing letters and memos and other longform text, you really need a proper dictation tool. These are available built into the operating systems of Windows and Mac OS 10, but I normally use the Dragon naturally speaking software instead. I have found that it is more accurate and more powerful than the built-in versions that you can get on either Windows or Mac. That doesn\'t mean you shouldn\'t try out the built-in speech recognition on Windows and Mac, you definitely should, because I think you would be very impressed with him. I know for sure that the version on Windows learns from your voice and from the corrections that you make to the text that you were spoken, and eventually becomes very powerful in recognizing your speech. The biggest problem that I had with the Windows speech recognition was that it was a huge memory hog and frequently brought my system to a grinding halt. This is not good. Blather never does that, but then again bladder cannot take dictation. The latest system that I use for dictation is on a fairly recent Mac Mini running the nuance Dragon Dictate software. This is a very powerful dictation program that learns from your speech patterns and you can also add words to the vocabulary so that it will get them right when it hears them. This is especially important to do if you have frequently used unusual words, such as a name with an alternate spelling from what is normally in the program\'s dictionary. One of the great things about the Mac Dragon Dictate program, also, is its ability to do transcriptions of audio files. In fact the reason I am speaking this way is that I plan to use the transcription of this recording as the show notes verbatim without any corrections. The difficulty that most people have with dictation software at least initially is doing things like punctuation and capitalization. You have to remember to do these things or else your transcript will come out without any punctuation or capitalization, unless the words that you are speaking are known proper nouns. It also capitalizes automatically at the beginning of the sentences, so that if you use periods frequently then you will have capitalized words after those periods. You can see that I\'m having trouble speaking this text in a fluent way, and this is one of the other difficulties that people have when initially using transcription software. It works best when you can express complete thoughts without pausing, because it learns from the context of your words. It has algorithms that calculate the possibility of one word or another based on the context, and so it is much better to speak entire sentences at one than it is to pause while trying to gather your thoughts. This is a major difference from trying to write at the keyboard, where it does not matter at all if you pause for seconds or even minutes while you think of what you want to write next. Anyhow, I highly recommend using some kind of dictation software if you suffer from repetitive strain injuries like I do. This will save you many thousands of keystrokes. Even if it\'s only using the speech recognition that\'s available on your phones over the web, that\'s better than nothing. The disadvantage of any of these services that have to send your recording over the web to \r\nget a transcription and then send it back into your device is that they will never learn your voice and your particular speech patterns. In order for that to work best, you really have to use a dedicated standalone speech recognition program that resides locally on your computer and saves your profile and learns from your speaking. Well, I guess that is about it for today, I hope you have enjoyed hearing this brief lesson on dictation. See you next time!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n------------------------------------------------------------\r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','RSI, Dictation, Speech Recognition',0,0,1), (1768,'2015-05-13','An Intro To C Episode 1 : Introduction and Types',1927,'I go through the basic types and a basic introduction of myself. :) ','

                                                        Episode 1: History and Basic Types

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Explain who you are and what you do.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Name: Colin Mills, (cjm)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Occupation: Software Engineering Student in Canada

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • I have been a UNIX geek and open source software FANATIC for about four years now.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Website: c-jm.github.io

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Start to go into the history of C and explain where it came from.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Abstract

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        C was originally developed by Dennis Ritchie between 1969 and 1973 at AT&T \r\nBell Labs,[5] and used to (re-)implement the Unix operating system.[6] \r\nIt has since become one of the most widely used programming languages of all \r\ntime, [7][8] with C compilers from various vendors available for the\r\nmajority of existing computer architectures and operating systems. \r\nC has been standardized by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) > since 1989 (see ANSI C) and subsequently by the \r\nInternational Organization for Standardization (ISO).

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Explain Types and their meanings

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • SIGNED: It means it can hold either negative or positive values.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • UNSIGNED: Unsigned means it can only hold positive values.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Retrieved From: Wikipedia On Signedness

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        int:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • An int is a variable that is at leas 16 bits in size.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • It is actually the most efficent for the processor itself.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Capable of storing -32767 -> 32767

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Int Specifiers

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • short: 16 bits in size

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          short int intThatIsAShort = 0;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • long: 32 bits in size

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          long intThatIsALong = 0;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • long long: 64 bits in size

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          long long reallyBigInteger = 0;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        char

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • One byte in memory. (8 bits).

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Holds a character but can also hold a number

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          char thisCanHoldALetter = \'x\';\r\nchar thisCanHoldANumber = 72;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Note about the ascii table

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • ASCII is just a number corresponding with a letter.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Look here for more information.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        float

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Holds floating point numbers

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          float thisIsAFloat = 72.2;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Double

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Like a float but bigger.

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          double thisIsADouble = 0;

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Arrays

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Arrays are collections of multiple things

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Have to be a set size.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Use braces to initalize

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • If you initalize one you initalize all.

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          int arrayOfNums[100] = {0};

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Strings

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \"Strings\" are made up of mutliple chars. (Yes it does make sense! :))

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          char arrayOfChars[81] = {0};

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Null termination is added to the end.

                                                          \r\n\r\n

                                                          \'\0\'

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',286,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','C, Programming',0,0,1), (1794,'2015-06-18','12-Tone Music and My Random 12 Tone Row of the Day',841,'An Intro to 12-tone music and my \"Random 12-Tone Row of the Day\" bash script.','

                                                        12-Tone Music (Dodecaphony) and My Random 12 Tone Row of the Day

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        In this episode I cover a bit of music theory as well as some bash scripting. The topic is the Twelve-Tone System of music composition and the scripting of a random 12-tone row to be generated daily. For a full transcript of the show click here.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n \"randomly\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','bash, dodecaphony, music theory, 12-tone, twelve-tone, scripting, Lilypond',0,0,1), (1783,'2015-06-03','Windows To Linux - Better Late Than Never.',604,'Long time Podcast listener finally gets off the fence and makes the switch. Now he\'s hooked.','

                                                        \r\nThis is a story of my last days as a Windows Users at home and my eventual switch to Linux. My name is Kevin and my online name is GNULinuxRTM. The name GNULinuxRTM was recently created for a project I am working on. But maybe Ill talk about that another time.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAlthough I listened to every single episode of Linux Reality, many episodes of Linux Outlaws, Linux Link Tech Show, The Bad Apples aka GNU World Order, and other Podcast shows, I just recently listened to my first episode to Hacker Public Radio. What caught my attention was the plea for content to keep Hacker Public Radio going. So I have been HPR binging and I have to say that the fact that this kind of Podcast format exists, is amazing.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYes, I had heard the words Hacker Public Radio before, but I just thought it meant that this was some kind of show for extreme Hacker types, which I didnt think described me.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnother confession, my day job is mostly in a Windows environment. And although I kept myself up to date on the progress of Linux, I had very few opportunities to use Linux at work. I had enough challenge keeping up to technology I had to know to do my job. Although I heard and understood the significance of making a commitment to use Linux, I never did make the switch. Sure I dabbled with Linux as a Server platform and maybe to get some use out of some old hardware. But not on my most powerful and most used home machine. The computer I use every day for my own personal projects was, until last Summer, a Windows PC.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou see I hate wasting effort and time, something we all have a limited amount of. I remember after a particularly frustrating bout with Linux I turned to a Co-Worker and said \"Windows, because Lifes too short\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAlso, I am one of those weirdos who loves the little red Trackpoint on IBM Thinkpads. Last Spring I traded in my old Thinkpad plus some cash for an off-lease Lenovo Thinkpad W510 Notebook. I got it cheaper because they didnt have the original power supply, instead it came with a 3rd party power supply. Eventually it got to me that it took more than twice as long to charge the notebook, so i spent the money to replace it with a higher wattage power supply. \"In a for penny, in for a pound\", why not upgrade to 8Gb of RAM too.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nShortly after the 90 day warranty I started having weird lockup issues. The hard drive light would go solid and the machine would just freeze. Ive seen this before. Suck it up and back to local computer store to replace the Hard Drive. But \"In for a penny, in for a pound\", why not get one of those slick new SSD drives. Got home, do a drive copy and I am back in business Or so I think. After a while I realize I am still suffering from intermittent Lockups. Time for a fresh install.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nInstall Windows 7, Windows Update, Reboot, Windows Update Reboot, Windows Update Reboot almost done. Blue-Screen-of-Death. Reboot, Blue Screen of Death. Start over, Re-install Windows 7, trickle install Updates, Save System State, Reboot, Repeat, Blue Screen, Ahhhhh!!@!!! System Restore, its that update, Blue Screen, not its that update, Blue Screen, Blue Screen, Blue Screen Ahhhhh!!##$\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIs it my new RAM, switch that out. No difference. Power Supply? Nope. Go back to Non-SSD drive? Still No Change. Different Windows Install Disc? No, No and No. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNow Im really \"In for a Pound\" with this machine and I cant use it. Deflated, I put the computer down in the corner of the room and try to forget about it. The sleek black Thinkpad just sits there mocking me every time I walk by, but I am determined to ignore it. Weeks go by, now a month. Ive gone back to my desktop, but its no use, I miss having a notebook. Im an easy-chair Notebook guy now. I dont want to regress down the evolutionary scale and hunch over my desktop anymore. Im at home, I should be reclining!\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLike a bad hangover, time has numbed the memory of the pain. I pick the Thinkpad, its time to drink again! Im back baby and Ive got that \"You cant beat me\" Techy Battle cry pumping through my veins. \"LINUX! Ill try Linux!\" At least that is the way I prefer to remember it. But really, I was thinking that Ive spent sooo much money on the piece of Crap, Ill use it even i have to switch to Linux.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLets see Ive got to approach this logically. Uhhh, choose a Distro, Desktop, hmmmm. Video on Richard Stallman spanking Ubuntu on Amazon Deal, hmmm. Ok, Linux Mint 17 is based on the LTS release of Ubuntu, 5 years Support, Cool! Top of the Distrowatch charts. Looks like a good start.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI install Linux Mint 17 and it is up and running in no time. Run the Update Manager and hold my breath. Wow! It updated 100%, no Crash Screen of Doom!\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNow what? What do i do now? Google \"First things to do after install Linux Mint 17\", wow Direct hit, Yeehaw! Oh cool, Steam Games, Yummy. PlayOnLinux, Bonus! What a blast. But the fun of discovery was better than any game I played.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAlas, my machine was running great but still had a locked up issue, just not as often. But it was a victory nonetheless. Besides, I had a mostly working machine and I would just ignore the problem. An infrequent lockup didnt seem to bother Linux Mint, it just boot back up fine.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAfter about a month on Linux Mint a little message popped up, I cant remember exactly what it said. But it was like machine was talking to me. \"Hey Buddy, this battery in your notebook, uhh it kinda sucks. And you might want it replace because well I need steady power to you know, breath. And it sure would be a lot easier if I could Huh Huh Huh AHHHHH count on some steady air flow\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYeah, you know I was elated, but even more so amazed! I had installed no diagnostic software, I had spent no additional time troubleshooting, I had just installed Linux and started using it. And my computer just told me what was wrong with it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNew battery arrived and now the machine is solid as rock. Did I go back to Windows 7, Hell No! I had kicked the habit once a for all and I was not missing Windows at all.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI distinctly remember a standout moment when I was working on my brother-in-law\'s wedding video. Circumstances were that the key family members could not be at the Wedding and the they were anxiously waiting for the Wedding Video. I didnt want to delay finishing the project and was reluctant to do anything else with the computer during the Render process. Rendering the Video took quite a bit of time and was very CPU intensive. But I had broken the Wedding into several segments and there was lots of Rendering and getting feedback. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nKdenlive lets you assign how many processors would be used during Rendering, and I had set that to four. There were processors to spare, maybe I can do something else while I am waiting for the Render.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIll read a few emails. Hey, I dont notice any performance difference. \r\nMaybe Ill surf a bit. Still fine. Youtube Video, smooth, now in HD, wow! no problem or no slow down. Multi-tasking as it should be!\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNext day at work, I cant help but talk about it with my Co-Workers. \"Why not get a Mac?\" they say. it wasnt a question, it was a strong suggestion. Most of them had written off Linux years ago. I start talking about how great my system is working for me and how I have been able to get so much done with 100% open source applications.\r\n\"So what\", they say. \"You can install most of those applications on the Mac and Windows as well\". \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIts no use, I guess I am not much of an evangelist. Or maybe I just work with cynical people. But it does cause me to question. Why am I so excited about Open Source Software now? At this point in history. Really most of the fundamental building blocks of Open Source Software have already happened. It seems to me we are now in a fine tuning stage.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI think it is that maturity that appeals to me. No longer do you have to say, you can install Linux, BUT. And word \"But\" lands with a thud. There is very little creative work that you cannot do on Linux and Open Source software, right now.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI dont regret a single moment I have invested in switching to and learning Linux.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy story continues, but well save that for another time. I hope to tell you more about my project and the hurdles Ive gone through in a future HPR episode.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBye for now,\r\nGNULinuxRTM signing off.\r\n

                                                        ',306,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux,Mint,GNU,RTM,Mac,Windows,Open Source,Distro,Richard Stallman,Thinkpad,PlayOnThis is a stoLinux',0,0,1), (1776,'2015-05-25','Vim Hints 004',2840,'Hints and Tips for Vim users - part 4','

                                                        Joining commands together

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I want to look at more movement commands and how to use them in conjunction with commands that change things in the file. I also want to add some more elements to the configuration file we have been building over the last few episodes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have covered a lot of ground in this episode, introducing a number of new subjects. This is partly because I felt the series needed to get to the point where you could start to make full use of Vim if you are following along, and partly because the episodes up to this point have been moving a little too slowly! I hope the change in pace and length hasn\'t put you off.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are particularly long, they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1776_full_shownotes.html and an ePub version is also available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1776_full_shownotes.epub.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Vim Help:\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Graphical Cheat Sheet: https://www.viemu.com/a_vi_vim_graphical_cheat_sheet_tutorial.html
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Vim Hints Episode 3 https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1734
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',225,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vim,gvim,editor,movement,editing,configuration',0,0,1), (1780,'2015-05-29','16 - TrueCrypt and GnuPG - An Update',911,'GnuPG and TrueCrypt updated, and how we support free software.','

                                                        \r\nPreviously we looked at the issues around TrueCrypt and Heartbleed, and noted that a fundamental problem was that technologies we rely on to be safe are often developed and maintained by volunteers or people on a shoestring budget. There is now more news worth looking at in this respect, so it is time for an update.\r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=825\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Editor\'s Note 2022-03-27: Tag changed from GnuPGP to GnuPG

                                                        \r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','TrueCrypt, GnuPG, support',0,0,1), (1785,'2015-06-05','54 - LibreOffice Impress - Creating a Presentation',674,'The mechanics of creating a presentation in Impress','

                                                        \r\nHaving looked at the theory of building a good presentation, now we can look at the mechanics of how to build a presentation. This will take you step-by-step through the creation process and get you ready to create your own awesome presentations.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1188\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','Libreoffice,Libreoffice impress,creating presentation',0,0,1), (1790,'2015-06-12','Penguicon 2015 Report',830,'Penguicon 2015 happened on April 24-26, 2015 in Southfield, Michigan','

                                                        \r\nPenguicon 2015 is a combined technology and science fiction convention in Southfield, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, and presented over 500 hours of programming over the entire weekend. Of this, around 100 hours were open source, tech-related. In this episode I give you my personal diary of my experience at this great event.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon 2015',0,0,1), (1795,'2015-06-19','54 - LibreOffice Impress - Templates and Master Pages',1034,'Using and acquiring Templates in Impress','

                                                        \r\nThe terms Template and Master Pages refer to the same thing, but inside the Impress application they are referred to as Master Pages, and they are accessed on the right-hand side of the page. If you as the author do not choose a specific Template to use when creating a new presentation, Impress will base the presentation on the default Template that is built in to Impress. But you can create your own default Template if you like.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1188\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Templates, Master Pages',0,0,1), (1778,'2015-05-27','Nethack and Vi cursor keys',552,'More about vi,vim and my nethack virtual machine','Hi I\'m Steve Bickle and this episode is \"Nethack and Vi cursor keys\", its my contribution partially inspired by the recent series of vi/vim podcasts and Frank Bell\'s recent episode Introduction to Rogue Class Linux.
                                                        \r\n\r\nIn addition to my piece here, I also want to use this opportunity to point out an excellent podcast about vim, that\'s complementary to the series on HPR.
                                                        \r\nI was pleased to see recently that Thomas Gideon\'s The Command Line podcast is back from a hiatus and want to make sure that others are aware. His 12th of April podcast is an essay entitled \"Hope and Fear in the World of vim\" where he discusses his use of vim throughout his career as a programmer. You can find this podcast at thecommandline.net
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe text editor vi was written long ago by Bill Joy in the late 70\'s before the advent of the PC keyboard and cursor keys, so the default key mappings for left/down/up/right being H,J,K and L are not immediately familiar to a pc keyboard user.
                                                        \r\n\r\n\"AD-M3A
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe original UNIX machine for which vi was written used the AD-M3A terminal where H,J,K and L had the cursor arrows engraved.
                                                        \r\nVi is installed as a default choice on many distros, and where it is not, there is invariably a package available that can be easily added.
                                                        \r\n\r\nSome, if not most, distros come vim installed by default (vim by the way stands for vi improved). This does have the cursor keys mapped nicely for a modern PC keyboard as well as the original keys. Vim is always aliased as vi, so if it\'s been installed when you enter vi you get vim.
                                                        \r\n\r\nVi is a pretty light weight bit of code whereas VIM has more dependencies so sometimes vi is still preferred as the default install package. For instance Debian and many of its derivatives have vi rather than vim installed by default.
                                                        \r\nIf you are distro hopping or working on other peoples systems you can generally rely on having vi available, but you can\'t be sure to get vim so it is useful to be conversant with the vi key mappings, along with a working knowledge of some of the basic commands. Then you will never be at a loss for a text editor when needing to hack around in a Linux box.
                                                        \r\n\r\nFor me as an occasional user of vi the most challenging keys to remember to use are the H,J,K and L. cursor keys, since muscle memory has my fingers diving for the arrow keys. This is where the game Nethack comes in, which is what this article/episode is really about.
                                                        \r\n\r\nNethack is a terminal based dungeon adventure games which uses the same cursor keys as vi and other old UNIX programs. Play this game for a few hours and you will ever struggle with vi cursor keys again.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe goal of the game is to retrieve the \'Amulet\' from the lowest level of the dungeon and return to the surface with it for your god.
                                                        \r\n\r\nNethack presents as a text based adventure with each level gradually being revealed to you in the on-screen character based level map. As you travel through the dungeon more of the level is revealed. As you play, your character gains more experience and levels up its capabilities.
                                                        \r\n\r\nYou play as one of a number of types of character, and race. These include many of the usual dungeons and dragons types, archaeologists most likely inspired by Indiana Jones and tourists which definitely owe much to Terry Pratchet. Each role and race has their own initial characteristics, default inventory items, levelsof resilience and ability to learn various skills. For instance a wizard will advance his spell making capabilities faster than a footpad.
                                                        \r\n\r\nAlthough seemingly a simplistic terminal based game there\'s more going on in Nethack than is at first apparent. Originally released in 1987 it was actively developed with improvements to game play features until 2003. Since then there have been minor updates and ports for different platforms have been added, however there is rumoured to be a release with further game play improvements some-time this year.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe game has real depth and subtlety that is gradually revealed the more you play. It is not an easy game to win (from my experience to date that may not even be possible) but the more you play it the better strategies you will devise and the more rewarding the game becomes. There\'s more complexity to this game than almost any modern 3d HD graphic adventure.
                                                        \r\n\r\nAlthough there is a Nethack Wiki where information about how to play can be sought, the true elite apparently learn through playing. I\'d suggest having a go, then when you become familiar with YASDs (yet another stupid death), there\'s a lot of them, you will have enough experience to answer a few burning question with the Wiki in order to be able to play a more satisfying game.
                                                        \r\n\r\nAlthough a challenging game, it is not a difficult game to play once you have remembered a few keyboard commands. And this game can be played just about anywhere. Because the game has GPL license there are many ports and flavours available. It is possible to play on most platforms: I have tried it on Linux, Android and even as a Google Chrome app, although the IOS port was not usable on our old iPad or a colleague\'s new iPhone.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThere are various ports for the Windows platform, some of which replace the character based interface with Windows 3.1 style tile interface or a 3d isometric graphic interface. Personally I\'d prefer to stick with the traditional character interface since the graphics don\'t really add anything to the game play. In fact when I play the game on Windows laptop, I use a minimal Debian install running on VirtualBox. I have set it up to auto-run Nethack and shutdown when exiting the game. Then I launch the VM directly with a shortcut containing the virtualbox command on the desktop.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThis is how I set up my Nethack VM:
                                                        \r\nFirst I created a VirtualBox VM with 1 core 256M of RAM and an 8GB hard drive (I could have easily got away with 2GB actually).
                                                        \r\n\r\nThen I installed a minimal install of Debian, configured networking and installed nethack using apt-get install.
                                                        \r\n\r\nOnce nethack was installed I disabled networking so I don\'t have to wait for a network connection to time-out when if my machine is not online.
                                                        \r\n\r\nTo make Debian auto-start with a particular user account you can edit the /etc/inittab and alter one of the tty invocations. I changed the line:
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        1:2345:respawn:/sbin/mingetty tty1

                                                        \r\n\r\nTo login my account \'steve\'
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        1:2345:respawn:/sbin/mingetty –autologin steve tty1

                                                        \r\n\r\nTo get Nethack to run on start-up, and the vm to shutdown on exiting the game edit the user\'s .bashrc file and append these three commands to the end of the file
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nclear # this ensures that the screen is clean prior to running the game
                                                        \r\nnethack # to run the game
                                                        \r\nsudo shutdown -h now # to close the VM when you exit the game
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nBecause Nethack is a terminal based game it doesn\'t hammer the battery in portable machines, making it an ideal travel game for a commuter.
                                                        \r\n\r\nEven if you are not a gamer its worth a look at Nethack, it might be the one computer game that really grabs your attention.
                                                        \r\n',240,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vi, vim, nethack, debian',0,0,1), (1800,'2015-06-26','YouTube Video Subscriptions',882,'How to subscribe to and watch YouTube Video series, with suggestions','

                                                        \r\nAlthough my wife and I have a Cable TV subscription, I have maintained I could give it up easily because so much of what I am interested in is online anyway. For many people that might mean Netflix or Hulu, but for me it means YouTube. This is the golden age of narrow-casting, as opposed to broadcasting, because YouTube gives so many creators the opportunity to find their own audience for things that dont appeal to the masses.\r\nFor more go to https://www.palain.com/?p=243\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n(Added)\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','YouTube, online video, subscriptions, Patreon',0,0,1), (1805,'2015-07-03','56 - LibreOffice Impress - Styles and Objects 1 - Presentation Styles',896,'Presentation Styles and their use in LibreOffice Impress','

                                                        \r\nWe have previously looked at Styles for Writer, and for Calc, and now it is time to look at them for Impress. You may recall from both Writer and Calc that we saw it is important to know that Styles live inside of Templates. So any time you change a Style you needed to make sure it was saved inside of a Template, and if you wanted it to be generally available in all documents or spreadsheets you needed to be sure to make the change inside the Default Template.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1125\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, Styles',0,0,1), (1782,'2015-06-02','ChorusText - a Non-visual Text Editor Open Assistive Device Project',1051,'Introducing ChorusText, a non-visual text editor open assistive device project','

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',305,79,1,'CC-BY-SA','ChorusText, text editor, Arduino, pcDuino, eSpeak, Mary TTS, Maker Faire Singapore 2015',0,0,1), (1777,'2015-05-26','Magnatune Favourites',4033,'Andrew and Dave talk about Magnatune and some of their favourite tracks','

                                                        Magnatune Favourites

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Andrew Conway and Dave Morriss, who each have a lifetime membership with Magnatune, talk about the label and share some favourite tracks.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        About Magnatune

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"Magnatune
                                                        Magnatune Logo
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Magnatune is an American independent record label based in Berkeley, California. It was founded in 2003 by John Buckman.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When first set up music could be bought from Magnatune through a download interface on the website with a "pay what you like" pricing model. Later it was possible to purchase physical CDs and in 2007 complete albums and individual tracks could be bought through Amazon.com.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Magnatune moved to a membership plan in 2008 and in 2010 dropped the CD printing service. The subscription model offers monthly or lifetime membership. Members can download as much as they want, or with a streaming membership can stream as much as they want. Many download formats are available and all music is without DRM.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Magnatune encourages buyers to share up to three copies with friends. All of the tracks downloaded free of charge are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (BY-NC-SA) License.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s legal to play Magnatune music on a non-commercial podcast without paying collecting society fees to organisations such as ASCAP, BMI or SoundExchange.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Music Choices

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The picture we mentioned when discussing the artist Kalabi
                                                        \"Picture
                                                        https://magnatune.com//artists/img/kalabi2.jpg

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See also https://www.museumwaalsdorp.nl/en/airacous.html if you want more.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Wikipedia entry on Magnatune: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnatune
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Magnatune site: https://magnatune.com/
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Wikipedia entry on Creative Commons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_Commons_license
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. John Buckman\'s blog: https://john.redmood.com/
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Web-based Magnatune player: https://greattuneplayer.jit.su
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Magnatune,music',0,0,1), (1786,'2015-06-08','What is MapReduce?',2188,'Charles in NJ returns in his outdoor studio to explain a Big Data concept.','

                                                        \r\nShownotes in pdf format
                                                        \r\nShownotes in docx format
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        What is MapReduce, Anyway?

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        MapReduce is inspired by three approaches from\r\nfunctional programming for applying a function to each item of a\r\ncollection of data, namely, Map, Filter and Reduce. That is pretty\r\nabstract, so I will try to bring some of these ideas down to Earth. \r\nI\'ll use lists to represent the “data” in any examples, but the\r\nconcepts in MapReduce can apply equally well to any data source:\r\nmultiple streams from the Internet, a number of internal data stores\r\nfrom multiple sites, and even user keystrokes/mouse moves. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If a function (or operation) can be applied to\r\neach item in some kind of input data, you may be able to use map,\r\nfilter and reduce.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Defining Terms

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Map

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When we use the expression\r\nMap(function: f, data: [1,2,3,4,5,6]), we are declaring that we want\r\nto apply the function \"f\" to each element in the data. In\r\nthis case, we have a list of numbers, but the data could be names,\r\nemployee records, or URLs for Internet documents from the Internet\r\nthat we would like to parse to extract useful information.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Example: function f is square(x) = x * x, and the\r\ndata is our list [1..6].

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMap( square(x), [1,2,3,4,5,6]) = [square(1),square(2), ..., square(6)], or [1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36]\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Filter

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Filtering data is essentially a variation of Map. \r\nYou could think of it in two stages:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Apply a \"test\" function to Map each item to either True or False (\"In\" or \"Out\")

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Use the results of that Map operation to drop any item that fails the test (False)

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Having said this, a Filter does not have to be implemented in this way. By\r\ndeclaring that we want to use a Filter operation, we have specified WHAT we\r\nwant to do. It really does not matter HOW it gets done.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Most functional programming tutorials would illustrate a Filter by\r\nselecting prime numbers from a list of integers, or to isolate numbers that\r\nare not multiples of 3. A more useful illustration of Filter is a search\r\nfilter that reviews documents in a repository, or a set of search engine\r\nresults, and returns only those that pass the \"relevance test\". The test\r\nitself could be defined using a \"fuzzy\" criterion for relevance (0-20% Not,\r\n20-50% A Little, 50-75% Fairly, > 75% Very -- or what have you), but the\r\nend result is that you\'ll choose some documents to accept, and omit the\r\nrest.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        In a filter operation on a large number of data items, you might want to\r\ndrop the items as early as possible. There is no law that requires you to\r\nmake these decisions in advance when you offer Map or Filter operations on\r\na server.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        In a MapReduce context, Map and Filter will often end up lumped together.\r\nThis is fine, because you don\'t want to waste processing time to perform\r\npotentially expensive transformations on data or documents that you can rule\r\nout immediately with a less computationally expensive filter.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Reduce

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A Reduce operation on a collection of data is any\r\nkind of aggregate operation that boils down all of the detail items\r\ninto one or more summary metrics computed on the (filtered) data. \r\nThe canonical examples of a Reduce operation would be a Sum or a\r\nCount, but there are other possibilities.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Reduce is usually defined as an operation: \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Reduce(function(accumulator, data item) -> new\r\naccumulator value; initial value; data).

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Sometimes, you may see the Reduce operation\r\ndefined recursively:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nReduce( function: f, initial_value, data = {first_item, all_other_items} ) is equal to \r\nReduce ( function: f,  new_value = f(initial_value, first_item),  data: {all_other_items})
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        If you follow that script, you can just\r\nrinse-and-repeat until you\'ve processed all of the items.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Why is this some kind of technological advance?

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        If you look at this characterization of Map and\r\nReduce, you\'ll see that these operations are fairly abstract. The\r\ndeclarations typically state only what needs to be done, and the\r\nimplementation steps that specify how it is to be done are left open.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        For operations on data items that are fairly\r\nindependent of each other, there are advantages in defining things in\r\nthis way. If there are no dependencies between data items, in the\r\nsense of the two rules listed below, you can use distributed\r\nprocessing across several \"servers\" to get to the result\r\nfor the entire data collection much faster. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Basic ground rules for the simplest case \r\n(Exceptions and additional constraints will apply in real projects):

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Computations for each data item do not depend on those for other data items, so no communication, coordination or shared memory is needed between \"worker\" machines.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. The order of the computations does not matter.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Under these conditions, Map and Reduce operations\r\ncould be outsourced from a MapReduce server installation to a fleet\r\nof \"worker\" computers that can take on pieces of the\r\noverall computation, and send their results back to the Aggregation\r\nServer (or \"Boss\" machine). That could give you a\r\ntremendous speed-up over the alternative of running on a single\r\ncomputing cluster. So there can be speed advantages that come from\r\nMapReduce.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        With the right infrastructure, you can relax these\r\nconstraints and still get many of the same benefits on data that\r\nneeds to be ordered or preprocessed into some kind of table\r\nstructure. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Another advantage of the Boss/Workers paradigm for\r\nMapReduce operations, which may be less obvious, is fault tolerance. \r\nComputers sometimes fail to complete their assigned tasks. Network\r\nconnections can be lost. In a Boss/Workers setup, a Worker could\r\nsend a status report back to the Boss machine (or a Supervisor, since\r\neven the Boss role can be shared) that either contains a SUCCESS\r\nstatus flag and the results of its assignment, or a FAILED flag. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If a Boss receives a FAILED message, that piece of\r\nthe overall computation could be re-assigned to other Worker(s). In\r\nthe case of a network outage, the Boss could respond to a Timeout\r\nevent for the Worker, flush that assignment to that Worker, and\r\nre-assign the unfinished task to other resources with a new unique\r\nID. Any homework that is turned in after the Timeout event can then\r\nbe ignored.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Note: This is just one way to build in parallelism\r\nand fault tolerance. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        An additional advantage to this sort of vague\r\ndefinition of MapReduce tasks is the ability to work with distributed\r\ndata in a way that allows greater use of local processing. A central\r\nserver (Hub) processing model forces remote sites to transmit all the\r\noriginal data to the Hub, wait for the Hub to do the processing, and\r\nthen possibly transfer the processed results back from the Hub to\r\nthe remote data repository. That\'s a lot of network traffic, any\r\npart of which could be lost, corrupted or even intercepted by third\r\nparties.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        In a Reduce operation, where everything is boiled\r\ndown to some [set of] summary measures, the local site could do much\r\nof the processing work, and transmit only the needed intermediate\r\nresults to the Boss back at the Hub for inclusion in the final totals\r\nover all Worker machines.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Summary: Leaving the implementation details out of\r\nthe MapReduce specification allows for flexibility and some degree of\r\noptimization in getting these operations done in the most beneficial\r\nway. \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • You can optimize to save time, even if that means spending more on hardware and communications.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • You can design to save money (local processing, servers that are easier to replace, etc.).

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Whatever your objectives, you can adjust your\r\nimplementation to get the best result for your application.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Enter Hadoop.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Hadoop is an open source project from the Apache\r\nFoundation that lets you set up massively parallel distributed\r\nprocessing schemes for computations that can be fit into the\r\nMapReduce paradigm. The best part is that you can make Hadoop work\r\non varying types of hardware, so you don\'t need to run the pieces of\r\ncomputational work solely on high-end, expensive supercomputers or\r\ncomplex computing cluster installations. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Hadoop makes it possible to farm out the bits of\r\ncomputational \"homework\" to \"commodity hardware\"\r\n– whatever that may mean for your installation. Commodity hardware\r\nis also an abstract term. In practice, you can match the level of\r\ncomputing power for Workers to meet the requirements of the assigned\r\nwork. The worker machines could be set up on computers that are\r\neasy to provision and replace, so you won\'t have to buy\r\nspecial-purpose servers that require extended periods for setup and\r\nconfiguration. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        MapReduce does NOT refer to the process of\r\nsplitting up a large data processing job into assignments. The\r\nconcepts behind MapReduce help us to think about and plan classes of\r\nprocessing tasks that are frequently applied to large datasets, or to\r\na lot of data streams that are coming in from many sources and\r\nlocations. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        So far, it sounds like MapReduce and Hadoop are a\r\nkind of silver bullet that can eliminate the time and expense\r\nrequired to solve “Big Data” problems. As helpful as these ideas\r\nand their supporting technologies may be, not every potential\r\nMapReduce job can be optimized as much as we might like. Hadoop\r\nwill not offer a cure-all for every problem. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        We still have to understand the problem, determine\r\nwhat is needed, and work hard to do the right thing.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        But when there is a good fit between the problem\r\nand this approach toward providing a solution, Hadoop and MapReduce\r\ncan be very helpful.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',229,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','map,reduce,hadoop',0,0,1), (1799,'2015-06-25','Posting From the Command Line on Open Social Networks',764,'I explain how to post content from the command line on open social networks pump.io and GNU Social','

                                                        Posting From the Command Line on Open Social Networks

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can post to your open social media timelines from the command line using API access. Why would you want to do this?

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Script automated postings.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Bots
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Post from terminal environments.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Post from wherever else you are without having to go to the social media site or to the client that you use to access it.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Trigger postings via voice command (what I do).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On GNU Social

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Here is the basic format for the command to post a message to a Statusnet / GNU Social timeline:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        curl -s --basic --user <username:password> --data status=\"Hello World\" --output /dev/null https://instance.domain.com/api/statuses/update.xml

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And here is the script I use to post a message to my timeline, launched by a blather voice command:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n# SN account info\r\nuser=johndoe\r\npass=\'password123\'\r\n\r\n# a place to store the text message \r\ntext=/tmp/message.txt\r\n\r\n# Virtual keystrokes to copy selected text to the clipboard\r\nxdotool key Control+c\r\n\r\n# pipe text out of clipboard into the text file\r\nxclip -o > $text\r\n\r\n# rest for half a sec\r\nsleep .5\r\n\r\ncurl -s --basic \\\r\n--user $user:$pass \\\r\n--data status=\"$(cat \"$text\")\" \\\r\n--output /dev/null \\\r\nhttps://instance.domain.com/api/statuses/update.xml \r\n\r\nrm $text\r\n\r\nexit 0\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On Pump.io

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On pump.io you have to install the pump.io software on your computer. You don\'t have to be running a server, you just have to have the binaries so that you can run the commands. I will not go into how this is done on this podcast, but there\'s a link to the pump.io website below and there should be installation instructions available there. Once you have the software installed, you also have to allow command-line access to your account and get the token for authentication, maybe authorize the user too:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npump-register-app -s instance.domain.com -P 443 -t CLI\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npump-authorize -s instance.domain.com -P 443 -u username\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Finally you can post to your timeline from the command line:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        pump-post-note -s instance.domain.com -P 443 -p -u username -n \"Hello World.\"

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        My script to post a message to the pump.io timeline, launched by a blather voice command:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n# a place to put the text. \r\ntext=/tmp/message.txt\r\n\r\n# --------------------------------\r\n# Since markdown is possible, I run \r\n# the text through markdown to get\r\n# a bit of formatting and save it\r\n# as a separate file \r\n# --------------------------------\r\npump=/tmp/pump.txt\r\n\r\n# Virtual keystrokes to copy selected text to the clipboard\r\nxdotool key Control+c\r\n\r\n# pipe text out of clipboard into the text file\r\nxclip -o > $text\r\n\r\n# run Markdown\r\nmarkdown $text > $pump\r\n\r\n# Post message\r\npump-post-note -s instance.domain.com -P 443 -p -u username -n \"$(cat $pump)\"\r\n\r\nsleep 1\r\n\r\nrm $text\r\nrm $pump\r\n\r\nexit 0\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','scripting, command-line, social media, GNU Social, pump.io',0,0,1), (1787,'2015-06-09','A Beginner with a Wok',1025,'Frank Bell shares some of the things he\'s learned about cooking with a wok.','

                                                        \r\nMerriam-Websters defines \"stir-fry\" as \"to fry quickly over high heat in a lightly oiled pan (as a wok) while stirring continuously.\"\r\n(Source: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/stir-fry)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTalk about stir-frying. Not an expert by any means, but think I\'ve learned enough to share a bit.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFrank bought a wok, quite on impulse, and has been experimenting with stir-fry recipes and has found it surprisingly easy--much easier than, say, making a souffle or oysters Rockefeller. In this podcast, he discusses what he has learned and in the context of narrating the preparation of a meal.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Some Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWok How-Tos:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Two Recipes:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,stir-fry,wok',0,0,1), (1788,'2015-06-10','Podcrawl Glasgow 2015',1950,'Dave Morriss and Kevie have a yarn about the upcoming event Podcrawl Glasgow 2015','

                                                        \r\nDave Morriss and Kevie have a yarn about the upcoming Glasgow Podcrawl. The event takes place on the 10th of July 2015 and kicks off at 6pm in the State Bar, Holland Street. The event is open to anybody with an interest in open source software or creative commons music. Whether you\'re an enthusiast or just interest in finding out more, also if you\'re a member of a band then we would love to have you along for a yarn over a few pints.
                                                        \r\nCheck out https://kmacphail.blogspot.co.uk/2015/01/podcrawl-glasgow-2015.html for more details and a map of how to get to the bar.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',296,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Glasgow,Podcrawl,open source, ccmusic, podcast, Linux',0,0,1), (1791,'2015-06-15','Organizing Photos with Bash',1875,'Use bash to simplify the process of organizing and backing up photographs.','

                                                        Summary

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I provide an overview of how I use bash to automate my process\r\n for orgainizing photographs on my computer.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        There are two main objectives of this script:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Organize photographs in a folder structure that makes sense to me, e.g. 2015/2015-05-22
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Allow me to back up my photographs using a variety of methods.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Download the Script

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        This script is hosted on Github and you can download the latest version using following command:

                                                        \r\n\r\ngit clone https://gist.github.com/81e489b2a7397bb17305.git\r\n\r\n

                                                        Script

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\nshopt -s -o nounset\r\n\r\n# Create variables and configure script.\r\ndeclare -rx SCRIPT=${0##*/}\r\ndeclare TMPDIR=/tmp/photos\r\ndeclare -r CURRENTDIR=`pwd`\r\ndeclare FILES=$TMPDIR/*\r\ndeclare DESTINATION=/media/Tyr/Pictures/Photos\r\ndeclare -r GOOGLEUSER=\"tnyplz@gmail.com\"\r\ndeclare -r  OPTSTRING=\"-h, -d:\"\r\ndeclare -r  LONGOPTSTRING=\"help, destination-directory, no-google-backup, sd-card, tmp-dir, no-delete, backup\"\r\ndeclare RESULT\r\ndeclare GOOGLE_BACKUP=true\r\ndeclare SD=false\r\ndeclare SDDIR\r\ndeclare NODELETE=false\r\ndeclare S3=false\r\n\r\n# Executable dependencies\r\ndeclare -rx find=\"/usr/bin/find\"\r\ndeclare -rx gphoto2=\"/usr/bin/gphoto2\"\r\ndeclare -rx google=\"/usr/bin/google\"\r\ndeclare -rx dcraw=\"/usr/bin/dcraw\"\r\ndeclare -rx rsync=\"/usr/bin/rsync\"\r\ndeclare -rx rename=\"/usr/bin/rename\"\r\ndeclare -rx tar=\"/usr/bin/tar\"\r\ndeclare -rx s3cmd=\"/usr/bin/s3cmd\"\r\n\r\n# Sanity Checks\r\nif test -z $BASH; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: please run this script with the BASH shell\\n\" >&2\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n# check for find\r\nif test ! -x $find; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $find command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n# check for gphoto2\r\nif test ! -x $gphoto2; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $gphoto2 command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n# check for google\r\nif test ! -x $google; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $google command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\nfi\r\n# check for dcraw\r\nif test ! -x $dcraw; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $dcraw command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\nfi\r\n# check for rename\r\nif test ! -x $rename; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $rename command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n# check for rsync\r\nif test ! -x $rsync; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $rsync command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\nfi\r\n# check for tar\r\nif test ! -x $tar; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $tar command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\nfi\r\n# check for glacier-cmd\r\nif test ! -x $s3cmd; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: the $s3cmd command is not available -- \\\r\naborting\\n\" >&2\r\nfi\r\n\r\n\r\n# Check for Options\r\n# =================\r\n\r\ngetopt -T\r\nif [ $? -ne 4 ]; then\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: %s\\n\" \"getopt is in compatibility mode\" >&2\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n\r\nRESULT=$(getopt --name \"$SCRIPT\" --options \"$OPTSTRING\" --longoptions \"$LONGOPTSTRING\" -- \"$@\")\r\nif [ $? -gt 0 ]; then\r\n    exit 192\r\nfi\r\n\r\neval set -- \"$RESULT\"\r\n\r\nwhile [ $# -gt 0 ]; do\r\n    case \"$1\" in\r\n    -h | --help) # show help\r\n        printf \"%s\\n\" \"\r\nThis script helps you automate the process of downloading photos from\r\nyour camera, uploading backups to Google Picasa, and syncing the files\r\nwith a specified directory.\r\n\r\nDependendies:\r\n  gphoto2\r\n  dcraw\r\n  googlecl\r\n  rsync\r\n  s3cmd\r\n\r\nusage: $SCRIPT [options]\r\n\r\nOptions:\r\n  -h | --help                        Show help for $SCRIPT\r\n  --destination-directory {LOCATION} Set the location where the photos will be\r\n                                     copied to.\r\n  --tmp-dir {LOCATION}               Set the temporary directory where images\r\n                                     will be downloaded to initially. The\r\n                                     default is /tmp/photos.\r\n  --no-google-backup                 Disable uploading low rez copies to Google\r\n                                     Plus.\r\n  --sd-card {LOCATION}               Set the location of the sd card.\r\n  --no-delete                        Do not delete from temp file.\r\n  --backup {FOLDER} {S3 BUCKET}      Create archive from folder and upload to S3.\r\n  \"\r\n        exit 0\r\n        ;;\r\n    --destination-directory ) shift\r\n        if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then\r\n            printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: %s\\n\" \"Invalid argument for destination. No destination given.\" >&2\r\n            exit 192\r\n        fi\r\n        DESTINATION=\"$1\"\r\n        ;;\r\n    --tmp-dir ) shift\r\n        if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then\r\n            printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: %s\\n\" \"Invalid argument for tmp-dir.  No temporary directory given.\" >&2\r\n            exit 192\r\n        fi\r\n        TMPDIR=\"$1\"\r\n        FILES=$TMPDIR/*\r\n        ;;\r\n    --no-google-backup ) shift\r\n        GOOGLE_BACKUP=false\r\n        ;;\r\n    --sd-card ) shift\r\n        SD=true\r\n        if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then\r\n            printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: %s\\n\" \"Invalid argument for sd directory. No sd card directory given.\" >&2\r\n            exit 192\r\n        fi\r\n        SDDIR=\"$1\"\r\n        ;;\r\n    --no-delete ) shift\r\n	NODELETE=true\r\n	;;\r\n    --backup ) shift\r\n        if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then\r\n            printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: %s\\n\" \"Invalid argument for AWS Glacier Backup. Backup folder and vault must be specified.\"\r\n        fi\r\n        S3=true\r\n        BACKUP_FOLDER=\"$1\"\r\n        BUCKET=\"$2\"\r\n        ;;\r\n    esac\r\n    shift\r\ndone\r\n\r\n# Functions\r\n# =========\r\n\r\n# function to convert a raw image to jpg.\r\n# input: requires the user to specify the file extention ($1).\r\nfunction convert_to_jpg () {\r\n  FILES2CONVERT=$TMPDIR/*\"$1\"\r\n  for FILE in $FILES2CONVERT\r\n  do\r\n    FILE2BACKUP=$TMPDIR/Backup/`basename \"$FILE\" \"$1\"`\'.jpg\'\r\n    if [ -e $FILE2BACKUP ]; then\r\n        printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Skipping $FILE, jpg file already exists\\n\"\r\n    elif [ -e $FILE ]; then\r\n        printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Converting $FILE to $FILE2BACKUP\\n\"\r\n        $dcraw -cvz -w -o 1 -q 3 \"$FILE\" | cjpeg -quality 80 -optimize > \"$FILE2BACKUP\"\r\n    else\r\n        printf \"Did not convert $FILE\\n\"\r\n    fi\r\n  done\r\n}\r\n\r\n# function to resize jpeg to upload to picasa\r\nfunction resize_to_thumb () {\r\n    FILES2RESIZE=$TMPDIR/Backup/* # TODO pass this in as argument along with destination directory\r\n    for FILE in $FILES2RESIZE\r\n    do\r\n        printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Creating thumbnail for $FILE...\"\r\n        convert $FILE -resize 2048x2048 $TMPDIR/Backup/Upload/`basename \"$FILE\" \".jpg\"`\'_thumb.jpg\'\r\n        printf \"done\\n\"\r\n    done\r\n}\r\n\r\n# function to import photos\r\nfunction import_photos () {\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Importing Photos\\n\"\r\n    if $SD; then\r\n        cp -p \"$SDDIR\"/* .\r\n    else\r\n        $gphoto2 --quiet --get-all-files\r\n    fi\r\n}\r\n\r\n# function to remove spaces in file names\r\nfunction remove_spaces () {\r\n    $find $1 -depth -name \"* *\" -execdir $rename \'s/ /_/g\' \"{}\" \\;\r\n}\r\n\r\n# function to sort images into direcotries based on date.\r\n# input: directory to sort ($1)\r\n#        directory to sort into ($2)\r\nfunction sort_images () {\r\n    SORTDIR=$2\'/Sorted/\'\r\n    for FILE in $1\r\n    do\r\n        printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Sorting $FILE\\n\"\r\n        DATEDIR=$SORTDIR`date -r \"$FILE\" +%Y`\'/\'`date -r \"$FILE\" +%Y-%m-%d`\r\n        mkdir -p $DATEDIR\r\n        cp \"$FILE\" $DATEDIR/\r\n    done\r\n}\r\n\r\n# function create archive and upload to AWS S3\r\n# input: directory to create an archive for ($1)\r\n#        s3 bucket name ($2)\r\nfunction archive_folder () {\r\n    ARCHIVE=$TMPDIR/$(basename $1).tar.bz2\r\n    printf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: archiving $ARCHIVE\\n\"\r\n    $tar -cvjf $ARCHIVE $1\r\n    $s3cmd put $ARCHIVE $2\r\n}\r\n\r\n# Create temporary directory\r\nmkdir -p $TMPDIR\r\ncd $TMPDIR\r\n\r\n# Create AWS Glacier archive\r\nif $S3; then\r\n    archive_folder $BACKUP_FOLDER $BUCKET\r\n    cd $CURRENTDIR\r\n    if [ $NODELETE = false ]; then\r\n        rm -rf $TMPDIR\r\n    fi\r\n    exit 0\r\nfi\r\n\r\n# Import files from camera\r\nimport_photos\r\nprintf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Importing Photos Done!\\n\"\r\n\r\n# Remove Spaces in Filenames\r\nremove_spaces $TMPDIR\r\n\r\n#Convert all files to lower case\r\nprintf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Converting Photos to Lower Case.\\n\"\r\nfor FILE in *\r\ndo\r\n    f=`echo $FILE | tr \'[:upper:]\' \'[:lower:]\'`\r\n    mv \"$FILE\" \"$f\"\r\ndone\r\nprintf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Converting Photos to Lower Case Done!\\n\"\r\n\r\n# Sort files\r\nsort_images \"$FILES\" \"$TMPDIR\"\r\nprintf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Sorting Images Done!\\n\"\r\n\r\n# Create backup jpgs and upload them to Picassa\r\nmkdir -p $TMPDIR/Backup\r\ncp $TMPDIR/*.jpg $TMPDIR/Backup/\r\n\r\nconvert_to_jpg \".nef\"\r\nconvert_to_jpg \".nrw\"\r\nmkdir -p $TMPDIR/Backup/Upload\r\nresize_to_thumb\r\n\r\nif $GOOGLE_BACKUP; then\r\n    # Upload jpgs to Picassa\r\n    # Requires that you authorize googlecl through the web browser.\r\n    $google picasa create --user $GOOGLEUSER --title \"Backup \"`date +%Y-%m` $TMPDIR/Backup/Upload/*\r\nfi\r\n\r\n# Copy files to final locations\r\n$rsync -ravv $TMPDIR/Sorted/ $DESTINATION # TODO test to make sure destination works\r\n\r\ncd $CURRENTDIR\r\n\r\n# Remove temp folder\r\nif [ $NODELETE = false ]; then\r\n    rm -rf $TMPDIR\r\nfi\r\n\r\nprintf \"$SCRIPT:$LINENO: Processing Complete!\\n\"\r\nexit 0\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n',263,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','bash, photography, automation',0,0,1), (1792,'2015-06-16','An Interview with Andrea Frost',607,'David Whitman interviews Andrea Frost during LinuxFest Northwest.','

                                                        \r\nI interview Andrea Frost at LinuxFest Northwest.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Andrea Frost

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAndrea Frost holds a B.A. in German language and a concentration in mathematics from Western Washington University. A passionate advocate of youth and education, Frost has a wide spectrum of volunteer experience with youth organizations.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nShe is currently an office assistant for Kids Council Northwest and finishing a post-graduate degree in computer science from Western.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://awc.cs.wwu.edu/\r\nWestern Washington University\r\nAssociation for Women in Computing\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nhttps://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/local/article22275924.html\r\n

                                                        \r\n',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','LinuxFest Northwest, Andrea Frost, Women in Computing',0,0,1), (1793,'2015-06-17','Some thoughts about the Go language',539,'I\'ve been learning Go recently. Here are my initial thoughts about the language and framework.','

                                                        \r\nShow_Notes:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHere are some useful links when learning Go:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd here are some links to things I mentioned during the show:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',302,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Go language,programming language',0,0,1), (1804,'2015-07-02','What\'s in my Bicycle Repair Tool Box',1454,'I describe what\'s in my bike repair tool box and what the tools do.','

                                                        Tools Mentioned

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Unless otherwise stated, all are made by Park Bicycle Tools: https://www.parktool.com/

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • SPA-1: Pin Spanner: Green
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • SPA-6: Adjustable Pin Spanner
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • SW-7: Triple Spoke Wrench
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • XLC bike tools crank tool TO-C02 (Crankarm removal tool): https://www.amazon.com/XLC-bike-tools-crank-tool/dp/B000NU2WAS/
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • SCW-13, SCW-15: 13mm, 15mm Shop Cone Wrenches
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • DCW-1: Double-Ended Cone Wrench
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • FR-1, 2, 5, 6: Freewheel Remover tools
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • BBT-22: Bottom Bracket Tool
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CN-10: Professional Cable and Housing Cutter
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Avenir \"Third Hand\" Cable Puller: 94-27-403 (https://www.avenirusa.com/parts-and-accessories/tools/cable-tools/third-hand-cable-puller.html)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • HCW-5: Crank and Bottom Bracket Wrench
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CT-3: Chain tool
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • HCW-15: Headset Wrench
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ferrules for cable housing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Cable End Caps
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • TW-1: Torque Wrench
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • SR-1: Sprocket Remover / Chain Whip
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Vise Grips (small and large)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Adjustable wrenches: 6\", 8\", 10\", 12\"
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',238,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','bicycles, bicycle repair, DIY, tools',0,0,1), (1797,'2015-06-23','An Interview with Aaron Wolf of the Snowdrift Co-op Project',875,'Aaron Wolf of the Snowdrift Co-op project is interviewed by David Whitman','

                                                        \r\nAn Interview with Aaron Wolf of the Snowdrift Co-op project by David Whitman during LinuxFest Northwest 2015\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAaron Wolf https://blog.wolftune.com/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSnowdrift: https://snowdrift.coop\r\nAbout:\r\nWe\'re building a sustainable funding platform for freely-licensed works. Our innovative matching pledge creates a network effect where we all work together to support these public goods.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIntroducing Snowdrift.coop\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOur matching patronage system allows everyone to support FLO projects with minimal risk and maximum impact.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nUnlike the one-to-one matching used in traditional fundraising, we use a many-to-many matching pledge that creates a network effect (like the internet itself) so that we all reinforce one another. Unlike one-time fundraising campaigns that help projects get started, Snowdrift.coop pays out monthly to provide sustainability for ongoing work.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBefore the times of modern market capitalism, creative workers were supported by wealthy patrons. With Snowdrift.coop, the global community becomes the patron. Instead of businesses deciding the options that we then merely choose from as consumers, we will support and actively work with projects that best serve the interests of the public.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSnowdrift wiki: https://snowdrift.coop/p/snowdrift/w\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIRC at: freenode.net at #snowdrift \r\n

                                                        ',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Free Software Support',0,0,1), (1802,'2015-06-30','An Interview with Emily Hampton a LinuxFest Northwest Volunteer',415,'An Interview with Emily Hampton a LinuxFest Northwest Volunteer','

                                                        Emily Hampton

                                                        \r\n\r\n',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','LinuxFest Northwest, Volunteers',0,0,1), (1796,'2015-06-22','Audacity - Chains, Notches and Labels',909,'Some more Tips and Tricks when using Audacity','

                                                        \r\nI expand some on Jon Kulp\'s show on using Labels in Audacity. Specifically, I comment on importing a Label track from a Tab separated text file.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nI go on to talk about using Notch filters, a Nyquist-effect plugin for Audacity. Notch filters work extremely well on certain frequency centered noise like mains hum.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nI follow up by talking about chains. A way of doing batch operations directly in Audacity.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',307,45,0,'CC-BY-SA','Audacity, Recording, Editing, notch filter, chain',0,0,1), (1798,'2015-06-24','Machine learning and service robots.',563,'Interview with Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Ertel at the 2014 MakerWorld in Germany','

                                                        \r\nLink to the videos of the crawling robots: https://iki.hs-weingarten.de/?lang=eng&page=p_crawler\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLink to the general Ravensburg-Weingarten University of Applied Sciences page, where you can also find videos of the service robots \"Kate\" and \"Marvin\": \r\nhttps://iki.hs-weingarten.de/?lang=eng&page=aktuelles\r\n

                                                        ',271,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','machine learning, robots, maker',0,0,1), (1801,'2015-06-29','How to tell your left earbud from your right',152,'Lowering the quality of shows, Ken provides a lifehack tip.','

                                                        AMAZING LIFE HACK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTie a knot in your left ear bud lead, and you can feel which is which without looking.\r\n

                                                        ',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','lifehack, earphones, knots, tips, hints, tricks',0,0,1), (1956,'2016-02-01','HPR Community News for January 2016',2340,'HPR Community News for January 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1935Fri2016-01-01Quick Bashpodder FixCharles in NJ
                                                        1936Mon2016-01-04HPR Community News for December 2015HPR Volunteers
                                                        1937Tue2016-01-05Klaatu talks to Cloudera about Hadoop and Big Dataklaatu
                                                        1938Wed2016-01-06How I prepare HPR showsDave Morriss
                                                        1939Thu2016-01-07Collating Pages with pdftkJon Kulp
                                                        1940Fri2016-01-08WASHLUG Talk on LastPassAhuka
                                                        1941Mon2016-01-11What\'s in my caseDave Morriss
                                                        1942Tue2016-01-12Kobo Touch N-905 E-Readerklaatu
                                                        1943Wed2016-01-13HPR AudioBook Club 11.5 - Interview with David Collins-RiveraHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        1944Thu2016-01-14sshfs - Secure SHell FileSystemFiftyOneFifty
                                                        1945Fri2016-01-15The Quassel IRC SystemFiftyOneFifty
                                                        1946Mon2016-01-18Wok CookeryDave Morriss
                                                        1947Tue2016-01-19ocenaudio lostnbronx
                                                        1948Wed2016-01-20Check Your Spelling in VimFrank Bell
                                                        1949Thu2016-01-21The Kindle/Kobo Open Reader (KOReader)Jon Kulp
                                                        1950Fri2016-01-22Kdenlive Part 2: Advanced Editing TechniqueGeddes
                                                        1951Mon2016-01-25Some additional Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        1952Tue2016-01-26Time now Ladies and GentsKen Fallon
                                                        1953Wed2016-01-27An Interview with David Willson of the Software Freedom SchoolDavid Whitman
                                                        1954Thu2016-01-28Grandpa Shows Us How to Turn Custom PensJon Kulp
                                                        1955Fri2016-01-29Install Open Street Map on a Garmin 60CXDavid Whitman
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-06 12:19:29 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Call for shows ... soon.
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1101
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-07 15:16:34 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Request to reserve slots for FOSDEM'16 Interviews
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1102
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-09 20:19:25 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Upload issue resolved
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1104
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-09 20:42:36 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Mailing list software turned off my subscription
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1106
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-22 12:40:22 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: FOSDEM Send in your questions
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1108
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-22 06:58:11 -0800
                                                          \n Subject: Spam filters do not like mail-lists
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1109
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Lord Drachenblut <lord.drachenblut@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-22 17:17:38 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: SCALE14X keynote
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1112
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: Nigel Verity <nigelverity@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-22 21:48:38 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Re: FOSDEM Send in your questions
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1114
                                                          \n Messages: 2
                                                        16. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 16
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 55 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1933\n(2015-12-30) \"HPR AudioBookClub 11 Street Candles\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDavid L. Willson on 2016-01-05:\n\"dangit!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1934\n(2015-12-31) \"Experiencing the Meegopad T-02 Part two\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2015-12-31:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2016-01-01:\n\"$2 mic\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDennis on 2016-01-03:\n\"Love the subtle humor...\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nElizabeth Chandler on 2016-01-03:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nJane V. Blanchard on 2016-01-03:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nA Shadowy Figure on 2016-01-04:\n\"Suitable for framing \"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nFrank on 2016-01-08:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1936\n(2016-01-04) \"HPR Community News for December 2015\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-01-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2016-01-07:\n\"Farts\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-01-07:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-01-07:\n\"Please do so\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-10:\n\"Le Pétomane\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1939\n(2016-01-07) \"Collating Pages with pdftk\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-01-10:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-10:\n\"Very nice\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nel Mussol on 2016-01-11:\n\"where is Dave\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-14:\n\"Donkeys\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1941\n(2016-01-11) \"What\'s in my case\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMagnus919 on 2016-01-11:\n\"Chronicles of a Cheap Geezer\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-11:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-01-11:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-12:\n\"What's a duplex check?\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nFrank on 2016-01-12:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nMike Ray on 2016-01-13:\n\"Nostalgia aint what it used to be\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nJonas on 2016-01-14:\n\"Great Episode\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-14:\n\"Check vs Cheque\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-14:\n\"Re: Nostalgia\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-14:\n\"Thanks Jonas\"
                                                          • Comment 11:\nMike Ray on 2016-01-14:\n\"Leftpondian spelling\"
                                                          • Comment 12:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-14:\n\"Re: Leftpondian spelling\"
                                                          • Comment 13:\nMike Ray on 2016-01-14:\n\"Rationalising languages\"
                                                          • Comment 14:\nJon Kulp on 2016-01-14:\n\"Gotta try one now\"
                                                          • Comment 15:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-15:\n\"Language rationalisation\"
                                                          • Comment 16:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-15:\n\"Hope you enjoy your fountain pen\"
                                                          • Comment 17:\nJon Kulp on 2016-01-15:\n\"Umm...probably not\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1942\n(2016-01-12) \"Kobo Touch N-905 E-Reader\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-01-13:\n\"KOReader uses normal directories\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2016-01-20:\n\"KOReader\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1944\n(2016-01-14) \"sshfs - Secure SHell FileSystem\"\nby FiftyOneFifty.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-01-14:\n\"Using sshfs to mount Pi rootfs on faster machine for cross-compiles\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2016-01-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\n0xf10e on 2016-01-16:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-01-18:\n\"no multiple users\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKevin O'Brien on 2016-01-21:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1946\n(2016-01-18) \"Wok Cookery\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-01-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-18:\n\"String or no string\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-01-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMark Waters on 2016-01-19:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-20:\n\"Thanks Mark\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nFrank on 2016-01-20:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-21:\n\"Banana pepper\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1948\n(2016-01-20) \"Check Your Spelling in Vim\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-01-22:\n\"Thanks a lot\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2016-01-23:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1951\n(2016-01-25) \"Some additional Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-01-26:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-27:\n\"Thanks Frank\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1952\n(2016-01-26) \"Time now Ladies and Gents\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-28:\n\"Great show idea\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1954\n(2016-01-28) \"Grandpa Shows Us How to Turn Custom Pens\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-01-28:\n\"Most interesting and entertaining\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-01-28:\n\"Acrylic smells\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1981,'2016-03-07','HPR Community News for February 2016',5248,'HPR Community News for February 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Nacho Jordi, \n Jon Doe, \n m1rr0r5h4d35.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1956Mon2016-02-01HPR Community News for January 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        1957Tue2016-02-02FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group B and CKen Fallon
                                                        1958Wed2016-02-03FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group AKen Fallon
                                                        1959Thu2016-02-04FOSDEM 2016 K building level 2Ken Fallon
                                                        1960Fri2016-02-05FOSDEM 2016 AW Building and moreKen Fallon
                                                        1961Mon2016-02-08HPR New Years Show Episode 1HPR Volunteers
                                                        1962Tue2016-02-09HPR New Years Show Episode 2HPR Volunteers
                                                        1963Wed2016-02-10HPR New Years Show Episode 3HPR Volunteers
                                                        1964Thu2016-02-11HPR New Years Show Episode 4HPR Volunteers
                                                        1965Fri2016-02-12Adding SQLite as a datasource to SQLeoKen Fallon
                                                        1966Mon2016-02-15Whats in my bagswift110
                                                        1967Tue2016-02-16How I saw the Linux Light at the end of the Windows tunnelNacho Jordi
                                                        1968Wed2016-02-17Advanced Terminal Usage: byobuJon Doe
                                                        1969Thu2016-02-18Horrors of Spam (and the Greater Horror of filtering it)Josh Knapp
                                                        1970Fri2016-02-19How I got started withy Linuxswift110
                                                        1971Mon2016-02-22BlinkStickDave Morriss
                                                        1972Tue2016-02-23How I got into Linuxm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        1973Wed2016-02-24Free/Libre/Vrije Software: The Goal and the PathKen Fallon
                                                        1974Thu2016-02-25Ubuntu Community donations, Governance and HardwareJWP
                                                        1975Fri2016-02-26Interview With An Android App Developersigflup
                                                        1976Mon2016-02-29Introduction to sed - part 1Dave Morriss
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Nigel Verity <nigelverity@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-01-22 21:48:38 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Re: FOSDEM Send in your questions
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1114
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Joshua Knapp <jknapp85@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-02 15:45:25 -0800
                                                          \n Subject: Request.php giving 500 error?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1118
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Charles Thayer <catintp@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-04 14:00:56 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Re: HPR In the press
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1121
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: "zwilnik@..." <zwilnik@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-08 10:27:03 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: HPR In the press
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1122
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: "David L. Willson" <DLWillson@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-11 09:11:59 -0700
                                                          \n Subject: speech synthesis during intro
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1124
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-11 17:18:23 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Re: speech synthesis during intro
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1123
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: sigflup synasloble <pantsbutt@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-02-14 19:18:21 -0600
                                                          \n Subject: title
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1128
                                                          \n Messages: 3
                                                        14. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 13
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 17 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1896\n(2015-11-09) \"User Local Software\"\nby Eric Duhamel.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBoclodoa on 2016-02-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1919\n(2015-12-10) \"DerbyCon Interview with Paul Koblitz\"\nby Xoke.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nOtto Localhorst on 2016-02-17:\n\"a template for a 'loid'\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1941\n(2016-01-11) \"What\'s in my case\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 18:\nNYbill on 2016-02-11:\n\"Its been a bit of an adventure...\"
                                                          • Comment 19:\nDave Morriss on 2016-02-15:\n\"Old fountain pen\"
                                                          • Comment 20:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-02-15:\n\"Pilot Metro and Scheaffer\"
                                                          • Comment 21:\nDave Morriss on 2016-02-15:\n\"Sheaffer\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1954\n(2016-01-28) \"Grandpa Shows Us How to Turn Custom Pens\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-02-01:\n\"Old Sheaffer\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1956\n(2016-02-01) \"HPR Community News for January 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-01-31:\n\"xmlstarlet, yes please\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1957\n(2016-02-02) \"FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group B and C\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-02-01:\n\"Distros and Accessibility\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-02-02:\n\"It wasn't really fair\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2016-02-02:\n\"A11y awareness\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1958\n(2016-02-03) \"FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group A\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTrent Palmer on 2016-02-04:\n\"Awesome Episode!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2016-02-05:\n\"Dazzling achievement\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1959\n(2016-02-04) \"FOSDEM 2016 K building level 2\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-02-03:\n\"More great interviews\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1972\n(2016-02-23) \"How I got into Linux\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTurtle on 2016-02-25:\n\"Nice show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1973\n(2016-02-24) \"Free/Libre/Vrije Software: The Goal and the Path\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nAndreas on 2016-02-24:\n\"there is something missing...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJames Michael Du Pont on 2016-02-27:\n\"cut off\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2001,'2016-04-04','HPR Community News for March 2016',5317,'HPR Community News for March 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Brian in Ohio, \n noplacelikeslashhome.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        1977Tue2016-03-01What\'s In My Bagm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        1978Wed2016-03-02Ultra High Vacuum: loading samplesAmunizp
                                                        1979Thu2016-03-03How to Make Perfect Steel-Cut OatsJon Kulp
                                                        1980Fri2016-03-04Fixing An Audio Problem while having a rantMrX
                                                        1981Mon2016-03-07HPR Community News for February 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        1982Tue2016-03-08Whats in my virtual bagNacho Jordi
                                                        1983Wed2016-03-09Review of Sony Vaio VPCswift110
                                                        1984Thu2016-03-10A Love Letter to linux.conf.auClinton Roy
                                                        1985Fri2016-03-11Fixing Bug 1092571Ken Fallon
                                                        1986Mon2016-03-14Introduction to sed - part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        1987Tue2016-03-15Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script (pt 1)Nacho Jordi
                                                        1988Wed2016-03-16Linux from ScratchBrian in Ohio
                                                        1989Thu2016-03-17WDTV Makes Me ItchEpicanis
                                                        1990Fri2016-03-18Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script part deuxNacho Jordi
                                                        1991Mon2016-03-21Adventures installing Linux on an Asus EeeBook X205Ab-yeezi
                                                        1992Tue2016-03-22How I\'m handling my podcast-subscriptions and -listeningfolky
                                                        1993Wed2016-03-23Can your window manager do this?Nacho Jordi
                                                        1994Thu2016-03-24Truck Repair: Serpentine Belt ReplacementJon Kulp
                                                        1995Fri2016-03-25Cov\'s JamsCov
                                                        1996Mon2016-03-28Xdotool magicNacho Jordi
                                                        1997Tue2016-03-29Introduction to sed - part 3Dave Morriss
                                                        1998Wed2016-03-30Homebrewingm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        1999Thu2016-03-31How I record a full band under Linuxnoplacelikeslashhome
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ivan Privaci <epicanis+hpr@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-03 14:08:46 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: The Robo-Summary Voice
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1131
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ivan Privaci <epicanis+hpr@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-03 14:18:39 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: (sigh) never mind (espeak voice question)
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1132
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-03 20:58:42 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-03-05T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1133
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: "Christopher \\"Cov\\" Covington" <cov@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-11 13:49:41 +0700
                                                          \n Subject: libravatar
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1134
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-20 19:23:09 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Help to fix audio
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1136
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Nigel Verity <nigelverity@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-03-20 21:08:34 UTC
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 90, Issue 5 - RMS Audio
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1137
                                                          \n Messages: 17
                                                        12. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 26
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 29 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1727\n(2015-03-17) \"Basic Mutt\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nLeslie Satenstein on 2016-03-13:\n\"Retired \"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nFrank on 2016-03-14:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1934\n(2015-12-31) \"Experiencing the Meegopad T-02 Part two\"\nby A Shadowy Figure.\n
                                                          • Comment 9:\nStilvoid on 2016-03-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1943\n(2016-01-13) \"HPR AudioBook Club 11.5 - Interview with David Collins-Rivera\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDavid L. Willson on 2016-03-15:\n\"Firefly\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1972\n(2016-02-23) \"How I got into Linux\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2016-03-02:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1973\n(2016-02-24) \"Free/Libre/Vrije Software: The Goal and the Path\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nCharles in NJ on 2016-03-21:\n\"Does FSF Have an Original?\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-03-22:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1976\n(2016-02-29) \"Introduction to sed - part 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGan Ainm on 2016-03-18:\n\"Another great sed resource\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-03-21:\n\"Thanks for this\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1978\n(2016-03-02) \"Ultra High Vacuum: loading samples\"\nby Amunizp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\namunizp on 2016-02-26:\n\"Wrong audio\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1979\n(2016-03-03) \"How to Make Perfect Steel-Cut Oats\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-03-03:\n\"Interesting episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-03-03:\n\"Slow-Cooker Size\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-03-03:\n\"The way of the oat\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1981\n(2016-03-07) \"HPR Community News for February 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nfolky on 2016-03-08:\n\"Change the name\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njezra on 2016-03-17:\n\"chicken coop?\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1983\n(2016-03-09) \"Review of Sony Vaio VPC\"\nby swift110.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\naoskfla on 2016-03-10:\n\"Boop\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2016-03-19:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1985\n(2016-03-11) \"Fixing Bug 1092571\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-03-11:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1987\n(2016-03-15) \"Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script (pt 1)\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-03-17:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1988\n(2016-03-16) \"Linux from Scratch\"\nby Brian in Ohio.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nEpicanis on 2016-03-16:\n\"Great topic, thanks!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1989\n(2016-03-17) \"WDTV Makes Me Itch\"\nby Epicanis.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-03-17:\n\"Brilliant show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-03-18:\n\"Nice kiosk idea\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nEpicanis on 2016-03-21:\n\"Thanks, all!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1992\n(2016-03-22) \"How I\'m handling my podcast-subscriptions and -listening\"\nby folky.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbjorn again on 2016-03-25:\n\"thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1994\n(2016-03-24) \"Truck Repair: Serpentine Belt Replacement\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbrian on 2016-03-25:\n\"two thoughts while still listening\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-03-25:\n\"Genius\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1997\n(2016-03-29) \"Introduction to sed - part 3\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-03-28:\n\"Knockout Episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-03-29:\n\"Careful what you wish for!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1998\n(2016-03-30) \"Homebrewing\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-03-30:\"[no title]\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2021,'2016-05-02','HPR Community News for April 2016',5521,'HPR Community News for April 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Joe, \n brian.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2000Fri2016-04-01How to Point a Satellite DishKen Fallon
                                                        2001Mon2016-04-04HPR Community News for March 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2002Tue2016-04-05Just got a Raspberry Pi Zeroswift110
                                                        2003Wed2016-04-06Using the Incron file watching daemonb-yeezi
                                                        2004Thu2016-04-07A First Look at the Owon B35TNYbill
                                                        2005Fri2016-04-08How I prepare and record my HPR Kdenlive voiceover shows.Geddes
                                                        2006Mon2016-04-11Basic Audio Production - CompressionNacho Jordi
                                                        2007Tue2016-04-12My new laptopDave Morriss
                                                        2008Wed2016-04-13HPR needs shows to survive.Ken Fallon
                                                        2009Thu2016-04-14Understanding the GNU/Screen Hardstatus lineCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                                        2010Fri2016-04-15Parsing JSON with Pythonklaatu
                                                        2011Mon2016-04-18Introduction to sed - part 4Dave Morriss
                                                        2012Tue2016-04-19Parsing XML in Python with Untangleklaatu
                                                        2013Wed2016-04-20Parsing XML in Python with Xmltodictklaatu
                                                        2014Thu2016-04-21A first look at the Owon B35T Part 2NYbill
                                                        2015Fri2016-04-22Linux in the ChurchJoe
                                                        2016Mon2016-04-25Echoprintlaindir
                                                        2017Tue2016-04-26Here are my thoughts on a 3D printer Kit.cheeto4493
                                                        2018Wed2016-04-27How to make Komboucha Teab-yeezi
                                                        2019Thu2016-04-28a pi project and an owncloud projectMatt McGraw (g33kdad)
                                                        2020Fri2016-04-29Automotive Billingbrian
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: NYbill <nybill@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-04 17:08:54 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: Re: Defaults...
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1159
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-05 20:20:08 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Call for shows
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1160
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-06 13:45:38 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HTML notes accessibility pointer
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1161
                                                          \n Messages: 7

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Curtis Adkins <curtadkins@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-09 21:26:57 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Upload show issue
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1168
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-12 08:12:09 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: CFP for Full Stack Fest 2016 has opened!
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1170
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-19 13:21:58 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: 11th Annual People's Podcast Awards
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1175
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-21 15:46:34 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: for your podcast: interview about FOSS situation in Russia
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1176
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: Frank Bell <frankwbell@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-21 13:37:59 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Proposed New Series
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1177
                                                          \n Messages: 8

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Carl D Hamann <carl.hamann@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-22 10:42:04 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Proposed New Series
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1184
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        18. \n
                                                        19. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-25 15:27:13 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-04-30T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1187
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        20. \n
                                                        21. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-25 21:56:10 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 91, Issue 11
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1189
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        22. \n
                                                        23. From: Carl D Hamann <carl.hamann@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-25 23:01:41 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Re: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-04-30T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1191
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        24. \n
                                                        25. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-30 18:21:57 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Re: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-04-30T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1196
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        26. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 38
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 46 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1987\n(2016-03-15) \"Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script (pt 1)\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDavid L. Willson on 2016-04-17:\n\"changed my life\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1990\n(2016-03-18) \"Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script part deux\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDavid L. Willson on 2016-04-17:\n\"found it!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1993\n(2016-03-23) \"Can your window manager do this?\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsigflup on 2016-04-04:\n\"ratpoison\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1996\n(2016-03-28) \"Xdotool magic\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nUrugami on 2016-04-18:\n\"File Naming\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1998\n(2016-03-30) \"Homebrewing\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-07:\n\"Would love to hear the full recoring\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1999\n(2016-03-31) \"How I record a full band under Linux\"\nby noplacelikeslashhome.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-04-01:\n\"More on Ardour!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-06:\n\"More detail\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2000\n(2016-04-01) \"How to Point a Satellite Dish\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-04-04:\n\"I tried very hard...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndroops on 2016-04-04:\n\"Very Good\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-04-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-06:\n\"Beep\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2001\n(2016-04-04) \"HPR Community News for March 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-04-04:\n\"Not a Timing Belt\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2002\n(2016-04-05) \"Just got a Raspberry Pi Zero\"\nby swift110.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-06:\n\"I'm so jealous\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2003\n(2016-04-06) \"Using the Incron file watching daemon\"\nby b-yeezi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-06:\n\"Installing this now\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2004\n(2016-04-07) \"A First Look at the Owon B35T\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-07:\n\"daisy chain\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2016-04-07:\n\"Americanism's?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-04-07:\n\"Not an Americanism to my knowledge\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-08:\n\"Why not what\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nNYbill on 2016-04-08:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2005\n(2016-04-08) \"How I prepare and record my HPR Kdenlive voiceover shows.\"\nby Geddes.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2016-04-10:\n\"Well done.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-17:\n\"Such Effort\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2006\n(2016-04-11) \"Basic Audio Production - Compression\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-17:\n\"Great Addition\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2007\n(2016-04-12) \"My new laptop\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-17:\n\"Suspect\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-04-18:\n\"I dunno what you're talking about\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nAlpha32 on 2016-04-26:\n\"Interesting show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2008\n(2016-04-13) \"HPR needs shows to survive.\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2016-04-13:\n\"But Ken, \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-04-14:\n\"sure you can!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-17:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2009\n(2016-04-14) \"Understanding the GNU/Screen Hardstatus line\"\nby Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^).\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-22:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2010\n(2016-04-15) \"Parsing JSON with Python\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nZen_Floater2 on 2016-04-14:\n\"squirrel\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-22:\n\"Don't like xpath !\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2011\n(2016-04-18) \"Introduction to sed - part 4\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-04-18:\n\"Wow\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-04-19:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-22:\n\"Nice one\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2012\n(2016-04-19) \"Parsing XML in Python with Untangle\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-22:\n\"Normal Parsers\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2013\n(2016-04-20) \"Parsing XML in Python with Xmltodict\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsigflup on 2016-04-19:\n\"cool\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-22:\n\"large complex files \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2014\n(2016-04-21) \"A first look at the Owon B35T Part 2\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-04-21:\n\"Great Show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2016-04-21:\n\"Its a brand new bench! \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-25:\n\"Logging in android\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2015\n(2016-04-22) \"Linux in the Church\"\nby Joe.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njan on 2016-04-24:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-25:\n\"Great episode\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2016\n(2016-04-25) \"Echoprint\"\nby laindir.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-04-25:\n\"Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2019\n(2016-04-28) \"a pi project and an owncloud project\"\nby Matt McGraw (g33kdad).\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMatt (g33kdad) on 2016-04-23:\n\"Some photos\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-04-30:\n\"Muttonchop too\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2020\n(2016-04-29) \"Automotive Billing\"\nby brian.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-04-30:\"[no title]\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2046,'2016-06-06','HPR Community News for May 2016',4534,'HPR Community News for May 2016','

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Bitbox, \n njulian, \n schism, \n pope523, \n Steve Saner, \n matthew, \n Lyle Lastinger.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2021Mon2016-05-02HPR Community News for April 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2022Tue2016-05-03Whats in my bagBitbox
                                                        2023Wed2016-05-04Setting up my Raspberry Pi 3Dave Morriss
                                                        2024Thu2016-05-05Remapping Keys with xmodmapJon Kulp
                                                        2025Fri2016-05-06Using a Smarphone as a microphonenjulian
                                                        2026Mon2016-05-09What\'s in my Bag... Again!Christopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2027Tue2016-05-10Old Engineers and New EngineersGabriel Evenfire
                                                        2028Wed2016-05-11Some basic info on alarm systemsschism
                                                        2029Thu2016-05-12The DSO138 Oscilloscope KitNYbill
                                                        2030Fri2016-05-13Book Review: The Pocket Refm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2031Mon2016-05-16A quick intro to OBD2 with Androidpope523
                                                        2032Tue2016-05-17How I Came to LinuxSteve Saner
                                                        2033Wed2016-05-18Distro Review: Bodhi Linuxm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2034Thu2016-05-19Frank\'s Five Seed BreadFrank Bell
                                                        2035Fri2016-05-20Building Communitydroops
                                                        2036Mon2016-05-23Glasgow Podcrawl 2016Dave Morriss
                                                        2037Tue2016-05-24Alpha32\'s Pinhead OatsAlpha32
                                                        2038Wed2016-05-25Attempting to fix a plastic boatJezra
                                                        2039Thu2016-05-26Blather Configuration Part 0: Initial SetupJon Kulp
                                                        2040Fri2016-05-27Why I Use Linuxmatthew
                                                        2041Mon2016-05-30Router Antennas More = better ?Lyle Lastinger
                                                        2042Tue2016-05-31My podcast listjanedoc
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-04-05 20:20:08 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Call for shows
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1160
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-07 17:17:26 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Policy Change - HTML default in RSS Feed
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1197
                                                          \n Messages: 24

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-08 11:30:50 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR On Goggle Play
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1205
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Mike Ray <mike@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-10 08:41:34 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Libre Office Calc - closing the docked styles dialog with the keyboard
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1206
                                                          \n Messages: 4

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Venant <venant@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-10 23:07:52 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Libre Office Calc - closing the docked styles dialog with the keyboard
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1217
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-24 14:20:42 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Short listed for the The People's Choice Podcast Awards
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1228
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-25 15:56:03 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: Ohio LinuxFest 2016 Call for Presentations
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1232
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-28 09:35:37 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Site Changes to fix Navigation
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1235
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-30 09:48:04 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-06-04T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1238
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        18. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 42
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 57 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1580\n(2014-08-22) \"The FAT and NTFS File Systems\"\nby JWP.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nRamiro on 2016-05-05:\n\"FAT, FAT32\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-06:\n\"Title change\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-05-08:\n\"Done\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1967\n(2016-02-16) \"How I saw the Linux Light at the end of the Windows tunnel\"\nby Nacho Jordi.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2016-05-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr1976\n(2016-02-29) \"Introduction to sed - part 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-05-26:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-26:\n\"Good luck with regex\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2007\n(2016-04-12) \"My new laptop\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-02:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2008\n(2016-04-13) \"HPR needs shows to survive.\"\nby Ken Fallon.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2016-05-01:\n\"I don't quite get it\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2016-05-02:\n\"Because it was\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2009\n(2016-04-14) \"Understanding the GNU/Screen Hardstatus line\"\nby Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^).\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nEric Suess on 2016-05-03:\n\"Thank you.\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2010\n(2016-04-15) \"Parsing JSON with Python\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nrstackhouse on 2016-05-24:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2015\n(2016-04-22) \"Linux in the Church\"\nby Joe.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nTodd on 2016-05-11:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2016\n(2016-04-25) \"Echoprint\"\nby laindir.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nlaindir on 2016-05-23:\n\"Late\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2019\n(2016-04-28) \"a pi project and an owncloud project\"\nby Matt McGraw (g33kdad).\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMatt (g33kdad) on 2016-05-07:\n\"Thanks, John\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2020\n(2016-04-29) \"Automotive Billing\"\nby brian.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-04-30:\n\"Awesome! \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJimZat on 2016-05-02:\n\"Honest Auto Mechanics\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nmysterio2 on 2016-05-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nTodd on 2016-05-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2021\n(2016-05-02) \"HPR Community News for April 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMatt (g33kdad) on 2016-05-09:\n\"Thanks!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-11:\n\"Great!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2022\n(2016-05-03) \"Whats in my bag\"\nby Bitbox.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-05-03:\n\"What's in your cab?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJWP on 2016-05-04:\n\"Great Podcast\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nChristopher M. Hobbs on 2016-05-07:\n\"Tell us about truckin'!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2023\n(2016-05-04) \"Setting up my Raspberry Pi 3\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-05-04:\n\"Pi3 in a Metal Box\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJWP on 2016-05-04:\n\"GNU Nano Editor\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-04:\n\"Faraday cage, Pibow and Nano\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMike Ray on 2016-05-07:\n\"Metal boxes and Emacs\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nBeeza on 2016-05-16:\n\"Alternative Pi Server Setup\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-16:\n\"SSHFS; SSD\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2024\n(2016-05-05) \"Remapping Keys with xmodmap\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-05-05:\n\"Interesting approach\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"Nice idea\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2027\n(2016-05-10) \"Old Engineers and New Engineers\"\nby Gabriel Evenfire.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve Saner on 2016-05-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGabriel Evenfire on 2016-05-13:\n\"Glad you liked it\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"A most interesting show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2028\n(2016-05-11) \"Some basic info on alarm systems\"\nby schism.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-05-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBill on 2016-05-23:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-05-24:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nTodd on 2016-05-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"Interesting subject\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2029\n(2016-05-12) \"The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"Was tempted to get one\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2030\n(2016-05-13) \"Book Review: The Pocket Ref\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-05-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2032\n(2016-05-17) \"How I Came to Linux\"\nby Steve Saner.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nPeri Saner on 2016-05-17:\n\"Wife\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-05-17:\n\"Bring on the rockets\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2016-05-18:\n\"The old gray beards in the basement.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"Really enjoyed this\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2034\n(2016-05-19) \"Frank\'s Five Seed Bread\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-05-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2016-05-20:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-30:\n\"Must try this, or a modification thereof\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2035\n(2016-05-20) \"Building Community\"\nby droops.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2016-05-20:\n\"building community\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndroops on 2016-05-20:\n\"Tech Podcasts\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-20:\n\"Show tags\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nTony Hughes on 2016-05-20:\n\"Building Comunity\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\namunizp on 2016-05-22:\n\"app\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2037\n(2016-05-24) \"Alpha32\'s Pinhead Oats\"\nby Alpha32.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-05-26:\n\"Cooking! Yay!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2038\n(2016-05-25) \"Attempting to fix a plastic boat\"\nby Jezra.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-05-24:\n\"Hilarious\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDennis New on 2016-05-27:\n\"Hilarious Indeed\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2016-05-28:\n\"Good Times\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1813,'2015-07-15','Apt Spelunking: surf, lightyears, and fbterm',896,'Windigo introduces several applications he found by wandering around the debian repositories.','

                                                        \r\n\"Apt spelunking\" is a silly term I made up for the act of searching through the Debian package repositories with vague terms, and trying out random applications therein.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nToday, we will be covering three packages: surf, lightyears, fbterm\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        surf

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nSurf is a lightweight, graphical browser. It uses the webkit rendering engine, and is a GTK-based application (not that you can tell). It is extremely spartan. Part of the suckless project, surf takes the Unix philosophy to it\'s extreme.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nEssentially, you only get a single browser window. No tabs, bookmarks, or other interface to speak of. Any navigation is accomplished through links on the page, or some very rudimentary keyboard shortcuts. Ctrl+H goes forward in history, and Ctrl+L goes backwards. If you want to visit a URL, you can either send it as a command-line argument, or use Ctrl+G to bring up a drun-like text input. It is perfect for lightweight system configurations, surf does the bear minimum to qualify as a web browser.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf you\'re looking for zen simplicity, or want an easy way to embed a web app in its own window without a lot of overhead, surf is an excellent option.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        lightyears

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n20,000 light years into space bills itself as a \"single player real-time strategy game with steampunk sci-fi\". In it, you are given a square of alien landscape, dotted with steam vents, and a small settlement at the center. This settlement runs on the steam so abundant on this alien world, and it\'s your job to keep the steam flowing.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe game consists of building steam nodes, which capture steam from the vents, and connecting them back to your settlement. Of course, you can\'t simply build a straight pipe back to your settlement; the length of the pipe is taken into account, and the longer the pipe, the harder it is to get steam to travel through it. You can get around this by daisy chaining nodes together in a web, and providing multiple routes back to your settlement. Running a steam-powered base on this alien planet isn\'t without its share of dangers, however! There are aliens, inclement weather, and seismic instability that can all damage your network of steam pipes and nodes. If your steam pressure falls below a certain threshold, you lose. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis game has an eerie similarity to network engineering, and I\'ve always enjoyed it a lot. It can get very frustrating, though, and the difficulty levels are steep steps. If you\'re interested in strategy games, I\'d highly recommend giving this one a try.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        fbterm

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnother in the lightweight category, fbterm is a terminal emulator that\'s designed to be run with a framebuffer. A framebuffer is a low-level method for displaying text and/or graphics on a monitor, and is often used to run GUI applications without the overhead of an X server.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou can use fbterm to get an antialiased terminal, with freetype font support. That means you can use bitmap and vector fonts, just like most full-featured terminal emulators, without the extra weight of running an X session and window manager.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf you like window managers, you could also use fbterm as a replacement for one of your consoles, using a program called \"rungetty\". Here\'s the instructions: https://superuser.com/a/810655/21018 I don\'t mind having fbterm as a backup terminal, in case I need to debug an X session or my window manager has locked up. Having an option that is more graphically pleasing than a bare getty TTY can be a lifesaver.\r\n

                                                        ',196,98,0,'CC-BY-SA','games,debian,terminal,browser',0,0,1), (1809,'2015-07-09','My \"New\" Used Kindle Touch',665,'I talk about why used stuff is often better than new stuff, with my new used Kindle Touch as example','

                                                        In this show I talk about why I like to buy stuff used whenever possible, whether it be printers, routers, shirts, books, or my latest acquisition, a used Kindle Touch, which in many ways is much better than my (much newer) Kindle paperwhite. Just for fun, I allow the Kindle Touch itself (using its built-in text-to-speech capabilities) to tell me the ways in which it\'s better than the Kindle Paperwhite.

                                                        ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kindle, eBook Readers, Used Stuff, Recycling, Thrifting',0,0,1), (1814,'2015-07-16','Custom Context Menus in GNU/Linux GUI File Managers',763,'I describe how to add custom context menu items in the Nautilus and Thunar file managers.','

                                                        On Nautilus

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On Nautilus you have to put your scripts into the Nautilus scripts folder, which on my system is located here:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n~/.local/share/nautilus/scripts\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can either put copies of the scripts in there, or you can do like I did and make symlinks from the Nautilus scripts folder to your /home/bin folder. (I prefer to make symlinks instead of copying the files in there, just in case I make any changes to my scripts. If I have made a symlink instead of copying the file, then I only have to change original script and the symlink will automatically use the updated version.) Once you\'ve done that, you right-click on a file and choose scripts then <yourscriptname> to run your script on the file.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Thunar

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        On Thunar you don\'t have to put your scripts anywhere special. It actually handles custom actions much better than Nautilus, in my opinion. What you do is go to the Edit menu and choose Configure custom actions. Then you get a dialog box with two tabs. The first tab is where you can give your custom action a name and then tell it what command to run, and also tell it whether to apply the custom action only to the selected file, to all files in the directory, or to all selected files. On the other tab you choose the context in which this custom action will appear. You can select categories of files—like images, audio files, or text files, and so forth—or you can specify filetypes by extension, so that your custom action will only appear if you right click on a file that has the extension.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Scripting, File Managers, Desktop Customization, GNU/Linux',0,0,1), (1803,'2015-07-01','What\'s In My Bag?',758,'The geek dad describes his daily carry gear and bag','

                                                        \r\nThe blog on Knightwise.com which inspired/sourced this episode: https://knightwise.com/whats-in-your-bag-week-day-3-matt-mcgraw/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe photo of my gear: https://cloud.thestrangeland.net/index.php/s/meDq3hozvgkay2W
                                                        \r\n\"photo\r\n

                                                        \r\n',255,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','gear, daily carry, what\'s in my bag',0,0,1), (1807,'2015-07-07','Arch Linux Development Environment: Ep1',2181,'A tour of how to setup a base Arch Linux environment.','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Checking the network\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Partitioning\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Making the filesystems\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Mounting the filesystems\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Installing the base packages\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Generate the fstab\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Chroot and Configuration\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Boot Loading\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nComplete show notes: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1807.html\r\n

                                                        ',286,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Arch Linux, dev, environment',0,0,1), (1810,'2015-07-10','17 - LastPass Hacked - What Does It Mean?',1380,'LastPass was hacked, but how bad is it?','

                                                        \r\nOn June 15, LastPass disclosed that it had been hacked, and I think by now just about everyone has heard about it. I know I received questions because I have recommended LastPass often, and my advice has been to stay with them. What I want to do now is explain exactly why this was not quite the big deal it was made out to be in some quarters, and that anyone telling you to stop using password vaults is only asking you to lower your own security.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=841 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','LastPass, password vault',0,0,1), (1811,'2015-07-13','Life and Times of a Geek part 2',2558,'Part 2 of my personal story of experiences with computers','

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last part I told you of my first encounter with a mainframe computer and the Algol60 language while an undergraduate student at Aberystwyth University.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Today I want to talk about the next stage as a postgraduate student at the University of Manchester.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It seems to have taken me over 6 months to prepare this episode of this series, for which I apologise. I seem to get distracted as I do my background research.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are particularly long, they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1811_full_shownotes.html and an ePub version is also available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1811_full_shownotes.epub.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','computer,programming,punched card,paper tape,teletype,graph plotter,Seymour Cray,CDC,Control Data Corporation,CDC 7600,Cray-1,ICL,ALGOL 60,FORTRAN,Pascal',0,0,1), (1812,'2015-07-14','Headphones and a $2 Microphone',1180,'I talk about my various headphones as I walk to my office.','

                                                        In this episode I use a https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005DJOIHE $2 microphone to record as I walk from home to my office. The topic is the 5 pairs of headphones I have and their various features, qualities, drawbacks, etc.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Headphones Mentioned in Podcast

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Neewer 3.5mm Hands Free Computer Clip on Mini Lapel Microphone
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Bose Quiet Comfort 15
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Sennheiser HD 550A
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Aftershokz Sportz M2 Bone-Conduction Headphones
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Sony MDR-J10 H ear headphones with non-slip design
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Howard Leight 1030110 sync noise-blocking stereo earmuffs
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','headphones, microphones, audio',0,0,1), (1817,'2015-07-21','Gathering Parts',1395,'NYbill talks about the process he goes through while starting an electronics project.','

                                                        \r\nThe web site that started this all:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nBig Muff Pi:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nParts Distributors:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHammond Box:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nJoe Knows:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nPicture of the gathered parts:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWhen I made the reference to \"two red lips\" regarding resistor colors I didn\'t quite explain what that meant. It was a way I learned, way back when, to remember which color was which number on a resistor. I hadn\'t thought about it in years. It used rhyming and references scheme to line the colors up with values. \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n0- Black - It\'s a \"no\" color, a zero\r\n1- Brown - \'brow-one\'\r\n2- Red - Two red lips\r\n3- Orange - Orange tree\r\n4- Yellow - Yell for help\r\n5- Green - a five dollar bill is green\r\n6- Blue - Blue and sick\r\n7- Violet - Violet heaven\r\n8- Gray - Great\r\n9- White - White wine\r\n
                                                        \r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','electronics,guitar pedal,fuzzbox,resistor colours',0,0,1), (1816,'2015-07-20','Visualising HPR tags',549,'Using GraphViz to visualise the tags on HPR episodes','

                                                        As you know, HPR asks for tags to be added to the episodes we contribute. These are intended to be used to produce some kind of improved topic search at some point in the future.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I find it difficult to decide what tags to add to my shows, and I expect many people feel the same way about it. Should I use common tags like Linux or does that not differentiate it enough? How many tags should I add, should the words be plural or singular?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have recently been asked to contribute to the task of adding tags to previous shows, so it\'s very much a hot topic at the moment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In thinking about this I wondered if there was a way in which existing tags could be represented in a visual way to help with the process of choosing and rationalising tags. It was the type of thought that occurs to you in the shower or while out for a walk.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In my last job I occasionally used a package called GraphViz to generate graphical representations. I used it to generate a chart showing how the organisation (a university) was divided up into schools, departments, sections and so on in a hierarchical manner. I wondered if it could be used for this task.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I decided to use my currently preferred scripting language, Perl, and found there was a module which let me access GraphViz. I started putting together a script.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The script was created in an evening and is still rather rough. It performs a very simple query on the database to obtain the show numbers of shows with tags, their titles and their tags. It then uses a CSV parser to parse the tag list and builds a hash table indexed by tags, where the contents per tag are the show numbers that use this tag.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Having built this hash table it is used to generate GraphViz data by making each tag and each show number a node and joining them together.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Finally the script processes the graph to produce output in SVG format which is available to view.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Bear in mind that this is not a finished project - it may never be finished! The script may not be ideal. My understanding of GraphViz may be insufficient, and the rendering of the SVG may not be good (I got various results on different browsers).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        However, you might find it interesting or even useful. Feedback on the idea is welcome.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Perl,GraphViz,tags,SVG',0,0,1), (1819,'2015-07-23','LibreOffice Tips: Horizontal Lists and Headless Operation',675,'A workaround to create horizontal ordered lists in LibreOffice and run LO headless to convert files','

                                                        LibreOffice Tips: Horizontal Lists

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        One of these things is how to create horizontal lists in LibreOffice. This is something that I wanted to do, I think it was maybe a year ago that I was really trying to find out how to do this. What I mean by that is I wanted to be able to do in LibreOffice the equivalent of an in-line list in HTML and CSS. There\'s a way in CSS to tell the browser to display a series of list items in-line rather than vertically—and this is used all the time for footers and headers and things of that sort—and I wanted to be able to do that in LibreOffice because it would ease the process of creating the exams that I make in my classes, where I have a numbered list for all of the questions, and the answers for each question are also done in a numbered list but at the 2nd level—usually done with a, b, c and d, whereas the numbers of the questions are 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. What I wanted to be able to do was have the ordered list a, b, c, d spread out horizontally across the page without having to do it manually. So in other words I wanted to be able to type a word for an answer and then press enter, and instead of having it go into a new line, have it simply move over to the right a little bit with a new letter in place for the next item in the ordered list. I hope it\'s clear what I\'m after here.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Anyway I never did find a way to do this. I searched online and there were a couple of other people who were interested in doing the same thing but they were all told this is impossible. Well, sort of. I found a workaround for this and it\'s not all that elegant but in a pinch it could work, and I don\'t think I would want to do it for an entire test but I thought it was kind of a cool way to do it.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        So what you do his make up the ordered list just like usual. I have here on my computer right now opened a document with a single question, question no. 1. And then it has at the 2nd level of ordered list a series of 4 options: red, purple, green, and blue. And each one of these is in a font color of the same name, so that the word \"Red\" is red, the word \"Purple\" is in purple, \"green\" is in green. I do this because it makes it easier to see how these things move up and down. There are little buttons down at the bottom of the screen where if you click on the arrow up or the arrow down, it will move the list item up or down. So right now red is in the 1st position, but if I click the down arrow it will go down to the 2nd position and the one that was formally 2nd is now 1st. So purple and red have switched places.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I want to have this kind of flexibility going horizontally as well, and the way I found to do this was to use columns. I select the 4 items and then under the Format menu choose Columns and tell it I want 4 columns because I have 4 items, and I click OK and suddenly these things are distributed across the screen horizontally. Now if I click the up arrow, the item moves left and right!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The bad thing about using columns is that the columns are of uniform width, so they do not dynamically change according to the number of characters that are in the word the way it would do in HTML with CSS.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Headless Operation

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To convert a Word .docx file to HTML, run the following command (LibreOffice must not be open in a graphical environment when you try to do this):

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nlibreoffice --headless --convert-to html foobar.docx\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To convert the same document to .odt format, run this command.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nlibreoffice --headless --convert-to odt foobar.docx\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice,horizontal list,headless',0,0,1), (1821,'2015-07-27','James Beard\'s Never-Fail Blender Hollandaise Sauce',413,'Frank describes how to make perfect Hollandaise Sauce every time.','

                                                        \r\nFrank describes James Beard\'s simple and almost infallible recipe for making Hollandaise sauce with a blender.\r\n
                                                        \r\nThe recipe from the _Theory_and_Practice_of_Good_Cooking_, used copies of which can be readily found via a web search. According to Amazon.doc, new copies are also available. Frank\'s copy is a first edition dating from 1977, though it\'s been used too much to be a collector\'s item.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nLinks:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,recipe,Hollandaise,sauce',0,0,1), (1815,'2015-07-17','57 - LibreOffice Impress - Styles and Objects 2 - Drawing Object Styles',997,'Drawing Object Styles and their use in LibreOffice Impress','

                                                        \r\nIn the previous tutorial we looked at Presentation Styles, and I started with them because they were mostly similar to what we already covered in Writer when we looked at Paragraph styles. But Impress is a graphical product, so we need to wrap our heads around a different set of issues here. and that brings us to Drawing Object Styles.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1182\r\n

                                                        \r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, Styles',0,0,1), (1825,'2015-07-31','58 - LibreOffice Impress - Creating a Template for Hacker Public Radio',850,'Creating a sample template illustrates these concepts','

                                                        \r\nThe idea in this tutorial is to tie together some of the concepts developed in the previous tutorials to create a Master Page, or Template, or Slide Master. (They all mean the same thing, but within Impress they are shown on the Sidebar as Master Pages, so I will stick with that terminology here.) I say we will use some of these concepts because trying to put everything into one Master Page would create a hideous end result. And since it helps to have a definite objective in mind I have decided to create one for Hacker Public Radio, where I record these tutorials as podcasts for the Internet.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1204\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, Template',0,0,1), (1830,'2015-08-07','How Holland Works: GreenWheels',643,'A quick look at the Dutch short term car sharing service','

                                                        \r\nNo longer owning a car of our own, we use the car-sharing service GreenWheels, which for a subscription of €5 per month, we are allowed to rent any of the hundreds of cars confidentiality parked all around the Netherlands.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        How it works

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Subscribe

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOnce you subscribe you get mailed a credit card sized RFID card and a PIN code.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Booking

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nGo to the website and enter in your location using ZIP/postcode or town name. You specify the times range you want to use it for and then press find to list the available options. A Google Map will appear with the availability of the cars displayed green for available and red for booked. Pick the one you want, login and confirm.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"screen\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pickup

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nGo to the car location and then open the car by placing the RFID card next to the RFID reader located just above the steering wheel. The central locking will open the doors allowing you to get in.\r\n

                                                        \r\nTake the controller out of the glove compartment and enter your pin code to unlock the ignition system.\r\n

                                                        \r\nYou can confirm that there is no damage, or log any damage that has occurred. Take the regular key and use that to start the car.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Refueling

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf you need to refuel then go to any [gas|petrol] station and refuel. Make note of the current distance travelled on the Odometer, and take the fleet refuelling card from the glove compartment. Instead of paying yourself, the bill will be charged directly to GreenWheels. Return the refuelling card and receipt to the glove compartment.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Drive

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Loads to see in the Netherlands.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Returning

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWhen you are finished, return the car and after checking that you have all your stuff, answer yes to the question \"Have you returned to the start point ?\". Then leave and use the RFID card to lock the car.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','How Holland Works, GreenWheels, Environment, integrated transport, car sharing',0,0,1), (1835,'2015-08-14','59 - LibreOffice Impress - Pictures',1396,'Using and formatting pictures, and creating a photo album','

                                                        \r\nAs we pointed out previously, Impress is inherently a graphical, and even multimedia, way of communicating. In fact, we saw in the previous tutorials that Impress and Draw share a common set of Styles that apply to both programs, and I have often seen in documentation that Impress and Draw are often mentioned in the same breath, so to speak. So it is important that we start developing an understanding of the graphical elements in Impress.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1217\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, Pictures, Photo Album',0,0,1), (1822,'2015-07-28','Some tips on using ImageMagick',1231,'ImageMagick is an amazing toolkit for manipulating images. Here\'s how I use it','

                                                        Some tips on using ImageMagick

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I like to use images in HPR shows if I can. I have experimented with various ways of preparing them since I first started contributing, but I\'m particularly impressed with what I am able to do using ImageMagick.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The ImageMagick system contains an enormous range of capabilities, enough for a whole series of shows. I thought I would talk about some of the features I use when preparing episodes to give you a flavour of what can be done.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m the rawest amateur when it comes to this kind of image manipulation. Just reading some of the ImageMagick documentation (see links) will show you what an enormous number of possibilities there are. I am only using a few in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have prepared longer show notes and demonstrated some scripts to explain how I process images. These can be found here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','images,ImageMagick,scripting,Krita',0,0,1), (1845,'2015-08-28','60 - LibreOffice Impress - The Gallery and Themes',869,'LibreOffice Clip Art Gallery and Theme collections','

                                                        \r\nIn the last tutorial we looked at pictures and how they can be used in Impress. But I left out one area because the tutorial was already running a bit long, and I wanted to give the Gallery and Themes the full attention they deserve. I think this is something a lot of people have missed when working with Impress, at least I have not seen these elements includes much in peoples presentations. But they are a wonderful addition to your toolkit, and well-worth some attention. Note that the Gallery is a common feature of all LibreOffice applications, and is available in applications like Writer and Calc, though there is less need for it there. It is when you get to applications like Impress and Draw that you really discover how useful it can be.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1222\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Presentations, Clip Art, Gallery, Themes',0,0,1), (1824,'2015-07-30','I\'m Learning Some Python',1920,'I discuss how I use Python and some of the cool modules and libraries that I\'ve found','\r\n\r\n

                                                        I\'m Learning Some Python

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Lately I\'m finally getting around to learning some Python. I wouldn\'t go as far as to say I\'m learning it properly—that\'s not really my way—I\'m kind of poking around in the dark learning things on an \"as-needed\" basis, but I\'m finding that it\'s incredibly powerful and making me much more efficient in my daily life. In this podcast I discuss some of my favorite ways of using it and some of the cool modules and libraries that I\'ve found that make things surprisingly easy in Python that used to be difficult for me in bash.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        What I Use It For

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Website build scripts, both for the School of Music and for my personal website. Converted from bash, tested and working fine on Windows and Mac.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Text manipulation scripts, used in conjuction with blather. These do things like change text case, remove spaces, and so forth.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Text entry. Voice commands insert various kinds of text templates or canned email responses for my classes. Also used in conjunction with blather.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Adding or stripping HTML tags to/from selected text.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Getting current weather conditions and forecasts, having results spoken back to me using system text-to-speech engine.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Fun blather commands where I interact with my computer and have it talk back to me.
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Favorite Python Modules/Libraries

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n
                                                        pyperclipA cross-platform clipboard module for Python. (only handles plain text for now) https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyperclip/1.5.11
                                                        pyttsxA Python package supporting common text-to-speech engines on Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyttsx
                                                        bs4HTML parsing library. Beautiful Soup Documentation
                                                        htmlminA configurable HTML Minifier with safety features. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/htmlmin/
                                                        smartypantssmartypants is a Python fork of SmartyPants, which easily translates "plain" ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.
                                                        titlecaseChanges all words to Title Caps, and attempts to be clever about SMALL words like a/an/the in the input. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/titlecase
                                                        swnamerA name generator that uses Star Wars characters, species and planets to create un fisique names. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/swnamer/0.1.0
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Demo Screencasts

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','python, scripting, programming',0,0,1), (1829,'2015-08-06','My \"New\" Used Kindle DX',836,'I talk about my latest gadget, a used Kindle DX','

                                                        I talk about my latest gadget, a used Kindle DX, which is a discontinued model with a 9.7 inch epaper screen. I talk about its features, limitations, how to navigate it, and I demonstrate its text-to-speech capabilities. Incidentally I really low-balled the original price of the Kindle DX. Looking around a little bit, I find that the original retail price was $479, which was then reduced to just under $400. Mine now seems like a bargain at $128 used.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Kindle

                                                        \r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ebooks, ereaders, kindle, gadgets, reviews',0,0,1), (1827,'2015-08-04','How I make bread',1112,'I\'ve been making my own bread for nearly 40 years, and I thought I\'d share my methods','

                                                        Ken Fallon was asking for bread-making advice on a recent Community News recording. I\'ve been making my own bread since the 1970\'s and I thought I\'d share my methods in response. Frank Bell also did an excellent bread-making episode in 2013.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have prepared a long description of my bread-making process, with photographs and a recipe, and this is all available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1827/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,bread,yeast,baking,loaves,dough,gluten',0,0,1), (1828,'2015-08-05','Multimeter Mod\'s Part 1',1162,'NYbill modifies his multimeter to add features he feels are lacking.','

                                                        \r\nNYbill talks about modifying his UNI-T UT61E multimeter to add two features he finds lacking. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn part one an LED back light gets installed for the LCD screen. Part two will cover the second mod, a auto-time out feature to save the units battery. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','multimeter,back light,LED,hardware hack',0,0,1), (1836,'2015-08-17','The Statusnet Shuffle',2711,'Theru and NYbill talk about moving a Statusnet instance and converting it to GNU-Social','

                                                        \r\nTheru and NYbill talk about moving a Statusnet instance to a new server. Also, upgrading an existing Statusnet instance to GNU-social.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','StatusNet,GNU social',0,0,1), (1834,'2015-08-13','Password Cards',500,'How to hide a password using a password card','

                                                        How to Hide a Password Using a Password Card

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        It\'s okay to write your password down and keep it in your wallet, but it\'s best to try to hide it as well. Here\'s how to keep your password secure and handy at the same time by embedding it in a password card.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Method 1

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Generate a fancy symbol-and-color-coded password card at passwordcard.org: https://www.passwordcard.org/en. Follow the directions there on how to use it best.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Method 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Make your own. Use the password generation package pwgen on Linux to generate a whole bunch of random passwords. In the following example, the -s flag tells it you want secure passwords that are generated randomly, not suitable for human memory. The -y flag tells it to include special characters, and 24 indicates how many characters each password should contain.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npwgen -sy 24\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Then either use one of the passwords that was generated from this command or embed your own existing password somewhere inside the giant block of gibberish such that only you will know where your password begins and ends. You can put a copy of this in your wallet.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n4b$0<k=#;?MJ^K:Uw\\6zmP5s
                                                        Y;4T3G+jUwJ!R+DT{2=6-^$"
                                                        !]""YmR%x.2uG"MGhm)TLyJA
                                                        }L)xpxG\\1n"\\]bC#+/t<a1*@
                                                        \'3^B`&mSHP@2p1s0;.Rrz_8k
                                                        skXLD!YAq|Ic!Y9(?DZKD:Oq
                                                        ;#/)sCz7PEbly7>/W|KlbveO
                                                        a0}amC@^{+aKhnHMgc$qq$XX
                                                        A#!o2FhIkD1Fu(K?nE!Szru4
                                                        iDAw2=MIa~KE)q\'C>S|`A*q.
                                                        Y=g\'_0i{BOXr8O4N11f8&yRf
                                                        ~+r^kB%#4o;zs:HWA/a\'4U#`
                                                        3":6E$PQ:y%D=^ENM5;!q^n4
                                                        i"n~oy"4KT/XYY2IV_A%3Sg\\
                                                        /evf,L5NSX$2-5b;OvZuhN$_
                                                        ds4ZD.t/!0yqcey.1?%P\'M!u
                                                        \'GDS-jBN+\'NB}cr7~Wy=;JSE
                                                        aI&7Byy$79Yf#gU|>@x_3IY2
                                                        -jyziY2pZ5M*#iL?9p+^F%PO
                                                        QUj&|HVDw2#x+t`1&zW"\'Rp{
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        If you want extra security make two columns or increase the character count.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nra;aH5v"}2lF()\\;K0f-G;YT 3XGq>wQ6")UvSU#NpYfr,M(h
                                                        PCgM%L)O[mra3vgsX{"0rV"0 7>qSluuegS<#;V-nI"uyc$bX
                                                        JE+4MxT/[t&i0\\(ndpE(z\\%@ }ZS\\3<xdG1]G%wf9;k6*_94%
                                                        FFZ}gR9hyZ=EsC6QgMz:n$=U h&-O+Wz7L8LmehF&znhF8#Ig
                                                        p`4C3PN^1F"AmlQe=[pkz<EM /,FOfQtR|"c8EzN8ug?i359=
                                                        a%i;X3~g0SqbKM|]#{hReCmP }.#EOVPxCX)b!r_>o@V9J_^9
                                                        H-<FAQ4I]SPlX!$o#I?~2ACy -<JE82-\'YV@bl;O_>(nxPgVH
                                                        PNHYp2_[-q9G?$Z:m?yZiAH. Xj(mZ0,7EabI-TL4-7RWK]n9
                                                        HCmiaZV{8EHREpS5Ppi_^SCl DTzK!CkZ#.c<3I;#}A#D(n$c
                                                        <koQz[`F99"{/vB~GcSt@n,* :J&*}n~.#F%{ErSs7j:}eyly
                                                        =!F:m65sA5utY,<AU\\8~Omz2 @P"*SIR/\\Ln0H;1JjM7P"{[0
                                                        8hk%p-)_3(P>;p.ROtRevNX_ BbwP00-Vq-5:38O.Z9MGom-n
                                                        9,txEI%j+\'7=7T@?X7^j^*`U ;!R<$|r3(QuJmsZe6}C(7%&s
                                                        X]`(;_6S@@<}Ia[&fZ3*naG7 fij5f)Mkp;EDO.CP""*~8{-^
                                                        S2_\'(C8Fn&[%nJ%`S3&r.N2< *$o\\Nrl*vJ0;zq7G3}wtMd0h
                                                        %is{8%\'^[b$Cu;a5_RYpy]LM k-=7(<\\uQ|hQH-m9.WYq6tx+
                                                        Vmb&c!$.@P>\\`1;1@ln(B#GY eQu\\~"L\'*xX%_)CTl*}8#2oD
                                                        =6I\'>(_nIsu=D2J{l4a4tf5x 3/7J1Rm.G.Hwo=Xm=Lv"o}jF
                                                        RYV/lC1|t&;!]@4#2r-h<88/ o[B[qZq@;=/MD8hX|nnZ-0$j
                                                        5k`x|:.0G{sra@WiuhHr^aU> Dy@Df^op.WCT)3jD(|T,I7E"
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','Privacy, security, passwords',0,0,1), (1818,'2015-07-22','Review of HPR\'s Interview Recorder: Zoom H1',1578,'HPR has a digital recorder. You are welcome to use it for interviews at your next tech event.','

                                                        \r\nThe Hacker Public Radio network owns a Zoom H1 digital voice recorder. If you are going to attend an open source event and think you would like to record interviews for Hacker Public Radio, make inquires to the mailing list and the correspondent with the recorder in their possession (currently FiftyOneFifty) will send it to you. This episode is a review of the devices features and how to use them.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nManufacturer page: https://www.zoom-na.com/products/field-video-recording/field-recording/zoom-h1-handy-recorder\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHow to use the H1 as an USB Mic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GG8hZ6PvfrQ\r\n

                                                        ',131,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Zoom H1, microphone, recording, review, DVR, digital voice recorder, tutorial, getting started, guide, howto, HPR',0,0,1), (1820,'2015-07-24','Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS, Interview 1 of 2',1248,'Interview Alex Juarez Rackspace Principal Engineer','

                                                        \r\nFrom the LAMP Stack break-fix competition, to the breakfast buffet they funded on Sunday, the Rackspace crew presented their organization as the managed hosting company that puts the customer first, by making sure no customer has to wait in a long queue before taking to a human, and to staying on the line as long as it takes to make sure all problems are solved and all questions are answered. This kind of commitment to service naturally requires are larger number of people working tech support, and by the end of the weekend I think it was clear to everyone Rackspace was in Kansas to recruit. I was impressed when one of the Rackspace representatives told me, \"We can teach people tech. We can\'t teach people to want to help other people\". Rackspace dedicates a significant part of employee time to training and improving the skills of their help desk staff. If there is a drawback it\'s that when one shift is training, the other two are expected to pull extra hours to cover the third shift.\r\n

                                                        ',131,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interview,Kansas Linux Fest,Rackspace',0,0,1), (1823,'2015-07-29','Kansas Linux Fest 2015, March 21-22, Lawrence KS, Interview 2 of 2',1689,'Interview: Ryan Sipes, Organizer, Administrator, Coder, Innovator, Raconteur','

                                                        \r\nRyan Sipes: KLF Organizer; Systems Administrator, Northeast Kansas Library System; Organizer of Lawrence (KS) Linux User Group; with Ikey Doherty, Ryan is a developer for Solus (formerly Evolve OS); a contributor to Vulcan text editor, written in Vala (Ryan\'s KLF talk, \"How to Write a GTK/Gnome Application\", was pretty much a tutorial in Vala)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRyan\'s projects and employer \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nKLF related interviews with Ryan Sipes \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nEvolve OS related interviews \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nKLF sponsors: \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe beers: \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',131,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interview,Kansas Linux Fest,Solus,Vala',0,0,1), (1831,'2015-08-10','Are speed listening and slow background music compatible?',412,'is there room for background music in podcasts for speed listeners?','

                                                        \r\nThis is A Shadowy Figure speaking to you from southwest Florida on Hacker Public Radio,\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBrought to you by An Honest Host Dot Com where you can Get a 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 thats H P R one five. Better webhosting that honest and fair at An Honest Host Dot Com.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNot only do I mention An Honest Host Dot Com out of commitment, but also out of respect. I\'ve listened to the interview by Ken Fallon of the man behind An Honest Host Dot Com Josh Knapp not long ago, and came away with a certain amount of appreciation for what Josh does. Which is basically keeping Hacker Public radio alive, along with the many other things he does. Thanks Josh, your generosity does not go unnoticed.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI\'ve been listening to HPR for about a year now and just recently purchased a Blue Yeti Microphone off of Ebay which turned out to be misrepresented and not in the condition it was claimed. As a side note, the day I received the Blue Yeti in the mail, I found the same microphone brand spanking new on Amazon.com for the same price as the used one I purchased on ebay. At one time I would have been disappointed by such a situation, but if theres anything I\'ve learned from experience, no matter how hard you punch the wall, the train still left at 4 o\'clock \r\nIf I were to devote an emotion to every real or perceived injustice I come across, I wouldn\'t have time to devote any emotions to the things enjoy.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnyway, My computing background goes all the way back to the original TRS-80.\r\nThe experience of writing basic for 4 hours to create a pathetic facsimile of the game pong turned me away from computing until the graphical user interface of windows 3.11 came along.\r\nI was alright with the direction of where computing was moving along once windows matured, but I never had any love for microsoft products, Mac\'s were prettier, but a lot more expensive, and had great hardware to boot, but I never caught the mac addiction either. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSlackware caught my interest, but wasn\'t ready for prime time, and red hat was a bit more complicated than I was comfortable with in the mid 90\'s\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsince 2006 I\'ve been using debian based operating systems exclusively, but still keep a macbook pro and a windows 8.1 laptop nearby for specific tasks I don\'t want to taint my linux box with.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nKDE plasma has been my desktop of choice since 2010, and I don\'t use google, facebook, twitter, or any other corporate tracking devices. Including cell phones.\r\nSmoke signals and email are about the best way to get a hold of me, and smoke signals have been notoriously ineffective in the past.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMoving alone,\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy day job includes leadership training, which was a big step up from my old job in one of the most reviled professions known to man, yes that\'s right, I used to be a used car salesman, (you thought I was going to say lawyer didn\'t ya?) no, but I date a lawyer, but I try to keep that a secret. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSo now that I\'ve tainted my reputation for good with the hacker public radio audience, I may as well plow forward and see what other damage to my reputation I can do. You can think of my handle A Shadowy Figure as damage control for all the stupid things I end up doing by mistake. (like buying things of ebay).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnyway, I thought I\'d share with the HPR audience my experience as a listener, and what I feel I can do to contribute. I love the mission statement behind HPR, and feel the need to do my part to see to it HPR continues to offer something of value to the hacker community.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLike many listeners and contributers to HPR, I listen to dozens of podcasts each week. Many of which belong in their spot of most downloaded podcasts, but I find a certain amount of charm in the grass roots nature of HPR.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMuch like the Norwegian trend of engaging in slow media content. As mentioned in a recent hpr episode, I actually found myself hypnotically engaged in 5150\'s whats in my pickup toolbox episode.\r\nI found myelf cheering on 5150 to come up with a pair of lugnuts to an unknown vehicle.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI was looking for solidarity there, being as for some reason, my prior toolboxes always seemed to have a couple of unknown parts, or even broken tools that should have been thrown out years ago, \r\nlike 5150\'s wire strippers.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI have to admit, Ken Fallons Amazing life hack episode of how to tell your left earbud from your right, lived up to its claim of setting a low bar. Ken has given some terrific episodes in the past, but this one fell a bit short of his standard of excellence. But I must admit, his goal was achieved.\r\nAs I listened, I said to myself, even I can top that! And thus, Ken inspired me to step over that low bar of quality he set, and record my own episode.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAfter reading up on the procedures for contributing a show, I came across the advice to not use bedding or background music, due to the diverse listening style of many HPR listeners.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOne of those listening styles Im vaguely familiar with was listening to podcasts speeded up.\r\nSomewhere I read about some people really really speeding up their recordings to the point most people can only hear a rapid fire series of blips and clicks. \r\nI don\'t know if that is typical, but I\'m inclined to think that is something found on the fring, and that most speed listeners fall in the range of 2 to 3 times normal rate.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI\'m also aware of a trend of some people to listen to music slowed down to the point of being one long drone that changes pitch every now and then.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nPerhaps in the future, depending on what sort of feedback I receive, I\'d like to experiment with combining the two.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBasically, recording Normally recorded vocal content, with an ultra slow music soundtrack that would balance out with speed listening.\r\nIn essence, hacking the audio, to provide speed listeners with a soundtrack.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOn the flip side, one could hack the audio to appeal to slow listeners, speeding up the soundtrack, and changing the pitch of the vocals to account for slow listening.\r\nBut that would probably kill some speed listeners with weak hearts, so I\'ll steer away from that unless there is enough demand to justify that.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIt seems like a concept that\'s destined to fail, but it\'s something I was pondering and would try if there were an audience for it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf there were any interest, what I\'d need to know is how fast do speed listeners listen to their audio.\r\nWhich is probably all over the map, making any effort futile.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBut it\'s just a thought I thought I\'d throw out there, along with introducing myself to the HPR audience, and saying thanks to all the people who make HPR possible.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a Shadowy Figure signing out.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',308,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Speed Listening',0,0,1), (1832,'2015-08-11','Simplify writing using markdown and pandoc',1288,'How I use Markdown and Pandoc in my writing workflow','
                                                        \r\n

                                                        My Document Creation workflow using Markdown and Pandoc

                                                        \r\n

                                                        b-yeezi

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Show Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I write almost exclusively in Markdown https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown when writing documents and taking notes. I use the program, Pandoc https://www.pandoc.org to convert markdown to different formats, including odt, docx, and pdf.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The original purpose of Markdown: 1 > Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Markdown has since been extended to include more features and functionality. Extended versions include Github-flavored markdown https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/wiki/Markdown-Cheatsheet and multi-markdown https://fletcherpenney.net/multimarkdown.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some of the basic syntax:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Headings - use one or more # to make headings
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • bold - use __ or ** for bold
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • italics - use _ or * for italics
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • hyperlinks - use [text](link) for hyperlinks
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • images - ![text](link) for images
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • tables -
                                                          Head1 | Head2 | Head3
                                                          ----- | ----- | -----
                                                          stuff | stuff | stuff
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • lists - use - or * or + at the beginning of a line
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • quotes and code - ` for single code item, > for block quote, tab for block code, ``` for fenced code. Highlighting is available
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pandoc: 2 Pandoc can convert documents in markdown, reStructuredText, textile, HTML, DocBook, LaTeX, MediaWiki markup, TWiki markup, OPML, Emacs Org-Mode, Txt2Tags, Microsoft Word docx, EPUB, or Haddock markup to

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • HTML formats: XHTML, HTML5, and HTML slide shows using Slidy, reveal.js, Slideous, S5, or DZSlides.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word processor formats: Microsoft Word docx, OpenOffice/LibreOffice ODT, OpenDocument XML
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ebooks: EPUB version 2 or 3, FictionBook2
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Documentation formats: DocBook, GNU TexInfo, Groff man pages, Haddock markup
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Page layout formats: InDesign ICML
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Outline formats: OPML
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • TeX formats: LaTeX, ConTeXt, LaTeX Beamer slides
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • PDF via LaTeX
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Lightweight markup formats: Markdown (including CommonMark), reStructuredText, AsciiDoc, MediaWiki markup, DokuWiki markup, Emacs Org-Mode, Textile
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Custom formats: custom writers can be written in lua
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I use Ubuntu because it is the only distro that does not bundle pandoc in the haskell libraries. With pandoc, you can specify the template that you are using, so that the same one document can be formatted quickly in many different ways and file formats.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Workflow:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Write using vim or other text editor. When I was starting, I used a markdown previewer
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Create the template for the client
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Convert document appropriately
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Use markdown for:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • taking notes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • creating SOPs
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Creating User guides (Image Magick mogrify)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Creating things for my website
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Other programs and tools:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Retext
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Haroopad
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • discount
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • stackedit.io
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • atom
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • texlive for going direct to pdf
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','markdown, writing, word processor',0,0,1), (1840,'2015-08-21','Running external commands in Kate',242,'Using the text filter option in the kate text editor.','

                                                        \r\nKate is an excellent text editor. The \"Text Filter\" - enables easy text filtering, which by pressing Alt + Backslash pops up a screen that allows you to enter commands.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"popup\r\n

                                                        \r\nSettings > Configure Kate > Plugins > Text Filter\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nKate (short for KDE Advanced Text Editor) is a text editor developed by KDE. It has been a part of KDE Software Compilation since version 2.2, which was first released in 2001. Geared towards software developers, it features syntax highlighting, code folding, customizable layouts, regular expression support, and extensibility.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSource: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_(text_editor)\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','kate, plugins, Text Filter',0,0,1), (1855,'2015-09-11','61 - LibreOffice Impress - Slide Layouts and AutoLayout Text Boxes',1066,'LibreOffice Impress Slide Layouts and components are explored','

                                                        \r\nWe have spent several tutorials on graphics, including the Themes and the Gallery, and that is all to the good since Impress is a graphical program to some degree. But it also is a way of presenting text content, and it worth a little time to develop that further. Impress does some things with text that resemble other programs like Writer, but it also does some things differently so it is worth a moment to discuss these specifics.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1245\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Layouts, AutoLayout, Text Boxes',0,0,1), (1865,'2015-09-25','62 - LibreOffice Impress - Working With Text Boxes',965,'The use of Text Boxes from the Drawing Toolbar is explored','

                                                        \r\nText Boxes are considered graphical objects, actually, so they are controlled by the Drawing Object Styles. These can be a little bit confusing because they are shared among different LibreOffice modules, so some of the things you see arent really meant for Impress. For example, there are three Title styles, but none of them are meant for putting titles on slides. They are actually meant for putting titles on drawings, such as engineering drawings. If you you wanted to have a slide title but use Text boxes, you should select the Title Only slide layout. The Title would be controlled by the Title Presentation Style.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1250\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Layouts, Text Boxes',0,0,1), (1850,'2015-09-04','18 - ssh Introduction',1022,'ssh is the secure way of connecting to a remote computer. This is an introduction to a mini-series.','

                                                        \r\nIn 1995 there was a password-sniffing attack on the network of the University of Helsinki in Finland, and this lead a researcher there, Tatu Ylönen, to create the first SSH implementation. SSH is an acronym for Secure Shell, and expresses the idea that you can securely log in and get a shell on a remote server. This was initially released as free software, but in later versions he took it proprietary. But the developers at OpenBSD decided that a free software implementation was needed, and they created OpenSSH, which is the basis for most implementations today. \r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=722 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh, Telnet, shell, security',0,0,1), (1841,'2015-08-24','My way into Linux',576,'From punch cards to Manjaro','

                                                        \r\nI let espeak describe my way through the world of bits and bytes from the punch cards of our Partnerbrigade to my Manjaro-laptop of today.\r\n

                                                        ',309,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','espeak,East Germany,punched cards,Commodore 64,Atari Mega ST,Macintosh,iMAC,MAC OS,LaTex,Debian,Ubuntu,Mint,Bodhi,ArchBang',0,0,1), (1837,'2015-08-18','Put an SSD in your Linux Box',1102,'What to check, read, and update if you want to upgrade your Linux PC with an Solid State Disk. ','

                                                        \r\nSome commands I mentioned that you should check out:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCheck SSD disk specs: \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nsudo hdparm -I /dev/sdb\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCheck for TRIM support: \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nsudo fstrim -v /\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nPerform TRIM support \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nsudo hdparm -I /dev/sdb | grep -i TRIM\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Detailed SSD Info

                                                        \r\n\r\n',285,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','SSD, Linux, BIOS, Update',0,0,1), (1846,'2015-08-31','UNI-T UT61E Review',1241,'NYbill does a quick review of his favourite multimeter for electronics, the UNI-T UT61E.','

                                                        \r\nNYbill does a quick review of his favourite multimeter for electronics, the UNI-T UT61E:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nA photo of the inside and outside of the meter:
                                                        \r\n\"picture\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI forgot to mention or show a picture of the data logging cable. I never use this feature so I tend to forget its there. \r\n

                                                        \r\n',235,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','multimeter,RMS meter,diode test,auto range',0,0,1), (1839,'2015-08-20','My \"New\" Used Pickup Truck',1320,'I talk about my pickup truck and doing some repairs and stuff','

                                                        My \"New\" Used Pickup Truck

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        After 16 years my wife and I decided to become a 2-vehicle family, and as a result I got myself a 2004 Ford Ranger. In this episode I talk about the process of finding and purchasing the truck, and then about some repairs I did and some other stuff related to it.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, automobile',0,0,1), (1844,'2015-08-27','The Marantz PMD 660 Professional Solid State Recorder',886,'I talk about the recording device I inherited from my mother-in-law and use it to record the show','\r\n

                                                        The Marantz PMD 660 Professional Solid State Recorder

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        I inherited a really nice audio recorder and microphone from my mother-in-law recently and in this episode I talk all about it and use the new device to record the show.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n------------------------------------------------------------\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Digital recorders, audio gear, microphones, podcasting ',0,0,1), (1833,'2015-08-12','Resurrecting an IBM T40',1248,'I make an attempt to bring a 13 year old laptop back to life','

                                                        \r\n\"laptop\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Category:T40\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ThinkPad T40,PCLinuxOS',0,0,1), (1838,'2015-08-19','Waking up with Windigo',925,'An overview of a terrible, hacky method of waking up.','This is a quick summary of my alarm clock system, written in bash and highly\r\nunreliable.\r\n\r\n

                                                        Hardware

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nMy preferred hardware platform is a Dell Mini 9.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Software

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nMy alarm clock is an embarrassing combination of bash scripts and Audacious, my\r\nfavorite media player. Any media player will do, as long as it\'s scriptable.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        How It Works

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThere are currently two bash scripts in my crappy alarm setup. One script is\r\ncalled \"wakeup\" and the other is called \"wakeup-at\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nwakeup is simply a wrapper that adds some error handling around audacious. It\r\nlaunches audacious if it can\'t find an instance running already, waits five\r\nseconds for it to get itself together, and then causes it to play. It is also\r\ncurrently broken, so the \'launching audacious\' part doesn\'t work. I have to\r\nmanually start audacious myself. FAILURE.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        wakeup script:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\naudacious &\r\n\r\nsleep 5s\r\n\r\naudacious -p &\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nYou\'ve noticed that the \"wakeup\" script doesn\'t actually have any timing\r\ninvolved; If you want to use it as an alarm, you get to combine it with the bash\r\n\"sleep\" command. This is not a failure, this is by design! An example alarm:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nsleep 8h; wakeup\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nOne problem with this methodology is that it requires math, and is prone to\r\nerrors. If I\'m going to sleep at 10:46:33 PM and need to wake up at 7:00 AM, I\r\nneed to chain sleep commands together for each unit of time:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nsleep 7h; sleep 14m; sleep 27s; wakeup\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nGet some of that math wrong, and you wake up at the wrong time. FAILURE.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"wakeup-at\" is a wrapper around \"wakeup\" that uses the \"at\" utility to schedule\r\nthe wakeup script. So, instead of using multiple sleep commands, it accepts any\r\nof the time formats that at accepts:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nwakeup-at 7:00 AM\r\nwakeup-at 6:00AM 2018-02-02\r\nwakeup-at teatime\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHere is the wakeup-at script:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n## Make sure we have enough arguments\r\nif [ $# -lt 1 ]\r\nthen\r\n  echo \"Usage: `basename $0` <time>\"\r\n  exit 1\r\nfi\r\n\r\necho \"$@\"\r\n\r\n## Add custom time keywords\r\ncase \"$1\" in\r\n\"eternaldarkness\")\r\n	echo wakeup | at 3:33 AM\r\n	;;\r\n\r\n## Catch-all; send all arguments to at\r\n*)\r\n	echo wakeup | at $@\r\n	;;\r\nesac\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf you make a syntax error, \"at\" tells you about it immediately. Its only\r\nfailings are what it inherits from the original \"wakeup\" script.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',196,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','bash, scripting, terrible',0,0,1), (1842,'2015-08-25','TiT Radio 20 You\'ve Been Pwned (probably)',7543,'While Peter is on walkabout, TiT Radio returns for a very short engagement','

                                                        \r\nLongtime listeners of Hacker Public Radio will remember \'TiT Radio\', a semi-weekly FOSS \"news\" and commentary show that appeared on HPR, recorded by the cast of \"Linux Cranks\" on the off schedule weeks. \"Linux Cranks\" eventually morphed into the \"Kernel Panic Oggcast\". While Peter is on walkabout, the cast of KPO has resurrected \"Tit Radio\" on a temporary basis. The listener is cautioned, while KPO is family friendly, \"TiT Radio\" makes no such commitment. Please join netminer, FiftyOneFifty, and pegwole as they drag you down the rabbit hole that has always been \"TiT Radio\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOur show topics were drawn from these links. Not all these topics made it into the show, but feel free to browse anyway:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',131,30,1,'CC-BY-SA','TiT Radio,news,commentary',0,0,1), (1858,'2015-09-16','Multimeter Mod\'s Part 2',1379,'NYbill finishes modification two to his multimeter. ','

                                                        \r\nNYbill talks about the second modification to his UNI-T UT61E multimeter. In this episode the switch and auto-timeout circuitry is installed.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a follow up to Multimeter Mod\'s Part 1:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nA video of Asphere\'s 3D printer in action: \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nPictures for the episode:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','multimeter,hack,maker,mod,modification,improve,electronics,blender,3D printing',0,0,1), (1869,'2015-10-01','Irssi Connectbot',848,'NYbill talks about setting up Irssi Connectbot on a Android phone to access IRC.','

                                                        \r\nNYbill talks about setting up Irssi Connectbot on a Android phone to access IRC.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://f-droid.org/repository/browse/?fdid=org.woltage.irssiconnectbot\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI don\'t know him. But, thanks for this handy guide on setting up key pairs with Connectbot, Michael:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://michaelchelen.net/0f3e/android-connectbot-ssh-key-auth-howto/\r\n

                                                        ',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android,phone,IRC,Irssi,Irssi ConnectBot,ssh',0,0,1), (2066,'2016-07-04','HPR Community News for June 2016',5832,'Dave and Ken review the last month without talking about brexit much','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n handsome_pirate, \n Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212, \n Todd Mitchell.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2043Wed2016-06-01My First Beer PodcastJustMe
                                                        2044Thu2016-06-02Bring on the Power!NYbill
                                                        2045Fri2016-06-03Some other Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        2046Mon2016-06-06HPR Community News for May 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2047Tue2016-06-07Neo Fetch 1.5JWP
                                                        2048Wed2016-06-08The Hubot chat-botJohn Duarte
                                                        2049Thu2016-06-09My Raspberry Pi Home ServerKnightwise
                                                        2050Fri2016-06-10Developing Black & White Filmhandsome_pirate
                                                        2051Mon2016-06-13My Linux JourneyTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2052Tue2016-06-14A Nerdy Conversation With Linden About Technologysigflup
                                                        2053Wed2016-06-15My 2nd HPR Beer PodcastJustMe
                                                        2054Thu2016-06-16Blather Configuration Part 1: Desktop ManagementJon Kulp
                                                        2055Fri2016-06-17GNU Nano EditorJWP
                                                        2056Mon2016-06-20Interview with a young hackerTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2057Tue2016-06-21dodddummy on oatsdodddummy
                                                        2058Wed2016-06-22My 14th Beer PodcastJustMe
                                                        2059Thu2016-06-23More Tech, Less MagicTodd Mitchell
                                                        2060Fri2016-06-24Introduction to sed - part 5Dave Morriss
                                                        2061Mon2016-06-27Handwritingdroops
                                                        2062Tue2016-06-28Now The Chips Are Definitely DownMrX
                                                        2063Wed2016-06-29My 3rd HPR Beer PodcastJustMe
                                                        2064Thu2016-06-30Test-Driving DevuanFrank Bell
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-05-07 17:17:26 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Policy Change - HTML default in RSS Feed
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1197
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-08 21:58:35 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: HPR on Google Play Podcast
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1239
                                                          \n Messages: 6

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-11 12:07:35 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Fwd: Just hit 1000 IA uploads
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1245
                                                          \n Messages: 3

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-11 19:52:08 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: Changes to series and the series.php page
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1248
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        8. \n
                                                        9. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-13 11:41:35 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Book Club
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1250
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        10. \n
                                                        11. From: sigflup synasloble <pantsbutt@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-13 08:30:58 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: dos?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1251
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        12. \n
                                                        13. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-15 16:23:59 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Changes to the website
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1253
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        14. \n
                                                        15. From: "Thaj A. Sara" <thajasara@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-15 15:17:37 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Hpr Digest, Vol 93, Issue 5
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1255
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        16. \n
                                                        17. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-16 08:52:53 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Re: Changes to the website
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1256
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        18. \n
                                                        19. From: Clinton Roy <clinton.roy@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-17 09:37:15 +1000
                                                          \n Subject: comments rss feed
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1257
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        20. \n
                                                        21. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-20 12:37:02 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Live @ PodcastAwards.com on June 26th @ 8pm EST
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1262
                                                          \n Messages: 7

                                                        22. \n
                                                        23. From: Dave Morriss <perloid@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-27 19:40:22 +0100
                                                          \n Subject: HPR Community News - next Saturday on 2016-07-02T18:00:00Z
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1269
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        24. \n
                                                        25. From: "Kevin O'Brien" <zwilnik@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-27 19:17:27 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Uploading not working?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1270
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        26. \n
                                                        27. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-28 16:04:08 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Upload not possible
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1271
                                                          \n Messages: 2

                                                        28. \n
                                                        29. From: Clinton Roy <clinton.roy@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-30 14:09:02 +1000
                                                          \n Subject: World map of contributors?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1273
                                                          \n Messages: 4
                                                        30. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 38
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 38 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1976\n(2016-02-29) \"Introduction to sed - part 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 5:\nFrank on 2016-06-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nFrank on 2016-06-03:\n\"LO and SED\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nDave Morriss on 2016-06-05:\n\"Regex in Libre Office\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2013\n(2016-04-20) \"Parsing XML in Python with Xmltodict\"\nby klaatu.\n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nLuiz Rodrigo on 2016-06-28:\n\"THANKS!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2028\n(2016-05-11) \"Some basic info on alarm systems\"\nby schism.\n
                                                          • Comment 6:\nBill on 2016-06-03:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nFrank on 2016-06-03:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2029\n(2016-05-12) \"The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2016-06-04:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-06-05:\n\"Pre-built kit\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2034\n(2016-05-19) \"Frank\'s Five Seed Bread\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2016-06-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2035\n(2016-05-20) \"Building Community\"\nby droops.\n
                                                          • Comment 6:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2016-06-17:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2038\n(2016-05-25) \"Attempting to fix a plastic boat\"\nby Jezra.\n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKathy scogna on 2016-06-03:\n\"Director\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2042\n(2016-05-31) \"My podcast list\"\nby janedoc.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2016-05-31:\n\"Dan Carlin\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-01:\n\"Ask Me Another \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-06-01:\n\"Frank Delaney et al\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2044\n(2016-06-02) \"Bring on the Power!\"\nby NYbill.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nrocket-dog on 2016-06-07:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2016-06-11:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2047\n(2016-06-07) \"Neo Fetch 1.5\"\nby JWP.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2016-06-07:\n\"Neat little app, thanks\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2049\n(2016-06-09) \"My Raspberry Pi Home Server\"\nby Knightwise.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\npitfd on 2016-06-09:\n\"Server Setup\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-10:\n\"CenterIM\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-11:\n\"CLI word processing\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nlaindir on 2016-06-16:\n\"Me too\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2050\n(2016-06-10) \"Developing Black & White Film\"\nby handsome_pirate.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2016-06-21:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2052\n(2016-06-14) \"A Nerdy Conversation With Linden About Technology\"\nby sigflup.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ngurdonark on 2016-06-20:\n\"Good listen\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2053\n(2016-06-15) \"My 2nd HPR Beer Podcast\"\nby JustMe.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2016-06-17:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2054\n(2016-06-16) \"Blather Configuration Part 1: Desktop Management\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\namunizp on 2016-06-17:\n\"Headless?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-17:\n\"Probably\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2055\n(2016-06-17) \"GNU Nano Editor\"\nby JWP.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\namunizp on 2016-06-17:\n\"+1 for nano\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\n0xf10e on 2016-06-18:\n\"-1 for facebook, too\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2056\n(2016-06-20) \"Interview with a young hacker\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2016-05-16:\n\"Links to Blackpool Makerspace and Jam\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2016-05-17:\n\"Interview with a young hacker\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-21:\n\"Excellent! \"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2057\n(2016-06-21) \"dodddummy on oats\"\nby dodddummy.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nLuke on 2016-06-30:\n\"Steel cut oats\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2059\n(2016-06-23) \"More Tech, Less Magic\"\nby Todd Mitchell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJon Kulp on 2016-06-23:\n\"More!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTodd Mitchell on 2016-06-24:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2061\n(2016-06-27) \"Handwriting\"\nby droops.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBrian on 2016-06-27:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njezra on 2016-06-28:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2016-06-28:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2062\n(2016-06-28) \"Now The Chips Are Definitely Down\"\nby MrX.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-06-28:\n\"Baofeng UV5R\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2086,'2016-08-01','HPR Community News for July 2016',4160,'Dave and Ken miss the regular recording slot but still get in the show','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2065Fri2016-07-01Whats in My BagTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2066Mon2016-07-04HPR Community News for June 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2067Tue2016-07-05Haste - the pastebin alternativeJohn Duarte
                                                        2068Wed2016-07-06Podcasts I listen to and how I fetch them.Christopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2069Thu2016-07-07Counting Stuff in LibreOffice CalcJon Kulp
                                                        2070Fri2016-07-08Adventures with Jonathan SlocumDavid Whitman
                                                        2071Mon2016-07-11Undocumented features of Baofeng UV-5R RadioMrX
                                                        2072Tue2016-07-12That Awesome Time I Deleted My Home Directorysigflup
                                                        2073Wed2016-07-13The power of GNU Readline - part 1Dave Morriss
                                                        2074Thu2016-07-14Experience With A Neighborhood Catbrian
                                                        2075Fri2016-07-15Skin cancerClinton Roy
                                                        2076Mon2016-07-18What Magazines I read Part 1Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2077Tue2016-07-19libernil.net and self hosting for friends and familyChristopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2078Wed2016-07-20What\'s in my bag?Windigo
                                                        2079Thu2016-07-21Everyone Loves Some Acid Housesigflup
                                                        2080Fri2016-07-22Kdenlive Part 3: Effects and TransitionsGeddes
                                                        2081Mon2016-07-25Fixing my daughter\'s laptopDave Morriss
                                                        2082Tue2016-07-26Basic Audio Production - EqualizationNacho Jordi
                                                        2083Wed2016-07-27My 18th HPR Beer PodcastJustMe
                                                        2084Thu2016-07-28Cleaning the Throttle Body on My Pickup TruckJon Kulp
                                                        2085Fri2016-07-29Penguicon 2016 ReportAhuka
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The main threads this month were:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        1. From: Clinton Roy <clinton.roy@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-06-30 14:09:02 +1000
                                                          \n Subject: World map of contributors?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1273
                                                          \n Messages: 5

                                                        2. \n
                                                        3. From: Venant <venant@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-07-01 19:31:57 -0400
                                                          \n Subject: Re: World map of contributors?
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1282
                                                          \n Messages: 11

                                                        4. \n
                                                        5. From: Ken Fallon <ken@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-07-20 09:42:36 +0200
                                                          \n Subject: Earth-friendly EOMA68 Computing Devices | Crowd Supply
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1293
                                                          \n Messages: 1

                                                        6. \n
                                                        7. From: Fifty OneFifty <fiftyonefifty@...>
                                                          \n Date: 2016-07-20 15:59:53 -0500
                                                          \n Subject: Earth-friendly EOMA68 Computing Devices | Crowd Supply
                                                          \n Link: https://comments.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1294
                                                          \n Messages: 1
                                                        8. \n
                                                        \nTotal messages this month: 18
                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Editor\'s Note:

                                                        \n

                                                        The list of mail threads above date from a time when HPR mailing list\nmessages were copied to Gmane. At that time the Mailman mailing list software\nused to run the list seemed not to be able to archive messages, or possibly\ncouldn\'t make them visible. We built lists of threads by reading the Gmane\ndata and showed them here.

                                                        \n

                                                        Since then Gmane has failed, and been restored, but the HPR lists have been\nlost. However, a later version of Mailman made these messages available as\nthey should have been, so nothing was actually lost!

                                                        \n

                                                        The above thread links have been disabled, but the threaded list for the month in question can be seen at:
                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-July/thread.html\n

                                                        \n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 17 comments:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2062\n(2016-06-28) \"Now The Chips Are Definitely Down\"\nby MrX.\n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMrX on 2016-07-03:\n\"Re Baofeng UV5R\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMrX on 2016-07-04:\n\"Re Re Baofeng UV5R\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2064\n(2016-06-30) \"Test-Driving Devuan\"\nby Frank Bell.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKrayon on 2016-07-19:\n\"SLiM\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2066\n(2016-07-04) \"HPR Community News for June 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nIvan "Epicanis" Privaci on 2016-07-04:\n\"This is a thing of beauty\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-07-08:\n\"Series page\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2068\n(2016-07-06) \"Podcasts I listen to and how I fetch them.\"\nby Christopher M. Hobbs.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ncybergrue on 2016-07-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2016-07-07:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nfolky on 2016-07-21:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2069\n(2016-07-07) \"Counting Stuff in LibreOffice Calc\"\nby Jon Kulp.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-07-07:\n\"Thanks for the quick tips\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2070\n(2016-07-08) \"Adventures with Jonathan Slocum\"\nby David Whitman.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-07-09:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2072\n(2016-07-12) \"That Awesome Time I Deleted My Home Directory\"\nby sigflup.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2016-07-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nbrian on 2016-07-17:\n\"great info\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2074\n(2016-07-14) \"Experience With A Neighborhood Cat\"\nby brian.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-07-14:\n\"This show is of interest to hackers\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2016-07-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2078\n(2016-07-20) \"What\'s in my bag?\"\nby Windigo.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2016-07-26:\n\"Mini9\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2016-07-28:\n\"My favorite\"
                                                          • \n

                                                        • \n
                                                        • hpr2081\n(2016-07-25) \"Fixing my daughter\'s laptop\"\nby Dave Morriss.\n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2016-07-26:\n\"Nice work!\"
                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2111,'2016-09-05','HPR Community News for August 2016',5495,'Dave and Ken discuss the last month, why we need shows and the correct way to hang toilet paper.','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n mattkingusa.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2086Mon2016-08-01HPR Community News for July 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2087Tue2016-08-02Magazines I read Part 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2088Wed2016-08-03How my wife\'s grandma got me into linux.Knightwise
                                                        2089Thu2016-08-04Solving a blinkstick python problemMrX
                                                        2090Fri2016-08-05A Docker DialogThaj Sara
                                                        2091Mon2016-08-08Everyday Unix/Linux Tools for data processingb-yeezi
                                                        2092Tue2016-08-09My new loveswift110
                                                        2093Wed2016-08-10GNU HealthDave Morriss
                                                        2094Thu2016-08-11Custom Keystrokes for Desktop Navigation on GnomeJon Kulp
                                                        2095Fri2016-08-1223 - SSL Certificates - How They WorkAhuka
                                                        2096Mon2016-08-15Useful Bash functions - part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        2097Tue2016-08-16New ToysTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2098Wed2016-08-17Minimal Music Site?mattkingusa
                                                        2099Thu2016-08-18Dat Muzak Showzx1101
                                                        2100Fri2016-08-19Re-Enable Copy and Paste in BrowsersKen Fallon
                                                        2101Mon2016-08-22What\'s on my podcatcherTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2102Tue2016-08-23AngularJS\'s ng-repeat, and the browser that shall not be namedRho`n
                                                        2103Wed2016-08-24DIY Book BindingKen Fallon
                                                        2104Thu2016-08-25Basic Audio Production: ReverbNacho Jordi
                                                        2105Fri2016-08-2624 - SSL Certificates - ProblemsAhuka
                                                        2106Mon2016-08-29My Podcast ClientMrX
                                                        2107Tue2016-08-30Makefiles for Everyday UseJon Kulp
                                                        2108Wed2016-08-31Changing the Oil on My Wife\'s CarJon Kulp
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This discussion takes\nplace on the Mail List which is open to all\nHPR listeners and contributors. The discussions are open and available on the\nGmane\narchive and the Mailman archive.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-August/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 32 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 8 comments on 4 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2027 (2016-05-10) \"Old Engineers and New Engineers\" by Gabriel Evenfire.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 4: Alpha32 on 2016-08-03: \"Excellent show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2066 (2016-07-04) \"HPR Community News for June 2016\" by HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 3: Alpha32 on 2016-08-04: \"World oat domination\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 4: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-06: \"Made in Scotland\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2081 (2016-07-25) \"Fixing my daughter\'s laptop\" by Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 2: Alpha32 on 2016-08-07: \"Brilliant!\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 3: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-07: \"I hope it never happens to you!\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 4: Jonathan Kulp on 2016-08-07: \"I\'m in the Same Boat\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 5: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-07: \"Thanks for the hint Jon!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2082 (2016-07-26) \"Basic Audio Production - Equalization\" by Nacho Jordi.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Jonas on 2016-08-13: \"New perspective.\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 24 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2086 (2016-08-01) \"HPR Community News for July 2016\" by HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Tony Hughes on 2016-08-03: \"Whats in My Bag\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2088 (2016-08-03) \"How my wife\'s grandma got me into linux.\" by Knightwise.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Tony Hughes on 2016-08-03: \"HPR 2088\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Steve on 2016-08-03: \"HPR 2088\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 3: knightwise on 2016-08-04: \"Yeey Steve ! \"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 4: other_Steve on 2016-08-24:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2089 (2016-08-04) \"Solving a blinkstick python problem\" by MrX.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-13: \"Great show\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2090 (2016-08-05) \"A Docker Dialog\" by Thaj Sara.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: b-yeezi on 2016-08-08: \"More interviews\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Thaj on 2016-08-17: \"Thanks!\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2091 (2016-08-08) \"Everyday Unix/Linux Tools for data processing\" by b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n\n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Jonathan Kulp on 2016-08-08: \"Ack!\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Ken Fallon on 2016-08-17: \"I love detox \"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 3: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-19: \"Thanks for mentioning \'ack\'\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 4: ivor on 2016-08-21: \"Interesting\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2093 (2016-08-10) \"GNU Health\" by Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Clinton Roy on 2016-08-09:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2094 (2016-08-11) \"Custom Keystrokes for Desktop Navigation on Gnome\" by Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-24: \"Using grep in a script\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Jon Kulp on 2016-08-25: \"Good tip\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 3: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-25: \"grep -q\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2095 (2016-08-12) \"23 - SSL Certificates - How They Work\" by Ahuka.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2016-08-18: \"Not allowed in the EU\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Kevin O\'Brien on 2016-08-19: \"Different in EU\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2096 (2016-08-15) \"Useful Bash functions - part 2\" by Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Ken Fallon on 2016-08-18: \"Here\'s me with the questions\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-18: \"Some answers for you...\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2097 (2016-08-16) \"New Toys\" by Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Tony Hughes on 2016-08-05: \"New Toys\"
                                                          • \n\n
                                                          • Comment 2: Frank on 2016-08-19:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2106 (2016-08-29) \"My Podcast Client\" by MrX.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Dave Morriss on 2016-08-31: \"I had forgotten hpodder\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • hpr2107 (2016-08-30) \"Makefiles for Everyday Use\" by Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • Comment 1: Fweeb on 2016-08-31: \".PHONY\"
                                                          • \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (3962,'2023-10-10','It\'s your data',442,'Ken shows a safer way to get episodes from HPR','

                                                        This is a response show to\nhpr3959\n:: Download any HPR series with english file names \"A dir with the\nseries name will be created and all shows will be renamed to\nShowTitle.mp3 inside it\"

                                                        \n

                                                        This was the first show by gemlog and he used Bash, sed, grep, wget,\nto scrape the HPR site. This is great but as he points out any change to\nthe site will break the script.

                                                        \n

                                                        A safer way to get the episodes is by scraping the rss feed, and the\nfollowing is an example of how you might do that

                                                        \n
                                                        #!/bin/bash\n\nseries_url="https://hackerpublicradio.org/hpr_mp3_rss.php?series=42&full=1&gomax=1"\ndownload_dir="./"\n\nwget "${series_url}" -O - | xmlstarlet sel -T -t -m 'rss/channel/item' -v 'concat(enclosure/@url, "→", title)' -n - | sort | while read episode\ndo\n  url="$( echo ${episode} | awk -F '→' '{print $1}' )"\n  ext="$( basename "${url}" )"\n  title="$( echo ${episode} | awk -F '→' '{print $2}' | sed -e 's/[^A-Za-z0-9]/_/g' )"\n  wget "${url}" -O "${download_dir}/${title}.${ext}"\ndone
                                                        \n',30,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','response, bash, rss, xml, xmlstarlet',0,0,1), (1847,'2015-09-01','Client Side C- WTF Is Wrong With You?',640,'In this episode of hackerpublicradio sigflup talks about her efforts porting stuff with emscripten','

                                                        \r\nThis is the link to the emulator: https://theadesilva.com/web_nes \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nemscripten\'s website is here https://kripken.github.io/emscripten-site\r\n

                                                        ',115,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','emscripten,c,c++,browser, javascript',0,0,1), (1848,'2015-09-02','Introduction to w3m, a Command Line Web Browser',901,'A brief introduction to using w3m, a command line web browser with tab and image support.','

                                                        W3M is a text browser with image and tab support which supports both keyboard and mouse navigation. (Image support is not available in some terminals, but does work in Xterm and rxvt, but images may be opened in a external viewer)). Mouse and keyboard navigation are supported, but I recommend learning the keybindings. Keybindings are case sensitive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The manual is 12 pages long and quite exhaustive. Here are some useful keybindings to get started with.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Open new tab: SHIFT-T
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Close tab: CTRL-Q

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Open URL: U (opens text dialog at bottom of window)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • See URL of current page: u (displays current URL at bottom of window)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Close tab: CTRL Q

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Go left one tab: {
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Go right one tab: }

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Back in the same page: b

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Page Up: - (hyphen) or PG UP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Page Down: SPACE or PG DOWN

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Previous page ("Buffer"): B
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • There is no "forward" button, but you can use view History: CTRL-h

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Search in page: / (opens search dialog at bottom of window)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Help: H

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Add bookmark: ESC-a
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • View bookmarks: ESC-v

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Run shell command: # (Opens a dialog at the bottom of the window. Exit with B.)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Paste into dialogs (e. g., passwords): Middle mouse button.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Scroll left: . (period)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Scroll right: , (comma)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Useful Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','web browser, text web browser, tabs',0,0,1), (1849,'2015-09-03','LinuxLugCast Episode-004 Outtakes',547,'Preshow & aftershow banter that does not get published through our normal feeds.','

                                                        \r\nSome good content that we do not publish to the show https://linuxlugcast.com/?p=197\r\n

                                                        \r\n',265,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','linuxlugcast,outtakes',0,0,1), (1852,'2015-09-08','Operation Wallacea',1769,'I talk to my daughter about her recent trip to Indonesia','

                                                        Operation Wallacea

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This summer my daughter Clara spent a month as a volunteer Research Assistant on Hoga Island in Indonesia learning to dive and helping to survey the coral reef and other habitats.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we talk about Clara\'s experiences with Operation Wallacea.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Photos

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"1
                                                        1 Welcome to Hoga Island
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"2
                                                        2 Relaxing near the Lodge
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"3
                                                        3 Beach
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"4
                                                        4 Soft and hard corals
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"5
                                                        5 Divers and soft corals
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"6
                                                        6 Upside-down jellyfish
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"7
                                                        7 Mangroves
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"8
                                                        8 Humbug Damselfish
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"9
                                                        9 Blue Damselfish
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"10
                                                        10 The hut from inside
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"11
                                                        11 The hut\'s verandah
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"12
                                                        12 The Shop
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','operation wallacea,hoga island,diving,padi,scuba,snorkel,coral,reef',0,0,1), (1875,'2015-10-09','63 - LibreOffice Impress - Formatting Text',1050,'Text formatting options are explored','

                                                        \r\nI know we have focused a lot on using Styles to control the formatting of text, and there is a reason for that. As I have said so often, uniformity of appearance is an important part of a professional-looking presentation, and that is best done by using the Presentation and Drawing Object styles appropriately. But there is a place for all of the other tools Impress has, and I want to go over some of them now before we move on to other topics.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1262\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,1,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Text',0,0,1), (1885,'2015-10-23','64 - LibreOffice Impress - Multimedia',853,'Using Audio and Video files in Impress','

                                                        \r\nOne thing that Impress lets you do that can be kind of fun is to use Multimedia files in your presentations in various ways. Now, there are some interesting limitations here. First of all, any time you want sounds, whether from an audio file or as part of a movie file, you need to have the right hardware. This means a little planning ahead. In many of the places where I do presentations the video is all I have. But most modern projectors, particularly in corporate meeting rooms, have the capability of playing audio as well as video. \r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1271\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Multimedia, Audio, Video',0,0,1), (1895,'2015-11-06','65 - LibreOffice Impress - OLE Objects, Spreadsheets, and Charts',966,'Using Calc modules and data in a presentation','

                                                        \r\nThe next topic we want to cover involves something called OLE, which stands for Object Linking and Embedding. This was developed by Microsoft, but has spread to the free software world as well. What it means is that you can use data from two different programs together, and changes made in place are automatically reflected in the other place. A great example comes with spreadsheets, since you create them in a spreadsheet program like Calc, but you might want to take a table created there and put it into a slide to display. \r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1275\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, OLE, Spreadsheets, Charts',0,0,1), (1905,'2015-11-20','66 - LibreOffice Impress - Built-In Charts',861,'Creating charts from inside Impress','

                                                        \r\nIn the last tutorial we looked at OLE objects, and saw that Charts could be brought into Impress from Calc via OLE. But you can create the Charts directly in Impress. Bear in mind that due to the modular nature of LibreOffice you will be using the same tools to do this as Calc uses: LibreOffice developers never reinvent the wheel if they can avoid it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThere is a lot to know about Charts if you are going to use them effectively, and we covered all of this in our Calc tutorials.\r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1291\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Charts',0,0,1), (1915,'2015-12-04','67 - LibreOffice Impress - Tables',937,'Impress tables and how to format them','

                                                        \r\nWe now have looked at three of the four objects that are offered to you on a new slide: Charts, Pictures, and Movies. So now it is time to take a look at Tables. You have options here, such as embedding a table from Calc or Writer, and there are times when you need that degree of power. But most of the time you can do what you need inside of Impress using its own functionality. As we saw last time with Charts, you can just click the button in the middle of a new slide and insert a Table that way, but that may not always be feasible, so you have the alternative option of going to the Insert menu and selecting Table. \r\nFor more go to https://www.ahuka.com/?page_id=1285\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, Impress, Tables',0,0,1), (1854,'2015-09-10','Installing Ubuntu on the Asus TP500L',927,'I talk about the process of getting Ubuntu onto my son\'s UEFI-secured laptop.','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Getting to BIOS\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          1. In Windows, go to Settings
                                                          2. \r\n
                                                          3. Search for advanced startup options
                                                          4. \r\n
                                                          5. Follow your nose to Boot to UEFI settings
                                                          6. \r\n
                                                          7. Can also get there by doing Shift+click on the Restart or Shutdown buttons then clicking through to advanced options until you find \"enter setup.\" Pressing F2 never worked for me
                                                          8. \r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. In the BIOS\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          1. Security tab: disable \"Secure Boot Control\"
                                                          2. \r\n
                                                          3. Boot tab: disable \"Fast Boot\"
                                                          4. \r\n
                                                          5. Boot tab: Here Asus support says to enable \"launch CSM\" (Compatibility Support Mode) but it wouldn\'t boot from the Ubuntu USB image this way. It worked when I left CSM disabled. I bet CSM works with a Windows or DOS USB.
                                                          6. \r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Plug in USB with Ubuntu image on it
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Restart computer and hold ESC key down, forcing windows boot menu to appear
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Choose the USB drive to boot from, off you go!
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','UEFI, Ubuntu, Dual-Booting, Windows 10, Privacy',0,0,1), (1853,'2015-09-09','I <3 Vista',400,'How I got into Linux','

                                                        \r\nI talk about how Vista got me into Linux, and my computing experience in general.\r\n

                                                        ',303,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Windows Vista,Ubuntu,Macintosh,Acer,Debian',0,0,1), (1856,'2015-09-14','ssh config',747,'Klaatu talks about ssh config.','

                                                        Put a file called \'config\' into ~/.ssh and you can define any option you would normally provide as part of the command as an automatically-detected configuration.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nFor example:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nhost foo\r\n    hostname foo.org\r\n    identityfile /home/klaatu/.ssh/foo_rsa\r\n    port 2740\r\n    protocol 2\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMakes the command \'ssh klaatu@foo\' look like this to SSH:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nssh -p2740 -i ~/.ssh/foo_rsa klaatu@foo.org\r\n
                                                        ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh,configuration,tutorial,hints and tips',0,0,1), (1857,'2015-09-15','Adventures In Coffee',1131,'CPrompt talks about his adventures in coffee making and how he finally realized that the French Pres','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. CPrompts French Press: https://www.amazon.com/Bodum-Chambord-French-Coffee-Chrome/dp/B00008XEWG\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Grocer that has some great coffee: https://www.thefreshmarket.com/\r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. The only creamer that will go in CPrompt\'s coffee: https://www.califiafarms.com/products/coffee-creamer/ \r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        ',252,88,1,'CC-BY-SA','coffee,fresh,coffee pots,french press,cafetiere,coffee plunger',0,0,1), (1859,'2015-09-17','A Mouse in a Maze on the Raspberry PI',2389,'This podcast describes a little game that I learned in my first programming class.','

                                                        This podcast is about a little programming exercise I learned in my first programming class. The idea is to generate a random text-based maze and make mouse (\'@\') search the maze systematically to find the cheese (\'V\'). If it does so before it runs out of energy (moves) it wins (\'$\' == happy mouse). Otherwise it starves (\'%\' == dead mouse).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can find my git repos for the Raspberry PI code including this program at these locations:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The Mouse-in-a-maze program also requires the catlib library as well which is at:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You may note that these directories are different from those in my previous RPI episodes. The repositories used to be on gitorious. However since gitlab acquired gitorious, I have migrated the repositories. They currently live on both github and gitlab and I have pushing updates to both for the time being. So I have been waffling about which one will be the ultimate master for these projects. But since, I am doing most all the work on this code myself, it doesn\'t much matter for the time being.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If this is your first time playing with bare metal programming in the RPI you can get more info and tips from HPR episodes 1619, 1630 and 1666. Note that the gitorious links in those episodes are outdated as mentioned above. The github links therein should still be fine though.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The mouse code itself is in the apps/mouse0 directory. If you haven\'t played with this environment before you\'ll need to do the following:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Get a compatible ARM toolchain up and running to build for the RPI. I recommend using: https://github.com/dwelch67/build_gcc/blob/master/build_arm
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • You\'ll need a USB-to-TTL serial cable to hook up to the RPI. I use: https://www.adafruit.com/products/954
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • You\'ll also need a small SD card to boot from.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Follow the steps in catrpi/README.txt to\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • create an SD-card with a loader on it.
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • build catlib for the RPI locally (a prereq for building mouse0.bin)
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • set up your serial connection to the RPI
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • start up a minicom instance to connect to the RPI
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once those prerequisites are taken care of you can:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • change directory to /path/to/catrpi/apps/mouse0 type make to build
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • mouse0.bin power on the RPI at the loader prompt, type \'x\' in the
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • serial console to start X-modem reception on the RPI
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • use your terminal program to send the mouse0.bin file via X-modem. In minicom you do this by CTRL-A followed by \'s\'. You then select \'xmodem\' as the protocol and navigate to and select the file mouse0.bin to send.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • when the transfer completes type \'s\' to start the program
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        These pages describe VT100 Terminal codes:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Sample traversal:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          ########################################\r\n  #+0****## #+#...###...#..$ ##  #  #    #\r\n  ##+###+## #+++......#...# ##       #   #\r\n  # #.+++++#....#   #      #    #      # #\r\n  #  #+++++#+.+..#  #  #          #      #\r\n  #  #.##.+++#+.### #     #   #   ##     #\r\n  #  ###.+.##++.##     #   ###     #   # #\r\n  ####+.#..#++#.##   #      #####   ##   #\r\n  #++#.#.###+.##    ##       ##    #   # #\r\n  #++++++.##.++.#   #  ##     #  # #  # ##\r\n  #+++++#..##.##      ## #  #### # #    ##\r\n  #+.....#..#.  ##   #      #     ##  ## #\r\n  #+..+.......   # #      #      #  ##   #\r\n  #+...#..###       # #  #          ##  ##\r\n  #.#..#.........# # # # ##### # #    ## #\r\n  #.......##  ##....  #        ###   ##  #\r\n  ##......# ##   ##..#  #####          # #\r\n  #.+.#...###    ###. ##          ##  # ##\r\n  ##.+...#  #      ####      #   ##    # #\r\n  ########################################\r\n  Mouse found the cheese!  :)  Press any key to restart!
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',259,25,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry PI, Bare metal programming',0,0,1), (1867,'2015-09-29','The Lafayette Public Library Maker Space',2733,'My son and I visit the Lafayette Public Library to try out the 3d printer in the maker space.','

                                                        The Lafayette Public Library Maker Space

                                                        \n\n\"Exterior\n\n

                                                        The Renovated Main Library

                                                        \n\n\"Large\n\n

                                                        Sewing Area

                                                        \n\n\"Display\n\n

                                                        Rolling pin with laser-etched π symbols

                                                        \n\n\n\"Array\n\n

                                                        Knitting Area

                                                        \n\n\n\"Triangular\n

                                                        Lego Robotics Space

                                                        \n\n\"One\n\n

                                                        The Ultimaker2

                                                        \n\n\"Close\n\n

                                                        Trying to print my Kindle paperwhite stand.

                                                        \n\n\"The\n\n

                                                        The Taz 3D printer by Lulzbot

                                                        \n\n

                                                        The finished Kindle stand:

                                                        \n\n\"My\n\n

                                                        It worked! Bad part of this design is that it does not accommodate the case that I have on my Kindle, so to use the stand with the Kindle I\'ll have to remove the case. The next photo shows my son\'s nook color sitting sideways on it. I might try to modify the design so that it will accommodate the Kindle with its case and also prop it up a bit more vertically. Still, this was a really fun experiment with my first 3d printout.

                                                        \n\n\"Kindle\n\n\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \n\n\n\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \n\n\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','3d printing, DIY, makers, libraries',0,0,1), (1861,'2015-09-21','Cool Stuff pt. 4',1032,'CPrompt talks about some more cool stuff for you to enjoy!','

                                                        CMUS

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nA great command line music player\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCMUS Home Page: https://cmus.github.io/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA good guide: https://www.tuxarena.com/static/cmus_guide.php\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Song Exploder

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nPodcast where musicians take apart their songs bit by bit\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://songexploder.net/\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Mr. Robot

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.imdb.com/title/tt4158110/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Follows a young computer programmer (Malek) who suffers from social anxiety disorder and forms connections through hacking. He\'s recruited by a mysterious anarchist, \r\nwho calls himself Mr. Robot.\"\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe pilot for Mr. Robot was directed by Niels Arden Oplev (The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo) \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDirected by: \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Sam Esmail\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nStarring:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Rami Malek\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Christian Slater\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Carly Chaikin\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Portia Doubleday\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Martin Wallstrm\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','CMUS,Mr Robot',0,0,1), (1862,'2015-09-22','The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 1',1307,'A tutorial of the KDE Desktop','

                                                        \r\nHello my name is Geddes and this is my first HPR Episode. Its part 1 of an audio voice recording of an article entitled THE AWESOMELY EPIC GUIDE TO KDE. This is a tutorial on the KDE Desktop, which I did for Linux Voice Magazine back at the start of 2015. Its primarily in response to the call from HPR for more shows, but in my introduction I\'ve also mentioned a few other reasons which I hope listeners will find interesting, a couple are around the issues of diversity and accessibility. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux Voice,KDE,desktop',0,0,1), (1870,'2015-10-02','19 - Home SSH Server',1115,'To learn ssh it helps to experiment, so this explains setting up a simple home server.','

                                                        \r\nThe best way to get familiarity with the concepts we will discuss is by experimentation. I think that it is becoming more common these days for people to own more than one computer and set them up in a network. And with cheap computers like Raspberry Pi it is really easy to get started. In this tutorial I want to discuss how you can set up such a server for your experiments in ssh. I encourage you to do this even though I dont intend this series to focus on server administration. The idea is that by practising these these techniques behind a good firewall you can get some familiarity with them before you get out on the Internet where it matters. For most Linux users, at least, installing and setting up a server is really simple, and you can do it minutes.\r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=847 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh, Telnet, server',0,0,1), (1900,'2015-11-13','20 - SSH Basics',1009,'In this we tutorial explore the basics of making an ssh connection.','

                                                        \r\nSo as we saw in the introductory tutorial, SSH uses the Client-Server model. Now, technically a server is just the machine you are connecting to, and there is no reason in principle that it could not be another desktop, a laptop, or even a telephone if it has the appropriate software. and in the previous tutorial we showed how you can easily install and set up an ssh server on your home network using another computer or a Raspberry Pi so that you can experiment with these commands. The model really reduces to you as the client, and the other machine as the server. As with all Internet connections there are standards and protocols involved. The original Telnet communicated over TCP through port 23. Because SSH was conceived as a replacement, it used the same TCP protocols, and was assigned the adjacent port number of 22. \r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=726 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh, client, basics',0,0,1); INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hostid`, `series`, `explicit`, `license`, `tags`, `version`, `downloads`, `valid`) VALUES (1863,'2015-09-23','The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 2',1307,'The Awesomely Epic Guide To KDE Part 2','

                                                        \r\nHello my name is Geddes and this is my second HPR Episode. Its part 2 of an audio voice recording of an article entitled THE AWESOMELY EPIC GUIDE TO KDE. This is a tutorial on the KDE Desktop, which I did for Linux Voice Magazine back at the start of 2015. In this half the topics I cover are - Upgrade Launch Menu, File Management, Window Management, and Visual Effects.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux Voice,KDE,desktop',0,0,1), (1920,'2015-12-11','21 - SSH Authentication - Keys',1119,'We introduce the idea of using public/private key pairs for authentication','

                                                        \r\nWhen you first try to login to a remote server you need to authenticate yourself, which means you have to demonstrate that you have rights to be on that server. You can do this in several ways:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Password You authenticate to the server by typing in your password. This is easy because you can generally remember your password, and it means you can easily login from any computer with that knowledge. This is still the most common authentication mechanism for SSH. It is also the least secure.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Public Key This is much more secure. It involves the creation of a key pair, of course. It is possible to use a key pair generated by PGP or GPG in the most current versions (version 2.0.13 introduced support for this). But there is a long established method using the Unix program ssh-keygen. This is very similar to generating a key pair as we discussed earlier. You run the program ssh-keygen, harvest some entropy, generate a passphrase to protect it, and so on.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=733 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh, client, encryption, keys',0,0,1), (1864,'2015-09-24','Turning an old printer into a network printer',1261,'Using a Raspberry Pi as a print spooler for an old USB printer','

                                                        Overview

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have a USB printer I bought back in 2005 when I bought a Windows PC for the family. It\'s an HP PSC 2410 PhotoSmart All-in-One printer. This device is a colour inkjet printer, with a scanner, FAX and card-reading facilities. It has been left unused in a corner for many years, and I recently decided to to see if I could make use of it again, so I cleaned it up and bought some new ink cartridges for it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It is possible to use this printer on Linux using CUPS for the printing and SANE for scanning. I connected it to my Linux desktop for a while to prove that it was usable. However, rather than leaving it connected in this way, I wanted to turn it into a network printer that could be used by the rest of the family. My kids are mostly away at university these days but invariably need to print stuff when they pass through. I searched the Internet and found an article in the Raspberry Pi Geek magazine which helped with this project.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are long, they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1864_full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. HP PSC 2410 PhotoSmart All-in-One printer: https://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/product?cc=uk&lc=en&product=303753
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. CUPS.org main web site: https://www.cups.org/
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. CUPS Wikipedia entry: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUPS
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. HP Linux Imaging and Printing (HPLIP): https://hplipopensource.com/hplip-web/index.html
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Scanner Access Now Easy (SANE): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanner_Access_Now_Easy
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. "Converting the Raspberry Pi to a wireless print server" from the Raspberry Pi Geek magazine: https://www.raspberry-pi-geek.com/Archive/2013/01/Converting-the-Raspberry-Pi-to-a-wireless-print-server
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Linux Foundation OpenPrinting work group: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/openprinting/\r\n
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Arch Wiki on CUPS - Linux Server Windows Client: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/CUPS_printer_sharing#Linux_server_-_Windows_client
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Internet Printing Protocol (IPP): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Printing_Protocol
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        ',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','printer,network,raspberry pi,CUPS,SANE',0,0,1), (1866,'2015-09-28','An awkward talk with two young computer users',327,'Eric and Emily discuss operating systems, school and fun uses of computers.','

                                                        \r\nQuvmoh speaks with Eric 15 and Emily 10 about their computer usage and implore others to contribute to HPR\r\n

                                                        ',110,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','young computer users',0,0,1), (1873,'2015-10-07','TiT Radio 21 - I Thought I Had Better Links',4183,'TiT Radio rides again, again','

                                                        \r\nAnother installment of TiT Radio with Kevin Wisher, pegwole, netminer, and FiftyOneFifty\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSome of these links may have bee discussed during the show:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',131,30,1,'CC-BY-SA','TiT Radio',0,0,1), (1860,'2015-09-18','FiftyOneFifty interviews Chris Waid of Save WiFi',8226,'This could be the most important podcast you listen to this year','

                                                        \r\nThe Save WiFi program has been instituted to combat the greatest threat the open source movement has faced from government over regulation. If you have listened to LinuxLUGCast.com, The Linux Link Tech Show, Linux for the Rest od US,or HPR recently, you may already be aware that recent decisions by the FCC have already forced router manufactures to lock down their equipment against the installation of non factory firmware. My guest, Chris Waid, CEO of Think Penguin and a leader in the Save WiFi project, joins me to explain how Linux on the desktop may also become subject to FCC regulation. As manufacturers incorporate more Software Defined Radio into PC\'s, the FCC may feel it has no choice but to lock down (or lock out), not only open source software, but any software that is not pre vetted and pre certified, even on proprietery OS\'s.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRight now, there is a narrow window where the FCC has invited comment from the public, and Hacker Public Radio invites all our listeners to add their voices against this ill advised course of action.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThere is one small saving grace. Kevin Wisher found an Ars Technica article where an unnamed FFC spokesman seems to be saying locking open source firmware out of routers was not the intended consequence (even though Open-WRT was mentioned by name in the updated rules). I think the FCC might prefer manuafacturers avoid incorporating radio hardware that is so easily manipulated:\r\nhttps://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/09/fcc-accused-of-locking-down-wi-fi-routers-but-the-truth-is-a-bit-murkier/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI want to give special thanks to Chris Waid for going above and beyond for recording our conversation because I was having ISP problems. I want to appologize in advance for any audio problems, I was way low and had to fix it in post.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',131,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Save WiFi,router,FCC',0,0,1), (1868,'2015-09-30','Glasgow Podcrawl review',2908,'The intrepid Glasgow Podcrawlers meet to discuss their experiences back in July','

                                                        Glasgow Podcrawl review

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second Glasgow Podcrawl took place on the 10th of July 2015. The participants were:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The event started at 6pm in the State Bar on Holland Street, moved on to the Bon Accord, the Inn Deep and finally to the Three Judges.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Dave Morriss departed after visiting the second bar to head back to Edinburgh, but everyone else lasted to the very end!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode hear the details of this singular event, and a whole lot about many other things.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Glasgow,Podcrawl,review',0,0,1), (1872,'2015-10-06','Sim City BuildIt September 2015',1417,'I talk about one of my favorite games sim city buildit','

                                                        \r\nDefinately focus on getting enough golden keys as it allows you to get some very good buildings\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','games, iPad, android, google play',0,0,1), (1876,'2015-10-12','MicrobeLog, or: On Shaving Yaks and Doing Things',561,'Why I\'m making an HPR episode, and why I\'m making a vaporware social network engine','

                                                        \r\nThe MicrobeLog overview: https://gitlab.com/microbelog/manifest\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhpr1726 :: 15 Excuses not to Record a show for HPR:\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1726\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nI think I\'ve pretty much had to fight excuses 5, 7, 10 and 12. :-)\r\n

                                                        ',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','federation, python, microservices, gtd, yakshaving',0,0,1), (1877,'2015-10-13','Recording HPR on the fly on your Android phone',378,'How quickly can you get an HPR recording done? 10 minutes including app install! Sort of.','

                                                        This episode was produced entirely on my phone, including upload.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Apologies for the atrocious sound quality and the low volume. Consider it performance art. I know I need to speak closer to the phone next time. There\'s DroidGain, but I guess it only accepts mp3.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        TL;DL: Install Urecord from F-Droid, choose 44.1 kHz, RECORD!

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        I estimate the total amount of time spent on this episode at:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 20 mins – installing apps on two phones
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 20 mins – evaluate apps on two phones (while cooking!)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 6 mins – record episode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 10 mins – update HPR user profile
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 30 mins – write show notes (while having dinner!)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 15 mins – figure out how to upload this thing from a phone
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ?? – upload episode
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        A large part of the typing time was angle brackets. HATE screen input. I want a modern phone with sliding QWERTY like the good old X10 Mini Pro, or maybe the slightly larger HTC Desire Z. Apparently the market doesn\'t. :-(

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Wow, turns out the difficult part was to upload the file. Had to use a file manager as a \"provider\" for Firefox to get the \"document\" from.

                                                        \r\n',311,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','android, hpr, audio, recording',0,0,1), (1881,'2015-10-19','My road to Linux',912,'I\'m so old I actually installed Watchtower on an Amiga and I review 22 years of Linux distributions','

                                                        I went against my own recommendations from my previous episode \r\nand used Rehearsal Assistant, because it can rename files inside the app. \r\nWell, turns out it records at 8 kHz and encodes it as 3GPP.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Sound quality: Yes, it\'s at a terrible sample rate, but you can \r\nhear what I\'m saying and at least I\'m Holding It Right.\r\nThere\'s no problem with sudden drops in \r\nlevel.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Do as I say, don\'t do as I do. Use\r\nUrecord,\r\nwhich is obviously \r\npronounced you record as in telling someone to record something, not \r\nyou record! as in insulting someone by comparing them to a vinyl disc. \r\nDon\'t say as I say.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Slirp can use either SLIP or \r\nPPP. I think I used Slirp with SLIP, and there was some other connection \r\nmethod that provided PPP directly without logging in and running a command. \r\nMaybe their getty even understood the PPP blurb and just went directly to \r\npppd. Anyway, my Amiga-side software didn\'t support it. When I switched to \r\nLinux I was able to use the other method and just talk PPP directly and \r\nauthorize using CHAP.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Debian didn\'t support Amiga\r\nuntil Debian Hamm, which was released in 1998. So I didn\'t have much\r\nchoice but to run Watchtower and compile my own stuff. By 1998 the Amiga was\r\nalready gathering dust in my wardrobe back at my parents\' place, while my PC\r\nand I were preparing to travel the seas with the Swedish Royal Navy and\r\nhang out (not really) with David Letterman on Saint Barths.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Wikipedia says that \r\nyes, it was Bruce Perens who tried to get UserLinux going, but they claim \r\nUbuntu killed it. I don\'t remember UserLinux getting any traction at all. I \r\nthink it\'s more accurate to say that Ubuntu put the last nail in its coffin. \r\nLWN seems to agree: The \r\nimmediate cause of death was an inability to deliver software. Today there \r\nstill is no real delivered product, over three months after the release of \r\nDebian Sarge.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        But the same article reveals that I was completely wrong about Bruce \r\ntrying to gather existing vendors together: It was occasionally \r\nconfused with UnitedLinux by people familiar with the Linux market. \r\nUnitedLinux is the old Caldera, Conectiva, SUSE and Turbolinux \r\ninitiative. Yeah, I was thinking of the one with Turbolinux in it. \r\nThat name rings a bell. But I thought Turbolinux was Finnish. Apparently they \r\nwere Japanese. Or actually, \r\napparently they are Japanese.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Ah yes, Best Linux, that was the Finnish one.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I know that guix\r\nis pronounced geeks. I just don\'t know it in my heart. Just \r\nlike I actually think GNU/Linux is the better descriptive term, but I keep \r\ntalking about the Linux ecosystem* etc, where 95% of that ecosystem is \r\nabstracted away from Linux by glibc and runs just as well on \r\nFreeBSD.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        * Yes, you may hate the term ecosystem. I happen to think it\'s an \r\napt** analogy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        ** You see what I did there.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',311,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Urecord,Slirp,Amiga,turbolinux,guix',0,0,1), (1878,'2015-10-14','What\'s In My Bag',548,'What\'s in my travel bag for my upcoming client trip','

                                                        What\'s in My Bag Show Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some links from the highlights of the episode

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','Consulting, travel',0,0,1), (1886,'2015-10-26','Moral Volcano\'s Linux Tips & Tricks podcast for Hacker Public Radio',3884,'A collection of Linux tips and tricks that may be useful new users.','

                                                        \r\nWelcome to my first podcast for Hacker Public Radio. \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Like Gnome 3? Good for you.\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Don\'t like Gnome 3 or like Gnome 2 more? Then, get a Linux distro with the Mate desktop. Mate desktop was forked from Gnome 2. Gnome 2 development was stopped by the Gnome 3 team.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. After installing the Mate desktop, install the Nimbus theme and Compiz desktop effects.
                                                          \r\n https://www.dropbox.com/s/47579lbgjsqgazz/nimbus-icon-theme_0.1.4-2_all.deb?dl=0
                                                          \r\n https://www.dropbox.com/s/ndei6yi4lj2zmid/gtk2-engines-nimbus_0.1.4-2_amd64.deb?dl=0
                                                          \r\n I don\'t have the 32-bit edition.\r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Have a USB wireless modem? Use wvdial or gnome-ppp with \"stupid mode\" enabled.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Change gnome-terminal color scheme to Green-On-Black and the the following line to your .bashrc for a colorful and usable terminal window.\r\n
                                                          PS1=\"\\a\\n\\n\\e[31;1m\\u@\\h on \\d at \\@\\n\\e[33;1m\\w\\e[0m\\n$ \"
                                                          \r\n https://www.vsubhash.com/article.asp?id=13&info=Ubuntu_and_Gnome_Diary#change_terminal_prompt
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Install CMU fonts from
                                                          \r\n https://canopus.iacp.dvo.ru/~panov/cm-unicode/
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Download Google fonts using this bash script\r\n
                                                          wget https://googlefontdirectory.googlecode.com/hg/ofl/ -r -nc -nd -np -A.ttf
                                                          \r\n This command takes a while to parse all the pages and find the fonts that need to be downloaded.
                                                          \r\n https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cj6zhjW7ZS0
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Good Artists Copy, Great Artists Steal; Jonathan Schwartz; March 2010
                                                          \r\n https://jonathanischwartz.wordpress.com/2010/03/09/good-artists-copy-great-artists-steal/
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Undead Myths In The Wake Of iDead Steve Jobs; V. Subhash; November 2011
                                                          \r\n https://www.vsubhash.com/article.asp?id=112&info=Undead_Myths_In_The_Wake_Of_iDead_Steve_Jobs
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Support free software
                                                          \r\n https://my.fsf.org/donate
                                                          \r\n https://mate-desktop.org/donate/
                                                          \r\n https://www.linuxmint.com/donors.php\r\n
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. Firestarter firewall - I think it needs only a little attention from Linux developers before it can be extremely useful again. Most of it still works.
                                                          \r\n https://fs-security.com/
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',312,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','desktop,Mate,wvdial,gnome-ppp,fonts,Firestarter firewall ',0,0,1), (1874,'2015-10-08','Interview with Droops',3239,'To mark the 10 year anniversary of HPR we talk to droops one of the founders of Today with a Techie.','

                                                        \r\nWe started producing shows as Today with a Techie 10 years ago this weekend. To mark the project we track down droops one of the founders and ask him about the early days.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        About HPR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hacker Public Radio (HPR) is an Internet Radio show (podcast) that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. HPR has a long lineage going back to Radio FreeK America, Binary Revolution Radio & Infonomicon, and it is a direct continuation of Twatech radio. Please listen to StankDawg\'s \"Introduction to HPR\" for more information.

                                                        \r\n \r\n

                                                        What differentiates HPR from other podcasts is that the shows are produced by the community - fellow listeners like you. There is no restrictions on how long the show can be, nor on the topic you can cover as long as they \"are of interest to Hackers\". If you want to see what topics have been covered so far just have a look at our Archive. We also allow for a series of shows so that host(s) can go into more detail on a topic.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can download/listen to the show here or you can subscribe to the show in your favorite podcatching client (like BashPodder) to automatically get our new shows as soon as they are available. You can copy and redistribute the shows for free provided you adhere to the Creative Commons AttributionShareAlike 3.0 License.

                                                        \r\n \r\n

                                                        We do not filter the shows in any way other than to check if they are audible and not blatant attempts at spam.

                                                        \r\n \r\n

                                                        \r\n Hacker Public Radio is dedicated to sharing knowledge. We do not accept donations, but if you listen to HPR, then we would love you to contribute one show a year.\r\n

                                                        \r\n \r\n

                                                        In the Press.

                                                        \r\n \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','TWaTech, RFA, Radio FreeK America, BinRev, Binary Revolution Radio, Infonomicon',0,0,1), (1879,'2015-10-15','Hacking a Belt to Make it Fit',906,'I record a show while hacking a belt to make it fit.','

                                                        In this episode I talk while I\'m performing a belt hack. I bought a belt at Goodwill that is in excellent condition but does not fit me. To make it fit I need to cut off 6.25 inches and then put it back together.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the belt as I got it. Notice the very small screws holding the buckle to the belt.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"The

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The screws are out, the belt removed from the buckle. You can see here the two holes that accommodate the screws as well as the rectangular notch.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Buckle

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'ve cut off 6.25" from the belt, ready to make the holes and notch in the remaining part.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"6.25"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here I\'ve clamped the part of the belt that I cut off to the remaining part to use as a template for making the holes and the notch.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Hole-and-notch

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Holes and notch cut in the remaining part of the belt. Doesn\'t look as nice as the original but it should work.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Holes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All done. Belt is reassembled and I\'m wearing it, fits just right!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Perfect

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, belts, dressing spiffily',0,0,1), (1880,'2015-10-16','Arduino Bluetooth HOWTO',2494,'Klaatu talks about getting a bluetooth module for an arduino, and how to make it work','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu talks about the HC-05 and -06 series of bluetooth modules and how to use them with an Arduino, including some basic code on the Arduino to get it to respond to signals over bluetooth, and some basic PyQt code on how to send signals to the bluetooth device. PLUS, he talks about configuring the bluetooth so that it is connected to the serial port of your system (so that Python can use it).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA super basic bluetooth controller app can be found here:\r\nhttps://gitlab.com/makerbox/rovcon \r\n(it\'s Klaatu\'s code, and it\'s not quite finished, so if you have improvements or questions, feel free to comment or merge or email)\r\n

                                                        ',78,91,0,'CC-BY-SA','arduino,python,qt',0,0,1), (1882,'2015-10-20','How I Compute Away From My Computer',1666,'Thaj explains his setup for computing outside of the house, without his laptop.','

                                                        Here is a list of the stuff I bought, as well as the apps I list in the episode:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Free/Open Source Android Apps:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • AntennaPod
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Atomic
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ChatSecure
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Connectbot (honorable mention to Irissi Connectbot)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • FB Reader
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • F-Droid
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • HN
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • NewPipe
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • K9 Mail
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Orbot
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Orweb
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Owncloud
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • OwnNote
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pixel Dungeon
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Plumble
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • RedReader
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Termux
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Twidere
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • VLC
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Not so Free/Open Source Android Apps:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • LastPass
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ezPDF Reader
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • News+
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',270,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','android, tablet, on the go, portable, apps, free software, open source software',0,0,1), (1883,'2015-10-21','Don\'t Get Locked In',1080,'Knightwise discusses how he uses tools from several major software platforms to get his work done','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode Knightwise talks about the cross-platform tools he uses for\r\nhis day job as a freelance IT consultant. All three of the major OS platforms\r\n(Linux, OS X and Windows) have their strengths, so by leveraging systems from\r\nacross all ecosystems Knightwise can use what he feels is the best tool for\r\nany individual task.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nUse the tool that\'s right for you without letting the fanboys or the zealots get in your way.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',111,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','cross-platform tools ',0,0,1), (1884,'2015-10-22','Some more Bash tips',949,'Some information about brace expansion in Bash that you might not know','

                                                        Some more Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We looked at Parameter Expansion back in HPR episode 1648 where we saw how Bash variables could be used, checked and edited. There are other sorts of expansions within Bash, and we\'ll look at one called "Brace Expansion" in this episode, which follows on from episode 1843 "Some Bash tips".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1884_full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,brace expansion,seq',0,0,1), (1887,'2015-10-27','Coffee Making Basics',642,'Reply to HPR Episode 1871 & Coffee Making','

                                                        Hi. This is "JustMe". I\'ve been in & out of computing since the late 70s. I\'m currently running the latest version of Linux Mint LMDE Mate on this Intel Core2 Q8300 CPU running @ 2.50GHz, on an ASRock motherboard with 8G of memory. Storage is provided by a 120Gb Samsung 850 EVO SSD for the OS and a Western Digital WD20 2T HD as home & swap. Video is provided by nVidia. My monitor is an LG E2441 wide screen. I built this box a few years ago and haven\'t seen a need to modernize it beyond upgrading the OS because it suits my purposes well. Although I\'m seriously contemplating switch my desk top to XFCE because Mate is still too buggy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \'nught about me. Let\'s get on to the subject at hand.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I just finished listening to the HPR Community News for September 2015 episode 1871 a couple of days ago. I listened to the two volunteer hosts talking about coffee, coffee preparation and how hard it was to get water to the correct temperature for that optimal cup of coffee. I\'d like to ask the two of them a couple of questions before I continue elucidating on this topic.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first question is, can you blind taste test the difference between Nescafé Instant and a cup of, let\'s say, Starbucks brewed coffee? (a blind taste test is where someone prepares cups of coffee without you knowing which cup has which coffee.) Also notice, I didn\'t say cappuccino or latte. I said, good ol\' fashioned brewed coffee, drunk black.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Don\'t be ashamed if you can\'t because many people don\'t have the taste buds for it. But if you can\'t, I\'d say forget making your own and stay with the crappy, Nescafé instant. You\'ll save yourself a lot of time, money.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On the other hand, if you can taste the difference, and you live in the San Francisco area of California, then I\'d like to ask another question. Can you taste the difference between Starbucks and Pete\'s Brewed coffee?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you can, then I propose one more question. Can you taste the difference between a cup of coffee made with Columbian beans and one made with Brazilian beans or Ethiopian beans or Costa Rica Beans?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you can answer yes to all of these questions, then I\'d say you should take the time to learn how to make a proper cup of coffee. You will be rewarded a thousand times over with each cup.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now, providing you have answered all in the affirmative or you\'re just interested in listening to the rest of this podcast, let\'s digress no further and proceed to the heart of the matter.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Making a cup of good coffee, just like making a bottle of good wine or a good omelet, takes understanding of the basics and practice in preparation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The basics of coffee making are simple: Freshly roasted whole beans, a good grinder & proper grind for the type of coffee preparation method, water, water temperature, and brew time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m not going to go into a step-by-step dissertation on each brewing method. Suffice it to say, you can take the time for that later. I\'ll only discuss the essentials here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Let me dally a moment longer. Do you drink wine or beer? When you do or if you do, do you add ice to it? Do you want watered down beer or wine? NO!!! Then why in the hell would you add milk or sugar to your coffee?????? \'nough said on that subject.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Let\'s proceed:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. By freshly roasted whole beans, I mean just that. Whole beans that have been roasted in the past couple of days. NOT two, three, four, five or more months ago. Beans lose their flavor, go stale, with time. Just like day-old bread. Ground beans lose their flavor even faster, so use only whole beans and grind them as you need them just before brewing. In addition, to maintain their freshness, keep whole beans in an air-tight bag or container, out of direct sunlight and in a cool, dry place (NOT refrigerated). Beans hate time, temperature, sunlight, and air.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          Another side note here. How much ground coffee per cup? General rule of thumb - 10 grams of ground coffee per 6 ounces of water. The average American cup/mug holds 8-14 ounces of water. So adjust the amount of ground coffee accordingly - experiment. Keep all the other factors the same and only vary the quantity of ground coffee until you get that "just right" cup. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, you\'ll like stale coffee beans and add extra just for fun.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Grinder. A good grinder is imperative. The greatest cost is going to be the grinder. Not all grinders are equal, nor do they grind beans equally well. So don\'t be afraid to spend good money for a good grinder. Look for a conical or burr grinder. No damn blade grinders. Blade grinders are for spices and grinding dog food. And I don\'t mean Kitchen Aid or Sunbeam or Cuisinart or Mr. Coffee or such. Look for brand names like Mazzer, Rancilio, Gaggia, Bunn, Macap, or Baratza. Spend good money now, it\'ll save you money and ensure years of good service.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          Note that each brewing method needs a different "grind" - coarseness/fineness. Experiment. Keep all the other factors the same and only vary the grind until you get that "just right" cup. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, don\'t worry about the grind.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          Another side note here. If you answered yes to all of the above questions, I\'ll guarantee that if I were to prepare two cups of coffee where all of the factors are the same except for the grinder (one cheap & one quality), that you would most definitely swear that different beans were used to make each cup. No Joke. That\'s the difference a good grinder makes. It, more than any other factor, will change the flavor of your coffee. And you\'ll more likely than not be missing out on a great cup and be constantly plagued with shit coffee if you cheap out.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          I can personally attest to this fact. I cheaped out in the beginning. Then I spent the money to buy a great grinder. My first sip of my first cup using the great grinder knocked my socks off. Night and day! I discovered the great taste of coffee that a great grinder provides. So don\'t cheap out. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, you\'ll like the cheap blade grinder. Or, hell, do it caveman style, just use a hammer to smash the beans.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Water. Mountain spring water is a MUST. The minerals in it help extract the delicate flavors of the coffee giving it a much more fuller, richer flavor. Distilled water leaves coffee tasting flat and lifeless. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, you\'ll like distilled water.

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Water temp. Yes. Water temp makes a difference. It\'s like the difference between scalding milk and burning milk. Coffee\'s delicate flavors require a temp between 195-200 degrees F or 90-94 degrees C. Too cold, no flavor extraction - flat coffee. Too hot and the oils are extruded - bitter coffee.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          First bring water to a rolling boil. This airiates the water. Once the water comes to a full boil, remove from the heat. Wait 30-40 seconds then pour into or over your freshly ground coffee beans and stir. For an even more accurate temp reading, use a thermometer. If you make espresso, the espresso maker will take care of the temp, provided you bought a GOOD espresso maker and not a cheap Cuisinart or the likes thereof. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, use boiling hot water.

                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Brew time. Each brewing method\'s brew time varies (French Press, espresso, pour over, drip, Aero Press, etc.). As little as 30 seconds (espresso) to between three to four minutes for the others is needed. So, experiment. Keep all the other factors the same and only vary the brew time until you get that "just right" cup. But, of course, if you like Nescafé instant, let it steep for 10 minutes.

                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Does all of this seem like a lot of time and bother just for a cup of coffee? Hell, yes!! But didn\'t it seem like a lot of time and bother to make that first perfect omelet? And wasn\'t it worth it, once you got the hang of it. It was no fuss at all. It\'s just like putting your pants on or brushing your teeth. You no longer have to think about it. You just do it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        And once you get the hang of it, the timing and flow to making that "Just right" cup of coffee, you\'ll be able to enjoy a perfect cup every time without breaking a sweat or furrowing a brow.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, here\'s to ya. Enjoy. And maybe next time we\'ll look at blending beans to create a euphoric cacophany of mouth flavors.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Bye bye

                                                        ',313,88,1,'CC-BY-SA','coffee,coffee making ',0,0,1), (1888,'2015-10-28','Diceware Passphrase',758,'Demonstration of using the diceware method of passphrase generation','

                                                        A walk through of how to use diceware (https://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.html) to create a passphrase and update your GPG key to use it.

                                                        ',277,74,1,'CC-BY-SA','security, gpg',0,0,1), (1889,'2015-10-29','experiencing the meegopad T-02 part one',789,'And now for something completely different','

                                                        This is HPR episode ${1889r) entitled "${experiencing the meegopad T-02 part one}". It is hosted by ${A Shadowy Figure} and is ${13} minutes long. The Summary: "${And now for something completely different}"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Apologies to speed listeners. I just couldn\'t make this episode speed-listener-friendly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode was made out of respect and admiration for the HPR contributers mentioned throughout the show.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Disclaimer:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I barely have a clue of what I am doing. And there are mistakes all over the place in this episode. It\'s just something I wanted to through out there to change things up a little, and pay homage to those I admire, and with a little luck, inspire others to use their creativity to record an episode of their own.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can do better. And I want to hear what you have to offer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The meegopad T-02 turned out to be something I wouldn\'t recommend to others, and the follow-up episode to this one will be a walk through of what it takes to "hack" the T-02 into being something that is usable.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Depending on the feedback to this episode, I can either follow the theme I started with this show, or do a more traditional HPR episode with a no frills walk through of the process of hacking the T-02 to work as advertised. So let me know what you prefer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Apologies to listeners from outside North America. The many slang terms used throughout the episode are representative of the hard boiled genre of noir to give this episode a certain "feel".

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Dames = women
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • lucky strikes = cigarettes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Barbies = women
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Kung fu grip = a GI jo action figure feature from the 70\'s
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 70 Roadrunner = High performance American Muscle car by Plymouth
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Posi traction = both rear wheels turn at the same rate at all times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Thermoquad = High performance carburetor
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The elusive split tail blond fox = a pretty woman
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dough = money
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fence = seller of stolen goods
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Capt\'n Crunch = an American brand of breakfast cereal
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Multimeter modifier = NYBill an HPR contributers
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Rig = computer
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Telnet = the way we used to communicate digitally before the world wide web was developed
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • TRS-80 = an early personal computer
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • clams = American dollars
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Jacksons = $20 dollar bill
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sega master system = the predecessor to the sega genesis gaming console (circa 1986)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Sony Trinitron = discontinued telivision set
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Netgear 600= wifi router
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Products mentioned in this episode

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        All music contained within, courtesy Kevin MacLeod of Incompitech.com https://incompetech.com/wordpress/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sound effects courtesy

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Lonemonk
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Rutgermuller
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • dhoy42
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • henaway
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • tuben
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • soundmary
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • knankbeeld
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • inchadney
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • kraftwerk2k1
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • elonen
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • gurdonark
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • cubic-archon
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • confusion music
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • zachfbstudios
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • husky70
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • solis2
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • magixmusic
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • dapperdaniel
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • robinhood76
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • djfroyd
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • boilingsand
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        of Freesound.org. https://freesound.org

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',308,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','MeeGoPad T02 ',0,0,1), (1890,'2015-10-30','A short walk with my son',1122,'Dave takes a walk with his son Alex and spouts a bunch of random guff about things','

                                                        We start the show by saying ta-ra to the wife and daughters and starting on our walk.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note to self: record an HPR episode about coffee

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode inspired by jonkulp\'s emergency HPR episode entitled "biking2work", as mentioned on his GNUsocial post: https://micro.fragdev.com/notice/1425116

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I give a brief introduction to who I am, and where I live.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Neewer Lapel Microphones from Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B005DOTSM4/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The lapel mic issue at our church. £1.50 a piece, rather than £25+ for an official replacement.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Background to my 7½ year podcasting history:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Other music podcasts too

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note to self: record an HPR episode on my journey into podcasting
                                                        Note to self: record an HPR episode on my journey into Linux

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Metric vs Imperial measurements

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note to self: record an HPR episode on variances between different measurement systems

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A comparison between my Nexus 7 and my Olympus DM-3 recorder, both with and without the lapel mic. https://media.thelovebug.org/u/thelovebug/m/lapel-microphone-comparisons/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Small glitch in the recording resulted in about 5 seconds being dropped, so it sounds a little disjointed at one point

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Opinion around acceptable audio quality.
                                                        "If you can hear it, it\'s good enough."

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note to self: record an HPR episode on Auphonic and how to improve audio quality with very little effort

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://auphonic.com/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        What would happen if Alex slipped and rolled down the hill.
                                                        Alex gives a quick introduction to himself.
                                                        He\'s also the slowest human in history.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I did run this episode through Auphonic, which didn\'t do a bad job in the slightest.
                                                        Settings used: Adaptive Leveler, Filtering, Noise and hum reduction set to Auto.
                                                        According to the processing results, hum reduction wasn\'t needed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It would appear as though I\'ve promised Ken 5 new shows - no pressure, eh.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Contact me:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',314,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','microphone,audio quality,auphonic.com,The Bugcast,Duffercast ',0,0,1), (1892,'2015-11-03','my chicken coop',610,'jezra blabs about the brok brok brok house','

                                                        \r\nDoor hardware build: https://www.jezra.net/blog/GNU_Linux_chicken_coop_door_hardware.html\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe twilight checker: https://www.jezra.net/blog/The_magic_starts_at_330AM_a_coop_story.html\r\n

                                                        ',243,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','chicken',0,0,1), (1940,'2016-01-08','WASHLUG Talk on LastPass',3446,'An expanded discussion of the LastPass intrusion as delivered at our LUG.','

                                                        \r\nI had the opportunity to present a talk on the LastPass intrusion at our local LUG, the Washtenaw Linux Users Group, which expanded on a previous HPR episode and added some additional material that I think might be of interest to our listeners. I still stand by my claim that LastPass was not seriously affected by the intrusion and is still an excellent security solution for most computer users.\r\nFor more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=841 \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n ',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','LastPass, passwords, password vaults',0,0,1), (1893,'2015-11-04','My LastPass Alternative',225,'How I do password management among my devices.','

                                                        \r\nMy LastPass Alternative\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nSave file to a location that will be synced between devices. Im my case Owncloud. Desktop Client syncs available for Linux, Windows and Mac. Mobile clients for Android, IOS, and even blackberry. Syncing note: I do not launch the desktop client on login. This allows the owncloud client to sync files before launching keepass. Also, I exit keypass before logging out for the same reason.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor integration with browser, there are\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd finally when on machines I don\'t control:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nOn same server with ownlcloud, can open files\r\n

                                                        ',273,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','Lastpass, keepass, password management',0,0,1), (1894,'2015-11-05','Interview with Davide Zilli and Dr Marianne Sinka of the HumBug Project',3648,'Mosquito Detection and Habitat Mapping for Improved Malaria Modelling','

                                                        \r\nBack in 2012 I put up a blog post on my site related to the need for an Open Source Mosquito Locator. Mosquitoes are the greatest killer of humans per year.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nRecently Alexandre Azzalini left a comment pointing me to the HumBug project which is dedicated to Mosquito Detection and Habitat Mapping for Improved Malaria Modelling. I got in touch, and so today I talk to Davide Zilli, and Dr. Marianne Sinka who were winners of the Google Impact Challenge UK 2014.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Royal Botanic Gardens Kew: Crowdsourcing data to help prevent mosquito-borne diseases

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMosquitoes are responsible for the spread of some of the most deadly and costly diseases, with more than half the world\'s population living in areas where they are routinely exposed to disease carrying mosquitoes. One of the most deadly diseases that they transmit is malaria, that kills over 600,000 people every year. The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew will equip villagers in rural Indonesia with wearable acoustic sensors to detect the sound of mosquitoes. Each species has its own wing beat allowing the research team to record the occurrence of different species, as well as daily readings of critical environmental conditions. Combined with detailed vegetation maps, this will be able to track disease-bearing mosquitoes. Over the next three years, Kew Gardens will work with Oxford University to turn this project into a reality, creating a downloadable smartphone app and a range of wearable acoustic detectors. This novel technology will be trialled in 150 rural households in Indonesia with the aim of preventing and managing outbreaks of mosquito-borne disease. This prototype technology has the potential ultimately to be rolled out in every region of the world where mosquito-borne diseases pose a threat to life.
                                                        \r\nhttps://impactchallenge.withgoogle.com/uk2014\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTheir approach is to use a Goertzel algorithm running on either a dedicated device or on a smart phone to identify species. This data will then be used for Habitat Mapping and Vector modeling to try and target only species that are a danger to Humans.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nReach them on Twitter @humbugmozz\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','mosquito, humbug, Google Impact Challenge, Hardware',0,0,1), (2131,'2016-10-03','HPR Community News for September 2016',5065,'HPR Community News for September 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n norrist.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2109Thu2016-09-01Hacking my inner earDave Morriss
                                                        2110Fri2016-09-02Overhauling a Bicycle HubJon Kulp
                                                        2111Mon2016-09-05HPR Community News for August 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2112Tue2016-09-06My old home serverMrX
                                                        2113Wed2016-09-07sqlite and bashnorrist
                                                        2114Thu2016-09-08Gnu Awk - Part 1b-yeezi
                                                        2115Fri2016-09-09Apt Spelunking 3: nodm, cmus, and parecordWindigo
                                                        2116Mon2016-09-12Duffer GardeningDave Morriss
                                                        2117Tue2016-09-13What\'s in my bag for Podcrawl?thelovebug
                                                        2118Wed2016-09-14What is App Inventor?Nacho Jordi
                                                        2119Thu2016-09-15Making Chocolate Chip CookiesJon Kulp
                                                        2120Fri2016-09-16WEBDUMP wmap EyeWitness phantomjs seleniumoperat0r
                                                        2121Mon2016-09-19Dark Cults Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2122Tue2016-09-20Alpha32\'s new machineAlpha32
                                                        2123Wed2016-09-21How I make coffeeAlpha32
                                                        2124Thu2016-09-22Repairing a Cloth Shopping Bag with a Sewing MachineJon Kulp
                                                        2125Fri2016-09-23My mobile recording solutionAlpha32
                                                        2126Mon2016-09-26My new (old) tabletAlpha32
                                                        2127Tue2016-09-27Tabletop Gamingklaatu
                                                        2128Wed2016-09-28Various glass bottle cutting methodsoperat0r
                                                        2129Thu2016-09-29Gnu Awk - Part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        2130Fri2016-09-30Git push to two repositories at onceklaatu
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-September/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 26 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 4 comments on\n3 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2059\n(2016-06-23) \"More Tech, Less Magic\"\nby Todd Mitchell.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nStilvoid on 2016-09-07:\n\"Seconded!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2095\n(2016-08-12) \"23 - SSL Certificates - How They Work\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2016-09-21:\n\"Different within EU\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2107\n(2016-08-30) \"Makefiles for Everyday Use\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-09-01:\n\".REAL\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-09-01:\n\""Copy and paste programming"\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 22 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2111\n(2016-09-05) \"HPR Community News for August 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2016-09-05:\n\"Show 2111\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nkdmurray on 2016-09-07:\n\"Audio tours\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-09-07:\n\"Love It\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2113\n(2016-09-07) \"sqlite and bash\"\nby norrist.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nmackrackit on 2016-09-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJONATHAN KULP on 2016-09-08:\n\"Worst ever?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nGumnos on 2016-09-08:\n\"Cleaning up the script\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKevin O'Brien on 2016-09-08:\n\"Excellent show!\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nnorrist on 2016-09-08:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2016-09-10:\n\"I enjoyed this\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2115\n(2016-09-09) \"Apt Spelunking 3: nodm, cmus, and parecord\"\nby Windigo.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-09-10:\n\"Thanks for parecord\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2116\n(2016-09-12) \"Duffer Gardening\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCol on 2016-09-24:\n\"Info\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-09-24:\n\"Re: Info\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2119\n(2016-09-15) \"Making Chocolate Chip Cookies\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2016-09-15:\n\"How about some cajun cooking?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-09-16:\n\"cajun cooking\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMrsXoke on 2016-09-19:\n\"You Learn Something New Everyday\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-09-20:\n\"Mom's wisdom\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nguitarman on 2016-09-27:\n\"Yum!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2120\n(2016-09-16) \"WEBDUMP wmap EyeWitness phantomjs selenium\"\nby operat0r.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2121\n(2016-09-19) \"Dark Cults Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJoe on 2016-09-22:\n\"Great Show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2127\n(2016-09-27) \"Tabletop Gaming\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJohn on 2016-09-27:\n\"Game Inspiring\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2129\n(2016-09-29) \"Gnu Awk - Part 2\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nalpha32 on 2016-09-29:\n\"textbook?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-09-29:\n\"Re: textbook?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2156,'2016-11-07','HPR Community News for October 2016',4628,'HPR Community News for October 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n The Bishop.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2131Mon2016-10-03HPR Community News for September 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2132Tue2016-10-04Gloom Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2133Wed2016-10-05Compression technology part 1The Bishop
                                                        2134Thu2016-10-06Shutdown Sequence Systemdklaatu
                                                        2135Fri2016-10-07Audio speedup scriptDave Morriss
                                                        2136Mon2016-10-10Fluxx Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2137Tue2016-10-11Pause All The Things, Sega Genesissigflup
                                                        2138Wed2016-10-12Hack the Box with BanditNYbill
                                                        2139Thu2016-10-13From Org Mode to LaTeX Beamer to PDFClinton Roy
                                                        2140Fri2016-10-14Vim Plugins I Useb-yeezi
                                                        2141Mon2016-10-17Make Web Python with Flaskklaatu
                                                        2142Tue2016-10-18Book Reviewsm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2143Wed2016-10-19Gnu Awk - Part 3b-yeezi
                                                        2144Thu2016-10-20An Interview with All About Code at Manchester BarCampTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2145Fri2016-10-21Daily notes and todo list with markdownnorrist
                                                        2146Mon2016-10-24Cards Against Humanity Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2147Tue2016-10-25Glass cutting bottlesoperat0r
                                                        2148Wed2016-10-26The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit Part 2NYbill
                                                        2149Thu2016-10-27What is in my Pentesting Bag?operat0r
                                                        2150Fri2016-10-28Apollo Guidance ComputerKen Fallon
                                                        2151Mon2016-10-31BarCamp Manchester part 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-October/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 30 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 10 comments on\n7 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2042\n(2016-05-31) \"My podcast list\"\nby janedoc.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nelmussol on 2016-10-04:\n\"Re: Joyce\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2074\n(2016-07-14) \"Experience With A Neighborhood Cat\"\nby brian.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nAnother Frank on 2016-10-08:\n\"Touching\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2121\n(2016-09-19) \"Dark Cults Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nnotklaatu on 2016-10-02:\n\"Re: Great Show\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nrtsn on 2016-10-12:\n\"!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2125\n(2016-09-23) \"My mobile recording solution\"\nby Alpha32.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nalpha32 on 2016-10-06:\n\"creeper van\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2126\n(2016-09-26) \"My new (old) tablet\"\nby Alpha32.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nkendal on 2016-10-19:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2127\n(2016-09-27) \"Tabletop Gaming\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nnotklaatu on 2016-10-02:\n\"Re: Game Inspiring\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2130\n(2016-09-30) \"Git push to two repositories at once\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-10-02:\n\"I figured :-)\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2016-10-02:\n\"explicit push\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nklaatu on 2016-10-08:\n\"explicit push\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 20 comments on 10 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2133\n(2016-10-05) \"Compression technology part 1\"\nby The Bishop.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nrtsn on 2016-10-12:\n\"Good episode!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2136\n(2016-10-10) \"Fluxx Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJohn on 2016-10-30:\n\"Fluxx synchronicity \"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2138\n(2016-10-12) \"Hack the Box with Bandit\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKrayon on 2016-10-24:\n\"Good fun!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2139\n(2016-10-13) \"From Org Mode to LaTeX Beamer to PDF\"\nby Clinton Roy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2140\n(2016-10-14) \"Vim Plugins I Use\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-10-19:\n\"Very interesting show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2141\n(2016-10-17) \"Make Web Python with Flask\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nShortFatBaldGuy on 2016-10-17:\n\"Great podcast\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-10-17:\n\"No Thanks \"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJONATHAN KULP on 2016-10-17:\n\"Seriously though...\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nb-yeezi on 2016-10-18:\n\"Give bottle a try\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKlaatu on 2016-10-20:\n\"Cheers\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2143\n(2016-10-19) \"Gnu Awk - Part 3\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBambiker on 2016-10-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-10-26:\n\"grep and awk\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2145\n(2016-10-21) \"Daily notes and todo list with markdown\"\nby norrist.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-10-20:\n\"Love this Idea\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFin on 2016-10-24:\n\"Nice! Licence?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nnorrist on 2016-10-25:\n\"Version with copyright notice\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2146\n(2016-10-24) \"Cards Against Humanity Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nspaceman on 2016-10-24:\n\"lulz\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2016-10-25:\n\"Bees?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2150\n(2016-10-28) \"Apollo Guidance Computer\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMikael on 2016-10-29:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2016-10-30:\n\"Superb interview\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2016-10-30:\n\"Fantastic Interview!!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2176,'2016-12-05','HPR Community News for November 2016',4692,'HPR Community News for November 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Bill \"NFMZ1\" Miller, \n spaceman.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2152Tue2016-11-01Apples to Apples Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2153Wed2016-11-02Splitting a Block of Bees Waxbrian
                                                        2154Thu2016-11-03Replacing a Bicycle Brake CableJon Kulp
                                                        2155Fri2016-11-04Ohio LinuxFest 2016Ahuka
                                                        2156Mon2016-11-07HPR Community News for October 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2157Tue2016-11-08BarCamp Manchester part 3Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2158Wed2016-11-09Art ClubBrian in Ohio
                                                        2159Thu2016-11-10Coup Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2160Fri2016-11-11An Audio Illustration Tying the Bowline KnotDavid Whitman
                                                        2161Mon2016-11-14What\'s in my freezer?Inscius
                                                        2162Tue2016-11-15Review/Criticism of Hipp\'s \"Git: Just Say No\"clacke
                                                        2163Wed2016-11-16Gnu Awk - Part 4Dave Morriss
                                                        2164Thu2016-11-17Skipbo Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2165Fri2016-11-18Get the most out of your commute with these great audio suggestions.knightwise
                                                        2166Mon2016-11-21How to use a Slide RuleDave Morriss
                                                        2167Tue2016-11-22Google ItBill "NFMZ1" Miller
                                                        2168Wed2016-11-23Analogue Random Number Generationklaatu
                                                        2169Thu2016-11-24How I connect to the awesome #oggcastplanet on mobileclacke
                                                        2170Fri2016-11-25soundtrap.ioKen Fallon
                                                        2171Mon2016-11-28hello worldspaceman
                                                        2172Tue2016-11-29Dutch Blitz Table Top GameSteve Saner
                                                        2173Wed2016-11-30Driving a Blinkt! as an IoT deviceDave Morriss
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-November/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 21 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 5 comments on\n5 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2130\n(2016-09-30) \"Git push to two repositories at once\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-11-02:\n\"Thought I'd never use this\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2140\n(2016-10-14) \"Vim Plugins I Use\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nb-yeezi on 2016-11-07:\n\"ack.vim\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2145\n(2016-10-21) \"Daily notes and todo list with markdown\"\nby norrist.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMatt on 2016-11-30:\n\"question about the script\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2148\n(2016-10-26) \"The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit Part 2\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2016-11-02:\n\"The real JYE Tech kit\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2150\n(2016-10-28) \"Apollo Guidance Computer\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2016-11-18:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 16 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2154\n(2016-11-03) \"Replacing a Bicycle Brake Cable\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2016-11-13:\n\""Sound-seeing"\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2156\n(2016-11-07) \"HPR Community News for October 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-11-09:\n\"Ear candy\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-11-09:\n\"Talkin' Purty\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2161\n(2016-11-14) \"What\'s in my freezer?\"\nby Inscius.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nthelovebug on 2016-11-14:\n\"Nice!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2016-11-15:\n\"Green beans\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2163\n(2016-11-16) \"Gnu Awk - Part 4\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nOtto on 2016-11-23:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-11-27:\n\"Thanks\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2164\n(2016-11-17) \"Skipbo Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nfolky on 2016-11-18:\n\"Crapette\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2016-11-18:\n\"Re: Crapette\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2166\n(2016-11-21) \"How to use a Slide Rule\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nchalkahlom on 2016-11-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nSteve Smethurst on 2016-11-25:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2016-11-27:\n\"Thanks!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2169\n(2016-11-24) \"How I connect to the awesome #oggcastplanet on mobile\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-11-06:\n\"More discussion and XMPP\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2170\n(2016-11-25) \"soundtrap.io\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2016-11-25:\n\"Sound trap IO, a different application?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nb-yeezi on 2016-11-30:\n\"Very Interesting\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2171\n(2016-11-28) \"hello world\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2196,'2017-01-02','HPR Community News for December 2016',5343,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in December 2016','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2174Thu2016-12-01Dungeoneer Tabletop Gameklaatu
                                                        2175Fri2016-12-02Kdenlive Part 4 Colour CorrectionGeddes
                                                        2176Mon2016-12-05HPR Community News for November 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2177Tue2016-12-06Knowledge Interconnection, the thai express hackspaceman
                                                        2178Wed2016-12-07Dice Mixerklaatu
                                                        2179Thu2016-12-08Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 1clacke
                                                        2180Fri2016-12-09Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 2 of 2clacke
                                                        2181Mon2016-12-12Install OpenBSD from Linux using Grubnorrist
                                                        2182Tue2016-12-13why say GNU/Linux ?spaceman
                                                        2183Wed2016-12-14Data Privacy: Farlands or bustBill "NFMZ1" Miller
                                                        2184Thu2016-12-15Gnu Awk - Part 5b-yeezi
                                                        2185Fri2016-12-16Soldering a Soldering FanKen Fallon
                                                        2186Mon2016-12-19Baking Yule BreadInscius
                                                        2187Tue2016-12-20The Toshiba Libretto 100ctm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2188Wed2016-12-21Art Appreciationbrian
                                                        2189Thu2016-12-22Working Amateur Radio SatellitesChristopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2190Fri2016-12-23fucking botnets how do they work?spaceman
                                                        2191Mon2016-12-26Building a Soundboard Android App with App Inventordroops
                                                        2192Tue2016-12-27Fun with Oscilloscopesm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2193Wed2016-12-28a clean podcast with no swearingspaceman
                                                        2194Thu2016-12-29The low-down on what\'s up in the Taiwan Strait.clacke
                                                        2195Fri2016-12-30All you need to know when uploading a showKen Fallon
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2016-December/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 68 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 16 comments on\n9 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr1998\n(2016-03-30) \"Homebrewing\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2016-12-27:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2121\n(2016-09-19) \"Dark Cults Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2016-12-04:\n\"Loved This\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2134\n(2016-10-06) \"Shutdown Sequence Systemd\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCPrompt^ on 2016-12-18:\n\"Great explanation!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2139\n(2016-10-13) \"From Org Mode to LaTeX Beamer to PDF\"\nby Clinton Roy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMichael on 2016-12-20:\n\""Beamer" vs. Projektor\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2145\n(2016-10-21) \"Daily notes and todo list with markdown\"\nby norrist.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 5:\nnorrist on 2016-12-01:\n\""2*/md"\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nMatt on 2016-12-03:\n\"of course!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2161\n(2016-11-14) \"What\'s in my freezer?\"\nby Inscius.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nInscius on 2016-12-06:\n\"Thanks\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2165\n(2016-11-18) \"Get the most out of your commute with these great audio suggestions.\"\nby knightwise.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nnjulian on 2016-12-29:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2172\n(2016-11-29) \"Dutch Blitz Table Top Game\"\nby Steve Saner.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nnorrist on 2016-12-05:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nSteve on 2016-12-06:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2173\n(2016-11-30) \"Driving a Blinkt! as an IoT device\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJonathan Kulp on 2016-12-01:\n\"You light up your life\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2016-12-01:\n\"It worked!!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2016-12-03:\n\"Twinkly Lights and MQTT\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2016-12-03:\n\"Re: Twinkly Lights and MQTT\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nMike Ray on 2016-12-03:\n\"MQTT and hardware monitoring\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2016-12-04:\n\"MQTT uses\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 52 comments on 14 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2176\n(2016-12-05) \"HPR Community News for November 2016\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-12-05:\n\"Dioder\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2016-12-05:\n\"On the purpose of those XEPs\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2016-12-05:\n\"Arousing regular expressions\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nSteve on 2016-12-06:\n\"Ham Radio Topics\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2177\n(2016-12-06) \"Knowledge Interconnection, the thai express hack\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2016-12-05:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nShortFatBaldGuy on 2016-12-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-06:\n\"This show is correctly flagged as Explicit\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nShortFatBaldGuy on 2016-12-06:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-06:\n\"Tags are not visable\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-06:\n\"Complaints are welcome\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-07:\n\"Site and Feeds updated\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nCheeto4493 on 2016-12-08:\n\"Add explicit to title?\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nKen Fallon Janitor on 2016-12-08:\n\"Technically yes\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nKen Fallon Host 30 on 2016-12-08:\n\"I object \"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2179\n(2016-12-08) \"Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 1\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2016-12-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2016-12-15:\n\"Re: protos in production\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2181\n(2016-12-12) \"Install OpenBSD from Linux using Grub\"\nby norrist.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsigflup on 2016-11-19:\n\"openbsd!!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2182\n(2016-12-13) \"why say GNU/Linux ?\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nmackrackit on 2016-12-12:\n\"Family Friendly \"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2016-12-12:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\n0xf10e on 2016-12-12:\n\"Three minutes of obscenities necessary?\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-13:\n\"HPR is not family frendly but ....\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-13:\n\"He will reply later\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\npd on 2016-12-13:\n\"Waste of Time\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\ngmail blocking on 2016-12-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nspaceman on 2016-12-13:\n\"reply from spaceman\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\ndavidWHITMAN on 2016-12-14:\n\"Spaceman!\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nFrank on 2016-12-14:\n\"Just Rude for the Sake of Rude\"
                                                          • Comment 11:\nDavid L. Willson on 2016-12-14:\n\"hilarious\"
                                                          • Comment 12:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-14:\n\"Reposting from fragdev\"
                                                          • Comment 13:\nspaceman on 2016-12-16:\n\"RE: Just Rude for the Sake of Rude\"
                                                          • Comment 14:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-17:\n\"HPR About page\"
                                                          • Comment 15:\nspaceman on 2016-12-18:\n\"re:re:\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2183\n(2016-12-14) \"Data Privacy: Farlands or bust\"\nby Bill \"NFMZ1\" Miller.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2016-12-15:\n\"I have to disagree\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2184\n(2016-12-15) \"Gnu Awk - Part 5\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2016-12-14:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nb-yeezi on 2016-12-15:\n\":re Lots of useful info\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2187\n(2016-12-20) \"The Toshiba Libretto 100ct\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2016-12-21:\n\"Windows 98 Updates\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2016-12-27:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nSteve on 2016-12-28:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2189\n(2016-12-22) \"Working Amateur Radio Satellites\"\nby Christopher M. Hobbs.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nspaceman on 2016-12-24:\n\"i love your kid\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2191\n(2016-12-26) \"Building a Soundboard Android App with App Inventor\"\nby droops.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nspaceman on 2016-12-26:\n\"free software\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndroops on 2016-12-30:\n\"Best Tool\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2192\n(2016-12-27) \"Fun with Oscilloscopes\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2193\n(2016-12-28) \"a clean podcast with no swearing\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-27:\n\"HPR About Page\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2016-12-28:\n\"Points\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMatthew Jones on 2016-12-28:\n\"Wtf? \"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2194\n(2016-12-29) \"The low-down on what\'s up in the Taiwan Strait.\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-12-16:\n\"First repercussions?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2016-12-29:\n\"Fantastic\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nClinton Roy on 2016-12-29:\n\"Outstanding!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nb-yeezi on 2016-12-29:\n\"Informative history lesson\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2016-12-31:\n\"Wow\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2195\n(2016-12-30) \"All you need to know when uploading a show\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-12-29:\n\"Text source\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2016-12-29:\n\"Correction: Text source\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1906,'2015-11-23','Apt Spelunking 2: tvtime, phatch, and xstarfish',1068,'Windigo digs through his software repositories and finds another couple of gems','

                                                        \r\n Welcome to the another episode of apt spelunking! If you missed the first\r\n episode, I should explain. Apt spelunking is the act of aimlessly searching\r\n through your distribution\'s software repositories, and picking out the gems\r\n that you find. I call it apt spelunking because I use Debian, which uses the\r\n apt packaging format.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n Let\'s jump into the first package: tvtime.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n tvtime\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://tvtime.sourceforge.net/

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n The package tvtime is a simple one, but it does what it does very well. tvtime\r\n interfaces with a TV tuner - specialized hardware that allows your computer to\r\n process analog television signals, via coaxial or RCA video cables. If you have\r\n this hardware, usually an expansion card or USB peripheral, tvtime allows you to\r\n use your computer as an analog television.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n tvtime binds to the card of your choosing, allows you to switch between NTSC and\r\n PAL modes (NTSC is what I use, that being the American standard), and shows you\r\n a wonderfully grainy video. It has filters that can help smooth out the image a\r\n bit, but it\'s still an analog video.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n tvtime is video only, so you need to use something else to handle the audio of\r\n whatever you are hooking up. Often this is done by the hardware tv tuner\r\n somehow; my PCI card tuner has a 3.5mm jack that offloads any sound received\r\n over the coaxial wire, and I patch that into my sound card. RCA cables have\r\n separate wires for audio, and I plug those into my sound card via a converter\r\n cable.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n I have used tvtime to hook up videogame consoles, VCRs, and older computers like\r\n the TRS-80. It\'s helped me to defeat Eternal Darkness, an old GameCube game that\r\n is still worth a look, and it\'s allowed me to digitize old VHS tapes we have\r\n lying around. More on that in another episode.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n It is a fantastic alternative to keeping an older analog TV around. If you have\r\n older equipment that needs to dump analog video somewhere, tvtime and a hardware\r\n tuner makes for a great setup.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n phatch

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phatch

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n This absurdly spelled program is incredibly good at what it does. Phatch, some\r\n sort of unholy combination of \"photo\" and \"batch\", is a GUI interface for\r\n assembling chains of actions to manipulate image files.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n I use this program for web development to save time when creating static photo\r\n galleries or other types of images with similar constraints.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n To use phatch, you assemble a set of operations (phatch refers to these as\r\n \"actions\") in an ordered \"action list\". I\'ll use my gallery thumbnail action\r\n list as an example.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n There are only two actions in my thumbnail action list: \"fit\", and \"save\". Each\r\n action has a set of predefined parameters and options that let you tweak what\r\n happens to your files. The \"fit\" action resizes an image without goofing up the\r\n aspect ratio. You give it a box to fit the image in, and it fits it fully into\r\n that box and cuts off any extra edges. The most important parameters for this\r\n action are canvas width, and canvas height - which tells phatch how big the box\r\n is. The save action has parameters that let you set which image format to use,\r\n which folder to save to, and even what to name the file. For my thumbnails, I\r\n have it use the original filename, and append a \"_t\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n Once you have your action list together, you can tell phatch to run on an entire\r\n directory and include or exclude different file types.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n There is much, much more to phatch than just resizing images. Sounds like\r\n another episode idea… anyhow, moving on!\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n xstarfish\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://packages.debian.org/hu/jessie/xstarfish\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n I left xstarfish until the end, because it\'s so much fun and so very, very\r\n weird. xstarfish generates a random, tileable background that can be dumped to\r\n a file, or assigned directly to the X display of your choice.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n It uses some sort of magic randomsauce to pick a color palette, some patterns,\r\n and some other distortions to that you get a brand-new, unique background every\r\n time you run it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n It can also be started in daemon mode, with a timer, to automatically change\r\n your wallpaper periodically.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n There are at least two problems with this.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n First of all, let\'s start with the practical. You can set the size of the image\r\n xstarfish generates, by either using the -g flag and manually setting the\r\n geometry with a pixel width and/or height, or you can use the -s flag and set a\r\n general size like \"small\", \"large\", or \"full\". If you use \"full\", xstarfish\r\n automatically generates a full wallpaper for your display.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n Since xstarfish generates randomness (which is often CPU intensive) and uses\r\n that to generate random filters (which can be hard on your CPU) and can be set\r\n to do it periodically (which, depending on frequency, could keep your CPU busy),\r\n this utility can be a resource hog. I have two monitors, each running 1280x1024\r\n resolution, and when I set it to generate a new background every 10 seconds...\r\n well, it didn\'t. It just maxed out one of my CPU cores, and spit out a\r\n background every once and a while. Cutting it down to only generate a single\r\n monitor-sized image every 60 seconds made things much more reasonable.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n The second, more pertinent issue with xstarfish is that it randomly picks colors\r\n and patterns. It is exceptionally random about it. Imagine for a moment that you\r\n needed to paint a room, and you wanted to pick random colors and patterns for a\r\n room in your house. You would begin by blindfolding a friend and pushing them\r\n into the paint isle at your nearest hardware store. Whatever three buckets of\r\n paint they bump into first, well, that\'s your color palette. What do you mean\r\n you don\'t like orange, sea foam and gunmetal grey? \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n Then, you take those paint cans and proceed to tie one to your ceiling fan, one\r\n to your eight-year-old child and swing the third around your head at a 35 degree\r\n angle. Fairly quickly, you\'ll have your own xstarfish-inspired decor.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n With all of the potentially awful things that can happen, I really do like\r\n xstarfish. It\'s not something I keep running all the time, and a lot of the\r\n options remind me of early 90s Encino Man fashion and school photo backdrops\r\n with lasers. But sometimes the patterns are actually quite pleasing, and if I\r\n keep the tile size small, it reminds me of 90s web design.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n That concludes the second installment of apt spelunking. Please don\'t let me\r\n take all the glory; take a tour through your package manager, whatever distro\r\n you use, and tell us about some cool stuff you find!\r\n

                                                        ',196,98,0,'CC-BY-SA','apt,tvtime,xstarfish,phatch,images,batch,video,wallpaper,terrible',0,0,1), (1899,'2015-11-12','MyTinyTodo List',752,'Introduction to one of my favorite productivity tools, the web-based todo list called MyTinyTodo','

                                                        This show is about my favorite tool to keep track of stuff I have to do, stuff I want to do, gift ideas for my family, books I want to read, HPR topics to record, etc. It\'s called MyTinyTodo. It\'s a web app that you can host on your own server and access from any device that has a web browser.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The website claims that it is already mobile friendly, but I did not like the mobile interface they had, and also did not like the fact that I had to use a different URL to get the mobile interface, so I hacked the stylesheet and the index.html file in the code to make it a responsive design. Now it looks great on all of my devices.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Features

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Multiple lists
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Task notes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tags (and tag cloud)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Due dates (input format: y-m-d, m/d/y, d.m.y, m/d, d.m)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Priority (-1, 0, +1, +2)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Different sortings including sort by drag-and-drop
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Search
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Password protection
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        System requirements

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • PHP 5.2.0 or greater;
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • PHP extensions: php_mysql (MySQL version), php_pdo and php_pdo_sqlite (SQLite version).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Installation

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Setup is very easy as these things go. Check out the installation instructions at their website.

                                                        ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','productivity, organization, web apps, self-hosting',0,0,1), (1911,'2015-11-30','Thoughts on GUI v CLI and the best distro',909,'Thoughts on which desktop to use, and which GUI to use','

                                                        Promotion of GUI to new users

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDeciding which GUI to present to a non techie, is simply a non issue as they can and do use different OS\'s all the time. We all have family and friends who have managed to operate phones, TV\'s and tablets as they iterate through their UI changes. Think about the changes in phones from Symbian to Android, iOS. The move from up and down channel tv\'s to DVR\'s, STB\'s and smart TV\'s. An then they all managed to get the hang of iPads and tablets without even calling you.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Promotion of GUI to tech savvy users.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTeach someone to use a GUI and they can use that computer.
                                                        \r\nTeach someone the command line and they can use any computer.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nGUI\'s change and do so all the time. This happens across the board. On all OS\'s Windows, Mac, KDE, Android, Gnome, Nokia.
                                                        \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_graphical_user_interface\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOn the other hand, if you learn to computer via the command line ONCE, then you know how to operate computers from 46 years ago, and most likely in 46 years. If you plans involve a career in the tech industry, you need to be using the command line.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMost of the issues are the fear of not been the expert any more.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Is Linux is ready for the Desktop ?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYes. Android
                                                        \r\nhttps://www.businessinsider.com/iphone-v-android-market-share-2014-5?IR=T\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        IS GNU/Linux is ready for the Desktop ?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBut you cry \"Android isn\'t Linux\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYes. ChromeOS is now shipping more units to educational market than Apple.
                                                        \r\nhttps://www.forbes.com/sites/anthonykosner/2014/12/01/google-unseats-apple-in-u-s-classrooms-as-chromebooks-beat-ipads/
                                                        \r\nhttps://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/chrome.pdf\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Summary

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDon\'t worry about it. Find what works for you and use it. Try and learn as much as you can. Learning stuff that will be around in 5 years is a good investment, but that is your choice.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','GUI,Graphical User Interface,CLI,Command Line Interface',0,0,1), (1897,'2015-11-10','Installing Windows 7 Ultimate',1357,'I talk about installing Windows 7 Ultimate on a 320 GB HDD I got from a friend','

                                                        \r\nhttps://anthonyvenable110.wordpress.com is my blog so feel free to check me out there.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','windows, operating system installation, windows 7 Ultimate, windows 7',0,0,1), (1901,'2015-11-16','Instaling Linux programs without internet',294,'I install supertuxkart at home on my PC','

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.supertuxkart,net/downloads to get your copy of the game\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, open source games, free',0,0,1), (1921,'2015-12-14','How to run a conference',700,'How to organise and run a conference, and what can go wrong.','

                                                        \r\nThe slides that this podcast are based upon can be found here:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1_fkpXmW7ruYXOZBzXG5wGuNeFV_JPCA7G2A7qTMlN8g/edit?usp=sharing\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n',315,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','conference,PyCon Australia,linux.conf.au',0,0,1), (1898,'2015-11-11','Free my music!',392,'How I got my music off my Mac and ended my iDependence.','

                                                        \r\nHow I got my music library transferred from my Mac to my Linux box, thereby allowing me to fully switch to Linux. This is a problem I\'ve been neglecting for a while that has been keeping me tethered to iTunes whenever I want to hear my music. This probably isn\'t the best or simplest solution, but it\'s how I felt comfortable doing it.\r\n

                                                        ',303,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Mac, music, iTunes, switch',0,0,1), (1902,'2015-11-17','My Linux Tool Box',1411,'Fin talks about his digital box of Linux tools.','

                                                        \r\nTools I use:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Htop - Command line system monitor
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Firefox - The best web browser
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Pluma or Gedit - Great gui text editors
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Yaourt or Synaptic - Simple yet powerful package managers
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Gucharmap - Character map for all your unicode needs
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Markdown - Distraction free, simple document writing.
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. VLC - The one true media player.
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Cinnamon Desktop Environment - My favorite desktop environment.
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. LibreOffice - For my limited office application needs.
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Evince or Atril - Simple, effective, reliable PDF readers.
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. mtPaint - Pixel art programme.
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. Inkscape - Vector graphics tool. Great for drawing.
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. GIMP - The Gnu Image Manipulation Programme.
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        27. Gnome Terminal or Mate Terminal - My preferred GUI terminals.
                                                        28. \r\n
                                                        29. Redshift - Ease your screen viewing when the sun goes down.
                                                        30. \r\n
                                                        31. Alarm Clock Applet - Used for the Pomodoro time management technique.
                                                        32. \r\n
                                                        33. Gparted - My preferred partition management tool.
                                                        34. \r\n
                                                        35. Steam - Lots of freedom hating games.
                                                        36. \r\n
                                                        37. Play on Linux - Tool to play other freedom hating games.
                                                        38. \r\n
                                                        39. Gpick - Simple colour picker and colour scheme generator.
                                                        40. \r\n
                                                        41. Thunderbird - My preferred email client. The best of a boring bunch.
                                                        42. \r\n
                                                        43. Skype - My nessecessity for human contact.
                                                        44. \r\n
                                                        45. Transmission - Torrent client. Great for downloading lots of Linux Distros!
                                                        46. \r\n
                                                        47. Uget - For when I need a large file that doesn\'t have a torrent.
                                                        48. \r\n
                                                        49. Java - I use OpenJDK and OpenJRE as java is my first language.
                                                        50. \r\n
                                                        51. Asunder CD Ripper - For ripping audio CD collections.
                                                        52. \r\n
                                                        53. Audacity - For recording this podcast!
                                                        54. \r\n
                                                        55. Music Brainz Picard - Tag, accurately, all those freshly ripped CDs.
                                                        56. \r\n
                                                        57. Virtualbox - Try all those .iso Linux distributions you just downloaded!
                                                        58. \r\n
                                                        59. GUFW - GUI Uncomplicated Fire Wall. Does exactly what it says on the tin.
                                                        60. \r\n
                                                        61. Numix Theme - A very complete theme with a lovely icon set. Flat style, very modern.
                                                        62. \r\n
                                                        ',299,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, GNU, Operating System, Tools, Utilities, Software',0,0,1), (1896,'2015-11-09','User Local Software',251,'Eric describes a technique for organizing and working on user-installed source code and binaries','

                                                        In this recording I describe how I decided where to store software that I downloaded manually, as opposed to software that is installed and organized automatically by GNU/Linux systems.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        SPOILER: I settled on ~/local/src/ and ~/local/opt/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Happy Halloween.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is my first time recording a podcast. I recorded this in an afternoon when no one else was around except the furry kids and the neighbors outside. I\'ve had the idea for this episode for a while, but having never recorded before didn\'t really know when/where/how to do it until just now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The perspective of this episode comes from a GNU/Linux user since Sept. 2012, and a little bit of experience from 2002-2004. I\'m interested in easy, simple solutions that everyone can use to solve problems or use new things.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Special thanks to Clacke for recommending in his recent episode the free/open-source Android recording application uRecord available from F-Droid. The resulting audio sounds great and uRecord is very easy to use. I recorded several separate paragraphs and concatenated them with Audacity.

                                                        \r\n',317,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, gnulinux, freesoftware, sourcecode',0,0,1), (1922,'2015-12-15','The case to backup Google email.',57,'A quick example of how I imported a backup of Gmail.','

                                                        \r\nGoogle Takeout, good for backup of gmail, or anything else from the Google-verse.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThunderbird email client\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nImportExportTools for Thunderbird\r\n

                                                        \r\n',318,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','google, email, thunderbird, backup, export',0,0,1), (1903,'2015-11-18','Some further Bash tips',1758,'Some more information about types of expansion in Bash','

                                                        Some further Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Expansion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are seven types of expansion applied to the command line in the following order:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Brace expansion (we looked at this subject in the last episode 1884)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tilde expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Parameter and variable expansion (this was covered in episode 1648)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Command substitution
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word splitting
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pathname expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will look at some more of these in this episode but since there is a lot to cover, we\'ll continue in a later episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1903_full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,expansion,tilde expansion,command substitution',0,0,1), (1904,'2015-11-19','Windows Command Line Tips and Tricks',441,'Some tips to make you feel more comfortable on the Windows side of things.','

                                                        Hello, HPR. I am OnlyHalfTheTime, the Reluctant Windows Admin. I am a Linux user at home and at heart. I run VPSs on Digital Ocean, host websites all in Linux, mostly Ubuntu. By day, however, I work for an Managed Services Provider which deals with all Windows boxes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Today, I would like to talk about some tips and tricks I have come across while being forced to make the best out of a Windows environment. Being a Linux user, I find that many functions are more quickly completed if you drop to a Command Line Interface. This holds true for many Windows functions as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First, let\'s establish the kind of environment you will need.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Unfortunately, there is no sudo command built in to Windows. What we will need to do is run a command prompt as an administrator. On Windows 7, you can accomplish this by clicking the start menu, typing cmd, then rightclicking the command prompt program and choosing \'run as administrator\'. In Windows 8 and 10, you can right click the start menu directly and click Command Prompt Admin.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is almost the equivalent to running as root. You can affect almost anything except some system protected files. No rm -rf /* for you! The windows user most like root would be SYSTEM. Running a command prompt as SYSTEM is possible to accomplish a few ways, but is very very rarely needed. I can make another podcast about that later, but it is out-of-scope here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Lets get into our first example: User creation is so much easier at the Windows command line. For example, I want to add a local user to a system with administrative rights. From an admin command prompt, I type:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        net user john hunter2  /add
                                                        \r\n

                                                        this creates the user john with the password hunter2. Then I type:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        net localgroup administrators john /add
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This adds john to the local group administrators. This group has admin rights on this local machine. Say john abuses this privilege and needs to have his permissions revoked.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        net localgroup administrators john /delete
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is much easier than going to the control panel, searching for users, adding a user, defining a password, choosing to make it an admin user. For me at least.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another thing the net command is used for is restarting services. Does that sounds silly to you? I agree! Regardless, let say you want to restart the print spooler on a troubled workstation. You could open a run prompt by hitting Windowskey+R and type "services.msc". This opens up the services window where you can find the service "print spooler" and right click it to restart. or you could just type:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        net stop spooler\r\nnet start spooler
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is easier to script as well, in case a user is always having trouble printing. Provide a simple batch file (the equivalent of a shell script) to resolve and get on with your day.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Affecting files can be a pain in Windows as the paths tend to be esoteric and alien to a Linux user. For example. Let\'s say I want to copy file foo.bar in the openVPN programs folder to my desktop. I could type:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        copy "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\OpenVPN Technologies\\OpenVPN Client\\etc\\profile\\foo.bar" "C:\\Users\\john\\desktop\\foo.bar"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Gotta remember those doublequotes since Windows has spaces AND parentheses in the full path. Wow. Even with tab completion, that\'s a lot of work. I have a better solution if you have access to the GUI. Find the file you wish to copy and drag and drop it into the command window. Windows will enter the full path into the prompt. If the files does not already exist where you want it you can\'t drag it into the prompt. There are variables that can speed up this process. It may not be as elegant and simple as ~, but Windows does have a variable for the local user\'s home directory. You can type:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        %HOMEPATH%\\desktop\\foo.bar
                                                        \r\n

                                                        But you are saying, wait OnlyHalfTheTime, this doesn\'t save me any time or keystrokes! This is true in this specific case, but in scripting, it becomes important to use variables instead of full paths. I may not have Windows installed in the "C" drive for example. Also, some are real time-savers. if you use %APPDATA% for example, it maps to C:{username}.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now, let\'s say I am going to be doing a lot of work in a specific directory. I could keep entering the full path, but come on, no one likes that guy. I could open a command prompt and cd or change directory, just like in Linux. or I could find the directory in the file explorer and right click in the folder while holding down shift. This gives you and extra option in the context menu named \'open command windows here\' which does exactly that. You will get a command window opened with the working directory set as the folder in which you right clicked.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hopefully some of these methods will help folks like me: Windows admin by day, Linux enthusiast by night. This is OnlyHalfTheTime, the Reluctant Windows Admin, signing off.

                                                        \r\n',319,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Windows, command line',0,0,1), (1912,'2015-12-01','OpenNMS at All Things Open Conference',476,'Klaatu talks to the OpenNMS project at the All Things Open Conference','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu talks to Jessie the OpenNMS project at the All Things Open Conference.\r\n

                                                        ',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interview,OpenNMS',0,0,1), (1907,'2015-11-24','Charlie Reisinger and Penn Manor',366,'Klaatu interviews Charlie Reisinger of Penn Manor school district','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu interviews Charlie Reisinger about how Penn Manor school district uses of open source...on every student\'s laptop.\r\n

                                                        ',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux,laptop,school',0,0,1), (1917,'2015-12-08','OpenSource.com',888,'Klaatu interviews Rikki Endsley from opensource.com','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu interviews Rikki Endsley from https://opensource.com, a community-driven website covering news and events in the open source world. Klaatu sometimes contributes to https://opensource.com, so this interview is tainted and biased. Beware!\r\n

                                                        ',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','open source, journalism',0,0,1), (1923,'2015-12-16',' Klaatu and System76',479,'Klaatu interviews Sam about kjd newest line of System76 computers','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu interviews Sam about kjd newest line of System76 computers, now with an all metal body! (the computers, not Klaatu, or Sam)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://system76.com/\r\n

                                                        ',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','laptop, heavy metal, apple, mac, ubuntu, system76',0,0,1), (1927,'2015-12-22','Ansible Interview',480,'Klaatu talks to Ansible at All Things Open conference','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu talks to Ansible at All Things Open conference.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','ansible,automation,chef,puppet',0,0,1), (1908,'2015-11-25','Arduino Pumpkin',448,'droops talks about how his class built a pumpkin that comes alive for halloween.','

                                                        Code for Pumpkin

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nint ledPin1 = 5;\r\nint ledPin2 = 6;\r\nint motorPin = 8;\r\nint lightPin = 3;\r\nint lightVal;\r\nint potPin = 0;\r\nint potVal;\r\n\r\nvoid setup(){\r\n  Serial.begin(9600);\r\n  pinMode(ledPin1, OUTPUT);\r\n  pinMode(ledPin2, OUTPUT);\r\n  pinMode(motorPin, OUTPUT);\r\n  pinMode(potPin, INPUT);\r\n  pinMode(lightPin, INPUT);\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin1, LOW);\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin2, LOW);\r\n  digitalWrite(motorPin, LOW);\r\n}\r\n\r\nvoid loop(){\r\n  potVal = analogRead(potPin);\r\n  lightVal = analogRead(lightPin);\r\n  Serial.println(lightVal);\r\n  if (lightVal < potVal){\r\n    animate();\r\n  }\r\n}\r\n\r\nvoid animate(){\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin1, HIGH);\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin2, HIGH);\r\n  digitalWrite(motorPin, HIGH);\r\n  delay(100);\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin1, LOW);\r\n  digitalWrite(ledPin2, LOW);\r\n  digitalWrite(motorPin, LOW);\r\n}\r\n
                                                        \r\n',1,91,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Arduino,Arduino Uno,LED,pumpkin,Halloween',0,0,1), (1909,'2015-11-26','Creating an Open, Embedded-Media Music Textbook',1795,'This is a recording of my presentation at the recent national joint CMS/ATMI meeting in Indianapolis','

                                                        Re-Invigorating the Wheel: Creating an Open, Embedded-Media Music Textbook for the Digital Age

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a recording of a presentation I gave on November 7th, 2015, at the national joint meeting of the College Music Society (CMS) and the Association for Technology in Music Instruction (ATMI) in Indianapolis, Indiana. I even have some action photos! Click on the first image below to visit the Flickr photo album, which also includes the slides from my presentation.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"ATMI\r\n\r\n

                                                        Books

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Percy Goetschius. Counterpoint Applied in the Invention, Fugue, Canon and Other Polyphonic Forms. New York: G. Schirmer, 1902. Download
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ________. Exercises in Elementary Counterpoint. New York: G Schirmer, 1910. Download
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Kent Kennan. Counterpoint, 4th ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1999.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Jonathan Kulp, Gratis ad Parnassum: A Free Workbook for 18th-Century Counterpoint. Lafayette, LA: [no publisher] 2009. view pdf
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Friedrich J. Lehmann. A Treatise on Simple Counterpoint in Forty Lessons. New York: G Schirmer, 1907. (This is the one I found on Project Gutenberg that I did not think was suitable as a textbook for my class)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Resources Mentioned

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Watch My Workflow:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Serious Nerds Only

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Many of the tedious repetitive processes I had to do on image files and audio files are done by bash scripts that are launched by voice commands, as demonstrated in the YouTube video above. The processes I\'m talking about are things like renaming files according to my filenaming conventions, putting the files in the right place, resizing images, converting images to different formats, optimizing them for file size, converting audio from MIDI to ogg and mp3, and reducing audio from two channels to one in order to reduce file size. Below are the main tools I use for this, apart from the Linux bash shell itself. If you\'re interested in actually seeing the scripts I wrote to perform the magic, I am happy to share. Just drop me an email.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n Calibre command-line tools: these were essential to automate the process of converting the source HTML file into the various versions and eBook formats of the book. Without this I might have thrown up my hands in defeat long ago.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\n ImageMagick: command-line image-manipulation tools\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\nsox: command-line audio-manipulation tool, \"the Swiss Army knife of sound processing programs.\"\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\noptipng: command-line png optimizer. This is important to keep the book\'s file size as small as possible.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\njpegoptim: command-line jpeg optimizer.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\n TiMidity++: an open-source, command-line MIDI-to-WAVE converter and player.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        • \r\n LAME: high quality MPEG Audio Layer III (MP3) encoder licensed under the LGPL.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n oggenc (part of vorbis-tools): Several tools to use, manipulate and create Vorbis files (vorbis is a free audio codec).\r\n
                                                        • \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','open learning materials, counterpoint, music theory, html, ebooks, epub, public domain',0,0,1), (1913,'2015-12-02','The Linux Experiment',209,'Help us take The Linux Experiment to the next level!','

                                                        \r\nIs free software ready for the mainstream? Has Linux progressed far enough in its evolution to be a practical desktop environment for those who dont have degrees in computer science? Can a user really just switch off Windows or Mac and be as productive on a completely open source operating system?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe Linux Experiment is relatively simple in its goals. Friends, all with varying degrees of experience with Linux in general (even some with zero experience and others who have experience with multiple distributions), will install some distribution or another of Linux on their home computers for four months.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOver the course of these four months, the users will administrate, tinker with, and use Linux as their primary home operating system, utilizing the power of open-source operating systems and applications to see just how productive they can be. Updates will be made on this very site along the way, providing an in-depth look into how each user is adapting to their new environment. The trials, tribulations, triumphs, and other nouns beginning with t will all be laid out here, bare for everyone to see.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBy the end of the four month cycle, each user has imposed their own goals as to where they want to be with Linux; running a server environment? Comfortable to tinker with bash commands? Time will tell.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor now, sit back, relax, and enjoy this isnt your normal experiment. We are the guinea pigs.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',320,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, the linux experiment, community',0,0,1), (1910,'2015-11-27','QMMP--The Qt-based MultiMedia Player',691,'QMMP is a simple media player inspired by Winamp and XMMS.','

                                                        Qmmp is an audio and video player for Linux, BSD, and Windows that\'s similar in appearance and functionality to Wimamp and XMMS. The Linux and BSD version are capable of playing video as well, through an mplayer plugin.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you like eye candy, it\'s skinnable; a library of skins is available from the maintainer. In addition, it works nicely with legacy XMMS and Winamp skins.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Screenshots:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Qmmp interface.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Qmmp video play:
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Qmmp settings dialog:
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Homepage: https://qmmp.ylsoftware.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Slackbuilds links:\r\nQmmp: https://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.1/audio/qmmp/\r\nQmmp Plugins: https://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.1/audio/qmmp-plugin-pack/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qmmp

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Playlist (*.m3u) specification:\r\nhttps://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pantos-http-live-streaming-17

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Skinamp: https://www.saschahlusiak.de/skinamp/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Librivox: https://librivox.org/

                                                        \r\n',195,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Audio,Video,Player,Playlist',0,0,1), (1925,'2015-12-18','Kdenlive Part 1: Introduction to Kdenlive',1085,'Geddes narrates the first part of Seth Kenlon\'s An Introduction to Kdenlive','

                                                        \r\nThis article has been written by Seth Kenlon and is narrated for you by Geddes. It was first published on 2011-11-16 and some of the commands may have changed slightly. Please see https://opensource.com/life/11/11/introduction-kdenlive for the complete text.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nSeth Kenlon is an independent multimedia artist, free culture advocate, and UNIX geek. He is one of the maintainers of the Slackware-based multimedia production project, https://slackermedia.ml\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nGNU/Linux has infamously been wanting for a good, solid, professional-level free video editor for years. There have been glimpses of hope here and there, but mostly the editors that have the look and feel of a professional application are prone to blockbuster-worthy crashes, and those that have been stable have mostly been stable because they don\'t actually do anything beyond very basic editing. Kdenlive changes all of that.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAt the film production facility at which I work, Kdenlive is the Linux editor in production use, and it performs (and frequently out-performs) the Mac boxes in cost, upkeep, flexibility, speed, and stability. This article series seeks to illuminate for professional editors how Kdenlive can replace proprietary tools, nearly as a drop-in replacement.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA good video editor is one that is suitable for anyone wanting to edit video, with powerful features that enable the video professional to do any task required of the job, yet with the simplicity that allows a hobbyist to quickly cut together footage off of a phone or point-and-click camera. Kdenlive can be both of those things, but regardless of the scope of your video project, there are right and wrong ways of doing things. Over the course of five articles, we will review the practical usage and the common set of best practices that will ensure your projects are successful.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kdenlive,opensource.com,Slackermedia',0,0,1), (1932,'2015-12-29','Klaatu interviews Grafana',478,'An interview with the Grafana project at All Things Open Conference 2015','

                                                        \r\nGrafana provides a powerful and elegant way to create, explore, and share dashboards and data with your team and the world.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nGrafana is most commonly used for visualizing time series data for Internet infrastructure and application analytics but many use it in other domains including industrial sensors, home automation, weather, and process control.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://grafana.org\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','go,graph,monitor,devop,admin,server',0,0,1), (1937,'2016-01-05','Klaatu talks to Cloudera about Hadoop and Big Data',647,'Klaatu talks to Cloudera about Hadoop and Big Data','

                                                        \r\nCloudera delivers the modern platform for data management and analytics. We provide the world’s fastest, easiest, and most secure Apache Hadoop platform to help you solve your most challenging business problems with data.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.cloudera.com/
                                                        \r\nhttps://hadoop.apache.org/\r\n

                                                        ',78,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interview,Cloudera,Hadoop',0,0,1), (1942,'2016-01-12','Kobo Touch N-905 E-Reader',2600,'Klaatu reviews the Kobo Touch e-reader','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the Kobo Touch N-905 e-reader.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Too Long; Didn\'t Listen: it\'s a positive review and the device mostly works well with Linux. There are some exceptions, such as the need to hack around the registration process; luckily, that\'s easy:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://gedakc.users.sourceforge.net/display-doc.php?name=kobo-desktop-ereader-setup

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That being \"the ugly\", here are the Good and the Bad:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Good:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • works with Linux, after one initial hack
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • uses file manager or calibre
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • great format support (EPUB, EPUB3, PDF, MOBI, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP, TIFF, TXT, HTML, RTF, CBZ, CBR)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • e-ink
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • great battery life (lasts a month on one charge, with every evening and weekend filled with reading)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • a little more interactive and configurable than expected
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • one device, one app, one purpose
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • small, lightweight, convenient
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • cheap ($60 USD)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • expansion up to 32gb
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Negative

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • requires registration (or a rego hack)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • rearranges your books by meta data; no override to respect your dirs
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • touch screen
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • slow (though not annoyingly slow)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • long time to index books
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • hard to keep track of books you are currently reading
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sleep/off screen should be more configurable
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','book,ebook,kobo',0,0,1), (1930,'2015-12-25','A systemd primer',511,'An introduction to the modern linux init system','

                                                        1 What is systemd?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A dependency system for unix services.
                                                        \r\nAnd, a set of basic unix services to make a unix system usable.
                                                        \r\nAnd, a growing list of not quite so basic services

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • NTP, networkd, timers (crond/atd)\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        From a programmers perspective, it\'s the mainloop phenomenon.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        2 Alternatives

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Solaris: Service Management Facility
                                                        \r\nMac OSX: launchd
                                                        \r\nUbuntu: upstart (until recently)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        3 Replaces

                                                        \r\n

                                                        SYSV
                                                        \r\nLSB (actually implements LSB deps)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        4 Terminology

                                                        \r\n

                                                        units

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • [auto]mount
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • swap
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • path (inotify triggers)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • socket
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • timer (crond/atd)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • service
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • slice (cgroup)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pseudo
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • device
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • snapshot
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • scope
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        targets

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • replace run levels
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • default target at boot
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • can isolate to just one target
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        5 Advantages - Design

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Proper, explicit dependencies between system compontents
                                                        \r\nStarts components in parallel
                                                        \r\nA proper separation of concerns, lots of situations covered.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • configuration files are regular, simple to understand generally small
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • OTOH, there are LOTS of options
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Configuration is not runnable shell.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        [Unit]\r\nDescription=CUPS Scheduler\r\nDocumentation=man:cupsd(8)\r\n\r\n[Service]\r\nExecStart=/usr/sbin/cupsd -l\r\nType=simple\r\n\r\n[Install]\r\nAlso=cups.socket cups.path\r\nWantedBy=printer.target\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Separate system and user daemons.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        6 Advantages - Sysadmins

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Modify configuration without modifying upstream configuration
                                                        \r\nService watching (startup, watchdog, failure modes)
                                                        \r\nsystemd-delta

                                                        \r\n
                                                        [EXTENDED]   /lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service → /lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service.d/debian.conf\r\n[EXTENDED]   /lib/systemd/system/systemd-timesyncd.service → /lib/systemd/system/systemd-timesyncd.service.d/disable-with-time-daemon.conf\r\n[EQUIVALENT] /etc/systemd/system/default.target → /lib/systemd/system/default.target\r\n\r\n3 overridden configuration files found.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        7 Advantages - Programming

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Removal of some error and security prone code

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • socket activation (e.g. privileged ports)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • user/group changing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        8 Advantages - Provisioning

                                                        \r\n

                                                        standardized cgroup controls
                                                        \r\ncontainers
                                                        \r\ndebootstrap ; systemd-spawn-boot\r\n* systemd takes care of all pseudo file systems for you

                                                        \r\n

                                                        9 Advantages - Users

                                                        \r\n

                                                        quick to boot
                                                        \r\ncan reduce load later on (services start & stop as required)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        10 Examples

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Color legend:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • black = Requires
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • dark blue = Requisite
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • dark grey = Wants
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • red = Conflicts
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • green = After
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        systemd-analyze blame

                                                        \r\n

                                                        systemd-analyze plot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        systemd-analyze plot gdm.service

                                                        \r\n

                                                        11 Disadvantages

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Journald

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • It’s really nice in theory, but in practice I’ve found it to be slow and buggy
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        It’s a little new, so LTS distros necessarily have older versions

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • el7 has something like 200 patches
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        network-online.target is a bit flakey
                                                        \r\nDBUS

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Unix is a graveyard of IPC, I don\'t feel DBUS is much better
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • KDBUS means it will probably be around for ever.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        12 Quandries

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Deeply hooked into linux specific details, not portable

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • kernel api, cgroups, udev etc.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some cool features relient on file system e.g. btrfs for snapshot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        13 Future

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I haven’t had a chance to play with networkd yet, but it sounds like it’s going to be very good.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        14 Questions

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Migrating

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • It depends…
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • systemd only supports start/stop/reload
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • work with the daemon: oneshot/simple/forking/inetd
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • integrate with systemd: notify, watchdog
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Userspace

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Every login, a separate systemd -> user is spawned
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Can override with .config/systemd files
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',315,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','systemd,linux',0,0,1), (1914,'2015-12-03','Waking up',462,'A follow up episode in response to Windigo\'s episode about waking up','

                                                        \r\nWhen I first heard Windigo\'s episode about waking up, I literally uttered \"Windigo, yer fucking killing me, man\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1838\r\n

                                                        \r\n',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','computer-based alarm system,media player,LED',0,0,1), (1918,'2015-12-09','DerbyCon Interview with Dave Kennedy',197,'Dave Kennedy talks about a capture the flag contest','

                                                        \r\nDavid Kennedy (ReL1K) is a security ninja and penetration tester that likes to write code, break things, and develop exploits. Dave is a Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) for a Fortune 1000. Dave is on the Back|Track and Exploit-Database development team and a core member of the Social-Engineer podcast and framework. David continues to contribute to a variety of open-source projects. David had the privilege in speaking at some of the nations largest conferences on a number of occasions including BlackHat, Defcon and Shmoocon. David is the creator of the Social-Engineer Toolkit (SET), Fast-Track, modules/attacks for Metasploit, and has released a number of public exploits. David heavily co-authored the Metasploit Unleashed course available online and has a number of security related white-papers in the field of exploitation. David has a book soon to be released in June from NoStarch Press, “Metasploit: A Penetration Testers Guide”. David is one of the founders of DerbyCon, a hacker con located in Louisville, Kentucky. Lastly, David worked for three letter agencies during his U.S Marine Corp career in the intelligence field specializing in red teaming and computer forensics.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.derbycon.com/talks-2011/\r\n

                                                        ',79,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interview,penetration testing,metasploit,DerbyCon',0,0,1), (1919,'2015-12-10','DerbyCon Interview with Paul Koblitz',284,'A brief interview with a pen tester','

                                                        \r\nXoke interviews Paul Koblitz (@ph4que), Senior Security Consultant at TrustedSec focusing on physical penetration. Also in the shownotes is a template for a \'loid\' which Paul discusses in the interview as his favourite tool.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',79,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interview,penetration testing,loid',0,0,1), (1924,'2015-12-17','Port Forwarding',1366,'In HPR 1900, Ahuka suggests changing the default ssh port, I ask why not employ port forwarding?','

                                                        Port Forwarding

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In Episode 1900, Ahuka advised you not to expose the ssh service to the Internet on the default port 22, there we agree. This is called "Security Through Obscurity". Whenever possible, server functions exposed to the Internet should be on non-default port numbers (the exception being HTTP on a public web server). I disagree however, in Ahuka\'s method of changing the port. He said you should change the port on the server itself:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        From https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/setup-ssh-to-run-on-a-non-standard-port.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Open /etc/ssh/sshd_config file and look for line Port 22 and change line to Port 2222. Restart sshd server. systemctl restart sshd

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sshd is running on a non-standard port, connection attempts to the system will fail. You need to connect using following command:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ ssh -p 2222 user@your-ip OR $ ssh -p 2222 user@you.homenetwork.org
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This could make sense if you manage a business or school network, where you have numerous users within your network with whom you share varying levels of trust. Still, I don\'t think anyone who can brute force your shh logon or shared keys would be stymied by a simple change of ports. But Ahuka also mentioned home networks, and I think we would rather keep things simple. I would humbly suggest keep ssh servers set to port 22 internally, and using a technology called "port forwarding" available on most consumer routers. Port forwarding is simply an administrator configured table that redirects incoming traffic on one IP port to a specific internal IP address and IP port on your internal network. In fact, unless you have only one PC connected directly to you ISP with no router or firewall, you will still need to setup port forwarding to tell the router which machine on your network the for which incoming communication is intended.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In other words, let\'s say you\'ve enabled ssh on port 40001 of a machine with an internal address of 192.168.1.5. You try to login remotely via ssh on port 40001 using the external IP assigned to you by your ISP (which is taken from a range assigned to them by the IANA). The external IP of your router should be displayed on your router\'s status page, or you could type "what is my IP" into Google. Instead of an IP in the range 192.168.x.y, like you are probably using internally, your external address will be in the Class A or B range, for instance 73.149.12.124.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So let\'s say you have ssh server running on port 40001 on a machine with IP adddress 192.168.1.5 on your home network. Your server has an external address of 73.149.12.124. You are at work or on vaction or whatever and you want to ssh into that machine on your home network, i.e,

                                                        \r\n
                                                        ssh -p 40001 you@73.149.12.124
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Unless the router itself supports ssh server (entirely possible with third party Linux based firmwares like Open-WRT and DD-WRT), if you haven\'t configured port fowarding, the router won\'t have any idea what to do with an incoming request on port 40001. You need to set up your port forwarding table in your router (don\'t worry, it\'s all point and click). IP forwarding may be under Advanced, in the menus, or Security, or Firewall, or a combination of the above.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You will be asked to enter the external port number (in our example, 40001), TCP or UDP or both (in our case, ssh is both, so you may have to create two separate entries), the internal IP address (in our example 192.168.1.5) and the internal port number (if you changed it internally as Ahuka recommended, in our example 40001, but, and this is the whole point of this podcast, you are going to have to set up port forwarding anyway, so why change the port number locally in the first place? If the terms TCP (Transport Control Protocol) and UDP (User Data Protocol) are unfamiliar to you, the difference can easily be explained. Using TCP, the computer transmitting data stops every few packets (I think the default is three, but don\'t hold me to it) until it gets an acknowledgment from the receiver that the packets were successfully received, then the sender continues. With UDP, the sender blurts out the whole transmission without caring whether the receiver go it or not.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Wikipedia has a great article on official and unofficial standardized port numbers. Once you get into five digits, conflicts to already assigned ports are rare, but it\'s still best to consult the Wiki. The higher numbers are generally not officially assigned, some particular software product is just "squatting" on the number. In fact, using the port number for a technology you are certain will never be used on your network may further obfuscate the service for which you are actually using it. You may think port 40001 is surely high enough to be free of conflict, but the Wiki says 40000 is used by "SafetyNET p Real-time Industrial Ethernet protocol".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another advantage of port redirection is you could use a different external port number with every host on your network, i.e., 40001 redirects to you server, 40002 redirects to your desktop, 40003 redirects to the old laptop in the kid\'s room, etc. Personally, I\'d only have port redirection into a single machine that is connected persistently (like a server), and the ssh from it into other hosts on the network (yes, this would be a connection of at least three nested shells). You can even run graphical programs over ssh with the -X argument, but I\'m leaving that on for later discussion. Of course, we will loose that functionality when we move from x-server to Wayland, so if you need a GUI you may have to investigate technologies like VNC or VPN.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Of course, everything depends on having a static IP locally on the ssh server (either set on host itself or manual assignment of IP on the router, if possible). You either need a static external address on the WAN (i.e., external address as seen from the Internet) side or employ a domain forwarding service. Also keep in mind, once we get Ivp6, everything above goes out the window.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',131,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','ssh,port forwarding,router',0,0,1), (1926,'2015-12-21','National Measurements Institutes',657,'A short overview of what these institutes do.','

                                                        I give a short personal view on what are National Measurements Institutes. More info can be found here:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        One thing not mentioned but related is ISO:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Organization_for_Standardization

                                                        ',301,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','science, measurement, NMI, national measurement institute',0,0,1), (1931,'2015-12-28','Atomic force microscopy',1566,'General view of the nanoscale tools. Special interest with Atomic force microscopes AFM','

                                                        I give a quick overview of what is nanotechnology. go over some of the tools used to view the small scale. I go a bit more in depth with atomic force microscopy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I left many things out that I would like to have said but mostly you can get further information here:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_force_microscopy

                                                        ',301,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','science, measurement, nanotechnology, small scale',0,0,1), (1929,'2015-12-24','I Found a Flashlight',820,'I talk about an amazing flashlight I found while walking to work one day recently','

                                                        I Found a Flashlight

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        A couple of weeks ago on the way to work I found a flashlight (or a \"torch,\" for those folks across the pond). It was rolling around on the street getting run over by cars and seemingly not suffering any damage as result. As soon as it was safe, I walked out into the street and grabbed it and took it with me. A little poking around online showed me that this was no ordinary device, but a police-grade flashlight.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        I contacted the Lafayette Police Department to find out what kind of flashlights they used and whether anyone had reported one missing. Ordinarily when I find something I don\'t worry about this, but I discovered that this thing cost quite a lot of money—around $125 on Amazon with a retail price of $225—and if a police officer had lost it I certainly didn\'t want him going into his own pocket to replace it if I could just give it back to him. The police department wrote back to me saying, yes, this was the kind of flashlight that they issued to their officers but no one was missing one. I also asked the University Police and they said they don\'t normally issue flashlights but that sometimes officers bought their own and no one had reported missing one.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        After seeing the amazing build quality and absolutely unbelievable light quality this thing produced, I decided to keep it and so I had to buy a charger to recharge the battery. This cost about $28 and now I\'m the proud owner of a Streamlight SL-20L flashlight. This is truly one of the greatest tools I\'ve ever had. Listen to the show to hear me sing its praises!

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','tools, flashlights, safety',0,0,1), (1928,'2015-12-23','Cov's Jams',2028,'A compilation of libre licensed music that Cov enjoyed listening to','

                                                        \r\nThe playlist can be found at https://www.jamendo.com/playlist/500146000/cov-s-jams-001\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Cedric Share-The Awakening Part.II (DerFilm Cut Edition) CEDRIC SHARE #piano #technominimal #techno 02:39
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. VENTO SUL 1 JURA #happy 03:19
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Satisfied MAURO DEL MAR (A.K.A. SCÁNDALI) #soundscapes #rock #song 02:06
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Deva Dasis TASTE OF DREAM #keyboard #synthesizer #lounge 04:21
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Im In Love With A Man ( I Can\'t Stand) ROCC NOBLES 03:36
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. We Have A Problem BILLY KORG #rock 05:35
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Libera Me MARIO SALIS #strings #sad #soundtrack 04:53
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Кокарда ДЕВЯТЬ #vocal 05:08
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        ',322,22,1,'CC-BY-SA','music',0,0,1), (1933,'2015-12-30','HPR AudioBookClub 11 Street Candles',8011,'In this episode, the HPR AudioBookClub reviews Street Candles by David Collins-Rivera.','

                                                        SUMMARY

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub reviews Street Candles by David Collins-Rivera. You can download this AudioBook for free from https://www.cavalcadeaudio.com/.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you liked this book, or are a fan of David Collins-Rivera, you can purchase it from https://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&page=1&rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3ADavid%20Collins-Rivera.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pre-Spoilers

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: Great book. Makes me want to go back and re-read the previous book. I wonder how well some of the commentary present in this book will resonate in the future. The story is good enough I have no doubt that it will still be a good read, but I\'m not sure if it might loose a bit.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • x1101: I Loved this book. So much so that I listened to it twice. Every chapter is a cliff hanger.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pokey: I LOVE this AudioBook! The author (Lostinbronx) really made me care about each of the characters. Every chapter is a cliff hanger, and that WORKS precisely because I do care about the characters.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pegwole: It was a fantastic post modern essay on life. Even though I listened to the wrong AudioBook.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CrispyoneFifty: Speaking for all of humanity, to all of humanity\'s future, I say \"you should go download and listen to this AudioBook!\"
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        (summary)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        BEVERAGE REVIEWS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As usual, the HPR_AudioBookClub took some time to review the beverages that each of us were drinking during the episode

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: Running late, just drinking water. I know LAME!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • x1101: Black Isle Organic Oatmeal Stout. Very little head, a cholate/coffee nose, as well as chocolate/coffee malt notes. Not overly fizzy, but not sudsy at all. Excellent. https://www.blackislebrewery.com/beer/Hibernator-Oatmeal-Stout.html
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pokey: I drank a Six Star Creatine fruit punch because I\'m tired of looking like Ejoq. I have to go to the gym after the show, and this stuff seems to help with muscle recovery. It tastes pretty good. There\'s no funny artificial sweetener after taste, for which I\'m very grateful. https://www.sixstarpro.com/products/creatinex3/
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pegwole: It\'s coffee. Its not a special one either, now shut up.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CrispyoneFifty: Newcastle Werewolf Blood-Red Ale It\'s sweet up front, and leaves a sweet after taste, with a punch of bitter in between. You can definitely taste the rye in there too. https://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/342/71106/
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Spoilers Notes

                                                        \r\nx1101\'s mental image of Bin Ragensten https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-tBCFYZpXFTE/ULLWzqZ0X9I/AAAAAAAAAQ4/-w4FEX8atL8/s1600/Santa-Claus-Rise-Of-The-Guardians-600x375.jpg \r\n

                                                        OUR NEXT AUDIOBOOK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft\r\n
                                                        https://hppodcraft.com/podcasts/TheCallofCthulhu-hppodcraft.mp3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        pegwole suggested this AudioBook, and we all thought that horror was a pretty good selection for our October recording.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        NEXT RECORDING

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We record the second Tuesday of every month at 20:00 Eastern US time Which = the second Wednesday of each month at 01:00z (unless its daylight saving time, then its the second Tuesday 24:00zhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times If you\'d like a Google calendar invite, or if you\'d like to be on the HPR_AudioBookClub mailing list, please get in contact with us on the HPR mailing list \'hpr at hackerpublicradio dot org.\' We\'re way behind on publishing, so if you want to join us, get in contact one of these ways and we\'ll let you know what the current book is.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FEEDBACK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thank you very much for listening to this episode of the HPR_AudioBookClub. We had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We also hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Please leave a few words in the episode\'s comment section.\r\n
                                                        As always; remember to visit the HPR contribution page HPR could really use your help right now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sincerely,\r\n
                                                        The HPR_AudioBookClub

                                                        \r\n

                                                        P.S. Some people really like finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we always include a few.

                                                        \r\n',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub',0,0,1), (1934,'2015-12-31','Experiencing the Meegopad T-02 Part two',901,'Part 2 of the saga of the meegopad T-02','

                                                        \r\nPart 2 of \"Experiencing the Meegopad T-02.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMany thanks to all the HPR contributers that inspire such great stories.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nGlossary of slang terms to be updated upon show release, along with the list of sound effects contributers.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\nSpecial thanks to the following individuals from freesound.org for their sound effects used throughout this episode.
                                                        \r\n\r\nRutgermuller
                                                        \r\njaredi
                                                        \r\nhybrid34
                                                        \r\nlintphishx
                                                        \r\ntimbre
                                                        \r\ncameronmusic
                                                        \r\ncr4sht3st
                                                        \r\nhusky70
                                                        \r\nmojomills
                                                        \r\nultradust
                                                        \r\nconleec
                                                        \r\ningolyrio
                                                        \r\ndapperdanial
                                                        \r\nrobinhood76
                                                        \r\nunfa
                                                        \r\nkwahma-02
                                                        \r\nstephsinger22
                                                        \r\nlonemonk
                                                        \r\nreg7783
                                                        \r\n\r\nHigher quality stereo copies of this episode in .Flac, Ogg, and MP3 format can be found at the following link.
                                                        \r\nhttps://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B6BAm4vn8c7QWnZLbnFib0JPc2M&usp=sharing
                                                        \r\n\r\nGlossary of slang terms used in this episode:
                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Came unglued\" = going berzerk
                                                        \r\n\"Sang a little song\" = provided information to law enforcement
                                                        \r\n\"Still\" = whiskey making apparatus
                                                        \r\n\"Scoring Barbies\" = Picking up women
                                                        \r\n\"G-Men\" = Government employees. (Federal agents)
                                                        \r\n\"Makerspace\" = 3-D Printing facility
                                                        \r\n\"Johnny Law\" = Law Enforcement
                                                        \r\n\"C-Note\" = $100.00 bill
                                                        \r\n\"Speakeasy\" = illegal drinking establishment in prohibition era United States
                                                        \r\n\"68 Chevelle\" = 1968 Chevrolet 2-door automobile
                                                        \r\n\"Ratting me out\" = informing on someone
                                                        \r\n\"Frank Nitty\" = 30\'s era Gangster, Al Capon\'s right hand man (Enforcer)
                                                        \r\n\r\nDisclaimer:
                                                        \r\n\r\nAll characters are fictitious renditions of HPR contributers.
                                                        \r\nNothing about any individuals character is based on anything other than my personal convenience of using their likenesses in fictitious storytelling.
                                                        \r\nNo disrespect is intended in any way.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThe genre that the character A Shadowy Figure lives in is hard boiled Noir.
                                                        \r\nNoir reflects a past history that had different standards than we do now.
                                                        \r\nI do not personally hold those antiquated world views. Nor do I promote them through this work of fiction. I would like to think this artistic creation does provide an opportunity to see how far we\'ve come as a society.
                                                        \r\n\r\nBut most of all, I\'d like to think that you the listener, are entertained and/or inspired by this presentation.
                                                        \r\n\r\nThank you all for your support.
                                                        \r\n\r\nA Shadowy Figure\r\n',308,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Meegopad',0,0,1), (1945,'2016-01-15','The Quassel IRC System',1395,'Quassel is an IRC client that routes your open chat windows into one connection to the IRC server','

                                                        Quassel is a centralized IRC hub that allows several client computers to appear as only one connection to the IRC server, i.e. Freenode. About the same time NYBill posted Episode 1869 "IRSSI Connectbot", I was wondering how to merge all my simultaneous IRC connections from multiple hosts to the same channel on the same server into one connection. I did a search on "GUI front end IRSSI" and came up with Quassel instead. I think NYBill and I are trying to solve pretty much the same problem. I\'m not trying to say my solution is better than NYBill\'s, I\'m just saying it\'s the one that appeals the most to me.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Problem: IRC servers (or at least Freenode) do not allow simultaneous connection from multiple hosts using the same user identifier. I.E., if I was logged in on the PC on my desk via XChat as FiftyOneFifty, if at the same time I was connected to IRC via a PC on the kitchen counter, I would have to use "Kitchen5150" as my identifier. If I was away from home, but left a computer connected to IRC back home, if I connected againover Android I\'d have to be Andro5150. I could adopt all these other personas as aliases, which protected them from theft and allowed me to still have admin rights on channels where I was admin depite using a different login. These multiple versions of me running in IRC inevitably lead to confusion about which was the "real" FiftyOneFifty, a situation which MrJackson is all too familiar with, I\'m sure.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        IRSSI Solution: Connect to a server via ssh, then login into IRC using the IRSSI terminal client inside a GNU screen or TMUX session. When moving between local hosts, disconnect from the current screen or tmux session, ssh into the server from the new host, and reconnect to the session running irssi. The irssi ncurses interface may not be as pretty or easy for some users as a GUI, but I understand it is quite functional.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Quassel Solution: Connect to IRC server via a single host running quassel-core. Connect multiple simultaneous clients to the core via quassel-client. All clients share the same IRC display at the same time, all the while transparent to the server (i.e. Freenode), which only sees the one login from the host running quassel-core.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are two components two this system, quassel-core and quassel-client. You want to install quassel-core on to a system with a persistent Internet connection, say a home or cloud server. I first used Arch on and RPI model 2, so quassle-core setup for Arch may be found here: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Quassel .

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A. Install the core

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Install quassel-core on the server [sudo pacman -S quassel-core]

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Generate a certificate

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Start core (i.e. sudo systemctl start quassel)

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Enable quassel on every startup (sudo systemctl enable quassel)

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • There is something in the wiki about a but preventing the enable fundction from working. "systemctl enable" just creates a sysmlink into the proper startup directory, so the wiki replaces it with a copy command "cp /usr/lib/systemd/system/quassel.service /etc/systemd/system/"
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Set up Port Forwarding on your router. I suggest you use an external port other than the default 4242 (Security Through Obscurity, see my Port Forwarding episode).

                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        All the configuration is done by the client!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        B. Install quassel-client

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. All you need to connect is an IP address and the external port number. The first account you create will be master and the only account with the ability to create other users. In other words, if someone else had your server\'s IP address and the port Quassel-core is listening on, they could beat you to establishing a master account and controll Quassel on your server.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Once you have established a connection to a core and set your password, you can set up the default IRC servers and channels. It\'s a GUI interface, so I\'m not going to walk you through the menus and various inputs. I only had success setting up one IRC server (Freenode) in the initial setup on the first client (as you connect addition clients, you will find your channels are already configured), and then only if I avoided ssl connections. Channels are entered into a list in the normal way (#channel_1, #channel_2, etc), but once you connect to a server, /join commands become persistant. I added a second IRC server, tllts, once I finished the initial setup.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The user interface is similar to XChat,but not quite as polished.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. You get popup notifications when someone uses your handle in a chat, but scrolling back to find it, rather than being in a different color, it shows up in a garish reverse text. Easier to spot, but not as eligant.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. No way to search back posts for your handle or anything else.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Links posted by others only have "copy this link function", not "open this link in default browser"

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. I don\'t seem to have spellchecking enabled in my IRC client. I discovered spell checkwas central in Linux, rather than every app having it\'s own version (i.e. I assume FireFox under Windows has it\'s own spellcheck libraries as Office has it\'s own library). I wonder if I installed hunspell on the Quassel core server, if I would suddenly get spellcheck ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1356 ).

                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        There is a perfectly adequate Android client for Quassel. Like AndChat, YAAIC, and the others, it seems to drop the connection unless you actively participating, but since the server is persistent, you never miss out on what was said while your client was disconnected.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The last time I was awy for the weekend, I shut off all my PC\'s and network devices. One drawback of a local Quassel server would be my LAN and Quassel Core server would need to be up even when I was away from home.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Migrating Quassel from my local server to the cloud: About a week after I\'d set up Quassel, a buddy anounced he had secured a Digital Ocean Droplet ($5 a month, limited storage, limited bandwidth). He was open to letting his friends use the service, as long as their requirements were low impact. I jumped on the oppurtunity to move my quassel-core over to the "cloud". Remember the five and a half steps to setting up quassel-core under Arch? According to my friend who manages the Digital Ocean Droplet running Ubuntu Server, it was pretty much "sudo aptitude install quassel-core". Once the core was running I then configured the new core from one of the clients (i.e., pointed quassel-client to a new IP and port number, then created an account and password). Since I was on a new server, I had to set up connections my IRC channels again. After that, every client I migrated to the new core inherited those channels from the server. A week or so after moving the core to the cloud, I came home to find my Internet had been down for a few hours. Cycling the power on the ISPs tranceiver and my router fixed my Internet connection, and since Digital Ocean had experienced no interruption, I was still able to scroll back to the five hours of IRC I missed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Quassel,IRC quassel-client,quassel-core',0,0,1), (1941,'2016-01-11','What\'s in my case',1976,'I\'m a fountain pen enthusiast; here\'s what\'s in my pen case','

                                                        What\'s in my case

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m a fountain pen geek and I thought I\'d share my geekiness on HPR in case there are any other FPGeeks out there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have a pen case which I bought from China through eBay, and so I felt that this allowed me to add this show to the \'What\'s in my ...\' series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a long set of notes to accompany this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1941/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','fountain pen,nib,ink,cartridge,piston fill,penmanship',0,0,1), (1946,'2016-01-18','Wok Cookery',1237,'I prepare a vegetarian version of Chow Mein for my son\'s visit','

                                                        Wok Cookery

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Not for the first time I\'m following in the footsteps of Frank Bell. Frank did an HPR episode entitled "A Beginner with a Wok", episode number 1787, on 2015-06-09. On it he spoke about his experiences stir-fry cooking using a wok.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Frank got a lot of comments about his episode and there seemed to be an interest in the subject. I have been interested in Chinese, Indonesian and other Far Eastern cookery styles for some time, and do a lot of cooking, so I thought I\'d record a show about one of the recipes I use.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My son visits around once a week and eats dinner with me. I offered to cook him my version of Chow Mein, which since he is vegetarian, needed to use no meat. This is my description of the recipe I used.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I loosely based this version of Chow Mein on Ken Hom\'s recipe in his book Chinese Cookery, page 226. This is from his 1984 BBC TV series, which I watched. I also learnt many of my preparation techniques from Ken Hom\'s books and TV shows.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a long set of notes to accompany this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1946/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Apologies for the sounds of a mouse scroll wheel in the audio. I was trying a new microphone position and didn\'t realise how sensitive it was to these sounds.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,wok,stir-fry,chow mein,noodles,Quorn',0,0,1), (1935,'2016-01-01','Quick Bashpodder Fix',578,'Charles in NJ returns with a short show to discuss a fix he made to Bashpodder.','

                                                        \r\nBashpodder is a great Bash script for downloading the latest episodes of podcasts and other media from their feeds.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThere are a few feeds that are not handled properly by Bashpodder, namely, the TED Talks podcast feed and the NPR digest show called the TED Radio Hour.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe URLs for the audio files have a number of additional fields at the end of the string after the media file name, and Bashpodder picks up the last field as if it were the media file name for the show. So every TED Radio Hour episode is called \"510298\". If you download more than one episode at a time, only the last episode to be saved will survive. Each new file clobbers the last one, because they all get the same filename.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCharles in NJ made a simple fix to Bashpodder.shell to correct this problem, and he shares it in this episode.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Additional Resources:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Original version of Bashpodder.shell
                                                          \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1935-bashpodder_original.shell\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Revised version with fixes to pick up TED-related podcast files
                                                          \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1935-bashpodder.shell\r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Abbreviated example of bp.conf configuration file that tells Bashpodder what resources to fetch
                                                          \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1935-bp.conf\r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Abbreviated example of podcast.log that shows how Bashpodder stores its history, including some sample TED links.
                                                          \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1935-podcast.log\r\n
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHappy New Year from Charles in NJ. \r\n

                                                        ',229,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bashpodder, podcast, bash, awk',0,0,1), (1939,'2016-01-07','Collating Pages with pdftk',934,'I describe how to collate the pages of two separate PDF files using pdftk','

                                                        I\'m moving into my new office at work, and among many things I had to move are file boxes full of old class notes from graduate school. The academic hoarder in me doesn\'t want to recycle them—I might need these things again! I\'m scanning.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I\'ve inherited an excellent scanner/copier with a feeder that lets you scan stacks of pages with one click. This works great for single-sided documents, but most of my handwritten notes are double-sided. I scan one side, then turn the stack over and scan the other side, and I end up with two PDFs for a single stack of pages—one with the front pages and the other with back pages in reverse order. The difficulty is to collate the pages of those two files so that the front and back sides appear in a single PDF in the correct order. Sounds like a job for a shell script!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The script takes two CLI arguments. The first argument is the PDF containing front pages, and the second is the PDF of the back pages.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The first job is take the backsides and reverse the page order, because they were scanned in last-page-to-first. This is very easy with pdftk:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        pdftk back.pdf cat end-1 output backfix.pdf
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Now that the pages are all in the correct order it\'s time to collate them. We\'re going to use the burst function of the PDF toolkit to explode each of the two PDFs into separate pages. After that, we recombine the separate pages in the correct order. The trick is finding a way to do this efficiently. In concept, it\'s not hard to collate pages in whatever order you want after they\'ve been burst. You simply keep giving pdftk CLI arguments for all of the files you want to combine and then output them as a single file. However, if you have 40 or 50 pages, it\'s extremely tedious to provide that many CLI args one at a time. This must be automated!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The way I figured out how to do this was to ensure that the burst command would output files that would appear in the correct order automatically when using the ls command inside the working directory. The burst command automatically numbers the output files, but you can specify certain filename formatting parameters if you want to. I chose a format that would begin the filename with the numerical page count in at least three digits with leading zeros (001, 002, etc), followed by an underscore and either the word \"front\" for the front pages or \"reverse\" for the back pages.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        So here are the burst commands:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\npdftk front.pdf burst output %03d_front.pdf\r\npdftk backfix.pdf burst output %03d_reverse.pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        At this point a bunch of new files appear, looking something like this:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n001_front.pdf\r\n001_reverse.pdf\r\n002_front.pdf\r\n002_reverse.pdf\r\n003_front.pdf\r\n003_reverse.pdf\r\n...\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Notice how the front and back pages all appear in the correct order? Now, instead of typing in the filename for every page, we can use the output of the ls command, filtering out any files not beginning with numbers.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        pdftk $(ls |grep ^[0-9]) cat output collated.pdf
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And it\'s done. The entire script loks like this:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n# Requires: pdftk\r\n\r\nfront=$(readlink -f "$1")\r\nback=$(readlink -f "$2")\r\nbasedir=$(dirname $front) \r\nstem=$(basename $back .pdf)\r\nbackfix="$stem"-fixed.pdf\r\nnew=$(basename $front .pdf | sed -e \'s/[Ff]ront/Combined/\')\r\n\r\ncd $basedir\r\npdftk $back cat end-1 output $backfix &> /dev/null\r\npdftk $front burst output %03d_front.pdf &> /dev/null\r\npdftk $backfix burst output %03d_reverse.pdf &> /dev/null\r\npdftk $(ls |grep ^[0-9]) cat output "$new".pdf\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','pdftk, scripting, productivity, scanning, document management, pdf',0,0,1), (1951,'2016-01-25','Some additional Bash tips',2424,'More about expansion in Bash: this time arithmetic expansion','

                                                        Some additional Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Expansion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As we saw in the last episode 1903 there are seven types of expansion applied to the command line in the following order:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Brace expansion (we looked at this subject in episode 1884)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tilde expansion (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Parameter and variable expansion (this was covered in episode 1648)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Command substitution (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word splitting
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pathname expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        There is also another, process substitution, which occurs after arithmetic expansion on systems that can implement it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will look at one more of these expansion types in this episode but since there is a lot to cover, we\'ll continue in a later episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1951_full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Audio Note

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This time, in the spirit of experimentation and as a way of learning Audacity I processed my audio thus:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Turned the stereo tracks to mono

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Used a Noise Gate plug-in to reduce background noise (after "training" it on some silence)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Performed a Truncate Silence pass to reduce the length of pauses

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Applied a small amount of amplification

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Let me know if this had any positive or negative effects on the end product.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,expansion,arithmetic expansion,shell arithmetic,number base',0,0,1), (1949,'2016-01-21','The Kindle/Kobo Open Reader (KOReader)',1638,'I talk about installing an alternate ebook reader app on a jailbroken Kindle','

                                                        In this episode I talk about installing an alternate ebook reader app on your Kindle paperwhite. The one I\'m using is called the Kindle/Kobo Open Reader (KOReader), and it has many features that the stock Kindle reader does not have:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Epub support
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word-breaking hyphenation
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • PDF reflow
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Take screenshot with diagonal swipe
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Export highlights to Evernote
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fills more screen space
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • User-installed fonts
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        How to get it running:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Jailbreak your Kindle, refer to this post. Jailbreaking doesn\'t give you any new programs. What it does is unlock the potential of the device and allows you to install different launchers and applications.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Install alternate launcher, such as KUAL, the Kindle Unified Application Launcher. This is a framework that allows developers to create menu items that will launch applications on a jailbroken Kindle.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Install KOreader. Instructions
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Install Dictionary files for whatever languages you want to have (optional)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • install Tesseract language data (optional)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can allow KOreader to take over styling of whatever book you\'re reading. If you don\'t like the style rules it applies, you can hack the epub CSS file located here: /koreader/data/epub.css

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','kindle, kobo, ebooks, epub, jailbreaking, rooting, ebook readers',0,0,1), (1938,'2016-01-06','How I prepare HPR shows',1574,'I use my own tools for preparing my HPR shows. I talk about them in this episode','

                                                        How I prepare HPR shows

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have been contributing shows to Hacker Public Radio since 2012. In those far off days (!) we sent everything in via FTP, and had to name the files with a combination of our host id, our name, the slot number and the title. The show notes had to contain a chunk of metadata in a defined format to signal all of the various attributes of the show. I found myself making numerous mistakes with this naming and metadata formatting and so started designing and writing some tools to protect myself from my own errors.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I started developing a Bash script in mid-2013 which I called hpr_talk. I used Bash since I thought I might be able to make something with a small footprint that I could share, which might be useful to others. The script grew and grew and became increasingly complex and I found I needed to add other scripts to the toolkit and to resort to Perl and various Perl modules to perform some actions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then in 2014 Ken changed the upload procedure to what it is now. This is a much better design and does away with the need to name files in odd ways and add metadata to them. However, this left my toolkit a bit high and dry, so I shelved the plans to release it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since then I have been enhancing the hpr_talk toolkit, adding features that I found useful and removing bugs, until the present time. Now it is probably far too complex and idiosyncratic to be of direct use to others, and is rather too personalised to my needs to be easily shared. Nevertheless, it is available on GitLab and I am going to describe it here in case it (or the methods used) might be of interest to anyone.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1938_full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Audio Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I had to record this in two parts. In the second part there was a constant background hum which I tried to remove. My removal process was not particularly successful I\'m afraid, so it cuts in and out. I\'m still learning how to do this sort of thing in Audacity!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Markdown,Pandoc,ePub,Bash,Perl,FTP',0,0,1), (1943,'2016-01-13','HPR AudioBook Club 11.5 - Interview with David Collins-Rivera',8866,'The HPR Audiobook Club interviews the author of the latest book we reviewed.','

                                                        SUMMARY

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub interviews David Collins-Rivera.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        David\'s Writing

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        David\'s Voice work and Acting

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        (summary)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        BEVERAGE REVIEWS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As usual, the HPR_AudioBookClub took some time to review the beverages that each of us were drinking during the episode

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • x1101: Green & Mint tea. Very mellow and refreshing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: Typical homemade lemonade. Teeth rotting good :)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pokey: I was drinking a can of Polar Lime Seltzer. I love seltzer, and lime is my favorite flavor. I think that seltzer feels (not tastes!) like cheap beer, and I once used it to help me quit drinking beer. I have since quit quitting beer, but I now I can\'t quit seltzer
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • lostinbronx:
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Things We Talked About

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OUR NEXT AUDIOBOOK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft\r\n
                                                        https://hppodcraft.com/podcasts/TheCallofCthulhu-hppodcraft.mp3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        pegwole suggested this AudioBook, and we all thought that horror was a pretty good selection for our October episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        NEXT RECORDING

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our next book club recording will be 2014/10/14T23:00:00+00:00. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Times If you\'d like a Google calendar invite, or if you\'d like to be on the HPR_AudioBookClub mailing list, please get in contact with us on the HPR mailing list \'hpr at hackerpublicradio dot org\'

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OUR AUDIO

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode was processed using Audacity https://audacity.sourceforge.net/. We\'ve been making small adjustments to our audio mix each month in order to get the best possible sound. It\'s been especially challenging getting all of our voices relatively level, because everyone has their own unique setup. Mumble is great for bringing us all together, and for recording, but it\'s not good at making everyone\'s voice the same volume. We\'re pretty happy with the way this month\'s show turned out, so we\'d like to share our editing process and settings with you and our future selves (who, of course, will have forgotten all this by then).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mumble uses a sample rate of 48kHz, but HPR requires a sample rate of 44.1kHz so the first step in our audio process is to resample the file at 44.1kHz. Resampeling can take a long time if you don\'t have a powerful computer, and sometimes even if you do. If you record late at night, like we do, you may want to start the task before you go to bed, and save it first thing in the morning, so that the file is ready to go the next time you are.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we use the \"Compressor\" effect with the following settings:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Threshold: -30db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Noise Floor: -50db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ratio: 3:1
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Attack Time: 0.2sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Decay Time: 1.0 sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Make-up Gain for 0db after compressing\" and \"compress based on peaks\" were both left un-checked.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        After compressing the audio we cut any pre-show and post-show chatter from the file and save them in a separate file for possible use as outtakes after the closing music.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we listen back to the whole file and we work on the shownotes. This is when we can cut out anything that needs to be cut, and we can also make sure that we put any links in the shownotes that were talked about during the recording of the show. We finish the shownotes before exporting the .aup file to .FLAC so that we can paste a copy of the shownotes into the audio file\'s metadata. We use the \"Truncate Silence\" effect with it\'s default settings to minimize the silence between people speaking. When used with it\'s default (or at least reasonable) settings, Truncate Silence is extreemly effective and satisfying. It makes everyone sound smarter, it makes the file shorter without destroying actual content, and it makes a conversations sound as easy and fluid during playback as it was while it was recorded. It can be even more effective if you can train yourself to remain silent instead of saying \"uuuuummmm.\" Just remember to ONLY pass the file through Truncate Silence ONCE. If you pass it through a second time, or if you set it too agressively your audio may sound sped up and choppy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we add new, empty audio tracks into which we paste the intro, outro and possibly outtakes, and we rename each track accordingly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We adjust the Gain so that the VU meter in Audacity hovers around -12db while people are speaking, and we try to keep the peaks under -6db, and we adjust the Gain on each of the new tracks so that all volumes are similar, and more importantly comfortable. Once this is done we can \"Mix and Render\" all of our tracks into a single track for export to the .FLAC file which is uploaded to the HPR FTP server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember to save often when using Audacity. We like to save after each of these steps. Audacity has a reputation for being \"crashy\" but if you remember save after every major transform, you will wonder how it ever got that reputation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FURTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FEEDBACK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thank you very much for listening to this episode of the HPR_AudioBookClub. We had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We also hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Please leave a few words in the episode\'s comment section.\r\n
                                                        As always; remember to visit the HPR contribution page HPR could really use your help right now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sincerely,\r\n
                                                        The HPR_AudioBookClub

                                                        \r\n

                                                        P.S. Some people really like finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we always include a few.

                                                        \r\n',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR AudioBookClub, Pokey, Thaj, lostnbronx, David Collins-Rivera, X1101, Street Candles',0,0,1), (1944,'2016-01-14','sshfs - Secure SHell FileSystem',1861,'How to mount remote storage using sshfs','

                                                        \r\nThis is a topic Ken Fallon has been wanting someone to do for some time, but I didn\'t want to talk about sshfs until the groundwork for ssh in general was laid. Fortunately, other hosts have recently covered the basics of ssh, so I don\'t have to record a series of episodes just to get to sshfs.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFrom the sshfs man page: SSHFS (Secure SHell FileSystem) is a file system for Linux (and other operating systems with a FUSE implementation, such as Mac OS X or FreeBSD) capable of operating on files on a remote computer using just a secure shell login on the remote computer. On the local computer where the SSHFS is mounted, the implementation makes use of the FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) kernel module. The practical effect of this is that the end user can seamlessly interact with remote files being securely served over SSH just as if they were local files on his/her computer. On the remote computer the SFTP subsystem of SSH is used.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn short, sshfs offers a dead simple way of mounting remote network volumes from another system on at a specified mount point on your local host, with encrypted data communications. It\'s perfect for at hoc connections on mobile computers or more permanent links. This is tutorial is going to be about how I use sshfs, rather than covering every conceivable option. I really think my experience will cover the vast majority of use cases without making things complicated, besides, I don\'t like to discuss options I haven\'t used personally.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThere are other ways to mount remote storage, most noteably SAMBA, but unless you are trying to connect to a Windows share, sshfs is far less trouble to set up, escpecially since most distros come with ssh-server already installed.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe first thing to do when preparing to use sshfs is to create a mountpoint on your local computer. For most purposes, you should create a folder inside your home folder. You should plan to leave this folder empty, because sshfs won\'t mount inside a folder that already has files in it. If I was configuring sshfs on a machine that had multiple users, I might set up a mount point under /media, then put symlinks in every user\'s home folder.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe sshfs command syntax reminds me of many of the other extended commands based ssh, like scp. The basic format is:\r\nsshfs username@<remote_host>: mountpoint\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTo put things in a better perspective, I\'ll use my situation as an example. My home server is on 192.168.2.153. If you have a hostname set up,you can use that instead of an IP. For the sake of arguement, my mountpoint for network storage is /home/fifty/storage . So, I can mount the storage folder on my server using:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153: /home/fifty/storage\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nBy default, your whole home directory on the remote system will be mounted at your mountpoint. You may have noticed the colon after the IP address, it is a necessary part of the syntax. Lets say you don\'t wish to mount your whole remote home folder, perhaps just the subdirectory containing shared storage. In my case, my server is an Raspberry Pi 2 with a 5Tb external USB drive which is mounted under /home/fifty/storage . Say, I only want to mount my shared storage, not everything in my home folder, I modify my command to be:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153:storage /home/fifty/storage\r\n .or.\r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153:/home/fifty/storage /home/fifty/storage\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nExcept that generally doesn\'t work for me, and I\'ll come to that presently. The 5Tb USB drive on the server isn\'t actually mounted in my home folder, it automounts under /media. The directory /home/fifty/storage on the server is actually a symlink to the actual mountpoint under /media. To make sshfs follow symlinks, you need to add the option \'-o follow_symlinks\', so now my sshfs command looks like:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153: /home/fifty/storage -o follow_symlinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou may have noticed, the \"-o\" switch comes at end the end of the command. Usually switches come right after the command, and before the arguements. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis will allow sshfs to navigate symlinks, but I\'ve discovered not all distros are comfortable using a symlink as the top levelfolder in a sshfs connection. For example, in Debian Wheezy, I could do:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153:storage /home/fifty/storage -o follow_symlinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOther distros, Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora so far don\'t like to connect to a symlink at the top level. For those distros, I need to use:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs fifty@192.168.2.153: /home/fifty/storage -o follow_symlinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nand walk my way down to storage.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOther related options and commands I haven\'t used but you may be interested in include -p , for Port. Lets say the remote server you want to mount is not on your local network, but a server out on the Internet, it probably won\'t be on the default ssh port. Syntax in this case might look like:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nsshfs -p 1022 fifty@142.168.2.153:storage /home/fifty/storage -o follow_symlinks\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nReading the man page, I also find \"-o allow_root\" which is described as \"allow access to root\" . I would expect, combined with a root login, this would mount all of the storage on the remote system, not just a user\'s home directory, but without direct expertience, Iwouldn\'t care to speculate further. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe mount can be broken with \'fusermount -u <mountpoint>\'. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAt this point, I could explain to you how to modify /etc/fstab to automatically mount a sshfs partition. The trouble is, /etc/fstab is processed for local storage before any network connections are made. Unless you want to modify the order in which services are enabled, no remote storage will ever be available when /etc/fstab is processed. It makes far more sense to encapsulate your sshfs command inside a script file and either have it autoloaded with your desktop manager or manually loaded when needed from a terminal.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOne thing to watch out for, is saving files to the mountpoint when the remote storage is not actually mounted, i.e., you save to a default path under a mountpoint you expect to be mounted and is not, so all the sudden you have files in a folder that is supposed to be empty. To remount the remote storage, you have to delete/move the paths created at your designated mountpoint, to leave a pristeen, empty folder again.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWeihenstephaner Vitus - The label says it\'s a Weizenbock, so we know its a strong, wheat based lager\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nIBU 17 ABV 7.7%\r\n

                                                        ',131,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','sshfs, shell commands',0,0,1), (1947,'2016-01-19','ocenaudio ',691,'ocenaudio is a cross-platform, easy to use, fast and functional audio editor.','

                                                        \r\nocenaudio is a cross-platform, easy to use, fast and functional audio editor. It is the ideal software for people who need to edit and analyze audio files without complications. ocenaudio also has powerful features that will please more advanced users.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nocenaudio supports VST (Virtual Studio Technology) plugins, giving its users access to numerous effects. Like the native effects, VST effects can use real-time preview to aide configuration.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        LOSTNBRONX

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.cavalcadeaudio.com\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OCENAUDIO

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThere\'s not much documentation out there for Ocenaudio. Here are a couple links to articles that might help:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',107,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','audio editor,ocenaudio,VST',0,0,1), (1955,'2016-01-29','Install Open Street Map on a Garmin 60CX',1238,'David Whitman installs an Open Street Map of Hawaii on a Garmin 60CX. Yipee for Free.','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. First go to this site: https://garmin.openstreetmap.nl/\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Then select your map type\r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Select and download the predefined area or tiles you want. You can download it directly or have the web page build it for you by entering your email address and pushing the button BUILD MY MAP.\r\n
                                                          \r\na) If you choose the email option then you get an email that the map is being built and another (later on) that the map is ready.\r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Unzip the file\r\n
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Rename the downloaded map to gmapsupp.img \r\n
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Save your old map (that\'s on your device) entitled to a different name and then backup\r\n
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Put the map you unzipped and renamed in its place and make sure it is renamed to \'gmapsupp.img\' (omit the single quotes I have used in these show notes)\r\n
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Use your device and thank OSM\r\n
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nReasons why I like OSM for use on my Garmin 60CX and Garmin E-trex Vista\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOSM maps have more data for my area than the Garmin supplied map World Wide maps are available. See where Peter64, Ken Fallon or even 5150 lives. It\'s cheaper than buying a commercial map Trails, points and other improvements I put on OSM can be on my map I like the OSM concept and community.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThese older GPS\'s can be purchased for bargain prices. Apparently the suction cup receiver - Garmin Windshield devices can also use OSM maps with other free software.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Open Street Map, OSM, Navigation, Fun',0,0,1), (1948,'2016-01-20','Check Your Spelling in Vim',699,'Frank summarizes how to use spellcheck in VIM','

                                                        \r\nFrank Bell describes how to check your spelling in the Vim editor and to create\r\nyour own wordlist.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFrank\'s ~/.vimrc file:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nset ruler laststatus=2 number title hlsearch\r\nsyntax on\r\nset textwidth=80\r\nset spell spelllang=en_us\r\nset spellfile=$HOME/.Vim/spell/en.utf-8.add\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Illustrations:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nText file in Vim with spellcheck enabled:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\"A\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nVim \"choose the right word\" list:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',195,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','Vim,spellcheck',0,0,1), (1957,'2016-02-02','FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group B and C',7735,'CAcert DRLM Gluster oVirt OpenVZ FSFE ReactOS BAREOS Debian PostgreSQL OpenMandriva Mageia Gentoo ','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        CAcert

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nCAcert.org is a community driven Certificate Authority that issues certificates to the public at large for free. CAcert\'s goal is to promote awareness and education on computer security through the use of encryption, specifically with the X.509 family of standards. We have compiled a document base (Wiki) that has helpful hints and tips on setting up encryption with common software, and general information about Public Key Infrastructures (PKI). CAcert Inc. is a non-profit association, incorporated in New South Wales, Australia.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Reinhard Mutz Organisation Assurer

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        DRLM

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDRLM (Disaster Recovery Linux Manager). DRLM is a Centralized Management Open Source solution for small-to-large Disaster Recovery implementations using ReaR. Is an easy-to-use software to manage your growing ReaR infrastructure. Is written in the bash language (like ReaR) and offers all needed tools to efficiently manage your GNU/Linux disaster recovery backups, reducing Disaster Recovery management costs. ReaR is great solution, but when we’re dealing with hundreds of systems, could be complex to manage well all ReaR deployments.\r\n
                                                        \r\nWith DRLM you can, easily and centrally, deploy and manage ReaR installations for all your GNU/Linux systems in your DataCenter(s). DRLM is able to manage all required services (TFTP, DHCP-PXE, NFS, …) with no need of manual services configuration. Only with few easy commands, the users will be able to create, modify and delete ReaR clients and networks, providing an easy way to boot and recover your GNU/Linux systems through network with ReaR. Furthermore DRLM acts as a central scheduling system for all ReaR installations. Is able to start rear backups remotely and store the rescue-boot/backup in DR images easily managed by DRLM.\r\n
                                                        \r\nYou can easily enable or disable the last or any previous backups to restore any client with a single command line. Currently DRLM supports PXE and NETFS(nfs) OUTPUT/BACKUP methods of ReaR, but the Development of DRLM non stops here, we are working on new 2.0 version with new features to improve performance, usability and more ReaR methods, in order to become, together with ReaR, the reference when talking about Disaster Recovery of GNU/Linux systems.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ruben Carbonell Perez

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Gluster

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGlusterFS is a scalable network filesystem. Using common off-the-shelf hardware, you can create large, distributed storage solutions for media streaming, data analysis, and other data- and bandwidth-intensive tasks. GlusterFS is free and open source software.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Niels de Vos, and Humble Devassy Chirammal

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"\r\n\"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        oVirt

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\noVirt manages virtual machines, storage and virtualized networks. oVirt is a virtualization platform with an easy-to-use web interface. oVirt is powered by the Open Source you know - KVM on Linux.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Yaniv Kaul

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenVZ

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOpenVZ is a container-based virtualization for Linux. OpenVZ creates multiple secure, isolated Linux containers (otherwise known as VEs or VPSs) on a single physical server enabling better server utilization and ensuring that applications do not conflict. Each container performs and executes exactly like a stand-alone server; a container can be rebooted independently and have root access, users, IP addresses, memory, processes, files, applications, system libraries and configuration files.\r\n
                                                        \r\nOpenVZ is free open source software, available under GNU GPL.\r\n
                                                        \r\nOpenVZ is the basis of Virtuozzo, a virtualization solution offered by Virtuozzo company. Virtuozzo is optimized for hosters and offers hypervisor (VMs in addition to containers), distributed cloud storage, dedicated support, management tools, and easy installation.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Pavel Emelyanov

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

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                                                        FSFE

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                                                        \r\nFree Software Foundation Europe is a charity that empowers users to control technology. Software is deeply involved in all aspects of our lives; and it is important that this technology empowers rather than restricts us. Free Software gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt and share software. These rights help support other fundamental freedoms like freedom of speech, press and privacy.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Matthias Kirschner

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                                                        ReactOS

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nReactOS® is a free open source operating system based on the best design principles found in the Windows NT® architecture (Windows versions such as Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows Server 2012 are built on Windows NT architecture). Written completely from scratch, ReactOS is not a Linux based system, and shares none of the UNIX architecture. The main goal of the ReactOS® project is to provide an operating system which is binary compatible with Windows. This will allow your Windows® applications and drivers to run as they would on your Windows system. Additionally, the look and feel of the Windows operating system is used, such that people accustomed to the familiar user interface of Windows® would find using ReactOS straightforward. The ultimate goal of ReactOS® is to allow you to use it as alternative to Windows® without the need to change software you are used to.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Hermès Bélusca-Maïto

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                                                        \"headshot\"

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                                                        BAREOS - Backup Archiving Recovery Open Sourced

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nBareos is a 100% open source fork of the backup project from bacula.org. The fork is in development since late 2010, it has a lot of new features. The source has been published on github, licensed AGPLv3.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Daniel Neuberger

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                                                        Debian

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                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system that we have created is called Debian. An operating system is the set of basic programs and utilities that make your computer run. At the core of an operating system is the kernel. The kernel is the most fundamental program on the computer and does all the basic housekeeping and lets you start other programs. Debian systems currently use the Linux kernel or the FreeBSD kernel. Linux is a piece of software started by Linus Torvalds and supported by thousands of programmers worldwide. FreeBSD is an operating system including a kernel and other software.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Sebastiaan Couwenberg

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                                                        PostgreSQL

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPostgreSQL is a powerful, open source object-relational database system. It has more than 15 years of active development and a proven architecture that has earned it a strong reputation for reliability, data integrity, and correctness. It runs on all major operating systems, including Linux, UNIX (AIX, BSD, HP-UX, SGI IRIX, Mac OS X, Solaris, Tru64), and Windows. It is fully ACID compliant, has full support for foreign keys, joins, views, triggers, and stored procedures (in multiple languages). It includes most SQL:2008 data types, including INTEGER, NUMERIC, BOOLEAN, CHAR, VARCHAR, DATE, INTERVAL, and TIMESTAMP. It also supports storage of binary large objects, including pictures, sounds, or video. It has native programming interfaces for C/C++, Java, .Net, Perl, Python, Ruby, Tcl, ODBC, among others, and exceptional documentation.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Christoph Berg

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                                                        OpenMandriva

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                                                        \r\n

                                                        We are a 100% community-driven association that believes in the values of free software & collaboration. We fight to protect these values and promote solutions anyone can use, change and distribute. OpenMandriva believes in creating, improving, promoting and distributing free software in general, and its projects in particular. We also crave for promoting free exchange of knowledge and equality of opportunity in software access and development, as well as in education, science and research. Our products are developed with passion by the community and aim to be flexible in use by all.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenMandriva represents the paradigm: from community to community, with passion, fun and dedication.

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                                                        Listen to the interview with Colin Close, President OpenMandriva

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                                                        Mageia

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMageia is a GNU/Linux-based, Free Software operating system. It is a community project, supported by a nonprofit organisation of elected contributors. Our mission: to build great tools for people.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Chris Denice (eatdirt)

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                                                        Gentoo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGentoo is a free operating system based on either Linux or FreeBSD that can be automatically optimized and customized for just about any application or need. \r\nExtreme configurability, performance and a top-notch user and developer community are all hallmarks of the Gentoo experience.\r\n
                                                        \r\nThanks to a technology called Portage, Gentoo can become an ideal secure server, development workstation, professional desktop, gaming system, embedded solution or something else—whatever you need it to be. Because of its near-unlimited adaptability, we call Gentoo a metadistribution.\r\n
                                                        \r\nOf course, Gentoo is more than just the software it provides. It is a community built around a distribution which is driven by more than 300 developers and thousands of users. The distribution project provides the means for the users to enjoy Gentoo: documentation, infrastructure, release engineering, software porting, quality assurance, security followup, hardening and more.\r\n
                                                        \r\nTo advise on and help with Gentoo\'s global development, a 7-member council is elected on a yearly basis which decides on global issues, policies and advancements in the Gentoo project.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Kristian Fiskerstrand

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                                                        \"headshot\"

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                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM, CAcert, DRLM, Gluster, oVirt, OpenVZ, FSFE, ReactOS, BAREOS, Debian, PostgreSQL, OpenMandriva, Mageia, Gentoo',0,0,1), (1958,'2016-02-03','FOSDEM 2016 K building level 1 Group A',6665,'Fedora, OpenSuse, illumos, ownCloud, Enlightenment, Tizen, Kolab, KDE, LibreOffice','

                                                        Table of Contents

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                                                        Fedora

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                                                        \"Logo\"

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                                                        \r\nThe Fedora Project is a partnership of free software community members from around the globe. The Fedora Project builds open source software communities and produces a Linux distribution called \"Fedora.\" The Fedora Project\'s mission is to lead the advancement of free and open source software and content as a collaborative community.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jiří Eischmann

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                                                        OpenSuse

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\nopenSUSE, formerly openSUSE Leap 42.1 and openSUSE Tumbleweed, is a international Linux project with different distributions sponsored by SUSE Linux GmbH and other companies. It is widely used throughout the world, particularly in Germany. The focus of its development is creating usable open-source tools for software developers and system administrators, while providing user-friendly desktops, and a feature-rich server environment.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Sarah Julia Kriesch

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                                                        illumos

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                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThis is the home of the illumos project, the open source fork of Sun\'s OpenSolaris. Launched in 2010, the project enjoys financial and technical support from several key companies which rely on the illumos kernel as the technological foundation for their own products, as well as the backing of a growing developer community.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Dan McDonald

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                                                        ownCloud

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAccess, Sync and Share your data, under your control! ownCloud provides access to your data through a web interface or WebDAV while providing a platform to view, sync and share across devices easily, all under your control. ownCloud\'s open architecture is extensible via a simple but powerful API for applications and plugins and works with any storage.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jos Poortvliet, Community Manager/ Chief Geek Herder at ownCloud

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                                                        Enlightenment

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe original reason Enlightenment exists - The Window Manager. From here everything else spawned. This is really the flagship product, closely followed by EFL itself. The window manager is a lean, fast, modular and very extensible window manager for X11 and Linux. It is classed as a “desktop shell” providing the things you need to operate your desktop (or laptop), but is not a whole application suite. This covers launching applications, managing their windows and doing other system tasks like suspending, reboots, managing files etc.\r\n
                                                        \r\nWe are moving towards Wayland as the base display system where Enlightenment is being worked on to become a full Wayland compositor on its own. This of course takes time and has its rough edges along the way, but we are not standing still, and one day will leave X11 behind.\r\n
                                                        \r\nOf course Enlightenment is built on top of EFL, using the libraries we wrote for it to do its UI as well as to run the entire compositor itself. This means that any improvements to EFL turn up in the compositor as well.\r\n
                                                        \r\nEnlightenment also is the Window Manager and Compositor for Tizen due in part to its efficiency and feature-set.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Philippe Caseiro

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                                                        Tizen

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                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTizen is an open and flexible operating system built from the ground up to address the needs of all stakeholders of the mobile and connected device ecosystem, including device manufacturers, mobile operators, application developers and independent software vendors (ISVs). Tizen is developed by a community of developers, under open source governance, and is open to all members who wish to participate.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Pawel Wieczorek

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                                                        Kolab

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Kolab Groupware Solution offers Personal Information Management for deployments of any size. It runs on a Rasberry Pi and in clouds spread over multiple data centres. Kolab provides a secure, scalable and reliable collaboration server. Since it is Free Software, it is not only used by large companies and organisation, but also by many individuals who care about being in control of their personal information.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nKolab is a free and open source groupware suite. It consists of the Kolab server and a wide variety of Kolab clients, including KDE PIM-Suite Kontact, Horde Webfrontend, Mozilla Thunderbird and Mozilla Lightning with SyncKolab extension and Microsoft Outlook with proprietary Kolab-Connector PlugIns.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Aaron Seigo

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                                                        KDE

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe KDE Community is an international technology team dedicated to creating a free and user-friendly computing experience, offering an advanced graphical desktop, a wide variety of applications for communication, work, education and entertainment and a platform to easily build new applications upon. We have a strong focus on finding innovative solutions to old and new problems, creating a vibrant atmosphere open for experimentation.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jonathan Riddell

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                                                        LibreOffice

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLibreOffice is the most widely used free open source office software. It is a community-driven project of The Document Foundation. LibreOffice is developed by professionals and by users, just like you, who believe in the principles of free software and in sharing their work with the world in a non-restrictive way. At the core of these principles is the promise of better-quality, highly-reliable and secure software that gives you greater flexibility at zero cost and no end-user lock-in. LibreOffice works natively with the Open Document Format, but also brings you support for by far the most file types for office-documents. It comes with support for over 80 languages and with a whole amount of other unique features to work with your texts, spreadsheets, presentations, drawings and data.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Italo Vignoli, Director Marketing and Communications

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                                                        \"headshot\"

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                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM, Fedora, OpenSuse, illumos, ownCloud, Enlightenment, Tizen, Kolab, KDE, LibreOffice',0,0,1), (1959,'2016-02-04','FOSDEM 2016 K building level 2',6241,'Mozilla,Apache,Jenkins,x doku tiki and MediaWiki,LFS,Perl,Barghest,Coala,Google SOC,Ultimaker','

                                                        Table of Contents

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                                                        Mozilla

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAt Mozilla, we’re a global community of technologists, thinkers and builders working together to keep the Internet alive and accessible, so people worldwide can be informed contributors and creators of the Web. We believe this act of human collaboration across an open platform is essential to individual growth and our collective future.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nMozilla is a free-software community, created in 1998 by members of Netscape. The Mozilla community uses, develops, spreads and supports Mozilla products, thereby promoting exclusively free software and open standards, with only minor exceptions. The community is supported institutionally by the Mozilla Foundation and its tax-paying subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation.\r\n
                                                        \r\nMozilla produces many products such as the Firefox web browser, Thunderbird e-mail client, Firefox Mobile web browser, Firefox OS mobile operating system, Bugzilla bug tracking system and other projects.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Francisco Picolini, Community Events Manager

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                                                        Apache Software Foundation

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe mission of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) is to provide software for the public good. We do this by providing services and support for many like-minded software project communities of individuals who choose to join the ASF.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Lars Eilebrecht

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                                                        Jenkins

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nIn a nutshell, Jenkins is the leading open source automation server. Built with Java, it provides hundreds of plugins to support building, testing, deploying and automation for virtually any project. \r\n
                                                        \r\nJenkins is an award-winning, cross-platform, continuous integration and continuous delivery application that increases your productivity. Use Jenkins to build and test your software projects continuously making it easier for developers to integrate changes to the project, and making it easier for users to obtain a fresh build. It also allows you to continuously deliver your software by providing powerful ways to define your build pipelines and integrating with a large number of testing and deployment technologies.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Kohsuke Kawaguchi

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                                                        XWiki

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nXWiki Enterprise is a professional wiki with enterprise features such as Blog, strong rights management, LDAP authentication, PDF export, full skining and more. It also includes an advanced Form and scripting engine making it a development environment for data-based applications. It has powerful extensibility features such as scripting in pages, plugins and a highly modular architecture.\r\n
                                                        \r\nSee the full feature list for more: https://enterprise.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Main/Features.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Anca Luca

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                                                        DokuWiki

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDokuWiki is a simple to use and highly versatile Open Source wiki software that doesn\'t require a database. It is loved by users for its clean and readable syntax. The ease of maintenance, backup and integration makes it an administrator\'s favorite. Built in access controls and authentication connectors make DokuWiki especially useful in the enterprise context and the large number of plugins contributed by its vibrant community allow for a broad range of use cases beyond a traditional wiki.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Michael Hamann

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                                                        Tiki

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTiki is the Free / Libre / Open Source Web Application Platform with the most built-in features. Whatever feature you can imagine running in a browser window, chances are Tiki does it.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nTiki Wiki CMS Groupware or simply Tiki, originally known as TikiWiki, is a free and open source Wiki-based content management system and online office suite written primarily in PHP and distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) license. In addition to enabling websites and portals on the internet and on intranets and extranets, Tiki contains a number of collaboration features allowing it to operate as a Geospatial Content Management System (GeoCMS) and Groupware web application.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jean-Marc Libs

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                                                        MediaWiki

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit charitable organization dedicated to encouraging the growth, development and distribution of free, multilingual, educational content, and to providing the full content of these wiki-based projects to the public free of charge. The Wikimedia Foundation operates some of the largest collaboratively edited reference projects in the world, including Wikipedia, a top-ten internet property.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Marius Hoch

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                                                        Linux from scratch

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLinux From Scratch (LFS) is a type of a Linux installation and the name of a book written by Gerard Beekmans, among others. The book gives readers instructions on how to build a Linux system from source. The book is available freely from the Linux From Scratch site and is currently in version 7.8.\r\n
                                                        \r\nLinux From Scratch is a way to install a working Linux system by building all components of it manually. This is, naturally, a longer process than installing a pre-compiled Linux distribution. According to the Linux From Scratch site, the advantages to this method are a compact, flexible and secure system and a greater understanding of the internal workings of the Linux-based operating systems.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jean-Philippe Mengual

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                                                        Perl

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPowerful, stable, mature, portable\r\n
                                                        \r\nPerl 5 is a highly capable, feature-rich programming language with over 27 years of development. Perl 5 runs on over 100 platforms from portables to mainframes and is suitable for both rapid prototyping and large scale development projects.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\"Perl\" is a family of languages, \"Perl 6\" is part of the family, but it is a separate language which has its own development team. Its existence has no significant impact on the continuing development of \"Perl 5\".\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Wendy G.A. van Dijk, Mark \"shadowcat\" Keating, and Curtis \"Ovid\" Poe

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                                                        \"headshot\"\r\n\"headshot\"\r\n\"headshot\"

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                                                        Barghest

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                                                        Listen to the interview with Jean-Baptiste Laurent and Kevin Gruber

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                                                        Coala

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nA Language Independent Code Analysis Application. coala is an application that makes it very easy, writing analysis for any programming language or even arbitrary textual data. It is a useful abstraction that provides a convenient user interface and takes away a lot of common tasks from the algorithm developer, effectively making bare research available for production use.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Lasse Schuirmann

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                                                        Google Summer of Code

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                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Google Summer of Code (GSoC) is an international annual program, first held from May to August 2005, in which Google awards stipends (of US$5,500, as of 2015) to all students who successfully complete a requested free and open-source software coding project during the summer. The program is open to students aged 18 or over – the closely related Google Code-In is intended for students under the age of 18.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Mary Radomile

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                                                        Ultimaker

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                                                        \"Logo\"

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                                                        \r\nWe wanted everyone to be able to enjoy the experience of making. Whether it was a cat dressed as an astronaut or a mechanical masterpiece. We set it as our goal to enable you to make those things. So we built a pioneering device that everyone could use and enjoy. We made it open source so everyone really could pitch in. And we started to grow.\r\n
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                                                        Listen to the interview with Olliver Schinagl

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                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM, Mozilla, Apache, Jenkins, xwiki, dokuwiki, tikiwiki, MediaWiki, Linux from scratch, Perl, Barghest, Coala, Google Summer of Code, Ultimaker',0,0,1), (1960,'2016-02-05','FOSDEM 2016 AW Building and more',6952,'FreeBSD,Matrix,Brainduino,Butterknife,pyhurdy,Coreboot,OpenEmbedded, PicoTCP,PTXdist,JavaCardPro','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        FreeBSD Foundation

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe FreeBSD Foundation is a 501(c)(3), US based, non-profit organization dedicated to supporting and building the FreeBSD Project and community worldwide. The Foundation gratefully accepts donations from individuals and businesses, using them to fund and manage projects, sponsor FreeBSD events, Developer Summits and provide travel grants to FreeBSD developers.\r\n
                                                        \r\nIn addition, the Foundation represents the FreeBSD Project in executing contracts, license agreements, copyrights, trademarks, and other legal arrangements which require a recognized legal entity. The FreeBSD Foundation is entirely supported by donations.\r\n<\r\nThe FreeBSD Foundation will support both the development and the popularization of FreeBSD, the world\'s best open source operating system.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ed Maste, Director of Project Development

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Matrix

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMatrix is an open standard for decentralised persistent communication over IP. It provides simple HTTP APIs and open source reference implementations for securely distributing and persisting JSON over an open federation of servers. Matrix can be used for decentralised group chat, WebRTC signaling, Internet of Things data transfer, and anywhere you need a common data fabric to link together fragmented silos of communication. Our focus is on simplicity and security.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Oddvar Lovaas

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Brainduino Open Source Brain Computer Interface

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nIn the recent years, affordable Brain-Computer Interfaces are becoming more accessible for consumers. Applications range from controlling computers / machines, biofeedback and Quantified Self. At first sight, the current generation of commercial devices seem to be decent in their functionality, and various use cases are suggested. However, neurophysiological signal quality, as well as limitations of software and hardware hackability are among the greatest issues and hurdles towards advancement in user experience. This is why we started to work on Brain-Duino, an open-source brainwave amplifier shield for the Arduino and other microcontrollers. Brain-Duino is a high quality, low noise and affordable EEG / BCI for hackers, makers, researchers, artists and other enthusiasts. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Konrad Willi Döring

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Butterknife

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nButterknife is the last missing piece of the puzzle that makes Linux-based desktop OS deployment a breeze. Butterknife complements your Puppet or Salt infrastructure and reduces the time you spend setting up Linux-based desktop machines. Lauri developed Butterknife as part of his MSc thesis at KTH while preparing for deployment of 4000+ dual-boot desktops and laptops of Tallinn Education Board. Butterknife is released under MIT license, feel free to share and improve.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Lauri Võsandi

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        pyhurdy meta-hurdy yocto project open embedded

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nEine Kliene Eingebettete Musik\r\n
                                                        \r\n(A little embedded music)\r\n
                                                        \r\nReplicating 12th Century Musical Instruments Using Embedded Linux\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Beth \'pidge\' Flanagan

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Coreboot and Flashrom

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ncoreboot is an extended firmware platform for delivering lightning fast and ultra secure boot experience on modern computers and embedded systems. As an Open Source project it provides auditability and helps regaining control over technology.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nflashrom is a utility for identifying, reading, writing, verifying and erasing flash chips. It is designed to flash BIOS/EFI/coreboot/firmware/optionROM images on mainboards, network/graphics/storage controller cards, and various other programmer devices.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Carl-Daniel Hailfinger

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        OpenEmbedded

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWelcome to OpenEmbedded, the build framework for embedded Linux. OpenEmbedded offers a best-in-class cross-compile environment. It allows developers to create a complete Linux Distribution for embedded systems.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Florian Boor

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        PicoTCP

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\npicoTCP is the answer for a size, speed and feature conscious open source TCP/IP stack for embedded devices.\r\n
                                                        \r\nEach component of the stack is deployed in a separate module, allowing the user to select at compile time what needs to be included for any specific platform. This allows you to free up memory and resources, which are often mission-critical for a project.\r\n
                                                        \r\nThe provided API\'s are small, well documented and give you access to the library facilities, both from the applications and from the device drivers. The library facilitates the integration with the surroundings and minimizes the time needed to combine the stack with existing code. The support required to port to a new architecture is reduced to a set of macros defined in a header file specific for the platform.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Toon Peters, Embedded Software Engineer at Intelligent Systems Belux by Altran

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        PTXdist and Barebox

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"\"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWhat is the best way to build a Linux distribution for an embedded system in a reproducible way, caring about long term maintenance and small footprint? PTXdist is a GPL licensed build system for userlands, started by Pengutronix. It uses the Kconfig configuration system from the Linux kernel. Although PTXdist (without patches) still fits on one disc, a whole root filesystem can be built as easy as \"ptxdist go\".\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nbarebox is a bootloader designed for embedded systems. It runs on a variety of architectures including x86, ARM, MIPS, PowerPC and others. barebox aims to be a versatile and flexible bootloader, not only for booting embedded Linux systems, but also for initial hardware bringup and development. barebox is highly configurable to be suitable as a full-featured development binary as well as for lean production systems. Just like busybox is the Swiss Army Knife for embedded Linux, barebox is the Swiss Army Knife for bare metal, hence the name.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Alexander Aring

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        JavaCard Pro

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"photo\"

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nJava Card OpenPlatform (JCOP) is a smart card operating system for the Java Card platform developed by IBM Zürich Research Laboratory. On 31 January 2006 the development and support responsibilities transferred to the IBM Smart Card Technology team in Böblingen, Germany. Since July 2007 support and development activities for the JCOP operating system on NXP / Philips silicon are serviced by NXP Semiconductors.\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Martin Paljak

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"headshot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Knitting

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Logo\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Siobhån Cottell

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Music By Fenster

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nTrack name : Free Software Song\r\nPerformer : Fenster\r\nRecorded date : 2002\r\nCopyright : Copyright (C) 2002, \r\nFenster LLC. Verbatim copying of this entire recording is permitted in any medium, \r\nprovided this notice is preserved. \r\nPerformers: \r\nPaul Robinson (vocals), \r\nRoman Kravec (guitar), \r\nEd D\'Angelo (bass), \r\nDave Newman (drums), \r\nBrian Yarbrough (trumpet), \r\nTony Moore (trumpet). \r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM, FreeBSD, Matrix, Brainduino, Butterknife, pyhurdy, Coreboot, OpenEmbedded, PicoTCP, PTXdist, JavaCardPro, Knitting',0,0,1), (1950,'2016-01-22','Kdenlive Part 2: Advanced Editing Technique',1057,'We discuss advanced editing techniques and review the tools you\'ll be using as a video editor.','

                                                        \r\nHello again HPR listeners this is Geddes back with Part 2 in the series covering the video editing application KdenLive.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nLast time in part one we looked at Installing, First launch, Your workspace, Importing footage, Three-point editing, and lastly The basic tools.
                                                        \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1925\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis time round we’ll be looking at advanced editing technique and Part 2 covers the following topics: \r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • A Brief History of the Editing Workflow
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Editing in the Timeline,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Audio Splits and Grouping Clips,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Basic Navigation in the Timeline,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Notes on Video Formats.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHere’s the link to the original article.
                                                        \r\nhttps://opensource.com/life/11/11/advanced-editing-kdenlive\r\n

                                                        ',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','video editing,Kdenlive',0,0,1), (1952,'2016-01-26','Time now Ladies and Gents',1860,'How to get the total duration of a lot of media files.','

                                                        In the show \"hpr1943 :: HPR AudioBook Club 11.5 - Interview with David Collins-Rivera\" pokey asked if there was a way to get the duration for media. The following three options springs to mind immediately.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first option is fix_tags and was written by our own Dave Morriss.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ date --utc --date=\"@$(echo $(fix_tags *mp3 *ogg 2>/dev/null | \\\r\nawk -F \'\\\\(|\\\\)\' \'/length/ {print $2}\' | \\\r\nsed \'s/ sec//g\' ) | \\\r\nsed \'s/ /+/g\' | bc )\"  +\"%T\"\r\n03:09:49\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next up is mediainfo which provides a lot of information on media files.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ date -ud @$(echo $(mediainfo --full --Output=XML *mp3 *ogg | \\\r\nxmlstarlet sel -T -t -m \"Mediainfo/File/track[@type=\'Audio\']/Duration[1]\" -v \".\" -n - | \\\r\nsed \'s/.\\{3\\}$//\') | \\\r\nsed \'s/ /+/g\' | bc)  +\"%T\"\r\n03:09:49\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The last option is to use ffprobe from the ffmpeg team.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ date -ud @$(echo $(for i in *mp3 *ogg;\\\r\ndo  \\date -ud 1970-01-01T$(ffprobe -i $i 2>&1 | \\\r\ngrep Duration | awk \'{print $2}\'| \\\r\nsed \'s/,//g\' ) +%s;done) | \\\r\nsed \'s/ /+/g\' | bc)  +\"%T\"\r\n03:09:49\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        For complete shownote please visit https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1952.html

                                                        \r\n',30,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','fix_tags,ffprobe,ffmpeg,bc,sed,awk,grep,time,iso8601,date,mediainfo,xmlstarlet',0,0,1), (1965,'2016-02-12','Adding SQLite as a datasource to SQLeo',601,'Using the graphical query builders from SQLeo with SQLite','

                                                        I have been looking for a tool that will graphically and programmatically track identifiers as they pass through systems. I could have done this in Inkscape after following the excellent tutorials on https://screencasters.heathenx.org/, however I also wanted to be able to describe the relationships programmatically.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This got me to thinking about graphical query builders for databases. The idea is to show each system as a table block and then draw lines between them to show how \"Field_X\" in \"System_A\" will map to \"Field_Y\" in \"System_B\". Many of the proprietary and some free database solutions allow this type of view. However I also want to easily package the entire thing up, so that someone else could access it without needing to pay for or install any specialized software. That limited the choice of database to SQLite, which is small, supported on many platforms and is released into the Public Domain.\r\n

                                                        SQLite is an in-process library that implements a self-contained, serverless, zero-configuration, transactional SQL database engine. The code for SQLite is in the public domain and is thus free for use for any purpose, commercial or private. SQLite is the most widely deployed database in the world with more applications than we can count, including several high-profile projects.
                                                        \r\nPlease follow the instructions on the SQLite site for information on how you can install it on your system. For me on Fedora it\'s simple to install via dnf/yum. You might also want to install some GUI managers if that\'s your thing.\r\n
                                                        dnf install sqlite sqlitebrowser sqliteman\r\n
                                                        \r\nI created a small database for demonstration purposes, consisting of two tables and one field in each.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next step is to download SQLeo Visual Query Builder which has support for a graphical query builder.\r\n

                                                        A powerful SQL tool to transform or reverse complex queries (generated by OBIEE, Microstrategy, Cognos, Hyperion, Pentaho ...) into diagrams to ease visualization and analysis. A graphical query builder that permits to create complex SQL queries easily. The GUI with multi-connections supports virtually all JDBC drivers, including ODBC bridge, Oracle, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Firebird, HSQLDB, H2, CsvJdbc, SQLite. And top of that, everything is open-source!
                                                        \r\nSQLeo is a Java Tool and there is a limited version available on the web site which is limited to 3 tables per graph and 100 rows. Now as the program is released under the GPLv2.0, you could download the code and remove the restrictions. You can also support the project to the tune of €10 and you will get the full version ready to rock.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Unzip the file and enter the newly created directory, and run the program as follows:\r\n

                                                        java -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -jar SQLeoVQB.jar\r\n
                                                        \r\nOne slightly confusing thing, and the reason for this post, is that I could not find support for SQLite listed in the list of databases to connect to. A quick search on the support forum and I found the question \"Connection to SQLite DB\". I found the answer a bit cryptic until I read the manual related to JDBC Drivers, which told me how to add the sqlite library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        SQLeo uses a standard Java sqlite library that is released under the Apache Software License, Version 2.0. You can download it from the SQLite JDBC MVNRepository and save it into the same directory as SQLeo.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Right Click in the Metadata explorer window and select new driver.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For step by step instructions please see https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1965.html

                                                        \r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','SQLite, JDBC, SQLeo',0,0,1), (1961,'2016-02-08','2015-2016 HPR New Years Show Episode 1',9946,'Education, Podcasts, Trains and Bikes','

                                                        HPR NEW YEARS EVE SHOW EPISODE: 1

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/hon30/GEDC0157.JPG

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/hon30/GEDC0158.JPG Standard gauge N scale:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/GEDC1995.JPG

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/GEDC0145.JPG

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/GEDC0137.JPG

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/GEDC0013.JPG

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/GEDC0010.JPG 3D printed N scale:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/3d_printed_lima_0.jpg

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://photos.jdulaney.com/train/models/n/3d_printed_lima_1.jpg

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2016',0,0,1), (1962,'2016-02-09','2015-2016 HPR New Years Show Episode 2',12011,'distros, Wearable, distros, RIP Ian Murdock, Chromebooks, Samsung, WW1, Libre Planet, TTS, and more','

                                                        HPR NEW YEARS EVE SHOW EPISODE: 2

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2016',0,0,1), (1963,'2016-02-10','2015-2016 HPR New Years Show Episode 3',10762,'Dyson Sphere, Star Wars, spammers, Tizen, Kevie, TV, Security, Single board PC\'s in general','

                                                        HPR NEW YEARS EVE SHOW EPISODE: 3

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2016',0,0,1), (1964,'2016-02-11','2015-2016 HPR New Years Show Episode 4',11108,'Cheap computers, ARM, Audio Book Club, Lights, Living, Orlando, Etching, Pronunciation, Pranks','

                                                        HPR NEW YEARS EVE SHOW EPISODE: 4

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Can you buy a NEW CHEAP computer that can run GNU Linux?

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Is ARM the future

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The HPR audio book club

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • After hours fun at Linux conferences

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Christmas light displays

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Southern living and booze

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Visit Orlando

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fun with etching

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pronunciation of town names

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pranks

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Naval warfare

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Some of TwoD\'s background story

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Scanning photos and kids\' art

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Strange Steam badge: https://gj.reddit.com/r/\'/comments/3yyju8/how_to_get_the_red_herring_steam_badge_holiday/

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Happy 2016 to everyone

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','New Year,2016',0,0,1), (1954,'2016-01-28','Grandpa Shows Us How to Turn Custom Pens',4014,'Live action audio of my dad teaching us how to turn pens on a mini lathe','

                                                        Grandpa Shows Us How to Turn Custom Pens on a Lathe

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Warning: this show is kind of long, even though I cut out about half of the original raw audio. While my parents were visiting during the holidays, my dad taught me, the wife, and the kids how to turn pens on his mini lathe. We made a few mechanical pencils, a pen and I also made a giant workshop pencil. Click on the image below to look at the gallery of photos on Flickr.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Pen

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        [my wife\'s lovely mechanical pencil]

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, pens, woodworking, lathe, writing instruments',0,0,1), (1953,'2016-01-27','An Interview with David Willson of the Software Freedom School',3286,'Starting with an out take, David Whitman talks to David Willson about Software Freedom School.','

                                                        David Whitman interviews David Willson of Software Freedom School

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',209,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Learning, Linux, School, Freedom, SFS, Software Freedom',0,0,1), (1966,'2016-02-15','Whats in my bag',420,'I talk about what I have in my bag today','

                                                        I describe the contents of my timbuk2 messenger bag today

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Sony Vaio VPCEB42FM 6 pounds weight
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Lenovo x201 3 lbs
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. iPad 3
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Galaxy Tab 3 lite
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. charging cable for android phone
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. charging cable for iPad 3
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Usb wall adapter to use with either iPad 3 or phone
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Ipod classic 6
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. 6 usb drives ranging in size from 4 gb to 26 gb but mostly 8 or 16\'s
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. screen cleaning cloth
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. mini phillips head screwdriver
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. Charging cable for laptop (has multiple heads that can be switched around to use for a variety of laptops)
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. One thing that I forgot is to mention is a usb mouse.
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also I got the bag in January 2014

                                                        ',297,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','timbuk2 bag,x201,sony vaio,laptops',0,0,1), (1967,'2016-02-16','How I saw the Linux Light at the end of the Windows tunnel',859,'My personal story of discovery of Linux','

                                                        \r\nJust a regular story of a Linux power user, or how I loved computers, then I hated computers, then I loved computers again, and then I moved to a love/hate kind of thing...\r\n

                                                        ',323,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Beginners, Computing history, Gaming',0,0,1), (1968,'2016-02-17','Advanced Terminal Usage: byobu',196,'Use this screen multiplexer wrapper to optimize your usage of the terminal, locally, and abroad.','

                                                        \r\nLong time listener, first time caller, here! My name is Jon Doe, but you can call me Jon.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nToday, I am going to be talking about a more advanced usage of the terminal in linux. This basic tutorial assumes that you have a basic knowledge of getting to the terminal, and installing software, so we can skip that, and make my job easier.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFirst, you have software that you may want to run, and keep running, even if we disconnect, or even if we walk to another machine. Classically, there was \'screen\' for this, but times change, and needs advance. My current favorite is byobu, a wrapper for the screen or tmux terminal multiplexers, tmux by default, now, which is a change since featured on episode 770 of HPR.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTo run byobu, simply type it\'s name at the terminal, and watch it\'s magic. When we say it is a wrapper, this is in double context. It encapsulates the tmux or screen binary in script, and it provides some useful enhancements to the already awesome capabilities of a basic multiplexer, including a nice bar at the bottom, detailing the system stats, configurable to whatever stats you need to display.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA screen multiplexer is an application that allows the running of multiple terminals, and their applications, within a single remote or local window, allowing you to change tasks with relative ease, similar to a window manager in X, but with no mouse needed.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor a basic test, go ahead and hit F2, and you will get a second terminal, the textual task tray at the bottom indicating your current and available terminals. F3 and F4 allow you to cycle between tasks, and F2 spawns additional.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor those following along, go ahead and hit F6, you will drop back to a shell, with byobu running everything in the background, and you can exit the terminal, or run whatever else you need to, outside of byobu\'s control. Use the byobu command again to reconnect, note that your session has remained open, and all terminal sessions are available for you to peruse. Also note that you can open byobu again, as the same user, both remotely and locally, and keep all of your terminals going, even on multiple systems and screens, at the same time. You can even share the session with others, assuming their ability to login, and cross code, or monitor usage of their session, for educational purposes, or group coding.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA popular and useful feature of terminal windows is the ability to maintain a scroll back buffer, and using a multiplexer, ostensibly, destroys this ability on the graphical side, assuming you are using it in a graphical environment, keeping the text for itself. Fear not, good hacker, for the simple application of F7 will activate scroll back mode, and allow your cursor (or arrow) and page keys to scroll up and down the text buffer. Enter settles you back to the end, allowing quick access to whatever just happened in that specific task windows while you were away.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis has been an introduction to advanced terminal usage, brought to you by Jon Doe.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd for those NPR nerds out there, \"This is HPR, Hacker Public Radio\"\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://byobu.co/\r\n

                                                        ',324,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','byobu, bash, terminal, ssh, remote, linux',0,0,1), (1971,'2016-02-22','BlinkStick',1080,'The BlinkStick is a small USB device with an RGB LED which you can build yourself','

                                                        BlinkStick

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In late 2013 I noticed the local Edinburgh Hacklab were offering soldering courses building a BlinkStick. I offered to sign my son Tim up to the next course since he wanted to learn to solder. He couldn\'t afford the time at that point, but we agreed to buy some BlinkSticks to build at home.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode describes some of our experiences with building and using the device.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The version we bought and built was the v1.0 release, since that and the BlinkStick Pro were all that was available. The base version now available is v1.1, and there are several other products available from the manufacturer in addition to these. The company is called Agile Innovative Ltd, based in the UK.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1971/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','BlinkStick,electronics,soldering,RGB LED,Integrated circuit',0,0,1), (1969,'2016-02-18','Horrors of Spam (and the Greater Horror of filtering it)',917,'In this Episode we will cover the Horror that is spam, and the great horror of filtering it.','

                                                        \r\nSpam Filtering isn\'t magic. A lot of work goes into helping keep your inbox clean, but there is still more hosting providers could do.

                                                        \r\n',174,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Spam, Spam Filtering, Hosting Providers',0,0,1), (1972,'2016-02-23','How I got into Linux',1224,'My first podcast. Me rambling about how I got into Linux.','

                                                        \r\nI will apologize now for some of the rough sound. This was recorded on a very old Sony tape recorder (all I had at the time). Hopefully, the tape hiss will cover up some of my Kentucky accent. Or vice versa. Whatever. This is the saga of me. And Linux. \r\n

                                                        ',325,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','Sony tape recorder,RedHat Linux,Enlightenment E16,dial-up,Mandrake,Debian,Icepack Linux,Slackware,Linux Mint,CrunchBang,OpenBSD',0,0,1), (1977,'2016-03-01','What\'s In My Bag',914,'EDC/Gear I carry/use','

                                                        Links to the gear I mention -

                                                        \r\n',325,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','Velox,multi-tool,Pocket Reference,screwdriver,Thermos',0,0,1), (1970,'2016-02-19','How I got started with Linux',1665,'I talk at length about how I got started with Linux','

                                                        \r\nThis story begins at the beginning of 2010.  I was broke at the time so I was trying to find a free operating system. I needed something I could run on my PC’s at home. I had searched on the Internet, but found nothing useful for a long time. But one day  I was at Barnes and Noble and I saw a magazine for Linux. (While I had heard of linux before I never thought of it as something I would ever be able to use.) When I asked people who I knew were computer professionals, I was told it was for people that were experts, and difficult to use. I never heard anything positive about it. I am so amazed that I hadn’t came across it sooner.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When I read the magazine I became exposed to Ubuntu 9.10.  Karmic Koala. It sounded so good, as if it was exactly what I was looking for. As a result, I got very excited took it home, and to my surprise had such an easy time installing it to my PC that I decided to run it along with Windows XP as a dual boot system. All I did was put the live CD in the drive and the instructions were step by step you would have to be pretty slow to not get how to set things up.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since then I have been very satisfied with Ubuntu in general and I have been able to check out later versions of it such as 10.04 (Maverick Meerkat) and 10.10 Lucid Lynx. I am looking forward to 11.04 Natty Narwhal for how it integrates multi-touch even more than 10.04.  This experience just goes to show once again how I  manage to find the coolest stuff by accident.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I will keep you posted on how I learn and grow with the different distros available so keep posted.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Read more: https://computersight.com/operating-systems/windows/how-i-got-started-with-linux/#ixzz1aPlfhqoa\r\n

                                                        ',297,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux',0,0,1), (1973,'2016-02-24','Free/Libre/Vrije Software: The Goal and the Path',6929,'A presentation given by Richard Stallman as part of FOSDEM fringe.','

                                                        \r\nNOTE for mp3 subscribers: On the request of RMS, we are not distributing this show in mp3 format. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a live recording of the presentation given by Richard Stallman as part of FOSDEM fringe. It was recorded at Auditorium D0.03, Campus Etterbeek, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, 1050 Ixelles, Belgium on Jan 29, 2016. You may remember that pokey interviewed Richard Stallman in episode hpr1116 (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1116)\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe slides for the presentation are available at https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/RMS_Intro_to_FS_TEDx_Slideshow.odp\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nRichard Matthew Stallman (born March 16, 1953), often known by his initials, rms,[1] is a software freedom activist and computer programmer. He campaigns for software to be distributed in a manner such that its users receive the freedoms to use, study, distribute and modify that software. Software that ensures these freedoms is termed free software. Stallman launched the GNU Project, founded the Free Software Foundation, developed the GNU Compiler Collection and GNU Emacs, and wrote the GNU General Public License.\r\n
                                                        \r\nStallman launched the GNU Project in September 1983 to create a Unix-like computer operating system composed entirely of free software. With this, he also launched the free software movement. He has been the GNU project\'s lead architect and organizer, and developed a number of pieces of widely used GNU software including, among others, the GNU Compiler Collection, the GNU Debugger and the GNU Emacs text editor. In October 1985 he founded the Free Software Foundation.\r\n
                                                        \r\nStallman pioneered the concept of copyleft, which uses the principles of copyright law to preserve the right to use, modify and distribute free software, and is the main author of free software licenses which describe those terms, most notably the GNU General Public License (GPL), the most widely used free software license.\r\n
                                                        \r\nIn 1989 he co-founded the League for Programming Freedom. Since the mid-1990s, Stallman has spent most of his time advocating for free software, as well as campaigning against software patents, digital rights management, and other legal and technical systems which he sees as taking away users\' freedoms, including software license agreements, non-disclosure agreements, activation keys, dongles, copy restriction, proprietary formats and binary executables without source code.\r\n
                                                        \r\nAs of 2014, he has received fifteen honorary doctorates and professorships.\r\n\r\n
                                                        ',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','RMS, GNU, Four freedoms',0,0,1), (1974,'2016-02-25','Ubuntu Community donations, Governance and Hardware',1598,'In general I was feeling bad about how donations work with Ubuntu','

                                                        \r\nI went to https://Ubuntu.com - https://Xubuntu.org, https://getfedora.org/ and https://www.opensuse.org/ to see how donations with the linux vendors worked.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe only one that I found was non profit was debain. It a real nonprofit certification in the USA.\r\n

                                                        ',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','donations,Ubuntu,Xubuntu,Fedora,OpenSUSE,Debian',0,0,1), (1975,'2016-02-26','Interview With An Android App Developer',829,'Sigflup here and holy crud it turns out my brother in law is an android developer','

                                                        \r\nIt\'s Christmas time and sigflup is spending time interviewing Dillon, who\'s an android developer.\r\n

                                                        ',115,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','interview,android',0,0,1), (1979,'2016-03-03','How to Make Perfect Steel-Cut Oats',630,'I explain how to make the perfect tasty, nutritious breakfast in a slow cooker','

                                                        How to Make Perfect Steel-Cut Oats

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Steel-Cut oats are amazingly good—delicious and nutritious—but they\'re kind of a pain to cook because they\'re so hard and require so much simmering. It can take up to 30 minutes to cook them on the stove top and you have to stir constantly to make sure they don\'t boil over or stick to the pan. I tried doing them in a rice maker and in the microwave, neither of which turned out well. Then I tried the slow cooker and found that this is the perfect way to make steel-cut oats exactly right every time with hardly any effort.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Ingredients

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Steel-cut oats
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Water (4-to-1 water-to-oats ratio)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Salt (¼ teaspoon for each ¼ c. oats)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pure maple syrup to taste
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Butter to taste
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Instructions

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Just put all the ingredients in the slow cooker and cook on 200 degrees Fahrenheit for about 4 hours. The water and oats should be combined in a 4 to 1 ratio. When I make this using American measurements, I used 1 Cup water for each ¼ cup of oats. In the metric system this is about 240 ml water for each 40 grams of oats.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','oatmeal, breakfast, cooking, slow cooker, oats, steel-cut oats',0,0,1), (1985,'2016-03-11','Fixing Bug 1092571',212,'Cant mount drive with cifs but can with kioslave smb','

                                                        \r\nAfter a windows server upgrade in work, I was no longer able to mount samba network drives from my laptop. Basically it boils down to not been able to mount drives on the console, but been able to browse them in the GUI. After investigating and trying all the options presented, I filed a bug with Fedora.
                                                        \r\nhttps://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1092571\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDespite filling in all the information, the bug remained untouched by human hands. Robots shut it, I reopened it. To be honest I thought it might be my set-up as nobody else was reporting it as an issue. Sure there were other people reporting problems but not attached to this bug.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nAnyway I happened to be at FOSDEM (https://hackerpublicradio.org/series/0089.html) and spotted Jeremy Allison from the SAMBA project who I had the pleasure of interviewing previously https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1451).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nJeremy was immediately able to pinpoint the issue to the kernel probably only supporting SMB version 1, while user space uses libsmbclient that supports smb1/smb2.\r\n

                                                        ',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','samba, smb1, smb2, /etc/fstab',0,0,1), (1978,'2016-03-02','Ultra High Vacuum: loading samples',162,'A short overview of how to load a sample into UHV (ultra high vacuum)','

                                                        \r\nI hope this is the correct version of my introduction to Ultra high vacuum systems and loading samples. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nPlease consult with a professional before using nitrogen and ultra high vacuum system.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNitrogen is dangerous in close environments as it displaces oxygen so please consult the health and safety risks. \r\n

                                                        \r\n',301,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Ultra high vacuum,nitrogen',0,0,1), (2221,'2017-02-06','HPR Community News for January 2017',5117,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in January 2017','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n Reg A, \n \"Hannah, of Terra, of Sol\".\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2196Mon2017-01-02HPR Community News for December 2016HPR Volunteers
                                                        2197Tue2017-01-03Why you should not say Free SoftwareKen Fallon
                                                        2198Wed2017-01-04How awesome is Guix and why will it take over the worldclacke
                                                        2199Thu2017-01-05Replacing the Throttle Position Sensor on My TruckJon Kulp
                                                        2200Fri2017-01-06Episode one of the future of free software seriesspaceman
                                                        2201Mon2017-01-09Matthew \"Lord Drachenblut\" WilliamsHPR Volunteers
                                                        2202Tue2017-01-10Makers on YouTubeDave Morriss
                                                        2203Wed2017-01-11NOT SO SMARToperat0r
                                                        2204Thu2017-01-12MASSCANoperat0r
                                                        2205Fri2017-01-13Quick Tips Roomba and silicone Packetsoperat0r
                                                        2206Mon2017-01-16Podcasts I Listen ToReg A
                                                        2207Tue2017-01-17NATO phonetic alphabetHannah, of Terra, of Sol
                                                        2208Wed2017-01-18Kayak Campingdroops
                                                        2209Thu2017-01-19Calibre eBook ServerJon Kulp
                                                        2210Fri2017-01-20On Freedom of Speech and Censorshipm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2211Mon2017-01-23My podcast workflowDave Morriss
                                                        2212Tue2017-01-24meanderings Cyberpunk and the MinidiscQuvmoh
                                                        2213Wed2017-01-25Clay Bodybrian
                                                        2214Thu2017-01-26Upgrading Vehicle Lights From Halogen to LEDJon Kulp
                                                        2215Fri2017-01-27Kickstarte Omega2 Plus first time setup walkthrough.Jrullo
                                                        2216Mon2017-01-30Working AO-85 with my sonChristopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2217Tue2017-01-31building a new voice input deviceJezra
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-January/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 51 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 11 comments on\n8 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2061\n(2016-06-27) \"Handwriting\"\nby droops.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2017-01-01:\n\"Thanks for sharing!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2159\n(2016-11-10) \"Coup Tabletop Game\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nnondescript on 2017-01-11:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2182\n(2016-12-13) \"why say GNU/Linux ?\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 16:\nFSA on 2017-01-11:\n\"Some language is more offensive than others\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2189\n(2016-12-22) \"Working Amateur Radio Satellites\"\nby Christopher M. Hobbs.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMichael on 2017-01-02:\n\"Additional links\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2190\n(2016-12-23) \"fucking botnets how do they work?\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nVictor O on 2017-01-09:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nVictor O on 2017-01-09:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2192\n(2016-12-27) \"Fun with Oscilloscopes\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2017-01-02:\n\"Bubble sort!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2193\n(2016-12-28) \"a clean podcast with no swearing\"\nby spaceman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nAConcernedListener on 2017-01-03:\n\"Say what ever you want the way you want.\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\ngws on 2017-01-05:\n\"no such thing as knowledge transfer\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2194\n(2016-12-29) \"The low-down on what\'s up in the Taiwan Strait.\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 6:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-01-02:\n\"Excellent show!\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nVictor O on 2017-01-09:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 40 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2197\n(2017-01-03) \"Why you should not say Free Software\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsapceman on 2016-12-28:\n\"what about freedom?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nmcnalu on 2017-01-03:\n\"Language has a life of its own\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nbrian on 2017-01-03:\n\"liberty\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2017-01-04:\n\"Replies\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2198\n(2017-01-04) \"How awesome is Guix and why will it take over the world\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2016-12-31:\n\"Correction: 8Sync 0.3!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nbrian on 2017-01-03:\n\"please more\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonas on 2017-01-04:\n\"Interesting!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nclacke on 2017-01-05:\n\"Slides\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2017-01-05:\n\"Everyday package operations\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nBiasOpinion on 2017-01-13:\n\"Working Programmer\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2199\n(2017-01-05) \"Replacing the Throttle Position Sensor on My Truck\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2017-01-05:\n\"When is the new truck?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-01-06:\n\"Nooooo...\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-06:\n\"Just getting started\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2201\n(2017-01-09) \"Matthew \"Lord Drachenblut\" Williams\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-01-10:\n\"Drachenblut\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2202\n(2017-01-10) \"Makers on YouTube\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nm1rr0r5h4d35 on 2017-01-09:\n\"Awesome suggestions\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nVictor O on 2017-01-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-01-11:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2206\n(2017-01-16) \"Podcasts I Listen To\"\nby Reg A.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\npauleb on 2017-01-17:\n\"Update on Linux Luddites\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nreg a on 2017-01-17:\n\"Linux Luddites Update Info\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2207\n(2017-01-17) \"NATO phonetic alphabet\"\nby Hannah, of Terra, of Sol.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-01-20:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2017-01-21:\n\"Thanks!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-01-26:\n\"We called it fife, not five\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2208\n(2017-01-18) \"Kayak Camping\"\nby droops.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMongo on 2017-01-19:\n\"Camping the right way\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndroops on 2017-01-19:\n\"Thanks\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2017-01-19:\n\"Another vacation destination\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\ndroops on 2017-01-19:\n\"Vacation Destination?\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-20:\n\"Not a camper\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2209\n(2017-01-19) \"Calibre eBook Server\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-01-21:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-21:\n\"Ports\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-01-22:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2210\n(2017-01-20) \"On Freedom of Speech and Censorship\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-01-22:\n\"Well Said\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBill Miller on 2017-01-23:\n\"Hello\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2212\n(2017-01-24) \"meanderings Cyberpunk and the Minidisc\"\nby Quvmoh.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBill Miller on 2017-01-26:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nQuvmoh on 2017-01-27:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2214\n(2017-01-26) \"Upgrading Vehicle Lights From Halogen to LED\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2017-01-26:\n\"What about the blinkers?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2017-01-26:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-27:\n\"Probably not \"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-27:\n\"Blinkers\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2017-01-27:\n\"Smokin' hot CANbus LED lamps. (230C in open air.)\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-01-27:\n\"Yikes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2241,'2017-03-06','HPR Community News for February 2017',2099,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in February 2017','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2218Wed2017-02-01Cool Stuff pt. 5Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                                        2219Thu2017-02-02The Musings of a Novice Cable TV Cord CutterReg A
                                                        2220Fri2017-02-03Taking apart a tabletlaindir
                                                        2221Mon2017-02-06HPR Community News for January 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2222Tue2017-02-07FOSDEM 2017 K (level 1, group A)Ken Fallon
                                                        2223Wed2017-02-08FOSDEM 2017 K (level 1, group B and C)Ken Fallon
                                                        2224Thu2017-02-09FOSDEM 2017 K (level 2 Stands 1 to 9)Ken Fallon
                                                        2225Fri2017-02-10FOSDEM 2017 K (level 2 Stands 10 to 19)Ken Fallon
                                                        2226Mon2017-02-13FOSDEM 2017 AW BuildingKen Fallon
                                                        2227Tue2017-02-14FOSDEM 2017 H Building and the Hallway trackKen Fallon
                                                        2228Wed2017-02-15linux.conf.au 2017: Russell Keith-MageeClinton Roy
                                                        2229Thu2017-02-16linux.conf.au 2017: Kathy ReidClinton Roy
                                                        2230Fri2017-02-17linux.conf.au 2017: Donna BenjaminClinton Roy
                                                        2231Mon2017-02-20linux.conf.au 2017: Rusty RussellClinton Roy
                                                        2232Tue2017-02-21linux.conf.au 2017: Lilly RyanClinton Roy
                                                        2233Wed2017-02-22linux.conf.au 2017: Hugh BlemmingsClinton Roy
                                                        2234Thu2017-02-23linux.conf.au 2017: Richard JonesClinton Roy
                                                        2235Fri2017-02-24linux.conf.au 2017: First timers interviewsClinton Roy
                                                        2236Mon2017-02-27Hoarding Raspberry Pisb-yeezi
                                                        2237Tue2017-02-28Do you care?Curtis Adkins (CPrompt^)
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-February/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 13 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 5 comments on\n5 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2198\n(2017-01-04) \"How awesome is Guix and why will it take over the world\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2202\n(2017-01-10) \"Makers on YouTube\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJim Weda on 2017-02-01:\n\"Treat list....\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2212\n(2017-01-24) \"meanderings Cyberpunk and the Minidisc\"\nby Quvmoh.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMatt on 2017-02-01:\n\"MiniDisc brought me here...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2213\n(2017-01-25) \"Clay Body\"\nby brian.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbrian on 2017-02-09:\n\"a clarrification\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2216\n(2017-01-30) \"Working AO-85 with my son\"\nby Christopher M. Hobbs.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMichael (mirwi), DL4MGM on 2017-02-04:\n\"Doppler shift\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 8 comments on 6 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2220\n(2017-02-03) \"Taking apart a tablet\"\nby laindir.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nAlpha32 on 2017-02-07:\n\"Oh man...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2221\n(2017-02-06) \"HPR Community News for January 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbrian on 2017-02-06:\n\"sorry\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-02-08:\n\"You did that unscripted ?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2227\n(2017-02-14) \"FOSDEM 2017 H Building and the Hallway track\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-02-28:\n\"For the whole series\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2229\n(2017-02-16) \"linux.conf.au 2017: Kathy Reid\"\nby Clinton Roy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nGuido on 2017-02-16:\n\"Great to hear about the big picture\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2235\n(2017-02-24) \"linux.conf.au 2017: First timers interviews\"\nby Clinton Roy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-02-27:\n\"Great Interviews!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2236\n(2017-02-27) \"Hoarding Raspberry Pis\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsigflup on 2017-02-21:\n\"right on\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njezra on 2017-02-27:\n\"Wonderful\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2261,'2017-04-03','HPR Community News for March 2017',4221,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in March 2017','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n BobJonkman, \n @einebiene.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2238Wed2017-03-01Gnu Awk - Part 6Dave Morriss
                                                        2239Thu2017-03-02making jerkyJezra
                                                        2240Fri2017-03-03Amateur Radio Round TableVarious Hosts
                                                        2241Mon2017-03-06HPR Community News for February 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2242Tue2017-03-07Interview with Colin J. Mills, organizer of KW LinuxfestBobJonkman
                                                        2243Wed2017-03-08My Quick Tips E01operat0r
                                                        2244Thu2017-03-09building lineageOSbrian
                                                        2245Fri2017-03-10Managing tags on HPR episodes - 1Dave Morriss
                                                        2246Mon2017-03-13My Custom RSS Comic and Security Feedoperat0r
                                                        2247Tue2017-03-14HPR New Year show 1Various Hosts
                                                        2248Wed2017-03-15HPR New Year show episode 2Various Hosts
                                                        2249Thu2017-03-16HPR New Year show episode 3Various Hosts
                                                        2250Fri2017-03-17HPR New Year show episode 4Various Hosts
                                                        2251Mon2017-03-20HPR New Year show episode 5Various Hosts
                                                        2252Tue2017-03-21HPR New Year show episode 6Various Hosts
                                                        2253Wed2017-03-22How to make and use a stencil@einebiene
                                                        2254Thu2017-03-23Introduction to Model RocketrySteve Saner
                                                        2255Fri2017-03-24The Good Ship HPRDave Morriss
                                                        2256Mon2017-03-27Modular Game ScalingEric Duhamel
                                                        2257Tue2017-03-28Watt OSTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2258Wed2017-03-29Killer KeilbasaBill "NFMZ1" Miller
                                                        2259Thu2017-03-30Minidiscs: A Response to HPR 2212Jon Kulp
                                                        2260Fri2017-03-31Managing tags on HPR episodes - 2Dave Morriss
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-March/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 37 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 6 comments on\n6 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2178\n(2016-12-07) \"Dice Mixer\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFiftyOneFifty on 2017-03-04:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2191\n(2016-12-26) \"Building a Soundboard Android App with App Inventor\"\nby droops.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nWindigo on 2017-03-28:\n\"Fantastic\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2206\n(2017-01-16) \"Podcasts I Listen To\"\nby Reg A.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nBookewyrmm on 2017-03-06:\n\"thanks and sorry\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2219\n(2017-02-02) \"The Musings of a Novice Cable TV Cord Cutter\"\nby Reg A.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nRegina Trolman on 2017-03-27:\n\"Loved it!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2221\n(2017-02-06) \"HPR Community News for January 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKrayon on 2017-03-01:\n\"OGGBot\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2236\n(2017-02-27) \"Hoarding Raspberry Pis\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\nAlpha32 on 2017-03-29:\n\"Great!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 31 comments on 11 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2239\n(2017-03-02) \"making jerky\"\nby Jezra.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\noperat0r on 2017-02-07:\n\"YuMMM hacking meat\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njezra on 2017-03-02:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\n@einebiene on 2017-03-22:\n\"Mhhhhh\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2240\n(2017-03-03) \"Amateur Radio Round Table\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndavidWHITMAN on 2017-03-08:\n\"Ham Radio Roundtable\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2245\n(2017-03-10) \"Managing tags on HPR episodes - 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2017-03-09:\n\"Erm...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-03-10:\n\"Oops!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2017-03-10:\n\"Listen to the entities\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2246\n(2017-03-13) \"My Custom RSS Comic and Security Feed\"\nby operat0r.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-03-16:\n\"Good idea\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2248\n(2017-03-15) \"HPR New Year show episode 2\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-03-15:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2249\n(2017-03-16) \"HPR New Year show episode 3\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-03-15:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen fallon on 2017-03-27:\n\"Fact check Scotland brexit not 100%\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2252\n(2017-03-21) \"HPR New Year show episode 6\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclinton roy on 2017-03-22:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2253\n(2017-03-22) \"How to make and use a stencil\"\nby @einebiene.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-03-21:\n\"Thank you\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBob Jonkman on 2017-03-22:\n\"Consultant\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\neinebiene on 2017-03-22:\n\"German Download Page\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nbrian on 2017-03-22:\n\"food not bombs\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nph on 2017-03-22:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nb-yeezi on 2017-03-22:\n\"Welcome new host!\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nBob Jonkman on 2017-03-23:\n\"Consultant\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\ndroops on 2017-03-30:\n\"Very cool\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2255\n(2017-03-24) \"The Good Ship HPR\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2017-03-01:\n\"hpr 2255\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-03-06:\n\"Nice idea\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nknightwise on 2017-03-25:\n\"How about a dropbox folder.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nM1rr0r5h4d35 on 2017-03-25:\n\"Very interesting show.\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\ndroops on 2017-03-29:\n\"New Hosts\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2017-03-30:\n\"Thanks for the comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2258\n(2017-03-29) \"Killer Keilbasa\"\nby Bill \"NFMZ1\" Miller.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-03-29:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nXoke on 2017-03-30:\n\"Little Smokies\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2259\n(2017-03-30) \"Minidiscs: A Response to HPR 2212\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-03-30:\n\"Minidisc\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-03-30:\n\"Interesting\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-03-31:\n\"Minidisk Walkman\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (1976,'2016-02-29','Introduction to sed - part 1',2668,'What sed is and how to use it in a simple way','

                                                        Introduction to sed - part 1

                                                        \r\n

                                                        sed is an editor which expects to read a stream of text, apply some action to the text and send it to another stream. It filters and transforms the text along the way according to instructions provided to it. These instructions are referred to as a sed script.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The name \"sed\" comes from Stream Editor, and sed was developed from 1973 to 1974 as a Unix utility by Lee E. McMahon of Bell Labs. GNU sed added several new features including better documentation, though most of it is only available on the command line through the info command. The full manual is of course available on the web.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1976/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,90,1,'CC-BY-SA','sed,stream editor,option,regular expression,substitution',0,0,1), (1980,'2016-03-04','Fixing An Audio Problem while having a rant',593,'Describing how I solved an audio problem while having a rant about automation limiting control','

                                                        This podcast details how I solved an audio problem I discovered while trying to record another episode for HPR. I\'ll hopefully get around to recording my original idea at a later date.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The recording was done in a bit of a hurry and I was a bit flustered so please excuse the fast talking and ranting.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Link to article that solved my problem https://blog.tiger-workshop.com/ubuntu-rear-microphone-not-working-on-ad1988b-sound-chip/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Command I used to install the app that solved my audio problem. App is from the standard Ubuntu 14.04 repo

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo apt-get install alsa-tools-gui
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Command to run from terminal to launch gui tool that solved the problem

                                                        \r\n
                                                        hdajackretask
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Audio, Hardware, Linux',0,0,1), (1982,'2016-03-08','Whats in my virtual bag',1710,'The usual programs I use everyday in my system','

                                                        Programs mentioned:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',323,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','Basic setup, Linux, Power user, Vim, Ratpoison, Sakura, Puppy Linux',0,0,1), (1986,'2016-03-14','Introduction to sed - part 2',3678,'Some more about the GNU sed command','

                                                        Introduction to sed - part 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last episode we looked at sed at the simplest level. We looked at three command-line options and the \'s\' command. We introduced the idea of basic regular expressions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will cover all of these topics in more detail.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We are looking at GNU sed in this series. This version contains many extensions to POSIX sed. These extensions provide many more features, but sed scripts written this way are not portable.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1986/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note: Since recording the audio I have added a sixth example to the full notes to cover the topic of word boundaries, which I had omitted at the time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,90,1,'CC-BY-SA','sed,stream editor,option,regular expression,substitution',0,0,1), (1987,'2016-03-15','Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script (pt 1)',1327,'The different stages of a bash script that was created accidentally','',323,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','Productivity, Bash basics, Programming design, Pomodoro, Timer, loops, sleep',0,0,1), (1990,'2016-03-18','Pomodoro Timer - The Evolution of a Script part deux',1734,'Further evolutions of a pomodoro script that got a life of its own','

                                                        \r\nThe Script: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1990.bash\r\n

                                                        \r\n',323,42,0,'CC-BY-SA','Productivity, Bash basics, Programming design, Pomodoro, Timer, loops, sleep',0,0,1), (1983,'2016-03-09','Review of Sony Vaio VPC',2019,'Sony vaio is discussed','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • i3 cpu
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 4 gb ram (can go up to 8 gb)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 5400 rpm hdd
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • linux mint 17.3
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, sony vaio, laptop',0,0,1), (1984,'2016-03-10','A Love Letter to linux.conf.au',595,'Why I\'ve been to fifteen linux.conf.au conferences','

                                                        Linux.conf.au, is the name and website of my favourite conference. Known by insiders as simply lca, it is an annual technical conference, focusing on Linux and Open Source technologies. LCA is a roaming conference, going to a different city of Australia and New Zealand every year. I\'ve helped organise the two lca\'s in my home town of Brisbane, Queensland, and it was in fact the first of these that introduced me to lca. This year lca was held in Geelong, down in the state of Victoria and it counts as my fifteenth linux.conf.au. Clearly this conference has become quite a big part of my life and it\'s probably a mature thing to stand back and have a look at why.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        lca is a technical conference, it\'s not a sales oriented conference, as an engineer having non-salesy, technical content makes me feel at home. For the most part, the paper committee only accept talks from people directly working on a project, so the speakers we select know their topic. lca is explicitly an open source conference, and mostly a low level conference.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        lca is a week long conference, so I often add some extra time on the end to make a holiday out of it. A fair percentage of our attendees are from overseas, and it makes sense for them to do the same. I have taken the train to a Perth (Western Australia) lca, that\'s the Indian Pacific train, a three day trip from one side of the country to the other. I\'ve done a day trip on a train in New Zealand, from Auckland to Wellington. I\'ve done a couple of motorcycle trips, down to Ballarat and Geelong (both cities in the state of Victoria). Those two tours are roughly a 3600km (or 2200 mile) round trips taking three to four days each way.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'ve done a motorcycle tour of Tasmania (an island state of Australia) after a Tasmanian lca. Next year, the conference is back in Tasmania for the Hobart lca, I\'m planning on doing a week long hike of about 85kms (50 odd miles) before the conference along the South Coast Track.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a bunch of people that I only get to see at lca, from year to year, sadly some of these come from my own home town. Keeping these connections strong is an important part of lca for me.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Every year, the parent organisation of lca, Linux Australia holds their Annual General Meeting during lca. I\'ve been an Ordinary committee member on the Linux Australia council a couple of times now. This year I didn\'t get enough votes, which means I have more time to devote to other things, like HPR recordings :)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Registration for lca normally starts Sunday afternoon, there\'s often a beginners guide to the conference. After fifteen years, I don\'t think I\'ve ever attended one, but I should probably help lead it next year..

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s very common for lca to choose a charity to raise money for. For many years this meant a loud, long, often raucous auction. In recent years we\'ve had a raffle over the full length of the conference. We\'ve helped many worthy charities over the years, the one that comes to mind was the \'Save the Tasmanian Devils\' fund, for which we raised a substantial amount of money, something around forty thousand dollars, partly based on the auction prize of changing the linux\'s kernel logo from Tux to Tuz, the lca mascot for that year. Tuz is a Tasmanian devil wearing a costume Penguin beak to cover over his case of the Devil Facial Tumour Disease, a communicable cancer, that is threatening their existence. This was also the conference where Linus shaved bDale\'s beard off to raise money for the charity.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We often hold lca at a university, and we often use student dormitories as accommodation. If we\'re lucky, this means that a large percentage of attendees can meet up in common areas of the accommodation at the end of the day and continue the conference long into the night. A particularly memorable lca on this front, somewhere in New Zealand, I forget which city, had a whole level of a student accommodation centre set aside as a common area, so a large percentage of the conference were able to fit and continue the conference late into the evening.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first two days of the conference are generally reserved for miniconferences, or miniconfs as we refer to them. These miniconfs go for one or two days and are organised around a particular topic, and separately to the main conference. The miniconfs change every year, but commonly include miniconfs focused on the kernel (this is primarily attended by kernel coders), hardware (based around ardunio, raspi, and this year espy), multimedia and music, sysadmin, OpenRadio, Open Source in Government. A highlight from the second Brisbane lca was the rocketry miniconf, where 25 odd rockets were put together and later launched. We\'ve been blessed over the years to have miniconfs working to improve and enlarge our community, including LinuxChix, Haecksen and the Community Leadership Summits.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After the miniconf days are done, the conference proper begins. These days start off with a keynote, have four or more streams of talks during the day, with longer tutorials running for half the day.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My favourite keynote from this year was Genevieve Bell, from Intel. From previous years, Tim Berners Lee, Eben Moglen and Kathy Sierra have left long term marks. These are people who have fundamentally created the world I live and work in now, their contributions cannot be understated.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a bunch of talks from every year that change the way I think about something, or the way I work. This year, I reckon the Record/Replay talk will probably change the way I debug programs. RR is a Mozilla tool, you run the buggy program under rr, which records exactly what the system calls the program runs, what state effects the program has, then you run that recording under the standard debugger, gdb. Typically with gdb you can only step forwards into the program, but with rr you can actually step back in time as well!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A hardware talk that really caught my attention this year was the Linux Microwave, a regular microwave with a set of scales and a thermal imaging camera added, so that whenever you heat/warm/defrost something, the microwave will never ever burn/under/over cook the food!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The other bit of hardware that I feel warrants a mention was the large loom that one of our venues, the National Wool Museum was built around. It is programmed by a large bunch of punch cards! There\'s always local attractions that add something to the conference.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        During the week, ad-hoc groups form around common interests, we call these Birds-of-feather sessions. I usually end up attending the Emacs BoF. A recurring BoF is the jobs BoF, where employers and hopeful employees come together.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I don\'t tend to attend too many tutorials myself. A number of years back I ran a tutorial on Antlr, a recursive descent parser toolkit.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a number of social events that happen most years, the conference dinner, the speakers dinner, and the professionals session. These events target the different audiences at the conference. A favourite spin on this was during a Melbourne lca where diners were given food and drink tokens to use around a market, rather than a traditional sit down dinner. The speakers dinner is a smaller, more private thank you to the speakers, many of whom have flown in from overseas. The professionals session tends to be the most varied, as it tends not be a full meal, but just a place where folks can meet, greet and swap business cards.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I can\'t say it\'s always been a bed of roses, I\'ve had a couple of hospital trips over the years, one for myself where, along with almost half of the conference, I came down with the dreaded noro-virus, a gastro bug that is prevalent on cruise ships. During another lca when I was chaperoning another attendee to hospital I figured my lca was over, but then I struck up a conversation with our ambulance driver, and it turned out he\'d been working on pdp-11s during his uni days!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The other awful lca experience I have to mention was the flooding that occurred just one week prior to our second Brisbane lca. All of our venues were affected, some were destroyed completely. We had to shift our main venue about 5kms up the road, hire buses, find new caterers at the last minute, a whole world of pain.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For many years now, most of our talks have been recorded, using our own recording system. All of these videos are up on the Linux Australia server and youtube. This means that weeks, months after the conference is finished, I find myself watching a recording that someone has recommended, and it takes me back to that one week in every year where the world makes sense to me.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As I mentioned previously, the next linux.conf.au is in Hobart, January 2017, I hope to see some hpr listeners there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',315,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, open source, conference',0,0,1), (1993,'2016-03-23','Can your window manager do this?',2022,'Where I show off my Ratpoison configurations','\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',323,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Ratpoison, Window Manager, Puppy Linux, customization',0,0,1), (1996,'2016-03-28','Xdotool magic',1082,'Overview and a few usage possibilities of the Xdotool program','\r\n',323,11,0,'CC-BY-SA','Xdotool, Automation, Productivity, File naming, Time stamps',0,0,1), (1991,'2016-03-21','Adventures installing Linux on an Asus EeeBook X205A',1065,'Installation instructions from lessons learned the hard way.','

                                                        High-level steps to install Ubuntu Mate on the Asus Eeebook X205A

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Information compiled from Here, Here, and Here

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Download and create startup disk

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Download the 64-bit version of the iso, then create a bootable USB. I recommend using dcfldd.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Getting grub 32-bit

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Compile or download grubia32.efi (see links), then move it into the /EFI/BOOT directory on the USB.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Installation

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Boot from the disk (assuming you already disabled secure boot from the BIOS). Install the system as you like.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First Boot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Reboot, but leave in USB. Type c when grub loads, then enter in:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        linux (hd1,gpt2)/boot/vmlinuz.... root=/dev/mmcblk0p2\r\ninitrd (hd1,gpt2)/boot/initrd....\r\nboot
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Wi-Fi

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To get wi-fi working, put in terminal:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram-XXXXXX /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then reload the brcmfmac driver:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac\r\nsudo modprobe brcmfmac
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fix bootloader

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fix Bootloader with the following commands as root:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo apt-get install git bison libopts25 libselinux1-dev autogen m4 autoconf help2man libopts25-dev flex libfont-freetype-perl automake autotools-dev libfreetype6-dev texinfo\r\n\r\n# from https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub-download.html\r\ngit clone git://git.savannah.gnu.org/grub.git\r\n\r\ncd grub\r\n\r\n./autogen.sh\r\n\r\n./configure --with-platform=efi --target=i386 --program-prefix=\"\"\r\n\r\nmake\r\n\r\ncd grub-core\r\nsudo su\r\n../grub-install -d . --efi-directory /boot/efi/ --target=i386\r\ncd /boot/efi/EFI\r\ncp grub/grubia32.efi ubuntu/\r\nexit
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then, we can just install grub-efi-ia32:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo apt-get update\r\nsudo apt-get install grub-efi-ia32
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Edit the grub configuration file:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo nano /etc/default/grub
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Find the line starting GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT and add intel_idle.max_cstate=1 before quiet splash\".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then ctrl-o, ctrl-x to save & exit, and type: sudo update-grub to update Grub.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remove the USB stick and reboot, and you should now have a self-sufficient booting system.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Conflict between sdhci-acpi and brcmfmac

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Due to some conflict between sdhci-acpi and brcmfmac (https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=88061), a parameter has to be changed for the sdhci-acpi driver. There are several ways to do this, but a quick fix is to add this line in /etc/sysfs.conf (make sure you have the package sysfsutils installed), this way the option is passed before the brcmfmac driver is loaded :

                                                        \r\n
                                                        # Disable SDHCI-ACPI for Wireless, otherwise WLAN doesn\'t work\r\nbus/platform/drivers/sdhci-acpi/INT33BB:00/power/control = on
                                                        \r\n

                                                        microSD Card Reader

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Create a file /etc/modprobe.d/sdhci.conf with the following content:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        # Adjustment to make micro SD card reader work\r\noptions sdhci debug_quirks=0x8000
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then run

                                                        \r\n
                                                        update-initramfs -u -k all
                                                        \r\n

                                                        After a reboot the card reader should be working.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Ubuntu Mate,Asus Eeebook X205A',0,0,1), (2003,'2016-04-06','Using the Incron file watching daemon',698,'I briefly introduce the incron file watching daemon, and give an example of how I use it.','

                                                        Using the Incron file watching daemon

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Check out the man page for incron and also this write-up by Nixcraft.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        basic usage:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        incrontab -e

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In your editor of choice, follow this syntax:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        <path-to-watch> <event mask> command

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',300,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','incron,bash,watcher,daemon',0,0,1), (1988,'2016-03-16','Linux from Scratch',425,'My experience of installing Linux from source','\r\n',326,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux From Scratch',0,0,1), (1989,'2016-03-17','WDTV Makes Me Itch',1880,'A step-by-step description of turning an old computer into a simple linux media appliance','

                                                        This half-hour-long episode describes the complete process for turning an old, limited thin-client terminal (an HP T5740) - and incidentally just about any other kind of hardware - into a simple automatic media-playing kiosk-style device, running VLC on a hand-made minimalist Arch Linux installation. I\'ve tried to describe the procedure I came up with in enough detail that anyone with a little bit of Linux experience can hopefully follow and potentially replicate the whole thing, but not so much detail that it gets horrifically tedious. Some of the extra details I glossed over in the audio are here in the show notes if you want them.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode will mostly be of interest to people with a little bit of Linux experience, but may hopefully be interesting to a few others. Mac and Windows partisans take note: before you start giggling about how \"complicated\" it is to set up Linux as you listen to what I describe here, I will reiterate that I chose to do the install \"by hand\" like this, and I assure you a more typical Linux install is quite a bit simpler (having just spent several months brutally installing Windows systems on innocent computers, getting and ordinary Linux installation finished is not only easier but faster. (\"Windows is getting ready to start to prepare to configure updates. Please wait 5 hours and don\'t turn off your computer...\") So there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m also going to try posting an \"enhanced\" version of this episode in .opus format with chapter markings and so on at my site: https://hpr.dogphilosophy.network Additional information may be found there as well, especially if anyone asks for it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some Linuxable Hardware I Mentioned:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Installing linux on old computers, laptops, etc. is such a well-established tradition that I don\'t see any reason to hunt down specific examples, but I also mentioned:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I assume I don\'t need to explain that the Dead Badgers thing isn\'t entirely serious... It\'s not entirely a joke, either: https://www.instructables.com/id/Compubeaver---%3E-How-to-case-mod-a-beaver---in-29-e/

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • systemd-networkd config:
                                                          \r\nhttps://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Systemd-networkd#Basic_DHCP_network
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        [Match]\r\nName=en*\r\n\r\n[Network]\r\nDHCP=ipv4
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Autostart X on tty1 only: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xinitrc#Autostart_X_at_login

                                                        \r\n
                                                        [[ -z $DISPLAY && $XDG_VTNR -eq 1 ]] && exec startx
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I actually have also tried the \"web browser kiosk\" thing with the browser loading up a particular web page on start. It actually works just fine, except that the Windows DHCP server seems to be kind of slow, and if I just let the system start without checking the browser initially just shows an \"internet no work\" sort of message. I got around this nicely by adding a couple of steps to .xinitrc before starting the web browser. First, I created a graphic to use as an X background that just has text that indicates that it\'s waiting for the network to come up. Then, I put a loop in .xinitrc that checks for a hostname on the internet to see if it resolves to an IP yet, which would tell me the internet had come up. I didn\'t want to have to install any specific additional software utilities or, ideally, to have to do any special parsing. It turns out that you can just use \"getent ahosts4 google.com\" (or other internet hostname) as a test for this - it will return nothing if the name doesn\'t resolve, so you only need to test if the response is not a blank. I used \"sleep 1\" to pause one second between tries. Once the resolution returns something, I had xsetbg change the background graphic to a more appropriate default and continue starting the browser, the VNC server, etc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The .xinitrc for that looks like this:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        if [ -d /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d ] ; then\r\n    for f in /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d/?* ; do\r\n        [ -x \"$f\" ] && . \"$f\"\r\n    done\r\n    unset -f\r\nfi\r\n\r\nxset s off\r\nxset -dpms\r\nxsetbg -fullscreen WaitingForNetwork.png\r\n#vlc --extraintf=http --http-host 0.0.0.0:8080 --http-password \'PutPasswordHere\' -L playlist.m3u &\r\n#Not sure this is necessary - chromium seems to retry on its own\r\nwhile [ `getent ahostsv4 google.com` -eq \'\']\r\ndo\r\n##wait one second then check again to see if network is up\r\nsleep 1\r\ndone\r\nxsetbg NetworkNowUp.png\r\n##The URL below is a \"test to see if you can connect to a conference\" link\r\nchromium --incognito --app=https://www3.gotomeeting.com/join/406552062 &\r\nx0vncserver -display :0 -passwordfile /home/tech/.vnc/passwd &\r\nexec openbox-session
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you have any questions or comments, you can leave them at either

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1989

                                                        \r\n

                                                        or on my own blog at

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hpr.dogphilosophy.net

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',182,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux,tutorial,howto,appliance,kiosk,media,video,audio,vlc,hardware,reuse',0,0,1), (2004,'2016-04-07','A First Look at the Owon B35T',2167,'You are along for the ride as NYbill takes his first look at another inexpensive multimeter.','

                                                        You are along for the ride as NYbill takes his first look at another inexpensive Multimeter.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is part 1 of a quick look at the Owon B35T True RMS multimeter with Bluetooth.

                                                        \r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','multimeter,Bluetooth,RMS',0,0,1), (1992,'2016-03-22','How I\'m handling my podcast-subscriptions and -listening',497,'I\'m describing my workflow from receiving the files to listen to them.','\r\n\r\n

                                                        Editor\'s Note 2018-06-12: The links above which previously referenced GitHub\r\nhave been updated to reflect the new location of the software, GitLab.

                                                        \r\n',309,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,tools,listening,podget',0,0,1), (1997,'2016-03-29','Introduction to sed - part 3',3828,'Looking at some more sed commands than just s','

                                                        Introduction to sed - part 3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last episode we looked at sed at a more advanced level. We looked at all of the command-line options which we will cover in this series and examined the s command in much more detail. We covered many more details of regular expressions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at more sed commands and how to use them.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1997/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,90,1,'CC-BY-SA','sed,stream editor,line address,regular expression,edit command',0,0,1), (1994,'2016-03-24','Truck Repair: Serpentine Belt Replacement',3688,'Listen as I replace the serpentine belt, idler pulley, and belt tensioner in my truck.','

                                                        Come along for the ride as I repair my pickup truck. The job is to replace the serpentine belt, idler pulley, and belt tensioner in the hope of getting rid of a very annoying loud chirping sound that was coming from my engine. Even after cutting out the long pauses where I was staring at my engine trying to imagine how I was going to get the belt to go in the indicated pattern, this episode still tops out at about one hour. Be warned. There are several sections where you\'re just kind of listening along to sounds of nature as I work.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Here\'s the instructional video I watched to learn how to do it:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alXnTNxO9qw\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, Auto repair, auto maintenance, cars, trucks',0,0,1), (2006,'2016-04-11','Basic Audio Production - Compression',1927,'Yet another explanation of sound compression in a DAW','',323,45,1,'CC-BY-SA','Audio, Compression, Ardour, Audacity, Podcasts, Recording',0,0,1), (1995,'2016-03-25','Cov\'s Jams',1730,'A compilation of libre licensed music that Cov enjoyed listening to','

                                                        Songs

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Playlist

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.jamendo.com/playlist/500161911/cov-s-jams-002\r\n

                                                        \r\n',322,22,1,'CC-BY-SA','music',0,0,1), (1998,'2016-03-30','Homebrewing',1438,'A bit about making your own beer.','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode, I will share some tips about how to get the most out of an inexpensive, entry-level homebrewing kit such as the Mr. Beer branded kit. These tips will work with any kit, however.\r\n

                                                        ',325,14,1,'CC-BY-SA','home brewing,accents',0,0,1), (1999,'2016-03-31','How I record a full band under Linux',1193,'How I use Ardour, Jack audio, and a Presonus interface to record an entire band practice.','

                                                        How I use Ardour, Jack audio, and a Presonus interface to record an entire band practice under linux.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Tools:

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Ardour
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Calf studio gear
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Invada Plugins
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • ArtyFX
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Jack
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Qjackctl
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Hardware

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Dell Latitude e6320
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Presonus studiolive 16.4.2
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • various Microphones
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',327,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Ardour,Jack audio,Presonus StudioLive mixer',0,0,1), (2002,'2016-04-05','Just got a Raspberry Pi Zero',810,'Excited about having a Raspberry Pi Zero','

                                                        https://anthonyvenable110.wordpress.com

                                                        ',297,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','raspberry pi',0,0,1), (2014,'2016-04-21','A first look at the Owon B35T Part 2',1306,'More clicking of things, Bluetooth happens, things are taken apart...','

                                                        In this episode of HPR you get to hear more of the things on NYbill\'s electronics bench that make clicking noises.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The review of the Owon B35T\'s continues. Bluetooth is now working. And we get an inside look at the meter.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','multimeter,Bluetooth',0,0,1), (2029,'2016-05-12','The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit',1258,'NYbill talks about building a DSO138 Oscilloscope kit.','

                                                        In this episode NYbill talks about building a DSO138 Oscilloscope kit.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','oscilloscope,electronics,soldering,SMD',0,0,1), (2044,'2016-06-02','Bring on the Power!',1160,'It this episode NYbill talks about power supplies used for electronics work.','

                                                        It this episode NYbill talks about power supplies used for electronics work.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','power supply,electronics',0,0,1), (2016,'2016-04-25','Echoprint',799,'I share what I\'ve learned about the Echoprint music identification system','

                                                        Ken\'s message asking about programmatically checking for the intro and outro: \r\nhttps://thread.gmane.org/gmane.network.syndication.podcast.hacker-public-radio/1039

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Echoprint website: https://echoprint.me

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Codegen source code: https://github.com/echonest/echoprint-codegen

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Echoprint - An Open Music Identification Service: https://www.ee.columbia.edu/~dpwe/pubs/EllisWP11-echoprint.pdf

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Server source codehttps://github.com/echonest/echoprint-server

                                                        ',257,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Echoprint,music identification',0,0,1), (2053,'2016-06-15','My 2nd HPR Beer Podcast',132,'Describing the taste of beers I\'ve tried','

                                                        Hi everyone,

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s MeToo here again recording for HPR with a follow on beer tasting podcast. Let me first apologize for the audio quality of this and the next eleven beer podcasts. They were all recorded live on my phone in the Nobody Knows Bar, so there is a bit of a background noise. I just hope it\'s not too distracting.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The following twelve beer podcasts were recorded over a period of several months. A couple of them, even though they were recorded at the same \"sitting\", I\'ve chosen to break up into several podcasts, just so as to add more podcasts to HPR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In a few cases, it\'s obvious that I get a little tongue tied. Please forgive me. I normally tend to just have one beer per sitting, but the beer is so good and I\'m with friends, and as such have had more than one per sitting at those times.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        But enough of the explanations and apologies. Let\'s get on to the heart of the podcast: my impressions of several beers.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One more thing before we start. The beer in this podcast is Old Foghorn. I mislabeled it in the recording as Old Fog.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"hand\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [Audio from pre-recorded report]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well. there you have it. Not one of my better recordings. But I hope you liked it nonetheless.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, this is MeToo here signing out until next time, wishing you happy trails and happy beers.

                                                        \r\n',313,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','beer tasting',0,0,1), (2011,'2016-04-18','Introduction to sed - part 4',2858,'How sed really works. Less frequently used sed commands','

                                                        Introduction to sed - part 4

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last episode we looked at some of the more frequently used sed commands, having spent previous episodes looking at the s command, and we also covered the concept of line addressing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at how sed really works in all the gory details, examine some of the remaining sed commands and begin to build useful sed programs.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2011/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,90,1,'CC-BY-SA','sed,stream editor,pattern space,hold space',0,0,1), (2007,'2016-04-12','My new laptop',1042,'I won an Entroware laptop at OggCamp 2015. I talk about it here','

                                                        My new laptop

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I attended OggCamp15 in Liverpool at the end of October 2015. As usual I bought some raffle tickets as a contribution to the expenses of the (un-)conference, not paying much attention to the prizes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Actually, the star prize was a laptop donated by Entroware, a significant sponsor of the event, one of the most impressive prizes ever offered at OggCamp. There was quite a lot of excitement about this prize.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I attended the drawing of the raffle at the end of proceedings on the Sunday. Dan Lynch (of Linux Outlaws, and a frequent organiser of OggCamp) was in attendance overseeing the selection of the raffle tickets. Various smaller prizes were won and the tension built up as the final drawing approached.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Things got very tense when the first number drawn for the laptop was called and nobody responded. Then another draw was made.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Imagine my shock and surprise when I realised I had the winning ticket! I had won the star prize in the OggCamp raffle!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See the full show notes here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2007/full_shownotes.html for the details of the laptop.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','laptop, Ubuntu, OggCamp, entroware',0,0,1), (2008,'2016-04-13','HPR needs shows to survive.',1180,'Do not listen to this show. Record one instead.','

                                                        \r\nYou can help out the Hacker Public Radio project by recording a show today.
                                                        \r\nSee https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php for more information.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','HPR,community,shows,call to action,contribute',0,0,1), (2009,'2016-04-14','Understanding the GNU/Screen Hardstatus line',1518,'CPrompt talks about how he configured his GNU/Screen to suit his needs.','

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://github.com/CPrompt/configs/blob/master/.screenrc (CPrompt\'s .screenrc file)\r\n
                                                        \r\nhttps://www.gnu.org/software/screen/manual/html_node/String-Escapes.html (GNU Man page on String Escapes)\r\n

                                                        ',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','GNU/Screen,.screenrc,terminal multiplexer',0,0,1), (2010,'2016-04-15','Parsing JSON with Python',731,'How to parse JSON with Python','

                                                        JSON is a popular way of storing data in a key/value type arrangement so that the data can be parsed easily later. For instance, here is a very simple JSON snippet:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        {\r\n"name":"tux",\r\n"health":"23",\r\n"level":"4"\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you are like me, three questions probably spring to your mind:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. That looks an awful lot like a Python dictionary.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          Yes, it looks exactly like a Python dictionary. They are shockingly similar. If you are comfortable with Python lists and dictionaries, you will feel right at home with JSON.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. I don\'t feel comfortable with dictionaries, can\'t I just use a delimited text file?

                                                          \r\n

                                                          You can, but you will have to write parsers for it yourself. If your data gets very complex, the parsing can get pretty ugly.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          That is not to say that you should not use a simple delimited text file if that is all that your programme needs. For example, I would not want to open a config file as a user and find that I have to format all my options as valid JSON.

                                                          \r\n

                                                          Just know that JSON is out there and available, and that the JSON Python module has some little features that make your life easier when dealing with sets of data.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Why not use XML instead?

                                                          \r\n

                                                          You can. Mostly one should use the most appropriate format for one\'s project. I\'m a big fan of XML, but sometimes JSON makes more sense.

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I am not going to make this post about teaching the JSON format. If you need clarification on how to structure data into JSON, go through a tutorial on it somewhere; there are several good ones online. Honestly, it\'s not that complex; you can think of JSON as nested dictionaries.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Starting from scratch, let\'s say that you write a programme that by nature gathers data as it runs. When the user quits, you want to save the data to a file so that when the user resumes the app later, they can load the file back in and pick up where they left off.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Storing Data as JSON

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At its most basic, the JSON data structure is basically the same as a Python dictionary, and in fact the nice thing about JSON is that it can be directly imported into a Python dictionary. Usually, however, you are resorting to JSON because you have somewhat complex data, so in the sample code we will use a dictionary-within-a-dictionary:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        #!/usr/bin/env python\r\n\r\ngame = {'tux': {'health': 23, 'level': 4}, 'beastie': {'health': 13, 'level': 6}}\r\n# you can always add more to your dictionary\r\n\r\ngame['konqi'] = {'health': 18, 'level': 7}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        That code creates a ditionary called game which stores the player name and a corresponding dictionary of attributes about how the player is doing in the progress of the game. As you can see after the comment, adding new players is simple.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now let\'s see how to save that data to a save file.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        ## continued...\r\nimport json\r\n\r\nwith open('dosiero.json', 'w') as outfile:\r\n    json.dump(game, outfile)
                                                        \r\n

                                                        That would be your save command. Simple as that, all the structured content of your game dictionary is committed to a file on your hard drive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Reading Data from a JSON File

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you are saving data to JSON, you probably will evenually want to read the data back into Python. For this, Python features the function json.load

                                                        \r\n
                                                        import json\r\n\r\ndosiero = open('dosiero.json')\r\ngame = json.load(dosiero)\r\n\r\nprint game['tux']     # prints {'health': 23, 'level': 4}\r\nprint game['tux']['health']    # prints 23\r\nprint game['tux']['level']     # prints 4\r\n\r\n# when finished, close the file\r\n\r\njson_data.close()
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, JSON integrates surprisingly well with Python, so it\'s a great format when your data fits in with its model.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Have fun!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [EOF]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Made with Free Software.

                                                        \r\n',78,38,0,'CC-BY-SA','Python,dictionary,JSON',0,0,1), (2012,'2016-04-19','Parsing XML in Python with Untangle',1262,'A quick introduction to Untangle, an XML parser for Python.','

                                                        XML is a popular way of storing data in a hierarchical arrangement so that the data can be parsed later. For instance, here is a simple XML snippet:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        <?xml version="1.0"?>\r\n<book>\r\n   <chapter id="prologue">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Beginning\r\n </title>\r\n   </chapter>\r\n</book>
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The nice thing about XML is that it is explicit and strictly structured. The trade-off is that it\'s pretty verbose, and getting to where you want to go often requires fairly complex navigation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you do a quick search online for XML parsing in Python, your two most common results are lxml and beautifulsoup. These both work, but using them feels less like opening a dictionary (as with JSON) to look up a definition and more like wandering through a library to gather up all the dictionaries you can possibly find.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In JSON, the thought process might be something like:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "Go to the first chapter\'s title and print the contents."

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With traditional XML tools, it\'s more like:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "Open the book element and gather all instances of titles that fall within those chapters. Then, look into the resulting object and print the contents of the first occurrence."

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are at least two libaries that you can install and use to bring some sanity to complex XML structures, one of which is untangle.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Untangle

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With untangle, each element in an XML document gets converted into a class, which you can then probe for information. Makes no sense? well, follow along and it will become clear:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First, ingest the XML document. Assuming it\'s called sample.xml and is located in the current directory:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> import untangled\r\n>>> data = untangle.parse('sample.xml')
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now our simple XML sample is sitting in RAM, as a Python class. The first element is <book> and all it contains is more elements, so its results are not terribly exciting:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book\r\nElement(name = book, attributes = {}, cdata = )
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, it does identify itself as "book" (under the name listing) but otherwise, not much to look at. That\'s OK, we can keep drilling down:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter\r\nElement(name = chapter, attributes = {'id': 'prologue'}, cdata = )
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now things get more interesting. The next element identifies itself as "chapter", and reveals that it has an attribute "id" which has a value of "prologue". To continue down this path:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter.title\r\nElement(name = title, attributes = {}, cdata = The Beginning )
                                                        \r\n

                                                        And now we have a pretty complete picture of our little XML document. We have a breadcrumb trail of where we are in the form of the class we are invoking (data.book.chapter.title) and we have the contents of our current position.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sniping

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That\'s very linear; if you know your XML schema (and you usually do, since XML is quite strict) then you can grab values without all the walking. For instance, we know that our chapters have \'id\' attributes, so we can ask for exactly that:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter['id']\r\n'prologue'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can also get the contents of elements by looking at the cdata component of the class. Depending on the formatting of your document, untangle may be a little too literal with how it stores contents of elements, so you may want to use .strip() to prettify it:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter.title.cdata.strip()\r\n'The Beginning'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Dealing with More Than One Element

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My example so far is nice and tidy, with only one chapter in the book. Generally you\'ll be dealing with more data than that. Let\'s add another chapter to our sample file, and some content to each:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        <?xml version="1.0"?>\r\n<book>\r\n   <chapter id="prologue">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Beginning\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para>\r\n     This is the first paragraph.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n\r\n    <chapter id="end">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Ending\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para>\r\n     Last para of last chapter.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n</book>
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Accessing each chapter is done with index designations, just like with a dict:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter[0]\r\nElement(name = chapter, attributes = {'id': 'prologue'}, cdata = )\r\n>>> data.book.chapter[1]\r\nElement(name = chapter, attributes = {'id': 'end'}, cdata = )
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If there is more than one instance of a tag, you must use a designator or else untangle won\'t know what to return. For example, if we want to access either the title or para elements within a chapter:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter.title\r\nTraceback (most recent call last):\r\nFile "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>\r\nAttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute 'title'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Oops. But if we tell it which one to look at:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter[0].title.cdata.strip()\r\n'The Beginning'\r\n>>> data.book.chapter[1].title.cdata.strip()\r\n'The Ending'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or you can look at the paragraph instead of the title. The lineage is the same, only instead of looking at the title child, you look at the para child:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data.book.chapter[0].para.cdata.strip()\r\n'This is the first paragraph.'\r\n>>> data.book.chapter[1].para.cdata.strip()\r\n'Last para of last chapter.'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can also iterate over items:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> COUNT = [0,1]\r\n>>> for TICK in COUNT:\r\n...     print(data.book.chapter[TICK])\r\nElement <chapter> with attributes {'id': 'prologue'} and children\r\n[Element(name = title, attributes = {}, cdata = The Beginning ),\r\nElement(name = para, attributes = {}, cdata = This is the first paragraph.)]\r\n\r\nElement <chapter> with attributes {'id': 'end'} and children\r\n[Element(name = title, attributes = {}, cdata = The Ending ),\r\nElement(name = para, attributes = {}, cdata = Last para of last chapter.)]
                                                        \r\n

                                                        And so on.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Easy and Fast

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'ll admit the data structure of the classes does look odd, and you could probably argue it\'s not the cleanest and most elegant of all output; it\'s unnerving to see empty cdata fields or to constantly run into the need to strip() whitespace. However, the ease and speed and intuitiveness of parsing XML with untangle is usually well worth any trade-offs.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [EOF]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Made on Free Software.

                                                        \r\n',78,38,1,'CC-BY-SA','python, parse, xml',0,0,1), (2013,'2016-04-20','Parsing XML in Python with Xmltodict',849,'A quick introduction to xmltodict, an XML parser for Python.','

                                                        \r\nIf Untangle is too simple for your XML parsing needs, check out xmltodict. Like untangle, xmltodict is simpler than the usual suspects (lxml, beautiful soup), but it\'s got some advanced features as well.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you\'re reading this article, I assume you\'ve read at least the introduction to my article about Untangle, and you should probably also read, at some point, my article on using JSON just so you know your options.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Quick re-cap about XML:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        XML is a way of storing data in a hierarchical arrangement so that the data can be parsed later. It\'s explicit and strictly structured, so one of its benefits is that it paints a fairly verbose definition of data. Here\'s an example of some simple XML:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        <?xml version="1.0"?>\r\n<book>\r\n   <chapter id="prologue">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Beginning\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para>\r\n     This is the first paragraph.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n\r\n    <chapter id="end">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Ending\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para>\r\n     Last para of last chapter.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n</book>
                                                        \r\n

                                                        And here\'s some info about the xmltodict library that makes parsing that a lot easier than the built-in Python tools:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Install

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Install xmltodict manually, or from your repository, or using pip:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ pip install xmltodict
                                                        \r\n

                                                        or if you need to install it locally:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ pip install --user xmltodict
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Xmltodict

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With xmltodict, each element in an XML document gets converted into a dictionary (specifically an OrderedDictionary), which you then treat basically the same as you would JSON (or any Python OrderedDict).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First, ingest the XML document. Assuming it\'s called sample.xml and is located in the current directory:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> import xmltodict\r\n>>> with open('sample.xml') as f:\r\n...     data = xmltodict.parse(f.read())
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you\'re a visual thinker, you might want or need to see the data. You can look at it just by dumping data:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data\r\nOrderedDict([('book', OrderedDict([('chapter',\r\n[OrderedDict([('@id', 'prologue'),\r\n('title', 'The Beginning'),\r\n...and so on...
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Not terribly pretty to look at. Slightly less ugly is your data set piped through json.dumps:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> import json\r\n>>> json.dumps(data)\r\n'{"book": {"chapter": [{"@id": "prologue",\r\n"title": "The Beginning", "para": "This is the first paragraph."},\r\n{"@id": "end", "title": "The Ending",\r\n"para": "This is the last paragraph of the last chapter."}]\r\n}}'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can try other feats of pretty printing, if they help:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(indent=4)\r\n>>> pp.pprint(data)\r\n{ 'book': { 'chapter': [{'@id': 'prologue',\r\n                         'title': 'The Beginning',\r\n             'para': 'This is the ...\r\n                         ...and so on...                 
                                                        \r\n

                                                        More often than not, though, you\'re going to be "walking" the XML tree, looking for specific points of interest. This is fairly easy to do, as long as you remember that syntactically you\'re dealing with a Python dict, while structurally, inheritance matters.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Elements (Tags)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Exploring the data element-by-element is very easy. Calling your data set by its root element (in our current example, that would be data[\'book\']) would return the entire data set under the book tag. We\'ll skip that and drill down to the chapter level:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data['book']['chapter']\r\n[OrderedDict([('@id', 'prologue'), ('title', 'The Beginning'),\r\n('para', 'This is the first paragraph.')]),\r\nOrderedDict([('@id', 'end'), ('title', 'The Ending'),\r\n('para', 'Last paragraph of last chapter.')])]
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Admittedly, it\'s still a lot of data to look at, but you can see the structure.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since we have two chapters, we can enumerate which chapter to select, if we want. To see the zeroeth chapter:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data['book']['chapter'][0]\r\nOrderedDict([('@id', 'prologue'),\r\n('title', 'The Beginning'),\r\n('para', 'This is the first paragraph.')])
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or the first chapter:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data['book']['chapter'][1]\r\nOrderedDict([('@id', 'end'), ('title', 'The Ending'),\r\n('para', 'Last paragraph of last chapter.')])
                                                        \r\n

                                                        And of course, you can continue narrowing your focus:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data["book"]["chapter"][0]['para']\r\n'This is the first paragraph.'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s sort of like Xpath for toddlers. Having had to work with Xpath, I\'m happy to have this option.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Attributes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You may have already noticed that in the dict containing our data, there is some special notation happening. For instance, there is no @id element in our XML, and yet that appears in the dict.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Xmltodict uses the @ symbol to signify an attribute of an element. So to look at the attribute of an element:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data['book']['chapter'][0]['@id']\r\n'prologue'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you need to see each attribute of each chapter tag, just iterate over the dict. A simple example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> for c in range(0,2):\r\n...     data['book']['chapter'][c]['@id']\r\n...\r\n'prologue'\r\n'end'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Contents

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In addition to special notation for attributes, xmltodict uses the # prefix to denote contents of complex elements. To show this example, I\'ll make a minor modification to sample.xml:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        <?xml version="1.0"?>\r\n<book>\r\n   <chapter id="prologue">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Beginning\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para class="linux">\r\n     This is the first paragraph.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n\r\n    <chapter id="end">\r\n      <title>\r\n     The Ending\r\n  </title>\r\n      <para class="linux">\r\n     Last para of last chapter.\r\n      </para>\r\n    </chapter>\r\n</book>
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Notice that the <para> elements now have a linux attribute, and also contain text content (unlike <chapter> elements, which have attributes but only contain other elements).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Look at this data structure:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> import xmltodict\r\n>>> with open('sample.xml') as g:\r\n...     data = xmltodict.parse(g.read())\r\n>>> data['book']['chapter'][0]\r\nOrderedDict([('@id', 'prologue'),\r\n('title', 'The Beginning'),\r\n('para', OrderedDict([('@class', 'linux'),\r\n('#text', 'This is the first paragraph.')]))])
                                                        \r\n

                                                        There is a new entry in the dictionary: #text. It contains the text content of the <para> tag and is accessible in the same way that an attribute is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> data['book']['chapter'][0]['para']['#text']\r\n'This is the first paragraph.'
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Advanced

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The xmltodict module supports XML namespaces and can also dump your data back into XML. For more documentation on this, have a look at the module on github.com/martinblech/xmltodict.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What to Use?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Between untangle, xmltodict, and JSON, you have pretty good set of options for data parsing. There really are diferent uses for each one, so there\'s not necessarily a "right" or "wrong" answer. Try them out, see what you prefer, and use what is best. If you don\'t know what\'s best, use what you\'re most comfortable with; you can always improve it later.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [EOF]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Made on Free Software.

                                                        \r\n',78,38,1,'CC-BY-SA','python, parse, xml',0,0,1), (2015,'2016-04-22','Linux in the Church',1116,'How I\'m using Linux for many of my projects at church.','

                                                        Linux has been my exclusive OS for many years. When I became the tech director at my church I wanted to utilize the power and freedom of Open Source so I\'m gradually implementing it on many of my projects.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Photo\r\n

                                                        \r\n',328,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Church, Tech, Sound',0,0,1), (2017,'2016-04-26','Here are my thoughts on a 3D printer Kit.',750,'Bought a 3D printer kit. My thoughts on how it went together.','

                                                        I purchased a 3D printer kit from AliExpress.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-shipping-High-Quality-Precision-Reprap-Prusa-i3-DIY-3d-Printer-kit-with-2-Roll-Filament/32424257787.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some after thoughts on how I liked it, a little overview of 3D printers and why I bought this one.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pictures of the printer as assembled, and a few items I printed https://www.travestylabs.com/3Dprinter/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I hope to make this into a series about software, tips and modifications, and other thoughts I have to share about it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',307,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','3D printer, RepRap kit',0,0,1), (2018,'2016-04-27','How to make Komboucha Tea',988,'Here, I describe how to brew your own komboucha tea.','

                                                        How to Make Kamboucha Tea

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Makes about 1 gallon

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Ingredients

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        IngredientUSMetric
                                                        water3 1/2 quarts??
                                                        white sugar1 cup??
                                                        black tea8 bags (or 2 tablespoons loose tea)??
                                                        starter tea from last batch of kombucha or store-bought2 cups??
                                                        scoby1 per fermentation jarN/A
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Optional flavoring extras for bottling: 1 to 2 cups chopped fruit, 2 to 3 cups fruit juice, 1 to 2 tablespoons flavored tea (like hibiscus or Earl Grey), 1/4 cup honey, 2 to 4 tablespoons fresh herbs or spices

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Equipment

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Stock pot
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1-gallon glass jar or two 2-quart glass jars
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Bottles: Six 16-oz glass bottles with plastic lids, 6 swing-top bottles, or clean soda bottles
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Instructions

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note: Avoid prolonged contact between the kombucha and metal both during and after brewing. This can affect the flavor of your kombucha and weaken the scoby over time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        1. Make the Tea Base: Bring the water to a boil. Remove from heat and stir in the sugar to dissolve. Drop in the tea and allow it to steep until the water has cooled. Depending on the size of your pot, this will take a few hours. You can speed up the cooling process by placing the pot in an ice bath.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        2. Add the Starter Tea: Once the tea is cool, remove the tea bags or strain out the loose tea. Stir in the starter tea. (The starter tea makes the liquid acidic, which prevents unfriendly bacteria from taking up residence in the first few days of fermentation.)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        3. Transfer to Jars and Add the Scoby: Pour the mixture into a 1-gallon glass jar (or divide between two 2-quart jars, in which case you\'ll need 2 scobys) and gently slide the scoby into the jar with clean hands. Cover the mouth of the jar with a few layers of cheesecloth or paper towels secured with a rubber band.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        4. Ferment for 7 to 10 Days: Keep the jar at room temperature, out of direct sunlight, and where it won\'t get jostled. Ferment for 7 to 10 days, checking the kombucha and the scoby periodically.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s not unusual for the scoby to float at the top, bottom, or even sideways. A new cream-colored layer of scoby should start forming on the surface of the kombucha within a few days. It usually attaches to the old scoby, but it\'s ok if they separate. You may also see brown stringy bits floating beneath the scoby, sediment collecting at the bottom, and bubbles collecting around the scoby. This is all normal and signs of healthy fermentation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After seven days, begin tasting the kombucha daily by pouring a little out of the jar and into a cup. When it reaches a balance of sweetness and tartness that is pleasant to you, the kombucha is ready to bottle.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        5. Remove the Scoby: Before proceeding, prepare and cool another pot of strong tea for your next batch of kombucha, as outlined above. With clean hands, gently lift the scoby out of the kombucha and set it on a clean plate. As you do, check it over and remove the bottom layer if the scoby is getting very thick.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        6. Bottle the Finished Kombucha: Measure out your starter tea from this batch of kombucha and set it aside for the next batch. Pour the fermented kombucha (straining, if desired) into bottles, along with any juice, herbs, or fruit you may want to use as flavoring. Leave about a half inch of head room in each bottle. (Alternatively, infuse the kombucha with flavorings for a day or two in another jar covered with cheesecloth, strain, and then bottle. This makes a cleaner kombucha without "stuff" in it.)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        7. Carbonate and Refrigerate the Finished Kombucha: Store the bottled kombucha at room-temperature out of direct sunlight and allow 1 to 3 days for the kombucha to carbonate. Until you get a feel for how quickly your kombucha carbonates, it\'s helpful to keep it in plastic bottles; the kombucha is carbonated when the bottles feel rock solid. Refrigerate to stop fermentation and carbonation, and then consume your kombucha within a month.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        8. Make a Fresh Batch of Kombucha: Clean the jar being used for kombucha fermentation. Combine the starter tea from your last batch of kombucha with the fresh batch of sugary tea, and pour it into the fermentation jar. Slide the scoby on top, cover, and ferment for 7 to 10 days.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Additional Notes:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • Batch Size: To increase or decrease the amount of kombucha you make, maintain the basic ratio of 1 cup of sugar, 8 bags of tea, and 2 cups starter tea per gallon batch. One scoby will ferment any size batch, though larger batches may take longer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • Putting Kombucha on Pause: If you\'ll be away for 3 weeks or less, just make a fresh batch and leave it on your counter. It will likely be too vinegary to drink by the time you get back, but the scoby will be fine. For longer breaks, store the scoby in a fresh batch of the tea base with starter tea in the fridge. Change out the tea for a fresh batch every 4 to 6 weeks.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • Other Tea Options: Black tea tends to be the easiest and most reliable for the scoby to ferment into kombucha, but once your scoby is going strong, you can try branching out into other kinds. Green tea, white tea, oolong tea, or a even mix of these make especially good kombucha. Herbal teas are ok, but be sure to use at least a few bags of black tea in the mix to make sure the scoby is getting all the nutrients it needs. Avoid any teas that contain oils, like earl grey or flavored teas.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • Avoid Prolonged Contact with Metal: Using metal utensils is generally fine, but avoid fermenting or bottling the kombucha in anything that brings them into contact with metal. Metals, especially reactive metals like aluminum, can give the kombucha a metallic flavor and weaken the scoby over time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Troubleshooting Kombucha

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • It is normal for the scoby to float on the top, bottom, or sideways in the jar. It is also normal for brown strings to form below the scoby or to collect on the bottom. If your scoby develops a hole, bumps, dried patches, darker brown patches, or clear jelly-like patches, it is still fine to use. Usually these are all indicative of changes in the environment of your kitchen and not a problem with the scoby itself.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • Kombucha will start off with a neutral aroma and then smell progressively more vinegary as brewing progresses. If it starts to smell cheesy, rotten, or otherwise unpleasant, this is a sign that something has gone wrong. If you see no signs of mold on the scoby, discard the liquid and begin again with fresh tea. If you do see signs of mold, discard both the scoby and the liquid and begin again with new ingredients.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • A scoby will last a very long time, but it\'s not indestructible. If the scoby becomes black, that is a sign that it has passed its lifespan. If it develops green or black mold, it is has become infected. In both of these cases, throw away the scoby and begin again.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • To prolong the life and maintain the health of your scoby, stick to the ratio of sugar, tea, starter tea, and water outlined in the recipe. You should also peel off the bottom (oldest) layer every few batches. This can be discarded, composted, used to start a new batch of kombucha, or given to a friend to start their own.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        • If you\'re ever in doubt about whether there is a problem with your scoby, just continue brewing batches but discard the kombucha they make. If there\'s a problem, it will get worse over time and become very apparent. If it\'s just a natural aspect of the scoby, then it will stay consistent from batch to batch and the kombucha is fine for drinking.

                                                        \r\n',300,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','tea, cooking, kitchen',0,0,1), (2019,'2016-04-28','a pi project and an owncloud project',1032,'A short episode where I describe a couple of geeky projects I\'ve been working on','

                                                        HPR - A couple of Projects I\'ve been working on

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Intro

                                                          \r\n\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Please record a show!!!!!
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Couple of Projects
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Pi Project

                                                          \r\n\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Love of Music
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Digital, of course and webradio
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Sonos, other proprietary solutions
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Got a Pi2 for XMas
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Pi Music Box
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • RuneAudio
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Arch Based
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • underlying tech is MPD
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • flash SD Card
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • boot with network cable attached
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • add music and webradios to library
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • .pls and .m3u files
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. PhotoFrame Project

                                                          \r\n\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • proprietary items
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • tablet/smart phone lying around
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • ownCloud
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • update for my parents on the road
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links and other Goodies

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Pi Project
                                                        \r\nSomaFM
                                                        \r\nCapital Public Radio
                                                        \r\nSonos
                                                        \r\nSamsung Shape
                                                        \r\nPiMusicBox
                                                        \r\nRune Audio
                                                        \r\nMusic Player Daemon
                                                        \r\nUSB Audio Dongle (amazon link... NOT an affiliate link)

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        PicFrame Project
                                                        \r\nownCloud
                                                        \r\nKindle Fire HD 6
                                                        \r\nPicFrame
                                                        \r\nPicFrame Android App

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Contact Info
                                                        \r\nMatt McGraw - matty at the strangeland dot net
                                                        \r\nStay-At-Home G33k Dad ~ Fatherhood in the digital age
                                                        \r\n@sahg33kdad
                                                        \r\nGoogle+ www.google.com/+MattMcGraw

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe following link includes a photo of the RPi in the bookshelf with the stereo as well as a screenshot of the Rune Audio app running on my Android phone.\r\n
                                                        \r\nhttps://cloud.thestrangeland.net/index.php/s/CdbU1povrcproZQ\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',255,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,RuneAudio,MPD,Music Player Daemon,ownCloud,PiMusicBox,PicFrame',0,0,1), (2020,'2016-04-29','Automotive Billing',2020,'How I bill for automotive repairs','

                                                        \r\nI get a call to look at my friend\'s broke down car.\r\n

                                                        ',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Automotive, Billing, Overhead, Repair, Process',0,0,1), (2022,'2016-05-03','Whats in my bag',1587,'What I carry in my computer bag when I hit the road.','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Swissgear messenger bag
                                                          \r\n https://www.conrad.com/ce/en/product/977572/Swissgear-Yukon-156-to-173-Laptop-Bag-Wenger-SwissGear-SWISSGEAR-173-Black (this link is to a newer version, closest I could find to my 7 year old bag)
                                                          \r\n This bag has been with me since 2009, and for about the last 3 years did double duty, carrying both of my laptops with other assorted gear, and has held up beautifully, No fabric wear, not a stitch or seam broken anywhere. Both zippers are intact and still pull smooth and easily, they haven\'t even lost the pull-tabs (usually my first issue with any zipper). The handle and the shoulder strap are reasonably comfortable (for a single shoulder strap) and show no signs of wear either. Can\'t recommend this bag enough if you are looking for a tough messenger bag. If you are going to haul 2 laptops around (plus gear) I would strongly recommend something with 2 shoulder straps though, if you\'re doing any serious walking about.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Toshiba Satellite P855-S5312
                                                          \r\n https://www.cnet.com/products/toshiba-satellite-p855-s5312-15-6-core-i5-3210m-windows-8-6-gb-ram-750-gb-hdd-series/specs/
                                                          \r\nI beefed up the ram to 16gb and removed the optical drive in order to install a second hard drive. I also replaced the original 750gb spinning HDD. The new drives were both samsung evo 500gb SSD\'s. https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA2W02DV8166 My only real gripe about this laptop is the screen resolution, which maxes out at 1366x768. IMHO, this is a waste of real estate on a 15.6 inch screen. I am looking into this, but replacement with a higher resolution screen seems to be unfeasible, from what I am reading. ( IF YOU HAVE SUGGESTIONS OR KNOW OF A SOLUTION I WOULD LOVE TO HEAR ABOUT IT!!)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The old HP Pavillion dv5-1235dx
                                                          \r\n https://www.cnet.com/products/hp-pavilion-dv5-1235dx-15-4-core-2-duo-t6400-vista-home-premium-64-bit-4-gb-ram-320-gb-hdd-series/specs/
                                                          \r\n(I dont presently haul this one around anymore) Got this one in \'09. nice screen doing 1680x1050 , but I didn\'t care for the plastic housing. I like the metal case on the toshiba. - although older, I really liked this laptop, and still prefer the keyboard (although somewhat cramped) over the one on my Toshiba. The feel of the keys themselves and the distinctive stroke and light click as you press down through the detent, just feels better than the chiclet keyboard on my newer machine. Incidentally, I once spilled a rum and coke across this thing, keyboard and all, while it was powered down. After dry out and a good cleaning, it fired up and still works. I don\'t recommend trying to re create this experiment though. Dumb luck, I suppose. I was sure it would be a deader.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wacom intuos cth480 pen/touch tablet
                                                          \r\n https://www.amazon.com/Wacom-Intuos-Tablet-Certified-Refurbished/dp/B00Q7FU5YS
                                                          \r\n (this thing isn\'t available in this form anymore) these are very nice and work out of the box for me on debian, and mint, (cant speak for other distros). Getting the pen\'s pressure sensitivity settings in some drawing programs (krita, gimp, etc) can sometimes be a bit fiddly and sometimes hard to find. Overall works quite well, although I am not a professional artist. Trucker, remember? Fun to play with, and reasonably small so its good travel size.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Toshiba 2TB \'canvio\' portable hard drive
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Western Digital 2TB \'my passport ultra\' portable hard drive
                                                          \r\nI carry one of these (WD) for extra storage and backups of my laptop. The other ( the Toshiba) I use mostly for storage of my movies and TV series collections (gotta have your firefly fix, right?). As to which one is better, I prefer the case on the Toshiba, just seems more durable in that high impact plastic, but I will let you know when one of them fails me :)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        and for those real long distance wifi signals (and/or getting into monitor mode):

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        (missed these in the audio)

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • zebra f-301 ballpoint pens, black ink, 2 in fine point and 2 in medium
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • several cheap highlighter markers and one sharpie
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Just to be clear...I included many of the links here from Amazon and other shopping sites, or from c-net, because I couldn\'t see how to load my pictures in with the notes, not because I want to give product reviews or sell anyone anything. I know it can be done, because I see it elsewhere, I\'m just too tired to figure it out now. next one. As I understand it, I owe at least 2-3 shows. Be patient with me Ken, I\'m workin\' on it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',330,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','laptop,Wacom tablet,hard drive,antenna',0,0,1), (2023,'2016-05-04','Setting up my Raspberry Pi 3',1716,'I bought a RPi 3, a case, a heatsink and an SSD and have set the Pi up as a server','

                                                        Setting up my Raspberry Pi 3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I bought a Raspberry Pi 3 in March 2016, soon after it was released. I want to use it as a server since it\'s the fastest Pi that I own, so I have tried to set it up in the best way for that role.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I describe what I did in case you want to do something similar.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Refer to the full notes for the details: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2023/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,SSD,Raspbian',0,0,1), (2024,'2016-05-05','Remapping Keys with xmodmap',531,'I describe how I use xmodmap to remap my spacebar to make underscores','

                                                        In this episode I talk about how I tried to implement an idea that my son had when we were talking one day. I was complaining about file names with spaces in them, and he asked what if the computer automatically changed the spacebar so that it made underscores whenever somebody was trying to save a file? I thought this was a great idea. I even thought of a way implement it, though not quite as magically as he had envisioned. My solution involves the use of the command-line tools xev and xmodmap, and one blather voice prompt to launch the xmodmap command that will remap the spacebar to make underscores instead. Maybe somebody a whole lot smarter than me can figure out how to make this happen automatically whenever a save dialog box is open.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        First you need to find the keycode for your spacebar. Run the xev command and then press the spacebar to see which key code it is. Here\'s the output on my laptop:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        KeyPress event, serial 48, synthetic NO, window 0x4e00001,\r\n    root 0xc0, subw 0x0, time 116149126, (-739,-226), root:(448,358),\r\n    state 0x0, keycode 65 (keysym 0x20, space), same_screen YES,\r\n    XLookupString gives 1 bytes: (20) \" \"\r\n    XmbLookupString gives 1 bytes: (20) \" \"\r\n    XFilterEvent returns: False\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        As you can see, my spacebar has the keycode of \"65.\" Now we use xmodmap to reassign keycode 65 to make underscores:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        xmodmap -e \"keycode 65 = underscore\"
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Now to test it out. While xev is running, press spacebar. Notice that now when the spacebar is pressed it makes an underscore:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        KeyPress event, serial 57, synthetic NO, window 0x2600001,\r\n    root 0xc0, subw 0x0, time 116190619, (-520,-247), root:(667,337),\r\n    state 0x0, keycode 65 (keysym 0x5f, underscore), same_screen YES,\r\n    XLookupString gives 1 bytes: (5f) \"_\"\r\n    XmbLookupString gives 1 bytes: (5f) \"_\"\r\n    XFilterEvent returns: False\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And to change it back:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        xmodmap -e \"keycode 65 = space\"
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Now whenever I want to change the spacebar to make underscores or switch it back, I speak one of the following commands, which are in my blather configuration file.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nMAKE UNDERSCORES: xmodmap -e \"keycode 65 = underscore\"\r\nMAKE SPACES: xmodmap -e \"keycode 65 = space\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • xmodmap man page: xmodmap is a utility for modifying keymaps and pointer button mappings in X
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • xev man page: use xev print contents of X events
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Video Demonstration

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        https://www.youtube.com/embed/hKEax8IqxAU

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','tips and tricks, CLI, bash, linux, accessibility',0,0,1), (2025,'2016-05-06','Using a Smartphone as a microphone',63,'I talk about an App that pipes the audio input of my Smartphone into my Computer to record this show','

                                                        Hello citizen of the Internet, my name is njulian, and in my first Episode for HPR I want to talk about an App called \"Microphone\". This App is available for Android in the F-Droid repository, link is in the Shownotes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All it does is sending the audio input from the microphone directly into the audio output. This causes horrible feedback loops, if the output happens to be the Phone\'s speakers. But if you plug a Male-to-Male 3.5mm cable into your Phone and the other end into your Computer you can use your Smartphone as a Microphone. Actually I am using this right now to record this show with Audacity on my Laptop. The reasons for that are pretty simple: I don\'t have enough free space on my Phone to record a show with Urecord and the other is that I was curious if this app really works.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well, actually there is not much more I could tell about the App. It has no menu, no way to customize it, and as you can hear no noise suppression.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That\'s about it, thanks for listening.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The App: https://f-droid.org/repository/browse/?fdfilter=microphone&fdid=net.bitplane.android.microphone

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Cable: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phone_connector_%28audio%29

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',331,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','android app',0,0,1), (2026,'2016-05-09','What\'s in my Bag... Again!',503,'A look at what I carry in my bag every day. It\'s quite different than the last show.','

                                                        \r\nJust a look at what I keep in my bag these days, though I forgot to mention my beloved Zojirushi thermos (SM-JA48-BA)!\r\n

                                                        ',241,23,1,'CC-BY-SA','edc, personal, bag, backpack, tools, laptops, junk',0,0,1), (2027,'2016-05-10','Old Engineers and New Engineers',782,'I describe my and my children\'s attempts to solve a puzzle','

                                                        \r\nThis is a short episode about a puzzle that I got for my birthday from my in-laws. I gave the puzzle to two of my children to solve after I\'d taken a crack at it. It was amusing to see see how and old engineer thought about the problem compared with young ones. Pictures of the puzzle are attached. The object is to get one ball in each notch at the end of the block at the same time.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"half

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"top

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"bearings

                                                        ',259,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','puzzle,problem solving,engineer',0,0,1), (2028,'2016-05-11','Some basic info on alarm systems',458,'A very basic intro into some alarm equipment','

                                                        \r\nA very basic bit of information on some alarm equipment.\r\n

                                                        ',332,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','alarm,PIR,sensor',0,0,1), (2030,'2016-05-13','Book Review: The Pocket Ref',886,'This is a short review of the Pocket Ref','

                                                        Recorded this episode while suffering from some severe seasonal allergies, so please disregard any sniffing, wheezing or coughing that may have crept in.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is a brief introduction to the Pocket Ref by Thomas Glover. In this episode, I don\'t go into great depth of the books many topics, primarily due to the nature of the book itself. It is meant to be a reference book, and as such it contains a treasure trove of reference material from a very broad range of topics.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, I mention a few other titles in this series - links below.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','book review,reference book',0,0,1), (2033,'2016-05-18','Distro Review: Bodhi Linux',1082,'A brief review of Bodhi Linux','\r\n

                                                        As with my last episode, you may hear some sniffling or pauses as I catch my breath. It is springtime in Kentucky, and my allergies are full force right now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, I take Bodhi Linux for a test drive. I\'ll tell you what I liked, what I didn\'t like, and how well or bad it performed on my test machine.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bodhi Linux,Moksha Desktop,Midori',0,0,1), (2031,'2016-05-16','A quick intro to OBD2 with Android',293,'Introduces automobile OBD2 and briefly profiles three available apps for Android.','\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',333,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','automotive, automobile, car, cars, bluetooth, android, apps',0,0,1), (2032,'2016-05-17','How I Came to Linux',868,'Steve tells his story of how he came to be a Linux user.','

                                                        I tell the story of how I learned about computers and eventually came to be an avid Linux user.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'ve been using Linux as my primary operating system for almost 20 years now. My primary distribution of choice has always been Slackware, but I have branched out to some more "modern" distributions as well, particularly for workstation environments.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have been an HPR listener now for several months and this is my first show. I enjoy the podcast very much and hope to see it continue for many more years. Thank you to the administrators and leaders to make it all possible. And, of course, thank you to everyone that contributes shows.

                                                        \r\n',334,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux',0,0,1), (2034,'2016-05-19','Frank\'s Five Seed Bread',426,'Frank describes his recipe for Five Seed Bread, inspired by a Kerry Greenwood mystery novel','

                                                        Frank describes his recipe for Five Seed Bread, inspired by Kerry Greenwood\'s first Corinna Chapman mystery novel, \"Earthly Delights.\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        List of Ingredients:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 1 cp. (237 ml.) warm water
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1 packet yeast
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1 1/2 cps. (213 grams) white flour, approx.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1 1/2 cps. (213 grams) rye flour, approx.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1 tbs. (14 grams) each dill seed, fennel seed, sesame seed, caraway seed, or to taste
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1 tsp. (5 ml.) coriander (the reference in the story referred to coriander seed, but I didn’t have any of that, so I ad libbed)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/4 (1 ml.) tsp. salt
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/2 tsp. (2 ml.) light brown sugar
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','bread, cooking, baking',0,0,1), (2035,'2016-05-20','Building Community',465,'droops discusses some ideas on how to expand the HPR community','

                                                        \r\nThis is droops and this is also Hacker Public Radio.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nI love HPR and noticing our current need for shows, I put it on my list that I needed to help out. But what to talk about?\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nLet’s talk about growing HPR. It is a cool show and project, but if the community does not grow the show will end. People run out of shows to host and others have to fill that space.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nI think we do a great job doing outreach to the community by going to conventions, getting mentioned in articles and magazines, and being cool with everyone. But as a community we could do a little more to get to the 4000 show mark. Even my lazy butt can help with these things.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nFirst, let’s bring more traffic to the site. To do this we need content, which is really all we have. But we need to be more clever with how we use it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWe need to transcribe all of our shows. This allows search engines to better index our content and bring more people to our site. Maybe they won’t subscribe or even listen to a show with the content being readable, but they were not going to listen anyway by not finding us. This is a big chore and we would need a team with leadership to do it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWe need more popular hosts (this sounds bad taken at face value) to guest host shows and mention HPR on their shows. We used to do this by sending in bumpers like “this is droops from Hacker Public Radio and we live whatever this show is. Hacker Public Radio is a daily show created by the community”. Let’s make a list of podcasters we want to guest host or mention our show and go after them.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nSpeaking of guest hosts, let’s work on interviewing more people who will put our show on their blog/social media. We did this in the early days of Twatech with Moka5 and we got a lot of traffic from this. I do know that we already do this, but not everyone who listens contributes a show and this is an easy way to do it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat if we made it easier to record shows? Maybe have an Android/iOS app to record and submit shows from.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWe could have a tool to submit show topics or do a survey to find out what people are interested in. This may prompt people to record shows by knowing that someone would be interested in it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nSomeone could get some free stock photos (or better yet we could just take our own) and put show titles over the images to share on social media. People click on images. I will do this so that everyone can see my ugly face.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"a\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOn that note, how about a video that explains what HPR is. This may be a good droops project. That would be something awesome to share on social media.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe website, which is a lot of work, needs to have related shows listed on each individual shows page. This will take a tag system and someone to tag all of the almost uncountable previous episodes.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nOne of my favorite show formats is reviews of software/media. This is so much in our community to keep up with and HPR is perfect for this. Everyone should do a show about some unique software they use or a cool book they are reading or a cool documentary they watched. Five minutes about something cool would bring me into learning more about it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nCurrently my classes are watching a documentary about the Silk Road called Deep Web (https://www.deepwebthemovie.com/). I should do a show on it to talk about privacy, government, all the cool things it brings up. We have not gotten far into the documentary yet as we keep stopping it to have discussions. \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAlso I love stickers, we should set up a store to sell stickers and t-shirts. Heck this is HPR, we should have tote bags. We can either sell them at cost or make a profit to pay for hosting or swag to give away.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHacker Public Radio is driven by the community and our community as a whole is much smarter than I am. Let’s put our minds together and grow our show.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',1,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','community',0,0,1), (2039,'2016-05-26','Blather Configuration Part 0: Initial Setup',1146,'In this episode I walk you through the process of getting blather running for the first time','

                                                        In this episode I walk you through the process of getting the Blather GNU/Linux speech recognition program running for the first time.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Arch: On Arch Linux this is really easy. Jezra made a package build for the AUR so you can just install it that way.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Debian: I wrote an installation script for Debian-based systems that installs the dependencies to build pocketsphinx, plus a few extra packages that I use continually when I\'m running blather (xvkbd, xdotool, espeak, wmctrl, elinks, xclip, curl). It builds/installs the Sphinx stuff, pulls the blather source code, and puts some configuration files and a startup script in place for you. This should take care of pretty much all of the heavy lifting.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I refer frequently to Jezra\'s usage notes on the Blather source code page at gitlab, so if you\'re trying to install this as I talk, you might want to follow along over there.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The trickiest bit in the initial run is the creation and placement of the language files. I normally use a bash script for this, but on this first episode of the series I\'m going to use the web-based lmtool to create the language files, just the way Jezra says to do on his usage page. He also includes my automated language updater script in the blather source code, though, so going forward I will be talking about how to use that script instead of the web-based tool.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Blather Launch Script

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I use a bash script to launch Blather because I want to set several environmental variables: location of the pocketsphinx gstreamer libraries, default browser, default text-to-speech engine, and so forth. Having these environmental variables set means that I can use easy-to-remember shortcuts in my blather commands config file. Here is my launch script:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        #!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n# tell it where the Gstreamer libraries are\r\nexport GST_PLUGIN_PATH=/usr/local/lib/gstreamer-0.10\r\n\r\n# set some shortcuts to use in the commands file\r\n\r\n#export VOICE=\"/usr/bin/festival --tts\"\r\nexport VOICE=\"/usr/bin/espeak\"\r\nexport CONFIGDIR=\"/home/$(whoami)/.config/blather\"\r\nexport KEYPRESS=\"xvkbd -xsendevent -secure -text\"\r\nexport BROWSER=\"chromium-browser\"\r\n\r\n# add blather script directory to the user\'s PATH\r\nexport PATH=\"$HOME/bin:/home/$(whoami)/.config/blather/scripts:$PATH\"\r\n\r\n# start blather in continuous mode with the GTK GUI \r\n# and a history of 20 recent commands\r\n\r\npython2 /home/$(whoami)/code/blather/Blather.py -c -i g -H 20\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','blather, speech recognition, accessibility, scripting, GNU/Linux',0,0,1), (2036,'2016-05-23','Glasgow Podcrawl 2016',1716,'Kevie and Dave invite you to the 2016 Glasgow Podcrawl','

                                                        Glasgow Podcrawl 2016

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Kevie and Dave Morriss chat about the upcoming Glasgow Podcrawl. This year\'s event takes place on the 29th of July 2016 and kicks off at 6pm in the State Bar, Holland Street.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The event is open to anybody with an interest in podcasting, open source software or creative commons music. Whether you\'re an enthusiast or just interested in finding out more, also if you\'re a member of a band, then we would love to have you along for a yarn over a few pints.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Check out https://kmacphail.blogspot.co.uk/2016/04/glasgow-podcrawl-2016.html for more details and a map of how to get to the bar.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Music on this episode is "Beer" from Darkman Sounds https://www.jamendo.com/track/1182203/beer

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Glasgow,Podcrawl,open source, ccmusic, podcast, Linux',0,0,1), (2037,'2016-05-24','Alpha32\'s Pinhead Oats',282,'I talk about how I cook steel cut oats, and ask you all to please share your favorite recipes','

                                                        It\'s oatmeal, I don\'t know how much we need in terms of notes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recipe:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 2 cups water
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/8 teaspoon salt
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2/3 cup steel cut/pinhead oats
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/8 teaspoon total allspice, nutmeg, cinnamon
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/4 cup brown/demerara/whatever sort of sugar
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1/2 cup raisins
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. boil water and salt
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. heat on medium, add oats, spices, sugar
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. stirring regularly, cook for 6 minutes, or until you get tired of stirring.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. remove from heat, add raisins.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. let sit for a few minutes to cool/finish absorbing water.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. enjoy!
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',303,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','pinhead oats, cooking, recipe, oatmeal, porridge, steel-cut oats',0,0,1), (2038,'2016-05-25','Attempting to fix a plastic boat',923,'Using fire and various bits of plastic, jezra attempts to repair a hole in a plastic boat.','

                                                        I\'m on a boat!

                                                        \n',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','boat',0,0,1), (2040,'2016-05-27','Why I Use Linux',300,'A short description of why someone would stumble onto Linux and not want to leave.','

                                                        My first objective in making this show is to actually record a show, which is something I\'ve never done.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My second objective was to say something interesting about why I use Linux, how I found it and why I think I keep using it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I found Linux by word of mouth. It was a bit of a hassle to use back then and I wouldn\'t have stuck with it if the system didn\'t meet my needs better than everything else that was available to me. Cost was very important at first, but as time has gone by, it\'s been the tools and the usability of the system that have made me stay with it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Despite their differences, Apple and Microsoft both try hard to be big, to have lots of users (buyers). They try to be everything to everyone. I think that happens with some Linux distributions too, but Linux is not one thing in the way that Windows is one thing. This means that at least some distributions can be less focused on keeping up with the latest, flashiest things. Linux just works for what I need it to do. I miss it when I\'m not using it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Most of the work I do besides household bookkeeping is programming for the web. The tools I use most often are: Vim, git, grep, Filezilla, the LAMP stack, Meteor, Firefox, Chromium. Many of these tools are afterthoughts in other systems, whereas they seem like native inhabitants in a Linux distribution.

                                                        \r\n',335,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, Vim, git, grep, Filezilla, LAMP stack, Meteor, Firefox, Chromium',0,0,1), (2041,'2016-05-30','Router Antennas More = better ?',454,'A ham operators view on router antennas','

                                                        \r\nReally complicated phasing of radio signals.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Diagram

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Alternative

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Lyle

                                                        \r\n',336,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','router,antenna,ham radio',0,0,1), (2042,'2016-05-31','My podcast list',1027,'Just a listing of the podcasts I listen to','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Wait Wait Don\'t Tell Me
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] The Pi Podcast
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] NPR Politics Podcast
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Common Sense with Dan Carlin
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] dan Carlin\'s Hardcore History
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Linux Luddites
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] HPR
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Geekspeak
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Car Talk
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] AOPA Live
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] The Linux Link Tech Show
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [www, rss] Frank Delaney\'s Re:Joyce
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',116,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,recommendation',0,0,1), (2045,'2016-06-03','Some other Bash tips',3353,'Yet more information about types of expansion in Bash','

                                                        Some other Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Expansion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As we saw in the last episode 1951 (and others in this sub-series) there are eight types of expansion applied to the command line in the following order:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Brace expansion (we looked at this subject in episode 1884)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tilde expansion (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Parameter and variable expansion (this was covered in episode 1648)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Command substitution (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic expansion (seen in episode 1951)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Process substitution
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word splitting
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pathname expansion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will look at process substitution and word splitting in this episode but since there is a lot to cover in these subjects, we\'ll save pathname expansion for the next episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2045/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,expansion,process substitution, word splitting',0,0,1), (2049,'2016-06-09','My Raspberry Pi Home Server',1524,'Knightwise talks about how he uses his Raspberry Pi to get things done.','

                                                        Knightwise talks about how he uses his Raspberry Pi to get things done, and keep his connection to the Internet secure and private when he\'s away from home. He also discusses a number of command line tools that he uses on the Pi which help to keep the workflow simple and clutter-free.

                                                        \r\n',111,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','raspberry pi, foss, productivity, vpn, command line, cli',0,0,1), (2047,'2016-06-07','Neo Fetch 1.5',173,'Neofetch is a console command displaying system information','

                                                        I was reading Linux Voice I heard Dave Morriss talking about shows and made a sort one about Neofetch 1.5. Its a command that displays system information.

                                                        \r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux Voice, Linux command, Neofetch 1.5',0,0,1), (2055,'2016-06-17','GNU Nano Editor',422,'Why GNU Nano is a real Text Editor and Simple Word Processor','

                                                        I recently heard an HPR Podcast where it was mentioned that Nano was not a real text editor. That somehow VI or Emacs or Kate or Gedit were in some way better than Nano. I just wanted to set the record straight that Nano is a serious editor that has a huge following and a facebook page.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','editor,GNU Nano,Vi,Vim,Emacs,Kate,Gedit',0,0,1), (2043,'2016-06-01','My First Beer Podcast',264,'Discussing beer tasting','

                                                        Hey. It\'s MeToo here again. On this episode, were diverging from my last podcast of coffee and switching topics to, wait for it. Wait for it. BEER.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now, you might think to yourself, \"What the heck! Beer?\" I know. I know. It\'s so plebeian, right?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well. I too, use to think like that. What with the shades of Budweiser, Michelob, Iron Horse, Iroquois, Genesee, etc... All squaw piss. Right?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was raised on wines & cocktails. But, over recent years, especially after listening to many of you guys\' podcast on beer-making and drinking, I became interested in wanting to try some of these artisan beers you all have spoken of. But, being overseas in a foreign country, my chances of such are like a snowball\'s chance in hell. Or so I thought.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then came one night when I was on my way to teach a class at one of the local universities, and passed by a newly opened bar with the humorous name of \"Nobody Knows Bar.\" Where, when I glanced in the window and to my amazement, were many of the very beers you all had been talking so much about. Wow! Here was my chance to partake. So, I went to class and afterwards stopped in to the bar.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, I tried a beer. It just happened to be an IPA. Now, don\'t get me wrong. Many, many years ago I had tried an IPA and found it far from my liking. So, my first choice wouldn\'t have been an IPA normally. Again you ask, \"Why did you choose an IPA this time?\" Well, the reason was bartender recommended it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        And again to my amazement (to coin a phrase), it was great. I guess the reason for enjoying it over before is that, as like everyone, my taste buds had changed. And truthfully speaking, I\'ve come to like IPAs over many others.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, to no longer digress. Let me tell you what I chose and my opinions on the beer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The beer? A 12oz. 8.2% Alc. by vol., glass bottled Lagunitas Brewery\'s Lagunitas Unlimited Release Maximus IPA Maximus Ale. I love the labeling. It reads: \"Life is uncertain. Don\'t dip.\" Also, \"If some is good, more is better.\" And one final one, \"Instant gratification isn\'t fast enough.\" What a lark!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Enough diddle dallying. On to the tasting: The nose on this beer is crisp and light. The first mouthing brings a floral, fruity semi-sweet taste. The fruitiness continues into the aftertaste with an added semi-dryness. And yet, despite the alcohol content, doesn\'t ring your clock. The longer after flavor is strongest on the underside of the back of the tongue. Very pleasant.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So. There you have it. My first beer tasting. I hope you found it telling. And maybe you too will try a bottle. I highly recommend it. I will continue these tasting over the course of time. Now don\'t get me wrong. I\'m no sot. And I still like my coffees, but I have now found a new \"like\" and it\'s artisan beers.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"hand

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Until next time. This is MeToo signing out and wishing you happy trails and happy beers.

                                                        \r\n',313,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Beer Tasting',0,0,1), (2050,'2016-06-10','Developing Black & White Film',964,'Black and white film is actually pretty easy to develop. Follow along as I do so.','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Intro to the film and the chemicals used
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Mixing chemicals with water
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Load developing tank with film
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Live recording of the developing process itself.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',337,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Photography',0,0,1), (2051,'2016-06-13','My Linux Journey',709,'This is a short show where I talk about how I started to use Linux','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 0.00 Introduction

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 0.40 Computer History

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 6.25 Linux and Freecycle

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 8.50 Current PC and Distro

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 9.10 Helping/converting others

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',338,29,0,'CC-BY-SA','Windows 3.1,Windows 95,Windows 98,Xubuntu,Windows XP,Freespire,Ubuntu,LibreOffice,Linux Mint',0,0,1), (2065,'2016-07-01','Whats in My Bag',271,'This is a short episode about what I carry in My Geek bag at various times','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 0.00 Intro

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 0.38 Lenovo x201

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1.10 Lenovo x200 Tablet

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1.30 Lenovo x61s

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2.25 Raspberry Pi stuff

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 3.55 Portable HDD

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 4.24 sign off

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',338,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','toolkit,laptop,tablet,netbook,Lenovo,Raspberry Pi,microSD,external HD',0,0,1), (2052,'2016-06-14','A Nerdy Conversation With Linden About Technology',2429,'In this episode of HPR sigflup interviews Linden who specializes in databases.','

                                                        In this episode of HPR sigflup interviews Linden who specializes in databases. The subject of this interview varies wildly. All the way from databases to python and arch linux

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou can contact Linden on twitter at @tesherista\r\n

                                                        ',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','MySQL, SQLite, R, C, Python, Logo, Arch ',0,0,1), (2076,'2016-07-18','What Magazines I read Part 1',300,'This is a short episode about the Magazines I read that may be of interest to other listeners','\r\n

                                                        Magazines I Read

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hi This is Tony Hughes for Hacker Public Radio, I\'m trying to do a show once a month or so and I was thinking of ideas that might be of interest to the listeners out there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While there are regular shows on \'What\'s on my pod-catcher\' I\'ve never heard one about what magazines that people in the HPR community like to read. With the advent of digital media and subscription services such as Issuu, Magzter, Google Play Newsstand and I\'m sure many others which offer both Free and subscription content I\'m sure many of you like me have quite a number of magazines you regularly read, and some you dip in to from time to time. So this show is about the Magazines I like to read.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First I\'d like to say that to facilitate regularly reading of digital media I feel for me a 10" tablet is the smallest format for comfortable reading (although for those of you with young enough eyesight to be able to read small fonts with no difficulty you may feel different). However my Tablet of choice is the 12" Samsung SM-P900 which I purchased in February 2015. My only gripe with this tablet is I\'ll probably never get Android 6 on it as it\'s now over 2 years since original release. While I agree with Apple that the 4:3 screen configuration for reading on a tablet is more user friendly I can not bring myself to spend that kind of money or be tied to the Apple ecosystem.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So what Magazines do I actually read?

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Linux Voice (https://www.linuxvoice.com) This is a Linux magazine that was set up a couple of years ago by some of the former editorial team from Linux Format after a successful Kick Starter Campaign. Good content for and about Linux and the Linux community and they support the community by distributing 50% of their annual profits back to the Open Source Community after a ballot of readers. They also release issues of the magazine with a creative commons licence 9 months after publication. This is the only magazine I currently have a Paper subscription to (it also comes with a free DRM free PDF copy for subscribers)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Linux Format (https://www.linuxformat.com) Similar in content to Linux Voice but without quite the same community philosophy, but still a very good publication.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • MicroMart (https://subscribe.micromart.co.uk) This is a more general computer magazine that started in 1985, as a place you could buy and sell computers and components but is now more of a regular weekly magazine format with news, reviews and articles about all things computer and technology related. As I said in my Journey to Linux show this was the Magazine that introduced me to Linux in the late 90\'s early 00\'s. They still have a weekly Linux page and regular Raspberry Pi and other Linux related content.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • MagpPi (https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi) This is the official Monthly magazine of the Raspberry Pi Community and as you will have worked out is focused on all things Raspberry Pi. Lots of Good content including: News, tutorials, and reviews of new peripherals for the Pi, and since being brought in house by the foundation it has a very professional look and feel about it. All the content is provided by members of the Raspberry Pi Community both from inside, and outside the Foundation. You can get a free Creative commons PDF from the website or to support the foundation you can subscribe to both Print and digital copies if you wish to.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Full Circle Magazine (https://fullcirclemagazine.org/) This is a completely community driven magazine for all things related to Ubuntu Linux and its derivatives. They carry news of what is happening in the World of Ubuntu and articles and tutorials of how to use Linux software for both the beginner and more experienced users. This is a Creative Commons and can be downloaded free from the website in both PDF and e-book formats.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • PCLinuxOS Magazine (https://pclosmag.com/index.html) This is another community driven magazine from The PCLinuxOS community and is similar to Full Circle in its content, with the aim of helping users of this distro to get the most out of it they can. Also available as a free Creative Commons PDF download from their website.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Magazine, Linux, Computing',0,0,1), (2281,'2017-05-01','HPR Community News for April 2017',5549,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in April 2017','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n fth, \n venam.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2261Mon2017-04-03HPR Community News for March 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2262Tue2017-04-04Abstracting Nurse JesusEric Duhamel
                                                        2263Wed2017-04-05Freak Does Geekfth
                                                        2264Thu2017-04-06At The LibraryBill "NFMZ1" Miller
                                                        2265Fri2017-04-07WattOS on Lenovo X61sTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2266Mon2017-04-10Gamebooks: Lone Wolfklaatu
                                                        2267Tue2017-04-11Our Digital Artsigflup
                                                        2268Wed2017-04-12Fish On!Bill "NFMZ1" Miller
                                                        2269Thu2017-04-13Chocolate Milkvenam
                                                        2270Fri2017-04-14Managing tags on HPR episodes - 3Dave Morriss
                                                        2271Mon2017-04-17Raspberry Pi Zero WTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2272Tue2017-04-18In Which Our Hero Takes 4 Hours to Install Hyper-V Server 2012OnlyHalfTheTime
                                                        2273Wed2017-04-19Fountain Pensm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2274Thu2017-04-20First Microsoft Surface Pro Ubuntu 16.04 Dual bootJWP
                                                        2275Fri2017-04-21Penguicon 2017Ahuka
                                                        2276Mon2017-04-24Tunnels and Trolls and Dungeon Delversklaatu
                                                        2277Tue2017-04-25Outernet and other projectsm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2278Wed2017-04-26Some supplementary Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        2279Thu2017-04-27The first Intel CompuStick sound fix with LUbuntuJWP
                                                        2280Fri2017-04-28Lenovo X61s Part 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-April/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 43 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 14 comments on\n8 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2178\n(2016-12-07) \"Dice Mixer\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2017-04-04:\n\"Tin Horn\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2212\n(2017-01-24) \"meanderings Cyberpunk and the Minidisc\"\nby Quvmoh.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\n1F on 2017-04-07:\n\"anti-hacker?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2236\n(2017-02-27) \"Hoarding Raspberry Pis\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-07:\n\"Pis or Pi's\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nMike Ray on 2017-04-08:\n\"Pis or Pi's\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2249\n(2017-03-16) \"HPR New Year show episode 3\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-04-03:\n\"New Episode Title: Conspriacy Gate!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2017-04-14:\n\"Windows on top\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2253\n(2017-03-22) \"How to make and use a stencil\"\nby @einebiene.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2254\n(2017-03-23) \"Introduction to Model Rocketry\"\nby Steve Saner.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nChristopher M. Hobbs on 2017-03-31:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nRoan on 2017-04-19:\n\"ahh the memories\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nnstr on 2017-04-23:\n\"!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2255\n(2017-03-24) \"The Good Ship HPR\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 7:\ndodddummy on 2017-04-03:\n\"This should be a sticky show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2259\n(2017-03-30) \"Minidiscs: A Response to HPR 2212\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 4:\nQuvmoh on 2017-04-04:\n\"minidisc\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 29 comments on 13 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2261\n(2017-04-03) \"HPR Community News for March 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJwp on 2017-04-03:\n\"One button submit\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-04:\n\"Radio, electromagnetic radiation and so forth\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2017-04-04:\n\"One Button will not fix the steady supply problem\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2263\n(2017-04-05) \"Freak Does Geek\"\nby fth.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBeeza on 2017-04-10:\n\"Brilliant Show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2264\n(2017-04-06) \"At The Library\"\nby Bill \"NFMZ1\" Miller.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-04-05:\n\"Podnutz\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2017-04-05:\n\"Great Idea\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nWindigo on 2017-04-10:\n\"Similar experience\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2266\n(2017-04-10) \"Gamebooks: Lone Wolf\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nLes Orchard on 2017-04-11:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2269\n(2017-04-13) \"Chocolate Milk\"\nby venam.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJWP on 2017-04-15:\n\"Great\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndoddummy on 2017-04-23:\n\"I liked the show but...\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2017-04-24:\n\"It is a syndicated show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2270\n(2017-04-14) \"Managing tags on HPR episodes - 3\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2017-04-19:\n\"Make it so\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-19:\n\"Thanks Steve\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ngws on 2017-04-19:\n\"series\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-19:\n\"Series same as Tag?\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\ngws on 2017-04-20:\n\"tag vs. series\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nBrenda J. Butler on 2017-04-23:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-24:\n\"Tags and Series\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-24:\n\"Thanks Brenda\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2271\n(2017-04-17) \"Raspberry Pi Zero W\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-04-22:\n\"Very Cool\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2272\n(2017-04-18) \"In Which Our Hero Takes 4 Hours to Install Hyper-V Server 2012\"\nby OnlyHalfTheTime.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2017-04-17:\n\"Been there\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2273\n(2017-04-19) \"Fountain Pens\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-04-18:\n\"Fountain Pens?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-19:\n\"Great show. We need more on this subject\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2274\n(2017-04-20) \"First Microsoft Surface Pro Ubuntu 16.04 Dual boot\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-04-28:\n\"Very interesting possibility\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2277\n(2017-04-25) \"Outernet and other projects\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nLowtek Morgellon on 2017-04-25:\n\"Outernet User\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nM1rr0r5h4d35 on 2017-04-25:\n\"Sounds Awesome!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2278\n(2017-04-26) \"Some supplementary Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nunverified on 2017-04-28:\n\"You Rock\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-04-29:\n\"Thanks\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2280\n(2017-04-28) \"Lenovo X61s Part 2\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2017-03-09:\n\"hpr 2280\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2306,'2017-06-05','HPR Community News for May 2017',5248,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in May 2017','\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n TheDUDE, \n Knox.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2281Mon2017-05-01HPR Community News for April 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2282Tue2017-05-02Pathfinder Adventure Card Gameklaatu
                                                        2283Wed2017-05-03Saving money shaving with double and single edge safety razorsDave Yates
                                                        2284Thu2017-05-04Resurrecting a dead ethernet switchmirwi
                                                        2285Fri2017-05-05The Tick ConspiracyTheDUDE
                                                        2286Mon2017-05-08Surviving a StrokeTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2287Tue2017-05-09Desparately Seeking Saving RMS - Introductiondodddummy
                                                        2288Wed2017-05-10Installing and using virtualenvwrapper for pythonKnox
                                                        2289Thu2017-05-11Sendy Send. Tell if your email has been read!!sigflup
                                                        2290Fri2017-05-12How to change the height of your Ironing boardKen Fallon
                                                        2291Mon2017-05-15Arch on CELESHannah, of Terra, of Sol
                                                        2292Tue2017-05-16Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 1MrX
                                                        2293Wed2017-05-17More supplementary Bash tipsDave Morriss
                                                        2294Thu2017-05-18Activities with a ToddlerShane Shennan
                                                        2295Fri2017-05-19MX LinuxTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2296Mon2017-05-22Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 2MrX
                                                        2297Tue2017-05-23More Magnatune FavouritesDave Morriss
                                                        2298Wed2017-05-24Phantom Power Drainbrian
                                                        2299Thu2017-05-25What\'s in My BagShane Shennan
                                                        2300Fri2017-05-26The first Intel CompuStickJWP
                                                        2301Mon2017-05-29Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 3MrX
                                                        2302Tue2017-05-30Bash snippet - nullglobDave Morriss
                                                        2303Wed2017-05-31Kdenlive Part 5 All About AudioGeddes
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-May/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 50 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 8 comments on\n8 previous shows:

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 42 comments on 16 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2281\n(2017-05-01) \"HPR Community News for April 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-05-06:\n\"dodddummy\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-16:\n\"Thanks for the explanation\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2283\n(2017-05-03) \"Saving money shaving with double and single edge safety razors\"\nby Dave Yates.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nQuvmoh on 2017-05-03:\n\"Smooth show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2017-05-04:\n\"Dave! The whole time i was wondering\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nRoan on 2017-05-08:\n\"Mechanical saftey razors\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nFrank on 2017-05-22:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nJonas on 2017-05-29:\n\"Welcome back!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2284\n(2017-05-04) \"Resurrecting a dead ethernet switch\"\nby mirwi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKrayon on 2017-05-04:\n\"Good job!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-05-05:\n\"well done\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2286\n(2017-05-08) \"Surviving a Stroke\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-05-08:\n\"Fatigue\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2017-05-09:\n\"Fatigue\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonas on 2017-05-29:\n\"Great Info. \"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2287\n(2017-05-09) \"Desparately Seeking Saving RMS - Introduction\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBrenda J. Butler on 2017-05-10:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2017-05-14:\n\"Thatnks for the tip\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2288\n(2017-05-10) \"Installing and using virtualenvwrapper for python\"\nby Knox.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndroops on 2017-05-11:\n\"Great episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBiasOpinion on 2017-05-16:\n\"More Python Help Please\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nWindigo on 2017-05-31:\n\"Excellent advice\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2289\n(2017-05-11) \"Sendy Send. Tell if your email has been read!!\"\nby sigflup.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2290\n(2017-05-12) \"How to change the height of your Ironing board\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njwp on 2017-05-29:\n\"True Love\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2292\n(2017-05-16) \"Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 1\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-18:\n\"Strange urge to make a show...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMrX on 2017-05-31:\n\"Re. Strange urge to make a show...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2293\n(2017-05-17) \"More supplementary Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-05-21:\n\"What about with SCP?\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-21:\n\"SCP is a bit weird\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-22:\n\"SCP without extended globs\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-05-22:\n\"Details, details...\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-22:\n\"TMTOWTDI\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-05-22:\n\"Ken is smiling\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nclacke on 2017-05-23:\n\"scp brace expansion??!\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-24:\n\"scp is a bit of a hack!!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2294\n(2017-05-18) \"Activities with a Toddler\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-05-19:\n\"Timely\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2017-05-19:\n\"Nice show\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDavid Morriss on 2017-05-20:\n\"This was great\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-05-21:\n\"Ride the Bus\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2017-05-22:\n\"Tickling\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2295\n(2017-05-19) \"MX Linux\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njwp on 2017-05-29:\n\"Nice litle Distro Review\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2297\n(2017-05-23) \"More Magnatune Favourites\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJonas on 2017-05-29:\n\"Great listen.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-29:\n\"Thanks for the feedback\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2298\n(2017-05-24) \"Phantom Power Drain\"\nby brian.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbrian on 2017-05-27:\n\"oops\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonas on 2017-05-29:\n\"I did not know that. \"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2300\n(2017-05-26) \"The first Intel CompuStick\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njwp on 2017-05-29:\n\"Sound Quality\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2302\n(2017-05-30) \"Bash snippet - nullglob\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2017-05-30:\n\"Thanks!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-05-31:\n\"Glad you found it useful\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2326,'2017-07-03','HPR Community News for June 2017',4644,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in June 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n\n Mongo, \n bjb.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2304Thu2017-06-01Using Gnome 3 for the First TimeShane Shennan
                                                        2305Fri2017-06-02Configuring an HP Laptop for Dual Boot Linux and Windows 10Mongo
                                                        2306Mon2017-06-05HPR Community News for May 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2307Tue2017-06-06Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 4MrX
                                                        2308Wed2017-06-07Everyday package operations in Guixclacke
                                                        2309Thu2017-06-08Crowdsourcing AccessibilityJon Kulp
                                                        2310Fri2017-06-09Kdenlive Part 6 Workflow and Conclusion. Geddes
                                                        2311Mon2017-06-12Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 5MrX
                                                        2312Tue2017-06-13Troubleshooting Websites with XAMPPFrank Bell
                                                        2313Wed2017-06-14NilFS2klaatu
                                                        2314Thu2017-06-15Bad CapsNYbill
                                                        2315Fri2017-06-16Penguicon 2017 ReportAhuka
                                                        2316Mon2017-06-19Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 6MrX
                                                        2317Tue2017-06-20Bash snippet - extglob and scpDave Morriss
                                                        2318Wed2017-06-21Talking about my thinkpadsswift110
                                                        2319Thu2017-06-22Minimal Music Site 17.05.39 now available on sourceforge.netmattkingusa
                                                        2320Fri2017-06-23Living Computers: Museum + LabsJWP
                                                        2321Mon2017-06-26Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 7MrX
                                                        2322Tue2017-06-27A bit of background on virtualenvwrapperbjb
                                                        2323Wed2017-06-28How to Configure Mumble in Real TimeThaj Sara
                                                        2324Thu2017-06-29Opensusecon 2017 and Ubuntu 16.04JWP
                                                        2325Fri2017-06-30Insurance - How It WorksAhuka
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-June/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 38 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 14 comments on\n7 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2187\n(2016-12-20) \"The Toshiba Libretto 100ct\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nBob Jonkman on 2017-06-07:\n\"Fixing dead pixels\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2278\n(2017-04-26) \"Some supplementary Bash tips\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nclacke on 2017-06-15:\n\"How people record\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nclacke on 2017-06-15:\n\"On using echo\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-15:\n\"On recording\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-15:\n\"Using echo, printf and ls\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 7:\nKen Fallon on 2017-06-15:\n\"Comment limit\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 8:\nclacke on 2017-06-16:\n\"printf episode\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2283\n(2017-05-03) \"Saving money shaving with double and single edge safety razors\"\nby Dave Yates.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\njwp on 2017-06-03:\n\"Hi Dave\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2284\n(2017-05-04) \"Resurrecting a dead ethernet switch\"\nby mirwi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\njwp on 2017-06-03:\n\"great show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2287\n(2017-05-09) \"Desparately Seeking Saving RMS - Introduction\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nrtsn on 2017-06-15:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2291\n(2017-05-15) \"Arch on CELES\"\nby Hannah, of Terra, of Sol.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nHannah, of Terra, of Sol on 2017-06-04:\n\"A repo, maybe?\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nrtsn on 2017-06-16:\n\"good episode\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2297\n(2017-05-23) \"More Magnatune Favourites\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nDave Lee on 2017-06-21:\n\"CC licenses and subscription model\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-22:\n\"Re: CC licenses and subscription model\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 24 comments on 10 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2304\n(2017-06-01) \"Using Gnome 3 for the First Time\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-06-01:\n\"xfdashboard\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2305\n(2017-06-02) \"Configuring an HP Laptop for Dual Boot Linux and Windows 10\"\nby Mongo.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2017-06-07:\n\"Excellent tutorial\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMongo on 2017-06-08:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2308\n(2017-06-07) \"Everyday package operations in Guix\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-05-25:\n\"I check this one while processing\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2017-05-29:\n\"Theme song\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2017-06-04:\n\"Theme song is up\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nb-yeezi on 2017-06-07:\n\"GNU Stow please\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2017-06-15:\n\"GNU Stow in the pipeline\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2309\n(2017-06-08) \"Crowdsourcing Accessibility\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-11:\n\"Interesting project; interesting word\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-06-11:\n\"absquatulate\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2313\n(2017-06-14) \"NilFS2\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nfolky on 2017-06-14:\n\"More ;-)\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2314\n(2017-06-15) \"Bad Caps\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-18:\n\"Thanks for this\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2017-06-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-06-19:\n\"The suspense is killing me \"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2017-06-19:\n\"Do not reply in the comments\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-06-19:\n\"I'll do a show next time\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nNYbill on 2017-06-19:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nNYbill on 2017-06-19:\n\""Do not reply in the comments"\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nKen Fallon on 2017-06-20:\n\"Great more shows\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2317\n(2017-06-20) \"Bash snippet - extglob and scp\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-06-28:\n\"Clarity!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-29:\n\"Clear as mud? :-)\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2320\n(2017-06-23) \"Living Computers: Museum + Labs\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-23:\n\"AWK series/ DEC hardware\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2322\n(2017-06-27) \"A bit of background on virtualenvwrapper\"\nby bjb.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-06-27:\n\"Great Show. My follow-up to com\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2325\n(2017-06-30) \"Insurance - How It Works\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2017-06-15:\n\"Great show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Podcrawl Glasgow 2017\n

                                                          The annual Podcrawl Glasgow will take place on Saturday July 29th\n at 6pm, starting in The State Bar, Holland Street, Glasgow ... and\n going on to who knows where!

                                                          \n

                                                          See Kevie\'s blog\n for the details.

                                                          \n

                                                          We hope to see some HPR listeners and contributors there!

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • UK Table Kit\n

                                                          From @timttmy:

                                                          \n

                                                          Could you mention on the community news that I still have the\n HPR table kit and if anyone needs it to let me know via the\n mailing list. Sadly I won\'t be able to make oggcamp this year\n and I\'m a more than a little gutted as this will be the first\n time I\'ve missed the event. I hope somebody can represent HPR\n this year but I\'ve not heard any chatter of excitement about\n it on the interwebs from anyone yet.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2056,'2016-06-20','Interview with a young hacker',271,'This is a short interview with a young member of my makerspace and local Raspberry Jam','

                                                        The following interview is with a young member of the Maker Space and Raspberry Pi community here in the North West of the UK.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can find more of Josh\'s work at:
                                                        \r\nhttps://allaboutcode.wix.com/home

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Blackpool Makerspace and LUG
                                                        \r\nhttps://blackpoolmakerspace.wordpress.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Blackpool Raspberry Jam
                                                        \r\nhttps://blackpoolraspberryjam.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','interview,maker,makerspace,Blackpool,soldering,electronics,Python,EduPython,Open SUSE',0,0,1), (2060,'2016-06-24','Introduction to sed - part 5',2889,'Finishing covering sed commands. Looking at some example scripts','

                                                        Introduction to sed - part 5

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode is the last one in the \"Introduction to sed\" series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last episode we looked at the full story of how sed works with the hold and pattern buffers. We looked at some of the commands that we had not yet seen and how they can be used to do more advanced processing using sed\'s buffers.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at a selection of the remaining commands, which might be described as quite obscure (even very obscure). We will also look at some of the example sed scripts found in the GNU sed manual.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2060/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,90,1,'CC-BY-SA','sed,stream editor,pattern space,hold space',0,0,1), (2097,'2016-08-16','New Toys',555,'Story of my PC hardware journey in last 20 years','

                                                        Hi HPR listeners this is Tony Hughes talking from Blackpool UK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I did a show a few weeks ago about my Geek Bags but didn’t talk about the Desktop PC I use and as I’ve just upgraded to a new (used) PC I thought I would tell the story of my Desktop PC’s over the years.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was a latecomer to the world of personal computing having been at school in the Late 60’s and early 70’s when we hadn’t even got calculators, if you were lucky to be able to work out the intricacy of it you may have had use of a slide rule. Even after calculators started to be more widely used I had a lecturer at college while studying marine engineering, that was so good with his slide rule and mental calculation, he could, and would often work out equations far faster than those of us using a calculator.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I first came across my first IBM clone PC back at college in 1987 while studying a control systems course this was a Intel 286 PC which the college ran CAD/CAM software on and we used it to learn how to create engineering drawings electronically. This would be the last time I used a computer until the early 1990’s when by then I had changed career and become a Registered Nurse. I was working in a residential nursing home and we had access to a Windows 3.xx PC which I would use to create templates of the clinical paperwork we used for record keeping.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Around this time I met my then wife to be and she needed a PC for the University Course she was on so we obtained a used Intel 386 PC from a Friend and upgraded the Ram from 1Mb to 4Mb which cost nearly half the price we paid for the PC £120, which in 1993 was a good chunk of cash. It was a time when there was a world shortage of Ram and offices were getting burgled just for the memory in the office PC’s.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While we had this PC in the house it didn’t much interest me at the time, this was pre internet days for the average user, we weren’t on line at work and the Word processing software was Dos based and I hated using it, so would do the odd things I needed to at work during my break.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Move forward 5 years and Windows 95 had taken over the world and there was this wonderful new OS called Windows 98 starting to appear in the shops. In September 1998 I went back to do a Nursing Degree in my specialist area of practice and found that we were required to submit all our course work in word processed format, no long hand written assignments this time around. So I decided that I would invest in a new home PC.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There were a couple of Big Box PC retailers in the UK at the time that advertised heavily in the press and on TV and I chose to go to one of these and bought a PC with the following specs:   

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pentium 2 350 CPU, 128Mb Ram, 6Gig HDD, 56k modem and a DVD Rom. It also came bundled with a Scanner, Inkjet printer and software including MS Office for small Business. All for the grand total of £1400 which at the time was about a month’s take home pay so I had to pay for it with the flexible friend (my Credit Card for those of you too young to remember the ad’s)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I also signed up for an AOL account to access the internet over the 56k modem, dog slow now but at the time was the only affordable way us mere mortals could afford home internet access. I remember it could take a minute or 2 to render my Bank’s web site when I started online banking in 2001 and that was using compression software to reduce the bandwidth.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I used that PC to write all my college work and with the help of a couple of friends started to tinker with the PC, getting a 120 ZIP drive for it, and later adding a CD RW drive for storing documents and Photos that I’d scanned and later taken with my first digital Camera.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        By 2002 the PC was starting to get a bit long in the tooth and I decided it was time for an upgrade and I had a PC built for me by a local shop with P4 2.5Ghz CPU 40Gig HDD and 512Mb Ram (later upgraded to 2Gig) and a CD RW drive again later upgraded to DVD RW drive. This PC cost me half of what I paid for the P2 four years previously and was to be the last PC I bought new, all the PC’s including laptops I’ve owned since this PC have been second hand. Some given by family or friends, some built from parts of Freecycle/Freegle, and lately PC’s I’ve bought at a local computer auction in the north west of the UK.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The title of this podcast is “New Toys” and so to the juicy bit, my Desktop for the last 6 years has been a Lenovo ThinkCentre 7373 Core 2 Duo PC with a 2.6Ghz CPU, 250Gig SSD, an upgrade from the 160Gig HDD it came with and 12Gig Ram also upgraded from the 4Gig it came with and requiring a bios flash to get the MB to support 16Gig. This rig has served me well but lately I have found it starting to feel its age and taking a long time to do things I now do regularly such as video and photo editing, Audio editing and virtual PC’s in virtualBox. So I decided it was time I looked around for an upgrade. As usual I was not in the market for a new PC, I could afford one but I don’t like splashing the cash unnecessarily. As luck would have it the monthly Auction catalog included a HP Compaq Elite 8300 i7 Micro Tower. I checked out the specs and liked what I read. So Monday 1st of August I took a trip to the auction and as luck would have it I became the proud owner of said PC for the princely sum of £212.80, hammer price of £190 plus commission.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The full spec of the PC is: i7 3.4Ghz CPU (22nm architecture) 4 cores and 8 threads, 8Gig Ram Supports 32Gig 500Gig HDD, DVD RW drive and a card reader. Also came with a Win7 pro CoA but no installed OS.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So it took me 10 minutes to install Linux Mint 18 and another 30 to complete the updates and install my software over and above the base install. It boots in just over a minute, which is only slightly slower than the old PC with an SSD, so I guess it will boot mega fast with an SSD upgrade, which is on the cards after I return from Holiday as may an upgrade to the Ram. I’ve already used some Ram from the old PC to increase to 12Gig but I need some matching 8Gig Ram to go to 16 or higher.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well that charts my PC hardware journey over the last 20 odd years it’s amazing to think that one of the Raspberry Pi 3’s I own has more processing power than most of the hardware I’ve had up to the Core 2 Duo in 2010.

                                                        \r\n',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','slide rule,Intel 286,Intel 386,Windows,AOL,modem,Linux Mint,Raspberry Pi',0,0,1), (2048,'2016-06-08','The Hubot chat-bot',1316,'An introduction to the Hubot chat-bot','

                                                        Hubot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Intro

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hubot is a chat-bot written by the folks at GitHub. It is a node.js application written in CoffeeScript.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hubot has a variety of adapters that allow it to connect to a variety of chat platforms. These range from IRC to Slack. So, the platform\r\nyou are interested in probably already has an adapter available for it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hubot uses individual CoffeeScript scripts to provide chat-bot functionality. There are a slew of existing scripts available in the npm. Just search for hubot-scripts.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can also write your own in order to make sure that Hubot provides the functionality that you need.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Install

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hubot is available as an npm package. So, you will need to install node.js and npm on your system. I will leave this as an exercise for the listener.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I will however, throw out a tip for those of you using a Raspberry Pi for this. The node.js platform should be deployed on an ARM system using the armhf (ARM hard float) architecture. The nod\r\ne.js stack needed to run Hubot will not properly install if you are using the armel (ARM soft float) architecture.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once you have node.js and npm installed, you can install hubot and its dependencies with the following command.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        npm install -g hubot yo generator-hubot coffee-script
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You create your own instance of hubot by using yeoman generator. You need to do this as a non-root user. When you create your bot, you will give it a name and\r\nspecify the adapter to use. These can be specified as command line flags, or the generator will prompt you for this information.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Owner
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Name
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Description
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Adapter
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Interactive

                                                        \r\n
                                                        yo hubot
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Providing the answers

                                                        \r\n
                                                        yo hubot --name mybot --description "My Helpful Robot" --adapter shell --defaults
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Running

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once hubot is installed, you can run it with the following. I will use the shell adapter, which provides an interactive shell from which to trigger hubot scripts.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        ./bin/hubot --adapter shell
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our Hubot instance is now active and ready to receive commands. We will start with a simple ping command.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot ping\r\nmybot> PONG
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We can see the available commands by asking Hubot for help

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot help\r\nmybot adapter - Reply with the adapter\r\nmybot animate me <query> - The same thing as `image me`, except adds a few parameters to try to return an animated GIF instead.\r\nmybot echo <text> - Reply back with <text>\r\nmybot help - Displays all of the help commands that Hubot knows about.\r\nmybot help <query> - Displays all help commands that match <query>.\r\nmybot image me <query> - The Original. Queries Google Images for <query> and returns a random top result.\r\nmybot map me <query> - Returns a map view of the area returned by `query`.\r\nmybot mustache me <url|query> - Adds a mustache to the specified URL or query result.\r\nmybot ping - Reply with pong\r\nmybot pug bomb N - get N pugs\r\nmybot pug me - Receive a pug\r\nmybot the rules - Make sure hubot still knows the rules.\r\nmybot time - Reply with current time\r\nmybot translate me <phrase> - Searches for a translation for the <phrase> and then prints that bad boy out.\r\nmybot translate me from <source> into <target> <phrase> - Translates <phrase> from <source> into <target>. Both <source> and <target> are optional\r\nship it - Display a motivation squirrel
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will try a couple more.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot echo "Hello world"\r\n"Hello world"\r\nmybot> mybot the rules\r\n0. A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.\r\n1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.\r\n2. A robot must obey any orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.\r\n3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Adding Scripts

                                                        \r\n

                                                        npm scripts

                                                        \r\n
                                                        npm install hubot-simpsons
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Add hubot-simpsons to the array in the external-scripts.json file.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot simpsons quote\r\nmybot> Disco Stu⦠likes disco.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Writing scripts

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://github.com/github/hubot/blob/master/docs/scripting.md

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can add your own custom scripts by adding them to the scripts directory. An examples.coffee script was included when Hubot was installed. It includes a variety of examples of things Hubot can do. I will illustrate by paring this down to a simple single script that responds to requests to open doors. Our simple script will open most doors, but will politely refuse to open the \'pod bay\' doors.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The script uses the respond method on the robot module. This method takes a regex patten to respond to. It returns a result that contains a match array when the pattern has been detected. In our script we capture the group between \'onen the\' and \'doors\'. We then use this to determine which response to provide. The response is triggered with the robots reply method.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        module.exports = (robot) ->\r\n\r\n robot.respond /open the (.*) doors/i, (res) ->\r\n   doorType = res.match[1]\r\n   if doorType is "pod bay"\r\n     res.reply "I'm afraid I can't let you do that."\r\n   else\r\n     res.reply "Opening #{doorType} doors"
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Restart Hubot by...

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now we can use our new, useful Hubot script.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot open the french doors\r\nmybot> Shell: Opening french doors\r\nmybot> mybot open the pod bay doors\r\nmybot> Shell: I'm afraid I can't let you do that.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Aliases

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A rose by any other name... If you would like your Hubot to respond to another name, you can assign your Hubot aliases to respond to. I really like this feature and I assign the \'!\' as my Hubot alias. This allows me to invoke Hubot with a single character.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> ! open the pod bay doors\r\nmybot> Shell: I'm afraid I can't let you do that.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Adapters

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Obviously the shell adapter is not very useful aside from allowing us to play with or develop Hubot scripts. Hubot comes with several adapters that allow it to integrate with existing chat systems. These include: * IRC * XMPP * Campfire * HipChat * Slack * IRC * IRC

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Conclusion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I hope this gives you a sense of what Hubot can do and how you can utilize it. Personally, I use Hubot in a variety of ways ranging from silly entertainment to useful communication tool. Using the eight-ball script, I can see if I will have a good day.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot eight-ball Will I have a good day?\r\nmybot> Shell: Most certainly!\r\nmybot> :-)
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using a modified version of of the sms script, I can send text messages to my family members who are not available online.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        mybot> mybot sms trinity   See you on the other side!\r\nmybot> Shell: Sent sms to 3125550690\r\nmybot> :-)
                                                        \r\n',277,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','hubot chat bot',0,0,1), (2058,'2016-06-22','My 14th Beer Podcast',415,'Talking about Troegs Brewery\'s Java Head Beer','

                                                        \r\nThis is my 14th Beer Podcast. I know. I know. I\'ve only put two (2) up online so far. But trust me, the other ten (10) are coming. This one\'s just out of sequence is all.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOh, yeah. A little other morsel/tidbit for those of you inclined to brew your own. Go to https://www.brewdog.com/diydog and download BrewDog\'s DIY Dog pdf of all of their brews/beers.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou ask, who\'s BrewDog? Well, they\'re two guys and a dog, who in 2005, began home brewing in a garage in North-Eastern Scotland. Two years and countless successes & failures later, BrewDog came howling into the world. Eight years after that - and more than 200 different beers later - they\'ve released the recipe and story behind every single one of those brews.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Picture\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSo, if you\'ve ever wanted to try to brew your own, here\'s another reason to start.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',313,14,1,'CC-BY-SA','Beer Tasting',0,0,1), (2063,'2016-06-29','My 3rd HPR Beer Podcast',147,'Introducing 2 beers that I feel you may like','

                                                        JustMe here again.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is my 3rd HPR Beer podcast report.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We\'re going to introduce you to two (2) beers. The first is Rebel Rider IPA & the second is Red Seal Carousel.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As always, thanks for listening & supporting HPR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"picture\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"picture\r\n

                                                        \r\n',313,14,1,'CC-BY-SA','beer tasting',0,0,1), (2054,'2016-06-16','Blather Configuration Part 1: Desktop Management',1496,'Blather Configuration Part 1: Desktop Management','\r\n

                                                        Blather Configuration Part 1: Desktop Management

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        In this episode I show how to start adding more commands, how to use the language updater script, and how to start doing some basic desktop navigation. I\'ll show you how to open and quit applications, and how to switch from one application to another using your voice.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        For information about installing blather for the first time, as well as the startup script that I use, please refer to episode 0 of this series, which has examples and links for this stuff.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To start using the language updater script, you need to move it or copy it from the blather source code directory into your path (e.g. ~/bin/). To add new commands you will have to edit the main command configuration file:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        ~/.config/blather/commands.conf
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Commands are configured in a \"key: value\" pair, where the key is what you wish to say, and the value is the command that will be executed when you say it. We will start out with some very basic ones, but these can be as elaborate as your imagination and scripting skills will allow. You can execute built-in system commands, or you can write your own scripts that will be executed upon the voice command.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Here\'s an example of a basic desktop application command set:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        OPEN CHROMIUM: chromium &\r\nGO TO CHROMIUM: wmctrl -a \"google chrome\"\r\nQUIT CHROMIUM: wmctrl -c \"google chrome\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The first command launches Chromium, the second one will switch focus to Chromium when you are currently in another program, and the third one closes Chromium. This makes use of the command line tool wmctrl, which is a very handy window management tool. The wmctrl -a command chooses which window to put focus on (or close) based on the window title, which in the commands above is given in quotation marks. There are many options to how wmctrl can find windows and take actions, but for now we will just use this basic option.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Once you have one command set of this kind working as you like, it\'s very easy to set up additional command sets for all of the desktop applications you use most often.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Some applications are more difficult to handle than others. For example media players typically change the window title based on which track is playing. This makes it impossible to use the static window title option above, so I resort to a bit of scripting to help it find the right window to put focus on or close:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        OPEN clementine: clementine &\r\nGO TO clementine: rid=$(pgrep clementine -u $(whoami) |head -n 1) && rwinname=$(wmctrl -lp |grep $rid |sed -e \"s/.*$rid * //\" | sed -e \"s/$(hostname) //\") && wmctrl -a \"$rwinname\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Opening the music player is easy. Switching to it is something else. To make this work I first find the process ID of the Clementine music player, and then I use the wmctrl list command to list all of the windows that are open and I grep for the process ID that I found in the first part. Then I extract the window name from that command\'s output and use the result inside quotation marks in the very last command to change Focus to that window. Whew!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        One last basic desktop navigation command for this episode. This is one that I use probably more than any other command. What it achieves is the alt + Tab Key stroke, which switches Focus to the previous window. Here\'s how I do it:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nBACK FLIP: xdotool key alt+Tab\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        This makes use of the wonderful xdotool package to execute a virtual keystroke. Magic!

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Accessibility, speech recognition, linux, scripting',0,0,1), (2057,'2016-06-21','dodddummy on oats',375,'How I \'cook\' steel cut oats','

                                                        https://www.betteroats.com/brand/oat-revolution-steel-cut-oats/

                                                        \r\n',151,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','cooking,Steel-Cut Oats,Pinhead Oats,oats',0,0,1), (2059,'2016-06-23','More Tech, Less Magic',992,'More Tech, Less Magic','

                                                        This was my first show for HPR! I wanted to offer up something unique–hopefully not too much so to enjoy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I talk a bit about the differences between how my son will grow up with gaming technology, and how I did. There’s a lot of nostalgia, a little humor, and also a bit of language.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All in-show music was created by me.

                                                        ',339,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','gaming, software development, hobbies',0,0,1), (2061,'2016-06-27','Handwriting',440,'droops argues why people should use handwriting to gain super powers','\r\n

                                                        Yesterday I listened to an episode of Freakonomics (https://freakonomics.com/podcast/who-needs-handwriting/) on handwriting. As a child I disliked penmanship and was horrible at it (still am). Eventually my teachers just told me to print so that they could read my answers. This is also a tech show, which should have an audience that leans toward the fact that computers are awesome. But most of you fine listeners should be interested in what is the best solution to a problem. Especially if that solution is contrary to conventional thought.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Many reasons were given for handwriting to be a thing of the past and I think most of them are a lot of bull.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First some more qualifications for me. I am a college dropout that did eventually graduate. Until last week I was a teacher who worked with students who were not always the best. I have been without a cell phone for two years and I love fountain pens. This probably does not qualify me for much, as I am certainly not a doctor or a scientific researcher, but I do have some real world experience and have been experimenting on my students (all in a good way).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So here are some of the cons:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Handwriting is old fashioned – true
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Typing is faster – true. Cursive is on average 30 words per minute.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Hands hurt after writing – true
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Lack of success as a child demotivated me, left me “school damaged” – true
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        These are all excuses that I have made and are all excuses my students have made. As a computer science teacher, I require all of my students to keep a handwritten notebook in my classes and they can use it on all of their tests, quizzes, and assignments. What an old fashioned stick in the mud I must be (they must have a cooler way to say this).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There is nothing wrong with using tech to help with anything, but if you do not understand concepts of why and how, all the tech in the world will not help you and many people try to use tech as a crutch.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Typing is faster, most students get to the point they can type everything that is said in a lecture. This skips a crucial part of learning where you use your brain to analyze what is being said. Writing is slower but should force you to put content in your own words by thinking about it and being an active listener.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The pain in your hand should go away with practice, good form, and proper tools. I like fountain pens as they glide over the paper and you do not have to hold them in a death grip. Form means to use your arm, not your wrist, to write. With practice this can be done.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was bad at handwriting as a child and my teacher was wrong to tell me to stop. Part of education is to teach about failure and difficulty. If people only do the easy things who will do the hard ones? A person interviewed on Freakanomics said their school put too much emphasis on handwriting so they moved their child to a different school as this was having too much of a negative effect on his feelings. Way to teach your child to run away from hard things. I hope no college professor ever hurts his feelings to requires too much from them. Life gets harder, education should be hard to prepare students for the work of life.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So enough cons, how about some pro argument.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Laptops are full of distractions, most adults I know cannot focus with their email and social media trying to grab their attention.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In an independent study talked about on Freakanomics, two researchers found that handwriters and laptopers had no difference in learning faces, unless they were allowed to review their notes before the quiz, where handwriters gained an edge. Concepts on the other hand, handwriters always held and almost like they thought about the concepts more than the students who just typed everything that was said.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Something not really covered was writing new content. I give my students fountain pens as rewards and this makes writing so much more special. They take more time to write things and think more about what they are trying to say. This is a win-win.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now everyone is different. Please try handwriting for a few weeks and see if it helps you retain more. If you are not a student, watch a lecture on the internet or read a book and see if you learn more.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Finally handwriting is personal. I am willing to mail a postcard to almost anyone that sends me their address (droops @ gmail) so that they can get that personal feeling.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So I made some arguments, handwriting makes you smarter, helps you develop grit, makes you feel special, and gives you super powers. Hopefully you will try it out.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This has been droops and this is Hacker Public Radio… HPR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fountain Pen Suggestions

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',1,112,0,'CC-BY-SA','handwriting, fountain pens, education, add, adhd',0,0,1), (2062,'2016-06-28','Now The Chips Are Definitely Down',2446,'Show about an interesting documentary I recently came across and new piece of hardware','\r\n

                                                        I’d like to start by apologising for the rather fast and excited speaking style of this show particularly towards the end, hope it doesn’t spoil the content too much, it was all done in rather a hurry.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this show I describe a thought provoking documentary I stumbled upon from 1977, the documentary is about the the silicon chip and explores the far reaching implications it will have on society.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The title for the original documentary was “Now the chips are down”.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I came up with the altered title “Now the chips are definitely down” to signify that not only have the changes already happened but that it’s also had a massive cost reduction impact as my newly purchased piece of equipment demonstrates.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The new piece of equipment that I bought only became so affordable because of the great advances and massive reductions in cost over time. A similar piece of equipment cost me around £120 maybe ten years ago and due to inflation you can probably double the cost again. The price of my new piece of equipment was astonishingly cheap I thought though on reflection its cheap price may also be down to it being a more mass produced item than normal amateur radio equipment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links to Horizon documentary

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Standard C510A /C510E links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Baofeng UV-5R links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Chirp links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Hardware, Electronics, Amateur Radio, Open Source, Linux',0,0,1), (2064,'2016-06-30','Test-Driving Devuan',1213,'Frank Bell takes Devuan Beta out for a spin.','

                                                        Frank Bell takes the Devuan Beta for a test drive and finds it accelerates smoothly, corners nicely, and rides comfortably.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',195,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Devuan, Debian, SystemD, SysV',0,0,1), (2070,'2016-07-08','Adventures with Jonathan Slocum',694,'Join me on an audio video adventure with Captain Slocum and another Robert W Service ballad','\r\n

                                                        A 3 layer Birthday Cake

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With Frosting

                                                        \r\n

                                                        May I suggest that you partake of the layers in this order?

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Voyage of the Liberdade by Joshua Slocum
                                                          \r\nFind the book at Gutenberg Press
                                                          \r\n“Project Gutenberg offers over 50,000 free ebooks: choose among free epub books, free kindle books, download them or read them online.
                                                          \r\nWe carry high quality ebooks: Our ebooks were previously published by bona fide publishers. We digitized and diligently proofread them with the help of thousands of volunteers.
                                                          \r\nNo fee or registration is required, but if you find Project Gutenberg useful, we kindly ask you to donate a small amount so we can buy and digitize more books. Other ways to help include digitizing more books, recording audio books, or reporting errors.
                                                          \r\nOver 100,000 free ebooks are available through our Partners, Affiliates and Resources”.
                                                          \r\n
                                                          \r\nFind the book in all available forms (HTML, EPub, Text, Kindle) at: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/18541
                                                          \r\nThe text file is here: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/18541/pg18541.txt
                                                          \r\nFirst create an espeak of the text file:
                                                          \r\nVoyage of the Liberdade by Joshua Slocum
                                                          \r\nhttps://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/18541
                                                          \r\nTo create an espeak run this commmand against the text file:

                                                          \r\n
                                                          espeak -f location_text -w output_file_here(.whatever_extension_you_want)
                                                          \r\n

                                                          Or read the book old school

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Sailing Alone Around the World by Joshua Slocum (Audio Book read by Alan Chant)
                                                          \r\nhttps://librivox.org/sailing-alone-around-the-world-by-joshua-slocum/

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. A YouTube Movie that explains more about Captain Slocum.
                                                          \r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iciZer5cbJ8

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Cremation of Sam McGee Robert W. SERVICE (1874 - 1958) Read by Kristin Hughes https://ia600202.us.archive.org/28/items/cremationsammcgee_0711_librivox/sammcgee_service_klh.mp3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Joshua Slocum, Sailing Alone Around the World, Audio Books, Robert W Service, birthday Shows',0,0,1), (2068,'2016-07-06','Podcasts I listen to and how I fetch them.',515,'As I drive to work, I rattle off a short list of podcasts that I listen to and how I fetch them.','\r\n

                                                        Subscriptions

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Right out of my ~./podget/serverlist:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Tools

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Configuration

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I can supply my podgetrc upon request. It’s pretty basic.

                                                        \r\n',241,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts,podget,podracer,gPodder,RockBox,Sansa Clip+',0,0,1), (2067,'2016-07-05','Haste - the pastebin alternative',556,'How to install your own haste server','

                                                        Haste

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A walk through of installing haste as an open source federated pastebin.com alternative.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See the project at hastebin.com

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I ran into project this while following John Kulp’s notes on his blather intro.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Installing node.js

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Installing via a package manager. See nodejs website for most up-to-date information. Commands given below are just for reference.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        RedHat based systems

                                                        \r\n
                                                        curl --silent --location https://rpm.nodesource.com/setup | sudo bash -\r\nsudo yum install -y nodejs
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Debian based systems

                                                        \r\n
                                                        curl --silent --location https://deb.nodesource.com/setup | sudo bash -\r\nsudo apt-get install -y nodejs
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Upgrade npm

                                                        \r\n
                                                        npm install npm -g
                                                        \r\n

                                                        haste-server

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Take a look at the haste-server project on github

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Clone haste-server git repository

                                                        \r\n
                                                        git clone https://github.com/seejohnrun/haste-server.git\r\ncd haste-server
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Choose storage method

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Choices

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • file system
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • redis
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • memcached
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you will be using the file system storage method, delete storage section in config.js using your favorite text editor.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Install

                                                        \r\n
                                                        npm install\r\nnpm start &
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Use server

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can now browse to your new haste-server at the server name or ip at port 7777. Follow the icon links on the page for usage.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        https://<servername>:7777
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using shell to add content

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Create a bash alias to pipe files to the haste file server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Add the following to your .bashrc file:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        HASTE_SERVER='https://myserver:7777'\r\nhaste() { a=$(cat); curl -X POST -s -d "$a" $HASTE_SERVER/documents | awk -v server="$HASTE_SERVER" -F '"' '{print server"/"$4}'; }
                                                        \r\n

                                                        References

                                                        \r\n\r\n',277,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','haste,haste-server,haste-client,javascript,nodejs,npm',0,0,1), (2069,'2016-07-07','Counting Stuff in LibreOffice Calc',1195,'I try to explain how to use the COUNTIF function in LibreOffice to generate reports','

                                                        When I took over as Director of the School of Music in January, one of the first things I did was to try to get a better handle on the number of faculty I had at various ranks, how many had terminal degrees, how many already had tenure, how many were on tenure track, how many held endowed professorships, and so forth. Somewhere in the process, I discovered a handy trick for generating reports for this kind of thing. It\'s the COUNTIF function of LibreOffice calc. In this episode I will go through some examples of ways that I\'ve used COUNTIF to generate reports.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Examples

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Count occurrences of the string from A6 of current sheet on other sheet Personnel in column K

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        =COUNTIF($Personnel.$K$1:$K$135,Reports.A6)
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Count occurrences of explicit string on other sheet \"Personnel\" in column K

                                                        \r\n
                                                        =COUNTIF($Personnel.$K$1:$K$135,"=Instructor")
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Count greater than or equal to 50

                                                        \r\n
                                                        =COUNTIF($I$2:$I$105,">=50")
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Using SUMPRODUCT, count between range greater than or equal to 40 but less than 50

                                                        \r\n
                                                        =SUMPRODUCT($I$2:$I$105>=40,$I$2:$I$105<50)
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Look for the string from sheet \"Reports,\" cell A21, in the sheet \"Personnel\" column U, excluding any rows that have the value \"Adjunct\" in column K.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        =COUNTIFS($Personnel.$U$1:$U$135,Reports.A21,$Personnel.$K$1:$K$135,"<>Adjunct")
                                                        \r\n',238,70,0,'CC-BY-SA','LibreOffice, formulas, tips and tricks',0,0,1), (2077,'2016-07-19','libernil.net and self hosting for friends and family',1098,'I talk a little about my network and how you can host services for your friends and family.','

                                                        What is libernil.net?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        libernil.net is an island of pseudo-freedom. This project was established in order to pursue ideals of Free Software, Free Culture, ethically sourced hardware, self hosting, and sharing with others. Generally it consists of personal content, though some community resources reside here as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The name came from an old programming group and was repurposed. I would really like to find a new name!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Similar networks

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • tilde.club
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sdf.org
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The network

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Set in three physical locations: two in Northwest Arkansas, one (a VPS) in Sweden.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One recycled shuttle rig called “summernight”, one ThinkPenguin nano called “aprilshowers”, and a VPS known as “eremit”. Two or three inaccessible machines for backups and other automation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Wireless access provided in the openwireless.org model at both US physical locations.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Services

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Websites
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Shell accounts
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • DNS
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • wireless access
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • XMPP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • IRC Bots
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Git
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • MediaGoblin
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Future services

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Game servers
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pump.io and GNU Social instances
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • mail server
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • PBX with DID lines
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • data service
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Events and community

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The community is very loosely organized and rarely operates under the name of the network, though we sometimes gather for events in the same location as the machines. In the past we’ve had a cryptoparty and I am trying to organize a FreeDOOM LAN party.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        How to host your own services

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Acquire a machine, any machine! Could be a junk rig, an old laptop, or a fancy single board computer.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Install your favorite distro or try freedombone/freedom box.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Get a domain name with your favorite registrar.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Get a static IP from your ISP if possible or go with Dynamic DNS
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Install Bind or set up your router to manage DNS.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Invite some friends to play on your new server! Maybe have a party!
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Set up backup scripts.
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',241,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','gnu, linux, networking, community, servers, services, commons',0,0,1), (2087,'2016-08-02','Magazines I read Part 2',220,'More of the magazines I read','\r\n

                                                        Hi Hacker Public Radio this is Tony Hughes again with the second episode about the magazines I like to read. All of the magazines I’ll be talking of today I read on my Magzter (www.magzter.com) Application on my tablet. I have a Magzter Gold subscription which gives me access to literally 100’s of magazines.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Vegetarian Times (www.vegetariantimes.com)
                                                          \r\nI’m a bit of a foodie and have been a vegetarian for many years, so access to good food magazines is important to me. This is a US publication so not all the advertised products are available in the UK but the articles and recipes are excellent.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Feel Good Food (www.womanandhome.com/recipes/534618/feel-good-food-mag)
                                                          \r\nA British magazine aimed at Women but non the less still a source of some brilliant recipes for delicious food for food lovers everywhere. Not a veggie magazine but there is usually something of interest. Like most of the food magazines I read I dip into them find recipes I like save them and move on.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Moving on from food to Sci Fi and cult fiction.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I’ve grouped these together as they both deal with this subject. They review the latest books, films, TV, comics and audio recordings for this genre . They also cover classic examples, often examining work from the so called golden age of a particular subject. Along with Total Film magazine (www.gamesradar.com/totalfilm) you will always have access to reviews of the latest films & TV and if they are worth the price of a cinema ticket or space as a series record on your PVR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another armchair hobby of mine is archaeology I’ve loved Time Team from the beginning. So my next magazine on Magzter is Archaeology (archaeology.org) this is a bi monthly magazine published in the US, but covering the latest archaeological news from around the world. For someone into my modern technology its interesting to read about what the latest technology was hundreds or even thousands of years ago.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Moving on, one of my other interests over the last 20 years has been motorcycles although I no longer ride I still retain an keen interest so a Bike magazine has to be something I dip into to drool over shiny metal every so often. So I currently have Back Street Heroes (www.backstreetheroes.com) as a favourite in Magzter and dip into it when I need a shiny metal fix.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Finally a more active hobby of mine is photography so there has to be a photography magazine in this list. Amateur Photographer (photographer.magazinesdirect.com) claims to be the worlds oldest weekly photography magazine. It covers all aspect of photography and the equipment you need. From high end Professional stuff to point and shoot cameras, and all the other stuff from bags to flash lights.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Magazine,food,recipe,sci fi,archaeology,motorcycles,photography',0,0,1), (2074,'2016-07-14','Experience With A Neighborhood Cat',915,'A show about a cat. Warning. Repeat. Warning. Contains content that will be disturbing to some.','

                                                        \r\nAn old friend comes home...\r\n

                                                        ',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','cat, compassion, death, medical, hospice, friend, pet, life',0,0,1), (2071,'2016-07-11','Undocumented features of Baofeng UV-5R Radio',531,'Follow on show about undocumented features I found on my Baofeng UV-5R radio','\r\n

                                                        This is a short follow on show listing undocumented features I came across while playing with my new Baofeng UV-5R radio

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Baofeng UV-5R links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,43,1,'CC-BY-SA','Electronics, Amateur Radio, Open Source',0,0,1), (2072,'2016-07-12','That Awesome Time I Deleted My Home Directory',505,'sigflup deletes her home directory only to recover one important file','

                                                        Omg, Sigflup deletes her home directory! Commands in this episode include:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\ngrep -b -a \"what you remember\" /dev/sd0a > /tmp/log\r\ndd if=/dev/sd0a bs=1 skip=12345 of=/tmp/out count=123456\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis is a capture of the program that sigflup recovered. It\'s a mouth tracker. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gf2NJrXGT4U\r\n

                                                        ',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','filesystem, grep, dd',0,0,1), (2351,'2017-08-07','HPR Community News for July 2017',2315,'Murphy is strong but Ken struggles on talking about shows released and comments posted in July 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Ironic Sodium.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2326Mon2017-07-03HPR Community News for June 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2327Tue2017-07-04A Texan\'s view on Why only a Native Born person can be PresidentJWP
                                                        2328Wed2017-07-05Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 8MrX
                                                        2329Thu2017-07-06Building a Digital Clock KitDave Morriss
                                                        2330Fri2017-07-07Awk Part 7b-yeezi
                                                        2331Mon2017-07-10Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 1Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2332Tue2017-07-11Installing DD-WRT on ASUS RT-N66UIronic Sodium
                                                        2333Wed2017-07-12VirtualenvWrapper for Fish Shellb-yeezi
                                                        2334Thu2017-07-13Our Adventure Begins!Claudio Miranda
                                                        2335Fri2017-07-14Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 9MrX
                                                        2336Mon2017-07-17Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2337Tue2017-07-18The Kobo Aura eReaderJon Kulp
                                                        2338Wed2017-07-19Binaural recording 2 off to workQuvmoh
                                                        2339Thu2017-07-20Podcast list additionsDave Morriss
                                                        2340Fri2017-07-21Tracking the HPR queue in PythonMrX
                                                        2341Mon2017-07-24Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 3Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2342Tue2017-07-25Wherein our hero fails to repair a garage door.Christopher M. Hobbs
                                                        2343Wed2017-07-26Healthcare in the NetherlandsKen Fallon
                                                        2344Thu2017-07-27Follow on to HPR2340 (Tracking the HPR queue in Python)MrX
                                                        2345Fri2017-07-28Fixing a toilet roll holderKen Fallon
                                                        2346Mon2017-07-31Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 4Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-July/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 23 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 3 comments on\n3 previous shows:

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 20 comments on 8 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2327\n(2017-07-04) \"A Texan\'s view on Why only a Native Born person can be President\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njezra on 2017-07-05:\n\"Not native born: natural born\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-07-05:\n\"Jezra is correct\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nCanadianbob on 2017-07-08:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2329\n(2017-07-06) \"Building a Digital Clock Kit\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Lee on 2017-07-06:\n\"Just bought one\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-07-06:\n\"Hmm, Glasgow Podsoldering anyone?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2333\n(2017-07-12) \"VirtualenvWrapper for Fish Shell\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nklaatu on 2017-07-17:\n\"homebrew virtual envs\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2334\n(2017-07-13) \"Our Adventure Begins!\"\nby Claudio Miranda.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin on 2017-07-13:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClaudioM on 2017-07-14:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2017-07-16:\n\"Nostalgia\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nClaudioM on 2017-07-18:\n\"Re: Nostalgia\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2337\n(2017-07-18) \"The Kobo Aura eReader\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nlostnbronx on 2017-07-27:\n\"Great Overview\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-07-27:\n\"Kobo anagrams to Book\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2338\n(2017-07-19) \"Binaural recording 2 off to work\"\nby Quvmoh.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2017-07-18:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2017-07-23:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2340\n(2017-07-21) \"Tracking the HPR queue in Python\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-05-25:\n\"You don't need to scrape\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMrX on 2017-05-31:\n\"Re you don't need to scrape\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2017-06-01:\n\"See show 1986\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMrX on 2017-06-01:\n\"re: See show 1986\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2343\n(2017-07-26) \"Healthcare in the Netherlands\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-07-26:\n\"Unexpectedly interesting\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-07-26:\n\"On the way\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Tags and Summaries\n

                                                          In the past month we have had contributions from \n bjb and\n Windigo \n and I have added a few tags & summaries myself. Many thanks to\n all contributors.

                                                          \n

                                                          See the current status and instructions for making your own\n contribution at \"Shows without a summary and/or tags\".\n This page has recently been reformatted for easier navigation and\n a new section has been added. This section lists the hosts whose\n shows need attention followed by the show numbers that need work.

                                                          \n

                                                          Currently there are 957 shows which need summaries or tags to be\n added. All contributions to this project are most welcome.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2073,'2016-07-13','The power of GNU Readline - part 1',716,'There\'s a lot you can do to speed up typing by using GNU Readline. We\'ll explore how in this series','

                                                        The power of GNU Readline - part 1

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We all use GNU Readline if we we use the CLI in Linux because it manages input, line editing and command history in Bash and in many tools.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have been using Unix and later Linux since the 1980\'s, and gradually learnt how to do things like jump to the start or the end of the line, delete a character backwards up to a space, or delete the entire line.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I think that learning GNU Readline is worthwhile since it contains a lot more features than what I just described. I thought I would do a few episodes on HPR to introduce some of what I consider to be the most useful features.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I want to keep the episodes short since this is a dry subject, and, if you are anything like me, you can\'t take in more than a few key sequences at a time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The source of my information is the GNU Readline Manual. This is very well written, if a little overwhelming.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To read the rest of the notes for this episode follow this link: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2073/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,102,1,'CC-BY-SA','command line,cli,GNU Readline',0,0,1), (2075,'2016-07-15','Skin cancer',359,'My recent experience with skin cancer, and a primer on UV','\r\n

                                                        This is a very personal podcast, discussing minor surgery. If that sort of stuff makes you cringe at all, this may not be the recording for you. I should also point out that I am not a medical professional, you should not take this recording as medical advice, if you have any concerns about your skin, seek professional medical advice.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I am a very white person living in Queensland, Australia. Our state has amongst the highest rate of skin cancers in the world, I believe we\'re in a tussle with New Zealand for first place at the moment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are two main types of skin cancer, melanoma and non-melanoma. The non-melanoma type is slow growing, and rarely spreads to other parts of the body, while melanoma is fast growing and spreads to the rest of the body.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Both my parents have had multiple lesions excised, so something like this was always on my mind. We live in a sunny, sub-tropical environment, the sort of clothing you\'d want to wear for comfort is light, breezy, and not covering much skin, exactly the wrong sort of clothes you\'d need to wear to protect yourself from ultraviolet (UV) rays that help cause skin cancer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        According to the Australian BoM FAQ https://www.bom.gov.au/uv/faq.shtml the per capita risk of skin cancer in Australia is ten times higher than America and sixty times higher than the UK.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The UV scale rarely gets above eight in the UK, in Brisbane the UV scale is above eight for roughly eight months of the year.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a lot of variables when it comes to UV. Cloud cover is probably the most important. Something that I can\'t stress enough is that heat and UV are not correlated, you can definitely be exposed to lots of UV when it\'s cold (see New Zealand, they\'re much more south, much more cold, and have more exposure due to the ozone hole). Another example is snow, UV will bounce off the snow and back at you.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The link between skin cancer and UV is quite strong, 95-99% of skin cancers are caused by excess sun exposure. (https://www.cancer.org.au)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, with all that history, I started getting yearly skin checks a couple of years ago. I\'d had a couple of skin checks when I was very young, and now that I\'m more advanced in years I wanted something less ad-hoc. Someone working for one such organisation gave a talk at one of the user groups I attended, and i made an appointment with Molemap. It\'s a full on procedure where your entire body is photographed, and each mole, freckle, bump and lump that is of possible concern is photographed from a few centimetres off the skin, and with the magnification lens sitting right on top of the mole.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have some near 200 spots on myself that are of interest, so my follow up appointments take about two and half hours to go over all these spots, plus looking for new ones. The hope is that, by doing this close to yearly, small changes in all these spots won\'t go unnoticed, and we can get on top of any cancers early.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Interestingly, the spot that was actually a problem was a new one, so under a year old, and was hiding underneath my beard, so in future I\'m definitely going to have my skin checked clean shaven.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The other thing I want to communicate is that early detection is key, all the skin cancers have a 90% plus survival rate (at five years) if caught early enough. This does potentially mean that a yearly check is not enough, but it\'s already proven it\'s worth to me.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Molemap only does photography of spots, and visual diagnosis. It does not do any treatment or biopsies or excisions, therefore there it has no self interest in recommending treatment on borderline cases. Molemap sprang out of a University of Queensland project, which is my alma mater. After receiving the diagnosis (via an online form, secured with a second factor sent to my phone) and panicking a fair bit, I contacted my regular doctors practice (we call them general practitioners in Australia, I\'m sure they\'re called different things elsewhere) for an appointment with a GP who had experience with skin cancers. In QLD, most medical centres will have at least one doctor with experience in this area. As it turns out, my regular GP has such experience and I got an appointment for the following week.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I wasn\'t really sure what to expect from my GP appointment, but I was mostly expecting to get the diagnosis confirmed, and either get sent to a specialist to deal with it, or organise another appointment at the GP.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What actually happened was it took all of five minutes for my doctor to confirm the diagnosis, then work how he had time in his schedule, and there was a nurse free, to excise the lesion straight away. I was given a local anaesthetic, so I felt no pain whatsoever, but you still feel the doctor pulling on your skin up, down left and right, so that the complete lesion can be removed, as well as a small amount of surrounding skin in case the cancer has spread.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here I should mention that melanomas spread very fast, and when they\'re excised up to a centimetre of skin may need to be removed, where as for a non-melanomic, a millimetre or so is good enough.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I got four sutures put in, they stayed for a week (we have a long easter break in Australia) so it ended up being closer to a week and a half. I had no problems, my scar healed up quickly and nicely. Now, a couple of months later, there\'s a little redness along the scar line, but that\'s about it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So. The take aways. UV is not correlated to heat, you can get a lot of UV exposure in cold environments. If you\'re travelling through a high UV area, take precautions (clothes that cover a lot of your skin, hat, sunglasses, sunscreen). If you live in a high UV area, get your skin checked regularly. Also, keep an eye on your own skin. Use a diary to record any new bumps, lumps, spots etc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',315,100,1,'CC-BY-SA','skin cancer,melanoma,UV,ultraviolet light',0,0,1), (2078,'2016-07-20','What\'s in my bag?',884,'A short summary of all the crap Windigo lugs back and forth','

                                                        If you should happen to find me on the road, don’t kill me! I’m an atheist!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, this will be the contents of my bag:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Stainless steel coffee mug, Stewarts-branded
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Stanley stainless steel thermos
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Kleen kanteen wide, 40oz stainless steel water bottle
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 1½-foot micro USB cable
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ethernet cable (currently retractable)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Sony headphones
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Handful of SD and USB storage, including 64GB primary on keychain
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Maglite AA-powered flashlight
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ballpoint pen
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Lunch, usually in a mason jar or metal box
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • If it’s Wednesday or Thursday, my backup drive
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dell Mini 9 with AC adapter
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • If I’m walking to the Tech Center, a ZaReason Verix laptop with AC adapter
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',196,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','coffee mug,thermos flask,ethernet cable,Maglite,ZaReason Verix,Dell Mini 9',0,0,1), (2079,'2016-07-21','Everyone Loves Some Acid House',441,'Sigflup demonstrates how to make acid house quickly','

                                                        In this episode of hpr sigflup makes some acid house. She uses Technobox2, which simulates the tb-303 and the tr-808

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Roland

                                                        \r\n',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','acid music ',0,0,1), (2081,'2016-07-25','Fixing my daughter\'s laptop',669,'My daughter broke the headphone jack in her laptop. I tried to get the remains out','

                                                        Fixing my daughter’s laptop

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My daughter is a student at university and uses her laptop with a headset most of the time. She shares a flat with a friend and they are both studying, so they don’t want to annoy each other with noise.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The headset my daughter uses has a very long cable and earlier this year she tripped over it. The microphone jack was OK, but the headphone jack snapped off at the first ring and the remaining piece was left in the socket.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode is about my attempt to remove the broken piece of the jack plug. To find out more about the method I used and how successful it was see the full notes with pictures here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note: The Amazon links below are for information. I have no financial involvement with Amazon; these are not Affiliate links.

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','laptop,repair,audio jack,Dremel,USB DAC',0,0,1), (2088,'2016-08-03','How my wife\'s grandma got me into linux.',2001,'Knightwise tells us how his wife\'s 80 year old grandmother got him into Linux.','

                                                        Knightwise talks about how he got into Linux.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        From the early beginnings where I dabbled in Suse to the present day where I run my company on Linux, I tell you the story of how I got into Linux .. And how my wife’s 80 year old grandma got me into Linux permanently.

                                                        \r\n',111,29,1,'CC-BY-SA','linux, ubuntu, suse, mandriva',0,0,1), (2085,'2016-07-29','Penguicon 2016 Report',1337,'Penguicon 2016 happened on April 29 through May 1, 2016 in Southfield, Michigan','\r\n

                                                        Penguicon 2015 is a combined technology and science fiction convention in Southfield, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, and presented over 500 hours of programming over the entire weekend. Of this, around 100 hours were open source, tech-related. In this episode I give you my personal diary of my experience at this great event.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon 2016',0,0,1), (2095,'2016-08-12','23 - SSL Certificates - How They Work',2462,'A discussion of how SSL certificates work','\r\n

                                                        I had the opportunity to present a talk on SSL Certificates at our local LUG, the Washtenaw Linux Users Group, which uses some material from a previous HPR episode, but may be of interest to our listeners nonetheless. Because this was a lengthy presentation I have divided it into sections. This first section explains how SSL Certificates work, and the second one will explore some of the problems that we have with SSL Certificates, and how we might address those problems. For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=655

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','SSL, Certificates, encryption',0,0,1), (2082,'2016-07-26','Basic Audio Production - Equalization',1126,'The basics of one of the most fundamental audio production techniques','\r\n

                                                        The bread and butter of open source audio production:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',323,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Music, Audio, Production, Recording, DAW, Audio Production, Sound, DIY, Equalization',0,0,1), (2084,'2016-07-28','Cleaning the Throttle Body on My Pickup Truck',1469,'I record the process of cleaning the throttle body on my truck, trying to fix an idling problem','

                                                        In this episode I take you along for the ride as I do a little bit of maintenance on my pickup truck. I\'ve been trying to track down the source of of a rough idling problem that sometimes turns into stalling out. I already replaced the fuel filter (did not solve the rough idling problem but probably was due anyway), and here I make an audio recording as I clean the throttle body, which apparently is one of the first things you should do when your vehicle is idling roughly and stalling out. Still not sure if I have totally fixed it but it seems to run OK so at least I did not mess it up any worse.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Throttle\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, Auto repair, auto maintenance, cars, trucks',0,0,1), (2089,'2016-08-04','Solving a blinkstick python problem',1220,'How I solved a problem I found when trying to control my new blinkstick nano with Python','\r\n

                                                        This is a show describing how I solved a problem of using my new Blinkstick Nano in Python, the problem occurred because I inadvertently installed the blinkstick module to the wrong version of Python as I have multiple versions of python installed on my raspberry pi.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A blinkstick is a USB powered device with attached RGB led’s, it can be controlled using a wide range of languages, and supports the Raspberry Pi, Linux, Microsoft Windows & Apple

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As a side note I forgot to mention that the blinkstick hardware and software is Open Source

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Initially I blindly followed the advice given at https://www.blinkstick.com/help/raspberry-pi-integration which recommended the following commands

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo apt-get install -y python-pip python2.7-dev\r\nsudo pip install blinkstick\r\nsudo blinkstick --info\r\nblnkstick --add-udev-rule
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I discovered that the blinkstick module was not being found when I ran my python script, this turned out to be because I was invoking a different version of python in my script from that which I installed the blinkstick module. I installed the blinkstick module to Python 2.7, my script was running python 3.2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I ran the following commands to rectify the problem

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo apt-get install -y python3-pip\r\nsudo pip-3.2 install blinkstick\r\nsudo blinkstick --info (Run in my script)\r\nblinkstick --add-udev-rule (Not required 2nd time round)
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some links I looked at to get some understanding of what was going on

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        You can get a list of your installed python modules by first going to the python interpreter by typing python at the command prompt and issuing the following command

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> help('modules')
                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can list your python search path by first going to the interpreter by typing python at the command prompt and issuing the following commands, the search path is the list of system directories that python will search to run things like commands and modules

                                                        \r\n
                                                        >>> import sys\r\n>>> sys.path
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Hardware, Electronics, Programming, Raspberry pi, python, open source, BlinkStick',0,0,1), (2090,'2016-08-05','A Docker Dialog',1972,'Thaj and Lyle (x1101) have a discussion about Docker and its use.','\r\n

                                                        Thaj and Lyle (x1101) have a discussion about Docker and its use.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',270,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Docker, Self-hosting',0,0,1), (2105,'2016-08-26','24 - SSL Certificates - Problems',2189,'A discussion of the problems with SSL certificates, and some solutions','\r\n

                                                        I had the opportunity to present a talk on SSL Certificates at our local LUG, the Washtenaw Linux Users Group, which uses some material from a previous HPR episode, but may be of interest to our listeners nonetheless. Because this was a lengthy presentation I have divided it into sections. This is the second section which will explore some of the problems that we have with SSL Certificates, and how we might address those problems. The first section contains our description of how SSL Certificates work.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For more go to https://www.zwilnik.com/?page_id=686

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','SSL, Certificates, encryption',0,0,1), (2091,'2016-08-08','Everyday Unix/Linux Tools for data processing',1815,'In this episode, I give some examples of common and uncommon tools for processing data files','
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some of the tools I use to process and clean data from all manner of customers:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        detox

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The detox utility renames files to make them easier to work with. It removes spaces and other such annoyances. It’ll also translate or cleanup Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) characters encoded in 8-bit ASCII, Unicode characters encoded in UTF-8, and CGI escaped characters.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See other episodes for great sed information. I like to remove DOS end of line and end of file characters:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        sed -i 's/\r\n//g' *.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        or

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sed -i 's/\\r//g' *.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Command-line tools

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • ack
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • awk
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • detox
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • grep
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pandoc
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pdftotext -layout
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sed
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • unix2dos and dos2unix
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • wget
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • curl
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        R libraries

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • RCurl
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • XML
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • rvest
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • tm
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • xlsx
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Python libraries

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Vim tricks

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • buffer searches (:vim /pattern/ ##)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ack plugin
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • bufdo (:bufdo %s/pattern/replace/ge | update)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Other tools

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux,unix,data,command-line',0,0,1), (2096,'2016-08-15','Useful Bash functions - part 2',1401,'The further development of a Bash function that may be of use in your scripts','

                                                        Useful Bash functions - part 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Overview

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the second show about Bash functions. In this one I revisit the yes_no function from the last episode and deal with some of the deficiencies of that version.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As before it would be interesting to receive feedback on these versions of the function and would be great if other Bash users contributed ideas of their own.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are long, they have been placed here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','coding,Bash,script,function',0,0,1), (2186,'2016-12-19','Baking Yule Bread',1075,'\'Tis the season and Inscius is baking Yule bread, Swedish style.','\r\n

                                                        Dough after rising one hour:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Bread

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Loaves after rising:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Three

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Finished bread (photo from another occasion):

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Loaves

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recording device: Zoom H2n

                                                        \r\n',283,93,1,'CC-BY-SA','Christmas,cooking',0,0,1), (2093,'2016-08-10','GNU Health',1202,'I talk to my friend Tom and his collaborator Euan who are working on a project using GNU Health','

                                                        GNU Health

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is an interview with Dr Tom Kane and his student Euan Livingstone in Tom’s office at Edinburgh Napier University (ENU) on 2016-07-06.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tom and Euan are investigating ways of running GNU Health for evaluation and demonstration purposes, using multiple Raspberry Pi systems and an Intel NUC. In particular they want to evaluate the conformity of interoperability (FHIR) standards, and are trying to build a reference implementation for decision makers who are procuring a Health and Hospital Information System.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the interview Tom used some terminology that I have provided links for here and at the end:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I had forgotten where I’d seen Luis Falcón, originator of GNU Health, being interviewed. It was on FLOSS Weekly, as linked below.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The complete notes for this episode, with pictures of the equipment, are here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thanks to Tom and Euan for taking the time to talk to me.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Interview,Linux,hospital,Hospital Information System,GNU Health,Raspberry Pi,NUC,LIMS,PACS,FHIR',0,0,1), (2094,'2016-08-11','Custom Keystrokes for Desktop Navigation on Gnome',844,'I demonstrate how to add custom keystrokes for desktop navigation on classic gnome','\r\n

                                                        In this episode I talk about how to set up custom keystrokes so that you can launch or switch to applications easily using the super key on your keyboard. I do this on the classic Gnome desktop environment and have not tested it on Gnome 3 or Unity to see whether it works on those.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To create a new custom keystroke, open System Settings, then go to Keyboard and Shortcuts. Click on the plus sign to open the dialog box where you specify the name of the keystroke and the command that is to be launched when the keystroke is executed. Click \"Apply\" and then click \"Disabled\" and it will allow you to type the keystroke you want to use.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        At this point the keystroke configuration is ready, but you have to either log out of the current session and log back in, or find some other way to reload the desktop environment configuration before you can actually use the keystroke.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I also talked about how I use my own scripts to check to see whether a program is running, and then either switch to that program if it\'s running or launch it if it\'s not. Here is an example for launching or switching to LibreOffice.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        #!/bin/bash\r\n\r\n# Look for the string "LibreOffice" on the list of \r\n# window titles and check the return code\r\n\r\nchecktitle=$(wmctrl -l | grep "LibreOffice" &> /dev/null ; echo $?)\r\n\r\n# If the return code is 0 that means it found the \r\n# string, so I use wmctrl to switch to the window \r\n# that has that string in the title. \r\n\r\nif [ $checktitle == 0 ] ; then\r\n    wmctrl -a "LibreOffice"\r\n    \r\n# If it returns a 1, then that means it did not \r\n# find a window with that string in it so I \r\n# launch the application.\r\n    \r\n  else\r\n    loffice &\r\nfi\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Save the script somewhere in your PATH, make it executable, and then use the script name in the command when you\'re setting up the keystroke.

                                                        \r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Scripting, Linux, Desktop Environments, Accessibility',0,0,1), (2098,'2016-08-17','Minimal Music Site?',768,'Matt King discussing the availability of an open source multimedia focused website.','

                                                        Project available https://sourceforge.net/p/minimal-music-site

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA very small responsive website for uploading content. Originally designed primarily for musicians needing an easy interface to share content. Upload files in the admin pages. Automatically saves files in directories and lists content on main pages by date. I\'m sure there are many improvements that could be made.\r\n

                                                        ',340,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','music,sourceforge,PHP,CSS3,mandrake,ardour',0,0,1), (2099,'2016-08-18','Dat Muzak Showz',2312,'Lyle (x1101) and Thaj talk about making music on Linux','\r\n

                                                        Note, starting any of while doing anything else with audio is probably a poor choice. At least in Linux. Because Linux audio is still slightly Lovecraftian.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tools Thaj suggested:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • LMMS,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ardour,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Qtractor,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fluidsynth,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Hydrogen,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Luppp,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Guitarix,
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Rackarack
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPmkd0fgiLU

                                                        \r\n',276,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Audio',0,0,1), (2102,'2016-08-23','AngularJS\'s ng-repeat, and the browser that shall not be named',636,'A method for optimizing the rendering of items when using AngularJS\'s ng-repeat directive.','

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At my work, we are in the process of revamping our internal call logging system. Moving from .NET and Microsoft’s ASPX pages for both the client side and back end processing, to an HTML5 based Single Page Application (SPA) using AngularJS for the client side interface with a .NET WebAPI service for the back end processing. The main page for both versions contains a list of the current days calls laid out in a table with 9 columns. Users are able to switch to a specific day’s calls by selecting a date via a calendar widget, or by moving one day at a time via previous and next day buttons. By the end of a typical day, the page will contain between 40 and 50 calls.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        During recent testing of the SPA client on the proprietary browser we all love to hate, or at least have a love/hate relationship with if you have to support it, I noticed that rendering of a whole days worth of calls would take seconds, freezing the UI completely. This made changing dates painful. As we reload the data any time you re-enter that page (a manual way to poll for new data until we implement either timer based polling or a push service through websockets), the page was almost unusable. The page rendered fine in both Mozilla and webkit based javascript JIT engines, but Microsoft’s engine would choke on it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After a bit of searching on “AngularJS slow rendering” and “AngularJS optimize”, I found many references about using Angular’s ng-repeat directive when rendering long lists of data (see references below for the main pages I read). I tried a couple of the methods mentioned to optimize the ng-repeat directive. I used the “track by” feature of ng-repeat to use the call’s id as the internal id of the row, so ng-repeat didn’t have to generate a hashed id for each row. I implemented Angular’s one-time binding feature to reduce the number of watches being created (reducing the test day’s number of watches from 1120 to 596), but even these two combined optimizations didn’t have enough effect to render the page in an acceptable amount of time. The next optimization I played with was using ng-repeat with the limitTo filter. This limits the number of items rendered in the list that ng-repeat is looping through. This is particularly useful combined with paging of the data. I set the limitTo option to different values to see how it affected the rendering time. I found that rendering 5 rows was fast and consistent for every day’s worth of data I viewed. From my reading, I knew if I updated the limitTo amount while keeping the array of items the same, ng-repeat would only render any un-rendered items, and not redo the whole limited list.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Code

                                                        \r\n
                                                        <tr ng-repeat="c in results | limitTo:displayRenderSize">
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Inside your directive, set an angular.$watch on the list of items to be rendered by ng-repeat. In this example the list is stored in the variable results.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        return {\r\n        scope: {\r\n            results: "=",\r\n    },\r\n        link: function (scope, element, attrs) {\r\n            scope.renderSizeIncrement = 5;\r\n            scope.displayRenderSize = scope.renderSizeIncrement;\r\n\r\n            scope.$watch('results', function () {\r\n                if (scope.results) {\r\n                    scope.displayRenderSize = scope.renderSizeIncrement;\r\n                    scope.updateDisplayRenderSize();\r\n                }\r\n            });\r\n            scope.updateDisplayRenderSize = function () {\r\n                if (scope.displayRenderSize < scope.results.length) {\r\n                    scope.displayRenderSize += scope.renderSizeIncrement;\r\n                    $timeout(scope.updateDisplayRenderSize, 0);\r\n                }\r\n            }\r\n        }\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Any time the results are updated. The displayRenderSize variable is reset to render the default number of items, and the updateDisplayRenderSize function is called. This function calls itself repeatedly via angular’s $timeout service ($timeout is a wrapper for javascript’s setTimeout function). It increments the displayRenderSize variable which is being watched by the limitTo filter of the main ng-repeat. Each time the displayRenderSize variable is incremented, the ng-repeat renders the next set of items. This is repeated until all the items in the list are rendered.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The magic happens because ng-repeat blocks any other javascript, which does not effect angular’s digest path, until it is finished rendering. By calling the updateDisplayRenderSize with a timeout, the function doesn’t get called again until after the next set of items is rendered. Making the $timeout delay 0, sets the function to be called as soon as possible after the ng-repeat digest cycle stops blocking. In this instance, the sum of the rendering time for parts of the list is shorter than the sum of the rendering time for all of the list at one time.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Conclusion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a couple small glitches with this solution. Scrolling can be a bit jerky as the chunk sized renders cause a series of micro UI freezes, instead of one big long one. Also, if you don’t have a fixed or 100% percent wide table layout, and you don’t have fixed column sizes, the table layout will dance a little on the screen until the columns have been filled with their largest amounts of data. This is the result of the table layout being re-calculated as more data fills it. That being said, overall, this solution works great. It moved the pause from seconds to under half a second or less—making the page go from unbearable to usable on Microsoft’s latest browser offerings.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        References

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [1] AngularJS Performance Tuning for Long Lists; Small Improvements; Tech blog; blog; viewed: 2016-08-09

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [2] Optimizing ng-repeat in AngularJS; Fundoo Solutions; blog; viewed: 2016-08-09

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [3] AngularJS: My solution to the ng-repeat performance problem; thierry nicola; blog; published: July 24, 2013; viewed: 2016-0809

                                                        \r\n',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','angularjs, ng-repeat, optimization, SPA',0,0,1), (2101,'2016-08-22','What\'s on my podcatcher',597,'Some of the podcasts I listen to','

                                                        A short show about the podcasts I like to listen to.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,75,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,podcatcher',0,0,1), (2103,'2016-08-24','DIY Book Binding',636,'With no shows in the queue, Ken rushes in a show on his latest hacks','

                                                        \r\nI love books, dislike technology when reading about technology, so what to do when the only available option is a pdf or ebook format ?\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nWith a hpr1480 :: Continuous Ink Supply System and 500 pages of A4 paper costing just €3, the option to print out books at home is not only possible but down right affordable. Even more so when when printing booklet format of 4 pages per physical sheet of paper.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSmall books of around 100 pages/25 sheets and a long arm stapler works fine, of larger sizes you can get a Comb binding machine but I dislike the sound and feel of these solutions\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy solution, a Jig Saw, some wood clamps, PVC Plumbers Glue, and some drywall/plaster board tape (pdf)\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Clamping
                                                        \r\nClamping the book and cut in half with a Jig Saw.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Clamp
                                                        \r\nClamp both halves together, aligning them together on their uncut edge, and trim the cut edges to give a clean cut.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Builders
                                                        \r\nBuilders supply stores and DIY shops carry the tape and glue.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Glue
                                                        \r\nNow apply a liberal amount of glue to the cut edge, apply the tape and let it dry for 30 minutes. Then apply another layer of glue and fold down the excess tape. Apply at least two more applications of glue.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','book binding,comb binding,jig saw,wood clamp',0,0,1), (2107,'2016-08-30','Makefiles for Everyday Use',1392,'I talk about how I use Makefiles in my Lilypond and HTML projects','

                                                        In this episode I talk about how I use Makefiles to ease the process of building complicated projects in Lilypond and HTML. You can use Makefiles to run any kinds of commands you want. It does not have to be building actual computer programs. In my case I use them to build musical scores and web pages. Keep in mind I\'m not an expert on this, and I\'m hoping I will make enough mistakes that it will prompt a series of follow-up episodes by people who actually know what they\'re talking about.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Here\'s an example. This is the Makefile for my Counterpoint workbook Gratis ad Parnassum, which I wrote in 2009. Written in a combination of LaTeX\r\n and Lilypond, this requires very complicated and long commands to build the workbook, and I found that the only way to do this project in a sane manner was to create a Makefile that would keep track of changes in the files and only rebuild when necessary. It also meant that the only commands I would have to type were very simple, because the long command line options were all stored in the Makefile.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        SHELL=/bin/bash
                                                        FILE=workbook_main
                                                        OUTDIR=out
                                                        WEBDIR=htmlout
                                                        VIEWER=evince
                                                        BROWSER=firefox
                                                        LILYBOOK_PDF=lilypond-book --output=$(OUTDIR) --pdf $(FILE).lytex
                                                        LILYBOOK_HTML=lilypond-book --output=$(WEBDIR) $(FILE).lytex
                                                        PDF=cd $(OUTDIR) && pdflatex $(FILE)
                                                        HTML=cd $(WEBDIR) && latex2html $(FILE)
                                                        INDEX=cd $(OUTDIR) && makeindex $(FILE)
                                                        PREVIEW=$(VIEWER) $(OUTDIR)/$(FILE).pdf >& /dev/null

                                                        all: pdf web

                                                        pdf:
                                                        $(LILYBOOK_PDF)
                                                        $(PDF)
                                                        $(INDEX)
                                                        $(PDF)
                                                        $(PREVIEW)

                                                        web:
                                                        $(LILYBOOK_HTML)
                                                        $(HTML)
                                                        cp -R $(WEBDIR)/$(FILE)/ ./
                                                        sleep 1
                                                        sh html-sed-fixes.sh
                                                        $(BROWSER) $(FILE)/index.html &

                                                        keep: pdf
                                                        cp $(OUTDIR)/$(FILE).pdf gratis.pdf
                                                        pdftk gratis.pdf update_info gratis.info output GratisAdParnassum.pdf

                                                        clean:
                                                        rm -rf $(OUTDIR)

                                                        web-clean:
                                                        rm -rf $(WEBDIR)

                                                        archive:
                                                        tar -cvvf free-counterpoint.tar \\
                                                        --exclude=out/* \\
                                                        --exclude=*.tar \\
                                                        --exclude=*.zip \\
                                                        --exclude=htmlout/* \\
                                                        --exclude=workbook_main/* \\
                                                        --exclude=*midi \\
                                                        --exclude=*pdf \\
                                                        --exclude=*~ \\
                                                        ../FreeCounterpoint/*
                                                        tar -xvvf free-counterpoint.tar
                                                        zip -r free-counterpoint.zip FreeCounterpoint
                                                        rm -R FreeCounterpoint
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And here is the Makefile for my song collection called Canciones para niños, using Lilypond source files.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        SHELL=/bin/bash
                                                        piece = lorca
                                                        #CPU_CORES=`cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -m1 "cpu cores" | sed s/".*: "//`
                                                        LILY_CMD = lilypond -ddelete-intermediate-files \\
                                                                            -dno-point-and-click #-djob-count=$(CPU_CORES)

                                                        notes = \\
                                                        cancioncilla.ily \\
                                                        cantada.ily \\
                                                        caracola.ily \\
                                                        china.ily \\
                                                        lagarto.ily \\
                                                        nana.ily \\
                                                        paisaje.ily \\
                                                        remanso.ily

                                                        .SUFFIXES: .ly .ily .pdf .midi

                                                        #CURDIR = $(shell pwd)
                                                        VPATH = $(CURDIR)/Scores $(CURDIR)/PDF $(CURDIR)/Parts $(CURDIR)/Notes

                                                        %.ly: %.ily
                                                        %.pdf %.midi:  %.ly 
                                                        $(LILY_CMD) $<
                                                        mv *.pdf PDF/
                                                        mv *.midi MIDI/

                                                        $(piece).pdf: $(notes) 

                                                        cancioncilla.pdf: cancioncilla.ly cancioncilla.ily
                                                        cantada.pdf: cantada.ly cantada.ily
                                                        caracola.pdf: caracola.ly caracola.ily
                                                        china.pdf: china.ly china.ily
                                                        lagarto.pdf: lagarto.ly lagarto.ily
                                                        nana.pdf: nana.ly nana.ily
                                                        paisaje.pdf: paisaje.ly paisaje.ily
                                                        remanso.pdf: remanso.ly remanso.ily

                                                        .PHONY: score
                                                        score: $(piece).pdf

                                                        keep: score
                                                        cp $(CURDIR)/PDF/$(piece).pdf $(CURDIR)/CancionesParaNinos.pdf

                                                        archive:
                                                        tar -cvvf lorca.tar \\
                                                        --exclude=*.pdf \\
                                                        --exclude=*.midi \\
                                                        --exclude=*~ \\
                                                        ../Canciones/*
                                                        tar -xvvf lorca.tar
                                                        zip -r lorca.zip Canciones
                                                        rm -R Canciones
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Automation, Makefiles, Scripting, Programming',0,0,1), (2108,'2016-08-31','Changing the Oil on My Wife\'s Car',1941,'Listen and enjoy as I change the oil on my wife\'s Honda CR-V','

                                                        Since people don’t seem to be adding enough shows, you’re going to be subjected to listening along while I change the oil on the car. This might be fascinating or it might be boring, but in either case I hope it inspires someone else to start uploading more shows. Incidentally, I recorded this whole thing on my phone, I’m doing these show notes on my phone, and am going to upload it from my phone as well, without adding the intro and outro music, showing just how easy it really is (as the saying goes).

                                                        ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, automotive, car maintenance ',0,0,1), (2110,'2016-09-02','Overhauling a Bicycle Hub',2715,'Listen and enjoy as I overhaul the rear hub of my 1985 Schwinn. ','

                                                        I record and talk while overhauling the rear hub of my 1985 Schwinn road bike. I wasn’t able to take pictures because my hands were really greasy, so if this interests you and you want to see how it’s done, search the web or YouTube for instructional materials. This episode was recorded on my phone with the $2 lapel microphone, uploaded straight to the HPR website. Easy!

                                                        \r\n',238,115,1,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, bicycle maintenance, bike maintenance, bicycles ',0,0,1), (2109,'2016-09-01','Hacking my inner ear',925,'How I discovered some new things about how my inner ear works and how to stop falling over','

                                                        Hacking my inner ear

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In April 2015 I suddenly found myself getting dizzy as I bent down – to the extent where I actually fell over at one point. I went to see a doctor but didn’t get a diagnosis.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A medical student I know suggested it might be BPPV - Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo, and with that in mind I researched it and found what turned out to be a cure.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See the full notes for more details: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2109/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','BPPV, inner ear, vestibular system',0,0,1), (2104,'2016-08-25','Basic Audio Production: Reverb',1451,'A very basic description of the reverb effect','

                                                        Here is the calf reverb plugin, neat and with a nice graphic interface (it contains a few parameters that I don’t cover in the podcast, thought).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.audiopluginsforfree.com/calf-reverb/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can probably download it too directly from your Package Manager

                                                        ',323,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Music, Audio, Audio Production, Sound, Compression, Recording techniques, Reverb',0,0,1), (2112,'2016-09-06','My old home server',945,'A show about my old home server','',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, hardware, server',0,0,1), (2115,'2016-09-09','Apt Spelunking 3: nodm, cmus, and parecord',801,'Windigo wades through the Debian repositories and brings attention to some of the good stuff.','

                                                        Hello, this is Windigo, and Welcome to the another episode of apt spelunking! If you missed the first episode, then you probably missed the second episode as well. I assure you, they were fantastic; no need to go back and check.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This series (and yes, it’s official now) is about finding uncommon packages that are buried in the Debian repos. It could very well be about finding packages in other repos, but no Arch, Fedora, Ubuntu or OpenSUSE users are smart or handsome enough to contribute an episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In no particular order, here are a few more packages I’ve discovered.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        nodm

                                                        \r\n

                                                        nodm is a very small, very specific utility that is used to start an X session automatically.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On Debian, you configure nodm with the configuration file located at /etc/defaults/nodm. You can specify whether or not nodm is enabled, which user to run as, and what x session to run.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While hugely insecure, nodm is a great way to avoid the hassle of a full display manager like gdm or lightdm. It’s extremely lightweight, which is perfect for my Mini 9, and kicks things right into my custom i3 session.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        cmus

                                                        \r\n

                                                        cmus is a very comprehensive, console-based music player. cmus stands for “C* music player“.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I received cmus as a recommendation from chalkahlom (Gavin) while looking for a media player suitable for the Mini 9. It is a very light application (1.5M uncompressed), which suited my needs well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The interface of cmus is slightly strange, and may take some getting used to. It is broken up into seven “views”, which can be accessed using the number keys. The views are “Library”, “Sorted Library”, “Playlist”, “Play Queue”, “Browser”, “Filters”, and “Settings”.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To be honest, I still haven’t given cmus a fair shake. It seems like an excellent music player, but I’m still unable to break away from the familiarity of audacious. I’m once again reaffirming my commitment to trying cmus out; it seems like a really good player, if given the time of day.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        parecord

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pulseaudio comes with a selection of very handy command-line utilities that can be used to play and record audio in various formats. The one I’d like to discuss is “parecord”.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Ordinarily, I do all of my podcast recording with the arecord utility, which talks directly to ALSA. Last time I tried this, it very badly broke audacity when I tried to import the audio. I sounded like a chipmunk, and then audacity crashed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        parecord is a nice alternative to arecord, because it also does encoding on the fly. There may be an ALSA equivalent that also encodes your audio as you’re recording, but I don’t know about it. At best, you’d have to pipe the output of arecord to avconv or a similar utility.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using parecord, I can specify the file format using the --file-format flag, and record directly to FLAC, which is what HPR prefers. Other formats are available, but I think FLAC is a good balance of quality and compression.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you prefer the raw recording style of arecord, there is a utility called parec which will record raw audio data, but it’s a bit outside of the scope of this podcast. Also, I don’t really know much about it.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I hope someone can find some use in the applications I’ve mentioned here. If you have some other packages that you find indispensable and/or useful, I’d love to hear about them in your very own episode.

                                                        \r\n',196,98,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux, pulseaudio, music',0,0,1), (2113,'2016-09-07','sqlite and bash',894,'Using cron, du,sqlite, and bash to find directory growth','

                                                        Crontab

                                                        \r\n

                                                        0 3 * * 0 /bin/du -m /data/ > /home/USER/du_files/"du_$(/bin/date +\\%Y\\%m\\%d)"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Script

                                                        \r\n
                                                        cd ~/du_files\r\nTODAYS_FILE="du_$(/usr/bin/date +%Y%m%d)"\r\nYESTERDAYS_FILE="du_$(/usr/bin/date --date="7 days ago" +%Y%m%d)"\r\n/usr/bin/echo "create table old (oldsize integer, path varchar);" > delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo "create table new (newsize integer, path varchar);" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo '.separator "\\t" ' >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo ".import $TODAYS_FILE new" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo ".import $YESTERDAYS_FILE old" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo ".mode csv" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo ".headers on" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo ".out deltas.csv" >> delta.sql\r\n/usr/bin/echo "select *,newsize-oldsize as delta_in_megabytes from old natural join new where oldsize<newsize order by delta_in_megabytes desc;" >> delta.sql\r\n\r\n/usr/bin/sqlite3 < delta.sql\r\n\r\necho $YESTERDAYS_FILE|/usr/bin/mailx -a deltas.csv -s deltas.csv me@mywork.com
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Resulting SQL

                                                        \r\n
                                                        create table old (oldsize integer, path varchar);\r\ncreate table new (newsize integer, path varchar);\r\n.separator "\\t"\r\n.import du_20160821 new\r\n.import du_20160814 old\r\n.mode csv\r\n.headers on\r\n.out deltas.csv\r\nselect *,newsize-oldsize as delta_in_megabytes\r\nfrom old    natural join new    where oldsize<newsize\r\norder by delta_in_megabytes desc;
                                                        \r\n',342,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','bash,sqlite',0,0,1), (2114,'2016-09-08','Gnu Awk - Part 1',1350,'An introduction the the awk text parsing tool','

                                                        Introduction to Awk

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Awk is a powerful text parsing tool for unix and unix-like systems.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The basic syntax is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk [options] 'pattern {action}' file
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here is a simple example file that we will be using, called file1.txt:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name       color  amount\r\napple      red    4\r\nbanana     yellow 6\r\nstrawberry red    3\r\ngrape      purple 10\r\napple      green  8\r\nplum       purple 2\r\nkiwi       brown  4\r\npotato     brown  9\r\npineapple  yellow 5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        First command:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk '{print $2}' file1.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, the “print” command will display the whatever follows. In this case we are showing the second column using “$2”. This is intuitive. To display all columns, use “$0”.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This example will output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        color\r\nred\r\nyellow\r\nred\r\npurple\r\ngreen\r\npurple\r\nbrown\r\nbrown\r\nyellow
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Second command:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk '$2=="yellow"{print $1}' file1.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This will output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        banana\r\npineapple
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, the command matches items in column 2 matching “yellow”, but prints column 1.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Field separator

                                                        \r\n

                                                        By default, awk uses white space as the file separator. You can change this by using the -F option. For instance, file1.csv looks like this:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name,color,amount\r\napple,red,4\r\nbanana,yellow,6\r\nstrawberry,red,3\r\ngrape,purple,10\r\napple,green,8\r\nplum,purple,2\r\nkiwi,brown,4\r\npotato,brown,9\r\npineapple,yellow,5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        A similar command as before:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk -F"," '$2=="yellow" {print $1}' file1.csv
                                                        \r\n

                                                        will still output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        banana\r\npineapple
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Regular expressions work as well:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk '$2 ~ /p.+p/ {print $0}' file1.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This returns:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        grape   purple  10\r\nplum    purple  2
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Numbers are interpreted automatically:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk '$3>5 {print $1, $2}' file1.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Will output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name    color\r\nbanana  yellow\r\ngrape   purple\r\napple   green\r\npotato  brown
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using output redirection, you can write your results to file. For example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk -F, '$3>5 {print $1, $2}' file1.csv > output.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This will output a file with the contents of the query.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here’s a cool trick! You can automatically split a file into multiple files grouped by column. For example, if I want to split file1.txt into multiple files by color, here is the command.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        awk '{print > $2".txt"}' file1.txt
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This will produce files named yellow.txt, red.txt, etc. In upcoming episodes, we will show how to improve the outputs.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Resources

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. https://www.theunixschool.com/p/awk-sed.html
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. https://www.tecmint.com/category/awk-command/
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. https://linux.die.net/man/1/awk
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Coming up

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • More options
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Built-in Variables
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic operations
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Awk language and syntax
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',300,94,1,'CC-BY-SA','awk,bash,linux',0,0,1), (2116,'2016-09-12','Duffer Gardening',746,'Prior to a Duffercast recording chalkahlom, inscius and I had a conversation about gardening','

                                                        Duffer Gardening

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In August I was invited on the Duffercast podcast as a guest.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While waiting for all of the participants to arrive, inscius (Mikael) in Sweden, chalkahlom (Gavin) in Hungary and myself in Edinburgh, Scotland, decided to record a show for HPR, since we were using Mumble. Because two of the participants are gardeners we chatted about gardening.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This show is the result.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        More about The Duffercast may be found at https://duffercast.org/.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thanks also to The Bugcast for the use of their Mumble server!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note: The Calendula that Mikael mentioned is more commonly known as a Marigold https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendula.

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','duffer,gardening',0,0,1), (2117,'2016-09-13','What\'s in my bag for Podcrawl?',771,'Dave shows us what is in the bag he\'s taking to the London Podcrawl.','

                                                        What’s in my bag for Podcrawl?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Videos

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [Video on Periscope] [Video on Mediagoblin]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Products

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mountain Warehouse backpack
                                                        \r\nI couldn’t find exact model (I believe it was in a sale), but likely to be a 10 litre backpack
                                                        \r\n[mountainwarehouse.com]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Google Pixel C - Android tablet
                                                        \r\n[google.com]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Microsoft Universal Mobile Keyboard
                                                        \r\n[microsoft.com][amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        AmazonBasics 7-inch Black Sleeve
                                                        \r\n[amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        AmazonBasics 10-inch Black Sleeve
                                                        \r\n[amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Samson Q2U Microphone (USB/XLR)
                                                        \r\n[samsontech.com][amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Olympus DM-3 Portable Recorder
                                                        \r\n[olympus.co.uk][amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Marshall Major Headphones
                                                        \r\n[amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Microsoft 3600 Bluetooth Mobile Mouse
                                                        \r\n[microsoft.com][amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Smartphone Audio Splitters
                                                        \r\n[amazon.co.uk black one][amazon.co.uk white one]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Neewer 3.5mm Hands Free Computer Clip on Mini Lapel Microphone
                                                        \r\n[amazon.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Samsung OTG MicroUSB Connector
                                                        \r\n[handtec.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Exibel USB Powerbank
                                                        \r\n(actually, these aren’t that good)
                                                        \r\n[clasohlson.co.uk]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
                                                        \r\n[samsung.com]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All other products mentioned are fairly generic and/or commonplace. Links are provided for information only, and do not represent a recommendation of purchase from any particular vendor, although I may have purchased the items from that vendor myself.

                                                        \r\n',314,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','backpack,Google Pixel C,Samson Q2U Microphone,Olympus DM-3,Marshall Major Headphones,Neewer 3.5mm Lapel Microphone',0,0,1), (2119,'2016-09-15','Making Chocolate Chip Cookies',2436,'Listen live as I make a batch of really tasty chocolate chip cookies','

                                                        \"Baking

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        The $250 Cookie Recipe

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Ingredients

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        1 cup butter
                                                        \r\n1 cup sugar
                                                        \r\n1 cup brown sugar
                                                        \r\n1 tsp. vanilla
                                                        \r\n2 eggs
                                                        \r\n2 cups flour
                                                        \r\n1 tsp. soda
                                                        \r\n1 tsp. baking powder
                                                        \r\n2½ cups blended oatmeal
                                                        \r\n½ tsp. salt
                                                        \r\n\r\n12 oz. chocolate chips
                                                        \r\n1½ cups chopped nuts (your choice)

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Directions

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Cream the butter and both sugars. Add eggs and vanilla. Mix dry ingredients together in separate bowl. Combine with the butter/sugar/egg mixture. Add chocolate chips. Roll into balls and place 2 inches apart on a cookie sheet.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Bake for 10–12 minutes at 375°F.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','Cooking, Baking, Yummy Things, Recipes, Cookies, Desserts',0,0,1), (2118,'2016-09-14','What is App Inventor?',1072,'An overview of the online free Android app creator','

                                                        \r\nhttps://appinventor.mit.edu/ \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFrom https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/App_Inventor_for_Android\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nApp Inventor for Android is an open-source web application originally provided by Google, and now maintained by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIt allows newcomers to computer programming to create software applications for the Android operating system (OS). It uses a graphical interface, very similar to Scratch and the StarLogo TNG user interface, which allows users to drag-and-drop visual objects to create an application that can run on Android devices. In creating App Inventor, Google drew upon significant prior research in educational computing, as well as work done within Google on online development environments.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',323,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android, Programming, Apps, Free apps, Online services, Programming languages',0,0,1), (2136,'2016-10-10','Fluxx Tabletop Game',1092,'Klaatu reviews the card game (Pirate) Fluxx','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the card game series, Fluxx.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://boardgamegeek.com/geeksearch.php?action=search&objecttype=boardgame&q=fluxx&B1=Go

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxx

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFluxx is a card game, played with a specially designed deck published by Looney Labs. It is different from most other card games, in that the rules and the conditions for winning are altered throughout the game, via cards played by the players.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',78,95,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame',0,0,1), (2124,'2016-09-22','Repairing a Cloth Shopping Bag with a Sewing Machine',1276,'I talk while sewing the strap back onto a cloth shopping bag','

                                                        In this episode I repair one of the straps/handles of a cloth shopping bag. I talk about using a sewing machine, about those dreadful bobbins, and about sewing a Halloween costume one time. I actually cut out about four or five minutes of near silence from when I was trying to get the thread to go through the needle. That\'s getting much harder to do as I get older. See the Pictures too.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Shopping\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, sewing, fixing stuff, repairs',0,0,1), (2121,'2016-09-19','Dark Cults Tabletop Game',1795,'Klaatu discusses the EOL tabletop game DARK CULTS','

                                                        Klaatu talks about the long-gone (but not forgotten, clearly) DARK CULTS tabletop game. His print-and-play revival is available here: https://gitlab.com/notklaatu/darkoccult

                                                        \r\n',78,95,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame',0,0,1), (2122,'2016-09-20','Alpha32\'s new machine',506,'I built a new computer.','

                                                        I built a new desktop computer with AMD components.

                                                        ',303,57,1,'CC-BY-SA','desktop, building, linux, AMD',0,0,1), (2123,'2016-09-21','How I make coffee',351,'A show about how I use my Coffee Gator','

                                                        The coffee gator is a pretty nice device, as is the swan-necked kettle they have. I recommend both.

                                                        \r\n',303,88,1,'CC-BY-SA','coffee, coffee gator, pour over, chemex',0,0,1), (2125,'2016-09-23','My mobile recording solution',144,'How I record decent audio in my creeper van.','

                                                        I use a Plantronics USB headset, my Chromebook, Linux, and Audacity to record on the go.

                                                        ',303,45,1,'CC-BY-SA','chromebook, mobile, recording, audio',0,0,1), (2126,'2016-09-26','My new (old) tablet',455,'How I got the cruft off my LG Gpad 7','

                                                        It took a while, but I finally figured out how to install custom recovery and flash a new OS on my $1 tablet.

                                                        \r\n',303,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','v410, LG, gpad, cyanogenmod, tablet, mobile, hack',0,0,1), (2127,'2016-09-27','Tabletop Gaming',2051,'Klaatu ponders analogue programming and tabletop gaming','

                                                        Klaatu ponders analogue programming and tabletop gaming.

                                                        \r\n',78,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame',0,0,1), (2132,'2016-10-04','Gloom Tabletop Game',1409,'Klaatu reviews the card game Gloom','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the card game “Gloom”, including its strengths, weaknesses, and potential for player mods.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12692/gloom

                                                        ',78,95,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame',0,0,1), (2371,'2017-09-04','HPR Community News for August 2017',5259,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in August 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2347Tue2017-08-01An Intro to Apache HadoopJWP
                                                        2348Wed2017-08-02Vim Hints 005Dave Morriss
                                                        2349Thu2017-08-03Customizing my bash promptWindigo
                                                        2350Fri2017-08-04Ahuka Insurance - Understanding The MarketplaceAhuka
                                                        2351Mon2017-08-07HPR Community News for July 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2352Tue2017-08-08Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 5Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2353Wed2017-08-09RoboThermometerEpicanis
                                                        2354Thu2017-08-10Night Sounds in Rural TennesseeJon Kulp
                                                        2355Fri2017-08-11Wii and WiiU Software Moddingoperat0r
                                                        2356Mon2017-08-14Safely enabling ssh in the default Raspbian ImageKen Fallon
                                                        2357Tue2017-08-15Air Soft Mini Howtooperat0r
                                                        2358Wed2017-08-16Amateur radio round table #2Various Hosts
                                                        2359Thu2017-08-17Android ROM and PAINoperat0r
                                                        2360Fri2017-08-18Tradeoffs in the US Health Care SystemAhuka
                                                        2361Mon2017-08-21Information Underground: Working Outklaatu
                                                        2362Tue2017-08-22Raspbian X86 on Lenovo x61sTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2363Wed2017-08-23Cancelling my TV licenceDave Morriss
                                                        2364Thu2017-08-24Managing Your Android with AirDroidFrank Bell
                                                        2365Fri2017-08-25Rolling out a radio-based internet service in rural EnglandBeeza
                                                        2366Mon2017-08-28Making Bramble JellyTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2367Tue2017-08-29How I create and post a show to HPRMrX
                                                        2368Wed2017-08-30Every cloude has a silver liningmirwi
                                                        2369Thu2017-08-31Little MetersNYbill
                                                        \n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-August/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 45 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 9 comments on\n5 previous shows:

                                                        \n\n

                                                        There are 36 comments on 14 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2349\n(2017-08-03) \"Customizing my bash prompt\"\nby Windigo.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nx1101 on 2017-08-04:\n\"prompt for other users\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nWindigo on 2017-08-04:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2017-08-12:\n\"Great show - most enjoyable\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2350\n(2017-08-04) \"Ahuka Insurance - Understanding The Marketplace\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nCanadianbob on 2017-08-13:\n\"Health Insurance Market\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-08-13:\n\"That's why I recorded this\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2351\n(2017-08-07) \"HPR Community News for July 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMad Sweeney on 2017-08-08:\n\"Sean Nós Free Software Song made me happy\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKrayon on 2017-08-29:\n\"AMAZING Free Software song!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2353\n(2017-08-09) \"RoboThermometer\"\nby Epicanis.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb--yeezi on 2017-08-10:\n\"On my to-do list\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClaudioM on 2017-08-11:\n\"Another Great Episode\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nIvan "Epicanis" Privaci (pseud.) on 2017-08-12:\n\"Glad to be back!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2354\n(2017-08-10) \"Night Sounds in Rural Tennessee\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-08-14:\n\"Some impressive ambient sounds\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-16:\n\"hpr2354 :: Night Sounds in Rural Tennessee\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nFrank on 2017-08-17:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nJonathan Kulp on 2017-08-17:\n\"Mystery bugs\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nWindigo on 2017-08-23:\n\"More nostalgia\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2356\n(2017-08-14) \"Safely enabling ssh in the default Raspbian Image\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-08-15:\n\"good coffee\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2360\n(2017-08-18) \"Tradeoffs in the US Health Care System\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-08-19:\n\"A better starting point\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2361\n(2017-08-21) \"Information Underground: Working Out\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-08-21:\n\"Citation needed\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClaudioM on 2017-08-23:\n\"Fantastic!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndeepgeek on 2017-08-24:\n\"Cost Correction\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2362\n(2017-08-22) \"Raspbian X86 on Lenovo x61s\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBeeza on 2017-08-25:\n\"Raspbian X86 On Atom-powered Netbook\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-26:\n\"Raspbian X86 On Atom-powered Netbook\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2363\n(2017-08-23) \"Cancelling my TV licence\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2017-08-23:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-08-24:\n\"I see your point, but...\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nBeeza on 2017-08-25:\n\"TV Detectors\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-26:\n\"Cancelling my TV licence\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2017-08-26:\n\"Thanks for the input\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2364\n(2017-08-24) \"Managing Your Android with AirDroid\"\nby Frank Bell.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-26:\n\"Managing Your Android with AirDroid\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2017-08-26:\"[no title]\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2365\n(2017-08-25) \"Rolling out a radio-based internet service in rural England\"\nby Beeza.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-26:\n\"Rolling out a radio-based internet service in rural England\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFrank on 2017-08-26:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nBeeza on 2017-08-29:\n\"Thanks for the comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2366\n(2017-08-28) \"Making Bramble Jelly\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTony Hughes on 2017-08-19:\n\"hpr2366 Making Bramble Jelly\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-08-19:\n\"I adjusted your text\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2369\n(2017-08-31) \"Little Meters\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2017-08-30:\n\"Noooo...don't stop buying and reviewing meters\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Lee on 2017-08-31:\n\"Excellent show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Comment System\n

                                                          As mentioned on the\n mailing\n list, we are working on a new comment system to replace the failing one we have now. We\'ll be reporting\n progress on the mailing list.\n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Filling the queue\n

                                                          The queue got very low recently but is now looking healthier. Thanks to\n everyone for their contributions. However, it would be better in\n future if shows could be spread out more to leave room for new contributors and to help prevent the\n feast/famine problem. See the Scheduling Guidelines on the Calendar page:\n

                                                          \n
                                                            \n
                                                          1. You must have have your audio recording ready to upload before you pick a slot.
                                                          2. \n
                                                          3. Always try and fill any free slots that are available in the upcoming week.
                                                          4. \n
                                                          5. If the queue is filling up then please consider leaving some slots free for new contributors.
                                                          6. \n
                                                          7. If you have a non urgent show then find a empty week and schedule it then.
                                                          8. \n
                                                          9. If you are uploading a series of shows, consider scheduling one every two weeks.
                                                          10. \n

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Amateur Radio Round Table\n

                                                          The current proposal is to record the next show on 2017-09-13 at 18:00 UTC.
                                                          \n Please let Michael (mirwi) know via the HPR mailing list if you\'d like to attend.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Tags and Summaries\n

                                                          In the past month we have had contributions from \n Epicanis\n and Windigo\n and I (Dave\n Morriss) have added a few tags & summaries myself. Many\n thanks to all contributors.

                                                          \n

                                                          Currently there are 950 shows which need summaries or tags to be\n added. All contributions to this project are most welcome. See the\n current status and instructions for making your own contribution\n at \"Shows without a summary and/or tags\".

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2391,'2017-10-02','HPR Community News for September 2017',4875,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in September 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2370Fri2017-09-01Who is HortonWorks?JWP
                                                        2371Mon2017-09-04HPR Community News for August 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2372Tue2017-09-05Docbookklaatu
                                                        2373Wed2017-09-06PCGenklaatu
                                                        2374Thu2017-09-07How to Make SauerkrautTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2375Fri2017-09-08Competing InterestsAhuka
                                                        2376Mon2017-09-11Information Underground: 21st Century Superstardeepgeek
                                                        2377Tue2017-09-12A Rambling Drive Into WorkMrX
                                                        2378Wed2017-09-13Why Docbook?klaatu
                                                        2379Thu2017-09-14sending a text message from the command lineJezra
                                                        2380Fri2017-09-15Raspbian X86 on P4 TowerTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2381Mon2017-09-18Benefits of a tabletopklaatu
                                                        2382Tue2017-09-19A Non Spoilery Review of \"git commit murder\" and \"Forever Falls\" by Michael Warren LucasFiftyOneFifty
                                                        2383Wed2017-09-20What\'s In My Ham ShackSteve Saner
                                                        2384Thu2017-09-21Slackware in ScotlandAndrew Conway
                                                        2385Fri2017-09-22Healthcare CostsAhuka
                                                        2386Mon2017-09-25The Decline and Fall of Tclclacke
                                                        2387Tue2017-09-26Free Weights and a BicycleFrank Bell
                                                        2388Wed2017-09-27Apt Spelunking 4: Planet of the AptsWindigo
                                                        2389Thu2017-09-28Thoughts on Lifetime Learningb-yeezi
                                                        2390Fri2017-09-29Still in the gameklaatu
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 41 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 11 comments on\n5 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2356\n(2017-08-14) \"Safely enabling ssh in the default Raspbian Image\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nsesamemucho on 2017-09-10:\n\"Thanks for pulling this together\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2017-09-19:\n\"Fantastic\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2358\n(2017-08-16) \"Amateur radio round table #2\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nJosh Huber KF6ZZD on 2017-09-25:\n\"Doppler shift of RF at terrestrial speeds\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2360\n(2017-08-18) \"Tradeoffs in the US Health Care System\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-09-03:\n\"Still have tradeoffs\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2364\n(2017-08-24) \"Managing Your Android with AirDroid\"\nby Frank Bell.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nBrenda J Butler on 2017-09-20:\n\"Run naked through the googleplex - haha\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2369\n(2017-08-31) \"Little Meters\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nNYbill on 2017-09-01:\n\"Ambient Noise\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nNYbill on 2017-09-01:\n\"8008\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nMike Ray on 2017-09-01:\n\"Ambient noise and ASMR\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nNYbill on 2017-09-01:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 7:\nNot Verified on 2017-09-06:\n\"1\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 8:\nNYbill on 2017-09-06:\n\"ESR tester kits.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 30 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2371\n(2017-09-04) \"HPR Community News for August 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2017-09-30:\"[no title]\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-09-30:\n\"We have gone live with the new comment system\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-09-30:\n\"In the US jelly is also clear and jam isn't.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-09-30:\n\"Jam versus jelly\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2374\n(2017-09-07) \"How to Make Sauerkraut\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njezra on 2017-09-30:\n\"splendid!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2017-09-30:\n\"Splendid\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2376\n(2017-09-11) \"Information Underground: 21st Century Superstar\"\nby deepgeek.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nA Porkchop on 2017-09-30:\n\"Communities\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-09-30:\n\"Great discussion\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2377\n(2017-09-12) \"A Rambling Drive Into Work\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-09-30:\n\"I know you said you didn't need this, but...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nthelovebug on 2017-09-30:\n\"Great concept for a show... so I pinched it!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2378\n(2017-09-13) \"Why Docbook?\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2017-09-30:\n\"kramdown\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nFlorian on 2017-09-30:\n\"whats so hard about code in a list?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKlaatu on 2017-09-30:\n\"Kramdown\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKlaatu on 2017-09-30:\n\"github markdown\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2379\n(2017-09-14) \"sending a text message from the command line\"\nby Jezra.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njezra on 2017-09-30:\n\"feedback!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-09-30:\n\"We do what you ask :)\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\njezra on 2017-09-30:\n\"force of habit?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2380\n(2017-09-15) \"Raspbian X86 on P4 Tower\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-09-30:\n\"Glad you posted\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKleer Kut on 2017-09-30:\n\"Raspbian x86\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2381\n(2017-09-18) \"Benefits of a tabletop\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ngurdonark on 2017-09-30:\n\"good episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nShane Shennan on 2017-09-30:\n\"I like how you put that!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2384\n(2017-09-21) \"Slackware in Scotland\"\nby Andrew Conway.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nsunzofman1 on 2017-09-30:\n\"Still Thriving\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2385\n(2017-09-22) \"Healthcare Costs\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-09-30:\n\"Impressive\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBob on 2017-09-30:\n\"More information\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2386\n(2017-09-25) \"The Decline and Fall of Tcl\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2017-09-30:\n\"More */Tk\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMad Sweeney on 2017-09-30:\n\"Tk is not accessible\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2017-09-30:\n\"rms flamefest\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMad Sweeney on 2017-09-30:\n\"Flamefest\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2388\n(2017-09-27) \"Apt Spelunking 4: Planet of the Apts\"\nby Windigo.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-09-30:\n\"Wasting shows again\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njezra on 2017-09-30:\n\"hahah\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available in the archives run\nexternally by Gmane\n(see below) and on the HPR server under Mailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        Note: since the summer of 2016 Gmane has changed location and is currently\nbeing reestablished. At the moment the HPR archive is not available there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-September/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Podcast Awards\n

                                                          The Podcast Awards\n Ceremony is at 5pm PST on September 30th 2017. That is the day on\n which this HPR episode is being recorded, and it is also\n International Podcast Day!

                                                          \n

                                                          Again this year, HPR is a contender for the Technology Category.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • FOSDEM 2018\n

                                                          For the upcoming FOSDEM 2018 we have applied for a Podcaster\'s\n Table where a range of technical podcasts (including HPR)\n will be promoted. We have collected notes of interest from a wide\n range of podcasts, and some representatives will hopefully be able\n to join us as we run this table.

                                                          \n

                                                          We are hoping that this application will be approved by the FOSDEM\n administrators.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Website issues\n

                                                          Over the past month the HPR website has been very slow at times, or\n has been so overloaded that it has effectively been unavailable.\n This has been caused by various web robots which have been\n scanning the site for long periods in a very inefficient way.

                                                          \n

                                                          We are aware of this and Josh has been taking remedial action.\n However, because these robots are not behaving in a standard way,\n the range of preventative action is limited without purchasing more\n sophisticated tools.

                                                          \n

                                                          For the moment we are monitoring the situation.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Anhonesthost.com\n

                                                          Just a reminder: HPR\'s webhosting service and behind the scenes\n facilities are provided free of charge by Josh Knapp of\n anhonesthost.com.

                                                          \n
                                                        • \n\n
                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2416,'2017-11-06','HPR Community News for October 2017',4714,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in October 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2391Mon2017-10-02HPR Community News for September 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2392Tue2017-10-03Weather, Ogg Camp, Server Room, ITO collectionJWP
                                                        2393Wed2017-10-04PWGen - A password generatorXoke
                                                        2394Thu2017-10-05The Lost EpisodeNYbill
                                                        2395Fri2017-10-06ObamacareAhuka
                                                        2396Mon2017-10-09Information Underground: State of independencelostnbronx
                                                        2397Tue2017-10-10The Urban AstronomerDave Morriss
                                                        2398Wed2017-10-11AutoHotkey Master of Automation ?operat0r
                                                        2399Thu2017-10-12Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboardsdodddummy
                                                        2400Fri2017-10-13My commute into workthelovebug
                                                        2401Mon2017-10-16Music Theory Hara-KiriTheDUDE
                                                        2402Tue2017-10-17Petition: the card game for fanaticsklaatu
                                                        2403Wed2017-10-18Amateur Radio Round Table #3Various Hosts
                                                        2404Thu2017-10-19Open Source Gaming #1: Meridian59TheDUDE
                                                        2405Fri2017-10-20Nokia 6 ReviewTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2406Mon2017-10-23Putting Ends onto CAT6 Ethernet CablesShane Shennan
                                                        2407Tue2017-10-24The Lost Episode Part 2NYbill
                                                        2408Wed2017-10-25My Current Favourite PodcastsShane Shennan
                                                        2409Thu2017-10-26RPG Counternotelostnbronx
                                                        2410Fri2017-10-27OLF 2017 ReportAhuka
                                                        2411Mon2017-10-30Information Underground: Co-op Paradiselostnbronx
                                                        2412Tue2017-10-31The Call of CthulhuHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 33 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 15 comments on\n8 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2150\n(2016-10-28) \"Apollo Guidance Computer\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nKen Fallon on 2017-10-29:\n\"The Apollo Saturn V Launch Vehicle Digital Computer (LVDC) Circuit Board\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2302\n(2017-05-30) \"Bash snippet - nullglob\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nclacke on 2017-10-05:\n\"nullglob in the wild\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-10-07:\n\"A wild nullglob appears\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2376\n(2017-09-11) \"Information Underground: 21st Century Superstar\"\nby deepgeek.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nblindape on 2017-10-29:\n\"Me Too\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2377\n(2017-09-12) \"A Rambling Drive Into Work\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nMrX on 2017-10-18:\n\"Reply to Comment 1\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nMrX on 2017-10-18:\n\"Answer to comment 2\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2378\n(2017-09-13) \"Why Docbook?\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nclacke on 2017-10-05:\n\"SGML\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nclacke on 2017-10-05:\n\"Markdown\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 7:\nBob Jonkman on 2017-10-17:\n\"Referenced your podcast in our NonProfit SysAdmin meeting\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 8:\nBob Jonkman on 2017-10-17:\n\"Should have provided a link to the KWNPSA meeting\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2381\n(2017-09-18) \"Benefits of a tabletop\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nklaatu on 2017-10-01:\n\"Thanks for the comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2384\n(2017-09-21) \"Slackware in Scotland\"\nby Andrew Conway.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nklaatu on 2017-10-01:\n\"Slackware everywhere!!!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\ncobra2 on 2017-10-07:\n\"MMMMM slackware!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2385\n(2017-09-22) \"Healthcare Costs\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-10-05:\n\"Reply to b-yeezi\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-10-05:\n\"Reply to Bob\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 18 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2394\n(2017-10-05) \"The Lost Episode\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2017-11-04:\n\"New Version\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-11-04:\n\""Then I can do a followup to this episode."\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2017-11-04:\n\"Oi!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2396\n(2017-10-09) \"Information Underground: State of independence\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTheDUDE on 2017-11-04:\n\"The struggle is real\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2397\n(2017-10-10) \"The Urban Astronomer\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-11-04:\n\"Enjoyed this show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-11-04:\n\"Thanks Kevin\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2398\n(2017-10-11) \"AutoHotkey Master of Automation ?\"\nby operat0r.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-11-04:\n\"Legalese\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2399\n(2017-10-12) \"Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njan on 2017-11-04:\n\"hpr2399\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2017-11-04:\n\"Shows on the mainframe\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nShane Shennan on 2017-11-04:\n\"Great Episode!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2402\n(2017-10-17) \"Petition: the card game for fanatics\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nmcnalu on 2017-11-04:\n\"Intriguing\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2404\n(2017-10-19) \"Open Source Gaming #1: Meridian59\"\nby TheDUDE.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTheDUDE on 2017-11-04:\n\"More Links\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2405\n(2017-10-20) \"Nokia 6 Review\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nQuvmoh on 2017-11-04:\n\"Great show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2407\n(2017-10-24) \"The Lost Episode Part 2\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2017-11-04:\n\"avrdude, fuses, clone programmers etc.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-11-04:\n\"Ordered\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nNYbill on 2017-11-04:\n\"Thanks, Mike.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nNYbill on 2017-11-04:\n\"Nice ken.\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nNYbill on 2017-11-04:\n\"...We will expect a show about the build, Ken.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-October/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR Shows on archive.org

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR show notes which contain images or which link to other files are something we encourage. However, when uploading these to the Internet Archive (IA) at archive.org there are a number of issues:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • If a file has been submitted as part of the original HPR upload we copy it to archive.org and use the URL of the copy in the notes. This mechanism has been added in the past few months and seems to be working fine.

                                                        • \n
                                                        • If the notes for a show contain links to external files these do not always seem to be accessible through the archive.org interface. For example, the recent show 2406 links to an image showing the cabling of a CAT6 plug, but the archive.org copy did not show this image (though it does now - see below).

                                                        • \n
                                                        • One way of dealing with the issue of external files would be to make a copy and place it on the HPR site, then it would be uploaded to the IA as described earlier. This might have copyright issues though.

                                                        • \n
                                                        • Another way would be to point to a copy on the Wayback Machine (WM). Sometimes the file has been copied there already, or it is possible to request that the WM snapshot it. This is what was done for the IA copy of show 2406. However, it was a manual process and therefore rather labour-intensive, which is not ideal.

                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Any suggestions on how to deal with this situation would be appreciated.

                                                        \n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2129,'2016-09-29','Gnu Awk - Part 2',1598,'We examine how Awk works, records and fields, printing and program files','

                                                        Gnu Awk - Part 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the second episode in a series where b-yeezi and I will be looking at the AWK language (more particularly its GNU variant gawk). It is a comprehensive interpreted scripting language designed to be used for manipulating text.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes for this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2129/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,94,1,'CC-BY-SA','Awk utility, Awk language, gawk, text manipulation',0,0,1), (2134,'2016-10-06','Shutdown Sequence Systemd',888,'Klaatu demonstrates how to sequence systemd shutdown processes','

                                                        Set up a service to trigger FIRST (this would be the shutdown service):\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n# cat /lib/systemd/system/fakehalt.service\r\n\r\n[Unit]\r\nDescription=Fake-Halt Service\r\nAfter=fakevm.service\r\nRequires=fakevm.service\r\n\r\n[Service]\r\nType=simple\r\nExecStart=/usr/local/bin/fakehalt.sh #this will fail until fakevm succeeds\r\nExecReload=/usr/local/bin/fakehalt.sh\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd then set up the one that you want to run and complete BEFORE shutdown is permitted:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n# cat /lib/systemd/system/fakevm.service\r\n[Unit]\r\nDescription=Fake Service\r\nBefore=fakehalt.service\r\n\r\n[Service]\r\nType=simple\r\nExecStart=/usr/local/bin/fake.sh\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nCreate a script to represent the VM shutdown (or any process that you cannot anticipate the duration of)

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n# cat /usr/local/bin/fake.sh\r\n#!/bin/sh\r\n\r\ntest=\"1\"\r\nsleep 21\r\nif [ X\"$test\" = \"X1\" ]; then\r\n    echo \"vm has shut down\" > /tmp/fake.test\r\n    exit 0\r\nelse \r\n    exit 1\r\nfi\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAnd a script to pass for a shutdown signal:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n# cat /usr/local/bin/fakehalt.sh\r\n#!/bin/sh\r\n\r\nsleep 3\r\ncat /tmp/vmfake.test > /tmp/haltfake.test\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nStart the service you want to happen AFTER the first one:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n# systemctl start fakehalt\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat \"should\" happen is that fakehalt will fail to find a file called /tmp/fake.test to cat from, and so everything should go horribly wrong.\r\n

                                                        \r\nWhat actually happens is that systemd places fakehalt service on hold until it gets an exit 0 signal from the fake service. So if you wait 21 seconds and cat /tmp/fakehalt.test, you see that the cat from a file that did not exist when fakehalt was started - actually succeeded.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',78,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','systemd,service',0,0,1), (2141,'2016-10-17','Make Web Python with Flask',2193,'Klaatu talks about Flask, a Python-based web microframework','

                                                        Klaatu talks about the Python web framework, Flask. Think Ruby-on-Rails but for Python, or a lightweight Django.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links in this show:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',78,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Python,Flask,web framework',0,0,1), (2146,'2016-10-24','Cards Against Humanity Tabletop Game',1231,'Klaatu reviews Cards Against Humanity','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the tabletop game, Cards Against Humanity. This is a non-offensive episode, so you can listen to it regardless of your feelings about the game.

                                                        \r\n',78,95,1,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop game,card,boardgame',0,0,1), (2152,'2016-11-01','Apples to Apples Tabletop Game',821,'Klaatu reviews Apples to Apples, a tabletop card game','

                                                        Klaatu reviews and ponders the game mechanics of Apples to Apples, and how they do and do not compare to Cards Against Humanity.

                                                        \r\n',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop game,card',0,0,1), (2120,'2016-09-16','WEBDUMP wmap EyeWitness phantomjs selenium',677,'Automate the process of finding unique websites, removing dupes and getting screenshots','',36,0,0,'CC-0','curl,sed,gawk,Burp Suite,EyeWitness,MetaSploit,wmap',0,0,1), (2128,'2016-09-28','Various glass bottle cutting methods',857,'This episode I chat briefly about glass bottle cutting and my experiences with it.','

                                                        This episode describes various methods of glass bottle cutting and my experience

                                                        \n',36,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','glass,glass cutting,bottle cutting',0,0,1), (2140,'2016-10-14','Vim Plugins I Use',1590,'In this episode, I talk about vim plugins as I drive home from work','

                                                        Vim Plugins I Use

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,82,0,'CC-BY-SA','vim,plugin',0,0,1), (2130,'2016-09-30','Git push to two repositories at once',1464,'Klaatu demonstrates how to perform one git push to two separate repositories','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Set up your git remotes (‘origin’ and ‘foo’)

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Create a new remote (‘all’) entry to encompass the existing targets

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Adjust ssh config as needed

                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. git push all HEAD

                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',78,81,0,'CC-BY-SA','git,git push,multiple repositories',0,0,1), (2159,'2016-11-10','Coup Tabletop Game',937,'Klaatu raves about the tabletop game, Coup','

                                                        https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/2012515236/coup-bluff-and-deception-in-the-world-of-the-resis

                                                        \r\n',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop game',0,0,1), (2164,'2016-11-17','Skipbo Tabletop Game',1331,'Klaatu talks about the surprisingly amazing game from Mattel','

                                                        Game design by Hazel \"Skip\" Bowman.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1269/skip-bo

                                                        \r\n',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop game',0,0,1), (2133,'2016-10-05','Compression technology part 1',1200,'Introduction to data reduction methods: Run-Length-Encoding','

                                                        \r\nFax (short for facsimile), sometimes called telecopying or telefax (the latter short for telefacsimile), is the telephonic transmission of scanned printed material (both text and images), normally to a telephone number connected to a printer or other output device. The original document is scanned with a fax machine (or a telecopier), which processes the contents (text or images) as a single fixed graphic image, converting it into a bitmap, and then transmitting it through the telephone system in the form of audio-frequency tones. The receiving fax machine interprets the tones and reconstructs the image, printing a paper copy.[1] Early systems used direct conversions of image darkness to audio tone in a continuous or analog manner. Since the 1980s, most machines modulate the transmitted audio frequencies using a digital representation of the page which is compressed to quickly transmit areas which are all-white or all-black.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fax\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRun-length encoding (RLE) is a very simple form of lossless data compression in which runs of data (that is, sequences in which the same data value occurs in many consecutive data elements) are stored as a single data value and count, rather than as the original run. This is most useful on data that contains many such runs. Consider, for example, simple graphic images such as icons, line drawings, and animations. It is not useful with files that don\'t have many runs as it could greatly increase the file size.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nRLE may also be used to refer to an early graphics file format supported by CompuServe for compressing black and white images, but was widely supplanted by their later Graphics Interchange Format. RLE also refers to a little-used image format in Windows 3.x, with the extension rle, which is a Run Length Encoded Bitmap, used to compress the Windows 3.x startup screen.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nTypical applications of this encoding are when the source information comprises long substrings of the same character or binary digit.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run-length_encoding\r\n

                                                        ',343,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','compression',0,0,1), (2135,'2016-10-07','Audio speedup script',1679,'I want to speed up some of my podcasts and truncate silence in them too so I wrote a script to do it','

                                                        Audio speedup script

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Back in 2015 Ken Fallon did a show (episode 1766) on how to use sox to truncate silence and speed up audio.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Inspired by this I wrote a Bash script to aid my use of the technique, which I thought I’d share with you.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out detailed notes for this episode describing the script and examining how it works and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2135/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','bash,sox,speed',0,0,1), (2137,'2016-10-11','Pause All The Things, Sega Genesis',379,'Learn how to create a hardware pause switch for the sega genesis','

                                                        \r\nCorrection, the microcontroller would have to watch the vertical sync, I misspoke.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Pausing\r\n

                                                        \r\n',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','genesis, pause console',0,0,1), (2138,'2016-10-12','Hack the Box with Bandit',893,'NYbill talks about a Linux \'War Game\' called Bandit.','

                                                        NYbill talks about a Linux ‘War Game’ called Bandit.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://overthewire.org/wargames/bandit/

                                                        ',235,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux,wargame,Bandit',0,0,1), (2139,'2016-10-13','From Org Mode to LaTeX Beamer to PDF',454,'My presentation pipeline','\r\n

                                                        I have recently been fortunate enough to give a presentation to two conferences, PyCon Australia and Kiwi Pycon, the Australian and New Zealand Python conferences, respectively. I\'m not going to give a talk based around the presentation, as it\'s rather code heavy, and we know that doesn\'t translate well to an audio medium.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Instead, what I wanted to do, was to talk a little bit about the presentation pipeline that I used to prepare this talk. The input is a plain text file, edited in Emacs, using a mode called Org mode. The intermediate form is a LaTeX file, using the document class Beamer which is designed for presentations that are going to be projected. Beamer is apparently the German word for digital projector. The final output form is a plain PDF.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        HPR isn\'t known for having many Emacs talks, so I should probably explain the idea of modes. Emacs has major modes and minor modes. For every document that you\'re editing there\'s one major mode, and any number of minor modes. So if I was editing a Python file for example, I would have the Python major mode which understands Python and can thus do Python specific things like Python code completion, and I would have a spell checker minor mode to check the spelling of comments, and another minor mode to automatically line wrap comment lines that are very long, and another minor mode to show what line number I\'m currently editing, and another minor mode to blink the cursor and so on.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The other topic that I haven\'t heard too much on is LaTeX. LaTex is the venerable typesetting solution for Unix based systems. LaTeX documents have a single document class, and then any number of packages. In the case of my presentation, the document class is Beamer, which sets up all the margins and fonts to be good for presentations. Some of the packages I\'m using are the symbols package, for arrows and maths symbols, and several graphics packages so I can draw trees in my slides.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m fairly comfortable with LaTeX, I could certainly write this presentation directly in LaTeX, but I think there are some advantages in using Org mode to generate my LaTeX instead.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As the name suggests, Org mode is designed to be an organisational mode, helping you write TODO lists and organise documents. While the document is just a plain text document that you can read and write with any text editor, the Emacs Org mode understands its own mark up and provides an outlining mode, where you can hide and expand trees of bullet points. The basic layout of a set of slides for a presentation is a tree of bullet points, where the top level bullet points are slides, and the second level of bullet points are lists of information put into each slide.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another mark up that Org mode understands is that of code blocks, so that we can easily say ``this chunk of code is a Python block\'\'. Org mode understands how to export this Python code block as a separate file, run it under Python, and can even insert the output of the program, or the result of a function, back into the original document as a code output block.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The advantage of having just one file for my presentation, versus one file for my presentation and a separate file for each code block, is that the code examples in my presentation never get out of sync with the code that I\'m actually running. This style of programming where the documentation is the primary document, and the code files are generated, secondary documents, is the inverse of the typical way of programming where the code documents are the primary documents, and documentation, the secondary documents, are automatically generated.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This style of programming, where the primary document is documentation is called literate programming. The process of creating the documentation (the PDF in my case) is called weaving. The process of creating the code files is called tangling.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I really like having just one file to generate one PDF presentation file, so I\'m going to keep using this technique in the future.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now, I have to admit that my presentation is not completely literate, there are some bits of output in my presentation that are copied and pasted, rather than automatically gathered, so I\'ve still got some work to do.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Down to brass tacks. The conventional file name extension for Org mode files is dot org. The typical metadata you put in presentations are Author, Email, and Title. In mine I\'ve also added Subtitle and Institute. Now, the interesting one here is Institute, for whatever reason, it\'s not a piece of metadata that Org mode knows about, but it\'s really easy to drop down into LaTeX and just use the LaTeX institute command directly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There\'s a metadata line that Org understands called Options, I request that my presentation has a table of contents, and that all the bullet points of level two become line items in that table of contents. Then I\'m straight into the slides. Bullet points at the first level are converted to sections, bullet points at the second level are turned into slides, and anything deeper than that are turned into contents of that slide. I have many code blocks, and I use options that specify what file this code block is tangled to, and to leave the white space alone when the code block is exported, as white space is critical to Python. I also turn on an option that gets line numbers printed for the code blocks. In a couple of places where I want to highlight certain areas of the code, I add labels to the code, then outside the code block I can refer to the label, and LaTeX will replace this with the line number. I think I\'d prefer to do this referencing with highlighting, or an arrow or something, but I\'m not sure I can do that.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Engineering is the process of dealing with tradeoffs to get something done, there are many trade offs when writing code to solve a problem, writing code for slides has quite a different set of tradeoffs, you want code to be easy to read, in terms of using long variable names, but you also need code blocks to contain as few lines as possible, so that you can use a large font size on the projector, and you also don\'t want to have to split an example across multiple slides if you can help it. I\'m also of the view that syntax highlighting is a waste of time, it\'s just a pretty layer of obfuscation that the mind has to understand, then drop in order to actually see the code. This stance of mine was vindicated when several presenters with syntax highlighted code realised on the day that the projected code was impossible to read due to the low contrast projectors used in a reasonably well lit room.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One feature that I would like to add is the ability to reveal new code. It\'s quite common to have a code block, reveal a problem with it, and display the same code block again, but with a minor change that fixes the previously explained problem. Ideally the old code and new code would be rendered differently, but I don\'t think that\'s an option right now. The other thing that I couldn\'t work out was how to run custom programs on my code blocks, I was wanting to run the Python unit test program, not the Python interpreter, and could not find a way to do that.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There\'s a single command to run inside Emacs to create the output PDF, M-x org-beamer-export-as-pdf.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, overall, I\'m very happy with this pipeline. It lets me have a primary document with code snippets, and it lets me have LaTeX snippets wherever I like. It\'s not perfect, but I\'m hoping to find ways to improve it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',315,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','emacs, org mode, LaTeX, Beamer',0,0,1), (2142,'2016-10-18','Book Reviews',937,'I take a brief look at two books others may find of interest.','

                                                        It\'s been a while since I submitted a show due to time constraints. I was actually feeling pretty bad when I recorded the show, so my voice may not be as loud as usual.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first book I talk about is "Hacker Culture" by Douglas Thomas

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/Hacker-Culture-Douglas-Thomas/dp/0816633460/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1474232379&sr=8-1&keywords=hacker+culture

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second book is "A History of Modern Computing" by Paul E. Ceruzzi

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/History-Modern-Computing-ebook/dp/0262032554/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1474232397&sr=1-1&keywords=history+of+modern+computing

                                                        \r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Books, Book Reviews, Hacker Culture, History',0,0,1), (2143,'2016-10-19','Gnu Awk - Part 3',1864,'In this episode, I go into more advanced topics for the awk tool.','

                                                        Awk Part 3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember our file:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name       color  amount\r\napple      red    4\r\nbanana     yellow 6\r\nstrawberry red    3\r\ngrape      purple 10\r\napple      green  8\r\nplum       purple 2\r\nkiwi       brown  4\r\npotato     brown  9\r\npineapple  yellow 5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Replace Grep

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As we saw in earlier episodes, we can use awk to filter for rows that match a pattern or text. If you know the grep command, you know that it does the same function, but has extended capabilities. For simple filter, you don\'t need to pipe grep outputs to awk. You can just filter in awk.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Logical Operators

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can use logical operators "and" and "or" represented as "&&" and "||", respectively. See example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $2 == "purple" && $3 < 5 {print $1}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here, we are selecting for color to to equal "purple" AND amount less than 5.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next command

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Say we want to flag every record in our file where the amount is greater than or equal to 8 with a \'**\'. Every record between 5 (inclusive) and 8, we want to flag with a \'*\'. We can use consecutive filter commands, but there affects will be additive. To remedy this, we can use the "next" command. This tells awk that after the action is taken, proceed to the next record. See the following example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        NR == 1 {\r\n  print $0;\r\n  next;\r\n}\r\n\r\n$3 >= 8 {\r\n  printf "%s\\t%s\\n", $0, "**";\r\n  next;\r\n}\r\n\r\n$3 >= 5 {\r\n  printf "%s\\t%s\\n", $0, "*";\r\n  next;\r\n}\r\n\r\n$3 < 5 {\r\n  print $0;\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        End Command

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The "BEGIN" and "END" commands allow you to do actions before and after awk does its actions. For instance, sometimes we want to evaluate all records, then print the cumulative results. In this example, we pipe the output of the df command into awk. Our command is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        df -l | awk -f end.awk
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our awk file looks like this:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $1 != "tmpfs" {\r\n    used += $3;\r\n    available += $4;\r\n}\r\n\r\nEND {\r\n    printf "%d GiB used\\n%d GiB available\\n", used/2^20, available/2^20;\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here, we are setting two variables, "used" and "available". We add the records in the respective columns all together, then we print the totals.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the next example, we create a distinct list of colors from our file:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        NR != 1 {\r\n    a[$2]++\r\n}\r\nEND {\r\n    for (b in a) {\r\n        print b\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is a more advanced script. The details of which, we will get into in future episodes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        BEGIN command

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Like stated above, the begin command lets us print and set variables before the awk command starts. For instance, we can set the input and output field separators inside our awk file as follows:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        BEGIN {\r\n    FS=",";\r\n    OFS=",";\r\n    print "color,count";\r\n}\r\nNR != 1 {\r\n    a[$2]+=1;\r\n}\r\nEND {\r\n    for (b in a) {\r\n        print b, a[b]\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this example, we are finding the distinct count of colors in our csv file, and format the output in csv format as well. We will get into the details of how this script works in future episodes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For another example, instead of distinct count, we can get the sum of the amount column grouped by color:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        BEGIN {\r\n    FS=",";\r\n    OFS=",";\r\n    print "color,sum";\r\n}\r\nNR != 1 {\r\n    a[$2]+=$3;\r\n}\r\nEND {\r\n    for (b in a) {\r\n        print b, a[b]\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n',300,94,0,'CC-BY-SA','awk,bash,linux',0,0,1), (2150,'2016-10-28','Apollo Guidance Computer',4381,'Francois Rautenbach tell us how he is hacking 50 year old computers','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode Ken chats with Francois Rautenbach who extracted the software from the Rope Memory modules of the long lost Apollo Guidance Computer used in Flight AS-202.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"the\r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Apollo, Space, Rope memory',0,0,1), (2145,'2016-10-21','Daily notes and todo list with markdown',1490,'How I use markdown and git to keep up with what I do','

                                                        Using Markdown and git to store your todo list and daily journal

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Why markdown
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • No distractions
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Simple syntax
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Plain text, Human readable.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Inline HTML
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Easy conversion to other formats
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        Why git
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Any SCM probably OK
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Github and Gitlab render markdown.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        The todo page
                                                        \r\n
                                                            # TODO\r\n\r\n    ### Can do now\r\n    * Bullet 1\r\n    * Bullet 2\r\n\r\n    ### Near term\r\n    1. Numbered 1\r\n    1. Numbered 2\r\n\r\n    ### Long term
                                                        \r\n
                                                        The journal script
                                                        \r\n
                                                            DAILYFILE="/Users/norrist/Projects/todo/daily/$(/bin/date +%F).md"\r\n    DAILYPATH="/Users/norrist/Projects/todo/daily/"\r\n    LOCKFILE="/Users/norrist/Projects/todo/daily/LOCK"\r\n    TODOFILE="/Users/norrist/Projects/todo/todo.md"\r\n\r\n    if [ -f $LOCKFILE ]\r\n        then\r\n            echo "$LOCKFILE PRESENT - ABORTING"\r\n            read -n1 -p "Remove and Continue? [y,n]" doit\r\n                case $doit in\r\n                    y|Y) echo "Continuing with $LOCKFILE PRESENT" ;;\r\n                    *) exit 1 ;;\r\n                esac\r\n\r\n\r\n        else\r\n            echo "NO LOKCFILE"\r\n            touch $LOCKFILE\r\n\r\n    fi\r\n\r\n\r\n    if [ -f $DAILYFILE ]\r\n        then\r\n            echo "$DAILYFILE exists"\r\n        else\r\n            echo  >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo  "-----">> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo "# $(/bin/date +%F)" >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo  >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo "### Projects" >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo  >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo "### Tickets" >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo  >> $DAILYFILE\r\n            echo "### Walkups" >> $DAILYFILE\r\n    fi\r\n\r\n    /usr/local/bin/edit -w --new-window $DAILYFILE\r\n    /opt/local/bin/aspell -c $DAILYFILE\r\n    /opt/local/bin/aspell -c $TODOFILE\r\n\r\n    rm $LOCKFILE\r\n    rm $DAILYPATH/README.md\r\n\r\n    cat $TODOFILE >> $DAILYPATH/README.md\r\n\r\n    for f in $(ls  -r $DAILYPATH/2*md)\r\n     do cat $f >> $DAILYPATH/README.md\r\n     echo >>$DAILYPATH/README.md\r\n     done\r\n\r\n    cd /Users/norrist/Projects/todo; /usr/bin/git add . && /usr/bin/git commit -m "$(date)" && /usr/bin/git push origin master
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Daily file template

                                                        \r\n
                                                            # 2016-08-02\r\n\r\n    -----\r\n\r\n    ### Projects\r\n\r\n    ### Tickets\r\n\r\n    ### Walkups
                                                        \r\n
                                                        aspell is awesome
                                                        \r\n',342,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Markdown,git,Bash',0,0,1), (2144,'2016-10-20','An Interview with All About Code at Manchester BarCamp',479,'This is a follow up interview with Josh as he has been busy since I last interviewed him ','

                                                        This is a follow up interview with Joshua Lowe as he has been very busy developing further python tools for the Raspberry Pi

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.allaboutcode.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The interview took place at BarCamp Manchester https://www.barcampmanchester.co.uk/ on the 24th September 2016 after he had done a talk about EduBlocks his new project for programming in Python and part of his Edupython project.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.edupython.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Josh will be at https://mozillafestival.org/ at the end of October and will be presenting his project again.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','BarCamp Manchester,Python,EduPython,EduBlocks,Raspberry Pi',0,0,1), (2151,'2016-10-31','BarCamp Manchester part 2',541,'An interview with the Organiser and one of the sponsors of the Event','

                                                        \r\nAn Interview with Claire Dodd, the organiser of BarCamp Manchester\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nAn Interview with Damion of Layershift Hosting, one of the sponsors of BarCamp Manchester\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','BarCamp Manchester',0,0,1), (2157,'2016-11-08','BarCamp Manchester part 3',504,'This is an interview with Alan O\'Donohoe which I did at BarCamp Manchester.','\r\n

                                                        This is an interview with Alan O\'Donohoe which I did at BarCamp Manchester. The links to his Twitter page and the Exa Foundation are as follows:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','BarCamp Manchester',0,0,1), (2170,'2016-11-25','soundtrap.io',1998,'A low-cost open-source acoustic logger for biodiversity and environmental monitoring.','

                                                        \r\nBack in hpr1894 :: Interview with Davide Zilli and Dr Marianne Sinka of the HumBug Project, the topic of an open-source acoustic logger came up. Today Ken tracks down Prof. Alex Rogers from the Department of Computer Science at University of Oxford, to talk about the project.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe prototype device is based on the Silicon Labs Gecko processor range and provides a low-cost acoustic logger which can record uncompressed audio to an SD card at 48,000 samples per second. Onboard acoustic recognition algorithms allow the device to decide when and what to record, and allow the computation and storage of acoustic features and complexity indices, rather than raw waveforms.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • EFM32 Gecko processor
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • WAV recordings to SD card
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 48,000 samples per second
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Powered by 3 x AAA batteries
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Analog MEMS microphone
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Measures just 50 x 38 x 12 mm
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Configurable USB interface
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Onboard real time clock
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"acoustic\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://soundtrap.io/\r\n

                                                        ',30,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','open source,open hardware,acoustic logger',0,0,1), (2148,'2016-10-26','The DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit Part 2',791,'In this episode NYbill talks about finishing the DSO138 Oscilloscope kit.','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode NYbill talks about finishing the DSO138 Oscilloscope kit.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe DSO138 Oscilloscope Kit (part 1)\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n3D printable case:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe kit with pre-soldered SMD parts:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nWithout pre-soldered parts:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe forums:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nPics for the episode:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','electronics,oscilloscope,kit,3D printing',0,0,1), (2147,'2016-10-25','Glass cutting bottles',857,'You may have seen vases made from bottles and wondered how they cut the glass.','

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/Diamond-Tech-Crafts-Bottle-Cutter/dp/B004ZRV3AU/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&qid=147568599%204&sr=8-8&keywords=Glass+++Bottle+Cutters+++++Tool

                                                        \r\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','glass,glass cutting,bottle cutting',0,0,1), (2149,'2016-10-27','What is in my Pentesting Bag?',1042,'I go over some of the items I use for my technical testing','\r\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','penetration testing,tools',0,0,1), (2168,'2016-11-23','Analogue Random Number Generation',2521,'Klaatu ponders analogue random number generation','

                                                        Klaatu talks about different ways of coming up with random numbers without electronics.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nDiscussed: dice, flipping through a book, sequential modulo, shifting tables, and pocketdiceroller.

                                                        ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame,random,number,math',0,0,1), (2178,'2016-12-07','Dice Mixer',1583,'Klaatu reviews the Dice Mixer dice tower','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the Dice Mixer.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Spoiler: it's really amazing and a heck of a lot of fun to put together.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Assembling\r\n\r\n\"Dice\r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,boardgame,random,number',0,0,1), (2174,'2016-12-01','Dungeoneer Tabletop Game',2560,'Klaatu reviews the Dungeoneer RPG card game','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu reviews the RPG card game, Dungeoneer, especially concentrating upon solitaire play.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIf you're keen to play, you'll want to use Klaatu's re-write of the official rules, or his re-write and touch-up of the unofficial solo rules. Neither of these are unique in themselves, but Klaatu humbly believes that they're a lot easier to comprehend than those online or in the box.

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,rpg',0,0,1), (2155,'2016-11-04','Ohio LinuxFest 2016',1124,'My experience of Ohio LinuxFest 2016','

                                                        Ohio LinuxFest is an annual Linux and Open Source conference held in the fall in Columbus, Ohio, USA. This year it happened on October 7-8, and I was not only an attendee, but a speaker. This program is about my experiences there this year.

                                                        ',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Open Source, Linux',0,0,1), (2154,'2016-11-03','Replacing a Bicycle Brake Cable',1769,'I replace the brake cable and housing on my 1985 Schwinn','

                                                        Part of my series of fixing stuff and wearing a microphone while I do it, listen along as I replace the brake cable and housing on my bicycle. For information about the tools I\'m using, check out my earlier episode about the tools in my bicycle repair toolbox. Check the Flickr photo album below for pictures to go along with the narrative. Sorry I kept sniffling so much. Allergies were terrible. The church bells in the background are from Our Lady of Fatima Church, which is nearby. I remember Dave wondered about the church bells from a previous episode.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Bicycle

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,115,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, bicycles, brakes, repairs, bicycle maintenance, bikes',0,0,1), (2153,'2016-11-02','Splitting a Block of Bees Wax',1101,'I need to split a block of bees wax','

                                                        \r\nI need to cut a block of wax...
                                                        \r\nI use a heat gun, some string, and a knife...
                                                        \r\nAlso some ramblings about other stuff.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"photo\r\n

                                                        \r\n',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','heat, cutting, diy',0,0,1), (2158,'2016-11-09','Art Club',372,'Have fun learning about art with your friends','

                                                        https://www.toledomuseum.org/

                                                        \r\n',326,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','art,art club,art museum',0,0,1); INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hostid`, `series`, `explicit`, `license`, `tags`, `version`, `downloads`, `valid`) VALUES (2160,'2016-11-11','An Audio Illustration Tying the Bowline Knot',343,'David Whitman attempts an audio illustration of how to tie the bowline knot.','

                                                        The following is partial copy from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowline

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "The bowline (/ˈboʊlɪn/ or /ˈboʊlaɪn/)[1] is an ancient and simple knot used to form a fixed loop at the end of a rope. It has the virtues of being both easy to tie and untie; most notably, it is easy to untie after being subjected to a load. The bowline is sometimes referred as King of the knots because of its importance. It is one of the four basic maritime knots (the other three are figure-eight knot, reef knot and clove hitch).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The structure of the bowline is identical to that of the sheet bend, except the bowline forms a loop in one rope and the sheet bend joins two ropes. Along with the sheet bend and the clove hitch, the bowline is often considered one of the most essential knots.[2]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Although generally considered a reliable knot, its main deficiencies are a tendency to work loose when not under load, to slip when pulled sideways[3] and the bight portion of the knot to capsize in certain circumstances.[citation needed] To address these shortcomings, a number of more secure variations of the bowline have been developed for use in safety-critical applications".

                                                        \r\n',209,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Knots, CLasoo, Bowline',0,0,1), (2161,'2016-11-14','What\'s in my freezer?',246,'Inscius talks about the food stored in his freezer.','

                                                        A short true tale of what I store in my (small) freezer, mid-October 2016. It is also the first time I record a podcast with a portable recorder.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "American blueberry" "European blueberry" a.k.a. "Bilberry"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Haricot vert a.k.a. green beans

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mangold/Chard

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Blackcurrant

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Broad beans

                                                        \r\n',283,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','food, storage, seasonal, garden',0,0,1), (2185,'2016-12-16','Soldering a Soldering Fan',309,'Practising soldering skills by hacking together a soldering extraction fan.','

                                                        \r\nIn the episodes hpr1037 :: Soldering Part 1 and hpr1047 :: Soldering Part 2: An audio demonstration of soldering, MrX inspired me to get into soldering. It\'s easy and if audio isn\'t your thing there is always the SOLDERING IS EASY complete comic book.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor my first project, I soldered a 12v power supply I got for €0 at the recycle shop, to a 12V fan from my old computer tower.\r\n

                                                        \r\n\"a\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe result a ugly solder joint, but a working project.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','soldering',0,0,1), (2162,'2016-11-15','Review/Criticism of Hipp\'s \"Git: Just Say No\"',1272,'In which I take an IRC rant to audio and look at what\'s really wrong with git.','

                                                        Review/Criticism of Hipp\'s "Git: Just Say No"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was recommended Richard Hipp – Git: Just Say No (youtube.com) last night on the excellent #oggcastplanet channel on freenode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I didn\'t listen to all of it, but I\'m putting this out there with the material I have, because anything else would be procrastination and this is HPR. We Want Shows!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are his criticisms, or suggested enhancements, top 10:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Show descendants of a check-in
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Simplified mental model
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Remember branch history
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Multiple check-outs from the same repo
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Sliced check-out and clones
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Check-out & commit against a remote repo
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. "Busybox" version of git
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. All comms via HTTP/HTTPS
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. "git all" command
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. "git serve" command
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I think the killer of these is #2, the rest are nitpicks or incorrect. And for addressing #2 there is the very interesting gitless report and project, which I\'m guessing doesn\'t abandon git entirely, just reworks the UI, which does need rework. Not for people like me, who already learned the nooks and crannies and make productive use of several of what might be misfeatures, but to lower the threshold for people coming to our software projects and whatever other source code we are managing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        TL;DL:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Why? Complete git log and less does the job, even for the oldest git project – git.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. YES, see gitless.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Why?
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Already works.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Presumably already works, don\'t know how well.
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Why?
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. (Didn\'t listen) Why?
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. (Didn\'t listen) Why? It has HTTP/HTTPS, but it also has the ssh model, which is great.
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Didn\'t listen.
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. (Didn\'t listen) git serve sucks, use gogs.
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fodder for further episodes

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • I\'m connecting to freenode through Matrix using Riot, both on web and mobile.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Is Matrix a big fat NIH? (hey look, WikiWikiWeb is back online!)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Why not just use XMPP?
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • It works great for me, and I didn\'t have to bother setting up a native IRC bouncer like ZNC or Quassel.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The quick-quick version: Just go to #freenode_#oggcastplanet:matrix.org and you\'re in the best IRC web chat available, in the #oggcastplanet channel on freenode.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • gitless (or gl)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fossil
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','git, fossil, rant',0,0,1), (2163,'2016-11-16','Gnu Awk - Part 4',1869,'Recapping the last episode and looking at variables in an Awk program','

                                                        Gnu Awk - Part 4

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the fourth episode of the series that b-yeezi and I are doing. These shows are now collected under the series title “Learning Awk”.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recap of the last episode

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Logical Operators

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have seen the operators ‘&&’ (and) and ‘||’ (or). These are also called Boolean Operators. There is also one more operator ‘!’ (not) which we haven’t yet encountered. These operators allow the construction of Boolean expressions which may be quite complex.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you are used to programming you will expect these operators to have a precedence, just like operators in arithmetic do. We will deal with this subject in more detail later since it is relevant not only in patterns but also in other parts of an Awk program.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The next statement

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We saw this statement in the last episode and learned that it causes the processing of the current input record to stop. No more patterns are tested against this record and no more actions in the current rule are executed. Note that “next” is a statement like “print”, and can only occur in the action part of a rule. It is also not permitted in BEGIN or END rules (more of which anon).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The BEGIN and END rules

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The BEGIN and END elements are special patterns, which in conjunction with actions enclosed in curly brackets make up rules in the same sense that the ‘pattern {action}’ sequences we have seen so far are rules. As we saw in the last episode, BEGIN rules are run before the main ‘pattern {action}’ rules are processed and the input file is (or files are) read, whereas END rules run after the input files have been processed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It is permitted to write more than one BEGIN rule and more than one END rule. These are just concatenated together in the order they are encountered by Awk.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Awk will complain if either BEGIN or END is not followed by an action since this is meaningless.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Variables, arrays, loops, etc

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Learning a programming language is never a linear process, and sometimes reference is made to new features that have not yet been explained. A number of new features were mentioned in passing in the last episode, and we will look at these in more detail in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes for this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2163/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        With a view to making portable notes for this series I have included ePub and PDF versions with this episode. Feedback is welcome to help decide which version is preferable, as are any suggestions on the improvement of the layout.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,94,1,'CC-BY-SA','Awk utility, Awk language, gawk,variables',0,0,1), (2166,'2016-11-21','How to use a Slide Rule',887,'By popular request, a description of how a slide rule works','

                                                        How to use a Slide Rule

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In my show 1664, “Life and Times of a Geek part 1”, I spoke about using a slide rule as a schoolboy. As a consequence, I was asked if I would do a show on slide rules, and this is it (after a rather long delay).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes for this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2166/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','slide rule,logarithm,slipstick,analogue computer',0,0,1), (2165,'2016-11-18','Get the most out of your commute with these great audio suggestions.',2156,'Knightwise talks about ways to stay entertained during your commute to work by listening to podcasts','\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThe knightwise.com podcast : https://feeds.feedburner.com/feedburner/knightcast\r\n

                                                        ',111,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,podcatcher,online course',0,0,1), (2169,'2016-11-24','How I connect to the awesome #oggcastplanet on mobile',795,'I give a quick overview of the challenges of IRC on the go and how Riot and Matrix solve them for me','

                                                        On HPR #2162 I mentioned that I\'m connecting to freenode IRC using Riot and Matrix. Here I explain a bit of background to why, what Matrix is, and why you should use it too.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Quick-quick version

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Just go to https://riot.im/app/#/room/#freenode_#oggcastplanet:matrix.org, click Join and you\'re on the channel! If you register a user there (or maybe on another instance, like @lambadalambda\'s https://matrix.heldscal.la/), you can then log in with the same username and password in the Android app and see all your joined channels there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Correction to audio: Riot is on F-Droid. For some reason I couldn\'t find it at the time, even though it\'s clearly there, so I\'m currently using the version from the Google Play Store. I hear that battery use may be an issue if you\'re independent from the evil GOOG.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Alternatives

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Other ways of connecting to IRC over flaky or intermittent connections without losing context:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • ZNC
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • In particular, check out this pretty elaborate ZNC-on-ZNC setup to solve the issue with having multiple devices that all want an independent scrollback buffer. I was just about considering setting up something like this when I discovered the Matrix bridge instead.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • One colleague of mine uses Quassel and loves it.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Another colleague uses irssi ConnectBot or something similar and can\'t understand why anybody would want anything else.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Criticism

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Fodder for further HPR episodes

                                                        \r\n\r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','matrix, irc, federation, mobile, im',0,0,1), (2171,'2016-11-28','hello world',227,'this first HPR podcast is to introduce myself and what I am about.','

                                                        I love programming, I make a living writing free software. However I am still a programmer without a keyboard. I want to share knowledge that gives us control over our own life. Tools that help us help ourselves.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Two main topics:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. computers (of course!)\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • everyday user
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • free software
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • programming
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. AFK stuff\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • veganism,
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • minimalism,
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • botany,
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • engineering.
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Lots of fun, life is interesting

                                                        \r\n

                                                        happy hacking

                                                        \r\n',344,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','introduction',0,0,1), (2173,'2016-11-30','Driving a Blinkt! as an IoT device',2349,'I have a Raspberry Pi Zero with a Blinkt! 8-LED array I\'m setting up as a notification device','

                                                        Driving a Blinkt! as an IoT device

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I managed to buy a Raspberry Pi Zero when they first came out in December 2015. This was not easy since they were very scarce. I also bought a first-generation case from Pimoroni and some 40-pin headers. With the Zero this header is not pre-installed and it’s necessary to solder it onto the Pi yourself.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have had various project ideas for this Pi Zero, but had not decided on one until recently. Within the last month or two Pimoroni produced a device called the Blinkt! which has eight APA102 RGB LEDs and attaches to the GPIO header. This costs £5, just a little more than the Zero itself.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My plan was to combine the two and turn them into a status indicator for various things going on that needed my attention.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes for this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2173/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,Blinkt!,BlinkStick,MQTT,Mosquitto',0,0,1), (2167,'2016-11-22','Google It',1150,'Discussing some of the successes Google has had despite people thinking Google is failing','

                                                        Discussing some of Google\'s successes. Lately I have been hearing a lot of flak towards Google and how they are doing everything wrong. So I go down a list of some of their success stories. Disagree? Email me.

                                                        ',346,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Google,Chrome, Android, Chromecast, tech, computers',0,0,1), (2175,'2016-12-02','Kdenlive Part 4 Colour Correction',1100,'A review of the Kdenlive colour correction suite','

                                                        Hello again HPR listeners this is Geddes back with Part 4 in the series covering the video editing application KdenLive. This time round we’ll be looking at colour correction which covers the following topics:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Workflow
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The human element
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Luma values
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Levels
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Colours
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Things that look broken
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Saturation
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Copying values between clips
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Colour Effects
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Selective colour correction and rotoscoping
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here’s the link to the original article.

                                                        \r\n',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kdenlive,opensource.com,colour correction',0,0,1), (2177,'2016-12-06','Knowledge Interconnection, the thai express hack',424,'learn things that empowers you and interconnects with other of your knowledge','

                                                        you can practice programming AFK, and hacking at the same time; doing problem solving on other things can be quite fun; and can seriously enhance your life;

                                                        \r\n

                                                        happy hacking;

                                                        \r\n',344,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','vegan food, recycling, hacking',0,0,1), (2181,'2016-12-12','Install OpenBSD from Linux using Grub',501,'Install OpenBSD from Linux using Grub','

                                                        Install OpenBSD from Linux using Grub

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Why OpenBSD

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tune in for another episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Why install from linux

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Most VPS providers have images for linux, but not OpenBSD
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Easier than trying to upload custom image or iso.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Grub2

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Start with a distro that uses grub2. I use Centos7
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • grub2 can load OpenBSD kernels.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The openbsd installer is a OpenBSD kernel.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Procedure

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Make sure you have console access to the linux VM
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Record the Network info for the running linux VM. If not using DHCP, you will need to know the IP, netmask, default route (gateway), and a DNS server.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Download the OpenBSD installation ram disk to /boot

                                                          \r\n
                                                          cd /boot\r\nwget https://ftp5.usa.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/6.0/amd64/bsd.rd
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Reboot
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Enter the grub command prompt by pressing c at the grub menu
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. The grub2 prompt has tab completion which can be helpful.
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Type ls to see the available disks
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Load the OpenBSD installation ram disk and boot

                                                          \r\n
                                                          grub> set root=(hd0,msdos1)\r\ngrub> kopenbsd /bsd.rd\r\ngrub> boot
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Installation

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The Installer will ask you several questions
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The default is almost always what you want. If unsure, just press enter.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Look at the FAQ if you get stuck
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Enter the network settings of the linux VPS
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • When asked "Location of sets", use HTTP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',342,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','OpenBSD,grub2,install',0,0,1), (2188,'2016-12-21','Art Appreciation',315,'Some thoughts on art appreciation','

                                                        \r\nA nod to Brian in Ohio...\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nElements Of Design...\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA mention of Dr. Don Bendel...\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nA note on artist statements...\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nMy cup example is very much stimulated by Pete Pinnell...\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nCheck out his short talk on cups.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WChFMMzLHVs\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n(though I wish It were elsewhere besides youtube)\r\n

                                                        ',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','art',0,0,1), (2172,'2016-11-29','Dutch Blitz Table Top Game',1548,'Steve describes the game of Dutch Blitz.','

                                                        Dutch Blitz Tabletop Game

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Origin

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Dutch Blitz was created by Werner Ernst George Muller, from\r\nPennsylvania, in the United States, in 1959. It is similar to the game\r\nNertz, which is played with standard playing cards. Nertz had been\r\naround since the 1940s. It isn’t totally clear to what extent Mr\r\nMuller was influenced by the game of Nertz. He was an optometrist and\r\nit is said that he thought the game might help his children learn\r\nabout colors and numbers.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Theme

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The game has a theme that originates with the Pennsylvania Dutch\r\nculture, which was formed by early German immigrants to eastern\r\nPennsylvania in the United States. The symbols used on the cards are\r\nrepresentative of that culture, which tended to be agricultural and of\r\na conservative protestant Christian faith.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Cards

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Each player has their own deck of cards. The standard set has 4 decks,\r\nso it can accommodate 2-4 players. There is an extension pack that adds\r\n4 more decks, supporting 4 more players. Each deck has 40 cards made\r\nup of number cards from 1 through 10 in four different colors (suits):\r\nred, blue, green, and yellow. Additionally, the red and blue cards\r\nhave a picture of a boy and the green and yellow cards have a picture\r\nof a girl. The decks are differentiated from each other by a symbol on\r\nthe back side of each card. The four standard decks have the following\r\nsymbols: pump, buggy, plow, and bucket.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Piles

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n

                                                          Blitz Pile - A pile of 10 cards that are dealt by each player before\r\ngame play starts. One of the goals is for the player to get rid of\r\ntheir Blitz pile. When one player clears their Blitz pile, the round\r\nis over.

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n

                                                          Post Piles - Three piles of cards to the left of the Blitz pile that\r\nare used by the player to help sort through cards during the game\r\nplay. These piles begin as 3 cards dealt out by the player before\r\ngame play. Cards can then be added to these piles in descending order\r\nand alternating “gender”. If one of the Post piles is cleared, the\r\nplayer may take a card off of their Blitz pile to start a new one.

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n

                                                          Wood Pile - During game play, the player rotates through their deck\r\nby taking 3 cards, face down, and turning them face up and placing\r\nthem on the Wood pile. The top most card is available to be played.

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n

                                                          Dutch Piles - During game play, players can start a Dutch pile when\r\nthey have a playable card with the number 1 on it. These piles are\r\nplaced in the middle of the table. The piles can then be built up,\r\nin sequential order and of matching color. Any player can play a\r\ncard on any Dutch pile.

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Game Play

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The game is played in rounds. The players do not take turns. When play\r\nstarts, all players begin playing at the same time as fast as they\r\ncan. When a player is able to clear their Blitz pile, they shout the\r\nword “Blitz” and all play must then stop. That is the end of the\r\nround.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Points

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When the round ends all of the cards that have been played on the\r\nDutch piles are sorted into their representative decks. Each player\r\ncounts the number of cards that they have played and then subtracts\r\ntwo times the number of cards left on their Blitz pile. That is their\r\nscore for the round.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In order to maximize one’s points for a round, the objectives are\r\ntwo-fold. You want to play as many cards as possible on the Dutch\r\npiles, but you also want to get rid of as many cards on your Blitz\r\npile as possible.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        References

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',334,95,1,'CC-BY-SA','tabletop, game, german, culture',0,0,1), (2179,'2016-12-08','Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 1',844,'I expand on a list of one-liner advice to myself 20 years ago, that I posted on pump.io.','

                                                        Follow along with the bullet points here: Mail to myself@myfirstemployment

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The original was a comment in Swedish to a question on an evil, centralized, proprietary social network: Kodapor -- Vilket arbetssätt-relaterat tips skulle du ge dig själv ....

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Maybe this should be part of a series \"Advice to a Young Hacker\"?

                                                        \r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','advice,work,post',0,0,1), (2182,'2016-12-13','why say GNU/Linux ?',460,'Dedicated to all the people that says Linux instead of GNU/Linux','

                                                        Stop saying Linux or open source or FOSS or FLOSS !!1!

                                                        ',344,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','GNU/Linux,Linux,open source,FOSS,FLOSS',0,0,1), (2180,'2016-12-09','Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 2 of 2',501,'I expand on a list of one-liner advice to myself 20 years ago, that I posted on pump.io. Part 2 of 2','

                                                        Continuation of yesterday\'s hpr2179 :: Mail to myself@myfirstemployment, Part 1.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Follow along with the bullet points here: Mail to myself@myfirstemployment

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The original was a comment in Swedish to a question on an evil, centralized, proprietary social network: Kodapor -- Vilket arbetssätt-relaterat tips skulle du ge dig själv ....

                                                        \r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','advice,programming,job',0,0,1), (2183,'2016-12-14','Data Privacy: Farlands or bust',895,'Conversation in response to comments about my last Episode called \"Google It\"','

                                                        Thanks to everyone for the emails and the opinion on the \"Google It\" episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I received a lot of emails and comments on my first episode. No one stated they disagreed with me on the opinion I was expressing but changed the conversation to be about their own privacy issues they have with Google\'s practices.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I wasn\'t dismissing those who feel Google overreaches in the privacy department. I was stating the fact that they are a very successful company DESPITE a lot of Tech writers and podcasters out here stating they aren\'t. You can argue the privacy points all you want but the fact is all I was stating was they are successful.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So with that said I weigh in on Privacy and how I see it. Disagree? let me know!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        People I mentioned in the podcast:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',346,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Google',0,0,1), (2436,'2017-12-04','HPR Community News for November 2017',5241,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2413Wed2017-11-01personal health careBitbox
                                                        2414Thu2017-11-02What\'s in my ham shack, part 1MrX
                                                        2415Fri2017-11-03bullet journal to org modeBrian in Ohio
                                                        2416Mon2017-11-06HPR Community News for October 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2417Tue2017-11-07Transmeta Crusoe - Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient) - Trouble Shooting and Debian 9 InstallJWP
                                                        2418Wed2017-11-08What\'s in my ham shack, part 2MrX
                                                        2419Thu2017-11-09Alien Brothers Podcast S1E01 - IntroductionThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP)
                                                        2420Fri2017-11-10Netbooks - Keeping an old friend aliveBeeza
                                                        2421Mon2017-11-13Project Interestlostnbronx
                                                        2422Tue2017-11-14Kickstarter Post Mortemklaatu
                                                        2423Wed2017-11-15Open Source Gaming #2: OoliteTheDUDE
                                                        2424Thu2017-11-16Interface Zero RPG Playklaatu
                                                        2425Fri2017-11-17Intro to XSLklaatu
                                                        2426Mon2017-11-20Let\'s Talk About Addictionlostnbronx
                                                        2427Tue2017-11-21Server Basics 101klaatu
                                                        2428Wed2017-11-22git Blobsklaatu
                                                        2429Thu2017-11-23Interface Zero RPG Playklaatu
                                                        2430Fri2017-11-24Scanning booksKen Fallon
                                                        2431Mon2017-11-27Information Underground: Local Controllostnbronx
                                                        2432Tue2017-11-28Living with the Nokia 6 – an update to HPR 2405Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2433Wed2017-11-29You were right, I was wrongKen Fallon
                                                        2434Thu2017-11-30CybrosisHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 44 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 18 comments on\n9 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2376\n(2017-09-11) \"Information Underground: 21st Century Superstar\"\nby deepgeek.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nKlaatu on 2017-11-07:\n\"re: Me Too\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2378\n(2017-09-13) \"Why Docbook?\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 9:\nKlaatu on 2017-11-06:\n\"KWNPSA\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2387\n(2017-09-26) \"Free Weights and a Bicycle\"\nby Frank Bell.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nbjb on 2017-11-07:\n\"5BX and 10BX, memory lane\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2393\n(2017-10-04) \"PWGen - A password generator\"\nby Xoke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nAaron on 2017-11-06:\n\"Haystack password\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2395\n(2017-10-06) \"Obamacare\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nbjb on 2017-11-07:\n\"thanks\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2399\n(2017-10-12) \"Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\ndodddummy on 2017-10-31:\n\"Accessibility\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\ndodddummy on 2017-11-06:\n\"Replying to comments from community episode\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\ndodddummy on 2017-11-13:\n\"ctrl vs fn keys\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2411\n(2017-10-30) \"Information Underground: Co-op Paradise\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-11-03:\n\"Fascinating\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nShane Shennan on 2017-11-04:\n\"Well done!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nbjb on 2017-11-07:\n\"indie hosting\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2017-11-07:\n\"Tell me how\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nsilver on 2017-11-26:\n\"Alternate web server.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2412\n(2017-10-31) \"The Call of Cthulhu\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nFrankBell on 2017-11-03:\n\"Lovecraft\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2017-11-03:\n\"Agreeing with Frank\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\ndodddummy on 2017-11-06:\n\"Is there a link to the audio you listened to?\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nel Mussol on 2017-11-08:\n\"file unavailable\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr406\n(2009-07-21) \"Moonshine\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\ncobra2 on 2017-11-25:\n\"shownotes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 26 comments on 15 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2413\n(2017-11-01) \"personal health care\"\nby Bitbox.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nnorrist on 2017-12-02:\n\"Fear and Cold Turkey\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nShane Shennan on 2017-12-02:\n\"All the best!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2415\n(2017-11-03) \"bullet journal to org mode\"\nby Brian in Ohio.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ncroy on 2017-12-02:\n\"You big tease!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"org-mode\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2416\n(2017-11-06) \"HPR Community News for October 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2017-12-02:\n\"Straight through cable\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-02:\n\"Re: Straight through cable\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-02:\n\"Did a correction show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2417\n(2017-11-07) \"Transmeta Crusoe - Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient) - Trouble Shooting and Debian 9 Install\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"First I've ever heard of this\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndrrty on 2017-12-02:\n\"wow\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2418\n(2017-11-08) \"What\'s in my ham shack, part 2\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"great infos\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2419\n(2017-11-09) \"Alien Brothers Podcast S1E01 - Introduction\"\nby The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"shows like these\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2420\n(2017-11-10) \"Netbooks - Keeping an old friend alive\"\nby Beeza.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-12-02:\n\"Would love to hear you on librivox\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2421\n(2017-11-13) \"Project Interest\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"attention\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nlostnbronx on 2017-12-02:\n\"Popular Kids\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2423\n(2017-11-15) \"Open Source Gaming #2: Oolite\"\nby TheDUDE.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"cool discoveries\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nlostnbronx on 2017-12-02:\n\"It Must Be Me\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2424\n(2017-11-16) \"Interface Zero RPG Play\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClaudioM on 2017-12-02:\n\"Wonderful Intro to RPGs!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2425\n(2017-11-17) \"Intro to XSL\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-02:\n\"This was really interesting\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-02:\n\"Re: This was really interesting\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2427\n(2017-11-21) \"Server Basics 101\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nShane Shennan on 2017-12-02:\n\"Thanks! I made a connection!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\n0xf10e on 2017-12-02:\n\"Solaris?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nZen_Floater2 on 2017-12-02:\n\"OpenBSD user\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2432\n(2017-11-28) \"Living with the Nokia 6 – an update to HPR 2405\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-02:\n\"Cheers Tony\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nRWA on 2017-12-02:\n\"Nokia 6 Update\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2433\n(2017-11-29) \"You were right, I was wrong\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2017-12-02:\n\"Best title ever!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2434\n(2017-11-30) \"Cybrosis\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2017-12-02:\n\"Link so you don't have to find the previous ep\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-November/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Call for shows

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • If there is anyone else who hasn\'t submitted a show this year there are only a few slots free !!!
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        New Year\'s Eve

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • HonkeyMagoo and associates have offered to look after the HPR New Year\'s Eve event again this year. They say:
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        "We plan on starting on 2017-12-31T10:00:00Z (December 31, 2017 5:00 am EST)
                                                        \nWe will stop the recording and the stream as long as there is no one on at 2018-01-01T12:00:00Z (January 1, 2018 7:00 am EST). If people are still on and talking we will keep the stream and the recording going."

                                                        \n
                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Further details are available on the HPR mailing list and the LinuxLUGcast website.
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Thanks to Windigo and bjb for sending in updates in the past month.
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2456,'2018-01-01','HPR Community News for December 2017',5229,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in December 2017','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Thanks to all HPR contributors in 2017!

                                                        \n\n

                                                        \n@einebiene,\nAhuka,\nAndrew Conway,\nb-yeezi,\nBeeza,\nBill \"NFMZ1\" Miller,\nBitbox,\nbjb,\nBobJonkman,\nbrian,\nBrian in Ohio,\nChristopher M. Hobbs,\nclacke,\nClaudio Miranda,\nClinton Roy,\ncobra2,\nCurtis Adkins (CPrompt^),\nDave Morriss,\nDave Yates,\nDavid Whitman,\ndeepgeek,\ndodddummy,\ndroops,\nEpicanis,\nEric Duhamel,\nFiftyOneFifty,\nFrank Bell,\nfth,\nGeddes,\nHannah, of Terra, of Sol,\nHPR Volunteers,\nHPR_AudioBookClub,\nIronic Sodium,\nJezra,\nJon Kulp,\nJrullo,\nJWP,\nKen Fallon,\nklaatu,\nKnox,\nlaindir,\nlostnbronx,\nm1rr0r5h4d35,\nmattkingusa,\nmirwi,\nMongo,\nMrX,\nNYbill,\nOnlyHalfTheTime,\noperat0r,\nQuvmoh,\nReg A,\nShane Shennan,\nsigflup,\nspaceman,\nSteve Saner,\nswift110,\nThaj Sara,\nThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP),\nTheDUDE,\nthelovebug,\nTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212,\nVarious Hosts,\nvenam,\nWindigo,\nXoke.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2435Fri2017-12-01Server Basics 102klaatu
                                                        2436Mon2017-12-04HPR Community News for November 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2437Tue2017-12-05Interface Zero Play-through Part 3klaatu
                                                        2438Wed2017-12-06Gnu Awk - Part 8Dave Morriss
                                                        2439Thu2017-12-07Internal Logic of Storieslostnbronx
                                                        2440Fri2017-12-08How to save bad beans or the French presscobra2
                                                        2441Mon2017-12-11Server Basics 103klaatu
                                                        2442Tue2017-12-12 The sound of Woodbrook Quaker Study centre in the SpringTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2443Wed2017-12-13pdmenuDave Morriss
                                                        2444Thu2017-12-14Interface Zero Play-through Part 4klaatu
                                                        2445Fri2017-12-15Information Underground: Backwards Capitalismlostnbronx
                                                        2446Mon2017-12-18Git server and git hooksklaatu
                                                        2447Tue2017-12-19Server Basics 104 OpenVPN Serverklaatu
                                                        2448Wed2017-12-20Useful Bash functions - part 3Dave Morriss
                                                        2449Thu2017-12-21Org-mode mobile solutionBrian in Ohio
                                                        2450Fri2017-12-22Android Audio with viper 4 android and magiskoperat0r
                                                        2451Mon2017-12-25Server Basics 105 OpenVPN Clientklaatu
                                                        2452Tue2017-12-26Hydraulic Heavy Scale ProjectDavid Whitman
                                                        2453Wed2017-12-27The power of GNU Readline - part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        2454Thu2017-12-28The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E02 - Strictly HackingThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP)
                                                        2455Fri2017-12-29Interface Zero RPG Part 5klaatu
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 43 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 15 comments on\n11 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2163\n(2016-11-16) \"Gnu Awk - Part 4\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nRon Strelecki on 2017-12-09:\n\"GNU AWK, part four\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-10:\n\"Thanks Ron\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nRon Strelecki on 2017-12-18:\n\"GNU Awk, part four\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2184\n(2016-12-15) \"Gnu Awk - Part 5\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nZZ on 2017-12-11:\n\"GNU Awk part 5\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-11:\n\"Re: Audio\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2297\n(2017-05-23) \"More Magnatune Favourites\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nrtsn on 2017-12-17:\n\"good stuff\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2314\n(2017-06-15) \"Bad Caps\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 9:\nNYbill on 2017-12-12:\n\"Its alive!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 10:\nJon KUlp on 2017-12-15:\n\"Insomnia\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2394\n(2017-10-05) \"The Lost Episode\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-20:\n\"All set but ....\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2403\n(2017-10-18) \"Amateur Radio Round Table #3\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-04:\n\"Visualisation of waves\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2417\n(2017-11-07) \"Transmeta Crusoe - Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient) - Trouble Shooting and Debian 9 Install\"\nby JWP.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nbusybusy on 2017-12-29:\n\"A Different Time\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2420\n(2017-11-10) \"Netbooks - Keeping an old friend alive\"\nby Beeza.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nGumnos on 2017-12-02:\n\"Netbooks and lightweight OSes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2422\n(2017-11-14) \"Kickstarter Post Mortem\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nbusybusy on 2017-12-29:\n\"Kickstarter Revisited\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2431\n(2017-11-27) \"Information Underground: Local Control\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nZen_Floater2 on 2017-12-01:\n\"Benevolent Dictator of the Magical Forrest\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2432\n(2017-11-28) \"Living with the Nokia 6 – an update to HPR 2405\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nTony Hughes on 2017-12-01:\n\"Reply to RWA re App performance\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 28 comments on 13 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2435\n(2017-12-01) \"Server Basics 102\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\n0xf10e on 2017-12-05:\n\"yum whatprovides?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2437\n(2017-12-05) \"Interface Zero Play-through Part 3\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-05:\n\"Noooooooo\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-05:\n\"Ignore him\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\njrullo on 2017-12-05:\n\"Is there a link for the free guide you mentioned.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-08:\n\"Free guide\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2438\n(2017-12-06) \"Gnu Awk - Part 8\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nRon Strelecki on 2017-12-22:\n\"AWK part 8\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-24:\n\"Thanks Ron\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2440\n(2017-12-08) \"How to save bad beans or the French press\"\nby cobra2.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-10:\n\"coffee\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ncobra2 on 2017-12-11:\n\"coffee\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2441\n(2017-12-11) \"Server Basics 103\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nx1101 on 2017-12-11:\n\"Moving follow up to comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2442\n(2017-12-12) \" The sound of Woodbrook Quaker Study centre in the Spring\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSTLShawn on 2017-12-20:\n\"Peaceful\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2017-12-21:\n\"Reply to Shawn\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2443\n(2017-12-13) \"pdmenu\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2017-12-13:\n\"Need to give this a try\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2445\n(2017-12-15) \"Information Underground: Backwards Capitalism\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2017-12-15:\n\"Well Done\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2447\n(2017-12-19) \"Server Basics 104 OpenVPN Server\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-21:\n\"Details\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-27:\n\"shownotes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2448\n(2017-12-20) \"Useful Bash functions - part 3\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSTLShawn on 2017-12-20:\n\"Fascinating\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-20:\n\"Thanks Shawn\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMike Ray on 2017-12-21:\n\"Bash shows\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-21:\n\"Thanks Mike\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nMike Ray on 2017-12-29:\n\"BASH_REMATCH\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-29:\n\"Re: BASH_REMATCH\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2452\n(2017-12-26) \"Hydraulic Heavy Scale Project\"\nby David Whitman.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-19:\n\"retriever dog training\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nSTLShawn on 2017-12-20:\n\"Would love dog training\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2454\n(2017-12-28) \"The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E02 - Strictly Hacking\"\nby The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTrucker Rich on 2017-12-28:\n\"Delivery and Content\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2455\n(2017-12-29) \"Interface Zero RPG Part 5\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2017-12-20:\n\"Wasting shows\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2017-12-28:\n\"Forgot a link\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2017-12-30:\n\"Added forgotten link\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2017-December/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Issue Tracker

                                                        \n

                                                        Josh of AnHonestHost.com has provided HPR with a GitLab repository we use for storing website code and scripts. It includes an issue tracker which we have been using to track some of the recent issues we have been experiencing. We plan to use this more in the future.

                                                        \n

                                                        See https://gitlab.anhonesthost.com/HPR/HPR_Public_Code/issues.

                                                        \n

                                                        Hosting for HPR

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR is hosted by Josh of AnHonestHost.com. We would appreciate it if you could donate to help reduce his costs in funding the hosting.

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR\'s shows and audio are also hosted by the Internet Archive (archive.org). They are currently running a funding drive where a generous supporter will match donations 3-to-1. As they say: "Your $5 becomes $20!"

                                                        \n

                                                        Donations to the Internet Archive would also be appreciated.

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR shows on the Internet Archive

                                                        \n

                                                        HPR shows from number 871 up to 2455 are currently available on the Internet Archive as individual "identifiers" in the Archive terminology.

                                                        \n

                                                        Gradually, earlier shows are being added and the shows for the coming week are added each weekend. The podcast feeds have recently been redirected to download from the copies on archive.org.

                                                        \n

                                                        In recent months the upload process has been enhanced to make sure that a copy of the notes and all other components of each show (such as pictures, and downloadable files) are available on archive.org as well as on the HPR site. Earlier uploads where this was not the case will be updated in due course.

                                                        \n

                                                        Static web site

                                                        \n

                                                        Can anyone recommend static site tools?

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to Xoke for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2184,'2016-12-15','Gnu Awk - Part 5',2394,'In this episode, I describe how to use regular expressions with Awk.','

                                                        GNU AWK - Part 5

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Regular Expressions in AWK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The syntax for using regular expressions to match lines in AWK is as follows:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        word ~ /match/
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or for not matching, use the following:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        word !~ /match/
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember the following file from the previous episodes:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name       color  amount\r\napple      red    4\r\nbanana     yellow 6\r\nstrawberry red    3\r\ngrape      purple 10\r\napple      green  8\r\nplum       purple 2\r\nkiwi       brown  4\r\npotato     brown  9\r\npineapple  yellow 5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We can run the following command:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $1 ~ /p[elu]/ {print $0}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will get the following output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        apple      red    4\r\ngrape      purple 10\r\napple      green  8\r\nplum       purple 2\r\npineapple  yellow 5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In another example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $2 ~ /e{2}/ {print $0}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Will produce the output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        apple      green  8
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Regular expression basics

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Certain characters have special meaning when using regular expressions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Anchors

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • ^ - beginning of the line
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • $ - end of the line
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\A - beginning of a string
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\z - end of a string
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\b on a word boundary
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Characters

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • [ad] - a or d
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [a-d] - any character a through d
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [^a-d] - not any character a through d
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\w - any word
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\s - any white-space character
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\d - any digit
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The capital version of w, s, and d are negations.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or, you can reference characters the POSIX standard way:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • [:alnum:] - Alphanumeric characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:alpha:] - Alphabetic characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:blank:] - Space and TAB characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:cntrl:] - Control characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:digit:] - Numeric characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:graph:] - Characters that are both printable and visible (a space is printable but not visible, whereas an ‘a’ is both)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:lower:] - Lowercase alphabetic characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:print:] - Printable characters (characters that are not control characters)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:punct:] - Punctuation characters (characters that are not letters, digits, control characters, or space characters)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:space:] - Space characters (such as space, TAB, and formfeed, to name a few)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:upper:] - Uppercase alphabetic characters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • [:xdigit:] - Characters that are hexadecimal digits
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Quantifiers

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • . - match any character
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • + - match preceding one or more times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • * - match preceding zero or more times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ? - match preceding zero or one time
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • {n} - match preceding exactly n times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • {n,} - match preceding n or more times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • {n,m} - match preceding between n and m times
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Grouped Matches

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • (...) - Parentheses are used for grouping
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • | - Means or in the context of a grouped match
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Replacement

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The sub command substitutes the match with the replacement string. This only applies to the first match.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The gsub command substitutes all matching items.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The gensub command command substitutes the in a similar way as sub and gsub, but with extra functionality
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The & character in the replacement field references the matched text. You have to use \\& to replace the match with the literal & character.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        { sub(/apple/, "nut", $1);\r\n    print $1}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The output is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name\r\nnut\r\nbanana\r\nstrawberry\r\ngrape\r\nnut\r\nplum\r\nkiwi\r\npotato\r\npinenut
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        { sub(/.+(pp|rr)/, "test-&", $1);\r\n    print $1}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This produces the following output:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name\r\ntest-apple\r\nbanana\r\ntest-strawberry\r\ngrape\r\ntest-apple\r\nplum\r\nkiwi\r\npotato\r\ntest-pineapple
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Resources

                                                        \r\n\r\n',300,94,0,'CC-BY-SA','awk, bash, command-line, cli',0,0,1), (2187,'2016-12-20','The Toshiba Libretto 100ct',1707,'In this episode I discuss some of the quirks of setting up Toshiba Libretto for retro gaming.','

                                                        In this episode, I discuss some of the quirks I encountered when setting up my recently acquired Toshiba Libretto 100ct for retro gaming. I cover the hardware specs, a few tips on getting it running while dealing with Win98 woes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Retro gaming, vintage hardware, Toshiba Libretto',0,0,1), (2192,'2016-12-27','Fun with Oscilloscopes',572,'Taking a look at oscilloscope music.','

                                                        For an example of the effect, here is an example -

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some other interesting ideas for oscilloscopes -

                                                        \r\n\r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Oscilloscope,music',0,0,1), (2189,'2016-12-22','Working Amateur Radio Satellites',1925,'A brief overview of how to work your first satellite.','\r\n

                                                        Resources:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',241,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hamradio, ham, radio, amateur, satellites, projects',0,0,1), (2190,'2016-12-23','fucking botnets how do they work?',233,'how using botnets for legetimate purposes can be useful','

                                                        \r\nyou can download the files, which includes the video tutorial on my hidden website: https://qzc3ou3vccr3yjyg.onion/software/gs-bot.tar.gz | you need the tor browser to do so\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\notherwise the video can be found on mediagoblin (minetest quality tho):\r\nhttps://roaming-initiative.com/mediagoblin/u/spaceman1/m/how-to-make-a-gnu-social-bot/\r\n

                                                        \r\n ',344,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','GNU Social,bot',0,0,1), (2191,'2016-12-26','Building a Soundboard Android App with App Inventor',603,'droops walks us through how to build Android Apps with App Inventor a block based language.','

                                                        \r\nBuilding quick Android Apps is simple with App Inventor. Droops walks through how to build a simple soundboard to play fun fart noises. This is a great project that he has done with his kids to bring computer science and computational thinking to the young ones. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"gui\r\n

                                                        \r\n',1,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','android, app inventor, mit',0,0,1), (2193,'2016-12-28','a clean podcast with no swearing',1074,'discussing the swearing drama ','

                                                        \r\n(replace-regex-in-string \"fuck\" \"rainbows\")\r\n

                                                        \r\n',344,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','freespeech',0,0,1), (2194,'2016-12-29','The low-down on what\'s up in the Taiwan Strait.',1928,'In which I respond to \"I don\'t get this whole Taiwan/US/China thing\"','

                                                        Wow, my aim was really to be strict about the terminology and always talk about Beijing/PRC or Taipei/ROC, but I noticed that I was saying \"China\" and \"Taiwan\" a lot of the time. Lucky I\'m not trying to be the President, eh?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m sorry it\'s so long, but on the other hand I think I speak pretty slow, so it\'s probably pretty amenable to sped-up listening. :-)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or, you can skip ~27 minutes in to go straight to my overview of the current situation, without the \"short\" background.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, pardon my pronunciation of Chinese names, which is an unpredictable mix of Cantonese, Cantonese-accented Mandarin, Mandarin and English.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Background:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"World\r\n
                                                        (Image license: public domain)\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Here\'s the text from IRC:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        China doesn\'t want Taiwan to be independent because that would be a loss of prestige to China.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are no technical details about it, it\'s all about symbolism.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The China thing is a really interesting thing to unpack. First of all, if you ask the traditional ruling party on Taiwan, the KMT or GMD (Guo Min Dang), there is no country called Taiwan. The KMT and the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) agree that there is only one China and Taiwan is simply a province of that China. Where they disagree is whether the true government of the whole is in Beijing or in Taipei. (fun fact: the official capital of the Republic of China (Taiwan) is Nanjing, which is not under ROC control)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, some de-facto parts of India and all of Mongolia is officially part of the ROC, according to their Constitution.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n\"Map\r\n
                                                        (Image license: CC-by-SA, Wikipedia user ZanderSchubert)\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        If you fly from Beijing, there are domestic flights and \"international flights and domestic flights to Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan\".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So the US and UN stance since 1972 is \"there is one China, and its government is in Beijing\". But at the same time US is giving military support to Taipei, which according to Beijing is an unruly province.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As long as the status quo holds – that Taipei claims to rule all of China and Beijing claims to rule all of China and no outsider that matters challenges that – China (both of them!) is happy. It works, there are extended business relations between the two jurisdictions (most of the electronics made in China are made in factories owned by Taiwanese companies)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Both the CCP and the KMT hope that in the long term, this can gradually creep toward a unification of China. If Taiwan would declare independence, that would mean war.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now, the current ruling party, the DPP (Democratic Progressive Party) officially support driving toward a Taiwanese rather than a Chinese national identity, and at some point independence. They are being very careful about it though, because they are also aware of how Beijing would react if they went out and did it. Also, while they do control the majority of the Legislative Yuan, there is a significant minority in Taiwan that adhere to a Chinese identity, don\'t want to upset China, and don\'t want formal independence. The current quirky situation works, and barriers have been coming down over the years. Relations are abnormal yet normal. On the rhetorical level it\'s all messed up, in practice you can fly between the island and the mainland, you can conduct business and send post, etc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When ROC (Republic of China, \"Taiwan\") and PRC (People\'s Republic of China, \"Mainland China\") representatives meet, there are no embassies or consulates involved, because neither acknowledges the other as a country. Neither President will call the other \"President\", because that would imply they represent a country, rather than a rebel faction inside what the other side considers China.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So when Trump goes on Twitter and says \"The President of Taiwan CALLED ME today to wish me congratulations on winning the Presidency. Thank you!\" that\'s a huge scandal in the eyes of Beijing. There is no President of Taiwan, and to imply so is to imply that Taiwan is a country and should be independent.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That\'s as short as I can make it, but that\'s the low-down on what\'s up in the Taiwan Strait.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Further reference (all Wikipedia):

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Tangential background (all except one from Wikipedia):

                                                        \r\n\r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','china, taiwan, roc, prc, politics, trump, history',0,0,1), (2199,'2017-01-05','Replacing the Throttle Position Sensor on My Truck',1138,'Sound-seeing episode, listen as I Replace the throttle position sensor on my truck','

                                                        When the \"check engine\" light came on in my truck again, it turned out to be the throttle position sensor just like when I very first bought the truck about a year-and-a-half ago. That time, I was able to fix it by spraying contact cleaner on it, but this time that didn\'t work. I ordered a new part. In this episode I talk while I replace the part and I also talk about the nifty diagnostic tool that I used to get the trouble code and how it sends the information to your smartphone.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"Throttle

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        What you can gather with the torque diagnostic tool for Android:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • View live OBD engine data on your Android phone - Connect to your vehicle ECU
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fully customisable dashboard screens - Design your own layouts and custom dials, use your own themes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Retrieve Fault Codes (DTCs) and clear Check Engine lights - View fault descriptions using the built-in databases
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Upload live OBD2 data to your webserver or the torque web viewer in realtime
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Check the performance of your vehicle with BHP / Torque / 0-60 & Quarter Mile widgets
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, cars, car repair, automotive',0,0,1), (2200,'2017-01-06','Episode one of the future of free software series',154,'introduction to the series','

                                                        \r\nSpaceman introduces a series on the future of free software as he sees it.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe full series is available on my hidden service: https://qzc3ou3vccr3yjyg.onion/free-software-podcasts/the-future-of-free-software/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nYou can access the site using the Tor Browser available here\r\n

                                                        ',344,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','free software',0,0,1), (2222,'2017-02-07','FOSDEM 2017 K (level 1, group A)',5392,'Ken interviews the projects in Group A of the the K building level 1','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"KDE\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.kde.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKDE is an international community that creates Free Software for desktop and portable computing. Among KDE\'s products are a modern desktop system for Linux and UNIX platforms, and comprehensive office productivity and groupware suites. KDE offers hundreds of software titles in many categories including web applications, multimedia, entertainment, educational, graphics and software development.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jonathan Riddell

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"GNOME\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.gnome.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGNOME 3 is an easy and elegant way to use your computer. It is designed to put you in control and bring freedom to everybody. GNOME 3 is developed by the GNOME community, a diverse, international group of contributors that is supported by an independent, non-profit foundation.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Bastian Ilso

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"LibreOffice\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.libreoffice.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLibreOffice is the most widely used free open source office software. It is a community-driven project of The Document Foundation. LibreOffice is developed by professionals and by users, just like you, who believe in the principles of free software and in sharing their work with the world in a non-restrictive way. At the core of these principles is the promise of better-quality, highly-reliable and secure software that gives you greater flexibility at zero cost and no end-user lock-in.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Italo Vignoli

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Kopano\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.kopano.io/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKopano is a thoroughly modern communication stack. It\'s fully MAPI based server (Core) provides access to email, contacts, calendaring through a web interface (WebApp), on the desktop (DeskApp) and can be used with mobile devices. Integration with online meetings tools based on WebRTC (Web Meetings) and integration with file storage services (Files) provide a complete set of tools to work together.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Michael Kromer

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"CiviCRM\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://civicrm.org

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nCiviCRM is an open source CRM built by a community of contributors and supporters, and coordinated by the Core Team. CiviCRM is web-based software used by a diverse range of organisations, particularly not-for-profit organizations (nonprofts and civic sector organizations). CiviCRM offers a complete feature set out of the box and can integrate with your website.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Alain Benbassat

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"GNU

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://taler.net/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTaler is an electronic payment system providing the ability to pay anonymously using digital cash. Taler consists of a network protocol definition (using a RESTful API over HTTP), a Mint (which creates digital coins), a Wallet (which allows customers\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Christian Grothoff

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"pEp

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://pep.foundation

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Swiss-based PEP foundation that intends to encrypt all digital written communication fully automatically giving \"Privacy by Default\"\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Hernâni Matques

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"FreeBSD

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.freebsd.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFreeBSD is an advanced computer operating system used to power modern servers, desktops, and embedded platforms. A large community has continually developed it for more than thirty years. Its advanced networking, security, and storage features have made FreeBSD the platform of choice for many of the busiest web sites and most pervasive embedded networking and storage devices.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Benedict Reuschling

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"illumos\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://illumos.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThis is the home of the illumos project, the open source fork of Sun\'s OpenSolaris. Launched in 2010, the project enjoys financial and technical support from several key companies which rely on the illumos kernel as the technological foundation for their own products, as well as the backing of a growing developer community.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Hans Rosenfeld

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OpenSUSE\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.opensuse.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nopenSUSE, formerly openSUSE Leap 42.1 and openSUSE Tumbleweed, is a international Linux project with different distributions sponsored by SUSE Linux GmbH and other companies. It is widely used throughout the world, particularly in Germany. The focus of its development is creating usable open source tools for software developers and system administrators, while providing user friendly desktops, and a feature rich server environment.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Douglas DeMaio

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"CentOS\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.centos.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe CentOS Project is a community-driven free software effort focused on delivering a robust open source ecosystem. For users, we offer a consistent manageable platform that suits a wide variety of deployments. For open source communities, we offer a solid, predictable base to build upon, along with extensive resources to build, test, release, and maintain their code.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Fabian Arrotin

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Fedora

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://getfedora.org/en/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFedora is an operating system based on the Linux kernel, developed by the community-supported Fedora Project and sponsored by Red Hat. Fedora contains software distributed under a free and open-source license and aims to be on the leading edge of such technologies.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Justin W. Flory

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM 2017, KDE, GNOME, LibreOffice, Kopano, CiviCRM, GNU Taler, pEp foundation, FreeBSD Project, illumos, OpenSUSE, CentOS, Fedora Project',0,0,1), (2223,'2017-02-08','FOSDEM 2017 K (level 1, group B and C)',6873,'Ken interviews the projects in Group B and C of the the K building level 1','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"ReactOS\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.reactos.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nReactOS® is a free open source operating system based on the best design principles found in the Windows NT® architecture (Windows versions such as Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows Server 2012 are built on Windows NT architecture). Written completely from scratch, ReactOS is not a Linux based system, and shares none of the UNIX architecture. The main goal of the ReactOS® project is to provide an operating system which is binary compatible with Windows.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Colin Finck

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Haiku\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.haiku-os.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nHaiku is an open-source operating system that specifically targets personal computing. Inspired by the BeOS, Haiku is fast, simple to use, easy to learn and yet very powerful.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with François Revol

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Gentoo\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.gentoo.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGentoo is a free operating system based on either Linux or FreeBSD that can be automatically optimized and customized for just about any application or need. Extreme configurability, performance and a top notch user and developer community are all hallmarks of the Gentoo experience.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Matthew Thode

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"CoreOS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://coreos.com/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nContainer Linux by CoreOS (formerly CoreOS Linux) is an open-source lightweight operating system based on the Linux kernel and designed for providing infrastructure to clustered deployments, while focusing on automation, ease of application deployment, security, reliability and scalability. As an OS, Container Linux provides only the minimal functionality required for deploying applications inside software containers, together with built-in mechanisms for service discovery and configuration sharing.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Brian Redbeard

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Debian\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.debian.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDebian is a free operating system (OS) for your computer. An operating system is the set of basic programs and utilities that make your computer run.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Sebastiaan Couwenberg

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"PostgreSQL\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.postgresql.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPostgreSQL is a powerful, open source object-relational database system. It has more than 15 years of active development and a proven architecture that has earned it a strong reputation for reliability, data integrity, and correctness. It runs on all major operating systems, including Linux, UNIX (AIX, BSD, HP-UX, SGI IRIX, Mac OS X, Solaris, Tru64), and Windows. It is fully ACID compliant, has full support for foreign keys, joins, views, triggers, and stored procedures (in multiple languages).\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Robert Juens

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Nextcloud\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://nextcloud.com

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nNextcloud is a suite of client-server software for creating file hosting services and using them. It is functionally very similar to the widely used Dropbox, with the primary functional difference being that Nextcloud is free and open-source, and thereby allowing anyone to install and operate it without charge on a private server. In contrast to proprietary services like Dropbox, the open architecture allows adding additional functionality to the server in form of so-called applications.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Frank Karlitschek

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Bazel\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://bazel.build/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nBazel is Google\'s own build tool, now publicly available in Beta. Bazel has built-in support for building both client and server software, including client applications for both Android and iOS platforms. It also provides an extensible framework that you can use to develop your own build rules.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with David Stanke

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Open

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://openbuildservice.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Open Build Service (OBS) is a generic system to build and distribute binary packages from sources in an automatic, consistent and reproducible way. You can release packages as well as updates, add-ons, appliances and entire distributions for a wide range of operating systems and hardware architectures.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Richard Brown

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OpenQA\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://openqa.opensuse.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nopenQA is an automated test tool for operating systems and the engine at the heart of openSUSE\'s automated testing initiative.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Richard Brown

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Free

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://fsfe.org/index.en.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nFree Software Foundation Europe is a charity that empowers users to control technology. Software is deeply involved in all aspects of our lives; and it is important that this technology empowers rather than restricts us. Free Software gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt and share software.These rights help support other fundamental freedoms like freedom of speech, press and privacy.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Florian Snow

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Vikings\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://vikings.net/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLibre Hosting Provider\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Thomas Umbach

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Tor

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.torproject.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTor is free software and an open network that helps you defend against traffic analysis, a form of network surveillance that threatens personal freedom and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with A Volunteer at the Booth

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Tails

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://tails.boum.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTails is a live operating system that you can start on almost any computer from a DVD, USB stick, or SD card. It aims at preserving your privacy and anonymity, and helps you to: use the Internet anonymously and circumvent censorship; all connections to the Internet are forced to go through the Tor network; leave no trace on the computer you are using unless you ask it explicitly; use state-of-the-art cryptographic tools to encrypt your files, emails and instant messaging.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with A Volunteer at the Booth

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Frënn

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.enn.lu/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLuxembourg based non-profit organization defending civil rights on the internet. We provide high-bandwidth Tor nodes all over the world to protect online privacy, anonymity, freedom of speech and fight censorship!\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with A Volunteer at the Booth

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Nos oignons\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://nos-oignons.net/Services/index.en.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nNos oignons is a not-for-profit organization created to collect donations in order to run Tor exit nodes. Tor enables users to create anonymous connections and bypass censorship on the Internet. Tor is at the same time a piece of software, a network of relays made of more than 7,000 servers and a project around which fortyish people gravitate.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with A Volunteer at the Booth

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Xen

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.xenproject.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Xen ProjectTM is the leading open source virtualization platform that is powering some of the largest clouds in production today. Amazon Web Services, Aliyun, Rackspace Public Cloud, Verizon Cloud and many hosting services use Xen Project software. Plus, it is integrated into multiple cloud orchestration projects like OpenStack.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Julien Fontanet

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OpenStack\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.openstack.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOpen source software for creating private and public clouds. OpenStack software controls large pools of compute, storage, and networking resources throughout a datacenter, managed through a dashboard or via the OpenStack API. OpenStack works with popular enterprise and open source technologies making it ideal for heterogeneous infrastructure. Hundreds of the world\'s largest brands rely on OpenStack to run their businesses every day, reducing costs and helping them move faster.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Aurélien Joga

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"oVirt\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.ovirt.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\noVirt is a virtualization management application used to manage hardware nodes, storage, and network resources, as well as deploying and monitoring virtual machines running in your data center.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Yaniv Kaul

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Foreman\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.theforeman.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nForeman is a complete lifecycle management tool for physical and virtual servers. We give system administrators the power to easily automate repetitive tasks, quickly deploy applications, and proactively manage servers, on-premise or in the cloud.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Greg Sutcliffe

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Gluster\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.gluster.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGlusterFS is a scalable network filesystem. Using common off-the-shelf hardware, you can create large, distributed storage solutions for media streaming, data analysis, and other data- and bandwidth-intensive tasks. GlusterFS is free and open source software.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Mohamed Ashiq Liyazudeen / Kaushal M / Jiffin Tony Thottan

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"ownCloud\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://owncloud.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nA safe home for all your data. Access & share your files, calendars, contacts, mail & more from any device, on your terms\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Holger Dyroff

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"CAcert\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.cacert.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nCAcert.org is a community-driven Certificate Authority that issues certificates to the public at large for free. CAcert\'s goal is to promote awareness and education on computer security through the use of encryption, specifically by providing cryptographic certificates. These certificates can be used to digitally sign and encrypt email, authenticate and authorize users connecting to websites and secure data transmission over the internet. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Eva Stöwe

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"secure-u\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.secure-u.de/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nDer Verein fördert die Wissenschaft, Forschung und Verbraucherberatung. Insbesondere ist Zweck des Vereins die Förderung der Sicherheit im Internet und die Unterstützung von Anwendern bei der Anwendung sicherer Kommunikation.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Eva Stöwe

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        \r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM 2017, ReactOS, Haiku, Gentoo, CoreOS, Debian, PostgreSQL, Nextcloud, Bazel, Open Build Service/OpenQA, FSFE, Vikings, Tor, Xen, OpenStack, oVirt, Foreman, Gluster, ownCloud, CAcert, secure-u',0,0,1), (2224,'2017-02-09','FOSDEM 2017 K (level 2 Stands 1 to 9)',4639,'Ken interviews the projects in the K building level 2 at stands 1 to 9','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Mozilla\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nHi. We\'re Mozilla, the proudly non-profit champions of the Internet, helping to keep it healthy, open and accessible to all.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ludovic Hirlimann

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"diaspora\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://diasporafoundation.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ndiaspora* is a true network, with no central base. There are servers (called \"pods\") all over the world, each containing the data of those users who have chosen to register with it. These pods communicate with each other seamlessly, so that you can register with any pod and communicate freely with your contacts, wherever they are on the network.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Lukas Matt

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Apache

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.apache.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe mission of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) is to provide software for the public good. We do this by providing services and support for many like-minded software project communities of individuals who choose to join the ASF.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Mechtilde Stehmaan

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OW2\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.ow2.org/bin/view/Main/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOW2 is an independent, global, open-source software community. The mission of OW2 is to a) promote the development of open-source middleware, generic business applications, cloud computing platforms and b) foster a vibrant community and business ecosystem. OW2 developments follow a flexible, component-based approach. These components range from specific software frameworks, protocols and applications through to integrated, service-oriented platforms.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Cedric Thomas

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Jenkins\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://jenkins.io/index.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nJenkins is an open source automation server which enables developers around the world to reliably build, test, and deploy their software. Jenkins, originally founded in 2006 as \"Hudson\", is one of the leading automation servers available. Using an extensible, plugin-based architecture developers have created hundreds of plugins to adapt Jenkins to a multitude of build, test, and deployment automation workloads.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Robert Sandell

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Tiki\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://tiki.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nTiki Wiki CMS Groupware or simply Tiki, originally known as TikiWiki, is a free and open source Wiki-based content management system and online office suite written primarily in PHP and distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) license. In addition to enabling websites and portals on the internet and on intranets and extranets, Tiki contains a number of collaboration features allowing it to operate as a Geospatial Content Management System (GeoCMS) and Groupware web application. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Alexander Mette

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"XWiki\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://xwiki.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nXWiki Enterprise is a professional wiki with enterprise features such as Blog, strong rights management, LDAP authentication, PDF export, full skining and more. It also includes an advanced Form and scripting engine making it a development environment for data-based applications. It has powerful extensibility features such as scripting in pages, plugins and a highly modular architecture. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Ludovic Dubost

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"WikiSuite\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://wikisuite.org/Software

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWikiSuite is especially suited to knowledge-centric organizations and offers most (80%+) of the data and information management features all organizations need\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Marc Laporte

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OpenNMS\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.opennms.org

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOpenNMS is a free and open-source enterprise grade network monitoring and network management platform. It is developed and supported by a community of user and developers as well as by the The OpenNMS Group, offering commercial services, training and support. The goal is for OpenNMS to be a truly distributed, scalable management application platform for all aspects of the FCAPS network management model while remaining 100% free and open source.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Tarus Balog

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Kolab\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://kolab.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Kolab Groupware Solution offers Personal Information Management for deployments of any size. It runs on a Rasberry Pi and in clouds spread over multiple data centres. Kolab provides a secure, scalable and reliable collaboration server. Since it is Free Software, it is not only used by large companies and organisation, but also by many individuals who care about being in control of their personal information.Kolab is a free and open source groupware suite.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Christian Mollekopf

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Turris

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://omnia.turris.cz/en/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMore than just a router. The open-source center of your home. Home router is necessary to connect you to the Internet but it is idle most of the time, just eating electricity. Why not use it for more tasks? With powerful hardware, Turris Omnia can handle gigabit traffic and still be able to do much more. You can use it as a home server, NAS, printserver and it even has a virtual server built-in.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Michal Hrušecký / Václav Zbránek

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        ',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM 2017, Mozilla, diaspora*, Apache Software Foundation, OW2, Jenkins, Tiki, XWiki, WikiSuite, OpenNMS, Kolab, Turris Omnia',0,0,1), (2225,'2017-02-10','FOSDEM 2017 K (level 2 Stands 10 to 19)',3561,'Ken interviews the projects in the K building level 2 at stands 10 to 19','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Open

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://opensmartgridplatform.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe Open Smart Grid Platform allows you to monitor and control hardware in the public space. With several (generic) functions ready to use, the main benefits of the Open Smart Grid Platform are: scalability & high availability, high security, its generic design, and no vendor lock-in.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Sander Jansen

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Perl

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.perl.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPerl 5 is a highly capable, feature-rich programming language with over 29 years of development. Perl 5 runs on over 100 platforms from portables to mainframes and is suitable for both rapid prototyping and large scale development projects. \"Perl\" is a family of languages, \"Perl 6\" is part of the family, but it is a separate language which has its own development team. Its existence has no significant impact on the continuing development of \"Perl 5\".\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Wendy G.A. van Dijk / Mark \"shadowcat\" Keating / Curtis \"Ovid\" Poe

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Coala\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://coala.io/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLinting and Fixing Code for All Languages\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Sebastian Latacz / Lasse Schuirmann

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Linux

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.linuxfromscratch.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nLinux From Scratch (LFS) is a type of a Linux installation and the name of a book written by Gerard Beekmans, among others. The book gives readers instructions on how to build a Linux system from source. Linux From Scratch is a way to install a working Linux system by building all components of it manually. This is a longer process than installing a pre-compiled Linux distribution. The advantages to this method are a compact, flexible and secure system and a greater understanding of the internal workings of the Linux-based operating systems.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Julien Lepiller

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Google

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://developers.google.com/open-source/gci/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGoogle Code-in is an annual programming competition hosted by Google Inc. that allows pre-university students to complete tasks specified by various, partnering open source organizations. Students that complete tasks win certificates and T-shirts. Each organization also selects two grand prize award winners who will earn a trip to Google\'s Headquarters located in Mountain View, CA.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Josh Simmons

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"GSoC\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSpend your summer break writing code and learning about open source development while earning a stipend! Accepted students work with a mentor and become a part of the open source community. Many become lifetime open source developers! Google Summer of Code is open to post-secondary students, age 18 and older in most countries.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Josh Simmons

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Ultimaker\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://ultimaker.com/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nProfessional 3D printing made accessible. Accurate, consistent results - tailored to your business. Highly complex 3D prints, industrial-grade materials, maximum performance, and future-ready 3D printing experience. With ultimate accessibility.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Rodney Becker

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"SOFA\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.sofa-framework.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSimulation Open Framework Architecture (SOFA) is an open source multiplatform framework primarily targeted at real-time physical simulation, with an emphasis on medical simulation. It is mostly intended for the research community to help develop new algorithms, but can also be used as an efficient prototyping tool or as a physics engine.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Hugo Talbot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"MuseScore\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://MuseScore.org

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMuseScore is a company devoted to helping aspiring musicians in their journey to master the music they love. MuseScore offers free, open-source, powerful, and easy-to-use music notation software to create high-quality sheet music, with audio score playback for results that look and sound beautiful. MuseScore has also formed an online community where musicians can share their creations, privately or publicly, through downloads, embeddable widgets, or MuseScore\'s mobile apps, while also bringing additional social features to sheet music.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Nicolas Froment

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Matrix.org\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://matrix.org

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMatrix.org is a non-profit open source initiative dedicated to creating and maintaining the Matrix open standard for decentralised communication, whose goal is to create an open and secure ecosystem for interoperable messaging, VoIP and IoT communication and history on the internet.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Matthew Hodgson

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        ',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM 2017, Open Smart Grid Platform, Perl Programming Language, Coala, Linux From Scratch, Google Code-in, GSoC, Ultimaker, SOFA, MuseScore, Matrix.org',0,0,1), (2226,'2017-02-13','FOSDEM 2017 AW Building',4164,'Ken interviews the projects in the AW building','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"coreboot\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.coreboot.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\ncoreboot is a replacement for your BIOS / UEFI with a strong focus on boot speed, security and flexibility. It is designed to boot your operating system as fast as possible without any compromise to security, with no back doors, and without any cruft from the 80s. It was originally designed for large super-computers with thousands of nodes, but it will run on your desktop, headless internet server, laptop, tablet or your favorite IoT device.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Julian Laubstein

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"GNU

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGNU GRUB is a Multiboot boot loader. It was derived from GRUB, the GRand Unified Bootloader, which was originally designed and implemented by Erich Stefan Boleyn. Briefly, a boot loader is the first software program that runs when a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and transferring control to the operating system kernel software (such as the Hurd or Linux). The kernel, in turn, initializes the rest of the operating system (e.g. GNU).\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Vladimir \'phcoder\' Serbinenko / Daniel Kiper

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Olimex\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.olimex.com

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nOlimex Ltd is a leading provider for development tools and programmers for embedded market. The company has 25+ years experience in designing, prototyping and manufacturing printed circuit boards, sub-assemblies, and complete electronic products. We are established in 1991 in Plovdiv - the second largest city in Bulgaria. We have extensive knowledge in analog, digital, and microcontroller design, and we offer our own-designed development boards, programmers and emulators for rapid prototyping ARM, AVR, MSP430, MAXQ and PIC microcontrollers.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Tsvetan Usunov

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Automotive

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.automotivelinux.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAutomotive Grade Linux (AGL) is a Linux Foundation Workgroup dedicated to creating open source software solutions for automotive applications. Although the initial target for AGL is In-Vehicle-Infotainment (IVI) systems, additional use cases such as instrument clusters and telematics systems will eventually be supported. AGL has participants from the Automotive, Communications, and Semiconductor Industries and welcomes contributions from individual developers. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Jan-Simon Möller

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Ham

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://uba.be/en/home

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nAmateur radio is a hobby for people who like to talk using radio transmitters. Many people enjoy using amateur radio to talk to other amateur radio hobbyists in other countries. Amateur radio hobbyists also use their radio transmitters to get help in emergencies. Amateur radio is often called Ham Radio. Many people use their amateur radios for fun. People who use Amateur radio are often called amateur radio operators, hams or amateurs.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Kristoff Bonne

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"CorteXlab\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.cortexlab.fr/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nCorteXlab is a radio testbed based on Software Defined Radio (SDR) and comprised of 40 radio nodes that allow remote users to test their own radio algorithms. The architecture will be also opened to industry third party to deploy their own front-end (RF or UWB) or baseband systems to test and validate their developments.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Léonardo S. Cardoso

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"OpenEmbedded\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.openembedded.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nWelcome to OpenEmbedded, the build framework for embedded Linux. OpenEmbedded offers a best-in-class cross-compile environment. It allows developers to create a complete Linux Distribution for embedded systems.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Andreas Müller

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        ',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','FOSDEM 2017, coreboot, GNU GRUB, Olimex, Automotive Grade Linux, Ham radio, CorteXlab, OpenEmbedded',0,0,1), (2227,'2017-02-14','FOSDEM 2017 H Building and the Hallway track',5099,'Ken interviews the projects in the H building and anyone else that wants to talk.','

                                                        Table of Contents

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Godot

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://godotengine.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nGodot is an advanced, feature-packed, multi-platform 2D and 3D open source game engine. Godot provides a huge set of common tools, so you can just focus on making your game without reinventing the wheel. Godot is completely free and open source under the very permissive MIT license. No strings attached, no royalties, nothing. Your game is yours, down to the last line of engine code.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Rémi Verschelde

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Software

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://sfconservancy.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSoftware Freedom Conservancy, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization incorporated in New York. Software Freedom Conservancy helps promote, improve, develop, and defend Free, Libre, and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects. Conservancy provides a non-profit home and infrastructure for FLOSS projects.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Bradley M. Kuhn

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"BBC

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.bbc.co.uk/opensource/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe BBC has been using and contributing to open source projects for as long as we\'ve had a website. This site brings together all the open source projects across the BBC with links to all our documentation and source code and information on how to get involved. Open source code used on public facing services, internal services and educational resources.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with David Buckhurst

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"photo

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"WolfSSL\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.wolfssl.com/wolfSSL/Home.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nEmbedded SSL/TLS Library for Applications, Devices, IoT, and the Cloud. Providing secure communication for IoT, smart grid, connected home, automobiles, routers, applications, games, IP, mobile phones, the cloud, and more.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Chris Conlon

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"GrimoireLab\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://grimoirelab.github.io/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nfree, libre, open source tools for software development analytics.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Daniel Izquierdo Cortázar

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"MySQL\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.mysql.com/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nMySQL is the world\'s most popular open source database. With its proven performance, reliability and ease-of-use, MySQL has become the leading database choice for web-based applications, used by high profile web properties including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Yahoo! and many more. Oracle drives MySQL innovation, delivering new capabilities to power next generation web, cloud, mobile and embedded applications.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Mark Leith

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Kallithea\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://kallithea-scm.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nKallithea, a member project of Software Freedom Conservancy, is a GPLv3\'d, Free Software source code management system that supports two leading version control systems, Mercurial and Git, and has a web interface that is easy to use for users and admins. You can install Kallithea on your own server and host repositories for the version control system of your choice.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Andrew Shadura

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"World

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://wpia.club/en/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe World Privacy and Identity Association (WPIA) is anxious to transfer the human rights to protect one\'s privacy and identity into the cyber space. WPIA is going to foster political education, seek exchange with politicians, develop software, and operate a free certificate authority. Everything will be done to patronise and substain your digital rights. We make it happen for empowering the digital YOU!\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Reinhard Mutz

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"XMPP\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://xmpp.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nXMPP is the open standard for messaging and presence. XMPP powers emerging technologies like IoT, WebRTC, and social. No one owns XMPP. It\'s free and open for everyone since 1999. It\'s a living standard. Engineers actively extend and improve it. Millions use XMPP software daily to connect to people and services.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Sam Whited

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Pulp\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://pulpproject.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nPulp is a platform for managing repositories of software packages and making it available to a large numbers of consumers. Pulp can locally mirror all or part of a repository, host your own software packages in repositories, and manage many types of content from multiple sources in one place.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Brian Bouterse

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"SHA2017\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://sha2017.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSHA2017 is a non profit outdoor Hacker camp/conference taking place in The Netherlands from the 4th to 8th of August 2017. It is the successor of a string of similar events happening every four years. These are GHP, HEU, HIP, HAL, WTH, HAR and OHM. Similar events are EMF Camp 2016 in the UK, CCC Camp and congress in Germany. The location is the Scoutinglandgoed in Zeewolde, 55km east of Amsterdam.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Robin Edgar

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"ManageIQ\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://manageiq.org/

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nManageIQ is an open source management platform for Hybrid IT. It can manage small and large environments, and supports multiple technologies such as virtual machines, public clouds and containers. With ManageIQ you will be able to: Continuously discover the latest state of your environment. Implement self service for your end users. Enforce compliance across the environment. Optimize the performance and utilization of you environment.\r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Listen to the interview with Carol Chene

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        ',30,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','Godot Engine, SFC, BBC Open Source, WolfSSL, GrimoireLab, MySQL, Kallithea, WPIA, XMPP, Pulp, SHA2017, ManageIQ',0,0,1), (2197,'2017-01-03','Why you should not say Free Software',429,'Ken suggests that the term Free Software is a bug.','

                                                        \r\nAs we all know the word Free has two meanings in the English language. Free of cost and Free from Freedom. So we get the expression \"free as in Beer\" and \"Free as in Freedom\" - or Free with a lower or upper F. Having disambiguity in a computer program is bad. So let\'s translate that problem to computer languages, and I\'m going to deliberately pick the C language. So for example were the word \"exit\" (which is a function), and you wanted to use it as a variable.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nset exit = 1;\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis leads to problems as the computer can\'t tell if the references to \"exit\" the function or is it the \"variable\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nFor that reason the \"The GNU C Library Reference Manual\" makes it clear that this is not allowed\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n 1.3.3 Reserved Names
                                                        \r\n The names of all library types, macros, variables and functions that come from the ISO C standard are reserved unconditionally; your program may not redefine these names. All other library names are reserved if your program explicitly includes the header file that defines or declares them. There are several reasons for these restrictions:\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n Other people reading your code could get very confused if you were using a function named \"exit\" to do something completely different from what the standard \"exit\" function does, for example. Preventing this situation helps to make your programs easier to understand and contributes to modularity and maintainability.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n It avoids the possibility of a user accidentally redefining a library function that is called by other library functions. If redefinition were allowed, those other functions would not work properly.\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis was written by \"Sandra Loosemore with Richard M. Stallman, Roland McGrath, Andrew Oram, and Ulrich Drepper for version 2.18\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn terms of the English Language, this results in:\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • segfaults where people just get confused.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Buffer overflows, where there is too much information to take in.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • time outs where the amount of time available to explain has been exceeded.\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nNow you can get around the problem by prefixing the variable name with a name space, which is very common in XML.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nset my:exit = 1;\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nHowever that\'s cumbersome and causes extra cycles to be expended, or abnormal termination of the program. Not many cycles but a few and it adds up over time. The more you use it the more wastage occurs. When you have two Bob\'s working in a company. You always need to specify if it\'s \"Bob in Accounting\" or \"Bob in Sales\".\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIt is often pointed out that this is not an issue in other languages, for example Dutch has \"Vrij\" for freedom and \"Gratis\" for without cost. However the FSF is a US organisation, in a English speaking area. So we should focus on the fact that the English compiler should have rejected at use of \"Free\" when it was first proposed because it was obviously disambiguous.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThe GNU project was started in 1983 and looking at the software available around then I find it very hard to believe that the concept of \"software you pay for\" was not widely known.\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_software\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • WordStar, \"By early 1980, MicroPro claimed in advertisements that 5,000 people had purchased WordStar in eight months\"\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • WordPerfect, \"The program was originally developed under contract at Brigham Young University for use on a Data General minicomputer in 1979.\"\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • VisiCalc, \"It sold over 700,000 copies in six years\"\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Lotus 1-2-3, \"Lotus 1-2-3 was released on 26 January 1983, and immediately overtook Visicalc in sales.\"\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nLooking at the archives of the Byte Magazine there are numerous examples where software \"Free/free\" and proprietary closed software was for sale as far back as 1979. Even the term freeware was coined in 1982 by Andrew Fluegelman.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nSo it would seem that the word \"Free Software\" was a bug from the start. Not that there is probably anything we can do about it now but if this bugs you then go over to the FSF and donate. If it doesn\'t bug you then donate. If you could care less, or indeed if you couldn\'t care less then also donate.\r\n

                                                        ',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','free software,free,freedom',0,0,1), (2198,'2017-01-04','How awesome is Guix and why will it take over the world',5011,'I sit down with Chris Webber and we ramble about how great Guix is','

                                                        I heard a \"holy crap\" somewhere in there, so I guess this show is explicit. That\'s about the level you can expect. :-)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I recorded this together with @cwebber@identi.ca over a year ago, on 2015-12-01. I told him I was hoping to get it out in time for FOSDEM. I didn\'t clarify which FOSDEM. :-D

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So this thing has been lying around, and I\'ve been polishing it and I\'ve been thinking \"man, 90 minutes is a bit rich for an HPR episode, I should edit this thing at some point\". Procrastinator strikes again!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well, that point never came in the course of one year, and HPR needs episodes, so this is what you get. I skipped around in it for QA reasons (audio sync) and I found that I wanted to listen to it again myself, so if your interests are anything like mine, I think it will be able to hold your attention. We had great fun recording it, and now that I\'ve got it out of the gate, maybe I won\'t be ashamed to ask Chris to record another one about one of the many topics that came up during this show.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the year since we recorded this, Guix has released versions 0.10.0, 0.11.0 and 0.12.0. It has functioning GNOME (based on Wingo\'s elogind) and can boot from a LUKS-encrypted drive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        DMD, the Daemon-Managing Daemon that was at the core of GuixSD, is now Shepherd, and still at the core of GuixSD.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Chris\'s project 8Sync is at version 0.2 and has a real GNU homepage (generated from S-expressions by Haunt!) and Guile 2.2 is closer than ever. 8Sync 0.2 uses some experimental features available in Guile 2.1 snapshots.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Guix and Software Conservancy still need your money (The FSF accepts Bitcoin!), and FOSDEM is still, or again, around the corner. I won\'t be going there this year, though, due to scheduling conflicts.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On my latest laptop I\'m running NixOS and it\'s running just great. My Guix VM on the other machine is no longer running Enlightenment, now that GNOME is ready. :-)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I haven\'t fixed clusterssh in either Nix nor Guix, but tmux-cssh works pretty great too!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Someone should still write guix-bisect!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        GuixOps has been dormant during 2016, but as late as two months ago there was some slight movement on the mailing list.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links to various things and people mentioned in the show:

                                                        \r\n',311,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','guix, linux, sysadmin, os, package management, nix, scheme, guile',0,0,1), (2201,'2017-01-09','Matthew \"Lord Drachenblut\" Williams',2292,'HPR Community members remember the digital dragon','

                                                        \r\nEulogies for Lord Drachenblut, including:\r\n

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Klaatu
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Randy Noseworthy
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • ClaudioM
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Brian Proffitt (writing for Fedora Project)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ahuka
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Joe C. Hecht (ref: google+)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Lostnbronx
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Knightwise
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Incidental music by Severed Fifth

                                                        ',159,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Lord Drachenblut',0,0,1), (2202,'2017-01-10','Makers on YouTube',1487,'I am trying to learn to make various things and am watching YouTube to find information','

                                                        Makers on YouTube

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have always enjoyed making stuff. I was born and brought up in the 1940’s and 1950’s when the UK was recovering from WW2, and in my experience everyone I knew repaired and made stuff. Most of them grew their own food as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have never been particularly good at making stuff, but I have built some basic furniture, built storage solutions for the house, built a rabbit hutch and run for my children’s pets, and so on and so forth.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In high school, even though I went to a Grammar School, all boys attended mandatory lessons on metalwork and woodwork. We learnt how to use hand tools and some power tools, make joints in wood, we also learnt to do basic metal work like soldering and brazing, and so forth.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Learning this stuff at school was great but I have used the woodworking techniques more than the metalwork - other than soldering.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I stopped watching TV in 2013, preferring reading and listening to podcasts. In recent times I have subscribed to a number of YouTube channels which share woodworking and metalworking techniques and projects. In general these people are Makers and Artists who can turn their hands to many skills. I thought I would share some of my favourites via HPR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes for this episode and these are available here https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2202/full_shownotes.html.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','making, youtube, podcast',0,0,1), (2203,'2017-01-11','NOT SO SMART',464,'How I am failing at troubleshooting disk I O issues','\r\n

                                                        (tracer32.exe) and LogExpert regex (warn|\\berr|fail|unabl|can|not|fault)

                                                        \r\n
                                                        rsync --info=progress2 ( need to compile from source ... )
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        grub-install --force --removable --boot-directory=/s/boot /dev/sdd\r\n\r\ngrub-mkconfig -o /s/boot/grub.cfg
                                                        \r\n

                                                        boot.ini ?!?!? ..( never could figure out how to boot my windows XP part from GRUB ...thought this would help with no luck )

                                                        \r\n
                                                        multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\\WINXP=\"Microsoft Windows XP Professional\"\r\nmulti(0)disk(0)rdisk(1)partition(2)\\WINXP=\"Microsoft Windows XP Professional\"\r\nmulti(0)disk(0)rdisk(2)partition(2)\\WINXP=\"Microsoft Windows XP Professional\"\r\nmulti(0)disk(0)rdisk(3)partition(2)\\WINXP=\"Microsoft Windows XP Professional\"\r\nmulti(0)disk(0)rdisk(4)partition(2)\\WINXP=\"Microsoft Windows XP Professional\"
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        tune2fs -c 1 ( check drives on boot )
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Linux provides other I/O schedulers such as the Noop scheduler, the Anticipatory scheduler and the Deadline scheduler.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Dec 31 14:59:46 plexserver console-kit-daemon[1463]: missing action\r\nDec 31 15:01:45 plexserver smartd[1038]: Device: /dev/sda [SAT], SMART Usage Attribute: 194 Temperature_Celsius changed from 113 to 112\r\nDec 31 15:01:45 plexserver smartd[1038]: Device: /dev/sdc [SAT], SMART Usage Attribute: 194 Temperature_Celsius changed from 112 to 111
                                                        \r\n

                                                        40-50C range are optimal.

                                                        \r\n',36,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','troubleshooting,ubuntu',0,0,1), (2204,'2017-01-12','MASSCAN',503,'MASSCAN FOR THE 10 DOTS O M G','

                                                        I chat about my issues with our vuln scanner and destroy the discovery scan times from 5-8 days to 1hr with Masscan.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        masscan   -p21,22,23,25,53,80,88,110,111,113,135,139,143,220,264,389,443,445,449,524,585,636,993,995,1433,1521,1723,3306,3389,5900,8080    --rate=14114 --open --excludefile BLACKLIST --ping  172.16.0.0/12 -oX  172.xml
                                                        \r\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','nmap, masscan, vulnerability, scanners',0,0,1), (2205,'2017-01-13','Quick Tips Roomba and silicone Packets',421,'Quick Tips Roomba Cleaning and Silicone Packet reuse','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • First bit is about Roomba and keeping them clean and happy!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2nd bit is about reusing Silicone Packets by baking them in the toaster oven!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Roomba, Silicone',0,0,1), (2206,'2017-01-16','Podcasts I Listen To',967,'Current podcasts that I listen to on my Android devices.','

                                                        Podcasts:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. SystemAU - Australian Linux Perspective with Music
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Accidental Tech Podcast - Apple Computers/Programs
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Android Central Podcast - Android Devices
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. BleedTV Podcast - TV Info
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Common Sense with Dan Carlin
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Dan Carlin\'s Hard Core History - History Lessons
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Hacker Public Radio
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Jalen & Jacoby - ESPN Sports Guys
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. Last Men on Earth - 2 Dudes Being Crude over Alcohol
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Linux Voice - Linux Guys talking Linux
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. Linux for the Rest of US - Door to Door Geek & Cody Cooper
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. MintCast - About Linux Mint from the Linux Mint Community
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. MobileTech Roundup - Kevin Tofel & Mat Miller talking mobile devices
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        27. Linux Luddites - Linux Talk From Cranky Dudes
                                                        28. \r\n
                                                        29. No Agenda - John Dvorak & Adam Curry Deconstruct the News
                                                        30. \r\n
                                                        31. PTI - Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon Talking Sports
                                                        32. \r\n
                                                        33. Stuff You Missed in History Class - Short, Concise History Lesson
                                                        34. \r\n
                                                        35. Talking TV with Ryan & Ryan - 2 TV Critics
                                                        36. \r\n
                                                        37. Television Zombies - 4 Friends Talking SF and Fantasy TV
                                                        38. \r\n
                                                        39. TLLTS - The Linux Link Tech Show
                                                        40. \r\n
                                                        41. The Talk Show with John Gruber - Daring Fireball/Apple Topics
                                                        42. \r\n
                                                        43. The Tony Kornheiser Show - Sports, Life, Politics, Movies, etc.
                                                        44. \r\n
                                                        45. TV Campfire Podcasts - TV Bloggers & TV Industry Pros Talking TV
                                                        46. \r\n
                                                        47. TV Talk Machine w/ Tom Goodman & Jason Snell - TV Industry
                                                        48. \r\n
                                                        49. TV Times Three - TV Bloggers Talking Up their Favorite Shows
                                                        50. \r\n
                                                        51. The Ubuntu Podcast - Ubuntu Linux Plus other Distros/Linux Info
                                                        52. \r\n
                                                        53. I Can\'t Believe this S*hit - 2 Politically Incorrect Dudes Talking Junk
                                                        54. \r\n
                                                        ',348,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','feed,podcast',0,0,1), (2207,'2017-01-17','NATO phonetic alphabet',478,'Neighbourly greetings. We cover the title, podcast recommendations, and well wishes.','

                                                        NATO phonetic alphabet in block diagram:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        [ English 26 letter alphabet ] --> [ Phonetic Function Box-machine-phone ] --> [ Output ]

                                                        \r\n
                                                        A - Alfa\r\nB - Bravo\r\nC - Charlie\r\nD - Delta\r\nE - Echo\r\nF - Foxtrot\r\nG - Golf\r\nH - Hotel\r\nI - India\r\nJ - Juliett\r\nK - Kilo\r\nL - Lima\r\nM - Mike\r\nN - November\r\nO - Oscar\r\nP - Papa\r\nQ - Quebec\r\nR - Romeo\r\nS - Sierra\r\nT - Tango\r\nU - Uniform\r\nV - Victor\r\nW - Whiskey\r\nX - X-Ray\r\nY - Yankee\r\nZ - Zulu\r\n~ - ~\r\n0 - Zero\r\n1 - One\r\n2 - Two\r\n3 - Three\r\n4 - Four\r\n5 - Five\r\n6 - Six\r\n7 - Seven\r\n8 - Eight\r\n9 - Niner
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mike India Charlie Romeo Oscar Bravo Echo FULL-STOP Tango Victor

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Charlie Oscar November Golf Romeo Echo Sierra Sierra India Oscar November Alfa Lima Delta India Siera Hotel FULL-STOP Charlie Oscar Mike

                                                        \r\n

                                                        X-Ray BREAK Mike India November Uniform Sierra BREAK Oscar November Echo

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hotel Alfa Charlie Kilo Echo Romeo BREAK Papa Uniform Bravo Lima India Charlie BREAK Romeo Alfa Delta India Oscar

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Please take care, TTFN, neighbor.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        rttykitty

                                                        \r\n',349,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','NATO,Phonetic,NatoPhonetic',0,0,1), (2209,'2017-01-19','Calibre eBook Server',750,'A quick rundown of how to share your ebook Library on your network using calibre-server','

                                                        You can share your Calibre ebook library by running the calibre-server daemon, either from your desktop machine or on a server that is available on your local network. (Or, if you have it set up that way, it can be outward-facing to the wide world.)

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To share your library from the desktop Calibre application, choose Connect/share from the menu at the top of the window, then choose Start Content Server. Make a note of the IP address and port, and then you can use other devices on your network to access the library at that address. Normally I use the \"Get Books\" function of the Marvin ebook app on my iPad, or else the \"Experimental Browser\" on my Kindle and download the books directly to the devices. On my Android phone, I use the Chrome browser and then long press on the link to an Epub file, choose to save to device, and then open it using FBreader.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        To share the library from your GNU/Linux server, you\'ll have to install Calibre on the server and then put a copy of your ebook Library on the server as well. To start and stop the server daemon, you need to put a service startup script in the /etc/init.d directory with all of the other system startup scripts. An example is given below—fill in with the appropriate paths and user data for your setup. (See the calibre-server user manual for a full list of options and their descriptions.) When the script is in place and has executable permissions, you start and stop the service as follows (as root):

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\nservice calibre-server start|stop|restart\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Service Startup Script

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        \r\n#!/bin/bash\r\n\r\nCALIBRE_LIBRARY_PATH="/path/to/CalibreLibrary"\r\nPIDFILE=/tmp/calibre-server.pid\r\nUSER=<run_as_user>        # run daemon as this user\r\nLOGIN=<end_user_username> # to log into library (optional)\r\nPW=<password>             # to log into library (optional)\r\nPORT=3456\r\n\r\nstart() {\r\n        echo "Starting Calibre server..."\r\n        su -c "calibre-server --with-library=\\"$CALIBRE_LIBRARY_PATH\\" --username=$LOGIN --password=$PW -p $PORT --pidfile=$PIDFILE --daemonize" & \r\n        if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then\r\n                echo "Could not start calibre-server."\r\n        fi\r\n}\r\n\r\nstop() {\r\n        echo "Stopping Calibre server..."\r\n        if [ -e $PIDFILE ]; then\r\n                read PID < $PIDFILE\r\n                ps aux | grep "$PID" | grep \'calibre-server\' > /dev/null\r\n                RUNNING=$?\r\n                if [ $RUNNING -eq 0 ]; then\r\n                        kill $PID\r\n                        if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then\r\n                                rm $PIDFILE\r\n                        fi\r\n                else\r\n                        echo "Could not find a calibre-server process with PID $PID."\r\n                fi\r\n        else\r\n                echo "Could not find pidfile: $PIDFILE"\r\n        fi\r\n}\r\n\r\nrestart() {\r\n        stop\r\n        start\r\n}\r\n\r\nstatus() {\r\n        if [ -e $PIDFILE ]; then\r\n                read PID < $PIDFILE\r\n                echo "calibre-server is running with PID $PID."\r\n        else\r\n                echo "calibre-server is not running."\r\n        fi\r\n}\r\n\r\nunknown() {\r\n        echo "Unrecognized command: $1"\r\n        echo "Try one of the following: (start|stop|restart|status)"\r\n}\r\n\r\ncase $1 in\r\n        start ) \r\n                start\r\n                ;;\r\n        stop )\r\n                stop\r\n                ;;\r\n        restart )\r\n                restart\r\n                ;;\r\n        status )\r\n                status\r\n                ;;\r\n        * )\r\n                unknown\r\n                ;;\r\nesac\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Calibre ebook Management Software
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Marvin ebook app for iOS
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • FBreader open-source multi-platform ebook reader.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ebooks, home servers, sharing',0,0,1), (2210,'2017-01-20','On Freedom of Speech and Censorship',1302,'Reflections on Freedom of Speech ','

                                                        In this episode, I discuss some of issues that can arise with Freedom of Speech, as well as some of the finer points of what constitutes "censorship".

                                                        \r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Freedom of Speech, Censorship',0,0,1), (2213,'2017-01-25','Clay Body',652,'Basic clay theory','

                                                        Before we create ceramics, we will begin with some basic theory.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Added by HPR Admins after the show was released

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Wikipedia article on Clay
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wikipedia article on Clay\r\nMinerals
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wikipedia article on Kaolinite
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wikipedia article on Feldspar
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','clay,pottery,porcelain,ceramic',0,0,1), (2481,'2018-02-05','HPR Community News for January 2018',4509,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in January 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Joey Hess.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2456Mon2018-01-01HPR Community News for December 2017HPR Volunteers
                                                        2457Tue2018-01-02Getting ready for my new Macbook Proknightwise
                                                        2458Wed2018-01-03Chrome Plugins You Must Haveoperat0r
                                                        2459Thu2018-01-04free software\'s long tailJoey Hess
                                                        2460Fri2018-01-05The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E03 - Decline of American EmpireThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP)
                                                        2461Mon2018-01-08Gitoliteklaatu
                                                        2462Tue2018-01-09AudioBookClub-14-Triplanetary-(First-in-the-Lensman-Series)HPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        2463Wed2018-01-10Setting up a 32 Bit Ubuntu ServerJWP
                                                        2464Thu2018-01-11The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E04 - Digital InstrumentsThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP)
                                                        2465Fri2018-01-12TronScript where have you been all my life!operat0r
                                                        2466Mon2018-01-15ShareX is awesomeXoke
                                                        2467Tue2018-01-16I randomly talk about my laptopsswift110
                                                        2468Wed2018-01-17THE WELLoperat0r
                                                        2469Thu2018-01-18A flight itinerary in BashDave Morriss
                                                        2470Fri2018-01-19Obamacare Update At The End Of 2017Ahuka
                                                        2471Mon2018-01-22Tea Time!operat0r
                                                        2472Tue2018-01-23Forum Failurelostnbronx
                                                        2473Wed2018-01-24Frotz - A Portable Z-Machine InterpreterClaudio Miranda
                                                        2474Thu2018-01-25Open Source Gaming #3 The Atari JaguarTheDUDE
                                                        2475Fri2018-01-26Information Underground -- Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-Rolllostnbronx
                                                        2476Mon2018-01-29Gnu Awk - Part 9b-yeezi
                                                        2477Tue2018-01-30Reading Audio Books While Distracteddodddummy
                                                        2478Wed2018-01-31City Of Masks - HPR_AudioBookClubHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 33 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 9 comments on\n6 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2399\n(2017-10-12) \"Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 7:\ndodddummy on 2018-01-01:\n\"One more use case and a generalization\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2422\n(2017-11-14) \"Kickstarter Post Mortem\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKlaatu on 2018-01-12:\n\"@busybusy\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2435\n(2017-12-01) \"Server Basics 102\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nFrank on 2018-01-02:\n\"SSH\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nKlaatu on 2018-01-08:\n\"Re: yum whatprovides?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2449\n(2017-12-21) \"Org-mode mobile solution\"\nby Brian in Ohio.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nfolky on 2018-01-10:\n\"Orgzly\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2454\n(2017-12-28) \"The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E02 - Strictly Hacking\"\nby The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nCasper on 2018-01-02:\n\"Delivery and Content\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2455\n(2017-12-29) \"Interface Zero RPG Part 5\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nClaudioM on 2018-01-03:\n\"Fantastic "Audio Drama" version of i0!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nDraco Metallium on 2018-01-22:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nRon P on 2018-01-23:\n\"Excellent! Encore!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 24 comments on 11 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2456\n(2018-01-01) \"HPR Community News for December 2017\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2018-01-01:\n\"Work load\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMike Ray on 2018-01-01:\n\"Soldering Iron\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2018-01-01:\n\"Soldering Iron\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMike Ray on 2018-01-01:\n\"Soldering\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nFrank on 2018-01-01:\n\"U. S. College Course Numbering\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2018-01-03:\n\"Learning to solder at school\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2458\n(2018-01-03) \"Chrome Plugins You Must Have\"\nby operat0r.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nXoke on 2018-01-04:\n\"You missed uMatrix\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2459\n(2018-01-04) \"free software\'s long tail\"\nby Joey Hess.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-01-04:\n\"My new favorite episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-01-04:\n\"Thanks for this Joey\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2460\n(2018-01-05) \"The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E03 - Decline of American Empire\"\nby The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBrian in Ohio on 2018-01-06:\n\"alien brothers podcast\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2018-01-08:\n\"HPR has no length restriction\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nRutiger of the Alien Brothers Podcast on 2018-01-08:\n\"Hi Brian from Ohio\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKlaatu on 2018-01-11:\n\"Another brilliant episode.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2461\n(2018-01-08) \"Gitolite\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\njimzat on 2018-01-11:\n\"gitolite and HPR2446\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKlaatu on 2018-01-12:\n\"@jimzat\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2462\n(2018-01-09) \"AudioBookClub-14-Triplanetary-(First-in-the-Lensman-Series)\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nAhuka on 2018-01-13:\n\"At long last!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2466\n(2018-01-15) \"ShareX is awesome\"\nby Xoke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSundar on 2018-01-16:\n\"Useful tool for streamlining screencapture\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nXoke on 2018-01-22:\n\"'jif'\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2470\n(2018-01-19) \"Obamacare Update At The End Of 2017\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2018-01-24:\n\"Thanks for the update!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-01-30:\n\"Time to update for the elimination of the individual mandate?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nAhuka on 2018-01-31:\n\"I did cover it\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2474\n(2018-01-25) \"Open Source Gaming #3 The Atari Jaguar\"\nby TheDUDE.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-01-23:\n\"They won't sell.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2475\n(2018-01-26) \"Information Underground -- Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-Roll\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nFrank on 2018-01-26:\n\"This Show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2477\n(2018-01-30) \"Reading Audio Books While Distracted\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-01-29:\n\"Correction\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-January/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Reserving Shows

                                                        \n

                                                        Due to the recent spate of future show reservations a change of text is required. The proposed change is from:

                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        All reservations need to be approved. In the case where you wish to reserve a particular slot but do not have the media recorded, you will need to get the reservation approved in advance by the HPR Mailing List.

                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        To

                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        All reservations need to be approved. Any host can reserve any slot one year in advance by recording their show and posting it on the desired day as normal. In exceptional circumstances it possible to make a reservation, but only if there was no way to have recorded the show in time, and with approval in advance by the HPR Mailing List.

                                                        \n
                                                        \n

                                                        This is intended only for exceptional circumstances such as a scheduled interview where we would like the audio to be released as soon after as possible, or to cover an important topical situation

                                                        \n

                                                        Upload Errors

                                                        \n

                                                        Some uploaders are reporting 403 permission denied. This is because one of the protection scripts is checking for strange activity. We narrowed this down to \' (quote) in file names, or | (pipes) in the show notes.

                                                        \n

                                                        New series

                                                        \n

                                                        Two new series have been added to the HPR system:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Health and Healthcare (13 episodes)
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Sound Scapes (6 episodes)
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Comment form \'justification\'

                                                        \n

                                                        The \'What does HPR mean to you?\' field on the comment form is required when commenting on older shows. As an anti-spam measure this field needs to completed with text which is between 20 and 200 characters in length.

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to bjb and Windigo for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2208,'2017-01-18','Kayak Camping',1502,'Kayak camping is a really fun (and affordable) way to explore the outdoors and get away.','

                                                        I talk about my setup for camping out of my kayak and ways to do this for very little money using stuff you already have and getting good cheap gear.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Getting out into nature is my favorite thing and I love going where I will not see others for days at a time.

                                                        \r\n',1,0,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','camping, outdoors, kayak, kayaking, boating',0,0,1), (2214,'2017-01-26','Upgrading Vehicle Lights From Halogen to LED',1080,'A quick show about upgrading some of the lights on our vehicles from halogen to LED','

                                                        This episode is about the process of upgrading halogen vehicle lights to LED. I did this on my pickup truck for the interior dome light, the brake lights, the third brake light, front and back turn signal lights, the backup lights, and also for the license plate lights. While I\'m talking about this process, I also install new LED brake light bulbs on our Honda CR-V. I almost forgot to talk about the necessity of installing resistors to handle the problem of hyperflashing with the blinker lights.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Click on the image below to view the photo album associated with this podcast.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \"LED

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Credits

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','DIY, Automotive, Auto Repair, Car Repair, LED, Lighting',0,0,1), (2220,'2017-02-03','Taking apart a tablet',1716,'In which I fail to discover or correct the problem with my son\'s tablet','

                                                        My son\'s tablet stopped working a few days ago, so I took it apart to see if I could find the problem. I discuss my kit and give a sound seeing tour of the disassembly.

                                                        ',257,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','repair,electronics,spudger,tablet',0,0,1), (2212,'2017-01-24','meanderings Cyberpunk and the Minidisc',298,'The Cyberpunk history of the Sony Minidisc','',110,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','cyberpunk, minidisc, movies',0,0,1), (2211,'2017-01-23','My podcast workflow',1558,'How I download, manage, listen to and delete podcasts','

                                                        My podcast workflow

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have been listening to podcasts for many years. I started in 2005, when I bought my first MP3 player.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Various podcast downloaders (or podcatchers) have existed over this time, some of which I have tried. Now I use a script based on Bashpodder, which I have built to meet my needs. I also use a database to hold details of the feeds I subscribe to, what episodes have been downloaded, what is on a player to be listened to and what can be deleted. I have written many scripts (in Bash, Perl and Python) to manage all of this, and I will be describing the overall workflow in this episode without going into too much detail.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was prompted to put together this show by folky’s HPR episode 1992 “How I’m handling my podcast-subscriptions and -listening. Thanks to him for a very interesting episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Refer to the full notes for the details: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2211/full_shownotes.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,RSS,Atom,Rockbox,playlist,Bashpodder,PostgreSQL,XSLT',0,0,1), (2216,'2017-01-30','Working AO-85 with my son',993,'My son and I try to make a contact on an amateur radio satellite','

                                                        Working AO-85 with my son!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Given all the talk about Amateur Radio on the mailing list, I decided to record a live operation show. In this episode my son and I try to make a contact on AO-85. He eventually loses interest and it\'s just me yelling into a microphone.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We don\'t manage to make a successful contact but we do pick up the bird. One person toward the end tried to pull us out of the noise but there were simply too many people utilizing the satellite for us to make contact. Part of that may have been my Doppler shift settings.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here is the pass data from gPredict (in CST) for this particular attempt:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Pass details for AO-85 (orbit 5478)\r\nObserver: KD5RYO, Siloam Springs, Arkansas\r\nLAT:36.20 LON:-94.48\r\nAOS: 2017/01/16 15:03:52 Local\r\nLOS: 2017/01/16 15:17:45 Local\r\n-----------------------------------------------------------\r\n Time                  Az      El  Range Footp  Dop   Loss \r\n-----------------------------------------------------------\r\n 2017/01/16 15:03:52 212.06  -0.00  3075  5738  2194 142.16\r\n 2017/01/16 15:04:33 212.46   2.48  2801  5720  2195 141.35\r\n 2017/01/16 15:05:15 212.94   5.23  2527  5701  2191 140.45\r\n 2017/01/16 15:05:57 213.52   8.35  2254  5682  2179 139.46\r\n 2017/01/16 15:06:38 214.26  11.99  1983  5663  2157 138.35\r\n 2017/01/16 15:07:20 215.23  16.38  1716  5644  2117 137.09\r\n 2017/01/16 15:08:02 216.60  21.92  1455  5624  2048 135.66\r\n 2017/01/16 15:08:43 218.69  29.25  1207  5604  1924 134.03\r\n 2017/01/16 15:09:25 222.35  39.50   979  5584  1692 132.22\r\n 2017/01/16 15:10:07 230.57  54.21   793  5564  1245 130.39\r\n 2017/01/16 15:10:48 261.54  72.25   683  5544   461 129.09\r\n 2017/01/16 15:11:30 347.38  69.68   687  5524  -524 129.14\r\n 2017/01/16 15:12:12  11.72  51.01   804  5503 -1288 130.50\r\n 2017/01/16 15:12:53  18.88  36.54   995  5483 -1720 132.35\r\n 2017/01/16 15:13:35  22.23  26.49  1225  5463 -1946 134.16\r\n 2017/01/16 15:14:17  24.21  19.28  1476  5442 -2069 135.78\r\n 2017/01/16 15:14:58  25.54  13.82  1739  5422 -2139 137.21\r\n 2017/01/16 15:15:40  26.52   9.47  2009  5402 -2180 138.46\r\n 2017/01/16 15:16:22  27.28   5.85  2283  5381 -2204 139.57\r\n 2017/01/16 15:17:03  27.91   2.74  2559  5361 -2218 140.56
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Finally, here\'s AO-85\'s page on AMSAT: https://www.amsat.org/?page_id=4690

                                                        \r\n

                                                        73 DE KD5RYO

                                                        ',241,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hamradio, ham, radio, amateur, satellites, projects',0,0,1), (2215,'2017-01-27','Kickstarter Omega2 Plus first time setup walkthrough',534,'I talk about my experience setting up the Omega2 plus for the first time','

                                                        I paid for one Omega2 Plus Kickstarter pledge. Later, as most do, the project offers upgrades. My pack was for one Omega2 plus, an OLED module, and the expansion board. After pledging I then added on another Omega2, a GPS module and a mini expansion board. Review wise, this is a good inexpensive IOT kit for any beginner. Someone that is more advanced can get into Arduino, or ESP8266 with microPython.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I mention Arduino and ESP8266 with microPython.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Really good tutorials on how to get going with microPython:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',96,91,0,'CC-BY-SA','onion.io, omega2, python, linux, sbc, single board computer, espeak, ogg vorbis, mc hawking',0,0,1), (2217,'2017-01-31','building a new voice input device',351,'a bunch of jibber jabber about putting a little computer into a phone','

                                                        CHIP computer: https://getchip.com/pages/chip

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Post about the build: https://jezra.net/post/2017-01-10_phonos.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now I can get crackin on "How I make beef jerky" :)

                                                        \r\n',243,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','voice input,C.H.I.P.,telephone,rotary dial,handset,Blather',0,0,1), (2218,'2017-02-01','Cool Stuff pt. 5',875,'CPrompt talks about some more cool stuff for you to enjoy!','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Android App: Opera Mini\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Website: CharacterMap\r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Music: Gilad Hekselman\r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','android,Opera Mini,CharacterMap,font,music,jazz',0,0,1), (2219,'2017-02-02','The Musings of a Novice Cable TV Cord Cutter',3503,'My adventures with dealing with my local cable TV provider and my hardware selections.','

                                                        I\'ve included various websites of the items I discussed in the podcast.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One thing I didn\'t mention in my podcast is that to use Roku streaming applications you go to the Roku store via your Roku device or via a computer browser and set up a Roku account. Once you have an account you have downloading access to the apps. Most of these apps are free but most premium service require a monthly fee which can be paid through Roku or the streaming service.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Roku Channel Store: https://channelstore.roku.com/browse

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For apps not in the official Roku Channel Store there is an unofficial Roku Private Channels store. These are applications for Roku devices similar to the Kodi/XBMC plug-ins:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://mkvxstream.blogspot.com/2016/08/roku-private-channels-roku-channels.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I AM NOT CONDONING PIRACY OR BREAKING OF DMCA LAWS!!!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        DMCA Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Millennium_Copyright_Act

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I found a couple of apps in the Roku Private Channels store that can provide me access to ESPN if I wish to use them.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I don\'t condone piracy so use at your own risk:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://mkvxstream.blogspot.com/2016/08/roku-private-channels-roku-channels.html

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        General Roku information:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Roku Wikipedia Info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roku
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. TCL Roku TVs: https://www.tclusa.com/roku/
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Roku TVs Sold by Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/search/ref=a9_asi_1?rh=i%3Aelectronics%2Cn%3A172282%2Ck%3Aroku+tv&keywords=roku+tv&ie=UTF8&qid=1485043393
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Roku Boxes: https://www.roku.com/roku-tv
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Amplified TV Antennas Review: https://www.tomsguide.com/us/best-tv-antennas,review-2354.html
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Indoor Amplified TV Antennas Sold by Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_4_5/159-5067263-7652968?url=search-alias%3Delectronics&field-keywords=amplified+indoor+hdtv+antenna&sprefix=ampli%2Cundefined%2C148&crid=14O1SJA572XSH
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Cox Communications: https://www.cox.com/residential/home.html
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',348,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','cable TV,cable,TV,Roku',0,0,1), (2228,'2017-02-15','linux.conf.au 2017: Russell Keith-Magee',1055,'A wide ranging interview with Russell Keith-Magee','

                                                        I interview Russell Keith-Magee at linux.conf.au 2017 in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        linux.conf.au

                                                        \r\n\r\n',315,78,1,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2229,'2017-02-16','linux.conf.au 2017: Kathy Reid',1600,'An interview with the new Linux Australia president Kathy Reid','

                                                        Clinton interviews Kathy Reid, the new president of Linux Australia.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        linux.conf.au

                                                        \r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2230,'2017-02-17','linux.conf.au 2017: Donna Benjamin',1965,'Clinton interviews speaker and previous linux.conf.au organiser Donna Benjamin','\r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2231,'2017-02-20','linux.conf.au 2017: Rusty Russell',2231,'Clinton interviews linux.conf.au creator Rusty Russell','

                                                        CCAN https://ccodearchive.net/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        linux.conf.au

                                                        ',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2232,'2017-02-21','linux.conf.au 2017: Lilly Ryan',953,'An interview with speaker and trainer Lilly Ryan','

                                                        Coder Dojo

                                                        \r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2233,'2017-02-22','linux.conf.au 2017: Hugh Blemmings',2233,'Clinton interviews Hugh Blemmings of the Linux Australia council','

                                                        Clinton speaks with Hugh Blemmings, immediate past President of Linux Australia

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Linux Australia
                                                        \r\nlinux.org.au

                                                        \r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2234,'2017-02-23','linux.conf.au 2017: Richard Jones',2234,'Two PyCon Australia organisers talk about PyConAu 2017','

                                                        Clinton chats with Richard Jones, head of PyCon Australia 2016/17

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We talk about PyCon Australia, and microPython.

                                                        \r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2235,'2017-02-24','linux.conf.au 2017: First timers interviews',2235,'Clinton speaks to three linux.conf.au first timers','

                                                        Clinton speaks to three linux.conf.au first timers for their take on the conference: York, Cat and Neeraj.

                                                        \r\n',315,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','lca2017',0,0,1), (2236,'2017-02-27','Hoarding Raspberry Pis',1515,'In this episode, I discuss my growing obsession with building a Raspberry Pi data center.','

                                                        Show Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, I discuss my growing obsession with building a Raspberry Pi data center.

                                                        \r\n\"Tower\r\n

                                                        Items referenced in this episode:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Hope this was enjoyable, if not, informative!

                                                        \r\n',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi, server, raspbian',0,0,1), (2237,'2017-02-28','Do you care?',464,'Some thoughts on the phrase I couldn\'t care less.','

                                                        CPrompt talks about one of his pet-peeves. The phrase "I could care less"

                                                        \r\n',252,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','English,idiom',0,0,1), (2238,'2017-03-01','Gnu Awk - Part 6',2379,'Looking more deeply into Awk\'s regular expressions','

                                                        Gnu Awk - Part 6

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the sixth episode of the “Learning Awk” series that b-yeezi and I are doing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recap of the last episode

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Regular expressions

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the last episode we saw regular expressions in the ‘pattern’ part of a ‘pattern {action}’ sequence. Such a sequence is called a ‘RULE’, (as we have seen in earlier episodes).

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $1 ~ /p[elu]/ {print $0}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Meaning: If field 1 contains a ‘p’ followed by one of ‘e’, ‘l’ or ‘u’ print the whole line.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $2 ~ /e{2}/ {print $0}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Meaning: If field 2 contains two instances of letter ‘e’ in sequence, print the whole line.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It is usual to enclose the regular expression in slashes, which make it a regexp constant.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We had a look at many of the operators used in regular expressions in episode 5. Unfortunately, some small errors crept into the list of operators mentioned in that episode. These are incorrect:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \\A (beginning of a string)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\z (end of a string)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \\b (on a word boundary)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first two operators exist, in languages like Perl and Ruby, but not in GNU Awk.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For the ‘\\b’ sequence the GNU manual says:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In other GNU software, the word-boundary operator is ‘\\b’. However, that conflicts with the awk language’s definition of ‘\\b’ as backspace, so gawk uses a different letter. An alternative method would have been to require two backslashes in the GNU operators, but this was deemed too confusing. The current method of using ‘\\y’ for the GNU ‘\\b’ appears to be the lesser of two evils.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The corrected list of operators is discussed later in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Replacement

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Last episode we saw the built-in functions that use regular expressions for manipulating strings. These are sub, gsub and gensub. Regular expressions are used in other functions but we will look at them later.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We will be looking at sub, gsub and gensub in more detail in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a set of longer notes for this episode and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,94,1,'CC-BY-SA','Awk utility, Awk language, gawk, regular expression',0,0,1), (2245,'2017-03-10','Managing tags on HPR episodes - 1',1568,'Looking for the best way to store and manage tags in the HPR database, part 1','

                                                        Managing tags on HPR episodes - 1

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have been collecting and storing tags for new HPR shows for a while now with the intention of eventually offering a search interface. In addition, a number of contributors, including myself have been adding tags (and summaries), to shows that do not have them, since August 2015. There is still a way to go, but we’re making progress. At the time of writing (2017-01-31) 56.29% (1248) of all HPR shows (2217) have tags.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In recent times the way in which we should use these tags has been discussed. In show 2035 on 2016-05-20 droops suggested:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The website, which is a lot of work, needs to have related shows listed on each individual show’s page. This will take a tag system and someone to tag all of the almost uncountable previous episodes.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode begins a discussion about some of the ways that tags can be stored, managed and accessed efficiently in the HPR database.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I started planning a show about this subject in the summer of 2016, and the amount of information I have accumulated has grown since then. There is now quite a lot, so I am going to split what was originally going to be one show into three.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The subject becomes quite technical in the later shows, discussing database design techniques, and all three of the shows contain examples of database queries and scripts. If you are not interested in this subject than feel free to skip past. However, you might find this first episode more palatable, and any thoughts you might have on the subject would be appreciated.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a set of longer notes for this episode and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR,database,schema,tag',0,0,1), (2248,'2017-03-15','2016-2017 HPR New Year show episode 2',14462,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 2','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 2

                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2240,'2017-03-03','Amateur Radio Round Table',3219,'HPR community hams get together to talk about ham radio','

                                                        HPR Amateur Radio Round Table

                                                        \r\n

                                                        2017-01-27, 0300 UTC

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Participants:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • cmhobbs KD5RYO
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Jon KT4KB
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Steve KD0IJP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Michael DL4MGM
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tyrel KG5RHT
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        After a short introduction of the hosts, we start discussing the question that came up on the mailinglist:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        How do you get started at all? How do you get the license to participate in amateur radio?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Probably the amateur radio organisation in your country will provide the essential information required for obtaining an amateur radio license. Start looking at the International Amateur Radio Union at https://www.iaru.org and track down your country. From there you can search for information about your local area and local groups. In the US, look for the ARRL at https://www.arrl.org.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you do not chose to get involved with the local club before taking the test to get the license, we suggest you do so after that. Local events and clubs can provide the insight into the vast possibilities amateur radio has to offer. This will allow you to chose much better, where your personal interests are and where to start. Radio "nets", are mentioned as a good starting point to actually get "on the air" and to overcome any possible shyness.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Acronyms explained along the way

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • VFO: Variable Frequency Oscillator. The thing behind the main tuning dial to adjust the frequency, an important building block of radio equipment. In modern gear the VFO-mode is the mode where you can continuously change the frequency in certain increments, as opposed to memory mode, where you normally select from a set of fixed frequencies previously stored.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CW: Continuous Wave. Used to reference to Morse code telegraphy as an operating mode.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • VHF: Very High Frequency. Generally this references the frequency range 30 Mhz to 300 MHz. In the context of a radio user, it normally means the sub range in there, that is assigned to the specific use.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • UHF: Ultra High Frequency. 300 MHz to 3 GHz
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • HF: High Frequency. Range 3 MHz to 30 MHz. Also referenced to as "short wave" frequencies. Several amateur radio "bands" are spread out in that frequency range.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We often reference frequency ranges by wavelength. E.g. the "20m band", which is the frequency allocation for amateur radio at 14 MHz. The connection is: Wavelength = c / frequency, with c being the speed of light. A rule of thumb is: Wavelength [m] = 300 / frequency [MHz]

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hint: The manufacturer Tektronix offers a nice poster with the world wide frequency assignments worked in: https://info.tek.com/rs/tektronix/images/eGuide-to-RF-Signals.pdf

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We went on describing a bit where our personal interests in amateur radio are.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our combined interests cover all the way from Morse code over voice communication to digital modes and "foxhunt" (the radio sport of Amateur Radio Direction Finding). Note that there are many other facets to amateur radio. Even our combined interests are just a small segment of the possible activities within the avocation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We talk about getting started with just listening to amateur radio traffic on the short wave frequencies.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Why do you need a license, why not just do it?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First, without a license, it is ILLEGAL.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Law makers have acknowledged that one important goal of amateur radio is education and experimentation. We are allowed to modify equipment or even build it completely from scratch and operate it legally on the assigned frequencies. This is a unique privilege that sets amateur radio apart from any other radio users which have to use certified equipment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We give some amateur related podcast recommendations, among those: Linux in the ham shack (https://lhspodcast.info) and HamRadio 360 (https://hamradio360.com).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Next Edition of the Amateur Radio Round Table

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next ham radio round table will be held in about a month, with a time that will be better suited for European time zones. We welcome anyone to participate, whether or not you are a licensed ham. Watch the HPR email list for announcements and details.

                                                        \r\n',109,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','amateur radio, ham',0,0,1), (2242,'2017-03-07','Interview with Colin J. Mills, organizer of KW Linuxfest',647,'After the KW Linuxfest, Bob Jonkman and Colin Mills sat down and talked for a while.','

                                                        After the KW Linuxfest on Saturday, 28 January 2017, Bob Jonkman and Colin J. Mills (HPR host cjm) sat down and talked about some of the organizational challenges in running an event, Colin\'s co-op program at Conestoga College, and anticipating another KW Linuxfest in 2018.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        KW Linuxfest is at https://kwlinuxfest.ca/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        KW Linuxfest 2017 was sponsored by Vehikl https://vehikl.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Kitchener Waterloo Linux User Group: https://kwlug.org

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can reach Colin J. Mills at kwlinuxfest.nospam@nospam.gmail.com

                                                        \r\n',350,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Kitchener-Waterloo',0,0,1), (2247,'2017-03-14','2016-2017 HPR New Year show 1',15870,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 1','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 1

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • FiftyOneFifty’s home network
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • FiftyOneFifty talks guns
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Reg A talks about his early days of computing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Caganer nativity scenes:\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The US Air Force
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • booze food and cpap machines
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • earliest memories
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • discuss our early days of computing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • knightwise and mobile computing
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • drw’s early days of computing and linux
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2249,'2017-03-16','2016-2017 HPR New Year show episode 3',13526,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 3','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 3

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Carrie Fisher
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • voting / politics
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • heritages
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Wikipedia for news
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pizza gate
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • why we love Linux
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • text editors
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • forum fun
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • coffee is great
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • making money with free software
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • free software in the workplace
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Single board computers
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2250,'2017-03-17','2016-2017 HPR New Year show episode 4',14536,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 4','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 4

                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2251,'2017-03-20','2016-2017 HPR New Year show episode 5',10179,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 5','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 5

                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2252,'2017-03-21','2016-2017 HPR New Year show episode 6',10369,'Hacker Public Radio new years eve show episode 6','

                                                        HPR new years eve show episode 6

                                                        \r\n',159,121,1,'CC-BY-SA','new years eve show',0,0,1), (2239,'2017-03-02','making jerky',749,'jezra goes talks about his process for making jerky, while making jerky','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Slice meat thin and against the grain
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Season the meat
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dehydrate the meat
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        enjoy!

                                                        ',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','meat,jerky,dehydrator',0,0,1), (2244,'2017-03-09','building lineageOS',1180,'I try my hand at building lineageOS for my device','

                                                        i am too ignorant to build for the device that i want.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        i mention a dev from xda.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        i am running debian sid... also mention arch and the importance of shownotes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        following lineage wiki, i merge the extra commands from a 14.1 device page.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        install adb fastboot repo with package manager and you can ignore creating ~/bin, chmod command, and PATH update as these tools were installed by your package manager.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        install list given on the wiki of packages...some will not exist... search to find out their names.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        cd into the location for your project.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ mkdir -p ./android/system\r\n$ cd android/system\r\n$ repo init -u https://github.com/LineageOS/android.git -b cm-14.1\r\n$ repo sync\r\n$ repo sync\r\n$ repo sync
                                                        \r\n

                                                        successful new 50G on my drive.

                                                        \r\n$ nano android/system/.repo/local_manifests/roomservice.xml\r\n

                                                        add the needed lines from the muppets and ignore extracting proprietary blobs.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        $ repo sync\r\n$ source build/envsetup.sh\r\n$ breakfast spyder\r\n$ export USE_CCACHE=1\r\n$ prebuilts/misc/linux-x86/ccache/ccache -M 50G\r\n$ export ANDROID_JACK_VM_ARGS=\"-Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -XX:+TieredCompilation -Xmx4G\"\r\n$ export WITH_SU=true\r\n$ croot\r\n$ brunch spyder
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ran 99% and errored... xmllint command not found.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        search for and install libxml2-utils.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        rerun build and get an out of memory error... go to bed... try tomorrow... shutdown machine.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        sift through old information as things have changed regarding file names and such.

                                                        \r\n$ nano ~/.jack-server/config.properties\r\n

                                                        change jack.server.max-service=4 to 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        start from envsetup.sh again.

                                                        \r\n$ cd $OUT\r\n

                                                        boot phone to recovery and install

                                                        \r\n$ adb sideload ./lineage-14.1-20170202-UNOFFICIAL-spyder.zip\r\n

                                                        i remove some apps and install fdroid.

                                                        ',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','android, lineageos, cyanogenmod, compiling ',0,0,1), (2253,'2017-03-22','How to make and use a stencil',833,'Cutting and using a stencil made of thick foil','

                                                        To make a stencil you need

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • a motif
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • thick foil/cardboard/metal sheet
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sharp knife/scalpel
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        To use a stencil:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • stencil
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • tape
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • paint
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • sponge/spray can
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • a surface to put it on
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Find a motif or make your own
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Copy/print motif on thick foil
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Cut out the black parts carefully
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Tape stencil to surface
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Apply paint with sponge
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. Carefully take off stencil
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Tadaaaaaaa
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n\"Stencil\"/\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n',351,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','stencil,diy',0,0,1), (2256,'2017-03-27','Modular Game Scaling',277,'how I allowed more display resolutions in a modular game design','

                                                        NOTE: the audio didn\'t cut together as smoothly as I remember from the first time, probably because I forgot to record at 44.1 KHz

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I explain in broad terms how I programmed a game system to adjust its display resolution using three distinct modules operating individually and in concert.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The "metagame" (launcher) module accepts an argument describing the size of the window available for display
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The "gameplay" module is informed of the space available as a \'window\' into the game world and uses it for one thing or another
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The "graphics" module opens a window at the specified size and modifies the graphical assets if needed
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once again I recorded in parts using a program called Urecord on my pocket computer (mobile phone).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I program using Pygame, post on a GNU Social account, maintain a personal website at NoxBanners.NET, and study programming techniques at Refactoring.com, style at Python.org, and sometimes patterns at Portland Pattern Repository

                                                        ',317,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','video games, programming, object-oriented, game development, design patterns',0,0,1), (2243,'2017-03-08','My Quick Tips E01',485,'I ramble on about some of my tips I recorded','\r\n

                                                        -rmccurdy.com

                                                        ',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Firefox,adblocker,cat litter,electronic recycling,shaving',0,0,1), (2246,'2017-03-13','My Custom RSS Comic and Security Feed',396,'Ya RSS say something. I talk about my comics only RSS feed','',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','RSS,Comics,html,scripting',0,0,1), (2254,'2017-03-23','Introduction to Model Rocketry',3248,'Steve talks about the hobby of model rocketry including some of the advanced aspects of the hobby.','

                                                        Introduction to Model Rocketry

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I introduce the hobby of model rocketry. I specifically highlight some of the advanced elements of the hobby to show how model rocketry goes from being a fun activity for kids to a serious hobby enjoyed by many adults.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Outline

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. History of model rocketry.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Early amateur experimentation with rocketry.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • G. Harry Stine develops the model rocket motor.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Vern Estes develops a way to mass produce motors.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Basic model rocket components and flight.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Airframe, nose cone, and fins.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The part of the model rocket motor.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Recovery mechanism (parachutes and streamers).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The launch pad
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The basic flight profile of a model rocket.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Building a typical model rocket kit.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Scratch building your own designs.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Using commercial components.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Using ordinary materials for rockets.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fabricating components: Lathes, laser cutters, CNC machines, etc.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Using CAD and simulation software.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Craftsmanship and scale modeling.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Model rocket competition.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Regional, national, and international meets.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Events: Altitude, duration, advanced recovery methods, payloads, egglofting.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. High power rockets.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Large rockets.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • High altitude rockets.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Supersonic rockets
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Composite motors.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Regulations
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Certification
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Materials
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Complex rocketry.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Motor clustering.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Staging.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dual deployment.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Electronics
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Altimeters
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Flight computers
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tracking
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Cameras
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Experimental motors.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. National associations.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • National Association of Rocketry (NAR).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tripoli Rocketry Association (TRA).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Safety codes.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Liability insurance.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Local clubs.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Safety.

                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. A little about my personal interests in model rocketry.

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Resources

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The following is a non-exhaustive list of companies that manufacture and/or sell model rocket kits and suplies. I\'ve primary listed those that I\'m most familiar with. There are certainly others.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        These are some of the major manufactures of high power composite motors.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        These are the two United States national model rocketry associations.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Resource for competition rocketry.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Here are a number of other interesting links

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Errata

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the show I said that G. Harry Stine worked at the White Sands Missile Base. The correct name for that facility is White Sands Missile Range. But, during the time that Stine worked there, it would have been called the White Sands Proving Ground. https://www.wsmr.army.mil/

                                                        \r\n',334,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','hobbies, rockets, models, rocketry',0,0,1), (2262,'2017-04-04','Abstracting Nurse Jesus',324,'how I abstracted random number generation for more syntactic sugar','

                                                        NOTE: the audio recording appears to have periodic jitter. As I recorded at 44.1 Khz this time, I wonder if my S2 just handles recording at a lower quality better, and if so I\'ll prefer lower quality over jitter in the recording.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I explain why and how I abstracted random number and choice generation into self-sustainable methods for objects.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • A superclass was needed so that all the classes of object in the game engine would have access to these random generation methods.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • I preferred to use methods in this case so objects would be self-sufficient and wouldn\'t depend on extra modules imported at the top of my code.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The syntactic sugar achieved by using customized methods instead of i.e. random.randint(0, 99) makes the code easier to write and understand at a glance.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Nurse Jesus is a pun on the acronym RNG for Random Number Generator
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Let me know if you get the reference at 2:00 ;-)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I recorded this episode in parts using a program called Urecord on my pocket computer (mobile phone).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I program using Pygame, post on a GNU Social account, and maintain a personal website at NoxBanners.NET. I study programming techniques at Refactoring.com, style at Python.org, and sometimes patterns at Portland Pattern Repository

                                                        \r\n',317,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','video games, programming, object-oriented, game development, abstraction',0,0,1), (2260,'2017-03-31','Managing tags on HPR episodes - 2',1477,'Looking for the best way to store and manage tags in the HPR database, part 2','

                                                        Managing tags on HPR episodes - 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the second show looking at the subject of Managing Tags.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the first show we looked at why we need tags, examined the present system and considered its advantages and disadvantages.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at a solution using a separate table of tags.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is a detailed subject so I have written out a set of longer notes for this episode and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR,database,schema,tag,SQL,foreign key',0,0,1), (2263,'2017-04-05','Freak Does Geek',1449,'A drift through a variety of topic with the letter A as the \"Anchor\"','',352,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','audio,tape recorder,mp3',0,0,1), (2255,'2017-03-24','The Good Ship HPR',1571,'HPR is a wonderful yet fragile project completely dependent on a steady flow of shows from hosts','

                                                        The Good Ship HPR

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hacker Public Radio

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What is it?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The podcast called Hacker Public Radio (HPR) is an amazing phenomenon. It has been providing an episode a day every weekday for years, and these episodes originate from the community.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I heard someone refer to HPR as “Crowd Sourced” which seemed like a good way of describing things. It is an open access resource which is managed under various Creative Commons licences, usually CC-BY-SA.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The content is very broad in scope. Anything “of interest to Hackers” is acceptable, which is interpreted in a wide variety of ways.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Access to shows is open to all through the HPR site, where shows back to episode 1 can be browsed, notes read, etc. There are feeds which propagate various updates: to shows, series, comments and email. Current shows are archived to the Internet Archive (archive.org) within a few days of appearing in the main feed, and older shows are gradually being archived this way with the intention of eventually storing everything there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For example, to find show 1999 on archive.org look for https://archive.org/details/hpr1999. The entire HPR collection can be browsed at https://archive.org/details/hackerpublicradio.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some history

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, if you examine the details on the website statistics page the predecessor of HPR started more than 11 years ago as “Today With A Techie”, transforming into “Hacker Public Radio” over 9 years ago.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Started:            11 years, 4 months, 12 days ago (2005-10-10)\r\nRenamed HPR:        9 years, 1 months, 20 days ago (2007-12-31)
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the earlier days the frequency of show release was not the predictable 5 per week, every weekday, that it is now. There were gaps, sometimes of several days, and occasionally shows came out on the weekend. Stability was achieved in October 2012 and there have been no gaps since then!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are currently 280 hosts who have contributed shows at some point in the history of HPR, and at the time of writing in February 2017 show number 2230 has been released. The number of episodes and hosts will be greater when the episodes from “Today With A Techie” are incorporated into the archive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Hacker Public Radio experiment has been very successful over the years, but there is a certain fragility in the way it works.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The longer notes for this episode which are available here, talk about the details of the problem facing HPR and go on to suggest some solutions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR,community,contribution,podcast',0,0,1), (2258,'2017-03-29','Killer Keilbasa',247,'Quick recipe for that last minute party','

                                                        I have heard out here a few recipes so I figured I would throw one out here that goes over real well when we make it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recipe:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 1 Lb. Keilbasa (your choice)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2 TBSP Ketchup
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2 TBSP Brown Sugar
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 2 Table spoons jelly (I have used orange Marmalade, Grape Jelly and various flavors of Jalapeno or pepper jelly)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Crock Pot (Slow cooker) or sauce pan
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • In crock pot add Kielbasa sliced in 1/2\" pieces
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Add jelly
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Add Brown Sugar
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Add Ketchup
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Turn crock pot on medium for 2 hours checking and stirring every half hour. Should be ready in 2 hours.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In sauce pan on medium heat stirring continuously until mixture liquefies and the Kielbasa look done. Probably less than 20 minutes this way but you have to watch it or it burns. This is why we use a slow cooker.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I make 5-7 lbs at a time for a party and usually it is all gone by the end of the party. So I take it that it is a hit. This also is pretty good over rice. Almost Asian style.

                                                        \r\n',346,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','keilbasa,recipe,food',0,0,1), (2264,'2017-04-06','At The Library',505,'What my local library offers','

                                                        Check out your local library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you are a cord cutter or looking for cheap alternatives to some of the following:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Ebooks
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Emagazines
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Audibooks
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • DVD\'s
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Blu rays
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CD\'s
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • And much much more!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',346,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','EBooks, audio books, Emagazines, Chromebooks, Movies, TV Shows, Computers',0,0,1), (2257,'2017-03-28','Watt OS',244,'a short show about the Linux distro Watt OS','

                                                        In this short episode I tell you about installing Watt OS onto an Acer Aspire One Netbook from 2008.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This net book came with a 8Gig SSD installed and a 32bit 1.6G atom processor and many modern Linux spins are just too big for the hardware.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        However Watt OS came to the rescue and installed on the Netbook without issue.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I plan to give it a go on a Lenovo x61 shortly and will let you know how that works out, my thought is it will fly on that hardware.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://wiki.planetwatt.com

                                                        ',338,57,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux,OS,OS Watt',0,0,1), (2259,'2017-03-30','Minidiscs: A Response to HPR 2212',1002,'Response to hpr2212 with my own uses and recollections of the awesome legacy medium of the minidisc','

                                                        This is a walking-and-talking response to hpr2212 (meanderings Cyberpunk and the Minidisc, The Cyberpunk history of the Sony Minidisc, hosted by Quvmoh on 2017-01-24) with my own uses and recollections of this awesome legacy medium.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Video about my USB power supply hack:
                                                        \r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v53k2RCT-lA\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','audio, minidisc, digital media',0,0,1), (2265,'2017-04-07','WattOS on Lenovo X61s',488,'I talk about installing WattOS on the X61s','

                                                        This is a follow on show from the one about WattOS on the Acer AspireOne I did recently.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I talk about installing and running of the OS on this 10+ year old laptop and how they are still a viable option as a cheap laptop.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Note all the recording, and uploading to HPR of this episode was done on the X61s

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://planetwatt.com/new/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.cnet.com/uk/products/lenovo-thinkpad-x61s/review/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://support.lenovo.com/gb/en/documents/pd012148

                                                        \r\n',338,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','WattOS,Lenovo X61s',0,0,1), (2268,'2017-04-12','Fish On!',1138,'Websites and apps used for planning fishing trips','

                                                        Whether hitting your local lake or planning a day trip out, it is always good to consult tech that can help out making the trip as successful as possible. Here are the items mentioned in the podcast:

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',346,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','fish,fishing',0,0,1), (2266,'2017-04-10','Gamebooks: Lone Wolf',2571,'Klaatu talks about the Lone Wolf solo RPG series','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu talks about the Lone Wolf series of solo RPG gamebooks from the 1980s.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,book,rpg',0,0,1), (2276,'2017-04-24','Tunnels and Trolls and Dungeon Delvers',1877,'Klaatu talks about Tunnels & Trolls solo RPG series, and Dungeon Delvers','

                                                        Klaatu reviews the solo RPG experience provided by Tunnels & Trolls community.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Additionally, he mentions a nice Creative Commons rulebook (if you can call 2 pages a book) called Dungeon Delvers.\r\n

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,book,rpg',0,0,1), (2267,'2017-04-11','Our Digital Art',1793,'Sigflup and Siss talk about digital art and what it means to them','Sigflup\'s art!!!
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSiss\'s art!!!!
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSigflup\'s Book!!!
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nSiss\'s books!!\r\n\r\n',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','digital art ',0,0,1), (2271,'2017-04-17','Raspberry Pi Zero W',378,'an introduction to the new Pi Zero W from the Raspberry Pi Foundation','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode I talk about the new Raspberry Pi Zero W single board computer released on 28th February 2017 to coincide with the 5th Birthday of the Raspberry Pi Foundation.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nThis tiny 65x30mm single board PC has the following specs\r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 1GHz, single-core CPU \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 512MB RAM \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Mini HDMI and USB On-The-Go ports \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Micro USB power\r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • HAT-compatible 40-pin header \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Composite video and reset headers \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CSI camera connector \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 802.11 b/g/n wireless LAN \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Bluetooth 4.1 \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nHere are a couple of links to the foundation and a fuller review\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.raspberrypi.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://www.engadget.com/2017/02/28/raspberry-pi-zero-w-is-a-10-computer-with-wifi-and-bluetooth/\r\n

                                                        \r\n ',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,Zero W,single board computer,sbc',0,0,1), (2280,'2017-04-28','Lenovo X61s Part 2',526,'A description of living with the X61s for almost 2 weeks','

                                                        HPR episode on Lenovo X61s part 2

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Cost £36 including auction fees
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • OS Free (any Linux will work well)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Upgrade to 120Gig SSD £40 of ebay
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Total outlay £76
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you have to buy one then get an OS free one and don\'t pay more than £80-£100 depending if it has an SSD or not

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hello HPR, a few episodes ago I talked of using the Lenovo X61s with Watt OS and said I would report back after a possible upgrade to the laptop with and SSD replacement for the hard drive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well I duly ordered and received a Drevo 120 Gig SSD from ebay. These are about £40 each so make a cheap upgrade to an older laptops spinning disc see review here:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.enostech.com/drevo-x1-240gb-ssd-review/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        after installing the PC with WattOS while it did everything you would need of an OS and was absolutely fine on the X61s I was a bit disillusioned with the amount of configuration needed to get all the software I needed working, definitely not New user friendly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Looking at other lite Linux distributions I came upon Linux Lite

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.linuxliteos.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        and decided that this might be a better choice as it says it is aimed at new users, and being based on Ubuntu was a familiar beast. ISO was downloaded and duly installed on the X61s and as soon as all the updates were completed I looked at the installed software and it was more comprehensive but not at the expense of still being lightweight.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At first Boot it takes about 300mb of ram and even with the word processor and Firefox in use Ram usage was only about 700mb.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Audacity after install worked out of the box, and I\'ve already recorded and uploaded another show for HPR using the X61s and all went flawlessly. With the new SSD I am getting close to 5 hours of use from the 8 cell 63W battery installed on the PC and while I recognize the X61s being over 10 years old is not going to meet the needs of a power user, its fully capable of being an everyday laptop for basic office tasks, some light audio editing, and even photo editing in GIMP. I was able to edit and process a 10mb .jpg image without any issues and exporting the final image took seconds.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was fairly happy with the X61s performance with the 80Gig spinner it came with, but the addition of an SSD has both improved performance and battery life to the extent that I would happily take it on the road as my only PC. Actually for the porpoise of writing this review I\'ve lived with it as my main PC for almost 2 weeks and have not really missed its big brother the X230i i3 laptop I also have. In fact I was going to record a show using that and found that as it has a composite Audio jack, and my head set requires separate mic and headphone sockets I wasn\'t able to, so one up to the X61s there.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Conclusion, if you have a couple of kids and you\'re looking for a laptop for them to do homework, watch Utube, and surf the web (parental controls enabled) then I would look no further. And if they get broken by said kids you\'ve not lost a bundle of dosh.

                                                        \r\n',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','Lenovo X61s, Linux Lite',0,0,1), (2282,'2017-05-02','Pathfinder Adventure Card Game',2445,'Klaatu talks about the Pathfinder RPG franchise, the OGL license, and the Adventure Card Game','

                                                        Klaatu introduces you to the Pathfinder and the Pathfinder Adventure Card Game.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        And since it's in the same neighborhood, Klaatu also mentions the Open Game License and mentions more than once Forgotten Realms.

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,card,rpg',0,0,1), (2269,'2017-04-13','Chocolate Milk',2529,'A sample show of the nixers podcast. Adam\'s story, milky chocolate, unicomp, and plan9','

                                                        More on https://nixers.net/showthread.php?tid=1991

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',353,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Unix, Technology, Plan9, Keyboard',0,0,1), (2286,'2017-05-08','Surviving a Stroke',644,'on the 2nd of February I had a stroke, this is my story','

                                                        First off a disclaimer: anything I say here is my experience and is in no way intended as advice to anyone, everyone who experiences or is at risk of a stroke is different and you must make your own lifestyle choices based on professional advice.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That clear lets get on with my show. On the 2nd February 2017 I had a Stroke, it came completely without warning. I was out with my wife, just about to start a Bridge class we were attending. I sat down at the table and just after sitting down was blasted with what I thought was White Noise from faulty hearing aids. After quickly removing them without any effect I thought I was having a sudden severe migraine, which I have from time to time. However I was unable to communicate what was happening and after several minutes my wife wrote on a paper the words “Home” and “Hospital” and I pointed to hospital. An Emergency ambulance was duly called and I was transferred to the local Emergency Department. Several hours later in the early hours of the next morning they admitted me, still not sure what had happened. It was only after a scan that afternoon that they concluded that I had had a Stroke.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I was seen by a consultant that evening who confirmed this and as I still had residual problems on my right side concluded that it was a stroke, and not a TIA (Transient Ischaemic Attack) or a mini stroke as it is sometimes called. I spent the next 12 days in hospital having further tests, including another scan, an MRI as opposed to the previous CT scan I had had on admission. After seeing the results of this scan the Consultant was amazed that I was not more severely affected, in other cases of the type of stroke I suffered the physical and cognitive damage is much more severe. It was looking like I had thankfully, dodged a bullet.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That is not to say there were no effects. My right side was effected and the fine motor control was damaged. Coordination in using my right hand and arm were initially difficult as was writing (I am predominantly right handed). Also my mouth felt like I was wearing someone’s false teeth, even though I have all my own. However the main effect has been fatigue, initially severe, but as I write this 6 weeks later this is starting to improve, although I still tire after 2-3 hours doing things that I could have done all day previously. I also still have a little feeling of weakness in my right hand and arm and writing is still an issue, thankfully most of my writing is done on a keyboard.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So what caused it I hear you yelling, well the truth is they don’t know. The most serious risks are to people that Drink alcohol excessively, Smoke and have a high fat diet. Also those over weight particularly the obese, and people with diabetes are high risk. Another major risk factor is genetic, and I remembered afterwards that my Grandfather and an Uncle had major strokes that ultimately led to their deaths. Also stress and high blood pressure can be a factor.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I don’t drink or smoke and have been a vegetarian for many years, also my blood pressure is checked regularly and was always seen as within normal range. However I was at the time of the stroke 21lb over weight, but even before it happened I had lost 7lb. Since the stroke the blood tests also show I am pre-diabetic so I need to increase my exercise (again something I had started to do), and alter my diet to reduce my blood sugars. Not major issues as I had started to attend a gym and walk more as part of the weight loss plan, and I actually prefer healthy food, and now have a reason to say to people when I’m in company why I eat what and the way I do.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The main effect for me has been the restriction on my mobility as the Consultant will not let me drive until 3 months post discharge (14th May), which means I have to rely on others or get public transport, this is not the problem but having to walk from transport stops to where I’m going is due to the fatigue. Roll on May 14th.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I thought I would record this show as a bit of a warning, and for listeners to realise that a Stroke can and does happen to anyone. On a positive note there is life after stroke and even for those who are more seriously disabled by a stroke many can and do recover most if not all the function they had before hand.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Further info on Stroke can be found here:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.stroke.org.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/stroke/pages/introduction.aspx

                                                        \r\n',338,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','health,stroke,recovery,TIA',0,0,1), (2270,'2017-04-14','Managing tags on HPR episodes - 3',1893,'Looking for the best way to store and manage tags in the HPR database, part 3','

                                                        Managing tags on HPR episodes - 3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the third (and last) show looking at the subject of Managing Tags relating to HPR shows.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the first show we looked at why we need tags, and examined the advantages and disadvantages of the present system of storage. We considered the drawbacks of this design when searching the tags.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then in the second show we looked at a simple way of making a tags table and how to query it in order to fulfil the requirements defined in the first show.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this show we’ll look at a more rigorous, efficient, “normalised” solution.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a set of longer notes for this episode and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','HPR,database,schema,tags,many-to-many',0,0,1), (2272,'2017-04-18','In Which Our Hero Takes 4 Hours to Install Hyper-V Server 2012',762,'A tale from the trenches. When good servers go bad.','

                                                        So we had this server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As all servers are wont to do, this one had run successfully for a number of years. Everything worked perfectly until it didn’t.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It ran, to my knowledge, only Hyper-V Server on its system drive, and had a second set of drives for hosting the VM that ran Microsoft Deployment Toolkit to service our depot. Our depot was on its own physical network, sharing with production only an ISP demarc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I had long since abandoned the depot and its trappings, thinking it someone else’s domain, thinking my time better spent on client systems, thinking that I didn’t need to know what happened in the oft-ignored part of our operation. I assumed that it was set up properly since it had been so stable for so many years. But you know the old saying:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When you make assumptions you make an ass out of you and muptions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Problem.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our monitoring systems reports the two depot servers offline, both the hypervisor and its virtual. I sent our depot technician to take a look. They come back online and he tells me that it needed to be rebooted. Having divested myself of giving a damn about the depot, I barely found the energy to shrug.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Then it happened again. I again sent the technician and promptly got wrapped up in some client-facing issue. I forgot about the servers until:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        They went offline a third time. I didn’t have to tell my depot tech; he was watching the same feed as I. He rummaged a bit and came back with a story of defeat and virtual disks not being found.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        “The server won’t boot because the Virtual disk can’t be found” he said.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        “Ok, so you mean the virtual won’t come up, but what about the physical?” I replied.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        “No, that’s what I mean. It won’t get past BIOS. It’s complaining of a virtual drive not being found.”

                                                        \r\n

                                                        “Sounds bogus, let’s look.”

                                                        \r\n

                                                        He was not wrong; that is what the screen said. And what it meant was RAID failure. I slid off the front of the server case and sure enough, one of the drives had popped.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Oh, did I mention? No backups.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Rabbit Hole.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Drives pop sometimes, ain’t no thing. We build systems to be resilient. You slap a fresh one in there and it starts re-silvering and you get on with your day. Not this time, gentle reader.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While digging through the RAID controller, I found, to my amazement, horror, and utter confusion, that whatever chucklefuck set up this server put the two system drives in a RAID 0. As I stared at the screen and at the blinking amber drive light, all that could pass my lips was a quiet “Oh my god, why?”

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this scenario, I didn’t see any way forward, but through. So far, it had been demonstrated that the bad drive would behave for about 2 hours, then throw a fit. I shut down the server and took some time to think about how to proceed. In that time, I re-discovered some of the things the virtual machine was serving.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Things like: MDT, DNS, DHCP, PXE boot, but most importantly: the lone DC for depot.local (MDT needs a domain). Oh, and it was the only machine that was set up to manage the hypervisor through the Hyper-V console and Server Manager.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        GREAT.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Compounding the issue, the virtual was not stored on the separate set of RAID 1 disks in this server as I had assumed. It was stored on the system drive. Oh joy, oh rapture.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My new mission: Rescue that virtual.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Struggle.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First things first. I assume I’ll only have one chance to rescue this data before this drive bites the dust for good. I plug in the VGA and keyboard. Take a deep breath.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I turn on the server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It fails to boot into the operating system. “Come on, you little shit.” Take out the drive and put it back in. Success. We boot into the OS and I’m presented with a log on screen. Password.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are no logon servers available to process your request.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Shit, that’s right. The virtual is the only DC. K, local admin it is. Login successful. Presented with a command like and SConfig. Grab the terminal and start poking about. cd to C: and dir. Find a folder named VMs. Bingo. Started copying the VHDX to the RAID 1 set.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        cp “C:\\vms\\Hyper-V Replica\\Virtual hard disks\\{guid}\\{guid}.vhdx” E:\\
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The server moves the data at a respectful 700Mbps, considering its current degraded state. It eventually finished the transfer after about 10 agonizing minutes. Shut down the physical to preserve the bad drive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We are out of the woods, but it’s still a long way to Gramma’s house.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The King is Dead; Long Live the King.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have a plan. Now that I have the VHDX, and since we clearly need a replica server, I’ll push my luck. I’ll build a new server and see if I can replicate the virtual. I happen to have a disused server sitting right next to the bad server. It’s admittedly dissimilar hardware, but shouldn’t be a problem. I don’t know why it’s lying dormant or what it was used for in the days of yore, but it’s mine now. Eminent domain.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        And here is the story of how it took me 4 hours to install an OS that usually takes 3 minutes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We need to load up Hyper-V 2012 on this “new” server first.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As is standard practice, I disconnect all but one drive from the mobo. I do this because sometimes the Windows installer decides that the “SYSTEM” partition belongs on a different drive from the C partition and it makes me cry. I used rufus (what a fantastic little utility, really. I need to donate to that guy) to make a HV 2012 boot disk from ISO.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You know how it takes a few times to get a USB to go into it’s slot correctly? Not me. I whipped that bad mamma-jamma like a shuriken from 30 feet away and it slid perfectly into the front of the server. Fireworks, 100 doves, the works.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Boot it, get to the installer part where it asks you upon which drive you wish to install it. Boom, error:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Weird. Sounds like a problem with the disk, right? Open up diskpart, clean it, format, create partition, assign it a letter. No go. Try a different drive? Nope. Disconnect the cd drive maybe. No dice. Connect all the drives and try each one. Nada. Boot up into Ubuntu and use GParted to re-do what I did in diskpart. Zilch. Re-create the install media. Goose egg. Try the back USB ports. I’m running out of ways to say no, but in essence, nothing was making this error go away.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Screw it. Maybe this is why this server was sitting unused? Maybe it’s a bad mobo or something and frankly, I don’t care. Part out the drives and junk it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We happen to have a literal pile of servers to pick from, so I grab the one on top because it’s the most similar to the bad server and because you must be out your damned mind if you think I’m digging through that mound of junk. This’ll do nicely.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember how I said I didn’t want to have anything to do with the depot? I still don’t. I want this new server to be unkillable, may he reign for a thousand generations. So, I may have gone a little overboard with the RAID setup for one simple hypervisor, which is going to be backed up and replicated.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That there is a 1TB RAID 1 with a hotspare and a 500ish GB RAID 5 with a hotspare. I never want to hear from this server again.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OK, so we start the Windows server install and:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        THE SAME ERROR.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        No way. I have done this dozens of times, this is insane. I have used this exact same USB drive to do it! I can use it on an ancient spare laptop and go through the install perfectly fine. I have dug through pages of posts on forums and tried every last solution suggested except one. I find, on page 3 (!) of Google, someone say that it only failed for them when they used a USB 3.0 drive to install. I look at the end of my USB install media, see blue, then see red. NO. WAY.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So I hunt around for a USB 2.0 drive. Takes me a few minutes, but we had one holding up the leg of a table. Rufus took a bit longer this time. When the drive was cooked, I gingerly placed it in the receptacle and crossed my fingers. If this didn’t work, then I was all out of ideas. No clue.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It worked. I could not believe it. USB 3.0. Why, Windows, WHY?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Playing with Fire.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Creating a new domain is a pain in the ass. I considered a number of possibilities, but now that I had the re-install of this server figured out, I figured let’s go nuts and join the new hypervisor to the old domain depot.local. If you’ll remember from 6 years ago when I started telling you this story, the sole virtual server performed DCHP, DNS, and DC functions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I powered up the bad physical server. It complained, but complied. Started the virtual, no issue. Waited a few minutes, then joined the shiny new server to the domain depot.local. From there, with the DC up and running it was a simple matter of using the Hyper-V console to set up replication. After about an hour of pacing back and forth like I was awaiting the birth of my first child, the virtual made it and was failed over successfully.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There were a few more issues to resolve, like the DNS server having the wrong IPs for just about everything even though they have been using statics for years, DHCP not responding on port 4011 for MDT for PXE Boot, DHCP being handed out by the virtual AND by the router on the same subnet (?!?!), and the DNS server refusing to connect over the HyperV vSwitch, but now at least I don’t have a knot in my stomach. I don’t know how this environment ever worked like this. What a mess to clean up.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I ripped the bad half of the RAID 0 out of the server like a man possessed. I nailed it to the wall behind my desk. There is a sign under it that reads: “RAID 0 is not RAID. If you use RAID 0 on anything, I will throw this hard drive at your head. I have good aim. It will probably hit your mouth.”

                                                        \r\n',319,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Windows, Servers, IT, MSP, Story',0,0,1), (2273,'2017-04-19','Fountain Pens',1391,'In this episode, I cover some of the basics of Fountain Pens','

                                                        For a good basic rundown of the parts of a fountain pen, The Goulet Pen Company has a fairly decent page at: https://www.gouletpens.com/anatomy-of-a-fountain-pen

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fountain pens on Youtube:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',325,112,1,'CC-BY-SA','fountain pen,nib,feed,barrel,section,cartridge,converter,piston fill',0,0,1), (2277,'2017-04-25','Outernet and other projects',884,'In this episode, I take a look at some different attempts to spread free internet access.','\r\n',325,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','free internet,Outernet,Project Loon',0,0,1), (2274,'2017-04-20','First Microsoft Surface Pro Ubuntu 16.04 Dual boot',556,'A short talk about converting a MS Surface pro from windows to unbuntu','

                                                        Hi. I purchased the first MS Pro on ebay after hearing of a like project on the Linux Action Show. I do a lot of traveling and I am always feeling bad about not having a something with open source on it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So one of the best for travel is the MS surface pro.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In short it works great with Ubuntu.

                                                        ',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Microsoft Surface Pro,Ubuntu',0,0,1), (2300,'2017-05-26','The first Intel CompuStick',655,'A talk about the original intel compute stick with ubuntu factory installed','

                                                        Well basically the stick out of the box was not very usable. I had to struggle with it for a long time to make it work for me doing even the most basic tasks. I went to https://linuxiumcomau.blogspot.com/ and things got better.

                                                        ',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Intel CompuStick,Ubuntu,UEFI',0,0,1), (2327,'2017-07-04','A Texan\'s view on Why only a Native Born person can be President',426,'A quick talk about why America is special','

                                                        Based on my limited knowledge of our founding documents. I have read them a few times and had a few basic classes about our founding documents. So I am not lawyer or Professor just a normal person with a very normal education. I did see the starting documents at the national archive last sept 2016 and they are real and can be publicly read.

                                                        ',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','President of the United States,eligibility',0,0,1), (2347,'2017-08-01','An Intro to Apache Hadoop',2249,'Just a pretty boring summary of what Hadoop is and how it works.','\r\n',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Hadoop,big data,MapReduce,cluster,HDFS',0,0,1), (2275,'2017-04-21','Penguicon 2017',1126,'A look at the lineup for the 2017 event.','

                                                        Penguicon 2017 is a combined technology and science fiction convention in Southfield, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, and presents over 500 hours of programming over the entire weekend. Of this, around 100 hours are open source, tech-related. In this episode I give you a look at the lineup you can expect to see.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,96,0,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon 2017',0,0,1), (2370,'2017-09-01','Who is HortonWorks?',1139,'And what they do with Hadoop.','

                                                        Just a quick show about Hortonworks and what they do.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        They are the biggest contributor to the Apache Hadoop project.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hortonworks.com/

                                                        ',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Apache Hadoop, Hadoop',0,0,1), (2278,'2017-04-26','Some supplementary Bash tips',2375,'Finishing off the subject of expansion in Bash (part 1)','

                                                        Some supplementary Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pathname expansion; part 1 of 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Expansion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As we saw in the last episode 2045 (and others in this sub-series) there are eight types of expansion applied to the command line in the following order:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Brace expansion (we looked at this subject in episode 1884)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tilde expansion (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Parameter and variable expansion (this was covered in episode 1648)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Command substitution (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic expansion (seen in episode 1951)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Process substitution (seen in episode 2045)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word splitting (seen in episode 2045)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pathname expansion (this episode and the next)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the last topic in the (sub-) series about expansion in Bash. However, when writing the notes for this episode it became apparent that there was too much to fit into a single HPR episode. Consequently I have made it into two.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at simple pathname expansion and some of the ways in which its behaviour can be controlled. In the next episode we’ll finish by looking at extended pattern matching. Both are included in the “Manual Page Extracts” section at the end of the long notes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long Show Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,expansion,pathname expansion,shopt',0,0,1), (2283,'2017-05-03','Saving money shaving with double and single edge safety razors',1031,'Using double and single edge safety razors to save money','',77,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','shaving,razor,safety razor,razor blade',0,0,1), (2284,'2017-05-04','Resurrecting a dead ethernet switch',893,'Replacing a failing capacitor in the power supply of an ethernet switch to make it work again.','

                                                        In this episode I simply let you participate with me replacing an electrolytic capacitor in the power supply of an Ethernet switch.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The broken capacitor shows a bulge in its housing and was therefore easily identifiable. The supply voltage in the fault condition could be observed with an oscilloscope to completely collapse when load is turned on. Both facts are illustrated in the image below.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Replacing the capacitor fixed the switch and brought it back in service.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Faulty

                                                        ',271,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Ethernet switch, capacitor, power supply',0,0,1), (2279,'2017-04-27','The first Intel CompuStick sound fix with LUbuntu',296,'A quick podcast about sound with LUbuntu','

                                                        https://allaboutmynonexistedworld.wordpress.com/2014/06/03/lubuntu-hdmi-sound-output/

                                                        \r\n',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Intel CompuStick,Lubuntu,pulse audio',0,0,1), (2285,'2017-05-05','The Tick Conspiracy',621,'A show that covers the ongoing war between ticks (may they rot in hell) and everything else.','

                                                        \r\nReminder: This show is released in .ogg a non patent encumbered format.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',354,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Ticks, Paranoia, Comedic, Informative?',0,0,1), (2290,'2017-05-12','How to change the height of your Ironing board',168,'Amazing Life Hack that will change your life forever.','

                                                        Tired of having back ache after Ironing

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Check out this amazing episode to hear how you too can transform a dull chore into an enjoyable experience !!!!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n \"Ironing\r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Amazing Life Hack',0,0,1), (2287,'2017-05-09','Desparately Seeking Saving RMS - Introduction',1830,'My attempt to start moving towards the RMS Model','

                                                        \r\nMy start towards the RMS ideal.\r\n

                                                        \r\n',151,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','free software, richard stallman, RMS',0,0,1), (2501,'2018-03-05','HPR Community News for February 2018',2881,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in February 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n\n Aaressaar, \n MPardo.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2479Thu2018-02-01Intergraph workstationJWP
                                                        2480Fri2018-02-02What\'s In My Podcatcher 1Ahuka
                                                        2481Mon2018-02-05HPR Community News for January 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2482Tue2018-02-06lca2018: Katie McLaughlinClinton Roy
                                                        2483Wed2018-02-07Useful Bash functions - part 4Dave Morriss
                                                        2484Thu2018-02-08The Big Idealostnbronx
                                                        2485Fri2018-02-09The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E05 - I Saw the Invisible ManThe Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP)
                                                        2486Mon2018-02-12Some stuff I bought at a recent amateur radio rallyMrX
                                                        2487Tue2018-02-13Simple LibreOffice Repo for FedoraToeJet
                                                        2488Wed2018-02-14Psychology of LoveAaressaar
                                                        2489Thu2018-02-15CONTEXT IS EVERYTHINGlostnbronx
                                                        2490Fri2018-02-16What\'s In My Podcatcher 2Ahuka
                                                        2491Mon2018-02-19Some news with Finuxfinux
                                                        2492Tue2018-02-20An Evening Subway RideMPardo
                                                        2493Wed2018-02-21YouTube Subscriptions - updateDave Morriss
                                                        2494Thu2018-02-22linux.conf.au 2018: Nicolas SteenhoutClinton Roy
                                                        2495Fri2018-02-2310 Years of XokeXoke
                                                        2496Mon2018-02-26Making a Raspberry Pi inventoryDave Morriss
                                                        2497Tue2018-02-27HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 1Various Hosts
                                                        2498Wed2018-02-28Life without GoogleQuvmoh
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 19 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 6 comments on\n4 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2418\n(2017-11-08) \"What\'s in my ham shack, part 2\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nMrX on 2018-02-25:\n\"re great infos\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2465\n(2018-01-12) \"TronScript where have you been all my life!\"\nby operat0r.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\ntimttmy on 2018-02-03:\n\"Thanks\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2477\n(2018-01-30) \"Reading Audio Books While Distracted\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-02-05:\n\"Chickens\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nWindigo on 2018-02-19:\n\"Also distractable\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2478\n(2018-01-31) \"City Of Masks - HPR_AudioBookClub\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nhammerron on 2018-02-04:\n\"a second Star Trek reference\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nlostnbronx on 2018-02-05:\n\"Excellent Episode\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 13 comments on 7 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2482\n(2018-02-06) \"lca2018: Katie McLaughlin\"\nby Clinton Roy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-02-05:\n\"How on earth did I do that? :(\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2018-02-17:\n\"Thank you to the admins\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2488\n(2018-02-14) \"Psychology of Love\"\nby Aaressaar.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2018-02-19:\n\"Welcome\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2489\n(2018-02-15) \"CONTEXT IS EVERYTHING\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-02-15:\n\"Bin there done that. (Deliberate typo Dave)\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2492\n(2018-02-20) \"An Evening Subway Ride\"\nby MPardo.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-02-19:\n\"Swapping in..\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nRWA on 2018-02-20:\n\"hpr2492 :: An Evening Subway Ride\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nMPardo on 2018-02-20:\n\"Screeching Steel Wheels\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nKen Fallon on 2018-02-23:\n\"Meta\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2493\n(2018-02-21) \"YouTube Subscriptions - update\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nHipstre on 2018-02-21:\n\"Entertained!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-02-27:\n\"Enjoy!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2495\n(2018-02-23) \"10 Years of Xoke\"\nby Xoke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-02-22:\n\"Wow\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2496\n(2018-02-26) \"Making a Raspberry Pi inventory\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2018-02-26:\n\"Directly into my toolbox\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-02-27:\n\"Thanks b-yeezi\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-February/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to Windigo and bjb for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period 25 shows have had tags and/or summaries added.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n

                                                        This page has been extended this month by the addition of a list of tags at the end. Each tag is followed by the show numbers which use that tag, each being a link to the show.

                                                        \n

                                                        The thinking is that if you are considering which tags to add to a show without them you can look through this list to find out whether other people have used the tag and in what context.

                                                        \n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2521,'2018-04-02','HPR Community News for March 2018',3923,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in March 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n the_remora.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2499Thu2018-03-01Tuning around the HF 40Mtr bandMrX
                                                        2500Fri2018-03-02What\'s In My Podcatcher 3Ahuka
                                                        2501Mon2018-03-05HPR Community News for February 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2502Tue2018-03-06Volume Of Thoughtlostnbronx
                                                        2503Wed2018-03-07My journey into podcastingthelovebug
                                                        2504Thu2018-03-08Intro to Git with pen and paperklaatu
                                                        2505Fri2018-03-09The power of GNU Readline - part 3Dave Morriss
                                                        2506Mon2018-03-12Build Your Own Lisp (A Book Review)Brian in Ohio
                                                        2507Tue2018-03-13Racket, Nix, Fractalide and the sounds of a Hong Kong New Townclacke
                                                        2508Wed2018-03-14False Prophetslostnbronx
                                                        2509Thu2018-03-15AudioBookClub 16 Matcher RulesHPR_AudioBookClub
                                                        2510Fri2018-03-1626 - Diffie-Hellman-Merkle Key ExchangeAhuka
                                                        2511Mon2018-03-19Response to episode 2496b-yeezi
                                                        2512Tue2018-03-20Intro to git remoteklaatu
                                                        2513Wed2018-03-21Why I choose Aperture firstDavid Whitman
                                                        2514Thu2018-03-22Electronics Calculator KitNYbill
                                                        2515Fri2018-03-23HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 2Various Hosts
                                                        2516Mon2018-03-26Intro to git branchklaatu
                                                        2517Tue2018-03-27DIY CCTV Security Systemoperat0r
                                                        2518Wed2018-03-28Converting My Laptop to Dual BootSteve Saner
                                                        2519Thu2018-03-29the_remora Builds a character in Edge of the Empirethe_remora
                                                        2520Fri2018-03-30Diffie-Hellman and Forward SecrecyAhuka
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 34 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 5 comments on\n4 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2403\n(2017-10-18) \"Amateur Radio Round Table #3\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2018-03-05:\n\"Waveform Site\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2453\n(2017-12-27) \"The power of GNU Readline - part 2\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nHipstre on 2018-03-31:\n\"GNU Readline 2\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2486\n(2018-02-12) \"Some stuff I bought at a recent amateur radio rally\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2018-03-01:\n\"Quite a haul!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nMrX on 2018-03-10:\n\"Re Quite a haul!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2498\n(2018-02-28) \"Life without Google\"\nby Quvmoh.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nDraco Metallium on 2018-03-03:\n\"No more e-mails on my phone.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 29 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2499\n(2018-03-01) \"Tuning around the HF 40Mtr band\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMichael on 2018-03-06:\n\"Great show!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMrX on 2018-03-10:\n\"re Great show!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2500\n(2018-03-02) \"What\'s In My Podcatcher 3\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2018-03-06:\n\"How in the world...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKevin O'Brien on 2018-03-06:\n\"It's just what I do\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2501\n(2018-03-05) \"HPR Community News for February 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-03-03:\n\"https://duidelijkautistisch.nl/\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2018-03-03:\n\"Escape for pipe\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nClinton Roy on 2018-03-04:\n\"Thank you.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nclacke on 2018-03-07:\n\"Re: flea market\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2502\n(2018-03-06) \"Volume Of Thought\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2018-03-10:\n\"Two comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2503\n(2018-03-07) \"My journey into podcasting\"\nby thelovebug.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-03-06:\n\"Wow\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nthelovebug on 2018-03-08:\n\"Re: Wow\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2505\n(2018-03-09) \"The power of GNU Readline - part 3\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJan on 2018-03-09:\n\"Some Lines Of Support\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2018-03-09:\n\"Comment Command\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2018-03-11:\n\"Surprisingly useful\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2018-03-25:\n\"Thanks for the comments\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2507\n(2018-03-13) \"Racket, Nix, Fractalide and the sounds of a Hong Kong New Town\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-02-25:\n\"typo\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-02-26:\n\"Re: typo\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nclacke on 2018-02-26:\n\"Re: typo\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nclacke on 2018-02-28:\n\"Re: that info.rkt for a node\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2018-03-20:\n\"Re: that info.rkt for a node\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2508\n(2018-03-14) \"False Prophets\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-03-23:\n\"You're right to worry, but ...\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nLostnbronx on 2018-03-26:\n\"I Agree With You, But...\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2018-03-28:\n\"Wendover Productions video\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2509\n(2018-03-15) \"AudioBookClub 16 Matcher Rules\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-03-15:\n\"interesting\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2514\n(2018-03-22) \"Electronics Calculator Kit\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nthelovebug on 2018-03-22:\n\"Blind faith\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2018-03-22:\n\"Enjoy the kit, Dave.\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nthelovebug on 2018-03-24:\n\"Done and dusted\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2515\n(2018-03-23) \"HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 2\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-03-27:\n\"Markdown shownotes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2516\n(2018-03-26) \"Intro to git branch\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2018-03-26:\n\"Intro to git\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-March/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        New series

                                                        \n

                                                        Three new series have been added to HPR this month:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • GNU Readline: shows about the Readline library
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Hobby Electronics: building electronic circuits and kits
                                                        • \n
                                                        • Introduction to Git: Klaatu\'s series of Git shows
                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to Windigo for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period 40 shows missing tags and/or summaries have been made whole.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n

                                                        The summary page has been further enhanced this month. The list of tags at the end of the page has been laid out to show the blocks with the same starting letter, and an alphabetic index added at the front. It is hoped that this will make it easier to find tags relating to the show to which you are about to add tags.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2546,'2018-05-07','HPR Community News for April 2018',1591,'Ken is on his own and talks about shows released and comments posted in April 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new hosts:
                                                        \n\n Tuula, \n bookewyrmm.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2521Mon2018-04-02HPR Community News for March 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2522Tue2018-04-03Flashbacks In Storytellinglostnbronx
                                                        2523Wed2018-04-04Run Linux on a Windows BoxJWP
                                                        2524Thu2018-04-05General problem solverTuula
                                                        2525Fri2018-04-06HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 3Various Hosts
                                                        2526Mon2018-04-09Gnu Awk - Part 10Dave Morriss
                                                        2527Tue2018-04-10Reviews Vs. Critiqueslostnbronx
                                                        2528Wed2018-04-11CCTV with DARKNEToperat0r
                                                        2529Thu2018-04-12What\'s in my podcatcherbookewyrmm
                                                        2530Fri2018-04-13Introduction to HealthAhuka
                                                        2531Mon2018-04-16Plot And Storylostnbronx
                                                        2532Tue2018-04-17Podcrawl Glasgow 2018thelovebug
                                                        2533Wed2018-04-18Burp Suite / ABCMouse Gameoperat0r
                                                        2534Thu2018-04-19Moving to Office 365 (and painting the ceiling)knightwise
                                                        2535Fri2018-04-20HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 4Various Hosts
                                                        2536Mon2018-04-23Lostnbronx examines points-of-view and tenses in storytelling.lostnbronx
                                                        2537Tue2018-04-24Recording HPR on the fly Part IIclacke
                                                        2538Wed2018-04-25My geeky plans for the new house.knightwise
                                                        2539Thu2018-04-26Interview - Austin Leeoperat0r
                                                        2540Fri2018-04-2728 - TLS 1.3Ahuka
                                                        2541Mon2018-04-30Microphone Wind Screen Demolostnbronx
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 18 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 11 comments on\n4 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2254\n(2017-03-23) \"Introduction to Model Rocketry\"\nby Steve Saner.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nJohn E Thompson on 2018-04-04:\n\"Great Show\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nSteve on 2018-04-04:\n\"Re: Great Show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2485\n(2018-02-09) \"The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E05 - I Saw the Invisible Man\"\nby The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP).
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nDraco Metallium on 2018-04-14:\n\"Two months without a new transmission\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2515\n(2018-03-23) \"HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 2\"\nby Various Hosts.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-04-03:\n\"ASCIIDoc shownotes\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2018-04-04:\n\"Markdown/ASCIIDoc\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nclacke on 2018-04-04:\n\"Overengineering\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2018-04-05:\n\"Re: Overengineering\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nclacke on 2018-04-05:\n\"Re: Overengineering\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2518\n(2018-03-28) \"Converting My Laptop to Dual Boot\"\nby Steve Saner.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nmongo on 2018-03-31:\n\"Good tutorial\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2018-04-06:\n\"Is OpenSCAD an alternative to Autodesk Fusion 360 ?\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nSteve on 2018-04-06:\n\"Really a different category of software\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 7 comments on 4 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2521\n(2018-04-02) \"HPR Community News for March 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nthe_remora on 2018-04-02:\n\"Handle Origin\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2018-04-07:\n\"Re: AND THEN IT'S GOT DIVS IN IT!!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKevin O'Brien on 2018-04-09:\n\"My name\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nclacke on 2018-04-12:\n\"Living the dream\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2524\n(2018-04-05) \"General problem solver\"\nby Tuula.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nWindigo on 2018-04-29:\n\"Thanks for the introduction\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2537\n(2018-04-24) \"Recording HPR on the fly Part II\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-03-28:\n\"An update\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2538\n(2018-04-25) \"My geeky plans for the new house.\"\nby knightwise.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nTuula on 2018-04-25:\n\"Such a beautiful soundscape\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-April/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to bjb and Windigo for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 18 shows which were missing them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2288,'2017-05-10','Installing and using virtualenvwrapper for python',665,'Installing and using virtualenvwrapper for python, (What I learned the hard way!)','

                                                        Installing Virtual env wrapper in linux

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Best documentation I have found for working with virtualenvwrapper:
                                                        \r\nhttps://python-guide-pt-br.readthedocs.io/en/latest/dev/virtualenvs/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Assuming you have pip installed.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Install virtualenv
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                            sudo -H pip install virtualenv
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Install virtualenvwrapper
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                            sudo -H pip install virtualenvwrapper
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Modify your .bashrc file to include that following lines:
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                            export WORKON_HOME=~/Envs\r\n    source /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Test the commands:

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • mkvirtualenv <project_name>
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • rmvirtualenv <project_name>
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • lsvirtualenv (Lists all virtual environments you have\r\ncreated.)

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • workon <project_name>
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • deactivate

                                                          • \r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Don\'t use SUDO when installing inside the virtualenv

                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',355,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','python, programming',0,0,1), (2289,'2017-05-11','Sendy Send. Tell if your email has been read!!',281,'Sigflup announces sendy send, which is a mechanism to tell if people read your email.','

                                                        https://ss.theadesilva.com/

                                                        ',115,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','HTML mail,read notification',0,0,1), (2291,'2017-05-15','Arch on CELES',725,'Convinces you, and herself that Arch Linux on a Chromebook is a good idea!','

                                                        ArchLinux on a CELES

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Samsung Chromebook 3

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Before begining

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        How-to

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Remove HW write-protect screw\r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Developer mode\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Enable Developer mode
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ...press, and hold the Esc + F3 (Refresh) keys – then press the Power button. This enters Recovery Mode...

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ...press Ctrl + D. It will ask you to confirm, then the system will revert its state and enable Developer Mode...

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ...press Ctrl + Alt + F2 (F2 is the \"forward\" arrow on the top row, →)

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ...Use chronos as the username...

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. SU & FW\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Escalate privileges. sudo -i
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • ChromeOS Firmware Utility Script\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            1. Install RW_LEGACY
                                                            2. \r\n
                                                            3. Set GBB Flags (1 second, SeaBIOS/Legacy)
                                                            4. \r\n
                                                            5. Remove ChromeOS Bitmaps (To look cool)
                                                            6. \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. OS & Kernel\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Install ArchLinux
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Install yaourt
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Install kernel with IRQ patch:
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • yaourt -G linux-galliumos-braswell&&cd !:2
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • makepkg -sifCc --skipinteg
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Install galliumos-braswell-config:\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • yaourt -S --force galliumos-braswell-config
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Grub\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Regenerate Grub configuration file\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Extra

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Sources

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        /etc/default/grub

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        GRUB_DEFAULT=0\r\nGRUB_TIMEOUT=5\r\nGRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=\"Arch\"\r\nGRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=\"quiet splash irqpoll\"\r\nGRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX=\"\"\r\nGRUB_PRELOAD_MODULES=\"part_gpt part_msdos\"\r\nGRUB_TERMINAL_INPUT=console\r\nGRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768\r\nGRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep\r\nGRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true\r\nGRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY=true\r\nGRUB_COLOR_HIGHLIGHT=\"light-cyan/blue\"\r\nGRUB_SAVEDEFAULT=\"true\"
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        /etc/pacman.conf

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        RootDir     = /\r\nDBPath      = /var/lib/pacman/\r\nCacheDir    = /var/cache/pacman/pkg/\r\nLogFile     = /var/log/pacman.log\r\nGPGDir      = /etc/pacman.d/gnupg/\r\nHookDir     = /etc/pacman.d/hooks/\r\nHoldPkg     = pacman glibc\r\nCleanMethod = KeepInstalled\r\nUseDelta    = 0.7\r\nArchitecture = auto\r\nIgnorePkg   =\r\nIgnoreGroup =\r\nNoUpgrade   =\r\nNoExtract   =\r\nUseSyslog\r\nColor\r\nTotalDownload\r\nCheckSpace\r\nVerbosePkgLists\r\nILoveCandy\r\nSigLevel = PackageRequired\r\nLocalFileSigLevel = Optional\r\nRemoteFileSigLevel = Required\r\n[core]\r\nInclude = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist\r\n[extra]\r\nInclude = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist\r\n[community]\r\nInclude = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist\r\n[arch-anywhere]\r\nServer = https://arch-anywhere.org/repo/$arch\r\nSigLevel = Never
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        lscpu

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        Architecture :        x86_64\r\nMode(s) opératoire(s) des processeurs : 32-bit, 64-bit\r\nBoutisme :            Little Endian\r\nProcesseur(s) :       2\r\nListe de processeur(s) en ligne : 0,1\r\nThread(s) par cœur : 1\r\nCœur(s) par socket : 2\r\nSocket(s) :           1\r\nNœud(s) NUMA :       1\r\nIdentifiant constructeur : GenuineIntel\r\nFamille de processeur : 6\r\nModèle :             76\r\nNom de modèle :      Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU  N3050  @ 1.60GHz\r\nRévision :           3\r\nVitesse du processeur en MHz : 642.089\r\nVitesse maximale du processeur en MHz : 2160,0000\r\nVitesse minimale du processeur en MHz : 480,0000\r\nBogoMIPS :            3200.00\r\nVirtualisation :      VT-x\r\nCache L1d :           24K\r\nCache L1i :           32K\r\nCache L2 :            1024K\r\nNœud NUMA 0 de processeur(s) : 0,1\r\nFlags:                 fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall nx rdtscp lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good nopl xtopology tsc_reliable nonstop_tsc aperfmperf tsc_known_freq pni pclmulqdq dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr pdcm sse4_1 sse4_2 movbe popcnt tsc_deadline_timer aes rdrand lahf_lm 3dnowprefetch epb tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority ept vpid tsc_adjust smep erms dtherm ida arat
                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        lspci

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                        00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series SoC Transaction Register (rev 21)\r\n00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 21)\r\n00:0b.0 Signal processing controller: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series Power Management Controller (rev 21)\r\n00:14.0 USB controller: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series USB xHCI Controller (rev 21)\r\n00:1b.0 Audio device: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series High Definition Audio Controller (rev 21)\r\n00:1c.0 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series PCI Express Port #1 (rev 21)\r\n00:1c.2 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series PCI Express Port #3 (rev 21)\r\n00:1f.0 ISA bridge: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series PCU (rev 21)\r\n02:00.0 Network controller: Intel Corporation Wireless 7265 (rev 59)
                                                        \r\n',349,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','xe500c13,celes,chromebook,archlinux,arch',0,0,1), (2292,'2017-05-16','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 1',1306,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I give a brief introduction and demonstration of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2293,'2017-05-17','More supplementary Bash tips',2305,'Finishing off the subject of expansion in Bash (part 2)','

                                                        More supplementary Bash tips

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pathname expansion; part 2 of 2

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Expansion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As we saw in the last episode 2278 (and others in this sub-series) there are eight types of expansion applied to the command line in the following order:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Brace expansion (we looked at this subject in episode 1884)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tilde expansion (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Parameter and variable expansion (this was covered in episode 1648)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Command substitution (seen in episode 1903)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Arithmetic expansion (seen in episode 1951)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Process substitution (seen in episode 2045)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Word splitting (seen in episode 2045)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Pathname expansion (the previous episode 2278 and this one)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is the last topic in the (sub-) series about expansion in Bash.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode we will look at extended pattern matching as also defined in the “Manual Page Extracts” section at the end of the long notes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long Show Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have written out a moderately long set of notes about this subject and these are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash, expansion, filename expansion, extglob, extended pattern matching',0,0,1), (2294,'2017-05-18','Activities with a Toddler',663,'11 things you can do with a toddler you are taking care of.','

                                                        Here is the list I check when I am looking for something to do with my toddler. Note that these are good indoor activities.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        [ ] Milk and TV\r\n[ ] Duplo\r\n[ ] Dollhouse\r\n[ ] Meal preparation\r\n[ ] Mixing bowl\r\n[ ] Crafts or painting\r\n[ ] Sink time\r\n[ ] Chasing and tickling\r\n[ ] Reading\r\n[ ] Cat videos\r\n[ ] Container of similar things
                                                        ',250,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','parenting, toddlers, children',0,0,1), (2296,'2017-05-22','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 2',724,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I go through the general specification of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,43,1,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2301,'2017-05-29','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 3',804,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        This episode will be right up your street if you like rambling podcasts.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I planned to cover the supplied accessories of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver however somewhere along the line I rambled off topic and started blathering on about a whole range of topics.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I cover the VHF / UHF spectrum, radio frequency, wavelength Omni-directional antennas, mains hum time stamp fingerprinting among other things.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sit back and enjoy.

                                                        \r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2307,'2017-06-06','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 4',942,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the controls and connectors around the outside edge of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I couldn\'t find a link to the supposed problem with the headphone socket on the Baofeng UV5R and despite regularly plugging and unplugging the covert earpiece so far mine seems to be working OK as long as I don\'t push the plug too far in. Perhaps on this radio it is less of a problem than I first thought.

                                                        \r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2311,'2017-06-12','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 5',1166,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the rear and front panel features & controls of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2316,'2017-06-19','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 6',941,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the menus 0 to 5 of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2321,'2017-06-26','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 7',1107,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the menus 6 to 11 of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Link to the Free, open-source tool for programming your amateur radio. It supports a large number of manufacturers and models, as well as provides a way to interface with multiple data sources and formats. https://chirp.danplanet.com/projects/chirp/wiki/Home

                                                        \r\n',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2328,'2017-07-05','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 8',830,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the menus 12 to 24 of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Menu 12, T-DCS - Transmitter DCS: [ D023N -- D754I , OFF ], DCS Wikpedia
                                                          \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squelch#DCS

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 13, 13 T-CTCS - Transmitter CTCSS [ 67.0 -- 254.1, OFF ], CTCSS Wikipedia
                                                          \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_Tone-Coded_Squelch_System

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 14, VOICE - Voice Prompt [ ENG / CHI / OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 15, ANI-ID - Automatic Number ID Baofeng UV-5R

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 16, DTMFST - DTMF tone of transmit [1, 2, 3, 0]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 17, S-CODE - Signal Code [ 1-15 ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 18, SC-REV - Scanner Resume Method (Time, Carrier, Search) [ TO / CO / SE ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 19, PTT-ID - When to send the PTT-ID (Beginning, End Both) [ BOT / EOT BOTH ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 20, PTT-LT - Signal code sending delay. [ 0 -- 30 ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 21, MDF-A - Channel Mode A Display [ NAME / FREQ ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 22, MDF-B - Channel Mode B Display [ NAME / FREQ ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 23, BCL - Busy Channel Lock-out [ OFF / ON ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 24, 24 AUTOLK - Automatic Keypad Lock [ ON/ OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • DTMF, Wikipedia
                                                          \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-tone_multi-frequency_signaling

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2335,'2017-07-14','Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF Handset part 9',912,'An in depth series about the Baofeng UV5R VHF/UHF hand-held transceiver.','

                                                        In this episode I cover the menus 25 to 40 of the Baofeng UV5R VHF / UHF Hand Held Transceiver

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Menu 25, SFT-D - Frequency Shift Direction [ - / + / 0 ] (Duplex shift)

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 26, OFFSET - Frequency shift amount - Values (MHz) [ 00.000 - 69.990 ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 27, MEM-CH - Store a Memory Channel [ 000 -- 127 ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 28, DEL-CH - Delete a memory channel [ 000 -- 127 ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 29, WT-LED - Display back-light colour (Standby) [ BLUE, ORANGE, PURPLE, OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 30, RX-LED - Display back-light colour (Receive) [ BLUE, ORANGE, PURPLE, OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 31, TX-LED - Display back-light colour (Transmitt) [ BLUE, ORANGE, PURPLE, OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 32, AL-MOD - Alarm Mode, Activated when Orange button Held [ SITE, TONE, CODE ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 33, BAND - Band Selection [VHF/UHF]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 34, TDR-AB - Transmit selection in Dual Watch mode [ A / B / OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 35, STE (Squelch Tail Elimination) [ ON / OFF ]
                                                          \r\nhttps://ham.stackexchange.com/questions/3771/how-does-the-baofeng-radio-eliminate-squelch-tail

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 36, RP-STE - Squelch Tail Elimination through a repeater [ 1-10 OFF]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 37, RPT-RL - Delay the squelch tail of re-peater [ 1 - 10 OFF ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 38, 38 PONMGS - Power On Message [ Full / MSG ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 39, Roger Beep, Wikipedia [ ON / OFF ]
                                                          \r\nhttps://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/roger_beep

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Menu 40 RESET - Restore defaults [ VFO / ALL ]

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',201,43,0,'CC-BY-SA','Amateur Radio',0,0,1), (2299,'2017-05-25','What\'s in My Bag',376,'Here are the five items in the bag I take to my job.','

                                                        A computer instructor explains why there is a flashlight, a flash drive, a set of picture dice, a small notebook, and a cell phone in his bag.

                                                        \r\n',250,23,0,'CC-BY-SA','instructor, bag',0,0,1), (2304,'2017-06-01','Using Gnome 3 for the First Time',643,'Shane just switched his desktop environment from XFCE to Gnome 3. Here is his experience, so far.','

                                                        Here are the three Gnome 3 extensions I am enjoying:

                                                        \r\n',250,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ubuntu, linux, xfce, gnome 3, desktop environment',0,0,1), (2295,'2017-05-19','MX Linux',529,'Show about my latest Linux Distro find','

                                                        MX Linux OS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hi To all in HPR land, this is Tony Hughes in the UK back with you. I noticed that the queue has a couple of gaps in the next week or so here goes again.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Apart from my last show I\'ve recently done shows on current Linux distro\'s that are suitable for older hardware but with a modern look and feel and fully featured with the latest software available.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you have probably gathered by now if you have listened to my other shows I am a big fan of older Lenovo Laptops. My main Lenovo is an X230i i3 with a 2.5G cpu and 8Gig of Ram and a 120Gig SSD, it did have Mint 17.3 running on it and after running Mint 18 / 18.1 for several months on my desktop PC I decided to upgrade to 18.1 on the X230i.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I completed the install and on first boot after install the boot time had risen from about 40s to over 2 minutes, I suspected a problem with the install so did it again with the same result. I couldn\'t find any issues reported on the net so resorted to installing Linux Lite which is based on Ubuntu 16.04 as is Mint 18. The problem persisted after this install despite getting near 40s boots on the Lenovo X61s with an SSD and the same Distro.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I did another web search but could not find any other reports of this issue with the X230i so put a post on the Facebook community Distro hoppers. The response I got back from one member was to try MX16.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        MX Linux is a joint venture from the antiX and former MEPIS communities and is based on the latest Debian Stable "Jessie" with the XFCE desk top environment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I duly downloaded it and installed it in a Virtual PC using virtual box to see what it looked and felt like. The install is fairly user friendly although if you\'ve never had experience of Linux and installed other Distributions a new user may be a bit unsure when asked about the MBR and where to put it, other than that a fairly straightforward install.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On install there is a fairly good selection of the software you would need including a full install of LibreOffice, FireFox, Thunderbird, GIMP and synaptic package manager for adding further software from the repositories. MX have also included the ability to simply install codecs and additional drivers and a software installation system for popular Apps from the MX Welcome that comes up at boot or if disabled can be started form the menu. Also I installed it on a virtual 8Gig HDD and GParted reports use of 4.64Gig after install and updates, by default it only installs a 1G swap despite 2Gig allocated Ram in the VM.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I liked the look of MX and decided to give it a go on the X230i, install went smoothly and lo and behold boot was back to around 40s on first boot after install. So I\'ve updated the install, installed my packages I use that are not there by default such as Audacity, Scratch and a couple of other things I use. I\'ve also put it on the X61s I use and again working faultlessly, so I\'m happy again. Since I installed MX I found out from a member of my Makerspace/LUG that he had experienced the same problem with Ubuntu 16.04 based distro\'s and crippled SSD Boot times.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I like MX so much when it come to time to reinstall my Desk Top PC, which is about the only PC I use that is not constantly changing OS, I think I will be putting MX on it. This is a big deal for me as I\'ve been a loyal Mint user for over 5 years but MX is working so well on the Laptops at the moment it would be good to have the same OS on the Desktop PC as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Will MX stop my Distro Hopping, NO, I like trying out new things that\'s why I have several Laptops kicking around so I have spare hardware to try out new Linux stuff, but it is good to have something stable around when you need it, hence sticking with Mint for so long on the Desktop.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Distributions',0,0,1), (2297,'2017-05-23','More Magnatune Favourites',4112,'Andrew and Dave offer you some more tracks from Magnatune','

                                                        More Magnatune Favourites

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After nearly two years Andrew (@mcnalu) and Dave have prepared another show of some of their favourite music from Magnatune for your pleasure.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Magnatune,music',0,0,1), (2302,'2017-05-30','Bash snippet - nullglob',428,'After learning about the nullglob option I have started to use it','

                                                        Bash snippet - nullglob

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I recently did an HPR show about Bash filename expansion and described the \'shopt\' command and its options. One of the options I talked about was \'nullglob\' which controls what is returned from an expansion when no files match.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When \'nullglob\' is enabled, and a pattern does not match, nothing is returned. When it is disabled (the default) then the pattern itself is returned.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Although I didn\'t think I\'d ever need to, I recently wrote a script where I used \'nullglob\', and thought I would share a snippet of the code to demonstrate what I did.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The script is for managing mail messages containing tag and summary updates. I use Thunderbird for my mail and have configured it to drop these messages into a directory so I can process them. I use Thunderbird\'s message filters to do this. A certain amount of Spam is also received, and sometimes valid messages need a bit of work before they can be processed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The directory where the messages are saved (the spool area) is stored in the variable \'MAILDROP\' earlier in the script.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          1 #\r\n  2 # Find the files and store their names in an array. Use 'nullglob' so we get\r\n  3 # nothing when there is nothing, then revert to the original setting\r\n  4 #\r\n  5 NG="$(shopt -p nullglob)"\r\n  6 shopt -s nullglob\r\n  7 MESSAGES=( $MAILDROP/*.eml )\r\n  8 eval "$NG"\r\n  9 \r\n 10 #\r\n 11 # Exit if there's nothing to do or report what's there\r\n 12 #\r\n 13 if [[ ${#MESSAGES[@]} -gt 0 ]]; then\r\n 14     echo "Files in the spool area:"\r\n 15     printf "%s\\n" "${MESSAGES[@]}"\r\n 16 else\r\n 17     echo "The spool area is empty"\r\n 18     exit\r\n 19 fi
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The variable \'NG\' holds the state of \'nullglob\' before the script modifies it. Remember that \'shopt -p\' returns a list of commands that will revert the named options to their current state.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next (line 6) the \'nullglob\' option is enabled.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The array \'MESSAGES\' is created on line 7 to hold the list of mail files found in the spool area. This is done with a pattern which matches files that end with the string \'.eml\'. If we didn\'t have \'nullglob\' enabled then when there were no files the array would contain the pattern - which would be misleading.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Having collected the file details \'nullglob\' is turned off by executing the command in the variable \'NG\' on line 8.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You might think that the script could just turn \'nullglob\' on then turn it off again when it\'s no longer needed. However, I prefer to use the technique I have shown here because it needs to have no knowledge of the state of the option before it\'s set, and restores that state afterwards.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        By line 13 the array \'MESSAGES\' either contains a list of files or is empty. The script checks for these two cases by determining how many elements are in the array. Greater than zero means we have files to process and they are listed in lines 14 and 15. The script then goes on to do various things with the files.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If there were no files then the script reports this and exits.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That\'s it! This is not the only way to do this, but I like to write scripts that call as few sub-processes as I can, and this way appeals for that reason.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,shopt,nullglob,filename expansion',0,0,1), (2298,'2017-05-24','Phantom Power Drain',273,'diagnosing a phantom power drain on an automobile','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. disconnect negative battery cable.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. connect multimeter between battery and cable.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. read amp draw... 15-20 millivolts milliamps is on the high end.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. unplug fuses one at a time, until the problem circuit is identified.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        ... some lip smacking, and vocal fry.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Corrected 2017-05-27 - Editor

                                                        \r\n',329,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','automotive',0,0,1), (2303,'2017-05-31','Kdenlive Part 5 All About Audio',922,'Recording Audio in Kdenlive','

                                                        Hello again HPR listeners this is Geddes with you again with Kdenlive part 5 All About Audio. The topics included are:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Audio Recording and Synchronization

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Best Practices for a Basic Mix

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Exporting

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here\'s the link to the original article. https://opensource.com/life/11/12/kdenlive-part-5-all-about-audio

                                                        ',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kdenlive,opensource.com,recording,audio',0,0,1), (2305,'2017-06-02','Configuring an HP Laptop for Dual Boot Linux and Windows 10',684,'Installing Linux Ubuntu GNOME to dual boot with Windows 10 on an HP laptop.','

                                                        This presentation describes the installation of Ubuntu GNOME 16.04 to dual boot with Windows 10 Home on an HP Spectre x360-13 laptop. Previously, I had been using Linux in a virtual machine on Windows. After the update, there was a very significant improvement in performance working in Linux without the Windows/VM overhead. It turned out to not be difficult and was certainly worth doing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I found a lot of helpful information here: https://askubuntu.com/questions/666631

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Get Clonezilla here: https://clonezilla.org/

                                                        \r\n',356,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Dual-boot',0,0,1), (2340,'2017-07-21','Tracking the HPR queue in Python',1292,'I explain how I capture the number of HPR shows in the queue using python','

                                                        In this episode I explain how I use python to track the number of shows in the HPR queue and then turn on a blinkstick to indicate the size of the queue.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Python code included below

                                                        \r\n
                                                        #!/usr/bin/env python3\r\n\r\n### This is a scratchpad file I've created to try out snippets of code in python\r\n\r\n# The script below is for use with Python 3\r\n# This script should work out of the box on most systems running a version of Python 3 \r\n# If you happen to have a blinkstick lying about then your can uncomment the blinkstick module\r\n# and uncomment the references at the bottom of the program that call the blinkstick functions\r\n# Regards, Mr X\r\n\r\n\r\n# Imported modules\r\nfrom time import sleep          # used to pause program\r\n#from blinkstick import blinkstick  # used to control blinkstick nano attached to usb port of raspberry pi\r\nimport urllib.request           # used to capture hpr webpage content to get the number of HPR shows in the que\r\nimport re               # regular expressions, used to find sting in HPR webpage (get_hpr_que)\r\n\r\n\r\n# These functions control a blink stick nano attached to my raspberry pi USB port #################\r\n# They can be ignored or deleted if you don't have one\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_off():\r\n# Search for all attached blinksticks and turn them all off\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.turn_off()   # Turn front blinkstick LED off\r\n        bstick.set_color(channel=0, index=1, name="black")  # Turn rear blinkstick led off\r\n        print("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " turned off")\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_on(colour):\r\n# Turn blinkstick on and set led colour to string value stored in var colour\r\n# valid colours are, black, silver, gray, white, maroon, red, purple, fuchsia, green, lime, olive, yellow, navy, blue, teal, aqua\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.set_max_rgb_value(30)        # Sets max blinkstick RGB value to 15, makes LED dimm\r\n        bstick.set_color(name=colour)       # Turn blinkstick on, var colour determines colour\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex") + " [" + colour + "]")\r\n#hex\r\n\r\ndef bstick_on_random():\r\n# Turn blinkstick on colour random\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.set_random_color()\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex"))\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_blink_red():\r\n# Flash blinkstick colour red\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.blink(name="red")\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex"))\r\n\r\n################################################################################\r\n\r\n\r\ndef get_hpr_que():\r\n# Goto hacker public radio calendar page and extract the number of shows in the queue\r\n# then return the number of shows as an integer\r\n# also turns on blinkstick LED and sends number of HPR shows in the que to the display\r\n\r\n    url = 'https://hackerpublicradio.org/calendar.php'   # HPR url for calendar page\r\n    try:\r\n        html_content = urllib.request.urlopen(url).read()   # Try to read hpr calendar page\r\n    except:\r\n        print("ERROR: Problem acessing url " + url)     # if error accessing url then return -1\r\n        hpr_shows = -1\r\n        return hpr_shows\r\n    html_page = str(html_content)   # convert to string\r\n    line_begin = html_page.find('There are only <strong>') # find position of string in html page\r\n    line_end = line_begin + 70 # Store line end position (start position + 70)\r\n    line = html_page[line_begin:line_end]  # Capture string line\r\n    #print(line) # DEBUG Print line string\r\n    digit = re.findall(r'\\d+',line)         # Find digits in line\r\n    #print(digit[0])    # print the 1st digit\r\n    try:\r\n        hpr_shows = int(digit[0])   # convert digit list to integer days\r\n    except:                         # If show numbers not found then return -1\r\n        print("ERROR: Problem getting number of HPR shows in que.")\r\n        hpr_shows = -1\r\n        return hpr_shows\r\n    #print(hpr_shows) # DEBUG\r\n    #return hpr_shows\r\n    if hpr_shows > 9:       # If hpr show que > 9 turn on green LED\r\n        print("Turn on green blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_on("green")\r\n    elif hpr_shows > 5:     # Else if hpr show que > 5 turn on blue LED\r\n        print("Turn on blue blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_on("blue")\r\n    elif hpr_shows > -1:    # Else if hpr show que > -1 turn on ref LED\r\n        print("Turn on red blinkstick LED")     \r\n        #bstick_on("red")\r\n    else:\r\n        print("Flash red blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_blink_red() # Else blink LED to show error\r\n    print("The are " + str(hpr_shows) + " shows in the HPR que...")\r\n    sleep(4)\r\n    print("Turn off all blinkstick LED's")\r\n    #bstick_off()           # Turn blinkstick off\r\n\r\n\r\n# Main program\r\nget_hpr_que()
                                                        \r\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Python, Programming, Hardware, BlinkStick',0,0,1), (2308,'2017-06-07','Everyday package operations in Guix',986,'Here\'s how I use Guix in my day-to-day. Fleshed out audio of a comment on ep 2198.','

                                                        Back at hpr2198 :: How awesome is Guix and why will it take over the world I wrote a comment about how I use guix in everyday practice. Here\'s the full episode for that comment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The most common operations I do are:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • guix environment --ad-hoc ncdu, where ncdu stands for something I heard about and want to try out, or something I only use once a month. It is then “installed” in the spawned sub-shell only. This is an awesome feature.
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • If you haven’t heard about ncdu, look it up.
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Also in ~/.bash_aliases
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Also in ~/.local/share/applications\r\n
                                                            • Using stow, of course
                                                            \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • guix package -i ncdu if it turned out to be something I like and use every day
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • guix pull to get the latest definitions for this user
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • guix package -u to upgrade my permanently installed stuff for this user
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • guix package -d to erase history of what I had installed before and release these references for collection
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • guix gc to reclaim my precious disk space

                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Followup episode material:

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • What\'s in my .bash_aliases?
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Decentralized source control, for real this time, with git-ssb
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • What\'s so great about execline?
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • What\'s a stow?
                                                            • How I got rid of stow and learned to love guix to the fullest (Future episode. That\'s not where I am today.)
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Listen kids, stow is not a package manager (warning: fediverse drama ahead). It\'s a symlink farm manager that I use for package management.
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Very short episode: ncdu, eh?
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','guix,linux,nix,sysadmin,development',0,0,1), (2309,'2017-06-08','Crowdsourcing Accessibility',1354,'A show about my efforts to get lots of students to help correct transcriptions of my online lectures','

                                                        In order to meet basic accessibility standards, I need to have text alternatives to the audio of my online video lectures for my music appreciation class. I have a transcription tool called Dragon Dictate that can do most of the heavy lifting as far as getting a raw transcript of the audio, but the transcription it generates needs a lot of attention in terms of correction, capitalization, and punctuation. It also needs to have all of the text separated into logical paragraphs and it really helps to have proper section headings.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        There are 20 lectures in all, and I have finished doing 11 of them, but I still have nine to go and no time to do it. I had an idea to crowdsource this effort by giving extra-credit points to my students for doing little bits of it at a time. They get one extra-credit point for every one minute of lecture that they correct.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I got the idea for this from the Distributed Proofreaders project, where volunteers work to help correct any mistakes that are found in the OCR scans of public-domain books before being posted on a website like Project Gutenberg. So far I\'ve gotten about 30 minutes of lecture transcripts corrected by students who needed extra credit, and I have high hopes that we will finish the project either this summer or next fall.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        One excellent tool that I found while I was figuring out how to handle this project logistically is the Linux command line tool called mp3splt. I use this tool to cut the long lecture files up into one-minute segments like so:

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        mp3splt -t 1.0.0 L13audio.mp3
                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I also wrote my own script that will generate an HTML page with individual audio players for all of these one-minute audio files so that students can very easily choose an audio file to work on that is exactly one minute long. The script also pushes all of the audio files over to my server after creating ogg versions of the mp3s using mp32ogg.

                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n
                                                        #!/bin/bash
                                                        \r\n\r\nurl=\'https://servername.edu/path/to/filedir\'\r\npage=$(pwd)/$(basename $(pwd))_page.html\r\n\r\nLESSON=$(ls *.mp3 |head -n1 | sed -e \'s/audio.*$//\')\r\n\r\ncat >> $page <<EOFtop\r\n<h2><a href="https://servername.edu/path/to/filedir/$LESSON.html">RAW TRANSCRIPT HERE</a></h2>\r\nEOFtop\r\n\r\nfor i in *.mp3; do\r\n stem=$(basename $i .mp3)\r\n mp32ogg $i \r\n sleep .2\r\ncat >> $page <<EOF\r\n\r\n<h3>File: "$i"</h3>\r\n<div class="centered">\r\n <audio controls>\r\n <source src="$url/$stem.mp3" type="audio/mpeg">\r\n <source src="$url/$stem.ogg" type="audio/ogg">\r\n </audio>\r\n</div>\r\nEOF\r\ndone\r\n\r\nscp *.ogg servername:~/path/to/filedir/\r\nsleep 1\r\nscp *.mp3 servername:~/path/to/filedir/\r\n#sleep 1\r\nscp $page servername:~/path/to/filedir/\r\n
                                                        \r\n\r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Bloviate: to speak or write verbosely and windily—pundits bloviating on the radio
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',238,79,0,'CC-BY-SA','Accessibility, scripting, audio editing, speech-to-text',0,0,1), (2310,'2017-06-09','Kdenlive Part 6 Workflow and Conclusion. ',1136,'A look at the final Kdenlive project workflow and conclusion.','

                                                        Hello HPR listeners this is Geddes with part 6 the final article in this Kdenlive series entitled Workflow and Conclusion.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The topics included are:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • The Gold Master
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • The render menu and the gold master
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Encoding Workflow
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Post production workflow
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Conclusion
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here\'s the link to the original article.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://opensource.com/life/12/1/kdenlive-part-6-workflow-and-conclusion

                                                        \r\n',310,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kdenlive,opensource.com,workflow',0,0,1), (2312,'2017-06-13','Troubleshooting Websites with XAMPP',886,'Frank describes how he used XAMPP to clone his website to localhost so he could shoot some trouble.','

                                                        Using XAMMP To Toubleshoot a Website

                                                        \r\n

                                                        XAMMP is package containing a complete LAMPP stack configured to work out of the box. It is avalable for Mac, Windows, and Linux from ApacheFriends.org and includes

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Apache
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. MariaDB
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. PHP
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Perl
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        XAMPP is excellent for testing a new website, testing updates for an existing site, or troubleshooting a misbehaving site.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this podcast, Frank tells how to set up XAMPP against the background of having recently had to troubleshoot his own recalcitrant website.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        XAMPP startup messages:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        # cd /opt/lampp\r\n# ./lampp start\r\nStarting XAMPP for Linux 5.6.30-0...\r\nXAMPP: Starting Apache...ok.\r\nXAMPP: Starting MySQL...ok.\r\nXAMPP: Starting ProFTPD...ok.
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',195,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','XAMPP,Apache,PHP,Perl,Wordpress',0,0,1), (2313,'2017-06-14','NilFS2',2099,'Klaatu talks about NilFS2','

                                                        \r\nKlaatu talks about NilFS2, including how to monitor checkpoints, create snapshots, and browse snapshots.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nNILFS or NILFS2 (New Implementation of a Log-structured File System) is a log-structured file system implementation for the Linux kernel. It is being developed by Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) CyberSpace Laboratories and a community from all over the world. NILFS was released under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).\r\n
                                                        \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NILFS\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://nilfs.sourceforge.net/en/\r\n

                                                        \r\n',78,77,0,'CC-BY-SA','file system,NILFS,NILFS2,checkpoint,snapshot',0,0,1), (2317,'2017-06-20','Bash snippet - extglob and scp',1707,'How does scp manage extended glob patterns?','

                                                        Bash snippet - extglob and scp

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Problem

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Following on from my last show on filename expansion, concentrating on extended patterns and the extglob option, I was asked a question by Jon Kulp in the comment section.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Jon was using ls *(*.mp3|*.ogg) to find all OGG and MP3 files in a directory which also held other files. However, when he wanted to copy this subset of files elsewhere he had problems using this expression in an scp command.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Having done some investigations to help solve this I thought I\'d put what I found into an HPR episode and share it, and this is the show.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Along the way clacke commented too and this led me to more investigations!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As often happens, my idea of a brief episode turned into something much longer, so I converted the notes into long notes which you can find here. In them I have marked some sections which you might want to skip over -- unless you are as much of a geek as I am! I have not covered these sections in detail in the audio.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,shopt,filename expansion,scp,rsync',0,0,1), (2314,'2017-06-15','Bad Caps',1584,'NYbill talking about repairing a computer motherboard.','\r\n

                                                        NYbill talks about repairing a motherboard.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Errata:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Even though I go into a bit about different types of capacitors I didn\'t plan on this being an episode about capacitors themselves. Even though I mention some different types. Bonus, there are also Trimmer Caps.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        And yes, I know LCD\'s don\'t have a trace. The old school CRT user popped out there. You all knew what I meant.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, I know I mentioned getting a 90 piece cap set from Banggood. I decided to order proper Nichicon replacements from Digikey. Had this been a repair for myself, I would use the no name caps I ordered from China. But, being this repair is for a friend, I figured I better get the real deal. ...BTW they were 220 uf caps.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        (Thanks Jezra for the musical interlude. We were joking calling it, "Time Passing".)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pics for the episode:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','repair,motherboard,capacitor,polymer electrolytic capacitor,ceramic capacitor',0,0,1), (2315,'2017-06-16','Penguicon 2017 Report',1211,'Penguicon 2017 took place on April 28-30, 2017 in Southfield, Michigan','

                                                        Penguicon 2017 is a combined technology and science fiction convention in Southfield, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, and presents over 500 hours of programming over the entire weekend. Of this, around 100 hours are open source, tech-related. In this episode I tell you about my own personal experience at Penguicon this year.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Penguicon 2017, open source event',0,0,1), (2325,'2017-06-30','Insurance - How It Works',1292,'To begin discussing the policy we need to first explain how insurance works','

                                                        Health policy is difficult and tricky. In the U.S. health care is mostly financed through insurance. How does that work, and what does it imply. There are some hard truths here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy',0,0,1), (2319,'2017-06-22','Minimal Music Site 17.05.39 now available on sourceforge.net',1809,'MattKingUSA review of dell gaming laptop and an update on Minimal Music Site','

                                                        Hey this is MattKingUSA doing an update of my project Minimal Music Site. And also a review of my new laptop! Thanks for listening!

                                                        \r\n',340,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','review,laptop,php,cms,music',0,0,1), (2320,'2017-06-23','Living Computers: Museum + Labs',938,'Free Shell accounts on old Computers with old programing langs','

                                                        From Wikipedia:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Living Computers: Museum + Labs (LCM+L) is a computer and technology museum located in the SoDo neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. LCM+L showcases vintage computers which provide interactive sessions, either through time-sharing operating systems or single-user interfaces. This gives users a chance to actually use the computers on-line or in person in the museum. An expansion adds direct touch experiences with contemporary technologies such as virtual reality, self-driving cars, the internet of things, and robotics. This puts today\'s computer technology in the context of how it\'s being used to tackle real-world issues. LCM+L also hosts a wide range of educational programs and events in their state-of-the art classroom and lab spaces.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','museum,vintage computer',0,0,1), (2329,'2017-07-06','Building a Digital Clock Kit',1707,'I bought a self-build digital clock on eBay and document the building process','

                                                        Building a Digital Clock Kit

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In April 2017 my son and I decided to each build a digital clock. I had been interested in the idea since seeing Big Clive build one on YouTube, and I think my son had been similarly motivated.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        He found one, which I have linked to below. It\'s smaller than the one shown by Big Clive, comes from ShenZhen China, and costs $5.35 (about £4.18) postage free. It takes a long time to arrive, so patience is needed!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are many digital clock kits on eBay, and lots of YouTube videos showing how to build them. I think it\'s a great project for someone wanting some soldering practice which is a little more demanding than a beginner project.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One type to avoid, I think, is the surface mount type. The one I have uses a through-hole PCB, but I have seen some that provide SMD (surface-mounted device) components. That type of soldering is beyond me at the moment (though my son has been teaching himself to do it).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Long notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have provided detailed notes detailing the unpacking and building of this device, with photographs. These are available here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,103,1,'CC-BY-SA','electronics,clock,soldering',0,0,1), (2322,'2017-06-27','A bit of background on virtualenvwrapper',1059,'Linux processes, the process environment and the shell, as they relate to virtualenvwrapper.','

                                                        A bit of background on virtualenvwrapper

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Or, Linux processes, the process environment and the shell.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        speaker intro

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hi, I\'m bjb. I\'ve been using Linux for wow, 20 years now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        motivation

                                                        \r\n

                                                        knox gave a nice podcast on virtualenvwrapper - it was timely for me, I was just trying to use it the other day and not finding all the bits and pieces. So thank you for collecting that info in one place.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        knox asked why virtualenvwrapper behaves as it does ...

                                                        \r\n

                                                        introduction

                                                        \r\n

                                                        virtualenvwrapper is a combination of bash functions and programs.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To understand how it works you need to know a little bit about bash and Linux.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I know there have been some very good earlier and current! HPR shows on bash. But bash is a huge topic. The man page for it was 3500 lines about 10 years ago ...now it is 4300 plus lines. It has a LOT of functionality, and when you\'re just trying to get something done, it\'s overwhelming to look at. So in this HPR episode, I will just answer one or two of knox\'s questions. It gives me an excuse to make an episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also I\'m not going to go too deep into the description. In order to keep the podcast short and to-the-point, I\'m just going to cover what is needed. There is lots more depth - there are several shells you could use and I\'m only going to talk about bash; at startup bash can read more than just the files I mention in this podcast ... I\'m just not going to cover all the possibilities. That\'s what the over 4300 line man page is for : -). If you have questions, ask them in the comments, or make your own podcast and ask them! Maybe you\'ll get some answers - either from me or from another HPR community member.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        environment for processes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A program that has no inputs is not flexible or powerful. As a simple example, a program that displays the results of a hard-coded search is certainly useful if you want to know about that hard-coded search term. But a program that can search for a term that you specify at run time is so much more useful. You do not have to recompile the program to change the search term.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Programs can receive inputs in several ways.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On Linux and other unix-like OSs, a program can be run with arguments, read and write to file descriptors (and that includes standard in, standard out and standard error), they can receive signals - and they have another input: the "environment". That is a bunch of key-value pairs that are made available to the program when it starts. Some examples of environment variables are PATH, HOME, EDITOR and PAGER. The name of the environment variable, \'PAGER\', is the key, and the thing on the other side of the equals sign, like \'less\', is the value - the pair make up a key-value entry in the environment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        People who program in C or C++ and maybe other languages know that the program starts with a main function, and that function has some parameters. The first one is a count of arguments and the second one is an array of strings, each string being one of the arguments passed to the program when it is launched. There is a little-known optional third parameter: an array of strings that represents the "environment".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The way the program gets these strings is that it inherits them from its parent process. The parent process of programs that are run from the command line is ... the command line itself, bash. Or csh, or whatever your shell is. When the program starts, it gets a copy of the exported parts of the environment of its parent.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        environment in bash

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Bash gives you the ability to set these environment variables and mark them as "available for handing to subprocesses", and that is what is happening when you give that "export" command.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can view all the currently defined variables that have been marked for export by using the "env" command with no arguments. E N V - echo november victor. Or, env, short for environment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since these variables are passed down the generations from parent to child, it is usually sufficient to define it once at the top level.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The command line itself is a program called bash. It reads some files at startup.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As an example of the "generations", you can call bash from within bash. And you can call bash again from within that bash. Then the first bash is the parent of the second one, and the second one is the parent of the third. The third bash is the child of the second.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can see the environment changing: Set a variable fred=one in the first shell and export it:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        export fred=one

                                                        \r\n

                                                        then run bash. In that bash you can echo $fred, and see that fred is one. Now you can change fred to two:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        export fred=two

                                                        \r\n

                                                        and run the third bash. In the third bash, you can see that fred is two:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        echo $fred

                                                        \r\n

                                                        now exit bash with the exit command.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you echo $fred, you will see fred is still two, since we set it to two just before we ran the third bash. But if you exit again, you will be back to the first bash, and you will see that fred is now one. This is the environment that bash had, just before you launched the second bash. The second and third environments are gone - those processes terminated when the exit command was given on their prompts; and when they did, their environments were cleaned up and removed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In the show notes, I have another exercise to help with understanding this environment thing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here\'s another exercise to illustrate this principle. Type bash and
                                                        \r\nenter, and you will be in a subshell. If you show a process listing
                                                        \r\nin a hierarchical format, with children indented from their parents,
                                                        \r\nyou will see that the bash you are currently in is a child of
                                                        \r\nanother bash. The command to see the list of running processes in
                                                        \r\nhierarchical format is:

                                                        \r\n

                                                            ps -efH

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are several bash processes. In order to pick out the bash
                                                        \r\ninstance that I\'m running, I look for the ps process, because it has
                                                        \r\na uniqe string in the arguments: -efH. In the less session, search
                                                        \r\nfor \'efH\' by typing "/efH". The screen will jump to where the
                                                        \r\nps -efH process is, and highlight the "efH" string that you searched
                                                        \r\nfor. The line you searched for will be at the top of the display
                                                        \r\n... to see the few lines above, type "kkkk" (one k for each line to
                                                        \r\nmove up). To exit from less, type q.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Go ahead and export another made-up variable - perhaps your street name:

                                                        \r\n

                                                           export CHESTNUT=rizwan

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Make sure it is there with the env command:

                                                        \r\n

                                                           env | grep CHESTNUT

                                                        \r\n

                                                        and then run another subshell, and search for it again:

                                                        \r\n

                                                           bash
                                                        \r\n   env | grep CHESTNUT

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Exit the various shells with the "exit" command or by typing ^D. If
                                                        \r\nyou exit the subshell, and the shell in which you created the
                                                        \r\nCHESTNUT environment variable, you can run the env command and
                                                        \r\nsearch for that environment variable - it will not be there. The
                                                        \r\nprogram in which the environment variable was created has terminated,
                                                        \r\nand its environment has been discarded.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        bash startup files

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When bash is a login shell, it reads ~/.bash_profile. When it is not a login shell, but some subshell of the login shell, it reads ~/.bashrc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So for things that you only need to set once, you can put them in ~/.bash_profile. For things that you have to run for each new subshell, you put them in .bashrc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        (Note that most distributions will set up the user accounts so they will run ~/.bashrc from .bash_profile for interactive shells)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        the PATH

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is important, because of two things. The first is the PATH. The PATH is one of the environment variables that is used by the system to look for executables. So if you want to run a program, it should be in one of the directories on the PATH, or you will have to specify the full path to the program when running it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When you first get your account on a system, there is a default version of the .bashrc and .bash_profile files. In .bash_profile there should be a definition of the PATH. It contains the system directories like /usr/bin and /bin - you don\'t want to remove those from your path or your shell will become next to useless - you will have to use full paths for all commands. So the way that people add directories to the PATH is to assign the existing value of PATH to itself, plus the desired new directories. For example:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        PATH=$PATH:/home/bjb/bin

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        But if you put this in .bashrc, then every subshell will have another copy of the directory /home/bjb/bin tacked onto the end of the PATH. So the right place to put this definition is in ~/.bash_profile, where it will be executed once and then inherited by all the subshells.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        shell functions and aliases

                                                        \r\n

                                                        However not everything you need in the shell is inherited from the parent program. It turns out that another facility that bash supplies and that virtualenv uses is the ability to define and execute bash functions. Bash also has aliases.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A bash function is a series of bash commands that have been given a name, and that you can run by typing that name. It can also receive arguments that can influence how the function will behave. HPR episode 1757 by Dave Morriss called "Useful Bash Functions" talks about bash functions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can see the list of currently defined bash functions by using the bash command: declare -F

                                                        \r\n

                                                        An alias is a simpler version of a function - it is (usually) just a shorter string to represent a longer or more complicated command, to make command line use easier (assuming you can remember all the aliases in the first place).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can see the list of currently defined aliases by using the bash command: alias

                                                        \r\n

                                                        virtualenvwrapper makes use of bash functions. This has consequences.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        the bash builtin command \'source\'

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One is that you need to define those functions in every subshell. That\'s why you need to put "source /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh" in your bashrc.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well it seems that on a Debian system virtualenvwrapper puts the workon shell function into your shell via a more convoluted route. I will describe it in the show notes. But in the end, the virtualenvwrapper file that defines the virtualenvwrapper adds the function workon to your shell by sourcing the file /etc/bash_completion.d/virtualenvwrapper whenever .bashrc is sourced. (Note that "." is shorthand for the bash "source" built-in command.) The "workon" function is defined in /etc/bash_completion.d/virtualenvwrapper (the definition is about in the middle of the file.)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        - ~/.bashrc sources /etc/bash_completion or /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion
                                                        \r\n  (whichever one it finds first);
                                                        \r\n- which sources /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion;
                                                        \r\n- which sources all the files in /etc/bash_completion.d
                                                        \r\n- one of which is virtualenvwrapper.sh
                                                        \r\n- which defines the bash function workon.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Look at that, on a Debian system "apt-cache show virtualenvwrapper" does indeed list bash-completion as a dependency. The virtualenvwrapper upstream does not assume you will be using command completion, and in the comments at the top of the /etc/bash_completion.d/virtualenvwrapper file tell you to put "source .../virtualenvwrapper.sh" into your ~/.bashrc file.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A description of bash-completion could be a topic of another podcast (I\'m not actually volunteering to do this one, heh, just suggesting it as a topic).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        life cycle of environment

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another consequence is this: When you run a program, it will inherit a copy of the environment of its parent. When it is done, it will exit and that environment will disappear. So, you cannot run a program or subshell to try to affect your environment. It will affect the subshell or program environment, and as soon as the command is done, that updated environment will disappear.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The "source" built-in bash command is meant to allow you to run a bunch of commands in a file as if they had been typed on the command line. So you can put commands that affect the environment, and the environment will still have the changes when the sourcing is done.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        back to virtualenvwrapper: conclusion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So, virtualenvwrapper is mainly changes to the environment. It consists of a few files that are stored in ~/.virtualenvs, with names like postactivate and premkvirtualenv. They are basically hooks to add functionality before and after the commands you would issue for virtualenv, so you can customize virtualenv.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To understand virtualenvwrapper, let\'s have a quick look at virtualenv first. The things you do with virtualenv are to create a virtualenv, destroy one, and activate one.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So the things you can do with virtualenvwrapper are to run some script or scriptlet before or after you create a virtualenv, destroy a virtualenv, or activate a virtualenv.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The main thing to customize is the "where to find the activate file" and the "what to do after activating \'postactivate\'".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It does this by setting environment variables (like PATH and PYTHONHOME) appropriately and by defining bash functions to do things like change directory to where the project is.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You just have to edit .virtualenvs/postactivate to contain the location of your project files. You also define WORKON_HOME to be the directory that contains all your virtualenvs (for me that is /usr/local/pythonenv, but for most people it will be some directory in their home directory.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Summary

                                                        \r\n

                                                        virtualenv manipulates the environment in order to allow you to have different python setups for your different projects - handy if you have one project that depends on different versions of python packages than another project and you want to run both.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        But virtualenv leaves a few rough edges, like leaving it up to you to find the virtualenv in order to source the activate script. That is where virtualenvwrapper comes in.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have talked about the environment, and how virtualenvwrapper manipulates the environment to make it easier to work with the virtualenvs that you have created.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The environment refers to the set of environment variables that are defined and passed to child processes. We also discussed the process hierarchy and that a new environment is created for a new process, and it is destroyed when that process exits. We covered sourcing a file of shell commands, so that if those commands affect the environment, then when the sourcing is done, the environment left is the one that was changed and the changes persist past the source command. We talked about the .bash_profile and the .bashrc files.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        HPR exhortation

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You\'ve been listening to Hacker Public Radio. Anyone can make a show -if I can do it, so can you.

                                                        \r\n',357,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','python,virtualenvwrapper,virtualenv,bash,linux',0,0,1), (2323,'2017-06-28','How to Configure Mumble in Real Time',384,'The cast of the urandom podcast help a guest troubleshoot their Mumble setup in real time. ','

                                                        Links relevant to the show:

                                                        \r\n',270,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Mumble, Podcasting, Audiobooks, Troubleshooting, How To',0,0,1), (2566,'2018-06-04','HPR Community News for May 2018',3807,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in May 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2542Tue2018-05-01How I helped my dad run a static website using SparkleShareclacke
                                                        2543Wed2018-05-02Home Theater - Part 1 Hardwareoperat0r
                                                        2544Thu2018-05-03How I prepared episode 2493: YouTube Subscriptions - updateDave Morriss
                                                        2545Fri2018-05-04HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 5Various Hosts
                                                        2546Mon2018-05-07HPR Community News for April 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2547Tue2018-05-08MSYS2clacke
                                                        2548Wed2018-05-09Single Vs Multiple Characterslostnbronx
                                                        2549Thu2018-05-10DVD ripping using old hardwareArcher72
                                                        2550Fri2018-05-11Howto get started playing RPGsklaatu
                                                        2551Mon2018-05-14Calibrating CalibrationNYbill
                                                        2552Tue2018-05-15What is stow?clacke
                                                        2553Wed2018-05-16Get ahead with git HEADklaatu
                                                        2554Thu2018-05-17Gnu Awk - Part 11b-yeezi
                                                        2555Fri2018-05-18HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 6Various Hosts
                                                        2556Mon2018-05-21Building trustklaatu
                                                        2557Tue2018-05-22Styx -- The Purely Functional Static Site Generatorclacke
                                                        2558Wed2018-05-23Battling with English - part 1Dave Morriss
                                                        2559Thu2018-05-24My Favourite Browser extensionMrX
                                                        2560Fri2018-05-25General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)Ken Fallon
                                                        2561Mon2018-05-28A reluctant dog walkMrX
                                                        2562Tue2018-05-29I bought a laptopclacke
                                                        2563Wed2018-05-30Action In Storytellinglostnbronx
                                                        2564Thu2018-05-31Intro to Fossilklaatu
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 18 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 7 comments on\n5 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr1762\n(2015-05-05) \"HPR Audio Book Club 10\"\nby HPR_AudioBookClub.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-05-12:\n\"Tickles me in places I'm not sure I'm comfortable with\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2381\n(2017-09-18) \"Benefits of a tabletop\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nBrian DeRocher on 2018-05-02:\n\"open source games\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2536\n(2018-04-23) \"Lostnbronx examines points-of-view and tenses in storytelling.\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nFweeb on 2018-05-02:\n\"2nd person\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-05-02:\n\"Chinese\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nlostnbronx on 2018-05-02:\n\"Fweeb, I think you're right\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2540\n(2018-04-27) \"28 - TLS 1.3\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nGavtres on 2018-04-30:\n\"TLS 1.3\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2541\n(2018-04-30) \"Microphone Wind Screen Demo\"\nby lostnbronx.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nfolky on 2018-05-03:\n\"Very quit\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 11 comments on 8 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2546\n(2018-05-07) \"HPR Community News for April 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-05-07:\n\"Re: butchering\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2547\n(2018-05-08) \"MSYS2\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClaudioM on 2018-05-08:\n\"MSYS2 is What Cygwin Should Be\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGavtres on 2018-05-08:\n\"Git Bash\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2549\n(2018-05-10) \"DVD ripping using old hardware\"\nby Archer72.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2550\n(2018-05-11) \"Howto get started playing RPGs\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nredrider06 on 2018-05-22:\n\"Howto get started playing RPGs\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2551\n(2018-05-14) \"Calibrating Calibration\"\nby NYbill.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nmcnalu on 2018-05-14:\n\"Oscillowant\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2018-05-14:\n\"A chimp by another name...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2556\n(2018-05-21) \"Building trust\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-05-25:\n\"Profound\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2557\n(2018-05-22) \"Styx -- The Purely Functional Static Site Generator\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-04-05:\n\"Addendum: Styx was written by Eric Sagnes\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2560\n(2018-05-25) \"General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-05-24:\n\"The date\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nNYbill on 2018-05-25:\n\"Nice TLDR.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-May/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Website changes

                                                        \n

                                                        There have been two changes to the HPR website in May:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • The tags for a show are now being displayed in the header of each show page

                                                        • \n
                                                        • A fault in the comment display code, which resulted in comments containing the percent sign (%) not to be displayed, has been corrected.

                                                        • \n
                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to Windigo for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 2 shows which were missing them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2586,'2018-07-02','HPR Community News for June 2018',3510,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in June 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nThere were no new hosts this month.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2565Fri2018-06-01HPR 2017 New Years Eve show part 7Various Creative Commons Works
                                                        2566Mon2018-06-04HPR Community News for May 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2567Tue2018-06-05Son of Hunky PunkClaudio Miranda
                                                        2568Wed2018-06-06Personal financeklaatu
                                                        2569Thu2018-06-07Pandemic: Reign of Cthulu board game reviewklaatu
                                                        2570Fri2018-06-08Penguicon 2018 ReportAhuka
                                                        2571Mon2018-06-11Kill Dr. Luckyklaatu
                                                        2572Tue2018-06-12What\'s in my tool kitbookewyrmm
                                                        2573Wed2018-06-13Foundations of git rebaseklaatu
                                                        2574Thu2018-06-14Personal cash-only financeklaatu
                                                        2575Fri2018-06-15Quick Tips June 2018operat0r
                                                        2576Mon2018-06-18My swedish and german podcasts part 1folky
                                                        2577Tue2018-06-19Emigrationklaatu
                                                        2578Wed2018-06-20LinuxLUGcast 102 the lost episodeHonkeymagoo
                                                        2579Thu2018-06-21Ubuntu 18.04 MateTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2580Fri2018-06-22DiabetesAhuka
                                                        2581Mon2018-06-25My new 3D printer - impressions of the Creality Ender 3Dave Morriss
                                                        2582Tue2018-06-263 Contribution case studiesklaatu
                                                        2583Wed2018-06-27Random RantTheDUDE
                                                        2584Thu2018-06-28Plot Twists In Storytellinglostnbronx
                                                        2585Fri2018-06-29Check to see if a Remote Control is workingKen Fallon
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 20 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 10 comments on\n7 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr1992\n(2016-03-22) \"How I\'m handling my podcast-subscriptions and -listening\"\nby folky.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nfolky on 2018-06-07:\n\"Changed links to my gits\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2158\n(2016-11-09) \"Art Club\"\nby Brian in Ohio.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nMathMann on 2018-06-05:\n\"Art Club\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2542\n(2018-05-01) \"How I helped my dad run a static website using SparkleShare\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nclacke on 2018-06-15:\n\"What is SparkleShare?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2552\n(2018-05-15) \"What is stow?\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nclacke on 2018-06-15:\n\"Clarification\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2557\n(2018-05-22) \"Styx -- The Purely Functional Static Site Generator\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-06-15:\n\"Killer feature\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2558\n(2018-05-23) \"Battling with English - part 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nMichael on 2018-06-14:\n\"Great idea!\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-06-14:\n\"Thanks Michael\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nHipstre on 2018-06-15:\n\"Battling With English\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2018-06-15:\n\"Thanks Hipstre\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2562\n(2018-05-29) \"I bought a laptop\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nclacke on 2018-06-15:\n\"Pinebook\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 10 comments on 7 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2566\n(2018-06-04) \"HPR Community News for May 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-06-15:\n\"The group of the tab is in the windowing (of it)\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-06-15:\n\"I don't use multiple windows\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2568\n(2018-06-06) \"Personal finance\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nnorrist on 2018-06-11:\n\"Receint pocdast on US Social Security\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2574\n(2018-06-14) \"Personal cash-only finance\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJWP on 2018-06-25:\n\"This Show about Cash\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2576\n(2018-06-18) \"My swedish and german podcasts part 1\"\nby folky.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-06-19:\n\"Home country of choice\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2018-06-19:\n\"A english/german recommendation\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nfolky on 2018-06-20:\n\"Here is the link\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2579\n(2018-06-21) \"Ubuntu 18.04 Mate\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nJWP on 2018-06-25:\n\"Great Little update\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2582\n(2018-06-26) \"3 Contribution case studies\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-06-27:\n\"Would love HPR feedback\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2585\n(2018-06-29) \"Check to see if a Remote Control is working\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2018-06-29:\n\"There is one more...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-June/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Workflow changes

                                                        \n

                                                        There has been a change to the HPR workflow this month:

                                                        \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • Earlier in 2018 a change was made to the database to add an additional version of the host name. This is intended to be spoken by espeak and can hold an alternative spelling which espeak handles better in the audio preamble of shows. In this way the name \'thelovebug\', for example, which espeak renders as "Thel Ove Bug" can be stored as \'TheLoveBug\', which espeak pronounces correctly.

                                                        • \n
                                                        • The use of this field has now been incorporated into the workflow.

                                                        • \n
                                                        • Many of these "espeak names" were changed in the database, but we probably haven\'t catered for them all. If your name is being mispronounced by espeak let us know and we\'ll try and fix it.

                                                        • \n
                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2611,'2018-08-06','HPR Community News for July 2018',5053,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in July 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Philip.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2586Mon2018-07-02HPR Community News for June 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2587Tue2018-07-03Cleaning out your Digital Guttersknightwise
                                                        2588Wed2018-07-04Miniature paintingTuula
                                                        2589Thu2018-07-05Saving Money: a response to Klaatu\'s Personal Finance SeriesJon Kulp
                                                        2590Fri2018-07-06Blowing a PC Power SupplyTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2591Mon2018-07-09International TroubleshootingNYbill
                                                        2592Tue2018-07-10Tech Talk With Allisonsigflup
                                                        2593Wed2018-07-11Intro to De Bellis AntiquitatisTuula
                                                        2594Thu2018-07-12Using nmtui, the Network Manager Terminal User interfacePhilip
                                                        2595Fri2018-07-13New laptop bargain?Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2596Mon2018-07-16Battling with English - part 2Dave Morriss
                                                        2597Tue2018-07-17How to Fix a Remote with Buttons that Don\'t WorkJon Kulp
                                                        2598Wed2018-07-18Calculating planetary orbits in HaskellTuula
                                                        2599Thu2018-07-19Fitting a 3.5mm adapter to a bluetooth receiver.Ken Fallon
                                                        2600Fri2018-07-20Special episode on 2600, Blue Boxes, PhreakingKen Fallon
                                                        2601Mon2018-07-23Liverpool Makerfest 2018Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2602Tue2018-07-24HPR Quick Tips July 2018operat0r
                                                        2603Wed2018-07-25Dummy shares a tip and a tip/rant about asking and answering questionsdodddummy
                                                        2604Thu2018-07-26Restoration of a Fasco L55A Hassock FanJon Kulp
                                                        2605Fri2018-07-27The Eyes Have ItAhuka
                                                        2606Mon2018-07-30Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Dan LynchTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2607Tue2018-07-31Processingklaatu
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 28 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 6 comments on\n4 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2519\n(2018-03-29) \"the_remora Builds a character in Edge of the Empire\"\nby the_remora.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nKlaatu on 2018-07-04:\n\"great walkthrough\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2558\n(2018-05-23) \"Battling with English - part 1\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 5:\nThe Snitch on 2018-07-06:\n\"The Jig is up Dave !\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2018-07-06:\n\"Re: The Jig is up\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2579\n(2018-06-21) \"Ubuntu 18.04 Mate\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2018-07-01:\n\"Great little update\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2583\n(2018-06-27) \"Random Rant\"\nby TheDUDE.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nRandyNose AKA TheNose100 on 2018-07-01:\n\"The Juiced Penguin\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-07-19:\n\"mp3 is not a real problem\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 22 comments on 11 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2588\n(2018-07-04) \"Miniature painting\"\nby Tuula.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2018-07-04:\n\"painting miniatures\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-07-09:\n\"Wonder no more\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2589\n(2018-07-05) \"Saving Money: a response to Klaatu\'s Personal Finance Series\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2018-07-08:\n\"Thanks for furthering this discussion\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njonkulp on 2018-07-09:\n\"The Suburban Option\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2590\n(2018-07-06) \"Blowing a PC Power Supply\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKlaatu on 2018-07-08:\n\"Switches on mains\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2594\n(2018-07-12) \"Using nmtui, the Network Manager Terminal User interface\"\nby Philip.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nklaatu on 2018-07-17:\n\"nice first ep!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2596\n(2018-07-16) \"Battling with English - part 2\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nklaatu on 2018-07-17:\n\"great series\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-07-19:\n\"Is English really so bad?\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nHipstre on 2018-07-20:\n\"Thanks so much!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nbjb on 2018-07-21:\n\"the ownership apostrophe\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2018-07-22:\n\"Hipstre's comments\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2018-07-26:\n\"Re: Ownership apostrophe\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2597\n(2018-07-17) \"How to Fix a Remote with Buttons that Don\'t Work\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nHipstre on 2018-07-21:\n\"How to Fix a Remote\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2599\n(2018-07-19) \"Fitting a 3.5mm adapter to a bluetooth receiver.\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ncmhobbs on 2018-07-18:\n\"great plan!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2600\n(2018-07-20) \"Special episode on 2600, Blue Boxes, Phreaking\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2603\n(2018-07-25) \"Dummy shares a tip and a tip/rant about asking and answering questions\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nHipstre on 2018-07-25:\n\"Nick Burns\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-07-25:\n\"Related to humilation\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nBrenda J. Butler on 2018-07-26:\n\"People who waste my time by trying to find the answer for me.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nQuick Answers on 2018-07-27:\n\"I failed to do this and I'm sorry.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2605\n(2018-07-27) \"The Eyes Have It\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-07-01:\n\"I *see* what you did there :)\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClintonRoy on 2018-07-27:\n\"Yowsers\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2607\n(2018-07-31) \"Processing\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2018-07-31:\n\"Seems likea great teaching tool\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-July/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to bjb for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 2 shows which were missing them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2318,'2017-06-21','Talking about my thinkpads',2715,'I talk about why I love my thinkpads so much and how I appreciate having them','

                                                        \r\nhttps://support.lenovo.com/us/en/solutions/pd015734\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nhttps://support.lenovo.com/us/en/solutions/migr-75044\r\n

                                                        ',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','thinkpad, laptop, lenovo, x201, t420',0,0,1), (2324,'2017-06-29','Opensusecon 2017 and Ubuntu 16.04',326,'Performance of Ubuntu 16.04 on my MS surface Tablet and Brief Review of OpenSuse Con 2017','

                                                        \r\nInformation about HTOP can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Htop\r\nInformation about Audacity 2.1.2 can be found at https://www.audacityteam.org/\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nOverall the opensuse con 2017 was a great event. Lots of talks, they had guy with 16 Raspberry PIs in a storage cluster and list goes on and on. Many of the folks there were suse employees or Open Cloud employees but they really had their passions down.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nUbuntu 16.04 is running fine on my MS surface tablet and is wife friendly.\r\n

                                                        ',129,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','openSUSE,openSUSE conference 2017,Ubuntu,Microsoft Surface tablet',0,0,1), (2330,'2017-07-07','Awk Part 7',1271,'Looping in Awk explained by a sleep-deprived host','

                                                        In this episode, I will (very) briefly go over loops in the Awk programming language. Loops are useful when you want to run the same command(s) on a collection of data or when you just want to repeat the same commands many times.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When using loops, a command or group of commands is repeated until a condition (or many) is met.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        While Loop

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here is a silly example of a while loop:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        #!/bin/awk -f\r\nBEGIN {\r\n\r\n# Print the squares from 1 to 10 the first way\r\n\r\n    i=1;\r\n    while (i <= 10) {\r\n        print "The square of ", i, " is ", i*i;\r\n        i = i+1;\r\n    }\r\n\r\nexit;\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Our condition is set in the braces after the while statement. We set a variable, i, before entering the loop, then increment i inside of the loop. If you forget to make a way to meet the condition, the while will go on forever.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Do While Loop

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here is an equally silly example of a do while loop:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        #!/bin/awk -f\r\nBEGIN {\r\n\r\n    i=2;\r\n    do {\r\n        print "The square of ", i, " is ", i*i;\r\n        i = i + 1\r\n    }\r\n\r\n    while (i != 2)\r\n\r\nexit;\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here, the commands in the do code block are executed at the start, then the looping begins.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For Loop

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another silly example of a for loop:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        #!/bin/awk -f\r\nBEGIN {\r\n\r\n    for (i=1; i <= 10; i++) {\r\n        print "The square of ", i, " is ", i*i;\r\n    }\r\n\r\nexit;\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, we set the variable, set the condition and set the increment method all in the braces after the for statement.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For Loop Over Arrays

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here is a more useful example of a for loop. Here, we are adding the different values of column 2 into an array/hash-table called a. After processing the file, we print the different values.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For file.txt:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name       color  amount\r\napple      red    4\r\nbanana     yellow 6\r\nstrawberry red    3\r\ngrape      purple 10\r\napple      green  8\r\nplum       purple 2\r\nkiwi       brown  4\r\npotato     brown  9\r\npineapple  yellow 5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using the awk file of:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        NR != 1 {\r\n    a[$2]++\r\n}\r\nEND {\r\n    for (b in a) {\r\n        print b\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We get the results of:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        brown\r\npurple\r\nred\r\nyellow\r\ngreen
                                                        \r\n

                                                        In another example, we do a similar process. This time, not only do we store all the distinct values of the second column, we perform a sum operation on column 3 for each distinct value of column 2.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For file.csv:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        name,color,amount\r\napple,red,4\r\nbanana,yellow,6\r\nstrawberry,red,3\r\ngrape,purple,10\r\napple,green,8\r\nplum,purple,2\r\nkiwi,brown,4\r\npotato,brown,9\r\npineapple,yellow,5
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using the awk file of:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        BEGIN {\r\n    FS=",";\r\n    OFS=",";\r\n    print "color,sum";\r\n}\r\nNR != 1 {\r\n    a[$2]+=$3;\r\n}\r\nEND {\r\n    for (b in a) {\r\n        print b, a[b]\r\n    }\r\n}
                                                        \r\n

                                                        We get the results of:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        color,sum\r\nbrown,13\r\npurple,12\r\nred,7\r\nyellow,11\r\ngreen,8
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As you can see, we are also printing a header column prior to processing the file using the BEGIN code block.

                                                        \r\n',300,94,0,'CC-BY-SA','bash, linux, awk',0,0,1), (2345,'2017-07-28','Fixing a toilet roll holder',531,'A small fix improves someone\'s life','

                                                        \r\nIn this episode Ken discusses how a simple \"life hack\", turned a source of frustration, into an engineering problem with a simple solution.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Toilet\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\"Toilet\r\n

                                                        \r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Life Hack, re-purpose hack',0,0,1), (2331,'2017-07-10','Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 1',309,'A short series of interviews done at the Liverpool Makefest 2017','

                                                        Hi HPR listeners

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tony Hughes here with the first of some short interviews I did during the Liverpool Makefest held on the 24th June 2017 at Liverpool Central Library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first interview was with Jay from the Inventors Asylum

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.inventorsasylum.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second interview was with John Walton about his Animatronics creations, sorry no web link.

                                                        ',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Interviews, Making',0,0,1), (2333,'2017-07-12','VirtualenvWrapper for Fish Shell',835,'In this episode, talk about how I created my own virtualenvwrapper-like interface using Fish Shell.','

                                                        In this episode, talk about how I created my own virtualenvwrapper-like interface using Fish Shell.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fish Shell is "a smart and user-friendly command line shell for macOS, Linux, and the rest of the family. It excels in tab completion and ease of use, but virtualenvwrapper does not support it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Virtualenvwrapper, like the name suggests, is a wrapper around python\'s virtualenv functionality, which allows you to use different versions of python packages in separate environments. To learn more, listen to BJB\'s show called A bit of background on virtualenvwrapper.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Functions and aliases in my fish config file:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        # Set virtual directory root\r\nexport set WORKON_HOME=$HOME/Envs\r\n\r\n# List virtual environments\r\nalias lsenvs="ls -m $WORKON_HOME | sed 's/\\///g'"\r\n\r\n# Create python2 virtual environment\r\nfunction -d "Like virtualenvwrapper for python2" mkvirtualenv2\r\n    virtualenv -p python2 $WORKON_HOME/$argv;\r\n    and source $WORKON_HOME/$argv/bin/activate.fish;\r\n    and echo "Virtual environment created."\r\nend\r\n\r\n# Create python3 virtual environment\r\nfunction -d "Like virtualenvwrapper" mkvirtualenv\r\n    virtualenv -p python3 $WORKON_HOME/$argv;\r\n    and source $WORKON_HOME/$argv/bin/activate.fish;\r\n    and echo "Virtual environment created."\r\nend\r\n\r\n# Source a virtual environment\r\nfunction workon\r\n    source $WORKON_HOME/$argv/bin/activate.fish; and echo "Switch to virtual environment."\r\nend\r\n\r\n# Delete a virtual environment\r\nfunction -d "Like virtualenvwrapper" rmvirtualenv\r\n    if test -n "$VIRTUAL_ENV"\r\n        deactivate\r\n    end\r\n    rm -rf $WORKON_HOME/$argv; and echo "Virtual environment deleted."\r\nend
                                                        \r\n',300,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','python,virtualenv,fish shell',0,0,1), (2334,'2017-07-13','Our Adventure Begins!',966,'I discuss Colossal Cave Adventure and the adventure of playing it with my son.','

                                                        In this HPR episode, I discuss the open-sourcing of Colossal Cave Adventure (a text adventure computer game), my childhood exposure to text adventure games, and passing along the text adventure torch to my middle son thanks to the "bsdgames" package.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Opening sound clip taken from "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey." Closing song is "The Free Software Song" performed by Mark Forry, Yvette Osborne, Ron Fox, Steve Finney, Bill Cope, Kip McAtee, Ernie Provencher, Dan Auvil (https://www.gnu.org/music/free-software-song.en.html).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        E-mail: claudio@linuxbasement.com
                                                        \r\nIRC: ClaudioM on irc.freenode.net, #oggcastplanet

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',152,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','foss,adventure,gaming,bsdgames,textadventure',0,0,1), (2336,'2017-07-17','Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 2',373,'A short series of interviews done at the Liverpool Makefest 2017','

                                                        Hi Tony Hughes here with the second of some short interviews I did during the Liverpool Makefest held on the 24th June 2017 at Liverpool Central Library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first interview is with Jimmy England from Warington Fab Lab

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://fablab.warrington.ac.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second interview was with Patrick from DoES Liverpool

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://doesliverpool.com/

                                                        \r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Interviews, Making',0,0,1), (2338,'2017-07-19','Binaural recording 2 off to work',188,'Binaural 3d audio recording, please listen at normal speed with good head phones.','

                                                        This is a follow up to show 0785 where I explained how and why I was recording 3d sound using my home made Binaural head phones, this episode is a standard morning commute waiting for Phantom Hawk to pick me up in his big yellow bus, enjoy.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',110,101,1,'CC-BY-SA','binaural,quvmoh,audio',0,0,1), (2337,'2017-07-18','The Kobo Aura eReader',1123,'A review of my new (used) Kobo Aura e-book reader','

                                                        I recently acquired a refurbished Kobo Aura e-book reader. This episode is a brief review.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','ebooks, ereaders, ebook readers',0,0,1), (2339,'2017-07-20','Podcast list additions',1255,'Updates to my list of podcast feeds','

                                                        Podcast list additions

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I did two HPR shows 1516 and 1518 in 2014 about the podcast feeds I\'m subscribed to. I have made a few additions since then (and a few subtractions) and I thought I\'d share a few of the additions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The list below shows the feed titles. Clicking on them will take you to the full notes where you can examine the details of the feed.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. The World of Business
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Criminal
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Seriously...
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Start the Week
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        9. Dan Carlin\'s Hardcore History
                                                        10. \r\n
                                                        11. The Verb
                                                        12. \r\n
                                                        13. Making It With Jimmy Diresta, Bob Clagett and David Picciuto
                                                        14. \r\n
                                                        15. Reclaimed Audio Podcast
                                                        16. \r\n
                                                        17. The Bugcast - Ogg Feed
                                                        18. \r\n
                                                        19. Open Country
                                                        20. \r\n
                                                        21. Common Sense with Dan Carlin
                                                        22. \r\n
                                                        23. Philosophy Bites
                                                        24. \r\n
                                                        25. All in the Mind
                                                        26. \r\n
                                                        27. BacterioFiles
                                                        28. \r\n
                                                        29. podcast (en) – omega tau science & engineering podcast
                                                        30. \r\n
                                                        31. This Week in Evolution
                                                        32. \r\n
                                                        33. This Week in Microbiology
                                                        34. \r\n
                                                        35. Urban Agriculture
                                                        36. \r\n
                                                        37. Weekly Space Hangout Audio
                                                        38. \r\n
                                                        39. Edinburgh Skeptics Presents...
                                                        40. \r\n
                                                        41. Exposing PseudoAstronomy
                                                        42. \r\n
                                                        43. The Pen Addict
                                                        44. \r\n
                                                        45. Late Night Linux (Ogg)
                                                        46. \r\n
                                                        47. systemau - OGG
                                                        48. \r\n
                                                        49. The Changelog
                                                        50. \r\n
                                                        51. The Duffercast Ogg
                                                        52. \r\n
                                                        53. The Full Circle Weekly News
                                                        54. \r\n
                                                        55. The JaK Attack! podcast
                                                        56. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Resources

                                                        \r\n',225,75,1,'CC-BY-SA','podcast,feed,recommendation',0,0,1), (2341,'2017-07-24','Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 3',378,'A short series of interviews done at the Liverpool Makefest 2017','

                                                        Hi Tony Hughes here with the third show of some short interviews I did during the Liverpool Makefest held on the 24th June 2017 at Liverpool Central Library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first interview is with David from Studio@Deyes in Wavertree

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://studio-deyes.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second interview was with Laura from Tactile electronics

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://tactile-electronics.tumblr.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The final interview for this show was with Amelia, Beth and Chelsea from Liverpool Girl Geeks.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.liverpoolgirlgeeks.co.uk/

                                                        ',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Interviews, Making',0,0,1), (2342,'2017-07-25','Wherein our hero fails to repair a garage door.',1517,'I try and fail to fix my garage door.','

                                                        My garage door failed spectacularly for a second time. I make an attempt to repair it but find that my extension cables are a bit too short. I hope I can explain a little about how garage doors work along the way.

                                                        ',241,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','diy, home improvement, fixit, wontfix, failure, door, garage door, handyman, narration',0,0,1), (2344,'2017-07-27','Follow on to HPR2340 (Tracking the HPR queue in Python)',869,'Improved version of script to capture the number of HPR shows in the queue using python.','

                                                        This is a follow up to my previous show HPR2340, the improvement being I use the available STATS file from the hpr website rather than scraping the content from the HPR calendar page

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Snapshot contents (2017-06-23) of \'stats.txt\' file which was actually called \'hpr_stats.txt\' my mistake

                                                        \r\n
                                                        Started:    11 years, 8 months, 19 days ago (2005-10-10)\r\nRenamed HPR:    9 years, 5 months, 27 days ago (2007-12-31)\r\nTotal Shows:    2911\r\nTotal TWT: 300\r\nTotal HPR:  2611\r\nHPR Hosts:  286\r\nDays to next free slot: 17\r\nHosts in Queue: 9\r\nShows in Queue: 14\r\nComments waiting approval:  0\r\nFiles on the FTP Server:    1\r\nNumber of Emergency Shows:  7\r\nDays until show without media:  0\r\n1498246151,369343750,299186950,2911,300,2611,286,17,9,14,0,1,7,0
                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                        #!/usr/bin/env python3\r\n\r\n### This is a scratchpad file I've created to try out snippets of code in python\r\n\r\n# The script below is for use with Python 3\r\n# This script should work out of the box on most systems running a version of Python 3 \r\n# If you happen to have a blinkstick lying about then your can uncomment the blinkstick module\r\n# and uncomment the references at the bottom of the program that call the blinkstick functions\r\n# Regrds, Mr X\r\n\r\n\r\n# Imported modules\r\nfrom time import sleep          # used to pause program\r\n#from blinkstick import blinkstick  # used to control blinkstick nano attached to usb port of raspberry pi\r\nimport urllib.request           # used to capture hpr webpage content to get the number of HPR shows in the que\r\nimport re               # regular expressions, used to find sting in HPR webpage (get_hpr_que)\r\n\r\n\r\n# These functions control a blink stick nano attached to my raspberry pi USB port #################\r\n# They can be ignored or deleted if you don't have one\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_off():\r\n# Search for all attached blinksticks and turn them all off\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.turn_off()   # Turn front blinkstick LED off\r\n        bstick.set_color(channel=0, index=1, name="black")  # Turn rear blinkstick led off\r\n        print("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " turned off")\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_on(colour):\r\n# Turn blinkstick on and set led colour to string value stored in var colour\r\n# valid colours are, black, silver, gray, white, maroon, red, purple, fuchsia, green, lime, olive, yellow, navy, blue, teal, aqua\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.set_max_rgb_value(30)        # Sets max blinkstick RGB value to 15, makes LED dimm\r\n        bstick.set_color(name=colour)       # Turn blinkstick on, var colour determines colour\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex") + " [" + colour + "]")\r\n#hex\r\n\r\ndef bstick_on_random():\r\n# Turn blinkstick on colour random\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.set_random_color()\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex"))\r\n\r\n\r\ndef bstick_blink_red():\r\n# Flash blinkstick colour red\r\n    for bstick in blinkstick.find_all():\r\n        bstick.blink(name="red")\r\n        print ("Blinkstick: " + bstick.get_serial() + " | Colour: " + bstick.get_color(color_format="hex"))\r\n\r\n################################################################################\r\n\r\n\r\ndef get_hpr_que_improved():\r\n# Goto hacker public stats page and extract the number of days to next free slot\r\n# turns on blinkstick LED with colour dependent on the number of days to next free slot in HPR queue\r\n\r\n    url = 'https://hackerpublicradio.org/stats.php'  # HPR url for stats page\r\n    try:\r\n        text = urllib.request.urlopen(url).read()   # Try to read hpr stats text\r\n    except:\r\n        print("ERROR: Problem acessing url " + url)     # if error accessing url then return -1\r\n        hpr_shows = -1\r\n        return hpr_shows\r\n    #print(text)    # DEBUG\r\n    text_page = str(text)   # convert text from list to string\r\n    line_begin = text_page.find('Days to next free slot:') # find position of string in page\r\n    line_end = line_begin + 27 # Store line end position (start position + 27)\r\n    line = text_page[line_begin:line_end]  # Capture string line\r\n    #print(line) # DEBUG Print line string\r\n    digit = re.findall(r'\\d+',line)         # Find digits in line\r\n    #print(digit[0])    # DEBUG print the 1st digit\r\n    try:\r\n        hpr_shows = int(digit[0])   # convert digit list to integer days\r\n    except:                         # If show numbers not found then return -1\r\n        print("ERROR: Problem getting number of HPR shows in que.")\r\n        hpr_shows = -1\r\n        return hpr_shows\r\n\r\n    if hpr_shows > 9:       # If hpr show que > 9 turn on green LED\r\n        print("Turn on green blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_on("green")\r\n    elif hpr_shows > 5:     # Else if hpr show que > 5 turn on blue LED\r\n        print("Turn on blue blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_on("blue")\r\n    elif hpr_shows > -1:    # Else if hpr show que > -1 turn on ref LED\r\n        print("Turn on red blinkstick LED")     \r\n        #bstick_on("red")\r\n    else:\r\n        print("Flash red blinkstick LED")\r\n        #bstick_blink_red() # Else blink LED to show error\r\n    print("The are " + str(hpr_shows) + " days to tne next free slot in the HPR que...")\r\n    sleep(4)\r\n    print("Turn off all blinkstick LED's")\r\n    #bstick_off()           # Turn blinkstick off\r\n\r\n\r\n# Main program\r\nget_hpr_que_improved()
                                                        \r\n',201,25,1,'CC-BY-SA','Python, Programming, Hardware, BlinkStick',0,0,1), (2346,'2017-07-31','Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 4',315,'A short series of interviews done at the Liverpool Makefest 2017','

                                                        Hi Tony Hughes here with the 4th show of some short interviews I did during the Liverpool Makefest held on the 24th June 2017 at Liverpool Central Library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first interview is with Hillary Harper one of the Makefest Crew

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second interview was with Gemma from Patten Craft

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.gemmamaylatham.co.uk/portfolio-item/patterncraft/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The final interview for this show was with Simon Rider of Liverpool Book Art

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://liverpoolbookart.com/

                                                        \r\n',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Interviews, Making',0,0,1), (2352,'2017-08-08','Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 5',192,'A short series of interviews done at the Liverpool Makefest 2017','

                                                        Hi Tony Hughes here with the 5th and final show of some short interviews I did during the Liverpool Makefest held on the 24th June 2017 at Liverpool Central Library.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first interview is with Diane from Melt 3D printing

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.melt-3d.co.uk/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The second interview was with Michael from Electric Flapjack Guitars

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://lpoolmakefest.org/portfolio/electric-flapjack-guitars/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        @EFGuitars

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://instagram.com/electricflapjack

                                                        ',338,78,0,'CC-BY-SA','Interviews, Making',0,0,1), (2343,'2017-07-26','Healthcare in the Netherlands',1109,'Ken reads the Wikipedia article on Healthcare in the Netherlands','

                                                        \r\nIn show hpr2325 Ahuka describes how Health Insurance and How It Works.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn this episode Ken reads the current state of Healthcare in the Netherlands by reading the Wikipedia entry.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',30,100,1,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance',0,0,1), (2348,'2017-08-02','Vim Hints 005',2286,'Hints and Tips for Vim users - part 5','

                                                        Vim Hints 005

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Vim Hints is back!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Oops! Where did half of 2015, all of 2016 and the first half of 2017 go?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well, life got in the way, plus motivation dwindled somewhat. This series is very demanding - the sed series was a walk in the park compared to tackling the continental-scale landscape of Vim!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Still, the original goal was to try and introduce the really useful features of Vim and to make it manageable for everyday use. The hope was, and still is, that the series could get people started on their own journeys through its marvels.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also, with the currently circulating StackOverflow article on "How to exit the Vim editor?", it\'s worth pointing out that we dealt with that subject in episode 1, and this issue is revealed as the ridiculous meme that it really is!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Quick recap

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To recap, the last episode of this planned series was in March 2015. Here\'s a list of links to all of the episodes so far:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Let\'s briefly describe what was covered in these episodes to set the context.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So far we have looked at very basic editing in episode 1, where we mentioned modes Normal, Insert and Command modes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In episode 2 we looked at Vim\'s backup mechanism, undoing and redoing changes, and file recovery in the event of a problem. We started using the .vimrc configuration file.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We began looking at movement commands in Normal mode in episode 3, and beefed up the configuration file somewhat.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        More movement commands were covered in episode 4 as well as searching. We began looking at commands that make changes, adding, inserting, deleting and changing text in various ways. The concept of doing these things with various movements was covered. Again, a number of useful options for the configuration file were introduced.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Full Notes

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Since the notes explaining this subject are particularly long, they have been placed here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2348/full_shownotes.html and an ePub version is also available here: https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2348/full_shownotes.epub.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Stack Overflow: Helping One Million Developers Exit Vim
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Vim Help:\r\n
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Previous episode: "Vim Hints Episode 4"
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Resources:\r\n
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n',225,82,1,'CC-BY-SA','vim,editor,movement,copy,paste,text object,configuration,.vimrc',0,0,1), (2349,'2017-08-03','Customizing my bash prompt',1452,'A detailed look into how, and why, to customize a bash prompt.','

                                                        Basic bash prompt information

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Variables and files\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • .bashrc: the RC file where all of this stuff can be set
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • PS1: main prompt variable
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • PS2: continuation prompt
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • PROMPT_COMMAND: a bash function name, run every time prompt is displayed
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Colors\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Uses escape sequences
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • There are problems with prompts and escape sequences\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • Multiple escaping
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • String interpretation and variable expansion
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • tput to the rescue!\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • Takes away the need for complex escape codes
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Must run tput init at the beginning of your .bashrc file
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • TL;DR: Use tput for color strings, add them at the last possible moment, with brackets and backslashes
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Embedding bash scripts\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Single quotes are king
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Will be run every time PS1 is evaluated
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Otherwise, only run at time of assignment
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Layout of my prompt

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Two lines\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Information/status line
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Prompt line
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Status line\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Starts with current username\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • Changes color when user has mail
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Next is the hostname (truncated)\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • Separated by an @ symbol, like an email address
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Changes color when the system is in need of a reboot
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Checks for /run/reboot_required
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Current directory\r\n
                                                              \r\n
                                                            • Separated from previous items by a pipe
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Truncated with a tilde if user\'s home is in the path
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Prepended with a number indicating the directory stack, if present
                                                            • \r\n
                                                            • Appended with the git (±) symbol if we\'re in a git branch, followed by the name of the branch
                                                            • \r\n
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Prompt line\r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • A blue » character
                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Prepended with the number of background processes spawned from this terminal
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Screenshot:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"A

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Link to Git Repository

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Editor\'s Note: added 2017-08-05

                                                        \r\n',196,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','bash,command line,configuration,terminal',0,0,1), (2350,'2017-08-04','Ahuka Insurance - Understanding The Marketplace',620,'How the Health Insurance Market works in the U.S','

                                                        In the U.S., health care, like most things, is driven by a private marketplace. We take a look at the principles that govern this marketplace in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace',0,0,1), (2360,'2017-08-18','Tradeoffs in the US Health Care System',756,'Financing health care means choices to be made','

                                                        Health care is a service, and like all services it needs to be paid for one way or another. This means making choices, and there are consequences and implications to whichever choice you make. But there is no free lunch, you have to pay.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace',0,0,1), (2375,'2017-09-08','Competing Interests',960,'We look at the marketplace and see how everyone\'s interests clash','

                                                        The Health Care Marketplace in the U.S. has 6 major partipants: Doctors, Hospitals, Insurance Companies, Employers, Government, and Individuals. Each of them has interests and incentives, and they tend to clash. How we resolve those competing interests has consequences for the systems we create.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace',0,0,1), (2385,'2017-09-22','Healthcare Costs',772,'What are the cost pressures in healthcare?','

                                                        The big driver to changing the healthcare system in the U.S. was the inexorable rise in healthcare costs. These costs kept rising for a number of reasons, which we look at at in this episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace, Healthcare Costs',0,0,1), (2395,'2017-10-06','Obamacare',949,'What did Obamacare do?','

                                                        In previous episodes we set the stage by examining insurance, the marketplace, competing interests, tradeoffs, and costs. With that we can now understand what Obamacare attempted to do and give a tentative evaluation of the legislation and its effects.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace, Obamacare',0,0,1), (2356,'2017-08-14','Safely enabling ssh in the default Raspbian Image',1973,'Ken walks us through a script to secure the base Raspbian Pixel image\r\n','

                                                        In this post I will show you how to take a default Raspbian Image and safely enable ssh by allowing remote access only with authorized keys.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Recently, and correctly, the official Raspbian Pixel distribution disabled ssh with the note that from now on SSH will be disabled by default on our images.To understand why this is a good thing please read A security update for raspbian pixel. In short, having 11 million computers out there in the hands of non security professionals, with a known username and password, is not a good idea.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That said there are many cases where you want to access your Pi remotely, and a key part of that is the ability to access it securely via ssh.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Raspberry Pi site offers a solution for how to reactivate ssh. One option is via the GUI, Preferences > Interfaces> SSH > Enabled. Another is via the console sudo raspi-config > Interfacing Options > SSH > Yes > Ok > Finish. The third offers a more interesting option.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For headless setup, SSH can be enabled by placing a file named ssh, without any extension, onto the boot partition of the SD card. When the Pi boots, it looks for the ssh file. If it is found, SSH is enabled, and the file is deleted. The content of the file does not matter: it could contain text, or nothing at all.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This is exactly what we want. Normally you would burn the image, then boot it in a Pi with a keyboard, screen and mouse attached, and then add the file. A shortcut to that would be to burn the image, eject it, insert it again, mount the sdcard boot partition, and then create a file called ssh.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I don\'t like either of these solutions as they involve varying amounts of user intervention. I want a solution that will automatically leave me with a modified image at the end without any intervention (aka human error) on my part.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So I want to build a script that can handle the following steps:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Download the latest image zip file
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Verify it is valid
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Extract the image itself
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Enable ssh
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Change the default passwords for the root and pi user
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Secure the ssh server on the Pi
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I could add to this list and customize every aspect of the image, but my experience has shown that the more you modify, the more maintenance you will need to do. When changes are made to the base Raspbian image, you will need to fix your scripts, and worse is the job of updating all those already deployed Pi\'s.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A better approach is to use the base images and control them with automation tools like Ansible, chef, puppet, cfengine, etc. This allows the images to be treated as Cattle rather than Pets, to see what that means see Architectures for open and scalable clouds, by Randy Bias, VP Technology at EMC, Director at OpenStack Foundation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Another approach to consider would be to Network Boot your Raspberry Pi and in that way the sdcard is barely used, and all traffic is run off the network. If you are deploying a lot of pi\'s in a area with a good physical network then this is a great option as well. This has the advantage that all the files are kept on the network and can be completely controlled from a central location.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you can\'t be bothered to stick around and find out how I did it, you can download the script fix-ssh-on-pi.bash from git hub. Remember that it is intended more as inspiration rather than a working tool out of the box. I deliberately wrote it so you must edit it to make it fit your needs.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        See the complete show notes for the step by step instructions that lead to the creation of the script file, with credit been given to the sites that offered each part of the solution.

                                                        ',30,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi, ssh',0,0,1), (2354,'2017-08-10','Night Sounds in Rural Tennessee',210,'A recording of the night sounds outside Tullahoma, Tennessee','

                                                        \r\nUpon arriving at my parents\' house tonight, I was struck anew by the incredible sounds of wildlife where they live in the woods. I decided to record and share with the HPR audience.\r\n

                                                        ',238,101,0,'CC-BY-SA','nature, insects, wildlife',0,0,1), (2353,'2017-08-09','RoboThermometer',756,'A surprisingly short geeky episode about connecting a temperature sensor to a Raspberry Pi','

                                                        Sorry this is such a short episode. I don\'t know what came over me, I was just listening to Mr.X talking about doing something with Python in Hacker Public Radio episode 2340, and for some reason I just felt a compulsion to record some kind of episode myself. It was so strange. I\'m way behind on my Hacker Public Radio contribution duties anyway, so here\'s a quick, geeky tutorial about a thing I did with a Raspberry Pi just to try it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The temperature sensor I\'m using is one of the many "1-wire" protocol devices supported by established kernel drivers, hence the reference to loading the modules for it:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        sudo modprobe w1-gpio\r\nsudo modprobe w1-therm
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The part about adding "dtoverlay=w1-gpio" to /boot/config.txt and then rebooting is also necessary, otherwise the modules load but no devices show up in /sys/bus/w1/devices/ .

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Part of the fun was coming up with a way of extracting the temperature reading in useful form without having to write a bunch of unnecessary python code. Not that there\'s anything wrong with python, but I get the impression that some people think everything "RaspberryPi" has to be written in python. An example of this that amused me is the piFM project, which cleverly abuses the first-generation Raspberry Pi spread-spectrum circuitry to turn it into a surprisingly powerful FM radio transmitter. This project had two ways to run it - the actual compiled C program that takes input audio and makes FM radio come out...and a python "module" that was literally just a system call that...ran the C program that takes the audio and makes FM radio come out.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Examples of reading the temperature data that I ran into tended to also be short python scripts, so I took it as a challenge to do without, resulting in the fun-to-recite command in the episode, which on my system is:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        echo "scale=3; (`grep -o "[[:digit:]]\\{5\\}" /sys/bus/w1/devices/28-05167380f6ff/w1_slave`/(5000/9))+32" | bc
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As an example of what you get with a correctly connected and configured DS18B20 module on a Raspberry Pi, in my case the device shows up as:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        /sys/bus/w1/devices/28-05167380f6ff/
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Your device\'s number after the "28-" will be different, so just replace my example with your own device\'s number.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you read the "w1_slave" virtual-file in that directory, you get something that looks similar to this:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        67 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 c4 : crc=c4 YES\r\n67 01 4b 46 7f ff 0c 10 c4 t=22437
                                                        \r\n

                                                        To be completely proper, one probably should validate that output to make sure the CRC matches so you know for sure that the read of the temperature data was correct, but I\'ve had Zabbix checking my living-room temperature once every minute for a couple of days now and seen no odd readings or failures, so I\'m not going to bother making anything more complicated than my hypnotic one-liner, unless I ever try to use the same kind of setup to monitor something more important, like a tank of expensive fish or a bioreactor full of beer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you want some more detailed connection instructions for the DS18B20 temperature sensor and the Raspberry Pi, here is one of the many online pages with the whole process:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruits-raspberry-pi-lesson-11-ds18b20-temperature-sensing/hardware

                                                        ',182,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspberry Pi,Shell,Zabbix,Monitoring,Temperature,DS18B20,Sensors,Linux',0,0,1), (2355,'2017-08-11','Wii and WiiU Software Modding',736,'I go over my current Wii and WiiU setup','

                                                        https://wiiu.guide/ A complete guide to Wii U custom firmware, from stock to Coldboot Haxchi.

                                                        ',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','wii,wiiu,console hacking',0,0,1), (2357,'2017-08-15','Air Soft Mini Howto',853,'I talk about my current setup for AirSoft and how we should all have hobbies! ','

                                                        https://airsoftjunkiez.com

                                                        \r\n

                                                        get off the computer !

                                                        ',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','airsoft',0,0,1), (2358,'2017-08-16','Amateur radio round table #2',2769,'Two of us trying to explain stuff mostly off the cuffs.','

                                                        This time only the two of us:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Steve, KD0IJP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Michael, DL4MGM
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        A lot of off the cuff technical explanation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Starting from the comment by David Whitman to the last round table, we talk about frequency, wave length, propagation velocity and their relations. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wavelength. Approximate wave length values are commonly used to reference to entire "frequency bands", which are the frequency spectrum portions allocated to a certain radio service in proximity. Status of (amateur) frequency allocation may vary with band or country. They may not be "exclusive" and there can be "primary" and "secondary" radio services sharing that spectrum. Secondary services must not interfere with primary ones, while the other way round has to be accepted.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What frequency is most powerful? - It depends! We ramble a bit how different frequencies have different propagation depending on certain factors like daytime, time of year, sun spot cycle. - Please help out with more in depth information here! Join us. There is a varying maximum and a minimum useable frequency for ionospheric propagation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_usable_frequency

                                                        \r\n

                                                        VHF (globally > 30MHz) and UHF (> 300 MHz) waves have a more line of sight propagation. Steve shortly introduces the concept of repeater stations. Usually at an exposed location, a repeater retransmits the signal that is received at another frequency, thus extending communication range. Participants only need to reach the repeater in order to be able communicate with each other. We hint at additional propagation modes for VHF, like sporadic E-layer propagation, but are not able to go into detail. - Please tell us, if you have experience in those fields!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some thoughts about RF output power and how it is less important if conditions are right.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Modulation: Putting "information" onto a radio frequency signal. Staring out as a clean "carrier wave", its parameters are modified according to the modulation scheme. We start out and explain the basic concepts of amplitude modulation, AM, where the amplitude of the radio wave is altered by the modulating signal. Then frequency modulation, FM, where the modulation process influences frequency of the output signal. We use voice audio as an example as modulation content, but this can of course be of digital nature. SSB, single side band modulation. It is the standard voice modulation mode for short wave amateur communication. We give a very brief explanation of one possible way of generating it. We discuss how it is more efficient than AM in regard to occupied frequency spectrum use and transmit power.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This leads to ideas how great it would be if someone could record a show about those things, including audio examples. We further digress in how it may be a good idea to single out individual topics separate shows. The "rabbit holes" (tm MrX I think) we fall in while explaining other stuff. Make them available to be simply referenced in later shows and we can concentrate on the topic at hand.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There will be a place to put ideas and draw inspiration for shows here: https://etherpad.net/p/HPR-HAM-TOPICS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we pick up the discussion of frequency shift caused by the Doppler effect and its effect on satellite operation. This was triggered by a question in "hpr2216 :: Working AO-85 with my son" (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2216). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doppler_effect

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We ramble a bit how in the wide field of amateur radio no one can know everything right from the beginning. Take the jump start provided by the knowledge required for the test and go on with learning by doing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        How cool would it be to have shows from "Ham fests" like the "Dayton Hamvention", the "HAM RADIO" or any other event. A brief mention of the "ARRL Fieldday".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have a mini poll and want to get feed back from the audience, if they would be interested to have some sort of decoding riddle in future shows.

                                                        \r\n',109,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','amateur radio, modulation, AM, FM, SSB, doppler, satellite',0,0,1), (2359,'2017-08-17','Android ROM and PAIN',1522,'I go over some of my pain and love for Android over the years','

                                                        https://www.nirsoft.net/utils/usb_devices_view.html

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://forum.xda-developers.com

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.bignox.com/

                                                        ',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Android,phone',0,0,1), (2361,'2017-08-21','Information Underground: Working Out',2447,'Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about exercise.','Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about exercise.',78,99,0,'CC-BY-SA','Information Underground',0,0,1), (2376,'2017-09-11','Information Underground: 21st Century Superstar',3180,'Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about iconless culture','

                                                        Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about cultural iconography.

                                                        ',73,99,0,'CC-BY-SA','culture, cultural icon',0,0,1), (2396,'2017-10-09','Information Underground: State of independence',2560,'Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about the state of independent art.','

                                                        Deepgeek, Lostnbronx, and Klaatu talk about the state of independent art.

                                                        ',107,99,0,'CC-BY-SA','art, independent art, media, marketing',0,0,1), (2362,'2017-08-22','Raspbian X86 on Lenovo x61s',670,'This is another distro review show','

                                                        This show is about putting the new Raspbian image onto one of the Lenovo x61s laptops that I have previously talked about.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        These laptops do not have a DVD drive so normally I would create a boot flash drive using USB image writer in Linux Mint, but I had received a DVD of Raspbian with the MagPi magazine so I connected a portable USB DVD drive that I have and used the disc to install to the laptop.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On booting to the DVD drive you get several options including a live session with persistence (this allows the saving of data and system changes to a flash drive during the session if wanted), but the option I chose was to install to hard drive.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This gives a simplified Debian installer and for new users with no previous experience of installing Linux it recommends one of the options at each stage. The only issue I had was at the stage it asks where to install Grub it does not automatically highlight the main drive (Sda) a small gripe but for a newcomer it could confuse.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        That said the install went flawlessly and upon first boot I was left with the PIXEL desktop with the task bar at the top of the screen and a short cut for the recycle bin. The boot time on this laptop with a Core2Duo 4Gig Ram and 120Gig SSD was about 30 seconds which is good also it was only using 87mb of the available RAM on start up, this shows the credentials of an OS built to run on the original 256mb Pi.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First job is to navigate to Raspberry config from the menu bar by going to:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Open Menu > Preferences > Raspberry Pi Configuration.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        From here you have a number of options but the important one is to change the default password from raspberry to something a little more secure.   After this I connected the Laptop to my WiFi network which is flawless on the x61s as it is an Intel WiFi card, I can\'t comment on other cards here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The next task that I did was to run the terminal commands \'sudo apt update\' & \'sudo apt upgrade\'. This will result in an updated system with all the security fixes installed and any package upgrades that are available.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The one thing I was not happy about is that Raspbian allows \'sudo\' access for terminal commands without requesting a password by default, this can be fixed if you feel this is a major issue depending on what you are using the device for.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://raspberrypi.stackexchange.com/questions/7133/how-to-change-user-pi-sudo-permissions-how-to-add-other-accounts-with-different  

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After completing the upgrade I decided to add the \'Synaptic\' package manager to the install as this makes finding software a little easier if you not sure exactly what you\'re looking for. This is as simple as \'sudo apt install synaptic\' in the terminal and once installed you\'ll find a link to it under preferences in the menu.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One thing that I found that did not work out of the box was Audio, I had to install some Alsa packages and audacity to collect the needed dependencies for the audio to work. So I installed Alsa player, Alsa mixer GUI and Audacity and after this and a reboot miraculously audio now worked.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Also there was not battery monitor installed so I installed Batmon so that I could check the battery status of the laptop.   On the whole given that Raspbian has been built to be compatible with all iterations of the Raspberry Pi board the software installed by default while minimal includes all the basics for web use - Chromium, email - Claws and office work - Open Office suit, along side all the Pi favourites such as Scratch (including Scratch 2) and Python programming tools.   Would I use Raspbian x86 as a daily driver, with a few tweaks, I might, particularly on an older PC/Laptop. I need to try it on an old Atom Net Book to see if it will work well on a really low specified system but a Pentium 4 with a couple of gig of RAM should work reasonably well as a development and homework PC for a school student so could extend the life of an old machine you may have kicking around. But a Core2Duo is definitely a goer, even with a basic 1Gig of Ram it should work quite well and 2Gig or better no issues at all.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There is a link to the iso download via HTTP or torrent here:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.zdnet.com/article/raspbian-gnulinux-new-release-includes-installable-x86-image/

                                                        \r\n',338,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Raspbian,X86,Lenovo',0,0,1), (2363,'2017-08-23','Cancelling my TV licence',639,'I don\'t watch any TV so I don\'t need a licence, but cancelling it is unexpectedly difficult','

                                                        Cancelling my TV licence

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I get a letter

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In July 2017 I received a letter from the TV Licensing organisation telling me they\'d be taking £147 from my account on the 1st of August. I had set up a "Direct Debit" arrangement with my bank many years before which allowed them to do this, and had forgotten all about it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When my kids were small, and later in their teens, a lot of TV was watched in my house. We used to watch all the over the air channels, and when things started to move towards digital in the UK I bought a PVR (aka DVR) which converted the Freeview channels into a signal for my analogue TV, and also recorded stuff on demand.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I watched some TV after I retired in 2009, but by 2013 with my kids having left home (to all intents and purposes), and the quality of what was available having fallen to a record low, I stopped.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When this letter arrived I realised I\'d been paying for this licence to watch TV for several years without using it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I throw out my TV

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The old analogue, CRT TV sitting in the corner of my room (and the associated Freeview PVR) had not been turned on for 4 years, so it was time for them to go. So I took my TV to the recycling centre with the help of my son. The PVR will be hacked for useful components.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I cancel my licence

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next step was to stop paying this annual licence. The letter told me what to do. I discovered I fulfilled all the requirements listed there:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • I never watch or record programmes as they are being shown on TV
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • I never download or watch BBC programmes on demand
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • I don\'t do this on a TV, desktop computer, laptop, mobile phone, tablet, games console, digital box or DVD/VHS recorder.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I called the number on the back of the letter and cancelled.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The guy I spoke to said I\'d get a letter of confirmation soon. I asked if they\'d cancel the Direct Debit or whether I should. He advised me to cancel myself, so I did it immediately.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I get my confirmation letter

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A number of days later I received a letter entitled (rather oddly) "Your No Licence Needed confirmation". It told me my no licence was valid from July 2017 and expired July 2019.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The letter did point out that I might receive a visit to "confirm that a licence isn\'t needed".

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A friendly leaflet accompanying the letter contained the question and answer:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Can I be prosecuted for watching BBC programmes on BBC iPlayer without a licence?

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Yes. From 1 September 2016, you risk prosecution and a fine of up to £1,000 plus any legal costs and/or compensation you may be ordered to pay.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I get an urgent letter from TV Licensing

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On the 12th August I received a letter from TV Licensing which asked me to call them urgently because my bank had declined a Direct Debit payment request.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I called on the 14th August and was told that this was a mistake and the letter could be ignored.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        However, to get this answer I had to navigate 4 menus and give my details to a robot. Of course the person I eventually contacted asked for the details all over again! This made me wonder if the robot is there for any purpose other than to be a deterrent to callers. The same goes for the 4 menus.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I get a phone call from TV Licensing

                                                        \r\n

                                                        On 17th August I found a message on my answering machine asking me to call TV Licensing. I did so, and navigated the 4 menus again. This time the robot asked for my licence number, but since I reasoned I didn\'t have one I gave it the reference number of my no licence. That didn\'t work.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It then asked for my postcode, street name, house number and payment details. It confirmed the address stuff but when I said I didn\'t pay for a licence it passed me to a human.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The lady I was speaking to then asked for my name, address, postcode, etc. I asked why I was being asked for this again having just given it to a robot. Apparently these weren\'t passed through because I "failed" to answer all the questions properly. That\'s odd because the same happened last time when I got the questions "right"!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This time it turned out that the problem was that my no licence had been cancelled. No reason was given.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I asked why, if a thing I had carefully set up with the expectation of it remaining in place for 2 years had been cancelled, I hadn\'t been notified. I didn\'t get an answer.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Conclusion

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It seems that TV Licensing has one of the worst systems for managing its "customers" on the planet. I told the representative that this was my opinion while I was on the phone.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m wondering what\'s next in the saga. Will it be the "heavies" at the door (I\'m not obliged to let them in without a warrant, I discovered), a legendary TV Detector van outside my house (I\'d like to see one and take a picture of it), another spurious money demand or unexplained loss of my details?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        However, although it has been bad, this story did give me something to write and talk about for HPR so it\'s not all bad!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n',225,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','TV,television,licence',0,0,1), (2364,'2017-08-24','Managing Your Android with AirDroid',875,'Frank discusses AirDroid, an app for managing Your Android via a browser.','

                                                        Frank Bell talks about the Android app, AirDroid, a utility for managing your Android phone via your browser. You can use it to transfer files back and forth between your phone and a computer, edit your contacts, control your camera, and much more.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Website: https://www.airdroid.com/

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some screenshots:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        AirDroid "Accept Connection" Screen:
                                                        \r\n\"https://pineviewfarm.net/weblog/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/AirDroid_Accept.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "AirDroid Devices" Screen:
                                                        \r\n\"https://pineviewfarm.net/weblog/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/AirDroid_Devices.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        AirDroid Browser Interface:
                                                        \r\n\"https://pineviewfarm.net/weblog/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/AirDroid_file_view.jpg\"

                                                        ',195,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android, phones, file transfer',0,0,1), (2365,'2017-08-25','Rolling out a radio-based internet service in rural England',1176,'One person\'s quest to get a decent internet connection when the big corporations aren\'t interested.','

                                                        In the UK there is a lot of competition in the telecoms business but, in reality, most of the players rely on infrastructure owned and operated by one company - BT.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Urban customers benefit greatly from this competition and probably have the cheapest telecom services in Europe as a result. The emphasis of the providers is, understandably, areas of high population concentrations. The problem is that nowadays a lot of people living in rural areas need fast and reliable internet connections to do their jobs and run their businesses.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What do you do when you live in a remote area and the major internet providers have no plans to roll fast connections out to where you live?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode Beeza describes how he found a solution and managed to get it implemented.

                                                        ',246,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Internet, ISP, BT, Wireless Networking, Infrastructure, rural',0,0,1), (2366,'2017-08-28','Making Bramble Jelly',665,'This is a show on making Bramble Jelly','

                                                        How to make Jam/Jelly

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Hi again HPR listeners, its the time of the year when I turn my hand to foraging and making Jelly from the local wild brambles.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The season has started early here in the UK so I’ve already produced over 60 jars of bramble jelly this year with more to come. Thankfully I have people who donate old jam jars for reuse during the year which I store for this very time of the year so I have not had any problems with jars for storage.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First on the issue of hygiene, before filling all the jars have previously been de-labelled and on the day of production are given another wash in hot soapy water, rinsed and placed in the oven and cooked for at least 15 minutes at 150° Centigrade (300° Fahrenheit) to sterilise them. All the lids are also boiled in water and kept hot until just before use for the same reason.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first thing I do in making jelly is wash the collected fruit (Blackberries) and put it in a pan with a little water to start cooking, then mash with a vegetable masher to start the process of breaking down the fruit. I also add 1 Lemon cut in half to each 1½ Kg of fruit both for the acidity and the pectin in the pith of the lemon (this helps setting the jelly as it cools). If there are any available I add wild plums to the mix in about a 10% ratio of plums to the Brambles as these are also rich in pectin.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once the fruit has boiled and broken down leave to cool, then remove the lemon skins ensuring you scrape the inside to get the gelatinous pulp into the pot as this contains the pectin. Now the fruit needs to be strained to remove the seeds etc. and just leave the juice for making the jelly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Once this has been done reduce the juice by about a third to concentrate it a little then measure the remaining juice to calculate how much sugar you will need for making the jelly. I use 1Kg sugar to each Liter of juice (1lb/US Pint)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Put the juice in a pan large enough that it only comes half way up after the sugar is added as you need room for it to expand as it boils, bring the Juice back up to a boil and add the sugar stirring until it\'s all dissolved. This will have cooled it all down again so continue heating the juice and sugar mix until it starts to boil. At this stage you need to keep the juice boiling until it has come to Jam temp (105°C/220°F). If you have a Jam Thermometer you can use that to find the jam/jelly point. I don’t so I use a mixture of visual clues (boiling with lots of small bubbles on the surface) and using a cold plate kept in the freezer to test the Jelly as it cooks until its ready. You need to boil the juice for 10-15 minutes after it gets to temperature then put a drop of the juice on a cold saucer and leave for a minute, after which run your finger through the blob of juice and if it ripples up and stays there without closing the gap created you have Jelly. If not boil for a further 5 minutes and repeat until you have a setting jelly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Editor\'s Note: above adjusted in accordance with the comment 2017-08-19

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Boiling
                                                        \r\nBoiling Jelly

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"Jam
                                                        \r\nJam setting

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point remove pan from the heat and allow to cool for 10 minutes. During this time you can drain your lids and lay them on a clean towel with the inside facing up ready to put on the jars (I’m using recycled store bought jars and lids. If using preserving jars follow the instructions with these.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As this is a jelly you don’t need a fancy jam funnel as it pours well from a jug, just ensure it is clean and dry as the high heat of the jelly will ensure it is sterile on use, but if you\'re paranoid about infection sterilise it the same way as your jars in preparation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All that remains is to remove a few jars from the oven, fill with the Jelly liquid, having given it a stir as you fill your jug. Put on the lids of the jars ensuring they are on tightly. If they have the security pop up button as the jelly cools if the lid is on correctly this will be sucked down showing a good seal.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Place the filled jars somewhere to cool, then label with a date and what it is, and you\'re set to enjoy your own home made jelly until it runs out, or give away as a home made gift to friends and family.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you want more info about making jams and jellies YouTube is full of how to videos.

                                                        \r\n',338,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','Cooking, Jam, Jelly',0,0,1), (2367,'2017-08-29','How I create and post a show to HPR',1209,'In this episode I describe the process I use to create and post a show to HPR.','

                                                        Below are my original rough show notes I used to guide me along my rambling path of describing how I record a show

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • How I record a podcast

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Start recording the show go through setting up recording level & adjusting my microphone, then do my usual introduction at the beginning.
                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • How I record and post a show

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • First talk about folder structure

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Write show notes. If I don’t know the subject well enough or perhaps want to go into some detail, Wikipedia can be very handy here.

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Record it using cheap gaming headset with boom microphone, about 2 minutes into my show I give a demonstration of a badly placed microphone. I fully expected this to produce a lot of wind noise in the recording, this unfortunately didn\'t happen, the boom microphone I\'m using is obviously much less susceptible to this than my previous microphone. Still it\'s always advisable to never place your microphone directly in front of your mouth. I tend to put mine at about chin level while making sure my chin never actually touches it.

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Record it by pushing the record button and talking

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Listen to it once or twice I tend to remove any bad stutters large silences, mistakes and some ums and ah’s.

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Add my own theme music to the beginning of the track (Explain)

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Intro and outro not required as HPR add this

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Highlight track with voice on it and select compression

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Write up show notes using LibreOffice writer while listening to show one more time.

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Export track in flac format, don’t add any information when exporting such as artist title etc as this is added later by HPR

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Go to the HPR calendar page pick a free slot

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • HPR will send you a time limited link via email

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Click on link to open the upload page for your show

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Fill in the required details from the show notes prepared in LibreOffice writer

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Browse to final flac show

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Submit show, job done

                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Just a little note if all this seems a bit complicated it doesn\'t have to be, this is how I normally produce a show you could instead just hit record on your recording device. Record it in just about any audio format, click on the free slot link on the HPR calendar page and upload the show without any show notes, HPR will do the rest.

                                                        ',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','HPR, recording, audacity',0,0,1), (2368,'2017-08-30','Every cloude has a silver lining',143,'Short, somewhat rhyming, thoughts provoked by an emptying show queue.','

                                                        Just some rambling about HPR and that you should record a show!

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\nThe world\'s going down, the HPR queue is low.\r\nBe one of the saviours, RECORD A SHOW!\r\n\r\nWhatever topic, you are not alone.\r\nFeel free to seek help, if you can\'t do on your own.\r\n\r\nOne will have to struggle, to find a friendlier crowd\r\nwith that wide range coverage from the simplest to \"clouds\".\r\n\r\nFrom toy to high tech and from jokes to wise words.\r\nEmbracing you all. - Not just the nerds.\r\n\r\nIt\'s not a \"service\", HPR is WE!\r\nSo contribute the stuff, you\'d like more of to see.\r\n\r\nIf YOU like it, others surely too will.\r\nDiversity defines the realm, we are aiming to fill. \r\n\r\nSure, there are heroes, lifting most of the weight.\r\nBut we all are the foundation, deciding HPR\'s fate.\r\n\r\nBe thankful, you slackers, who leave those free slots,\r\nfor those few prolific, still filling the spots.\r\n\r\nPlease don\'t keep the burden on shoulders so few.\r\nChime in with some topic, by sharing your view.\r\n\r\nHigh praise to those, stepping in a first time!\r\nWe need more of you though, to strengthen the lines. \r\n\r\nLike an episode? - Please let us know!\r\nIt\'s positive feed back, that\'s keeping us go.\r\n\r\nComment on the page or record a reply.\r\nThere\'s no reason for hiding or being overly shy.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a community effort to make the thing we love stay.\r\nBecause failing would mean, that HPR goes away.\r\n\r\nBut it takes more than bad times to make HPR disappear!\r\nTogether we stand, and we all are still here.\r\n\r\nBit by bit, sharing knowledge and fun,\r\nbuilding the confidence that HPR WILL go on. \r\n\r\nIt\'s up to us, so just pick up the ball\r\nand keep the show rolling, for the sake of us all.\r\n
                                                        ',271,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','poetry, low queue',0,0,1), (2377,'2017-09-12','A Rambling Drive Into Work',1361,'An attempt at making a show on the way into work','

                                                        Please excuse the audio quality in the episode & feel free to skip if it\'s too painful on the ears. In the episode, I mainly talk about my two most recent cars as I couldn’t think of anything else to talk about off the cuff.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',201,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','car,drive,podcast,audio',0,0,1), (2369,'2017-08-31','Little Meters',1271,'NYbill does a quick review of two more inexpensive multimeters','

                                                        Listen to more things clicking and beeping!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        NYbill does a quick review of two more inexpensive multimeters, ANENG models AN8002 and AN8008.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Bonus noises! I recorded next to an open window on a gusty day. Oops…

                                                        \r\n\r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','Electronics, Multimeter, Review',0,0,1), (2372,'2017-09-05','Docbook',3278,'How to Docbook','

                                                        Forsake markdown now! Klaatu walks you through writing in Docbook, processing and rendering output.

                                                        ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','xml,docbook,writing',0,0,1), (2373,'2017-09-06','PCGen',2640,'Klaatu talks about a PC generator','

                                                        Building characters for your next exciting tabletop RPG session? Use PCGen, and here\'s how!

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','RPG,character,character generator',0,0,1), (2374,'2017-09-07','How to Make Sauerkraut',595,'This is a short show on making Sauerkraut','

                                                        First off I have to admit to being a bit of a foodie and I love Sauerkraut but getting naturally fermented sauerkraut here in the UK in my experience impossible and if you can it tends to be expensive. So I went and had a look on YouTube for some instructions on how to do it, and my first efforts worked well. I’ve just made another batch and took pictures as I was doing it. So this is a how to show on making Sauerkraut.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Just to say that this is about making basic sauerkraut but you can add additional flavours with garlic, other veg and spices. At some point I will try chilli but this week I want the clean taste of a basic sauerkraut.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I use a large white cabbage which you need to strip any outer leaves that are blemished or dirty then quarter and cut out the hard core. Now before shredding weigh the cabbage as you need this to work out how much salt you will add for each Kilo of cabbage and other vegetables, if using. You need 20 grammes of salt, nothing fancy but use one without any any additives, just pure salt, I used a rock salt which cost £1.35 for 350g. You\'re basically after 2% salt to weight of Cabbage and anything else you are fermenting.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It’s also an idea to have about 100mls of a 2% brine to top up if needed to cover the veg in the jar if there is not quite enough liquid made during mashing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK01.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Shred the cabbage and put into a large bowl with the salt, now the fun bit starts. You need to get your hands in and start to crush the salt covered shredded cabbage to start drawing out the moisture, this will take several minutes or longer depending on quantity, but you will feel the texture changing and the liquid starting to be drawn out quite soon after starting. Continue this process until the cabbage seems to have shrunk by about half and there is also a juice in the bottom of the bowl. You can cheat and do this for a few minutes then cover with food wrap and leave for up to an hour and the salt will have done some of the work for you, but you need to give it a good 5 minutes to start before you do this, and you may have to do a little more mashing before transferring to a jar.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK02.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK03.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK04.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this stage find a jar or jars, large enough to hold all the cabbage with a little to spare, you can sterilise if you wish but a good clean in hot soapy water then rinsed and allowed to dry is sufficient as the salt kills and bad bacteria and encourages to good bacteria to grow. Put all your salted and mashed cabbage mix in the jar/jars well packed down with the juice ensuring that the juice is covering the cabbage by about 1cm (this is where the extra saline solution comes in if you don’t quite have enough.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK05.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Now put your lid on but not overly tight as this is a fermented product and if there is nowhere for the gas to go then you could have a pressure explosion in your cupboard (some people use wine makers fermenting valves but this is a little overkill and more cost than needed).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tuck the jar away in a storage place that’s about room temp and leave for several days checking every so often to see how it is. If the brine has evaporated you may need to top up slightly. After about a week you should have sauerkraut, give it a try, if its sour enough this is when you take it and put in the fridge or cold cellar/garage to stop the fermenting. All you have to do now is start eating, oh, and make your next batch ready for when that’s gone.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2374_SK06.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n',338,93,0,'CC-BY-SA','Cooking, Fermenting, Food preserving ',0,0,1), (2378,'2017-09-13','Why Docbook?',2405,'Klaatu talks about why Docbook is the greatest','

                                                        What\'s so great about Docbook, any way? Glad you asked.

                                                        ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','xml,docbook,writing',0,0,1), (2379,'2017-09-14','sending a text message from the command line',295,'a bunch of waffling on about email and text message sending from the command line','

                                                        Notes? We don\'t need no stinking notes!

                                                        \r\n\r\nEdited 2017-09-08 by Ken
                                                        \r\nI beg to differ :).
                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        \r\nThis show was recorded on Audacity using a Logitech headset.\r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn episode hpr1892 :: my chicken coop jezra went to great lengths to protect his chickens. His system based on a BeagleBone Black ensures the door opens and closes only during the day. \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\nIn this show jezra explains how he gets the system to send him an email, and a text message using mailx and his phones providers free SMS to Email gateway.\r\n

                                                        ',243,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','command line, mail, SMS',0,0,1), (2380,'2017-09-15','Raspbian X86 on P4 Tower',248,'This is a show on installing Pixel on a Pentium 4 Tower PC','

                                                        Raspbian x86 on an old P4 tower

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Well I’m back again, as I said in the show I did about Raspbian x86 on the Lenovo x61s, I was interested to see how the OS would perform on what I now class as very old hardware in the form of a Pentium 4 tower.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We have a spare tower at the Makerspace which gets used to test low resource operating systems to see if they live up to their name, so on Saturday (yesterday as I write this, but a few weeks ago by the time this show goes out) I put the x86 Raspbian image on to this tower to see how it would perform.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Tower specifications are: Pentium 4 2.8Gig CPU, 2Gig DDR Ram and a 40Gig HDD, which in its day was a very useful bit of kit, but technology has moved on and most people wouldn’t consider it any use as a working PC today.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First problem I encountered was the DVD drive was duff and I didn’t have the image on a flash drive. Luckily I did have my trusty USB DVD in the bag, so I hooked that up, booted into the boot menu and set the disc off loading the OS. I won\'t go into this again as I ran through the install process last time, HPR 2362, but the install went well and I was left with a new install of Pixel on the tower.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I went through the new install process and was left with an up to date and password secure PC, I then rebooted to check what the resource use was at first boot, which I was amazed was a consistent 66mb of RAM, and about 1% CPU use.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr2380_P4_01.jpg\"

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Using the Chromium web browser pushes up RAM usage over a 100 but it was smooth and easily coped with navigating to resource hungry sites such as YouTube and the BBC. So first test passed.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I next opened a Word document in LibreOffice, this took about 10seconds to load but once open was perfectly usable with no lag, so should provide a good office capable PC.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So you can use the Web, Write documents, it has an email client or you can use web mail. And it’s not painfully slow, this PC would now make a very usable homework/first computer for any child, or a computer for an older member of the family that just needs to keep in touch with family and friends without breaking the bank. In fact you could probably pick up a working tower off the likes of Freecycle/Freegle for £0 and you may even get a small 17”/19” TFT monitor from the same place.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Yes it’s not as energy efficient as the latest kit but as I said last time the cost of a new PC/laptop can buy a lot of additional electricity in the time you may run it before it finally expires.

                                                        ',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Raspbian x86, Pentium4 hardware.',0,0,1), (2382,'2017-09-19','A Non Spoilery Review of \"git commit murder\" and \"Forever Falls\" by Michael Warren Lucas',555,'I met Mike Lucas at Kansas Linux Fest 2017 and review a couple of his novels','

                                                        A Non Spoilery Review of "git commit murder" and "Forever Falls" by Michael Warren Lucas

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I met Michael at Kansas Linux Fest 2017 where he was a speaker. Turns out we\'ve probably been walking past each other in the halls at Penguicon the last three years that I have attended. Michael is a BSD guy and one of us. As well as being an open source advocate, he works professionally as a systems admin and network engineer. I bought his texts "SSH Mastery" (because I\'ve always needed help getting my head around reverse IP tunneling), "Networking for Systems Administrators", and "$ git commit murder", his latest novel. Because I was a good customer, Michael threw in "Forever Falls" for free.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "git commit murder" takes place at a BSD convention. The gathering in the novel is slightly less informal than the Linux conferences I\'ve attended. The conference is targeted at the users, contributors, and managers of the fictional "SkyBSD". Our protagonist, Detroit native Dale Whitehead has come to Canada to deliver a talk on his mesh networking project. The conference is disrupted when attendees start to die in what appear to be unrelated accidents. Dale is unwilling to accept these deaths as accidents, and puts his analytical mind to discovering the killer. He also employees his hacking skills, having already created an admin account on the host university\'s server within minutes of checking in. This makes him understandably reluctant to discuss his theories with the authorities until he has positively identified a culprit.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The SkyBSD community is not without contention. A significant number of contributors want to move from Subversion to git for version control and just as many are vehemently opposed. Also, the recent release of candid photos meant to embarrass a contributor has many calling for a Code of Conduct and the banning of violators. Others think this is going too far. Dale has to contemplate whether either of these is reason for murder? Perhaps it is a struggle by an old guard who is not ready to surrender leadership to a younger generation?

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At first, it was hard to get to like Michael\'s protagonist, Dale Whitehead. Dale suffers from an extreme form of Attention Deficit Disorder which requires medication and causes him to actively shun the company of other people. The same affliction that allows him to get "in the zone" when programming also makes being in crowds a fresh hell for Dale. He is in constant terror that some aberrant behavior on his part will reveal his condition to his companions and he finds it much easier to deal with other humans via e-mail or IRC. It\'s clear Michael Lucas has an understanding of the condition, either via research or contact with someone who suffers ADD.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At least one character in the story seemed to me to bear a passing resemblance to a familiar conference fixture in real life. Michael told me the sequel might be set at an open source/Sci Fi convention in a city near the great lakes. Time will tell if the Tuesday Afternoon Solaris Overview or a kilt wearing organizer will make an appearance.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "Forever Falls" is also a mystery, as well a SciFi story. Ella Forecourt is a recruit right out of college for the Montague Corporation. As a corporate security officer, she is assigned to investigate the death of a Montague research scientist at the Freefall installation. In the course of the novel, you learn that Montague has proprietary technology that allows them to "portal" into other universes or dimensions where the laws of physics are different from those of our universe. In Freefall, gravity runs parallel to the surface of the world. In other words, you don\'t fall down, you fall sideways, and with no ground to stop you, if you fall, you fall forever.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Montague has a research facility built into the "Cliff". With gravity travelling sideways, the surface of the planet appears as an endless cliff. "Above" the facility is a huge metal awning to deflect falling boulders. On top of the awning is where the security team discovers the body of Dr. Devin Grupper. The damage to the body suggests Dr. Grupper impacted with terminal velocity. Even in the lighter gravity of Freefall constant acceleration means terminal velocity is governed by air resistance. Montague does use airships for transport, but there are no records of how Grupper could have secured transportation and a pilot to wind up smashed on the awning without a ship going missing. Thus Security Second Ella Forecourt is assigned to the case. "Forever Falls" is but one in a series of Montague Portal novels by Michael Lucas. I look forward to reading the rest of the series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/Michael-Warren-Lucas/e/B001JP9NEY

                                                        ',131,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Kansas Linux Fest, book review',0,0,1), (2388,'2017-09-27','Apt Spelunking 4: Planet of the Apts',543,'Another couple of interesting packages from the Debian repos','

                                                        It\'s another exciting episode of Apt Spelunking! The fourth installation, which covers the following packages:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        dunst - Lightweight notification daemon

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Dunst is a lightweight, customizeable desktop notification daemon. Similar to Ubuntu\'s notify-osd, it displays passive notifications with very minimal resources. It has customizeable keystrokes, and its colors can be configured as well.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        i3 - Lightweight tiling window manager

                                                        \r\n

                                                        i3 is my window manager of choice; tiling, extremely customizeable, and absurdly light. With fantastic support for multiple monitors, and vim keybindings, it eventually finds its way onto every machine I use.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        uqm - Ur-Quan Masters

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Derived from Star Control II, Ur-Quan Masters is a fantastic retro game about spaceships and aliens. Earth has been seized, and is isolated from the rest of the galaxy. Luckily, you happen to have yourself a ship built with ancient mystic technology and whatnot.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Fun, funny, and dangerously addictive; make sure to stay away from this game if you have things to do.

                                                        ',196,98,1,'CC-BY-SA','recommendations,software,repositories',0,0,1), (2383,'2017-09-20','What\'s In My Ham Shack',2244,'I describe the equipment that I have an use in my Amateur Radio station.','

                                                        What\'s In My Ham Shack

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode I am starting what I hope will become a series where Amateur Radio operators talk about what equipment they have and use in their Ham Shacks.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Ham Shack Definition

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A good definition of exactly what a Ham Shack is can be found on Wikipedia.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_shack

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Categories of Ham Radio gear

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I tend to divide gear into the following categories.

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        1. Portable - hand-held devices designed for carrying.
                                                        2. \r\n
                                                        3. Mobile - equipment that is designed to be used in a vehicle.
                                                        4. \r\n
                                                        5. Base - gear used in a fixed station environment.
                                                        6. \r\n
                                                        7. Miscellaneous - other stuff.
                                                        8. \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        My Ham Shack

                                                        \r\n

                                                        You can google any of these model numbers to see what the hardware looks like and learn more about it.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Portable Gear

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Allinco DJ-190 Handy-Talkie
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Yeasu VX-6R tri-band Handy-Talkie
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mobile Gear

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Yeasu FT-8800 dual-band radio
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • New Motorolla Mount (NMO) antenna mount
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Comet B-10nmo mobile antenna
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Comet SBB-5nmo mobile antenna
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Base Station Gear

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • ICOM IC-746 HF+6m+2m radio
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Grasshopper II vertical HF antenna
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Unknown brand vertical 2-meter/70-cm base station antenna
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • MFJ-4225MV Switching Power Supply
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • MFJ-949E Manual Antenna Tuner
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • LDG Electronics AT-200Pro II Automatic Antenna Tuner
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Computer running Xubuntu 16.04
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • West Mountain RIGblaster Advantage digital interface
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Miscellaneous Gear

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • MFJ-269C Antenna Analyzer
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Stereo head-phones and microphone
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Push-to-Talk pedal
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • RTL-SDR Dongle
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Collection of various connectors and adaptors
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',334,43,1,'CC-BY-SA','ham radio, amateur radio, radio, shack, equipment',0,0,1), (2384,'2017-09-21','Slackware in Scotland',3399,'Beni comes to Scotland and talks to Andrew about Slackware 14.2, a year after release.','

                                                        Beni aka @Navigium visited Andrew aka @mcnalu in Scotland as part of a cycling tour and they decided to record a follow up to their previous HPR show on Slackware to mark the release of Slackware 14.2, or rather the first anniversary of its release.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Some points and links mentioned are:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Arch is for fruitflies, Slackware for elephants?
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Destroying a hard drive hammer or drill?
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Grub vs Lilo?
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Changes in Slackware - no changes an end user would notice! Pulseaudio now included as needed for bluetooth support. In Andrew\'s experience of 14.1 and before, only one package needed Pulseaudio, namely the game VVVVVV and even then it just wanted to see it installed, didn\'t need it for sound to work!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • You can get gnome for slackware with dropline GNOME.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Digression: Trains in Switzerland vs Scotland
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Beni and Andrew generally build our packages using the slackbuilds.org. There can be dependency issues but it\'s rare. Worst case is Pandoc with its Haskell deps but sbopkg queue files are a great help there. Beni recommends sbotools as an alternative that deals with this and feels like portsnap on FreeBSD.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Digression: Recommend this HPR show on open-sourcing of Colossal Cave Adventure by ClaudioM.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Managing WiFi networks: wicd vs NetworkManager vs rc.inet1 (slackware network config script).
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • When camping and cycling, power is precious. Beni explains how to pack a bicycle for air travel.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Expect Slackware in Switzerland!
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The hosts wish to clarify that no Italian Arch linux users nor fruitflies were harmed during the recording of this show.

                                                        ',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','linux,slackware,scotland,bicycles',0,0,1), (2387,'2017-09-26','Free Weights and a Bicycle',1246,'Frank discusses his life-long love for free weights','

                                                        Frank discusses his long experience with trying not to get fat by using free weights and a bicycle. Free weights are, without question, the geekiest form of exercise, having a versatility and flexibility unmatched by any alternative.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Here are some sample programs:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Sample Programs:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Procedure: 3 sets × 8 reps, increasing to 10 reps, then add five pounds and start over with 8 reps.

                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Exercises (* = requires bench, **= bench desirable):

                                                          \r\n
                                                            \r\n
                                                          • Program One: Leg Raises,* Leg Curls,* Dumbbell Flies,** Barbell Curls, Triceps Pull-Overs, Forward and Reverse Wrist Twists (using pipe with rope to raise and lower weights)

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Program Two: Dumbbell Lunge, Bench Press,* Bent-Over Rows, Dumbbell Kickbacks, Zottman Curls, Forward and Reverse Wrist Curls

                                                          • \r\n
                                                          • Program Three: Half Squats, Bench Press, Concentration Curls, Dumbbell Kickbacks, Forward and Reverse Wrist Curls.

                                                          • \r\n
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        As stated in the podcast, Frank has not found many weight-training websites appealing. The websites tend to be for fanatic bodybuilders or for pitching products. This one, though, has a pretty good catalog of exercises: https://www.weight-training-exercises.com/. Note that the same exercise may be known by several names, depending on the speaker.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Free Weights:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A bicycle:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        \"A

                                                        \r\n',195,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','exercise, free weights, physical fitness',0,0,1), (2389,'2017-09-28','Thoughts on Lifetime Learning',568,'In this episode, I talk about my experiences in learning to be a good learner','

                                                        Thoughts on Lifetime Learning

                                                        \r\n

                                                        For some of my other thoughts on this topic, consider reading this blog post.

                                                        \r\n',300,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','learning, self-improvement',0,0,1), (2386,'2017-09-25','The Decline and Fall of Tcl',1733,'... in which I\'m reading Where Tcl and Tk went wrong, by David N Welton, posted on 2010-03-30','

                                                        Tcl is an interesting language that does many things \"wrong\", especially if you\'re coming from a LISP perspective, and especially-especially if you\'re coming from a Scheme perspective. Examples are all over the C2 wiki, but probably DynamicStringsVsFunctional is the epicenter.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It also forms an important part of modern Scheme history, as the Tcl War led to the creation of Guile.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        What happened after that? Where Tcl and Tk went wrong, by David N Welton

                                                        \r\n

                                                        TL;DL: Tcl was successful because it found its niche as a lightweight yet capable language able to both integrate and be integrated with C code, but it fell behind on Tk look-and-feel compared to GNOME and KDE and also on other mainstream development phenomena, it ossified because it was afraid to upset its installed base, it got stuck between not-slim-enough and not-featureful-enough, the syntax is too weird, and it spiraled into losing touch with the rest of the free software world, which ultimately also affected business use.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Further notes

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Guile (again) faces several of these same challenges.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Haskell tries to avoid success at all costs, in order to not lose the freedom to improve the language.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Python and Perl both have Tk integrations and Python\'s IDLE is even implemented in it. Lua had ltk, but it\'s no longer maintained. There is even a Tcl/Tk package for R.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ousterhout pronounces it OH-stir-howt, which may or may not be how I pronounced it. I think the guttural sound may be reserved for the Dutch \"G\" and have nothing to do with \"H\".
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Potential episodes

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Fossil
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Tcl
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',311,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','tcl, tk, history, languages, community',0,0,1), (2392,'2017-10-03','Weather, Ogg Camp, Server Room, ITO collection',466,'A short podcast about various things mostly OggCamp','

                                                        A short show about the weather in Texas and Germany, Oggcamp 2017 and my Server room. I have been having trouble with my Raspberry Pi collection being too large and new in the box.

                                                        ',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','OggCamp',0,0,1), (2381,'2017-09-18','Benefits of a tabletop',2650,'Klaatu talks about the benefits of analogue gaming','

                                                        Klaatu talks about the benefits of tabletop gaming over computer gaming.

                                                        ',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,rpg',0,0,1), (2390,'2017-09-29','Still in the game',1449,'Klaatu compares PC and tabletop gaming','

                                                        In a counterpoint to episode 2381, Klaatu talks about how PC gaming compares to tabletop gaming.

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,rpg,pc gaming',0,0,1), (2393,'2017-10-04','PWGen - A password generator',1355,'Xoke talks about how he uses PWGen to set people\'s passwords at work','
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Download PWGen here
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Download the 5 letter word list here
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        ',79,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Security, Passwords',0,0,1), (2417,'2017-11-07','Transmeta Crusoe - Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient) - Trouble Shooting and Debian 9 Install',806,'I did a basement clean up and got my old transmeta cpu up and running','

                                                        I did the long awaited basement clean up project.
                                                        \r\nlots of old geeky stuff went to the bins and recycle yards :(

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The Transmeta company made chips around 2000 and made chip x86 ready though a software layer. Since I love almost anything that is not Intel it was a match made in heaven.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The best info I found about the FSI 210 was at this site:
                                                        \r\nFujitsu-Siemens Futro S210 (ThinClient)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you want to do a project at raspberry PI prices just go to Ebay and type Futro - they have a lot of Thin clients with other chips.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        About the chip:
                                                        \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmeta_Crusoe

                                                        ',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Transmeta Crusoe,Fujitsu-Siemens Futro S210,thin client',0,0,1), (2394,'2017-10-05','The Lost Episode',1622,'NYbill talks about building an inexpensive transistor tester... a year after the fact.','

                                                        NYbill puts up a ‘Lost Episode’ recorded in October, 2016. A comment for Ep. 2369 asking if I have ever built one of the many Transistor Kits available jogged my memory. I still had the recording so, I’ll just throw it up. I’m not sure how many pics I can find for the episode. I’ll put up what I can.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        And just for Mike Ray, I’ll leave in some bench noises I would usually edit out. ;)

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The soldering vice being used:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/Aven-17010-Adjustable-Circuit-Holder/dp/B00Q2TTQEE/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1505162033&sr=8-3&keywords=soldering+vise

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Solder sucker:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.amazon.com/Electronix-Express-060820-Solder-Desoldering/dp/B00L2HRW92/ref=sr_1_4?s=industrial&ie=UTF8&qid=1505162388&sr=1-4&keywords=solder+sucker

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The kit (This looks like the one I ordered. But, it\'s been about a year gone by now. This one shows firmware running on the chip in the pics. You can take a gamble on it if you’d like):

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://www.ebay.com/itm/2016-DIY-GM328-Transistor-Tester-LCR-ESR-meter-PWM-Square-wave-Signal-Generator-/272234590655?epid=2013312516&hash=item3f627231bf:g:Y5oAAOSw3mpXLEvU

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pics for the episode:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/collection/2016-diy-transistor-kit/

                                                        ',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','Electronics, kits, testers',0,0,1), (2631,'2018-09-03','HPR Community News for August 2018',4471,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in August 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Xtrato.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2608Wed2018-08-01BattleTechTuula
                                                        2609Thu2018-08-02SparkleShareklaatu
                                                        2610Fri2018-08-03Gnu Awk - Part 12Dave Morriss
                                                        2611Mon2018-08-06HPR Community News for July 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2612Tue2018-08-07Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Joe aka Concrete DogTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2613Wed2018-08-08Quick Awk Tipklaatu
                                                        2614Thu2018-08-09My 1948 Truetone D1835 Tube RadioJon Kulp
                                                        2615Fri2018-08-10CancerAhuka
                                                        2616Mon2018-08-13Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Josh - A.K.A - All About CodeTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2617Tue2018-08-14Exposing a Raspberry Pi database through a REST APIb-yeezi
                                                        2618Wed2018-08-15Yesod - First ImpressionsTuula
                                                        2619Thu2018-08-16A Gentle Introduction to Quiltbjb
                                                        2620Fri2018-08-17Thoughts on language learning part 1dodddummy
                                                        2621Mon2018-08-20Liverpool Makefest 2018 - Chan\'nel Thomas a.k.a little pink makerTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2622Tue2018-08-21Raspberry Pi Temperaturatorb-yeezi
                                                        2623Wed2018-08-22Actors and Agents, Sprites and Fractalsclacke
                                                        2624Thu2018-08-23Cycling through Brusselsknightwise
                                                        2625Fri2018-08-24My thoughts on language learning communication applications.dodddummy
                                                        2626Mon2018-08-27Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interviews with Helen and ChrisTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2627Tue2018-08-28Home Phone Setup!!sigflup
                                                        2628Wed2018-08-29UK Telephone Network ExplorationXtrato
                                                        2629Thu2018-08-30Thoughts on language learning part 3 - game/story mode.dodddummy
                                                        2630Fri2018-08-31Open Source Gaming: Revisiting Meridian 59TheDUDE
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 25 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There is 1 comment on\n1 previous show:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2542\n(2018-05-01) \"How I helped my dad run a static website using SparkleShare\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-08-04:\n\"Full episode on SparkleShare\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 24 comments on 15 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2608\n(2018-08-01) \"BattleTech\"\nby Tuula.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ncmhobbs on 2018-08-01:\n\"hurray battletech!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTuula on 2018-08-05:\n\"MegaMek and MekWars\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2609\n(2018-08-02) \"SparkleShare\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-08-04:\n\"Thank you!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2611\n(2018-08-06) \"HPR Community News for July 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-08-06:\n\"In case there was any doubt.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2612\n(2018-08-07) \"Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Joe aka Concrete Dog\"\nby Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nSteve on 2018-08-07:\n\"Rockets!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTony Hughes on 2018-08-09:\n\"Comment 1\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2613\n(2018-08-08) \"Quick Awk Tip\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nDave Morriss on 2018-08-12:\n\"Thanks for this\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2614\n(2018-08-09) \"My 1948 Truetone D1835 Tube Radio\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nhammerron on 2018-08-09:\n\"Tube Radio Show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJon Kulp on 2018-08-11:\n\"Tube clock radios\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2615\n(2018-08-10) \"Cancer\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-08-11:\n\"Thank you.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2617\n(2018-08-14) \"Exposing a Raspberry Pi database through a REST API\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen on 2018-08-14:\n\"Where is the script\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2618\n(2018-08-15) \"Yesod - First Impressions\"\nby Tuula.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2018-08-15:\n\"Looking into this\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2619\n(2018-08-16) \"A Gentle Introduction to Quilt\"\nby bjb.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2620\n(2018-08-17) \"Thoughts on language learning part 1\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbaffled on 2018-08-22:\n\"Nice show\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-08-24:\n\"I have 2, do I hear 3?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2622\n(2018-08-21) \"Raspberry Pi Temperaturator\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-08-27:\n\"Why is there no cute warning on this episode\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-08-30:\n\"Cuter than a box of puppies or kittens\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2624\n(2018-08-23) \"Cycling through Brussels\"\nby knightwise.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-08-22:\n\"Fantastic\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2627\n(2018-08-28) \"Home Phone Setup!!\"\nby sigflup.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMike Ray on 2018-08-27:\n\"Definition of hacking!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nb-yeezi on 2018-08-28:\n\"My sentiments exactly\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\njezra on 2018-08-29:\n\"Absolutely spectacular\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\ndodddummy on 2018-08-30:\n\"Scream, Yell, "Bravo!", also, this is called A Show\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nMike Ray on 2018-08-30:\n\"Stoop?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2628\n(2018-08-29) \"UK Telephone Network Exploration\"\nby Xtrato.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-08-30:\n\"Memories\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-August/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to bjb and possible future host baffled for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 9 shows which were without them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2651,'2018-10-01','HPR Community News for September 2018',4790,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in September 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Jeroen Baten.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2631Mon2018-09-03HPR Community News for August 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2632Tue2018-09-04Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interviews with Robert and CarlTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2633Wed2018-09-05Elm - First ImpressionsTuula
                                                        2634Thu2018-09-06Git tag and metadataklaatu
                                                        2635Fri2018-09-07Running your own mainframe on Linux (for fun and profit)Jeroen Baten
                                                        2636Mon2018-09-10Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interviews with Noel from JMU FabLabTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2637Tue2018-09-11Convert it to Textb-yeezi
                                                        2638Wed2018-09-12Dirt cheap Magicklaatu
                                                        2639Thu2018-09-13Some ancillary Bash tips - 9Dave Morriss
                                                        2640Fri2018-09-14Another Rambling Drive Into WorkMrX
                                                        2641Mon2018-09-17Liverpool Makefest 2018 - interview with Rachel from the MicroBit FoundationTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2642Tue2018-09-18My swedish and german Podcasts Part 2folky
                                                        2643Wed2018-09-19The Payoff In Storytellinglostnbronx
                                                        2644Thu2018-09-20Error on show 2642folky
                                                        2645Fri2018-09-21Blinking LEDKen Fallon
                                                        2646Mon2018-09-24Liverpool Makefest 2018 - Interview with Steve and Gerrard from the Liverpool Astronomical society.Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2647Tue2018-09-25More Quick Tipsoperat0r
                                                        2648Wed2018-09-26Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 1MrX
                                                        2649Thu2018-09-27More ancillary Bash tips - 10Dave Morriss
                                                        2650Fri2018-09-28My Pocket KnifeShane Shennan
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 29 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 9 comments on\n8 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr1512\n(2014-05-20) \"Adopting and Renovating a Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nKen Fallon on 2018-09-30:\n\"Ahhh so that\'s what counterpoint is.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1919\n(2015-12-10) \"DerbyCon Interview with Paul Koblitz\"\nby Xoke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nCarpet Muncher on 2018-09-09:\n\":)\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2549\n(2018-05-10) \"DVD ripping using old hardware\"\nby Archer72.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\narcher72 on 2018-09-04:\n\"Change to code location\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2557\n(2018-05-22) \"Styx -- The Purely Functional Static Site Generator\"\nby clacke.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nclacke on 2018-09-17:\n\"Update re: TOML in Nix\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2615\n(2018-08-10) \"Cancer\"\nby Ahuka.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nA person on 2018-09-09:\n\"Thankyou\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2624\n(2018-08-23) \"Cycling through Brussels\"\nby knightwise.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nbaffled on 2018-09-03:\n\"Very nice.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2625\n(2018-08-24) \"My thoughts on language learning communication applications.\"\nby dodddummy.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nclacke on 2018-09-19:\n\"Accordion outro\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nclacke on 2018-09-19:\n\"Interesting idea\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2627\n(2018-08-28) \"Home Phone Setup!!\"\nby sigflup.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 6:\nBrenda J. Butler on 2018-08-31:\n\"stoop\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 20 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2631\n(2018-09-03) \"HPR Community News for August 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nbaffled on 2018-09-03:\n\"Cool show.\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nbaffled on 2018-09-03:\n\"Cool show.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2635\n(2018-09-07) \"Running your own mainframe on Linux (for fun and profit)\"\nby Jeroen Baten.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\ndodddummy on 2018-09-01:\n\"This is embarrassing\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nGavtres on 2018-09-07:\n\"Memories...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2637\n(2018-09-11) \"Convert it to Text\"\nby b-yeezi.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-09-12:\n\"WOW\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBeeza on 2018-09-14:\n\"Value of text conversion\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nJonas on 2018-09-15:\n\"Ranger, etc.\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2018-09-15:\n\"Great show\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nclacke on 2018-09-19:\n\"Q\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2639\n(2018-09-13) \"Some ancillary Bash tips - 9\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen on 2018-09-13:\n\"Ahhhhhh\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\njohanv on 2018-09-21:\n\"Really interesting\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDave Morriss on 2018-09-21:\n\"Thanks for the feedback\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2640\n(2018-09-14) \"Another Rambling Drive Into Work\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nthelovebug on 2018-09-19:\n\"Audio quality\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2644\n(2018-09-20) \"Error on show 2642\"\nby folky.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nclacke on 2018-09-19:\n\"Ken loves you\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nclacke on 2018-09-19:\n\"Re: Kvalificerat hemligt\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nfolky on 2018-09-23:\n\"Rere: Kvalificerat hemligt\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2645\n(2018-09-21) \"Blinking LED\"\nby Ken Fallon.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2018-09-21:\n\"Nice!\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nTuula on 2018-09-21:\n\"great show\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2648\n(2018-09-26) \"Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 1\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nNYbill on 2018-09-28:\n\"Thanks pal\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2650\n(2018-09-28) \"My Pocket Knife\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-09-27:\n\"Milkbag wtf\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-September/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Thanks to windigo and Otto Localhorst for sending in updates in the past month.

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 23 shows which were without them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2676,'2018-11-05','HPR Community News for October 2018',3954,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in October 2018','\n\n

                                                        New hosts

                                                        \n

                                                        \nWelcome to our new host:
                                                        \n\n Yannick the french guy from Switzerland.\n

                                                        \n\n

                                                        Last Month\'s Shows

                                                        \n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
                                                        IdDayDateTitleHost
                                                        2651Mon2018-10-01HPR Community News for September 2018HPR Volunteers
                                                        2652Tue2018-10-02Liverpool Makefest 2018 - Interview with Caroline and JohnTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2653Wed2018-10-03Using the EXACT Function in ExcelShane Shennan
                                                        2654Thu2018-10-04Making CrepesShane Shennan
                                                        2655Fri2018-10-05Sleep Apnea and AfibAhuka
                                                        2656Mon2018-10-08Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 2MrX
                                                        2657Tue2018-10-09Why we are all going to shit in 30 years due to computersJeroen Baten
                                                        2658Wed2018-10-10Questions on podcast productionAl
                                                        2659Thu2018-10-11Further ancillary Bash tips - 11Dave Morriss
                                                        2660Fri2018-10-12Installing a bootloader on an ArduinoKen Fallon
                                                        2661Mon2018-10-15My Music Production SetupClaudio Miranda
                                                        2662Tue2018-10-16Repairing a motherboardArcher72
                                                        2663Wed2018-10-17Short review on a 2.5 inch SSD/HDD caddyTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
                                                        2664Thu2018-10-18My git workflowYannick the french guy from Switzerland
                                                        2665Fri2018-10-19Exercise and DietAhuka
                                                        2666Mon2018-10-22Slackware Post-Installm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2667Tue2018-10-23Create PDF bookmarks with Pdftkklaatu
                                                        2668Wed2018-10-24Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 3MrX
                                                        2669Thu2018-10-25Additional ancillary Bash tips - 12Dave Morriss
                                                        2670Fri2018-10-26Character Arcs In Storytellinglostnbronx
                                                        2671Mon2018-10-29Algae farming with Desearcherm1rr0r5h4d35
                                                        2672Tue2018-10-30Porteusklaatu
                                                        2673Wed2018-10-31Urandom - Ohio Linux Fest 2-18 Podcaster RoundtableThaj Sara
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Comments this month

                                                        \n\n

                                                        These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows\nreleased during the month or to past shows.
                                                        \nThere are 49 comments in total.

                                                        \n

                                                        There are 13 comments on\n10 previous shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr1308\n(2013-08-07) \"Helping a New Computer User\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 1:\nGort on 2018-10-08:\n\"Computer Intro Outline\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nShane Shennan on 2018-10-12:\n\"Thanks, Gort!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr1512\n(2014-05-20) \"Adopting and Renovating a Public-Domain Counterpoint Textbook\"\nby Jon Kulp.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nJon Kulp on 2018-10-02:\n\"Talk about reviving...\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2134\n(2016-10-06) \"Shutdown Sequence Systemd\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\ndavid pellecchia on 2018-10-07:\n\"systemd service\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2608\n(2018-08-01) \"BattleTech\"\nby Tuula.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nBookewyrmm on 2018-10-09:\n\"Fandom\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nTuula on 2018-10-24:\n\"MechWarrior online\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2627\n(2018-08-28) \"Home Phone Setup!!\"\nby sigflup.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 7:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"Re: stoop\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2635\n(2018-09-07) \"Running your own mainframe on Linux (for fun and profit)\"\nby Jeroen Baten.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nJan on 2018-10-02:\n\"Second Reading\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2640\n(2018-09-14) \"Another Rambling Drive Into Work\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nMrX on 2018-10-03:\n\"Re Audio quality\"
                                                          • \n
                                                          • \nComment 3:\nlostnbronx@gmail.com on 2018-10-14:\n\"Great Sound Quality\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2644\n(2018-09-20) \"Error on show 2642\"\nby folky.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 4:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"Re: Kvalificerat hemligt\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2648\n(2018-09-26) \"Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 1\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nMrX on 2018-10-03:\n\"Re Thanks pas\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2650\n(2018-09-28) \"My Pocket Knife\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                            \n
                                                          • \nComment 2:\nShane Shennan on 2018-10-01:\n\"Link about Milk Bags\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n

                                                        There are 36 comments on 8 of this month\'s shows:

                                                        \n
                                                        • hpr2651\n(2018-10-01) \"HPR Community News for September 2018\"\nby HPR Volunteers.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-09-30:\n\"The loop issue\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nDave Morriss on 2018-09-30:\n\"Re: The loop issue\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKen Fallon on 2018-09-30:\n\"Clarify\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nDave Morriss on 2018-09-30:\n\"Re: Clarify\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2018-09-30:\n\"Does the comment system remove backslashes?\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nfolky on 2018-10-01:\n\"Material for a show\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nKen Fallon on 2018-10-01:\n\"touché Sir\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"subshell issues\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"Kvalificerat hemligt\"
                                                          • Comment 10:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"Re: Intro volume\"
                                                          • Comment 11:\nDave Morriss on 2018-10-01:\n\"She sells subshells...\"
                                                          • Comment 12:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"Re: TTS over intro music\"
                                                          • Comment 13:\nclacke on 2018-10-01:\n\"That brings back memories\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2654\n(2018-10-04) \"Making Crepes\"\nby Shane Shennan.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nlostnbronx on 2018-10-08:\n\"Great Recipe\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nJonas on 2018-10-08:\n\"How I make crepes\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nShane Shennan on 2018-10-09:\n\"Brown Sugar!\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nShane Shennan on 2018-10-09:\n\"Thanks for sharing your technique!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2657\n(2018-10-09) \"Why we are all going to shit in 30 years due to computers\"\nby Jeroen Baten.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nBrian in Ohio on 2018-10-10:\n\"Mr Baten\'s shows\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\ndodddummy on 2018-10-14:\n\"You keep putting out my shows before I do!\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nDenise on 2018-10-19:\n\"The podcast content\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2658\n(2018-10-10) \"Questions on podcast production\"\nby Al.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nKen Fallon on 2018-10-10:\n\"This does NOT have to apply to HPR shows.\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2666\n(2018-10-22) \"Slackware Post-Install\"\nby m1rr0r5h4d35.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nClinton Roy on 2018-10-21:\n\"systemd information\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nBrian in Ohio on 2018-10-24:\n\"wicd\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2667\n(2018-10-23) \"Create PDF bookmarks with Pdftk\"\nby klaatu.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nb-yeezi on 2018-10-23:\n\"gcj deprecated\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nClinton Roy on 2018-10-23:\n\"debian\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nKlaatu on 2018-10-31:\n\"Thanks for the snap tip\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2668\n(2018-10-24) \"Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 3\"\nby MrX.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMichael on 2018-10-31:\n\"Great Episodes!\"

                                                          \n
                                                        • hpr2669\n(2018-10-25) \"Additional ancillary Bash tips - 12\"\nby Dave Morriss.
                                                        • \n
                                                        • \n
                                                          • Comment 1:\nMad Sweeney on 2018-10-26:\n\"Quoted Literals in Regex\"
                                                          • Comment 2:\nMad Sweeney on 2018-10-26:\n\"Re: Quoted Literals in Regex\"
                                                          • Comment 3:\nStuart Little on 2018-10-26:\n\"quoting portions of regex\"
                                                          • Comment 4:\nMad Sweeney on 2018-10-26:\n\"Re: Quoted Literals in Regex\"
                                                          • Comment 5:\nDave Morriss on 2018-10-27:\n\"Thanks for the combined wisdom being directed at my question\"
                                                          • Comment 6:\nDave Morriss on 2018-10-27:\n\"Backslashes in comments\"
                                                          • Comment 7:\nMad Sweeney on 2018-10-27:\n\"Not just backslashes\"
                                                          • Comment 8:\nDave Morriss on 2018-10-27:\n\"Comments eating ampersands?\"
                                                          • Comment 9:\nMad Sweeney on 2018-10-27:\n\"Re: Comments eating ampersands?\"

                                                          \n
                                                        \n\n

                                                        Mailing List discussions

                                                        \n

                                                        \nPolicy decisions surrounding HPR are taken by the community as a whole. This\ndiscussion takes place on the Mail List which is open to all HPR listeners and\ncontributors. The discussions are open and available on the HPR server under\nMailman.\n

                                                        \n

                                                        The threaded discussions this month can be found here:

                                                        \nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2018-October/thread.html\n\n\n

                                                        Any other business

                                                        \n

                                                        Tags and Summaries

                                                        \n

                                                        Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 23 shows which were without them.

                                                        \n

                                                        If you would like to contribute to the tag/summary project visit the summary page at https://hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php and follow the instructions there.

                                                        \n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (2399,'2017-10-12','Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards',639,'Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards','Using Super Glue to create Landmarks on Keyboards\r\n',151,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','keyboard, function key, laptop keyboard',0,0,1), (2400,'2017-10-13','My commute into work',2208,'In this episode, Dave records an episode across his entire commute into work.','

                                                        In this episode, Dave records an episode across his entire commute into work.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Hacker Public Radio episodes by me so far:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        How am I recording

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m recording this episode, in my car, on a Samsung Galaxy A5 with a Neewer lavalier microphone (as recommended by HPR\'s own Jon Kulp) attached to my jacket, recording using the Auphonic Edit Android app (also on iOS).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Post-recording, I also ran the audio recorded using AuphonicEdit to the Auphonic website for levelling.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        My portable podcasting setup

                                                        \r\n

                                                        (previously mentioned on hpr2117) and used to record Sat On My Doorstep 1 - Alex, published to Anchor on 2017-09-13)

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        As an aside*

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Both Caroline and I use that particular microphone each to record The Bugcast each week. Both the Samson and AudioTechnica microphones have been recommended by Daniel J Lewis of The Audacity To Podcast for those podcasters who cannot afford professional level equipment.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The cars I have owned

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This list may contradict the detail provided in the episode... that\'s because I may have made a few errors in recollection when I was recording.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Shameless plugs

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        I also guested on:

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Drive statistics

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • From Conisbrough to New Ollerton (rough location map)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • roughly 28 miles
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • roughly 36 minutes
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n',314,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','commute,car,cars,driving,podcasting,equipment,podcasting equipment,anchor,anchor.fm,the bugcast',0,0,1), (2397,'2017-10-10','The Urban Astronomer',1959,'An introduction to an astronomy podcast that you might like','

                                                        The Urban Astronomer

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I\'m interested in Astronomy and listen to a number of Astronomy podcasts. I have listed a few of these in the past when doing HPR shows about the podcast feeds I subscribe to (shows 1516, 1518 and 2339).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        One of the recent additions to my podcast list that I have been listening to this year is called "The Urban Astronomer", which has a website here and a podcast feed here. The site and podcast are run by Allen Versfeld, who is based in South Africa.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        To quote from the website:

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Allen is an amateur astronomer, an IT professional, a podcaster, a father of five beautiful kids and a barely competent chess player. He is also the director of the Astrophotography Section of the Astronomical Society of South Africa, where he coordinates and promotes the activities of people who are far better photographers than him.

                                                        \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        I have been enjoying Allen\'s episodes a lot. There are some great interviews with some very interesting people in the world of Astronomy. Allen has a relaxed interviewing style which I find appealing.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I wrote to him, commenting on one of his episodes, and I mentioned Hacker Public Radio in my email. He has subscribed to HPR and has been kind enough to mention it on a recent podcast. I\'m offering you a chance to listen to one of his episodes here.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The episode is number 12 of "The Urban Astronomer", from June 16, 2017. It is an interview with Jen Millard, a first year Astronomy PhD student at Cardiff University in the UK. Jen is also a host on the "Awesome Astronomy" podcast, as mentioned in the episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        I hope you enjoy listening to this example episode.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',225,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','astronomy,podcast',0,0,1), (2398,'2017-10-11','AutoHotkey Master of Automation ?',1042,'I\'ll go over my AutoHotkey script I used to give free money in GTA (dropping)','',36,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','GTA5,hacking,macros,autohotkey',0,0,1), (2401,'2017-10-16','Music Theory Hara-Kiri',970,'A show on music theory, and figuring out what viewers on hear actually want with a music theory show','

                                                        Yeah just want feedback on what to do with a music theory show, since I see it was on the requested lists and no one was really doing it that I\'ve seen.

                                                        ',354,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Music, Music Theory',0,0,1), (2420,'2017-11-10','Netbooks - Keeping an old friend alive',979,'Why netbooks are not necessarily obsolete and how to keep them performing well','

                                                        Beeza uses an Acer Aspire One netbook as a media player (principally audio).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The audio quality sent from the sound card out through the headphone socket really is excellent, so that when fed into a hi-fi amplifier the final reproduction is every bit as good as audio from a CD player - possibly better.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The netbook is over 5 years old. When it was first bought most Linux distros ran very well on it. Since that time, however, the optimal hardware spec for most distros has increased quite considerably, leaving a humble netbook relatively underpowered, having typically 1 Gb RAM and a sedate CPU.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        All is not lost, fortunately. Raspbian X86, which is very closely related to the ARM version of Raspbian as used on the Pi, has a very light footprint and delivers performance on a netbook very much like what you would have experienced when they were brand new.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Raspbian X86 is not perfect, though. It works brilliantly straight out of the box, but its security model needs a bit of simple reconfiguration to get the best from it. There are also, tweaks and cheats that can improve the Pixel user interface which, in its default setup, may not be to everybody\'s liking.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode Beeza explains steps he has taken to get the best from his netbook and, in the politest way possible, tells you what you can do with yours.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        POST RECORDING NOTE

                                                        \r\n

                                                        "Since recording the show I have installed Pulseaudio on top of Raspbian X86. It\'s a very simple install using Synaptic (or \'apt-get install pulseaudio\'), after which you can run it as a daemon process with \'pulseaudio -D\'.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The advantage of Pulseaudio is that it gives you greater control over the audio channels and devices than is possible with just the default ALSA sub-system. This will be handy if you ever record from streams or USB microphones.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you install Pulseaudio, I strongly recommend installing pavucontrol as well - a mixer designed specifically to work with Pulseaudio".

                                                        \r\n',246,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Netbooks, Raspbian, Distros',0,0,1), (2402,'2017-10-17','Petition: the card game for fanatics',2520,'Klaatu talks about a card game he designed','

                                                        Klaatu talks about a card game that he designed and is currently Kickstarting. Hear all about the exciting game play in this episode!

                                                        \r\n

                                                        It\'s a neato fantasy battle game, and is Creative Commons and open source. He hopes to finance, specifically, the artwork, which is being done by artist Nikolai Mamashev on Linux with Krita.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        If you want to contribute, go to https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/s8hzk27aqx/petition-a-card-game-for-fanatics

                                                        ',78,95,0,'CC-BY-SA','game,gaming,tabletop,rpg',0,0,1), (2403,'2017-10-18','Amateur Radio Round Table #3',3550,'Two guys try to answer Ken\'s questions about ham radio.','

                                                        This is the 3rd in the Amateur Radio Round Table series.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Participants in this episode are:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Steve, KD0IJP
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Michael, DL4MGM
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ken, N0CALL
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Russ, K5TUX
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        No agenda items had been set before recording, so we spent our time answering Ken\'s questions and allowing the discussion to proceed naturally. Some of the topics of conversation included:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • What the licensing exams are like in the US as well as Germany.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Resonance.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Antenna design.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • RF Modulation
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        The next Amateur Radio Round Table recording is tentatively set for November 15, 2017 at 18:00 UTC. Watch the HPR email list for any further updates on this and consider joining in the discussion if you are a "ham" or if you aren\'t but have any interest in the subject.

                                                        \r\n',109,43,1,'CC-BY-SA','ham radio, amateur radio, radio, antenna, rf, modulation',0,0,1), (2412,'2017-10-31','The Call of Cthulhu',5011,'In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub discusses The Call of Cthulhu','

                                                        SUMMARY

                                                        \r\n

                                                        In this episode, the HPR_AudioBookClub discusses The Call of Cthulhu.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Non-Spoiler Thoughts

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Pop Culture References

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        BEVERAGE REVIEWS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        As usual, the HPR_AudioBookClub took some time to review the beverages that each of us were drinking during the episode

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Thaj: Plain old water..... boring as usual
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • x1101: Rising Tide Calcutta Cutter IPA. Pine and citrus flavors gently accompany huge doses of hops
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pokey: Wallgreens generic hot flu remedy (comparable to Theraflu). Its gritty and tastes bad, but it helps if you\'re sick with a cold or flu.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • semioticrobotic: Harney & Sons Pumpkin spice herbal tea. semioticrobotic also recommends letting one of these tea bags steep in hot apple cider.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • pegwole: Black Coffee
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        THINGS WE TALKED ABOUT THIS TIME

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Coconut Oil, Red Dwarf, Batman, Dr. Who

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OUR NEXT AUDIOBOOK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Cybrosis by P. C. Haring \r\n
                                                        Cybrosis by P.C. Haring

                                                        \r\n

                                                        OUR AUDIO

                                                        \r\n

                                                        This episode was processed using Audacity https://audacity.sourceforge.net/. We\'ve been making small adjustments to our audio mix each month in order to get the best possible sound. It\'s been especially challenging getting all of our voices relatively level, because everyone has their own unique setup. Mumble is great for bringing us all together, and for recording, but it\'s not good at making everyone\'s voice the same volume. We\'re pretty happy with the way this month\'s show turned out, so we\'d like to share our editing process and settings with you and our future selves (who, of course, will have forgotten all this by then).

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Mumble uses a sample rate of 48kHz, but HPR requires a sample rate of 44.1kHz so the first step in our audio process is to resample the file at 44.1kHz (Tracks > Resample > 44100). Resampling can take a long time if you don\'t have a powerful computer, and sometimes even if you do. If you record late at night, like we do, you may want to start the task before you go to bed, and save it first thing in the morning, so that the file is ready to go the next time you are.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Next we use the \"Compressor\" effect with the following settings:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • Threshold: -30db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Noise Floor: -50db
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Ratio: 3:1
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Attack Time: 0.2sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Decay Time: 1.0 sec
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • \"Make-up Gain for 0db after compressing\" and \"compress based on peaks\" were both left un-checked.
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        After compressing the audio we cut any pre-show and post-show chatter from the file and save them in a separate file for possible use as outtakes after the closing music.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we listen back to the whole file and we work on the shownotes. This is when we can cut out anything that needs to be cut, and we can also make sure that we put any links in the shownotes that were talked about during the recording of the show. We finish the shownotes before exporting the .aup file to .FLAC so that we can paste a copy of the shownotes into the audio file\'s metadata. We use the \"Truncate Silence\" effect with it\'s default settings to minimize the silence between people speaking. When used with it\'s default (or at least reasonable) settings, Truncate Silence is extremely effective and satisfying. It makes everyone sound smarter, it makes the file shorter without destroying or distorting any actual content. It makes a conversation sound as fluid during playback as it was when it was recorded. It can be even more effective if you can train yourself to remain silent instead of saying \"uuuuummmm.\" Just remember to pass the file through Truncate Silence ONCE, and ONLY ONCE. If you pass it through a second time, or if you set it too aggressively your audio may sound very choppy, and un-natural.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        At this point we add new, empty audio tracks into which we paste the intro, outro and possibly outtakes, and we rename each track accordingly.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        We adjust the Gain so that the VU meter in Audacity hovers around -12db while people are speaking, and we try to keep the peaks under -6db, and we adjust the Gain on each of the new tracks so that all volumes are similar, and more importantly comfortable. Once this is done we can \"Mix and Render\" all of our tracks into a single track for export to the .FLAC file which is uploaded to the HPR FTP server.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember to save often when using Audacity. We like to save after each of these steps. Audacity has a reputation for being \"crashy\" but if you remember save after every major transform, you will wonder how it ever got that reputation.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FURTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

                                                        \r\n

                                                        A Small Room in Koboldtown (Escape Pod podcast Episode 157) by By Michael Swanwick & read by Cheyenne Wright\r\n
                                                        A Small Room in Koboldtown

                                                        \r\n

                                                        FEEDBACK

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Thank you very much for listening to this episode of the HPR_AudioBookClub. We had a great time recording this show, and we hope you enjoyed it as well. We also hope you\'ll consider joining us next time. Please leave a few words in the episode\'s comment section.\r\n
                                                        As always; remember to visit the HPR contribution page. HPR could really use your help right now.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        https://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Sincerely,\r\n
                                                        The HPR_AudioBookClub

                                                        \r\n

                                                        P.S. Some people really like finding mistakes. For their enjoyment, we always include a few.

                                                        \r\n',157,53,1,'CC-BY-SA','Review, Audiobook, HPR_AudioBookClub',0,0,1), (2411,'2017-10-30','Information Underground: Co-op Paradise',2691,'Deepgeek, Klaatu, and Lostnbronx discuss their long-running server co-operative.','

                                                        \r\nDeepgeek, Klaatu, and Lostnbronx discuss their long-running server co-operative, including the triumphs and challenges over the years, personal benefits, and why listeners might want to create such a thing themselves.

                                                        ',107,99,0,'CC-BY-SA','web server,email server,server,co-op,co-operative,gopher,privacy,information underground',0,0,1), (2404,'2017-10-19','Open Source Gaming #1: Meridian59',874,'A showcase of Open Source games, Starting with the revived MMORPG Meridian59','

                                                        Check out the game

                                                        \r\nEdited 2017-10-11T16:59:43Z (Wednesday) ken\r\n\r\n

                                                        Meridian 59

                                                        \r\n

                                                        From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Meridian 59 is known as the first 3D graphical massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) and stands as one of the longest running original online role-playing games. Developed by Archetype Interactive, the team included John Hanke who later founded Niantic, Inc. and codeveloped Google Earth and Pokémon Go.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First published by the now defunct 3DO Company, the game was first launched online in an early form on December 15, 1995 and released commercially on September 27, 1996 with a flat-rate monthly subscription. Meridian 59 is currently available as open source software and is being run by original developers Andrew Kirmse and Chris Kirmse.

                                                        \r\n\r\n

                                                        Links

                                                        \r\n\r\n',354,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Gaming, Open Source',0,0,1), (2405,'2017-10-20','Nokia 6 Review',675,'This is a short show about my first thoughts of the Nokia 6','

                                                        The Nokia 6 is a mid range phone with the following specifications:

                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • 5.5-inch 1080p screen
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Snapdragon 430 chip set
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • CPU - Octa-core 1.4 GHz Cortex-A53
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • GPU - Adreno 505
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 3GB of RAM
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Dual 4G SIM capable (All UK networks)
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 32Gig internal storage expansion with SD card up to 128Gig
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 16MP and 8MP cameras
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • Fingerprint scanner
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • 3.5mm Headphone Jack
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        • All metal Aluminium case
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Price at purchase, network unlocked £200

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The phone came with Android 7.1 and as soon as it was connected to the Internet it updated to 7.1.1 so has the latest September security patches.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        The first issue encountered was that this phone uses a nano SIM card for the phone network and my old One Plus used the bigger micro SIM, so I had to get a new Sim card sent to me which took 24 hours. In the mean time I was installing some of the applications that I have on the phone and checking that all my contacts had transferred to the new phone, which despite a backup of same some had not migrated, but that’s a Google issue not the phone.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        When the SIM arrived I put it and a 16Gig micro SD card into the SIM slot, the cards were recognized and after configuring the SD card as additional storage I was able to set my pod catcher and camera to save files to the SD card rather than internal storage thus leaving internal storage for apps and Android updates.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        First thing I noticed over my previous One Plus1 is how snappy everything is the CPU upgrade was definitely and improvement over my old phone. Another thing is the fact that Nokia has decided to keep the 3.5mm headphone Jack which for me is essential as I listen to music and audio recordings at some time on the phone most days. A lot has also been said about the 3000mAh battery not being up to all day use and the slowness of recharging it if needed. For my use profile I find the battery more than adequate, I surf, use social media, take occasional snaps, watch the odd You Tube video and listen to pod-casts/music, Oh and make the odd phone call.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After a 14 hour day I have still got 50-60% of battery left. Granted the other night I got down to 40% it did take all night to recharge to 98% with a 2.5A charger, with the official 2A charger it does seem to be a little faster, but yes if you\'re a heavy user you will need to carry your charger or a portable battery for emergency top ups.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        So would I recommend the Nokia6 to someone in the market for a phablet, the short answer is yes, if you need the larger screen but can\'t afford the high end larger screen phones this is a very good mid range option, if you need to use the dual SIM capability it might be worth spending the extra £40 and getting the 64Gig version to give extra room for updates and plenty of space for Applications as you will not be able to use the expansion capacity as the second SIM uses the space where the Micro SD card goes.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        After the first 2 weeks or so my first impressions are this is a good phone and well worth the £200 price point.

                                                        ',338,57,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android, Nokia 6, Phones, New Kit',0,0,1), (2410,'2017-10-27','OLF 2017 Report',1376,'OLF 2017, a Free and Open Source Software conference took place on September 29- October 1, 2017','

                                                        Ohio LinuxFest 2017 is a Free and Open Source Software convention in Columbus, Ohio, and presents a variety of talks over the entire weekend. In this episode I tell you about my own personal experience at Ohio LinuxFest this year.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Links:

                                                        \r\n\r\n',198,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','OLF 2017, Open Source, Free Software, Conference',0,0,1), (2406,'2017-10-23','Putting Ends onto CAT6 Ethernet Cables',509,'This was my experience learning how to put the ends onto CAT6 cable.','

                                                        This is the graphic that I used to learn how to feed the wires correctly into the plastic end piece in the right order:
                                                        \r\n\"https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Sec-OmiRuDk/WOLMmb0yXJI/AAAAAAAAARE/ay3qkpPmIq4__PJc3RJoPWv9RNnxXauJQCEw/s1600/CAT6%2Bcat5%2BWiring%2BDiagram%2Bstraight%2Bthrough%2Bcable%2Bcolor%2Bcode%2Brj45%2BethernetTIA%2B568B.jpg\"

                                                        ',250,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','CAT6, learning, DIY',0,0,1), (2431,'2017-11-27','Information Underground: Local Control',2431,'Deepgeek, Klaatu, and Lostnbronx natter on about local participation and responsibility.','

                                                        SUMMARY:

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Deepgeek, Klaatu, and Lostnbronx discuss communities, real and virtual, and get to the heart (or not) of the confluent issues surrounding modern confusion, apathy and despair with their leadership.

                                                        \r\n\r\n',107,99,1,'CC-BY-SA','community,information underground,klaatu,deepgeek,lostnbronx',0,0,1), (2407,'2017-10-24','The Lost Episode Part 2',1332,'NYbill talks about flashing firmware to a Atmega328p chip to get a Transistor Tester Kit working. ','

                                                        A follow up to “The Lost Episode”. Flashing the blank Atmega328p chip to get bring a nonworking Transistor Tester Kit to life.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        There are a lot of these kits out there. Different shapes, colors, and capabilities. In my case the kit was called a: 2578AY-AT. The firmware for this particular kit is: mega328_color_kit.

                                                        \r\n\r\n
                                                            lsusb (get bus and device ID numbers.)\r\n    sudo chmod +777 /dev/bus/usb/*bus_ID/*device_ID\r\n\r\n    avrdude -c ‘your programmer’ -p ‘your chip’
                                                        \r\n
                                                          \r\n
                                                        • In my case:
                                                        • \r\n
                                                        \r\n
                                                            avrdude -c usbasp -p m328p
                                                        \r\n

                                                        Avrdude should communicate with the programmer and verify the chip is ready to receive instructions.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        From here Avrdudess helped as I was able to use the ‘verify’ options after a write to see there was an error. Avrdudess also let me correct the error by changing the E-lock value to 0x04. Then the flash would write.

                                                        \r\n

                                                        Remember to write the hex file first and the eep file second as hex would over write a eep file if it was written first.

                                                        \r\n',235,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','Electronics,kit,tester,AVR programmer,transistor',0,0,1),