From 684a926d90792d8e6049fb2fd419556277e6e323 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ken Fallon Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 20:49:58 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] 2023-11-17_19-49-58Z_Friday database changed --- sql/hpr-db-part-0c.sql | 28 ++++++++++++++-------------- sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql | 24 ++++++++++++------------ sql/hpr-db-part-0e.sql | 24 ++++++++++++------------ sql/hpr-db-part-0f.sql | 24 ++++++++++++------------ sql/hpr-db-part-10.sql | 28 ++++++++++++++-------------- sql/hpr-db-part-11.sql | 26 +++++++++++++------------- sql/hpr-db-part-12.sql | 26 +++++++++++++------------- sql/hpr-db-part-13.sql | 26 +++++++++++++------------- sql/hpr-db-part-14.sql | 36 ++++++++++++++++++------------------ sql/hpr-db-part-15.sql | 16 +++++++++++++++- sql/hpr.sql | 30 ++++++++++++++++++++++-------- 11 files changed, 158 insertions(+), 130 deletions(-) diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-0c.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-0c.sql index 955d06c..5ec81f2 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-0c.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-0c.sql @@ -599,7 +599,19 @@ (3986,'hpr3986.spx','spx',1950476,'15462e2b2ade5a60409434001d52b6b9329f1ff6','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), (3986,'hpr3986.flac','flac',41579627,'bc410fd59b298d7cc0257c46f726e77c4ff0d4af','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 99125669 samples'), (3986,'hpr3986.opus','opus',4030879,'9a55748359e2fed6475483761974a7561a4296f4','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), -(3986,'hpr3986.wav','wav',198252762,'f4a3efe7b82761d9c1f3140c0fdffd5e10bd9aef','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'); +(3986,'hpr3986.wav','wav',198252762,'f4a3efe7b82761d9c1f3140c0fdffd5e10bd9aef','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'), +(3993,'hpr3993.mp3','mp3',8120684,'6d00676cb4693d87ecebed2a5117b4f77ff4982d','audio/mpeg; charset=binary','setgid Audio file with ID3 version 2.4.0, contains:MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1, 64 kbps, 48 kHz, Monaural'), +(3993,'hpr3993.ogg','ogg',7924941,'dfa89dbd7ab0a0eebe5fcc09e49d9490b2e74056','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3993,'hpr3993.spx','spx',3834021,'7f67404912def1d0700473363c08cb63662e2350','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), +(3993,'hpr3993.flac','flac',87358042,'d4eadf56d6a6418d05dce3e9748efba9408f6186','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 194886000 samples'), +(3993,'hpr3993.opus','opus',7924941,'8474cf9fe9730b5ce96fc2a6a398ef9c0d6bbe91','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3993,'hpr3993.wav','wav',389772102,'2720c2a93faa8a39c003a764c2a7f465c50fb2a9','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'), +(3994,'hpr3994.mp3','mp3',6971564,'b277bc12b5fc62b99973304e9cc45352760e3eee','audio/mpeg; charset=binary','setgid Audio file with ID3 version 2.4.0, contains:MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1, 64 kbps, 48 kHz, Monaural'), +(3994,'hpr3994.ogg','ogg',8436900,'0721ccd82b77531e79dd0e893a4fcebf1f16c9ad','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3994,'hpr3994.spx','spx',3291408,'51e5922a2d4f4f6172a5aea72c1352cdadc1c813','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), +(3994,'hpr3994.flac','flac',59778226,'fdca142bef4ffaea4ea7f7ea9a7b9174bb2a0d71','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 167304312 samples'), +(3994,'hpr3994.opus','opus',8436900,'98db56a7ef9db79c1bf810daf79365545b5eb6f1','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3994,'hpr3994.wav','wav',334608726,'0c03027c393e967502f04179271e4161cb0e3fc3','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `assets` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; @@ -620,7 +632,7 @@ CREATE TABLE `comments` ( `last_changed` datetime NOT NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp(), PRIMARY KEY (`id`), KEY `comments_eps_id_idx` (`eps_id`) -) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=3826 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3 COLLATE=utf8mb3_unicode_ci COMMENT='New comments table populated from c5t_* tables'; +) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=3827 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3 COLLATE=utf8mb3_unicode_ci COMMENT='New comments table populated from c5t_* tables'; /*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */; -- @@ -986,15 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `comments` (`id`, `eps_id`, `comment_timestamp`, `comment_author_nam (355,862,'2011-11-22 11:52:45','Daniel Beecham','AWESOME!','Alright! Breaking down protocols series, I hope there are lots and lots of episodes of this, I like the idea.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), (356,862,'2011-11-23 12:09:19','Kevin Granade','Thanks, I\'ll do my best.','Glad to hear it. I\'ll see what I can do, though to tell you the truth, I\'ve never recorded audio before, and this took a lot more time than I had anticipated. I want to do more, but I have some programming to catch up on now.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), (357,862,'2011-12-06 22:12:08','Dave Potts','Great Show','I really liked the show. Thanks for taking the time to put it together.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(358,862,'2011-12-18 23:26:54','rowinggolfer','superb episode','Very, very nice episode. More like this please kevin!\r\nInspired by steve gibson, but outperforming him in terms of content on this occasion.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(359,865,'2011-11-30 03:46:41','dish','Cmdr Taco!!','I totally did not know it was Cmdr Taco\'s idea! What a great episode! thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(360,865,'2011-12-10 21:41:33','JonathanRRogers','Confusion about ZIP vs. ARC','While the events related to transparency match what I remember, I think Deltaray confused the ZIP and ARC file formats. What I\'ve been able to find indicates that Phil Katz created the ZIP format specifically to be different from the ARC format after he lost a lawsuit brought by SEA. If all the Wikipedia articles and sources they cite are wrong about this, there must be a deep conspiracy indeed.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(361,865,'2012-01-30 15:19:12','Deltaray','Phil Katz was a code thief','@JonathanRRogers: I was kinda generalizing that Phil Katz is a code thief. While ZIP may be a different format and algorithm, he got into the whole thing by dishonorable means and I don\'t think he should be given as much credit as he does and more credit should go to Thom, whose efforts where effectively derailed by Phil. The point is, there is a lot more to the story than what is mentioned on Wikipedia. My source material is episode 8 of the BBS: The documentary, by Jason Scott:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.archive.org/details/BBS.The.Documentary','2022-02-14 13:15:37'), -(362,866,'2011-11-28 22:35:49','marcoz','nice','Nice, Klaatu.\r\n\r\nMost of my contributions now are documentation related so I found this most interesting to listen to. I stumbled on Publican not too long ago (less than a year I\'m pretty sure. I honestly don\'t remember) and I really like the output. I think it\'s definitely a good thing for OSS and am glad you had an episode on it. docs.fedora.com (and rh) are on my short list of nice looking documentation sites\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(363,866,'2011-11-30 03:43:42','klaatu','cool thank you goodbye','Marcoz, \r\n\r\nGlad you liked the ep, glad you like Publican. I enjoy using it, myself....UNTIL i have to get in there and do a whole bunch of xslt custom params... then I fall back on raw docbook and xsltproc. But man, when I don\'t need that? publican is just so darned easy.\r\n\r\nIf you liked my HPR ep on Publican, then you\'ll LOVE my Gnu World Order ep on epub! (yes, that was an advert) https://thebadapples.info/audiophile.gnuWorldOrder_7x04.ogg\r\n\r\nAds aside, thanks for the comment and stuff! ','2022-02-14 13:15:37'), -(364,866,'2011-11-30 11:43:08','doubi','Widening the audience','Great podcast (as usual, Klaatu). Within the first few minutes I got excited about pimping this to my non-techie writer friends on Twitter. For that reason it would have been good to skip over \'scary\' things emacs & vim & just concentrate on how it can help writers used to other tools, but hey, I can always remix & put out a cut-down version if I cared that much.\r\nMany thanks for helping spread the good word!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(365,867,'2011-11-30 03:47:40','klaatu','Kids these days','You can\'t tell \'em anything, what with their facebooks and twitters and such.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(366,867,'2011-12-02 08:17:25','Ken Fallon','Admin Fail !!','Hi Mr. Gadgets,\r\n\r\nApologies for not adding the shownotes on time. I promise to do better if you don\'t tell Santa.\r\n\r\nKen','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(367,869,'2011-12-03 20:20:37','DeadDog','','That was excellent.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(368,869,'2011-12-06 01:18:10','kenbo','This was cool','Awesome change of pace! You should do more of this.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), -(369,870,'2011-12-04 13:31:34','e8hffff','Memories','Thanks. Brought back similar memories in Australia.\r\n\r\nI kind of started off with Video consoles, but first computers were TRS-80, Apple2 (at school and cousin owned Redstone clone), Sinclair Spectrum 48k, Atari 512/1040,IBM XT,Apple LCII... +various computers used at workplaces.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql index 29cb8df..6e36fb4 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql @@ -1,3 +1,15 @@ +(358,862,'2011-12-18 23:26:54','rowinggolfer','superb episode','Very, very nice episode. More like this please kevin!\r\nInspired by steve gibson, but outperforming him in terms of content on this occasion.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(359,865,'2011-11-30 03:46:41','dish','Cmdr Taco!!','I totally did not know it was Cmdr Taco\'s idea! What a great episode! thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(360,865,'2011-12-10 21:41:33','JonathanRRogers','Confusion about ZIP vs. ARC','While the events related to transparency match what I remember, I think Deltaray confused the ZIP and ARC file formats. What I\'ve been able to find indicates that Phil Katz created the ZIP format specifically to be different from the ARC format after he lost a lawsuit brought by SEA. If all the Wikipedia articles and sources they cite are wrong about this, there must be a deep conspiracy indeed.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(361,865,'2012-01-30 15:19:12','Deltaray','Phil Katz was a code thief','@JonathanRRogers: I was kinda generalizing that Phil Katz is a code thief. While ZIP may be a different format and algorithm, he got into the whole thing by dishonorable means and I don\'t think he should be given as much credit as he does and more credit should go to Thom, whose efforts where effectively derailed by Phil. The point is, there is a lot more to the story than what is mentioned on Wikipedia. My source material is episode 8 of the BBS: The documentary, by Jason Scott:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.archive.org/details/BBS.The.Documentary','2022-02-14 13:15:37'), +(362,866,'2011-11-28 22:35:49','marcoz','nice','Nice, Klaatu.\r\n\r\nMost of my contributions now are documentation related so I found this most interesting to listen to. I stumbled on Publican not too long ago (less than a year I\'m pretty sure. I honestly don\'t remember) and I really like the output. I think it\'s definitely a good thing for OSS and am glad you had an episode on it. docs.fedora.com (and rh) are on my short list of nice looking documentation sites\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(363,866,'2011-11-30 03:43:42','klaatu','cool thank you goodbye','Marcoz, \r\n\r\nGlad you liked the ep, glad you like Publican. I enjoy using it, myself....UNTIL i have to get in there and do a whole bunch of xslt custom params... then I fall back on raw docbook and xsltproc. But man, when I don\'t need that? publican is just so darned easy.\r\n\r\nIf you liked my HPR ep on Publican, then you\'ll LOVE my Gnu World Order ep on epub! (yes, that was an advert) https://thebadapples.info/audiophile.gnuWorldOrder_7x04.ogg\r\n\r\nAds aside, thanks for the comment and stuff! ','2022-02-14 13:15:37'), +(364,866,'2011-11-30 11:43:08','doubi','Widening the audience','Great podcast (as usual, Klaatu). Within the first few minutes I got excited about pimping this to my non-techie writer friends on Twitter. For that reason it would have been good to skip over \'scary\' things emacs & vim & just concentrate on how it can help writers used to other tools, but hey, I can always remix & put out a cut-down version if I cared that much.\r\nMany thanks for helping spread the good word!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(365,867,'2011-11-30 03:47:40','klaatu','Kids these days','You can\'t tell \'em anything, what with their facebooks and twitters and such.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(366,867,'2011-12-02 08:17:25','Ken Fallon','Admin Fail !!','Hi Mr. Gadgets,\r\n\r\nApologies for not adding the shownotes on time. I promise to do better if you don\'t tell Santa.\r\n\r\nKen','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(367,869,'2011-12-03 20:20:37','DeadDog','','That was excellent.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(368,869,'2011-12-06 01:18:10','kenbo','This was cool','Awesome change of pace! You should do more of this.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), +(369,870,'2011-12-04 13:31:34','e8hffff','Memories','Thanks. Brought back similar memories in Australia.\r\n\r\nI kind of started off with Video consoles, but first computers were TRS-80, Apple2 (at school and cousin owned Redstone clone), Sinclair Spectrum 48k, Atari 512/1040,IBM XT,Apple LCII... +various computers used at workplaces.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), (370,870,'2012-01-08 20:35:00','FiftyOneFifty','','Haven\'t listened yet, will make a point of it today. The pic of the TRS-80 Model 3 brings back memories, I have one just like on my desk under a bunch of papers and 3 more (plus a printer) stored. I really need to make time to get back to my classic comps and emulators.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), (371,873,'2011-12-08 21:10:48','new-clinux','','I\'m by no means a zealot about these things -- far from it! -- but the fact that this is .mp3 only seems laughably beyond the pale :)\r\n\r\ncheers, keep the faith.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'), (372,873,'2011-12-09 05:50:23','Ken Fallon','We\'re also in Ogg and Spx','Hi new-clinux,\r\n\r\nFree software versions of the mp3 encoder and decoder have been available for years so there is no software freedom issue with the format. Many of our listeners come from parts of the world where software patents are not recognised, for the rest there are ogg and spx feeds https://hackerpublicradio.org/syndication.php \r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:15:37'), @@ -986,15 +998,3 @@ (1352,1902,'2015-11-23 12:12:09','Dave Morriss','Nice list','Hi Fin,\r\n\r\nThanks for this list. There were some good items in there that I\'d never come across before.\r\n\r\nHaving been wrangling Unicode recently I like what gucharmap offers.\r\n\r\nI use Okular for PDF viewing, but evince\'s annotation features are interesting. It\'s apparently available as \"Document Viewer\" under Xfce (which I currently use).\r\n\r\nPlenty of things to explore!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), (1353,1902,'2015-11-28 12:13:00','zloster','Nice list','I also would like to thanks for this list. I also use a lot of these programs.\r\nSome addition to the list could be: transmission-remote-gtk (www.webupd8.org/2011/12/transmission-remote-gtk.html) - if you want to manage the transmission-daemon running on remote machine and you don\'t like the build-in web-interface.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), (1354,1903,'2015-11-19 06:56:24','Ken Fallon','Another gem','Never knew this was possible.\r\n\r\nexcellent+=hpr1903\r\n\r\nSee what i did there','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1355,1903,'2015-11-23 11:28:23','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ken','Glad you got something out of this. Bash is surprisingly rich in features considering it\'s a command-line interpreter.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1356,1904,'2015-11-20 04:49:12','b-yeezi','Thanks','Great show. Thanks for the valuable information. I\'m not a system admin, but I am a full time Linux user that sometimes has to use a Windows PC for work. It\'s great to get some Windows command line basics from a trusted source, as searching for such commands online can lead to seedy websites. Keep up the great content!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1357,1904,'2015-11-25 17:10:08','Frank','','I add my thanks. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1358,1906,'2015-11-28 20:11:31','Dave Morriss','Some interesting packages','I was intrigued by Phatch and installed it to try out.\r\n\r\nIt\'s intriguing though a bit counter-intuitive (for me anyway) since it seems to start by assembling a tool chain, which I didn\'t expect.\r\n\r\nI then had difficulty working out how to apply the chain to some images. I shall persevere!\r\n\r\nI also tried xstarfish and like what it produces.\r\n\r\nThanks for pointing these out.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1359,1906,'2015-12-01 22:26:52','Windigo','Re: Phatch','It\'s definitely not a terribly intuitive interface. I think it applies all of the actions you add (in order) to each of the images, but you have to be *very* explicit when assembling your chain.\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'ll do a more in-depth show on how phatch works. Hmm...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1360,1906,'2015-12-02 09:54:42','Dave Morriss','Re: Phatch','Phatch seems to have a lot of potential. I can see a use for it myself; I like to assemble several pictures for HPR episodes, and I want to do things like strip metadata, shrink the size and make thumbnails. I can see that this might be possible but knowing how is the barrier. I looked at the documentation but it seems to be very short of actual instructions!\r\n\r\nSo, I know iPhatch is all about \"Do Stuff To Stuff\". I\'ve understood the \"Do Stuff\" phase a little, but find the \"To Stuff\" part cryptic.\r\n\r\nIf you\'ve mastered it yourself a show about your experiences would be great!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1361,1907,'2015-11-25 20:11:06','Jonathan Kulp ','Excellent ','Loved this interview and the project. Wish it had been a bit longer. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1362,1907,'2015-12-23 11:42:09','Charles in NJ ','Penn Manor','What Charlie & the amazing students of the Penn Manor school district have managed to create is truly inspiring. \r\n\r\nYou should drop everything for 5-1/2 minutes to catch Charlie\'s TEDx Talk on YouTube:\r\n\r\nhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=f8Co37GO2Fc\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1363,1908,'2015-11-28 22:01:21','Dave Morriss','Loved this!','A very cool project.\r\n\r\nI\'m in envy of your students.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1364,1909,'2015-11-26 09:49:54','Mike Ray','Calibre cli','Good show John.\r\n\r\nAmusing to hear one or two questioners at the end really struggling with the concept of doing \'something for nothing\'. Thought she might call you a communist :-)\r\n\r\nHow about a show talking about how you use Calibre\'s command-line to create your books? I\'m curious about how to create ePub books from either plain text, markdown or HTML','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1365,1909,'2015-11-26 12:57:03','Jonathan Kulp ','Valuing Musicians','Haha true she wasn\'t crazy about the \"free\" aspect, but to be fair, musicians face an ongoing struggle against people undervaluing their skills, whether it be someone balking at the \"outrageous\" price for private lessons or the \"scandalous\" fee to play at a wedding. People think music is all fun and games, but for professionals it\'s hard work, a highly specialized skill developed over many years. I think her questions were coming from the perspective of someone fighting to make sure musicians\' skills are properly valued. I get this.\r\n\r\nI\'ll definitely do a show about calibre conversions, both with the GUI and the CLI. Thanks for the comments!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), -(1366,1909,'2015-11-27 02:02:14','b-yeezi','Great show','Thanks for sharing this presentation. I enjoyed the entire thing and will use some of your ideas in my own projects. I especially enjoyed your explanations of creative commons and free software in a way that was clear and accurate, but not too preachy. These concepts are so foreign to some people that is entertaining to hear their reactions when they are exposed to free culture. \r\n\r\nThanks again and I am looking forward to your next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-0e.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-0e.sql index b5742dd..24ad4e2 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-0e.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-0e.sql @@ -1,3 +1,15 @@ +(1355,1903,'2015-11-23 11:28:23','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ken','Glad you got something out of this. Bash is surprisingly rich in features considering it\'s a command-line interpreter.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1356,1904,'2015-11-20 04:49:12','b-yeezi','Thanks','Great show. Thanks for the valuable information. I\'m not a system admin, but I am a full time Linux user that sometimes has to use a Windows PC for work. It\'s great to get some Windows command line basics from a trusted source, as searching for such commands online can lead to seedy websites. Keep up the great content!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1357,1904,'2015-11-25 17:10:08','Frank','','I add my thanks. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1358,1906,'2015-11-28 20:11:31','Dave Morriss','Some interesting packages','I was intrigued by Phatch and installed it to try out.\r\n\r\nIt\'s intriguing though a bit counter-intuitive (for me anyway) since it seems to start by assembling a tool chain, which I didn\'t expect.\r\n\r\nI then had difficulty working out how to apply the chain to some images. I shall persevere!\r\n\r\nI also tried xstarfish and like what it produces.\r\n\r\nThanks for pointing these out.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1359,1906,'2015-12-01 22:26:52','Windigo','Re: Phatch','It\'s definitely not a terribly intuitive interface. I think it applies all of the actions you add (in order) to each of the images, but you have to be *very* explicit when assembling your chain.\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'ll do a more in-depth show on how phatch works. Hmm...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1360,1906,'2015-12-02 09:54:42','Dave Morriss','Re: Phatch','Phatch seems to have a lot of potential. I can see a use for it myself; I like to assemble several pictures for HPR episodes, and I want to do things like strip metadata, shrink the size and make thumbnails. I can see that this might be possible but knowing how is the barrier. I looked at the documentation but it seems to be very short of actual instructions!\r\n\r\nSo, I know iPhatch is all about \"Do Stuff To Stuff\". I\'ve understood the \"Do Stuff\" phase a little, but find the \"To Stuff\" part cryptic.\r\n\r\nIf you\'ve mastered it yourself a show about your experiences would be great!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1361,1907,'2015-11-25 20:11:06','Jonathan Kulp ','Excellent ','Loved this interview and the project. Wish it had been a bit longer. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1362,1907,'2015-12-23 11:42:09','Charles in NJ ','Penn Manor','What Charlie & the amazing students of the Penn Manor school district have managed to create is truly inspiring. \r\n\r\nYou should drop everything for 5-1/2 minutes to catch Charlie\'s TEDx Talk on YouTube:\r\n\r\nhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=f8Co37GO2Fc\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1363,1908,'2015-11-28 22:01:21','Dave Morriss','Loved this!','A very cool project.\r\n\r\nI\'m in envy of your students.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1364,1909,'2015-11-26 09:49:54','Mike Ray','Calibre cli','Good show John.\r\n\r\nAmusing to hear one or two questioners at the end really struggling with the concept of doing \'something for nothing\'. Thought she might call you a communist :-)\r\n\r\nHow about a show talking about how you use Calibre\'s command-line to create your books? I\'m curious about how to create ePub books from either plain text, markdown or HTML','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1365,1909,'2015-11-26 12:57:03','Jonathan Kulp ','Valuing Musicians','Haha true she wasn\'t crazy about the \"free\" aspect, but to be fair, musicians face an ongoing struggle against people undervaluing their skills, whether it be someone balking at the \"outrageous\" price for private lessons or the \"scandalous\" fee to play at a wedding. People think music is all fun and games, but for professionals it\'s hard work, a highly specialized skill developed over many years. I think her questions were coming from the perspective of someone fighting to make sure musicians\' skills are properly valued. I get this.\r\n\r\nI\'ll definitely do a show about calibre conversions, both with the GUI and the CLI. Thanks for the comments!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), +(1366,1909,'2015-11-27 02:02:14','b-yeezi','Great show','Thanks for sharing this presentation. I enjoyed the entire thing and will use some of your ideas in my own projects. I especially enjoyed your explanations of creative commons and free software in a way that was clear and accurate, but not too preachy. These concepts are so foreign to some people that is entertaining to hear their reactions when they are exposed to free culture. \r\n\r\nThanks again and I am looking forward to your next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), (1367,1909,'2015-12-01 18:12:59','Frank','','Though it\'s been a long time since I have to buy one, I fully share your sentiments about the college textbook industry. The publishers block the paths of learning, raise their flintlocks at students, and cry \"Stand and deliver.\"','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), (1368,1910,'2015-11-28 04:24:34','Matt','I didn\'t know this project existed.','Great episode! I\'m a long time Winamp fan too. I also like Qt based applications that are cross-platform. Thanks!\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), (1369,1910,'2015-11-28 17:54:36','Frank','Thanks','Glad you enjoyed it.\r\n\r\nThere\'s one thing I forgot, even though it was in my notes. Qmmp can be a little strange about playing URLs that have funky characters, such as parentheses, in them. Some of the old-time radio sites, most of which are hobbyist sites, have some very unusual URLs for the individual OTR episodes, mostly because the maintainers try to squeeze too much information into them. \r\n\r\nI sometimes end up falling back to XMMS, which still comes bundled in Slackware, praise Bob! for those.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'), @@ -986,15 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `comments` (`id`, `eps_id`, `comment_timestamp`, `comment_author_nam (2352,2505,'2018-03-11 13:02:59','clacke','Surprisingly useful','I went into this thinking \"bah, readline, it\'s C-r, C-a, C-e, some kill and yank, what\'s to learn?\". But it was Dave, and somehow there was a Part 3, so maybe there were something useful in there?\r\n\r\nWow, I was so wrong about knowing everything there is to know about readline. I don\'t know how useful the capitalization things are, and C-t I already knew about and I think it\'s mostly useful for when you have pressed C-t by mistake ... but M-b and M-f, OMG.\r\n\r\nI have needed these for years. I usually hop around with C-left and C-right, but when you\'re one mosh, one tmux and one su down, usually all arrow keycodes are long gone, and it\'s all misery. Now with M-b and M-f my life quality will drastically improve!\r\n\r\nAlso interesting to know what the args thing is for. I\'ve been vaguely aware of it as it\'s easy to trigger by mistake, but I think I will use it more now that I have been taught exactly what it does. Maybe for counting the length of git commit messages, for example. You want a 60-character max commit message length? M-6 0 C-b after you typed your message will show you by how much you overran the limit!\r\n\r\nThanks, Dave. As always a great contribution, even for those of us who may think we already know everything.','2018-03-11 13:06:02'), (2353,2509,'2018-03-15 09:44:38','Clinton Roy','interesting','This was an interesting discussion, maybe because of the disagreements?\r\n\r\nAlso, thank you for the audio notes.','2018-03-15 12:42:11'), (2354,2507,'2018-03-20 22:06:14','clacke','Re: that info.rkt for a node','Correction to correction: No I didn\'t misspeak anything, we just misunderstood each other. Sorry for the confusion. :-)','2018-03-20 22:08:47'), -(2355,2514,'2018-03-22 07:24:04','thelovebug','Blind faith','I haven\'t even listened to the episode yet, but I\'ve just ordered myself one of those calculator kits from Amazon!','2018-03-22 09:24:12'), -(2356,2514,'2018-03-22 19:46:26','NYbill','Enjoy the kit, Dave.','I warn about a few small pitfalls I ran into while building it. Hope it saves you the same trouble.','2018-03-22 20:12:51'), -(2357,2508,'2018-03-23 07:44:35','clacke','You\'re right to worry, but ...','Musk isn\'t the only one. He\'s the one who got the furthest, and who has the grandest master plan. But don\'t forget about Bezos and Branson and their space ventures.\r\n\r\nSo, I don\'t think we\'re pinning our hopes on one man. But my answer reveals something else. We\'re still pinning our hopes on Great Men (as in the Great Man theory of history). Musk, Bezos and Branson aren\'t geniuses in the sense that they are sciencing and engineering all this stuff when nobody else could, they\'re just hiring the people who do.\r\n\r\nStill, I think people fawning over Musk is awesome, because it means people are pinning their hopes on research, engineering and entrepreneurship, because that\'s what he symbolizes. And hustling the money and funneling it in the right direction isn\'t nothing either.\r\n\r\nIt\'s far better than people admiring people who literally don\'t contribute anything, or are contributing negatively, to furthering the knowledge and power of the human race, like David Avocado Wolfe, Dr. Oz or Gwyneth Paltrow.\r\n\r\nOk, so we\'re not at the mercy at a single man, but we are at the mercy of three men? No. Don\'t forget about China and India, and old spacer-travelers Japan and ESA, and even Russia! They\'re also further into space than Bezos or Branson, and on some axes further than Musk.\r\n\r\nI\'m not overly worried. Humanity will get our eggs in a second basket before the century is over.','2018-03-23 08:24:41'), -(2358,2514,'2018-03-24 23:57:21','thelovebug','Done and dusted','Bought it, built it! Surprisingly straight forward, thanks a) to your advice nybill, and b) the link you couldn\'t get to worked first time for me had a pretty detailed picture guide.\r\n\r\n\"It\'s a bit clicky,\" says the wife, so all the more reason to use it.\r\n\r\nSo, here is a PG-13 picture of the calculator in action:\r\nhttps://next.thelovebug.org/index.php/s/apL8pxrX7Spd6Bc\r\n\r\n(I managed to break my GMG instance without even knowing about it! My next project, perhaps?)','2018-03-25 09:10:46'), -(2359,2505,'2018-03-25 16:56:39','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the comments','Thanks Jan, Clinton Roy and clacke.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad you are finding the series useful.\r\n\r\nI had known of Readline\'s existence for years, and that there were some features that might be useful, but had never spent the time to find out what it could do. I am most surprised at the amount of work that has gone into this library and the great features it offers.\r\n\r\nI expect to be able to get another couple of shows from it before I\'m finished, and there\'s scope for others to contribute too if they work out cool things to do with it!','2018-03-25 16:58:18'), -(2360,2508,'2018-03-26 19:20:28','Lostnbronx','I Agree With You, But...','I think China is our biggest chance for competition, in the long run, but they aren\'t moving quickly. That may change. I hope it does.\r\n\r\nI also believe that the commercialization of space is the only real future it can possibly have. If people can\'t at least hope for a better life out there, they won\'t bother. China may be a big player here too, since it has no problem sponsoring large-scale commercial ventures.\r\n\r\nLooked at from that point-of-view, though, business people like Musk and the others may turn out to be our last best hope for humanity, after all. I sure wouldn\'t mind being wrong!','2018-03-26 19:28:01'), -(2361,2516,'2018-03-27 01:17:50','Mike Ray','Intro to git','Great podcast.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been using git for a few years now but there is something new even for a seasoned git user in this series.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a subject that needs clarity, because a lot of the online stuff about git is complex and confusing.\r\n\r\nMore please. And more about this kind of DevOps related stuff, and more server config and admin','2018-03-27 06:53:42'), -(2362,2515,'2018-03-27 08:10:58','clacke','Markdown shownotes','klaatu and Ken were discussing the merits on Markdown and the horribleness of the multitude of markdown flavors.\r\n\r\nHere\'s what I do for shownotes: I write on hashify.me.\r\n\r\nMarkdown on the left, live rendered text on the right so you can easily Ctrl-click links to check them etc. Then I mark the text on the right, right-click and choose \"View selection source\" (this is on Firefox). It opens a new tab with the source almost correctly marked. I mark it, copy and then paste into the show notes textbox and choose HTML5 as text type.','2018-03-27 08:14:15'), -(2363,2508,'2018-03-28 10:48:12','Ken Fallon','Wendover Productions video','Interesting \"Space: The Next Trillion Dollar Industry\"\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiRBQxHrxNw','2018-03-28 11:10:23'), -(2364,2537,'2018-03-29 01:17:37','clacke','An update','When uploading the other shows I noticed that they had some weird clicks and jumps in them. Apparently I had turned on \"skip silence\" when I played with the settings. My recommendation is: don\'t.','2018-03-29 07:50:14'), -(2365,2453,'2018-03-31 19:52:18','Hipstre','GNU Readline 2','Enjoying the series. I am doing a tutorial on creating a LisP in C (which I heard about on HPR) and it uses Readline. So I came back to listen to this series. I always learn something. There\'s always an \"Aha!\" moment. Thanks!','2018-03-31 20:05:42'), -(2366,2518,'2018-04-01 01:02:47','mongo','Good tutorial','Steve Saner gives a good tutorial on a way to add Windows to a Linux computer. I found the part about getting data from his old encrypted drive most interesting, as I have been a bit afraid of encrypting a drive for fear of finding myself locked out.\r\n\r\nI am glad that he was able to use some information from my HPR show from last year on the subject of adding dual boot to my laptop.\r\n\r\nAlso, very good show notes for someone following his lead.','2018-04-01 06:28:55'), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-0f.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-0f.sql index 0eec30b..a970be1 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-0f.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-0f.sql @@ -1,3 +1,15 @@ +(2355,2514,'2018-03-22 07:24:04','thelovebug','Blind faith','I haven\'t even listened to the episode yet, but I\'ve just ordered myself one of those calculator kits from Amazon!','2018-03-22 09:24:12'), +(2356,2514,'2018-03-22 19:46:26','NYbill','Enjoy the kit, Dave.','I warn about a few small pitfalls I ran into while building it. Hope it saves you the same trouble.','2018-03-22 20:12:51'), +(2357,2508,'2018-03-23 07:44:35','clacke','You\'re right to worry, but ...','Musk isn\'t the only one. He\'s the one who got the furthest, and who has the grandest master plan. But don\'t forget about Bezos and Branson and their space ventures.\r\n\r\nSo, I don\'t think we\'re pinning our hopes on one man. But my answer reveals something else. We\'re still pinning our hopes on Great Men (as in the Great Man theory of history). Musk, Bezos and Branson aren\'t geniuses in the sense that they are sciencing and engineering all this stuff when nobody else could, they\'re just hiring the people who do.\r\n\r\nStill, I think people fawning over Musk is awesome, because it means people are pinning their hopes on research, engineering and entrepreneurship, because that\'s what he symbolizes. And hustling the money and funneling it in the right direction isn\'t nothing either.\r\n\r\nIt\'s far better than people admiring people who literally don\'t contribute anything, or are contributing negatively, to furthering the knowledge and power of the human race, like David Avocado Wolfe, Dr. Oz or Gwyneth Paltrow.\r\n\r\nOk, so we\'re not at the mercy at a single man, but we are at the mercy of three men? No. Don\'t forget about China and India, and old spacer-travelers Japan and ESA, and even Russia! They\'re also further into space than Bezos or Branson, and on some axes further than Musk.\r\n\r\nI\'m not overly worried. Humanity will get our eggs in a second basket before the century is over.','2018-03-23 08:24:41'), +(2358,2514,'2018-03-24 23:57:21','thelovebug','Done and dusted','Bought it, built it! Surprisingly straight forward, thanks a) to your advice nybill, and b) the link you couldn\'t get to worked first time for me had a pretty detailed picture guide.\r\n\r\n\"It\'s a bit clicky,\" says the wife, so all the more reason to use it.\r\n\r\nSo, here is a PG-13 picture of the calculator in action:\r\nhttps://next.thelovebug.org/index.php/s/apL8pxrX7Spd6Bc\r\n\r\n(I managed to break my GMG instance without even knowing about it! My next project, perhaps?)','2018-03-25 09:10:46'), +(2359,2505,'2018-03-25 16:56:39','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the comments','Thanks Jan, Clinton Roy and clacke.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad you are finding the series useful.\r\n\r\nI had known of Readline\'s existence for years, and that there were some features that might be useful, but had never spent the time to find out what it could do. I am most surprised at the amount of work that has gone into this library and the great features it offers.\r\n\r\nI expect to be able to get another couple of shows from it before I\'m finished, and there\'s scope for others to contribute too if they work out cool things to do with it!','2018-03-25 16:58:18'), +(2360,2508,'2018-03-26 19:20:28','Lostnbronx','I Agree With You, But...','I think China is our biggest chance for competition, in the long run, but they aren\'t moving quickly. That may change. I hope it does.\r\n\r\nI also believe that the commercialization of space is the only real future it can possibly have. If people can\'t at least hope for a better life out there, they won\'t bother. China may be a big player here too, since it has no problem sponsoring large-scale commercial ventures.\r\n\r\nLooked at from that point-of-view, though, business people like Musk and the others may turn out to be our last best hope for humanity, after all. I sure wouldn\'t mind being wrong!','2018-03-26 19:28:01'), +(2361,2516,'2018-03-27 01:17:50','Mike Ray','Intro to git','Great podcast.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been using git for a few years now but there is something new even for a seasoned git user in this series.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a subject that needs clarity, because a lot of the online stuff about git is complex and confusing.\r\n\r\nMore please. And more about this kind of DevOps related stuff, and more server config and admin','2018-03-27 06:53:42'), +(2362,2515,'2018-03-27 08:10:58','clacke','Markdown shownotes','klaatu and Ken were discussing the merits on Markdown and the horribleness of the multitude of markdown flavors.\r\n\r\nHere\'s what I do for shownotes: I write on hashify.me.\r\n\r\nMarkdown on the left, live rendered text on the right so you can easily Ctrl-click links to check them etc. Then I mark the text on the right, right-click and choose \"View selection source\" (this is on Firefox). It opens a new tab with the source almost correctly marked. I mark it, copy and then paste into the show notes textbox and choose HTML5 as text type.','2018-03-27 08:14:15'), +(2363,2508,'2018-03-28 10:48:12','Ken Fallon','Wendover Productions video','Interesting \"Space: The Next Trillion Dollar Industry\"\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiRBQxHrxNw','2018-03-28 11:10:23'), +(2364,2537,'2018-03-29 01:17:37','clacke','An update','When uploading the other shows I noticed that they had some weird clicks and jumps in them. Apparently I had turned on \"skip silence\" when I played with the settings. My recommendation is: don\'t.','2018-03-29 07:50:14'), +(2365,2453,'2018-03-31 19:52:18','Hipstre','GNU Readline 2','Enjoying the series. I am doing a tutorial on creating a LisP in C (which I heard about on HPR) and it uses Readline. So I came back to listen to this series. I always learn something. There\'s always an \"Aha!\" moment. Thanks!','2018-03-31 20:05:42'), +(2366,2518,'2018-04-01 01:02:47','mongo','Good tutorial','Steve Saner gives a good tutorial on a way to add Windows to a Linux computer. I found the part about getting data from his old encrypted drive most interesting, as I have been a bit afraid of encrypting a drive for fear of finding myself locked out.\r\n\r\nI am glad that he was able to use some information from my HPR show from last year on the subject of adding dual boot to my laptop.\r\n\r\nAlso, very good show notes for someone following his lead.','2018-04-01 06:28:55'), (2367,2521,'2018-04-02 14:37:25','the_remora','Handle Origin','I pulled the name the_remora from Glenn Cook\'s Garrett PI series of novels. The Remora is a nickname of a tertiary character from the later books in the series.','2018-04-02 14:46:38'), (2368,2515,'2018-04-04 01:35:03','clacke','ASCIIDoc shownotes','If you like ASCIIDoc, you can type your shownotes on https://asciidoclive.com/ and then do the same thing as I described above with hashify.me.\r\n\r\nJust like hashify, asciidoclive allows you to type on the left, see the result on the right.','2018-04-04 07:15:23'), (2369,2515,'2018-04-04 12:00:53','Dave Morriss','Markdown/ASCIIDoc','Hi clacke,\r\n\r\nA couple of interesting finds. I use both Markdown (Pandoc flavour mostly) and ASCIIDoc (via Asciidoctor).\r\n\r\nI write all my HPR shownotes with Markdown, using Vim on one monitor and a browser on the other, building the output with Pandoc via Make, using Vim\'s \'make\' interface to do it.\r\n\r\nI also like to write a journal per project and use ASCIIDoc for that because I can generate much more interesting documents with colour, side notes, icons, good tables and so on. Again Vim lets me type the document with syntax highlighting, build it with \'make\' and display it on my right-hand monitor using a dedicated browser (I like QupZilla at the moment).\r\n\r\nMy solution is probably massively over-engineered but I like it :-)','2018-04-04 12:03:04'), @@ -986,15 +998,3 @@ (3352,3525,'2022-02-10 22:21:57','wynaut','thanks!','I learnt something new here, will listen to the other episodes in this series too.','2022-02-10 23:37:11'), (3353,3525,'2022-02-11 10:22:12','Dave Morriss','Re: processes','Hi dnt,\r\n\r\nI am also reluctant to listen to people floundering about with these apparently random singulars and plurals. After all there are some amazingly good resources on the internet that explain unusual words and where they came from.\r\n\r\nHowever, I suppose you need some sort of incentive to look.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:19'), (3354,3525,'2022-02-11 10:26:08','Dave Morriss','Hope you find the episodes useful, wynaut','Hi,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment. I hope you find the whole set of episodes useful.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:20'), -(3355,3315,'2022-02-13 14:56:47','Ken Fallon','Yet another one','Load memory ....','2022-02-13 20:51:47'), -(3356,3286,'2022-02-13 17:25:47','timttmy','Me too!','Glad at least two of us find it useful.\r\nJust setting up a new (to me) gen 2 thinkpad x1 yoga and needed to remind myself how to create client keys :)','2022-02-13 20:51:47'), -(3491,3644,'2022-07-16 10:23:47','Archer72','Pinball machines and English','That was interesting. I remember working at a place that assembled the lighting backplanes for these machines. I would get to play on the machines at lunch. Two of the memorable ones were Star Wars, The Adams Family and Last Action Hero.\r\n\r\nOh, and your English is just fine, and you might find Dave Morris\' series on English idiosyncrasies a good listen, starting with \r\nhpr2558 :: Battling with English - part 1','2022-07-16 18:35:37'), -(3357,3527,'2022-02-15 18:41:04','Windigo','PATA and Netbooks','My Dell Mini 9 has the same PATA interface, so it seems like it was all the rage during the netbook days.\r\n\r\nBetween that and 32-bit Atom processors, I\'m afraid mine is reaching the limit of its usefulness. Mine\'s relegated to console and framebuffer apps. Kudos on getting yours running Chromium!','2022-02-15 19:34:23'), -(3358,3533,'2022-02-16 07:55:18','tuturto','interesting','Porridge is one of those things that many people probably find very mundane. But when you start digging into details, you\'ll discover a lot of interesting tidbits. Like what kind of grains are for animals and what are for humans varies from culture to culture and from time period to other.','2022-02-16 20:01:18'), -(3359,3533,'2022-02-16 15:10:20','Trey','Steel Cut Oats','Thank you for sharing. I absolutely LOVE steel cut oats. Much better than rolled, IMHO.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to your next podcast topic.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), -(3360,3531,'2022-02-16 15:14:26','Trey','Old school KVMs','Thank you for sharing. I remember taking apart old, mechanical KVM switches to clean the contacts for more reliable operation. \r\nI still have several electronic KVMs floating around, but haven\'s had the need in quite some time. I definitely need to look into using Barrier.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), -(3361,3526,'2022-02-16 15:19:05','Trey','Comments','It was sad that there were no comments on the December Community News episode, so I had to leave a comment for this one.\r\n\r\nYou all do an amazing job ensuring that every podcast for the month receives discussion. As a (infrequent) HPR contributor, I enjoy comments on my podcasts and hearing your thoughts. Surely others feel the same.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work!','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), -(3362,3533,'2022-02-16 15:32:48','Dave Morriss','Great show topic, excellent show','Hi,\r\n\r\nI was listening to this while making porridge for my breakfast. I have some steel cut oats - I live in Scotland after all - but I tend to prefer rolled oats, probably because it\'s what I was brought up on (in England mind you). In Scotland steel cut oats are called pin head oatmeal.\r\n\r\nMy porridge gets salt and a teaspoon of honey. I\'m diabetic so I avoid sugar, but only recently found that honey has a low glycaemic index (about 50 probably) so is not going to give me a sugar high like sugar would - at least not a teaspoon of it!\r\n\r\nI used to visit the Far East each year many years ago, and I became quite keen on rice porridge - congee. It\'s very bland but is eaten with lots of added stuff like pickles and roasted peanuts, and was pretty good for breakfast.\r\n\r\nGreat show. I enjoyed the ambient sound aspects a lot.\r\n','2022-02-16 12:09:46'), -(3363,3472,'2022-02-17 21:23:34','Stache_AF','Thank you','Your podcast gave me the idea to do the same for my state\'s daily COVID updates. I was able to find the API info and break it out so I could extract my state\'s, county\'s, and zip code\'s respective numbers so I don\'t have to click through several interactive maps.','2022-02-17 21:25:30'), -(3364,3534,'2022-02-18 18:34:53','Aaronb','At 66 Years old. . . .','I bought one about 4 years ago. I\'m surprised how much I use it. Here is a nice youtube video that show how even cheap ebay versions of electronic ones are great.','2022-02-18 20:33:57'), -(3365,3534,'2022-02-18 18:36:35','Aaronb','sorry forgot the Link','https://youtu.be/fKSSY1gzCEs','2022-02-18 20:33:57'), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-10.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-10.sql index 7f90462..86d91e6 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-10.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-10.sql @@ -1,3 +1,15 @@ +(3355,3315,'2022-02-13 14:56:47','Ken Fallon','Yet another one','Load memory ....','2022-02-13 20:51:47'), +(3356,3286,'2022-02-13 17:25:47','timttmy','Me too!','Glad at least two of us find it useful.\r\nJust setting up a new (to me) gen 2 thinkpad x1 yoga and needed to remind myself how to create client keys :)','2022-02-13 20:51:47'), +(3491,3644,'2022-07-16 10:23:47','Archer72','Pinball machines and English','That was interesting. I remember working at a place that assembled the lighting backplanes for these machines. I would get to play on the machines at lunch. Two of the memorable ones were Star Wars, The Adams Family and Last Action Hero.\r\n\r\nOh, and your English is just fine, and you might find Dave Morris\' series on English idiosyncrasies a good listen, starting with \r\nhpr2558 :: Battling with English - part 1','2022-07-16 18:35:37'), +(3357,3527,'2022-02-15 18:41:04','Windigo','PATA and Netbooks','My Dell Mini 9 has the same PATA interface, so it seems like it was all the rage during the netbook days.\r\n\r\nBetween that and 32-bit Atom processors, I\'m afraid mine is reaching the limit of its usefulness. Mine\'s relegated to console and framebuffer apps. Kudos on getting yours running Chromium!','2022-02-15 19:34:23'), +(3358,3533,'2022-02-16 07:55:18','tuturto','interesting','Porridge is one of those things that many people probably find very mundane. But when you start digging into details, you\'ll discover a lot of interesting tidbits. Like what kind of grains are for animals and what are for humans varies from culture to culture and from time period to other.','2022-02-16 20:01:18'), +(3359,3533,'2022-02-16 15:10:20','Trey','Steel Cut Oats','Thank you for sharing. I absolutely LOVE steel cut oats. Much better than rolled, IMHO.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to your next podcast topic.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), +(3360,3531,'2022-02-16 15:14:26','Trey','Old school KVMs','Thank you for sharing. I remember taking apart old, mechanical KVM switches to clean the contacts for more reliable operation. \r\nI still have several electronic KVMs floating around, but haven\'s had the need in quite some time. I definitely need to look into using Barrier.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), +(3361,3526,'2022-02-16 15:19:05','Trey','Comments','It was sad that there were no comments on the December Community News episode, so I had to leave a comment for this one.\r\n\r\nYou all do an amazing job ensuring that every podcast for the month receives discussion. As a (infrequent) HPR contributor, I enjoy comments on my podcasts and hearing your thoughts. Surely others feel the same.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work!','2022-02-16 20:01:19'), +(3362,3533,'2022-02-16 15:32:48','Dave Morriss','Great show topic, excellent show','Hi,\r\n\r\nI was listening to this while making porridge for my breakfast. I have some steel cut oats - I live in Scotland after all - but I tend to prefer rolled oats, probably because it\'s what I was brought up on (in England mind you). In Scotland steel cut oats are called pin head oatmeal.\r\n\r\nMy porridge gets salt and a teaspoon of honey. I\'m diabetic so I avoid sugar, but only recently found that honey has a low glycaemic index (about 50 probably) so is not going to give me a sugar high like sugar would - at least not a teaspoon of it!\r\n\r\nI used to visit the Far East each year many years ago, and I became quite keen on rice porridge - congee. It\'s very bland but is eaten with lots of added stuff like pickles and roasted peanuts, and was pretty good for breakfast.\r\n\r\nGreat show. I enjoyed the ambient sound aspects a lot.\r\n','2022-02-16 12:09:46'), +(3363,3472,'2022-02-17 21:23:34','Stache_AF','Thank you','Your podcast gave me the idea to do the same for my state\'s daily COVID updates. I was able to find the API info and break it out so I could extract my state\'s, county\'s, and zip code\'s respective numbers so I don\'t have to click through several interactive maps.','2022-02-17 21:25:30'), +(3364,3534,'2022-02-18 18:34:53','Aaronb','At 66 Years old. . . .','I bought one about 4 years ago. I\'m surprised how much I use it. Here is a nice youtube video that show how even cheap ebay versions of electronic ones are great.','2022-02-18 20:33:57'), +(3365,3534,'2022-02-18 18:36:35','Aaronb','sorry forgot the Link','https://youtu.be/fKSSY1gzCEs','2022-02-18 20:33:57'), (3366,3527,'2022-02-21 01:27:29','ClaudioM','Re; PATA and Netbooks','I hear ya on extending the lives of these devices nowadays, but with OpenBSD and Fluxbox, along with the SSD and adapter, it\'s surprisingly useful! Firefox won\'t build on OpenBSD/x86 (it segfaults since it needs more memory) so they won\'t be including it any longer. SeaMonkey is still available, but not sure for how much longer.','2022-02-21 20:16:29'), (3367,3523,'2022-02-21 16:20:16','LinuxMintXFCE','Compose','Thank you very much. I\'ve been working on learning languages with DuoLingo but the special characters I\'ve ignored because I could not enter them easily. My notes with vim were correct because I could easily map keys. But I had no idea how to do it with linux in general without entering a bunch of keys that sometimes conflicted with the app.\r\n\r\nSo all I had to do was:\r\n1. Settings\r\n1.1. Keyboard\r\n1.1.1. Select Layout tab\r\n1.1.1.1. Slide off \"Use system defaults\"\r\n1.1.1.2. Under \"Compose key\" select \"right alt\"\r\n1.1.1.3. close everything under settings\r\n2. vi ~/.XCompose (A file I did not have.)\r\n2.1. Modify it as shown and save \r\nhttps://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Xorg/Keyboard_configuration#Configuring_compose_key\r\n3. Reboot the system and done!\r\n\r\nA todo might be to add special keys to do repetitive tasks...','2022-02-21 20:16:29'), (3368,3228,'2022-02-21 16:28:53','Windigo','Exactly what I needed','This episode was the explanation of YAML that I needed.\r\n\r\nI know it\'s been years since it aired, but I use the fundamentals explained here every single time I open a YAML file.','2022-02-21 20:16:29'), @@ -449,7 +461,8 @@ (3822,3971,'2023-10-28 22:48:22','kdmurray','Great Series','Really enjoying the series sgoti. I appreciate that you\'ve gone to the trouble of gathering people together to try to expand the number of voices for this topic and all the ancillary things as well like the role of the Internet in how people think about their offline relationships.','2023-10-29 10:25:45'), (3823,3978,'2023-11-05 18:50:42','Kevin O\'Brien','Good show','This was interesting and I enjoyed seeing the perspective of an operator. I have made it a practice to be courteous to truck drivers because they have enough weird stuff to deal with.','2023-11-05 19:06:21'), (3824,3981,'2023-11-06 10:42:23','Hobson Lane (hobs)','Ken\'s comment about demand avoidance','Love the monthly Community News shows. Ken\'s comment about resisting the demands of his past self from reminders apps struck a chord with me. I\'ve been struggling with PDA (persistent/pathological demand avoidance) myself. I\'ll record a response show to summarize some things I\'ve learned from other podcasts that help boost my intrinsic motivation -- things like random rewards (to prevent external rewards from swamping your intrinsic motivation dopamine high). Dave\'s idea to use rituals and habits is also something that sometimes works for me. Rely admire the high quality open source technical infrastructure that keeps this community thriving and the supportive vibe of all the hosts and contributors. It gives me hope for the future of social media and the Internet.','2023-11-06 10:45:43'), -(3825,3984,'2023-11-09 15:21:35','Trey','Really? You are sharing this with the world?','Dude! I thought we were keeping this on the down low? And you are naming names?\r\n\r\nNow I need to contact witness protection AGAIN!\r\n\r\nSMH...','2023-11-09 15:26:35'); +(3825,3984,'2023-11-09 15:21:35','Trey','Really? You are sharing this with the world?','Dude! I thought we were keeping this on the down low? And you are naming names?\r\n\r\nNow I need to contact witness protection AGAIN!\r\n\r\nSMH...','2023-11-09 15:26:35'), +(3826,3989,'2023-11-17 02:10:27','Trey','Changing passowrds','One consideration when it comes to the LastPass breach is that attackers are actively working to compromise individual vaults exposed by the data. They seem to be targeting known cryptocurrency traders, but if you had a weak or guessable password or low iterations of encryption, the information you stored in your vault may become available to attackers. It is recommended that, whether you choose to stay with LastPass or not, you change all of the passwords, keys, important secrets, etc which you stored in your vault.','2023-11-17 13:02:07'); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `comments` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; /*!50003 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */ ; @@ -985,16 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (481,'2009-11-12','Mashpodder',517,'Ken Fallon talks about Mashpodder.','

Ken Fallon talks about Mashpodder.

\r\n\r\n

Some useful links:

\r\n\r\n

\r\nThe Ogg Vorbis version of this show can be found courtesy The Bad Applez --> download hpr0481.ogg\r\n

\r\n',30,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','podcast,bashpodder,mashpodder,Linux Reality,Spudshow',0,1996,1), (482,'2009-11-14','Lugging it Home',1011,'Lostnbronx talks about real and virtual Linux User Groups','LUGGING IT HOME\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nGetting By Without A Local Linux Users Group\r\n\r\n

\r\n\r\nMusic in this episode:\r\n\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nBluejuice\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n\r\nCheck out their page at the Podsafe Music Network \r\nhere\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nVitriol\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nThe Reductionist\r\n\r\n

\r\n\r\nAnd\r\n\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nBig John Bates\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nHis\r\n\r\npage \r\n\r\nat the Podsafe Music Network\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nMystiki\r\n',107,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Linux user group',0,1854,1), (483,'2009-11-16','TiT Radio - Filthy Grunt and Bloopers',4063,'Monsterb and friends host TiT Radio Bloopers','

Recorded on November 14th, 2009. Please visit https://titradio.info/013.html for shownotes.

\n',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Go programming language,AMD,EEE PC,e-reader',0,1858,1), -(484,'2009-11-17','Her PR Problem',1347,'Rikki Kite gives her \"Her PR Problem\" talk at Ohio Linux Fest 2009.','

Rikki Kite of The Rose Blog and Linux Pro Magazine gives her \"Her PR Problem\" talk at Ohio Linux Fest 2009\'s Diversity in Open Source Workshop.

\r\n

The ogg version provided by The Bad Apple Linux Oggcast.

\r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,1424,1), -(485,'2009-11-19','Newsbeuter',1704,'ThistleWeb talks about the cli RSS reader called Newsbeuter','

ThistleWeb talks about the cli RSS reader called Newsbeuter, and it\'s podcatching abilities. He also gives an overview of the concept and advantages of RSS as he found many PC literate people he met had no clue about them or how they could be of use.

\r\n

The accompanying blog post which gives much more detail can be found here.

',106,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Newsbeuter,News reader,podcatcher,aggregator',0,1913,1), -(486,'2009-11-24','HPR Round Table 6',3078,'Klaatu, SigFLUP, Skirlet, and Deepgeek gather around the HPR Round Table','Klaatu, SigFLUP, Skirlet, and Deepgeek gather around the venerable HPR Round Table to discuss the classic sci fi film, Forbidden Planet.',109,26,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','round table,movie,film,review',0,1807,1), -(487,'2009-11-26','Demo or Bust 2010 Ep 6',4146,'SigFLUP host the next episode of Demo or Bust 2010','

demos in this episode:
\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=51438
\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=53223
\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=15216
\r\n

\r\n\r\n

closing song: Fractured by Azazel of The Black Lotus

\r\n

You may contact Demo or Bust at pantsbutt@gmail.com or +1-206-312-1618\r\n

',115,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Demo or Bust 2010',0,2382,1), -(491,'2009-12-07','Null_Pointer Interview',2708,'Quvmoh interviews Ken McConnell on his new geek mystery Null_Pointer','

Quvmoh interviews Ken McConnell on his new geek mystery Null_Pointer

\r\n\r\n

https://www.w0pht.org/wordpress
\r\nhttps://nullpointer.ning.com/profiles/blog/list

\r\n',110,78,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','TRS-80,film,books',0,2238,1), -(488,'2009-11-27','Pegwole interviews Debbie Nicholson',953,'At Ohio Linux Fest 2009, Pegwole and Lord Drachenblut chat with FSF\'s Debbie Nicholson','

At Ohio Linux Fest 2009, Pegwole sits down for a lil\' chat with FSF\'s Debbie Nicholson.

',120,78,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,1300,1), -(489,'2009-12-01','SSL Attack',1734,'Finux talks about SSL attacks','

Finux talks about SSL attacks\r\n

\r\nShownotes are on Finux\'s blog

',85,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','SSL,TLS,vulnerability,x509 certificate',0,1785,1), -(490,'2009-12-02','TIT Radio Ep 13.1ec',1149,'From PC Radio Show website:\"Our guest was Richard Stallman\"','From PC Radio Show website:
\r\n\r\n\"Our guest was Richard Stallman, the man behind GNU and the Free Software Foundation. He condemns the Amazon Kindle (his term for it is the \"swindle\")\r\nbecause it takes away freedoms that readers of hardcopy books enjoy.\r\nFreedoms such as the ability to lend a book to a friend, to borrow one\r\nfrom a library, to buy one anonymously by paying cash, to keep a book\r\nas long as we like and to give it away. The Amazon Kindle implements DRM\r\n- digital rights management - to restrict your use of books. He is not\r\nagainst eBook readers per se, just the DRM, which in addition to the\r\nabove also requires you to run proprietary software to read eBooks. He\r\nurged listeners to go to Defectivebydesign.org and sign up to participate in his protests.\"
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nThe complete episode from July 22nd can be found here.
\r\n
\r\nEnding Song: Free Software Song by Mr. Jono Bacon (Ubuntu Community Manager)
\r\n
\r\nPlease visit https://titradio.info for more info.
\r\n
',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','kindle,swindle,ebooks,audiobooks,DRM,Digital Restrictions Management',0,1491,1), -(492,'2009-12-09','TIT Radio Ep 14',3741,'Monsterb and friends host TiT Radio','

TiT Radio Episode 014 -\r\nPotluck Roundtable of Geeks

monsterb\r\nstarts the show by mentioning the great shows on Hacker\r\nPublic Radio like "Demo\r\nor Bust by SigFlup", "Talk\r\nGeek to Me by deepgeek", and mentions the active\r\ncontributors like finux, Ken Fallon, Thistleweb, and lostnbronx. He also\r\nreads some email from Denny (Polarwave\'s\r\nOpenBSD Tips and Tricks for Newbies) and Jos (Camp\r\nKDE 2010).


Azimuth talks about setting up a dirty,\r\nquick, temporary, unsecure, simple HTTP server to share files.
1.)\r\n
alias webshare=\'python -c\r\n"import SimpleHTTPServer;SimpleHTTPServer.test()"\'
2.)\r\ncd to directory to be served
3.)
webshare   \r\n# ctrl-c to exit.
Az also mentions FOSSCasts\r\n(free screencasts covering Linux, Unix, and Open Source software in\r\ngeneral).


monsterb\r\nmentions Debian GNU/kFreeBSD\r\n(port that consists of GNU userland using the GNU C library on top of\r\nFreeBSD\'s kernel, coupled with the regular Debian package set). ISOs\r\ncan be found at the Georgia\r\nTech FTP.


Klaatu\r\ntalks about Quanta Plus (a\r\nhighly stable and feature rich web development environment) and\r\nKDevelop (free opensource\r\nIDE).


artv61 talks about Axel\r\n(a command line application which accelerates HTTP/FTP downloads by\r\nusing multiple sources for one file).


threethirty\r\nmentions the first FSF endorsed\r\nnetbook running gNewSense.
Source:\r\nIn other words, DRM from\r\ntop to bottom ... From LWN.net


COtW\r\n(Command of the Week):
Azimuth$ inxi\r\n(command line information script)
Download & Install: #
cd\r\n/usr/local/bin && wget -Nc smxi.org/inxi && chmod +x\r\ninxi
Klaatu$
find\r\n~ -type f -iname \'*.ogg\'
Jman$
pinfo\r\n(viewer for Info documents, which is based on ncurses. The\r\nkey-commands are in the style of lynx.)


Other things\r\nmentioned: Chromium OS,\r\nCranky Geeks, DistroWatch,\r\nKOffice, Linux\r\nMint, Powerpill,\r\nQt\r\nCreator, TuxRadar, and\r\nTuxRadar\'s "Code\r\nProject: create an ffmpeg front-end"

\r\n

\r\n


Caller: SndChaser

\r\n

\r\n


TerryF\'s Song of the\r\nWeek: Shine by Cactus

\r\n

\r\n


\r\n

\r\n

Please visit\r\nhttps://titradio.info for more\r\ninformation.

\r\n


\r\n

\r\n


\r\n

',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Kdevelop,apt-fast git script',0,1921,1), -(493,'2009-12-10','Free and Open Source Software in Business',1765,'Robert Ladyman talks about Free and Open Source software in the Business world.','

Robert Ladyman talks about Free and Open Source software in the Business world.

\r\n

Also available is the ogg version of this episode.

',85,36,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','open source software,free software,business,FOSS',0,2008,1), -(494,'2009-12-11','Klaatu interviews Russ from Linux in the Ham Shack',594,'Klaatu interviews Russ from the Linux in the Ham Shack podcast','

Klaatu, at Ohio Linux Fest 2009, interviews Russ from the Linux in the Ham Shack podcast.

\r\n

The ogg version provided by The Bad Apple Linux Oggcast.

\r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,2514,1), -(495,'2009-12-14','Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine',1358,'Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine.','

Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine.

\r\n

Ogg version

',85,36,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','blender,game engine',0,1966,1), -(496,'2009-12-22','Uber Leet Hacker Force Radio Issue 2',427,'Uber Leet Hacker Force Radio issue 2','

git clone git://repo.or.cz/hrr.git

\r\n\r\n

We still are looking for someone to donate web-space so if you\'re interested contact us at pantsbutt at gmail

',115,87,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','audacity',0,2107,1), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-11.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-11.sql index eb5b555..481fe30 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-11.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-11.sql @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +(484,'2009-11-17','Her PR Problem',1347,'Rikki Kite gives her \"Her PR Problem\" talk at Ohio Linux Fest 2009.','

Rikki Kite of The Rose Blog and Linux Pro Magazine gives her \"Her PR Problem\" talk at Ohio Linux Fest 2009\'s Diversity in Open Source Workshop.

\r\n

The ogg version provided by The Bad Apple Linux Oggcast.

\r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,1424,1), +(485,'2009-11-19','Newsbeuter',1704,'ThistleWeb talks about the cli RSS reader called Newsbeuter','

ThistleWeb talks about the cli RSS reader called Newsbeuter, and it\'s podcatching abilities. He also gives an overview of the concept and advantages of RSS as he found many PC literate people he met had no clue about them or how they could be of use.

\r\n

The accompanying blog post which gives much more detail can be found here.

',106,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Newsbeuter,News reader,podcatcher,aggregator',0,1913,1), +(486,'2009-11-24','HPR Round Table 6',3078,'Klaatu, SigFLUP, Skirlet, and Deepgeek gather around the HPR Round Table','Klaatu, SigFLUP, Skirlet, and Deepgeek gather around the venerable HPR Round Table to discuss the classic sci fi film, Forbidden Planet.',109,26,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','round table,movie,film,review',0,1807,1), +(487,'2009-11-26','Demo or Bust 2010 Ep 6',4146,'SigFLUP host the next episode of Demo or Bust 2010','

demos in this episode:
\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=51438
\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=53223
\r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=15216
\r\n

\r\n\r\n

closing song: Fractured by Azazel of The Black Lotus

\r\n

You may contact Demo or Bust at pantsbutt@gmail.com or +1-206-312-1618\r\n

',115,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Demo or Bust 2010',0,2382,1), +(491,'2009-12-07','Null_Pointer Interview',2708,'Quvmoh interviews Ken McConnell on his new geek mystery Null_Pointer','

Quvmoh interviews Ken McConnell on his new geek mystery Null_Pointer

\r\n\r\n

https://www.w0pht.org/wordpress
\r\nhttps://nullpointer.ning.com/profiles/blog/list

\r\n',110,78,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','TRS-80,film,books',0,2238,1), +(488,'2009-11-27','Pegwole interviews Debbie Nicholson',953,'At Ohio Linux Fest 2009, Pegwole and Lord Drachenblut chat with FSF\'s Debbie Nicholson','

At Ohio Linux Fest 2009, Pegwole sits down for a lil\' chat with FSF\'s Debbie Nicholson.

',120,78,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,1300,1), +(489,'2009-12-01','SSL Attack',1734,'Finux talks about SSL attacks','

Finux talks about SSL attacks\r\n

\r\nShownotes are on Finux\'s blog

',85,0,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','SSL,TLS,vulnerability,x509 certificate',0,1785,1), +(490,'2009-12-02','TIT Radio Ep 13.1ec',1149,'From PC Radio Show website:\"Our guest was Richard Stallman\"','From PC Radio Show website:
\r\n\r\n\"Our guest was Richard Stallman, the man behind GNU and the Free Software Foundation. He condemns the Amazon Kindle (his term for it is the \"swindle\")\r\nbecause it takes away freedoms that readers of hardcopy books enjoy.\r\nFreedoms such as the ability to lend a book to a friend, to borrow one\r\nfrom a library, to buy one anonymously by paying cash, to keep a book\r\nas long as we like and to give it away. The Amazon Kindle implements DRM\r\n- digital rights management - to restrict your use of books. He is not\r\nagainst eBook readers per se, just the DRM, which in addition to the\r\nabove also requires you to run proprietary software to read eBooks. He\r\nurged listeners to go to Defectivebydesign.org and sign up to participate in his protests.\"
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nThe complete episode from July 22nd can be found here.
\r\n
\r\nEnding Song: Free Software Song by Mr. Jono Bacon (Ubuntu Community Manager)
\r\n
\r\nPlease visit https://titradio.info for more info.
\r\n
',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','kindle,swindle,ebooks,audiobooks,DRM,Digital Restrictions Management',0,1491,1), +(492,'2009-12-09','TIT Radio Ep 14',3741,'Monsterb and friends host TiT Radio','

TiT Radio Episode 014 -\r\nPotluck Roundtable of Geeks

monsterb\r\nstarts the show by mentioning the great shows on Hacker\r\nPublic Radio like "Demo\r\nor Bust by SigFlup", "Talk\r\nGeek to Me by deepgeek", and mentions the active\r\ncontributors like finux, Ken Fallon, Thistleweb, and lostnbronx. He also\r\nreads some email from Denny (Polarwave\'s\r\nOpenBSD Tips and Tricks for Newbies) and Jos (Camp\r\nKDE 2010).


Azimuth talks about setting up a dirty,\r\nquick, temporary, unsecure, simple HTTP server to share files.
1.)\r\n
alias webshare=\'python -c\r\n"import SimpleHTTPServer;SimpleHTTPServer.test()"\'
2.)\r\ncd to directory to be served
3.)
webshare   \r\n# ctrl-c to exit.
Az also mentions FOSSCasts\r\n(free screencasts covering Linux, Unix, and Open Source software in\r\ngeneral).


monsterb\r\nmentions Debian GNU/kFreeBSD\r\n(port that consists of GNU userland using the GNU C library on top of\r\nFreeBSD\'s kernel, coupled with the regular Debian package set). ISOs\r\ncan be found at the Georgia\r\nTech FTP.


Klaatu\r\ntalks about Quanta Plus (a\r\nhighly stable and feature rich web development environment) and\r\nKDevelop (free opensource\r\nIDE).


artv61 talks about Axel\r\n(a command line application which accelerates HTTP/FTP downloads by\r\nusing multiple sources for one file).


threethirty\r\nmentions the first FSF endorsed\r\nnetbook running gNewSense.
Source:\r\nIn other words, DRM from\r\ntop to bottom ... From LWN.net


COtW\r\n(Command of the Week):
Azimuth$ inxi\r\n(command line information script)
Download & Install: #
cd\r\n/usr/local/bin && wget -Nc smxi.org/inxi && chmod +x\r\ninxi
Klaatu$
find\r\n~ -type f -iname \'*.ogg\'
Jman$
pinfo\r\n(viewer for Info documents, which is based on ncurses. The\r\nkey-commands are in the style of lynx.)


Other things\r\nmentioned: Chromium OS,\r\nCranky Geeks, DistroWatch,\r\nKOffice, Linux\r\nMint, Powerpill,\r\nQt\r\nCreator, TuxRadar, and\r\nTuxRadar\'s "Code\r\nProject: create an ffmpeg front-end"

\r\n

\r\n


Caller: SndChaser

\r\n

\r\n


TerryF\'s Song of the\r\nWeek: Shine by Cactus

\r\n

\r\n


\r\n

\r\n

Please visit\r\nhttps://titradio.info for more\r\ninformation.

\r\n


\r\n

\r\n


\r\n

',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','Kdevelop,apt-fast git script',0,1921,1), +(493,'2009-12-10','Free and Open Source Software in Business',1765,'Robert Ladyman talks about Free and Open Source software in the Business world.','

Robert Ladyman talks about Free and Open Source software in the Business world.

\r\n

Also available is the ogg version of this episode.

',85,36,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','open source software,free software,business,FOSS',0,2008,1), +(494,'2009-12-11','Klaatu interviews Russ from Linux in the Ham Shack',594,'Klaatu interviews Russ from the Linux in the Ham Shack podcast','

Klaatu, at Ohio Linux Fest 2009, interviews Russ from the Linux in the Ham Shack podcast.

\r\n

The ogg version provided by The Bad Apple Linux Oggcast.

\r\n',78,78,0,'CC-BY-NC-SA','OLF 2009,interview',0,2514,1), +(495,'2009-12-14','Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine',1358,'Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine.','

Gary Whiton talks about the Blender Game Engine.

\r\n

Ogg version

',85,36,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','blender,game engine',0,1966,1), +(496,'2009-12-22','Uber Leet Hacker Force Radio Issue 2',427,'Uber Leet Hacker Force Radio issue 2','

git clone git://repo.or.cz/hrr.git

\r\n\r\n

We still are looking for someone to donate web-space so if you\'re interested contact us at pantsbutt at gmail

',115,87,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','audacity',0,2107,1), (497,'2009-12-23','Kris Findlay discusses Secure Socket Handler',1344,'Talk with Kris Findlay','or grab the\r\n... ogg vorbis version',85,36,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','ssh,port forwarding,X forwarding,scp',0,2090,1), (498,'2009-12-25','Talk Geek To Me Ep 02',2044,'Deepgeek talks geek to his fans about HTML','

Deepgeek discusses upgrading from old style HTML to Modern HTML. He uses, as a feature example, device independence between Cell Phone Micro Browsers and Desktop Browsers like Firefox.

\r\n

Alternate audio formats are available at talkgeektome.us.

',73,34,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','HTML,css,stylesheets,micro browser,mobile browsing',0,1959,1), (499,'2009-12-30','TiT Radio Ep 15',5310,'Monsterb and friends host TiT Radio','TiT Radio Episode 015 - 330 Moisture Control
\r\n
\r\nPlease visit https://titradio.info/015.html for shownotes.
\r\n',99,30,1,'CC-BY-NC-SA','FreeBSD,Zoneminder,webcam,inx distro,VideoLAN Movie Creator',0,1954,1), @@ -985,16 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (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), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-12.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-12.sql index caa7893..0bf4ceb 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-12.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-12.sql @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +(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), @@ -985,16 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (2464,'2018-01-11','The Alien Brothers Podcast - S01E04 - Digital Instruments',3906,'Casper and Rutiger Detail their Digital and Analog Sonic Setups in IOS and Android','

Casper and Rutiger are back with a very simple topic: Making music with various Digital Audio Workstations.

\r\n

Rutiger details his MacOS / iOS platform and the Apps he uses to create his noise:
\r\nhttps://soundcloud.com/fibrechannel

\r\n

Casper details his Windows setup with a relatively cheap DAW and various Analog and Digital transmissions he uses to create his noise:
\r\nhttps://soundcloud.com/user-393542827

\r\n

@alienbpc

\r\n',359,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','DAW, Sonic Voyages, iOS Music Apps, PreSonus Audiobox 22vsl, Logic Pro X, Studio One',0,0,1), (2696,'2018-12-03','HPR Community News for November 2018',4317,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2018','\n\n

New hosts

\n

\nWelcome to our new host:
\n\n desearcher.\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
2674Thu2018-11-01Raspberry pi3 open media serverJWP
2675Fri2018-11-02YouTube PlaylistsAhuka
2676Mon2018-11-05HPR Community News for October 2018HPR Volunteers
2677Tue2018-11-06Thoughts on language learning part 4 - RPG.dodddummy
2678Wed2018-11-07Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 4MrX
2679Thu2018-11-08Extra ancillary Bash tips - 13Dave Morriss
2680Fri2018-11-09Some Additional Talk About Characters -- 01lostnbronx
2681Mon2018-11-12DerbyCon Interview - Hackers for CharityXoke
2682Tue2018-11-13(NOT) All About Blenderm1rr0r5h4d35
2683Wed2018-11-14Using Open source tools to visualize the heartrate and blood oxygen saturation level of my stepchildJeroen Baten
2684Thu2018-11-15Making a remote control visibleKen Fallon
2685Fri2018-11-16Scientific and Medical ReportsAhuka
2686Mon2018-11-19(NOT) All About Blender - Part the Secondm1rr0r5h4d35
2687Tue2018-11-20Some Additional Talk About Characters -- 02lostnbronx
2688Wed2018-11-21Explaining the controls on my Amateur HF Radio Part 5MrX
2689Thu2018-11-22Bash Tips - 14Dave Morriss
2690Fri2018-11-23A chat about the HiveMQ BrokerKen Fallon
2691Mon2018-11-26DerbyCon Interview - John StrandXoke
2692Tue2018-11-27YouTube URL tricksdesearcher
2693Wed2018-11-28Getting started with web based game in Haskell and ElmTuula
2694Thu2018-11-29Bandit UpdateNYbill
2695Fri2018-11-30Problems with StudiesAhuka
\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 24 comments in total.

\n

There are 9 comments on\n7 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 15 comments on 8 of this month\'s shows:

\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-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n

Hacker Public Radio New Year’s Eve Show

\n

Edited from linuxlugcast.com

\n

Hey folks

\n

It’s that time of year again. Time for the Hacker Public Radio 24 hr (26 hr) New Years Eve Show.

\n

For those who don’t know on New Years Eve 2018-12-31 at 10:00 am UTC (5:00 am EST) we will have a recording going on the HPR Mumble server (at ch1.teamspeak.cc on port 64747) for anyone to come on say “Happy New Year” and talk about what ever they want.

\n

We will leave the recording going until 2019-01-01 12:00 am UTC (7:00 am EST) or until the conversation stops.

\n

For those who have never used Mumble before, we have a guide over at linuxlugcast.com in our how to section explaining how to setup the desktop Mumble client, but Mumble isn’t only available for the desktop. It is also available for Android and IOS.

\n

We are also going to setup an etherpad for people to share links to things they are discussing.

\n

So please stop in. Say “Hi” and maybe join in the conversation with other HPR listeners and contributors. It’s always a good time.

\n

New podcast - Libre Lounge

\n

Libre Lounge

\n

Quoted from the site:

\n
\n

Libre Lounge is a podcast where we casually discuss various topics involving user freedom, crossing free software, free culture, network and hosting freedom, and libre hardware designs. We discuss everything from policy and licensing to deep dives on technical topics… whatever seems interesting that week. At some point we might even have guests!

\n
\n

Internet Archive funding drive

\n

As you know, HPR uploads all current episodes to the Internet Archive at https://archive.org, and is in the process of uploading older shows, so we are particularly keen that this amazing service continues.

\n

The Internet Archive is currently fundraising. Donations are currently being matched by a generous supporter, so this will double your impact if you are able to donate.

\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), (2721,'2019-01-07','HPR Community News for December 2018',4247,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in December 2018','\n\n

New hosts

\n

\nWelcome to our new host:
\n\n Edward Miro / c1ph0r.\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
2696Mon2018-12-03HPR Community News for November 2018HPR Volunteers
2697Tue2018-12-04The Linux Shutdown Command ExplainedJWP
2698Wed2018-12-05XSV for fast CSV manipulations - Part 1b-yeezi
2699Thu2018-12-06Bash Tips - 15Dave Morriss
2700Fri2018-12-07Episode 3000Ken Fallon
2701Mon2018-12-10First impressions of the Odroid-gododddummy
2702Tue2018-12-11Audacity set up and response to episode 2658Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2703Wed2018-12-12Fog of war in Yesod based gameTuula
2704Thu2018-12-13Intro to Scribusklaatu
2705Fri2018-12-14Evidence-based MedicineAhuka
2706Mon2018-12-17Why I love the IBM AS/400 computer systemsJeroen Baten
2707Tue2018-12-18Steganalysis 101Edward Miro / c1ph0r
2708Wed2018-12-19Ghostscriptklaatu
2709Thu2018-12-20Bash Tips - 16Dave Morriss
2710Fri2018-12-21Youtube downloader for channelsKen Fallon
2711Mon2018-12-24Raspberry Pi 3A+ ReviewYannick the french guy from Switzerland
2712Tue2018-12-25Steganographyklaatu
2713Wed2018-12-26Resources in 4x gameTuula
2714Thu2018-12-27Airplane stalls and Angle of AttackBrian in Ohio
2715Fri2018-12-28About ONAPJWP
2716Mon2018-12-31Really Simple YouTubeThaj 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 34 comments in total.

\n

There are 15 comments on\n11 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 19 comments on 10 of this month\'s shows:

\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-December/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n

\nThanks to all HPR contributors in 2018!\n

\n

\nAaressaar, Ahuka, Al, Archer72, b-yeezi, bjb, bookewyrmm, Brian in Ohio, clacke, Claudio Miranda, Clinton Roy, Dave Morriss, David Whitman, desearcher, dodddummy, Edward Miro / c1ph0r, finux, folky, Honkeymagoo, HPR Volunteers, HPR_AudioBookClub, Jeroen Baten, Joey Hess, Jon Kulp, JWP, Ken Fallon, klaatu, knightwise, lostnbronx, m1rr0r5h4d35, MPardo, MrX, NYbill, operat0r, Philip, Quvmoh, Shane Shennan, sigflup, Steve Saner, swift110, Thaj Sara, The Alien Brothers Podcast (ABP), the_remora, TheDUDE, thelovebug, ToeJet, Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212, Tuula, Various Creative Commons Works, Various Hosts, Xoke, Xtrato, Yannick the french guy from Switzerland.\n

\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), -(2741,'2019-02-04','HPR Community News for January 2019',4598,'Yannick Dave and Ken talk about shows released and comments posted in January 2019','\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
2717Tue2019-01-01Mobile Device SecurityEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2718Wed2019-01-02Genre In Storytellinglostnbronx
2719Thu2019-01-03Bash Tips - 17Dave Morriss
2720Fri2019-01-04Download youtube channels using the rss feedsKen Fallon
2721Mon2019-01-07HPR Community News for December 2018HPR Volunteers
2722Tue2019-01-08RAID 6 a short descriptionJWP
2723Wed2019-01-09Using Elm in context of 4X game clientTuula
2724Thu2019-01-10Using a DIN Rail to mount a Raspberry PiDave Morriss
2725Fri2019-01-11The Illumos Shutdown Command Explainedklaatu
2726Mon2019-01-14Home Theater - Part 2 Software (High Level)operat0r
2727Tue2019-01-15PasswordsEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2728Wed2019-01-16The Unreliable Narrator In Storytellinglostnbronx
2729Thu2019-01-17Bash Tips - 18Dave Morriss
2730Fri2019-01-18Resizing images for vcard on AndroidKen Fallon
2731Mon2019-01-21My 8 bit ChristmasAndrew Conway
2732Tue2019-01-22Storytelling formula complianceklaatu
2733Wed2019-01-23Writing Web Game in Haskell - News and NotificationsTuula
2734Thu2019-01-24MashpodderMrX
2735Fri2019-01-25SoffrittoTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2736Mon2019-01-28Response to show 2720Dave Morriss
2737Tue2019-01-29My Pioneer RT-707 Reel-to-Reel Tape DeckJon Kulp
2738Wed2019-01-30My ApplicationsTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2739Thu2019-01-31Bash Tips - 19Dave Morriss
\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 8 comments on\n4 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 21 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2019-January/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n\n

Tags and Summaries

\n

Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 11 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); -INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hostid`, `series`, `explicit`, `license`, `tags`, `version`, `downloads`, `valid`) VALUES (3959,'2023-10-05','Download any HPR series with english file names',165,'A dir with the series name will be created and all shows will be renamed to ShowTitle.mp3 inside it','

Hello all. This is gemlog from Terrace, bc, canada just up near the\nalaska panhandle.

\n

Some of you may know me from in COM chat on sdf dot org or as a\nfedizen on the tilde dot zone instance of mastodon.

\n

Now, the other day I finally got around to checking out HPR properly,\neven though my masto-pal claw-dio-m turned me on to it a couple of years\nago.

\n

Recently, on a friday night in irc on tilde radio, I noticed there\nwere whole series on hpr and not only single shows and that got me kind\nof excited.
\nI guess I\'m easily excitable.

\n

Anyhow, something I could listen to at work or while driving. Still,\nI managed to forget about it until /just/ before I was leaving the house\nfor work on Monday morning. I rushed to copy over a few shows - nearly\nat random onto my phone and headed out to work.

\n

After I got my morning sorted at work, I told VLC to play-all and\nenjoyed a couple of shows. I noticed that each show I had chosen had a\nbeg post at the beginning. I figured I could make one on at least\nsomething from my messy gemlog/bin dir.

\n

However, after a break, I came back and couldn\'t remember which 4\ndigit numbered dot mp3 I had finished up on, which mildly irked me.\nWell, as we all know, irk becomes itch and I put my sad regex skills to\nthe test scraping the hpr website with a custom bash script later when I\ngot home.

\n

A very custom bash script. Like all scrapers, if any of the guys at\nhpr even breathe the wrong way, it will probably break horribly. On the\nother hand, I\'ve had scrapers that looked just as sad running for many\nyears against a canadian government site. So. Who knows?

\n

All the script uses are some built-ins from bash along with sed and\nwget for the actual getting. My local instance of searX N G was left\nsmoking as scrambled for sed incantations to string together. I\'m not a\nsed guy.

\n

Usage is simple, as the script only accepts one argument: ... the\nfour digit series number of the show you want to download. It will\ncreate a dir with the series name and download every mp3 it finds,\nrenaming each show to the show title.

\n

I was tempted to doll it up with some niceties like options for\ndownload dir, a selector for a series with a dialog of some kind... yada\nyada yada.

\n

But... we all know what happens when you stretch a quick hack with a\nbash script too far for the scripting language: hours of misery wishing\nyou\'d started with some other language.

\n

So far, I\'ve used the script to download 8 series. DU dash S H tells\nme they add up to 2 dot 2 gig, so it seems to work well enough.

\n

It comes with the same iron clad warranty as everything I write:

\n

If it breaks, you get to keep all the pieces. Thanks for\nlistening.

\n
#!/bin/bash\n# gemlog@gemlog.ca 2023-08-26\n# License: CC BY-SA 4.0.\n# not proud of my continuing lack of regex foo frankly...\n\nif [ $# -lt 1 ]; then\n  echo 1>&2 "$0: You need to enter the HPR Series Number to download as 4 digits"\n  echo "The full list of HPR Series is at https://hackerpublicradio.org/series/index.html"\n  exit 2\nfi\n\nsnumber=$1\nre='^[[:digit:]]{4}$'\nif [[ $snumber =~ $re ]]; then\n    wget https://hackerpublicradio.org/series/$snumber.html -q -O /tmp/$snumber.html\n    content=$(</tmp/$snumber.html)\n    declare -a shows\n    shows=$(grep -P '^(?=.*h3)(?=.*title)' /tmp/$snumber.html)\nelse\n    echo "'$snumber' is not exactly 4 digits like an HPR series number"\n    exit 2\nfi\n\nseries=$(echo $content | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P -m1 '(?<=In-Depth Series:).*(?=Number)' | sed 's/[ t]*$//' )\nseries=$(echo ${series// /_} | cut -b 2-50 | sed 's/_*$//' | sed 's/^_*//' | sed s/[^A-Za-z0-9_.]/_/g)\n\n#outdir="/home/gemlog/Music/Audio/HPR/$series-Se$snumber/"\noutdir=~/"Downloads/HPR/$series-Se$snumber/"\nmkdir -p "$outdir"\necho "Files for the series "$series" will be saved in $outdir"\n\ndeclare -a shows\ndeclare -a url_array\nshows=$(grep -P '^(?=.*h3)(?=.*title)' /tmp/$snumber.html)\nIFS=$'n'\n\nfor line in $shows\n  do\n    f=$((f+1))\ndone\necho\necho\necho "Downloading $f mp3 files"\n\n\nfor line in $shows\n  do\n    i=$((i+1))\n    title=$(echo $line | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P '(?<=::).*('host')'  | sed 's/host//' | sed 's/[ t]*$//' | sed s/[^A-Za-z0-9_.]/_/g | sed 's/ /_/g' | sed 's/^_*//' )\n    enumber=$(echo $line | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P '(?<=hpr).*('::')' | sed 's/:://')\n    enumber=$(printf "%04d" $((enumber)) )\n    outfile=$outdir$title-Ep$enumber.mp3\n    url="https://www.hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr$enumber.mp3"\n    echo "Downloading file $i: $title"\n    wget --verbose --max-redirect 2 $url -O $outfile\n    sleep 2\n  done\n\n\necho\nttlfiles=$(ls -1 $outdir | wc -l)\necho "$ttlfiles files for the series "$series" were saved in $outdir"\n\nexit 0
\n',425,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash, sed, grep, wget, scraper',0,0,1), -(2761,'2019-03-04','HPR Community News for February 2019',4022,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in February 2019','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
2740Fri2019-02-01Pop!_OS 18.10 (quick) reviewYannick the french guy from Switzerland
2741Mon2019-02-04HPR Community News for January 2019HPR Volunteers
2742Tue2019-02-05SAP Hana Certification DirectoryJWP
2743Wed2019-02-06Character build in the d20 systemklaatu
2744Thu2019-02-07Yet Another Rambling Drive Into WorkMrX
2745Fri2019-02-08My YouTube Subscriptions #1Ahuka
2746Mon2019-02-11My software part 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2747Tue2019-02-12checking oilbrian
2748Wed2019-02-13Writing Web Game in Haskell - Special eventsTuula
2749Thu2019-02-14Lostnbronx and Klaatu commentary from episode 2743klaatu
2750Fri2019-02-15Windmill is on the FritzKen Fallon
2751Mon2019-02-18Battling with English - part 3Dave Morriss
2752Tue2019-02-19XSV for fast CSV manipulations - Part 2b-yeezi
2753Wed2019-02-20Specific Settings In Storytellinglostnbronx
2754Thu2019-02-21Craigslist Scam CatchEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2755Fri2019-02-22My YouTube Subscriptions #2Ahuka
2756Mon2019-02-25Bash Tips - 20Dave Morriss
2757Tue2019-02-26How to DMklaatu
2758Wed2019-02-27Haskell - Data types and database actionsTuula
2759Thu2019-02-28Cleaning the Potentiometers on a Peavey Bandit 65Jon Kulp
\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 10 comments in total.

\n

There are 6 comments on\n5 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 4 comments on 4 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2019-February/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n

Tags and Summaries

\n

Thanks to the following contributors for sending in updates in the past month: windigo

\n

Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 24 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), -(2466,'2018-01-15','ShareX is awesome',447,'ShareX, for all your screenshot needs and more','

Find it at https://getsharex.com/

',79,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Windows, Screenshot, documentation',0,0,1), -(2468,'2018-01-17','THE WELL',408,'I record a video with audio on my fathers well setup in the sticks','

I record a video with audio on my fathers well setup in the sticks

\r\n

https://rmccurdy.com/scripts/videos/rmccurdy_com/THE_WELL.mp4

',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','well, pump, troubleshooting',0,0,1), -(2469,'2018-01-18','A flight itinerary in Bash',1065,'Working out dates and times in a Bash script','

A flight itinerary in Bash

\r\n

My daughter flew out to New Zealand before Christmas 2017 to spend some time with her brother, who had been there with his girlfriend since November. I saw her flight itinerary from the airline, but had no idea of how the times related to time back home, so I wrote a little Bash script to calculate times in UTC (my local timezone).

\r\n

Both of my children have travelled a fair bit in the past few years. I like to keep track of where they are and how they are progressing through their journeys because otherwise I tend to worry. This one was a reasonably simple journey, two flights via Doha in Qatar, with not too long a wait between them. The overall journey was long of course.

\r\n

When my daughter flew out to Indonesia in 2015 (4 flights and a boat trip, over 38 hours travel time) I built a spreadsheet. Just whatever provides a good distraction!

\r\n

The rest of the notes, including details of the date command and the script I wrote can be found here.

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,date,ISO 8601,epoch',0,0,1), -(2470,'2018-01-19','Obamacare Update At The End Of 2017',798,'Where is US Health Care policy as we head into 2018?','

In 2017 Obamacare was the subject of a great deal of political jockeying, and yet by the end of the year almost nothing changed. So what happened, and why?

\r\n\r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace, Obamacare',0,0,1), -(2479,'2018-02-01','Intergraph workstation',1725,'My rebuild of my Intergraph workstation','

Been going through my old work servers.

\r\n

They typically run until I can\'t update them anymore and then sit not used until I have a bit of free time. So I have an old intergraph box in it that I new pentium 4 motherboard from about 8 years back. I had the receipt taped to the inside of the box. And the Expense statement from work. I had centos 6.0 on it try as it must It got no more updates and repros. It also has a weak PSU as I had to remove the DVD and graphics card to get to work.

\r\n

About intergraph:

\r\n
\r\n

Intergraph Corporation is an American software development and services company. It provides enterprise engineering and geospatially powered software to businesses, governments, and organizations around the world. Intergraph operates through three divisions: Hexagon PPM, Hexagon Safety & Infrastructure, and Hexagon Geospatial. The company\'s headquarters is in Huntsville, Alabama, USA. In 2008, Intergraph was one of the 100 largest software companies in the world. In 2010, Intergraph was acquired by Hexagon AB. Intergraph was founded in 1969 as M&S Computing, Inc., by former IBM engineers who had been working with NASA and the U.S. Army in developing systems that would apply digital computing to real-time missile guidance. The company was later renamed to Intergraph Corporation in 1980. In 2000, Intergraph exited the hardware business and became purely a software company. On July 21, 2000, it sold its Intense3D graphics accelerator division to 3Dlabs, and its workstation and server division to Silicon Graphics. The companies incorporated SmartSketch, a drawing program used previously for the PenPoint OS and EO tablet computer. When Pen computing did not take off, SmartSketch was ported to the Windows and Macintosh platforms. https://www.cnet.com/news/intergraph-delivers-cheap-workstations/

\r\n
\r\n

The new TD-300 and TD-400 "Personal Workstations" offer 3D graphics capabilities equal to or below the prices of PCs configured as 3D workstations, the company said. The TD-300 and TD-400 Personal Workstations are available immediately, with prices starting at $5,495. https://www.intergraph.com/about_us/history_90s.aspx

\r\n

So the box now has a Pentium 4 dual core in it which is 64 bit. This chip is 2004-2007. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentium_4

\r\n

So I have the ubuntu 32 bit work. And Suse Enterprise 12, tumbleweed and leap on hyperV. I had my Transmeta box on Debian I386 32 bit. So I need a redhat flavor. Since its 64 bit I picked CentOS. https://www.centos.org/

\r\n

What is CentOS?

\r\n
\r\n

CentOS (/ˈsɛntɒs/, from Community Enterprise Operating System) is a Linux distribution that attempts to provide a free, enterprise-class, community-supported computing platform functionally compatible with its upstream source, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). In January 2014, CentOS announced the official joining with Red Hat while staying independent from RHEL, under a new CentOS governing board. In July 2010, CentOS overtook Debian to become the most popular Linux distribution for web servers, with almost 30% of all Linux web servers using it. Debian retook the lead in January 2012.

\r\n

In January 2014, Red Hat announced that it would sponsor the CentOS project, "helping to establish a platform well-suited to the needs of open source developers that integrate technologies in and around the operating system". As a result of these changes, ownership of CentOS trademarks was transferred to Red Hat, which now employs most of the CentOS head developers; however, they work as part of Red Hat\'s Open Source and Standards team, which operates separately from the Red Hat Enterprise Linux team. A new CentOS governing board was also established.

\r\n

CentOS developers use Red Hat\'s source code to create a final product very similar to RHEL. Red Hat\'s branding and logos are changed because Red Hat does not allow them to be redistributed. CentOS is available free of charge. Technical support is primarily provided by the community via official mailing lists, web forums, and chat rooms. CentOS version numbers for releases older than 7.0 have two parts, a major version and a minor version, which correspond to the major version and update set of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) used to build a particular CentOS release. For example, CentOS 6.5 is built from the source packages of RHEL 6 update 5 (also known as RHEL version 6.5), which is a so-called "point release" of RHEL 6.

\r\n

Starting with version 7.0, CentOS version numbers also include a third part that indicates the monthstamp of the source code the release is based on. For example, version number 7.0-1406 still maps this CentOS release to the zeroth update set of RHEL 7, while "1406" indicates that the source code this release is based on dates from June 2014. Using the monthstamp allows installation images to be reissued for (as of July 2014) oncoming container and cloud releases, while maintaining a connection to the related base release version.

\r\n

Since mid-2006 and starting with RHEL version 4.4, which is formally known as Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 update 4, Red Hat has adopted a version-naming convention identical to that used by CentOS (for example, RHEL 4.5 or RHEL 6.5). AltArch releases are released by the Alternative Architecture Special Interest Group (AltArch SIG) to supporThere are three primary CentOS repositories (also known as channels), containing software packages that make up the main CentOS distribution: base - contains packages that form CentOS point releases, and gets updated when the actual point release is formally made available in form of ISO images. updates - contains packages that serve as security, bugfix or enhancement updates, issued between the regular update sets for point releases. Bugfix and enhancement updates released this way are only those unsuitable to be released through the CentOS-Fasttrack repository described below. addons - provides packages required for building the packages that make up the main CentOS distribution, but are not provided by the upstream. The CentOS project provides several additional repositories that contain software packages not provided by the default base and updates repositories. Those repositories include the following: CentOS Extras - contains packages that provide additional functionality to CentOS without breaking its upstream compatibility or updating the base components. CentOSPlus - contains packages that actually upgrade certain base CentOS components, changing CentOS so that it is not exactly like the upstream provider\'s content. CentOS-Testing - serves as a proving ground for packages on their way to CentOSPlus and CentOS Extras. Offered packages may or may not replace core CentOS packages, and are not guaranteed to work properly. CentOS-Fasttrack - contains bugfix and enhancement updates issued from time to time, between the regular update sets for point releases. The packages released this way serve as close candidates for the inclusion into the next point release. This repository does not provide security updates, and does not contain packages unsuitable for uncertain inclusion into point releases. CR (Continuous Release) - makes generally available packages that will appear in the next point release of CentOS. The packages are made available on a testing and hotfix basis, until the actual point release is formally released in form of ISO images. debuginfo - contains packages with debugging symbols generated when the primary packages were built contrib - contains packages contributed by CentOS users that do not overlap with any of the core distribution packages Software Collections - provides versions of software newer than those provided by the base distribution, see above for more details

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

The end of support on my box is currently 2024. During my setup I let the centos do something with LVM the drive had two WD 320GB disks. One was very hot so I moved it so it have some more air.

\r\n

LVM:

\r\n
\r\n

In Linux, Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is a device mapper target that provides logical volume management for the Linux kernel. Most modern Linux distributions are LVM-aware to the point of being able to have their root file systems on a logical volume.

\r\n

Heinz Mauelshagen wrote the original LVM code in 1998, taking its primary design guidelines from the HP-UX\'s volume manager. LVM is used for the following purposes: Creating single logical volumes of multiple physical volumes or entire hard disks (somewhat similar to RAID 0, but more similar to JBOD), allowing for dynamic volume resizing. Managing large hard disk farms by allowing disks to be added and replaced without downtime or service disruption, in combination with hot swapping. On small systems (like a desktop), instead of having to estimate at installation time how big a partition might need to be, LVM allows filesystems to be easily resized as needed. Performing consistent backups by taking snapshots of the logical volumes. LVM can be considered as a thin layer of continuity and ease-of-use for managing hard drive replacement, repartitioning and backup. software layer on top of the hard disks and partitions, which creates an abstraction Basic functionality Volume groups (VGs) can be resized online by absorbing new physical volumes (PVs) or ejecting existing ones. Logical volumes (LVs) can be resized online by concatenating extents onto them or truncating extents from them. LVs can be moved between PVs. Creation of read-only snapshots of logical volumes (LVM1), or read-write snapshots (LVM2). VGs can be split or merged in situ as long as no LVs span the split. This can be useful when migrating whole LVs to or from offline storage. LVM objects can be tagged for administrative convenience. VGs and LVs can be made active as the underlying devices become available through use of the lvmetad daemon.

\r\n
\r\n

Setup with CentOS is not as simple as linux mint or ubuntu and very different than debian. You have to click and know a little about what you doing. For me with the basic 500GB install disk I got only a bare server with ssh. The machine was having power issues and would not boot from a usb stick so I had to go through 4 different DVD drives until I found one that worked with the DVD-R format. I had to use another deskop and power the DVD threw the other desk up connecting only the sata port the IDE drive was not working well either on this old board.

\r\n

I had to remove the old centos 6 from the drives using Gparted. There were errors with the gparted but the centos installer worked great after I removed ext4 part of the lvms.

\r\n

GParted is a free partition editor for graphically managing your disk partitions.

\r\n

With GParted you can resize, copy, and move partitions without data loss,

\r\n

Getting the mirrors working and getting it to work through a fire wall was pretty hard I had to make two config changes to the yum.conf one with the proxy address and the other to allow http cache. I also used export_proxy= to get it work globally. I had really trouble finding a fast mirror but I did not give up hope after a while it found fast mirrors that I got over 2MB per second from.

\r\n

So I installed Gnome and made boot up at startup I will install x2go or vncserver on it also just in case I need it.

\r\n

After some time of playing with it I was able to get it to fully update.

\r\n

I then moved to the server room, got the IP address and connected it it from putty. I think the advantage of this box is that I will always have a Redhat 7 install ready to demo or learn something without having to setup a lot of things.

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Intergraph Corporation, Pentium 4, CentOS, Logical Volume Manager',0,0,1), -(2480,'2018-02-02','What\'s In My Podcatcher 1',1067,'A current report, with descriptions, of the podcasts I enjoy','

I listen to many podcasts as my primary form of audio entertainment, and because Hacker Public Radio listeners also tend to be podcast listeners (pretty much by definition) I am sharing my finds with the community. Besides, Ken made me do it.

\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','Podcasts',0,0,1), -(2490,'2018-02-16','What\'s In My Podcatcher 2',959,'A current report, with descriptions, of the podcasts I enjoy','

I listen to many podcasts as my primary form of audio entertainment, and because Hacker Public Radio listeners also tend to be podcast listeners (pretty much by definition) I am sharing my finds with the community. Besides, Ken made me do it.

\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','Podcasts',0,0,1), -(2467,'2018-01-16','I randomly talk about my laptops',574,'Random talk about my laptops and the linux distros that are on them','

Just decided to start talking about my laptops after I installed Ubuntu Mate 16.04 to my x60.

',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','laptop, linux, fun, computers',0,0,1), -(2472,'2018-01-23','Forum Failure',1000,'Lostnbronx talks about his recent experiment in running a forum.','

In 2017 I created a forum over at Proboards dedicated to my audio work and writing. It didn\'t attract a user base, and I deleted it when 2018 rolled around.

\r\n

These are just some thoughts about why I wanted it to begin with, and why I think it failed.

\r\n

I still believe Proboards is a good way to jump into forums and using forum software, and still recommend it for that reason:

\r\n

https://proboards.com/

\r\n

Here are some of my projects mentioned briefly in this episode:

\r\n\r\n',107,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','forum,lostnbronx,platform,community',0,0,1), -(2473,'2018-01-24','Frotz - A Portable Z-Machine Interpreter',608,'How to use Frotz to play those old Infocom text adventure games from the 80s.','

Frotz is an interpreter for Infocom games (like Zork) and other Z-machine games. You can install it via your respective package manager or download the source code from the URLs below.

\r\n\r\n',152,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Frotz,Z-code,Z-machine,Interactive Fiction',0,0,1), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-13.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-13.sql index 56159c2..b38116a 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-13.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-13.sql @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +(2741,'2019-02-04','HPR Community News for January 2019',4598,'Yannick Dave and Ken talk about shows released and comments posted in January 2019','\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
2717Tue2019-01-01Mobile Device SecurityEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2718Wed2019-01-02Genre In Storytellinglostnbronx
2719Thu2019-01-03Bash Tips - 17Dave Morriss
2720Fri2019-01-04Download youtube channels using the rss feedsKen Fallon
2721Mon2019-01-07HPR Community News for December 2018HPR Volunteers
2722Tue2019-01-08RAID 6 a short descriptionJWP
2723Wed2019-01-09Using Elm in context of 4X game clientTuula
2724Thu2019-01-10Using a DIN Rail to mount a Raspberry PiDave Morriss
2725Fri2019-01-11The Illumos Shutdown Command Explainedklaatu
2726Mon2019-01-14Home Theater - Part 2 Software (High Level)operat0r
2727Tue2019-01-15PasswordsEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2728Wed2019-01-16The Unreliable Narrator In Storytellinglostnbronx
2729Thu2019-01-17Bash Tips - 18Dave Morriss
2730Fri2019-01-18Resizing images for vcard on AndroidKen Fallon
2731Mon2019-01-21My 8 bit ChristmasAndrew Conway
2732Tue2019-01-22Storytelling formula complianceklaatu
2733Wed2019-01-23Writing Web Game in Haskell - News and NotificationsTuula
2734Thu2019-01-24MashpodderMrX
2735Fri2019-01-25SoffrittoTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2736Mon2019-01-28Response to show 2720Dave Morriss
2737Tue2019-01-29My Pioneer RT-707 Reel-to-Reel Tape DeckJon Kulp
2738Wed2019-01-30My ApplicationsTony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2739Thu2019-01-31Bash Tips - 19Dave Morriss
\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 8 comments on\n4 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 21 comments on 9 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2019-January/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n\n

Tags and Summaries

\n

Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 11 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); +INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hostid`, `series`, `explicit`, `license`, `tags`, `version`, `downloads`, `valid`) VALUES (3959,'2023-10-05','Download any HPR series with english file names',165,'A dir with the series name will be created and all shows will be renamed to ShowTitle.mp3 inside it','

Hello all. This is gemlog from Terrace, bc, canada just up near the\nalaska panhandle.

\n

Some of you may know me from in COM chat on sdf dot org or as a\nfedizen on the tilde dot zone instance of mastodon.

\n

Now, the other day I finally got around to checking out HPR properly,\neven though my masto-pal claw-dio-m turned me on to it a couple of years\nago.

\n

Recently, on a friday night in irc on tilde radio, I noticed there\nwere whole series on hpr and not only single shows and that got me kind\nof excited.
\nI guess I\'m easily excitable.

\n

Anyhow, something I could listen to at work or while driving. Still,\nI managed to forget about it until /just/ before I was leaving the house\nfor work on Monday morning. I rushed to copy over a few shows - nearly\nat random onto my phone and headed out to work.

\n

After I got my morning sorted at work, I told VLC to play-all and\nenjoyed a couple of shows. I noticed that each show I had chosen had a\nbeg post at the beginning. I figured I could make one on at least\nsomething from my messy gemlog/bin dir.

\n

However, after a break, I came back and couldn\'t remember which 4\ndigit numbered dot mp3 I had finished up on, which mildly irked me.\nWell, as we all know, irk becomes itch and I put my sad regex skills to\nthe test scraping the hpr website with a custom bash script later when I\ngot home.

\n

A very custom bash script. Like all scrapers, if any of the guys at\nhpr even breathe the wrong way, it will probably break horribly. On the\nother hand, I\'ve had scrapers that looked just as sad running for many\nyears against a canadian government site. So. Who knows?

\n

All the script uses are some built-ins from bash along with sed and\nwget for the actual getting. My local instance of searX N G was left\nsmoking as scrambled for sed incantations to string together. I\'m not a\nsed guy.

\n

Usage is simple, as the script only accepts one argument: ... the\nfour digit series number of the show you want to download. It will\ncreate a dir with the series name and download every mp3 it finds,\nrenaming each show to the show title.

\n

I was tempted to doll it up with some niceties like options for\ndownload dir, a selector for a series with a dialog of some kind... yada\nyada yada.

\n

But... we all know what happens when you stretch a quick hack with a\nbash script too far for the scripting language: hours of misery wishing\nyou\'d started with some other language.

\n

So far, I\'ve used the script to download 8 series. DU dash S H tells\nme they add up to 2 dot 2 gig, so it seems to work well enough.

\n

It comes with the same iron clad warranty as everything I write:

\n

If it breaks, you get to keep all the pieces. Thanks for\nlistening.

\n
#!/bin/bash\n# gemlog@gemlog.ca 2023-08-26\n# License: CC BY-SA 4.0.\n# not proud of my continuing lack of regex foo frankly...\n\nif [ $# -lt 1 ]; then\n  echo 1>&2 "$0: You need to enter the HPR Series Number to download as 4 digits"\n  echo "The full list of HPR Series is at https://hackerpublicradio.org/series/index.html"\n  exit 2\nfi\n\nsnumber=$1\nre='^[[:digit:]]{4}$'\nif [[ $snumber =~ $re ]]; then\n    wget https://hackerpublicradio.org/series/$snumber.html -q -O /tmp/$snumber.html\n    content=$(</tmp/$snumber.html)\n    declare -a shows\n    shows=$(grep -P '^(?=.*h3)(?=.*title)' /tmp/$snumber.html)\nelse\n    echo "'$snumber' is not exactly 4 digits like an HPR series number"\n    exit 2\nfi\n\nseries=$(echo $content | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P -m1 '(?<=In-Depth Series:).*(?=Number)' | sed 's/[ t]*$//' )\nseries=$(echo ${series// /_} | cut -b 2-50 | sed 's/_*$//' | sed 's/^_*//' | sed s/[^A-Za-z0-9_.]/_/g)\n\n#outdir="/home/gemlog/Music/Audio/HPR/$series-Se$snumber/"\noutdir=~/"Downloads/HPR/$series-Se$snumber/"\nmkdir -p "$outdir"\necho "Files for the series "$series" will be saved in $outdir"\n\ndeclare -a shows\ndeclare -a url_array\nshows=$(grep -P '^(?=.*h3)(?=.*title)' /tmp/$snumber.html)\nIFS=$'n'\n\nfor line in $shows\n  do\n    f=$((f+1))\ndone\necho\necho\necho "Downloading $f mp3 files"\n\n\nfor line in $shows\n  do\n    i=$((i+1))\n    title=$(echo $line | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P '(?<=::).*('host')'  | sed 's/host//' | sed 's/[ t]*$//' | sed s/[^A-Za-z0-9_.]/_/g | sed 's/ /_/g' | sed 's/^_*//' )\n    enumber=$(echo $line | sed -e :a -e 's/<[^>]*>//g;/</N;//ba' | grep -o -P '(?<=hpr).*('::')' | sed 's/:://')\n    enumber=$(printf "%04d" $((enumber)) )\n    outfile=$outdir$title-Ep$enumber.mp3\n    url="https://www.hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr$enumber.mp3"\n    echo "Downloading file $i: $title"\n    wget --verbose --max-redirect 2 $url -O $outfile\n    sleep 2\n  done\n\n\necho\nttlfiles=$(ls -1 $outdir | wc -l)\necho "$ttlfiles files for the series "$series" were saved in $outdir"\n\nexit 0
\n',425,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash, sed, grep, wget, scraper',0,0,1), +(2761,'2019-03-04','HPR Community News for February 2019',4022,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in February 2019','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
2740Fri2019-02-01Pop!_OS 18.10 (quick) reviewYannick the french guy from Switzerland
2741Mon2019-02-04HPR Community News for January 2019HPR Volunteers
2742Tue2019-02-05SAP Hana Certification DirectoryJWP
2743Wed2019-02-06Character build in the d20 systemklaatu
2744Thu2019-02-07Yet Another Rambling Drive Into WorkMrX
2745Fri2019-02-08My YouTube Subscriptions #1Ahuka
2746Mon2019-02-11My software part 2Tony Hughes AKA TonyH1212
2747Tue2019-02-12checking oilbrian
2748Wed2019-02-13Writing Web Game in Haskell - Special eventsTuula
2749Thu2019-02-14Lostnbronx and Klaatu commentary from episode 2743klaatu
2750Fri2019-02-15Windmill is on the FritzKen Fallon
2751Mon2019-02-18Battling with English - part 3Dave Morriss
2752Tue2019-02-19XSV for fast CSV manipulations - Part 2b-yeezi
2753Wed2019-02-20Specific Settings In Storytellinglostnbronx
2754Thu2019-02-21Craigslist Scam CatchEdward Miro / c1ph0r
2755Fri2019-02-22My YouTube Subscriptions #2Ahuka
2756Mon2019-02-25Bash Tips - 20Dave Morriss
2757Tue2019-02-26How to DMklaatu
2758Wed2019-02-27Haskell - Data types and database actionsTuula
2759Thu2019-02-28Cleaning the Potentiometers on a Peavey Bandit 65Jon Kulp
\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 10 comments in total.

\n

There are 6 comments on\n5 previous shows:

\n\n

There are 4 comments on 4 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2019-February/thread.html\n\n\n

Any other business

\n

Tags and Summaries

\n

Thanks to the following contributors for sending in updates in the past month: windigo

\n

Over the period tags and/or summaries have been added to 24 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), +(2466,'2018-01-15','ShareX is awesome',447,'ShareX, for all your screenshot needs and more','

Find it at https://getsharex.com/

',79,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Windows, Screenshot, documentation',0,0,1), +(2468,'2018-01-17','THE WELL',408,'I record a video with audio on my fathers well setup in the sticks','

I record a video with audio on my fathers well setup in the sticks

\r\n

https://rmccurdy.com/scripts/videos/rmccurdy_com/THE_WELL.mp4

',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','well, pump, troubleshooting',0,0,1), +(2469,'2018-01-18','A flight itinerary in Bash',1065,'Working out dates and times in a Bash script','

A flight itinerary in Bash

\r\n

My daughter flew out to New Zealand before Christmas 2017 to spend some time with her brother, who had been there with his girlfriend since November. I saw her flight itinerary from the airline, but had no idea of how the times related to time back home, so I wrote a little Bash script to calculate times in UTC (my local timezone).

\r\n

Both of my children have travelled a fair bit in the past few years. I like to keep track of where they are and how they are progressing through their journeys because otherwise I tend to worry. This one was a reasonably simple journey, two flights via Doha in Qatar, with not too long a wait between them. The overall journey was long of course.

\r\n

When my daughter flew out to Indonesia in 2015 (4 flights and a boat trip, over 38 hours travel time) I built a spreadsheet. Just whatever provides a good distraction!

\r\n

The rest of the notes, including details of the date command and the script I wrote can be found here.

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','Bash,date,ISO 8601,epoch',0,0,1), +(2470,'2018-01-19','Obamacare Update At The End Of 2017',798,'Where is US Health Care policy as we head into 2018?','

In 2017 Obamacare was the subject of a great deal of political jockeying, and yet by the end of the year almost nothing changed. So what happened, and why?

\r\n\r\n',198,100,0,'CC-BY-SA','Health Insurance, Health Policy, Insurance Marketplace, Obamacare',0,0,1), +(2479,'2018-02-01','Intergraph workstation',1725,'My rebuild of my Intergraph workstation','

Been going through my old work servers.

\r\n

They typically run until I can\'t update them anymore and then sit not used until I have a bit of free time. So I have an old intergraph box in it that I new pentium 4 motherboard from about 8 years back. I had the receipt taped to the inside of the box. And the Expense statement from work. I had centos 6.0 on it try as it must It got no more updates and repros. It also has a weak PSU as I had to remove the DVD and graphics card to get to work.

\r\n

About intergraph:

\r\n
\r\n

Intergraph Corporation is an American software development and services company. It provides enterprise engineering and geospatially powered software to businesses, governments, and organizations around the world. Intergraph operates through three divisions: Hexagon PPM, Hexagon Safety & Infrastructure, and Hexagon Geospatial. The company\'s headquarters is in Huntsville, Alabama, USA. In 2008, Intergraph was one of the 100 largest software companies in the world. In 2010, Intergraph was acquired by Hexagon AB. Intergraph was founded in 1969 as M&S Computing, Inc., by former IBM engineers who had been working with NASA and the U.S. Army in developing systems that would apply digital computing to real-time missile guidance. The company was later renamed to Intergraph Corporation in 1980. In 2000, Intergraph exited the hardware business and became purely a software company. On July 21, 2000, it sold its Intense3D graphics accelerator division to 3Dlabs, and its workstation and server division to Silicon Graphics. The companies incorporated SmartSketch, a drawing program used previously for the PenPoint OS and EO tablet computer. When Pen computing did not take off, SmartSketch was ported to the Windows and Macintosh platforms. https://www.cnet.com/news/intergraph-delivers-cheap-workstations/

\r\n
\r\n

The new TD-300 and TD-400 "Personal Workstations" offer 3D graphics capabilities equal to or below the prices of PCs configured as 3D workstations, the company said. The TD-300 and TD-400 Personal Workstations are available immediately, with prices starting at $5,495. https://www.intergraph.com/about_us/history_90s.aspx

\r\n

So the box now has a Pentium 4 dual core in it which is 64 bit. This chip is 2004-2007. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentium_4

\r\n

So I have the ubuntu 32 bit work. And Suse Enterprise 12, tumbleweed and leap on hyperV. I had my Transmeta box on Debian I386 32 bit. So I need a redhat flavor. Since its 64 bit I picked CentOS. https://www.centos.org/

\r\n

What is CentOS?

\r\n
\r\n

CentOS (/ˈsɛntɒs/, from Community Enterprise Operating System) is a Linux distribution that attempts to provide a free, enterprise-class, community-supported computing platform functionally compatible with its upstream source, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). In January 2014, CentOS announced the official joining with Red Hat while staying independent from RHEL, under a new CentOS governing board. In July 2010, CentOS overtook Debian to become the most popular Linux distribution for web servers, with almost 30% of all Linux web servers using it. Debian retook the lead in January 2012.

\r\n

In January 2014, Red Hat announced that it would sponsor the CentOS project, "helping to establish a platform well-suited to the needs of open source developers that integrate technologies in and around the operating system". As a result of these changes, ownership of CentOS trademarks was transferred to Red Hat, which now employs most of the CentOS head developers; however, they work as part of Red Hat\'s Open Source and Standards team, which operates separately from the Red Hat Enterprise Linux team. A new CentOS governing board was also established.

\r\n

CentOS developers use Red Hat\'s source code to create a final product very similar to RHEL. Red Hat\'s branding and logos are changed because Red Hat does not allow them to be redistributed. CentOS is available free of charge. Technical support is primarily provided by the community via official mailing lists, web forums, and chat rooms. CentOS version numbers for releases older than 7.0 have two parts, a major version and a minor version, which correspond to the major version and update set of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) used to build a particular CentOS release. For example, CentOS 6.5 is built from the source packages of RHEL 6 update 5 (also known as RHEL version 6.5), which is a so-called "point release" of RHEL 6.

\r\n

Starting with version 7.0, CentOS version numbers also include a third part that indicates the monthstamp of the source code the release is based on. For example, version number 7.0-1406 still maps this CentOS release to the zeroth update set of RHEL 7, while "1406" indicates that the source code this release is based on dates from June 2014. Using the monthstamp allows installation images to be reissued for (as of July 2014) oncoming container and cloud releases, while maintaining a connection to the related base release version.

\r\n

Since mid-2006 and starting with RHEL version 4.4, which is formally known as Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0 update 4, Red Hat has adopted a version-naming convention identical to that used by CentOS (for example, RHEL 4.5 or RHEL 6.5). AltArch releases are released by the Alternative Architecture Special Interest Group (AltArch SIG) to supporThere are three primary CentOS repositories (also known as channels), containing software packages that make up the main CentOS distribution: base - contains packages that form CentOS point releases, and gets updated when the actual point release is formally made available in form of ISO images. updates - contains packages that serve as security, bugfix or enhancement updates, issued between the regular update sets for point releases. Bugfix and enhancement updates released this way are only those unsuitable to be released through the CentOS-Fasttrack repository described below. addons - provides packages required for building the packages that make up the main CentOS distribution, but are not provided by the upstream. The CentOS project provides several additional repositories that contain software packages not provided by the default base and updates repositories. Those repositories include the following: CentOS Extras - contains packages that provide additional functionality to CentOS without breaking its upstream compatibility or updating the base components. CentOSPlus - contains packages that actually upgrade certain base CentOS components, changing CentOS so that it is not exactly like the upstream provider\'s content. CentOS-Testing - serves as a proving ground for packages on their way to CentOSPlus and CentOS Extras. Offered packages may or may not replace core CentOS packages, and are not guaranteed to work properly. CentOS-Fasttrack - contains bugfix and enhancement updates issued from time to time, between the regular update sets for point releases. The packages released this way serve as close candidates for the inclusion into the next point release. This repository does not provide security updates, and does not contain packages unsuitable for uncertain inclusion into point releases. CR (Continuous Release) - makes generally available packages that will appear in the next point release of CentOS. The packages are made available on a testing and hotfix basis, until the actual point release is formally released in form of ISO images. debuginfo - contains packages with debugging symbols generated when the primary packages were built contrib - contains packages contributed by CentOS users that do not overlap with any of the core distribution packages Software Collections - provides versions of software newer than those provided by the base distribution, see above for more details

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

The end of support on my box is currently 2024. During my setup I let the centos do something with LVM the drive had two WD 320GB disks. One was very hot so I moved it so it have some more air.

\r\n

LVM:

\r\n
\r\n

In Linux, Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is a device mapper target that provides logical volume management for the Linux kernel. Most modern Linux distributions are LVM-aware to the point of being able to have their root file systems on a logical volume.

\r\n

Heinz Mauelshagen wrote the original LVM code in 1998, taking its primary design guidelines from the HP-UX\'s volume manager. LVM is used for the following purposes: Creating single logical volumes of multiple physical volumes or entire hard disks (somewhat similar to RAID 0, but more similar to JBOD), allowing for dynamic volume resizing. Managing large hard disk farms by allowing disks to be added and replaced without downtime or service disruption, in combination with hot swapping. On small systems (like a desktop), instead of having to estimate at installation time how big a partition might need to be, LVM allows filesystems to be easily resized as needed. Performing consistent backups by taking snapshots of the logical volumes. LVM can be considered as a thin layer of continuity and ease-of-use for managing hard drive replacement, repartitioning and backup. software layer on top of the hard disks and partitions, which creates an abstraction Basic functionality Volume groups (VGs) can be resized online by absorbing new physical volumes (PVs) or ejecting existing ones. Logical volumes (LVs) can be resized online by concatenating extents onto them or truncating extents from them. LVs can be moved between PVs. Creation of read-only snapshots of logical volumes (LVM1), or read-write snapshots (LVM2). VGs can be split or merged in situ as long as no LVs span the split. This can be useful when migrating whole LVs to or from offline storage. LVM objects can be tagged for administrative convenience. VGs and LVs can be made active as the underlying devices become available through use of the lvmetad daemon.

\r\n
\r\n

Setup with CentOS is not as simple as linux mint or ubuntu and very different than debian. You have to click and know a little about what you doing. For me with the basic 500GB install disk I got only a bare server with ssh. The machine was having power issues and would not boot from a usb stick so I had to go through 4 different DVD drives until I found one that worked with the DVD-R format. I had to use another deskop and power the DVD threw the other desk up connecting only the sata port the IDE drive was not working well either on this old board.

\r\n

I had to remove the old centos 6 from the drives using Gparted. There were errors with the gparted but the centos installer worked great after I removed ext4 part of the lvms.

\r\n

GParted is a free partition editor for graphically managing your disk partitions.

\r\n

With GParted you can resize, copy, and move partitions without data loss,

\r\n

Getting the mirrors working and getting it to work through a fire wall was pretty hard I had to make two config changes to the yum.conf one with the proxy address and the other to allow http cache. I also used export_proxy= to get it work globally. I had really trouble finding a fast mirror but I did not give up hope after a while it found fast mirrors that I got over 2MB per second from.

\r\n

So I installed Gnome and made boot up at startup I will install x2go or vncserver on it also just in case I need it.

\r\n

After some time of playing with it I was able to get it to fully update.

\r\n

I then moved to the server room, got the IP address and connected it it from putty. I think the advantage of this box is that I will always have a Redhat 7 install ready to demo or learn something without having to setup a lot of things.

\r\n

Links

\r\n\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Intergraph Corporation, Pentium 4, CentOS, Logical Volume Manager',0,0,1), +(2480,'2018-02-02','What\'s In My Podcatcher 1',1067,'A current report, with descriptions, of the podcasts I enjoy','

I listen to many podcasts as my primary form of audio entertainment, and because Hacker Public Radio listeners also tend to be podcast listeners (pretty much by definition) I am sharing my finds with the community. Besides, Ken made me do it.

\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','Podcasts',0,0,1), +(2490,'2018-02-16','What\'s In My Podcatcher 2',959,'A current report, with descriptions, of the podcasts I enjoy','

I listen to many podcasts as my primary form of audio entertainment, and because Hacker Public Radio listeners also tend to be podcast listeners (pretty much by definition) I am sharing my finds with the community. Besides, Ken made me do it.

\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',198,75,0,'CC-BY-SA','Podcasts',0,0,1), +(2467,'2018-01-16','I randomly talk about my laptops',574,'Random talk about my laptops and the linux distros that are on them','

Just decided to start talking about my laptops after I installed Ubuntu Mate 16.04 to my x60.

',297,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','laptop, linux, fun, computers',0,0,1), +(2472,'2018-01-23','Forum Failure',1000,'Lostnbronx talks about his recent experiment in running a forum.','

In 2017 I created a forum over at Proboards dedicated to my audio work and writing. It didn\'t attract a user base, and I deleted it when 2018 rolled around.

\r\n

These are just some thoughts about why I wanted it to begin with, and why I think it failed.

\r\n

I still believe Proboards is a good way to jump into forums and using forum software, and still recommend it for that reason:

\r\n

https://proboards.com/

\r\n

Here are some of my projects mentioned briefly in this episode:

\r\n\r\n',107,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','forum,lostnbronx,platform,community',0,0,1), +(2473,'2018-01-24','Frotz - A Portable Z-Machine Interpreter',608,'How to use Frotz to play those old Infocom text adventure games from the 80s.','

Frotz is an interpreter for Infocom games (like Zork) and other Z-machine games. You can install it via your respective package manager or download the source code from the URLs below.

\r\n\r\n',152,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Frotz,Z-code,Z-machine,Interactive Fiction',0,0,1), (2474,'2018-01-25','Open Source Gaming #3 The Atari Jaguar',832,'Episode 3 is about the Atari Jaguar which has been open source since 1999','https://www.atariage.com/Jaguar/archives/HasbroRights.html\r\n\r\n
\r\nHasbro Releases Jaguar Publishing Rights\r\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:\r\nCONTACTS:\r\nDana Henry\r\nHasbro Interactive\r\n978-921-3759\r\ndhenry@hasbro.com\r\n\r\nBeverly, MA (May 14, 1999) - Leading entertainment software publisher, \r\nHasbro Interactive announced today it has released all rights that it \r\nmay have to the vintage Atari hardware platform, the Jaguar.\r\n\r\nHasbro Interactive acquired rights to many Atari properties, including \r\nthe legendary Centipede, Missile Command, and Pong games, in a March \r\n1998 acquisition from JTS Corporation.\r\n\r\nThis announcement will allow software developers to create and publish \r\nsoftware for the Jaguar system without having to obtain a licensing \r\nagreement with Hasbro Interactive for such platform development. \r\nHasbro Interactive cautioned, however, that the developers should not \r\nuse the Atari trademark or logo in connection with their games or \r\npresent the games as authorized or approved by Hasbro Interactive.\r\n\r\n\"Hasbro Interactive is strictly focused on developing and publishing \r\nentertainment software for the PC and the next generation game \r\nconsoles,\" said Richard Cleveland, Head of Marketing for Hasbro \r\nInteractive\'s Atari Business Unit. \"We realize there is a passionate \r\naudience of diehard Atari fans who want to keep the Jaguar system alive, \r\nand we don\'t want to prevent them from doing that. We will not interfere \r\nwith the efforts of software developers to create software for the \r\nJaguar system.\"\r\n\r\nHasbro Interactive, Inc. is a leading all-family interactive games \r\npublisher, formed in 1995 to bring to life on the computer the deep \r\nlibrary of toy and board games of parent company, Hasbro, Inc. (ASE:HAS). \r\nHasbro Interactive has expanded its charter to include original and \r\nlicensed games for the PC, the Playstation(R) and Nintendo(R) 64 game \r\nconsoles and for multi-player gaming over the internet. Headquartered \r\nin Beverly, Massachusetts, Hasbro Interactive has offices in the U.K., \r\nFrance, Germany, Japan and Canada. For more information, visit the \r\nHasbro Interactive Web site at https://www.hasbro-interactive.com.\r\n
',354,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Atari Corporation, Atari Jaguar',0,0,1), (2475,'2018-01-26','Information Underground -- Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-Roll',2601,'The IU guys examine the first Sexual Revolution in America, back during Prohibition.','

Deepgeek, Klaatu, and Lostnbronx look back at the flappers and speakeasies of the 1920\'s and 30\'s, and attempt to draw a line from the newly independent women of that era, up through the Playboy Bunnies of the 1950\'s, all the way to today.

\r\n

Are things better or worse? Is what we "know" about history really important? And do the Info-Underground boys have any clue what they\'re even talking about?

',107,99,1,'CC-0','sex,alcohol,women,prohibition,freedom,history,pornography,oppression,playboy,hugh hefner',0,0,1), (2483,'2018-02-07','Useful Bash functions - part 4',2386,'A Bash function for parsing lists of numbers and ranges','

Useful Bash functions - part 4

\r\n

Overview

\r\n

This is the fourth show about the Bash functions I use, and it may be the last unless I come up with something else that I think might be of general interest.

\r\n

There is only one function to look at this time, but it\'s fairly complex so needs an entire episode devoted to it.

\r\n

As before it would be interesting to receive feedback on this 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',225,42,1,'CC-BY-SA','coding,Bash,script,function',0,0,1), @@ -985,16 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (3439,'2021-10-07','Linux Inlaws S01E40: The One with the BSDs',5834,'The other One Operating System to Rule them all','

In this episode, Martin and Chris host an eclectic panel of contributors to\r\nthe *other* major FLOSS operating system family - you guessed it: the\r\nflavours of the Berkeley Software Distribution (aka BSD among friends).\r\nDisclaimer: you may be tempted to diverge from the Path of the\r\nRighteousness also known as Linux and give this alternative a spin. So\r\nthis episode is *not* for the faint-hearted - listen at your own\r\ndiscretion! Also: the true defective nature of our beloved (?) hosts\' past\r\nwill be revealed - an episode not be missed despite the caveat! Plus\r\na refresher on spaced-out operating system concepts including library\r\noperating systems and a rant on Android and friends. In addition to some\r\ncool BSD trolling...

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',384,111,1,'CC-BY-SA','Berkeley Software Distribution, library operating systems, Android, Copyleft, BSD License, Usenet',0,0,1), (3442,'2021-10-12','What is this thing called science',790,'Critical thinking is only part of the equation. Here\'s the other part.','
\r\n

Counter Point

\r\n

This show is a counter point to: hpr3414 :: Critical Thinking may make You Critical of the Covid Crisis\r\n

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

Some time ago, I did some Hacker Public Radio episodes in which I ostensibly demonstrated how to create a PDF with Scribus. Secretly, I was actually demonstrating how unexpected payloads could be embedded into a PDF. Did the PDF I uploaded as part of that episode no longer contain a payload if the listener who downloaded it wasn\'t aware that the payload existed?

\r\n

I\'ve been diagnosed by educators as a \"life long learner,\" which as far as I can tell is a buzzword referring to someone who takes pleasure in learning new things. In our world of technology, dear listener, I think this term is just \"hacker.\" And that\'s appropriate, because this is Hacker Public Radio you\'re listening to now, and listeners of this show tend to be people who enjoy learning and exploring new ideas, taking apart gadgets to see what makes them tick, reverse engineering code and data to understand how it gets processed, and so on.

\r\n

The thing about being a hacker or a life-long learner is that there\'s a lot of stuff out there that wants to be hacked, or learnt. And it turns out that it\'s just not possible to learn everything. Sometimes, you\'re out of your depth. It can be tricky to recognize when you\'re out of your depth, and I think there\'s a certain learn-able skill to knowing that you don\'t know something. There\'s a lot of value to this skill, because when you can recognize you don\'t have expertise on something, you\'re able to look around you and find someone who has. That\'s significant because you can learn from someone with expertise.

\r\n

In my own humdrum life, before getting a full-time job at a tech company, I was commissioned on several occasions to build out infrastructure for a video game development project, an indie radio station, a few different multimedia projects, and so on. When I took on those roles, I became the resident expert. People turned to me for the authoritative word on what technological solutions should be used. When I told them, they were more or less obligated to listen, because that was the role I\'d been hired for. If they were to ask me what a workstation should run, and I said Linux, but they bought a Mac instead, then my role would be unarguably redundant. They could just as easily type the question into a search engine on the Internet, and ignore the result. Or they could roll a die, or whatever.

\r\n

In those cases, though, it\'s a question of my opinion compared to someone else\'s opinion. Both are valid. Because I was the architect, my opinion mattered more to the long-term plan, but if the long-term plan were to change from having a highly-available cluster for fast 3d model rendering to having workstations with a familiar desktop, then my opinion would be less valid.

\r\n

But there are some areas in life where opinions don\'t matter. Specifically, that area is science. But what is science, anyway? People talk about science a lot, but it took me a long time, especially as someone who largely came from an artistic background, to comprehend the significance of the term, much less how it worked.

\r\n

Forget about all the high school classes and pop dietitians and physicists. Science is a framework. It\'s a set of principles designed to help our human brains hack the world around us in a methodical and precise way. Instead of letting our opinions, which may or may not be relevant, influence conclusions and decisions we make, science looks at the results of controlled input and output. Wait a minute. \"Input and output\"? Those are words I understand. Those are computer terms!

\r\n

Yeah it turns out that computers are the product of science, and in fact building computers and programming computers is a form of Computer Science. Those are just words we made up, but they reveal a lot about what we computer hackers do all day. Computers don\'t understand the influence of opinion, or your force of will, or the power of faith. They just take input and produce output. They do this very reliably.

\r\n

I don\'t know whether you\'ve ever tried, but it\'s really hard to make a computer. Comprehending how a CPU processes rudimentary electrical pulses to transform them into complex instruction sets is mind-bending, at least to me. I\'ve sat down and thought about it critically. I\'ve set up a few experiments, too. There\'s one you can do with dominoes, believe it or not, that can somewhat help you design a logic circuit. There\'s a Turing Machine you can build with Magic The Gathering cards. And an electronics kit that\'ll help you build an 8bit CPU. But even with all of those experiments, the open RISC-V CPU still eludes my comprehension.

\r\n

And just to be clear: back in 2008 or so, I was hired to stress test a RISC CPU to determine whether it was efficient at rendering massive amounts of video. I designed tests in an attempt to prove that a RISC CPU could not out-perform the latest Intel Core2duo, and could not achieve the goal (RISC is better, what can I say?) So my affinity for RISC is far from just a passing interest. But I can\'t build a RISC-V or even really explain how a CPU works.

\r\n

For that, I understand that there are experts. These aren\'t just people I call experts because they\'re labeled that way on their shirt pocket. They\'re experts because they\'re building the RISC-V, and it works. I met some of them back at OSS Con in 2019. I recognize their expertise, because they\'re proving their knowledge.

\r\n

Let\'s say I approached the RISC-V booth with the preconception that x86 was superior. After all, why would most consumer computers be running x86 if it weren\'t the best? I might be skeptical if I were told that RISC-V is superior for some tasks. Could they have ulterior motives? Could they have been paid off by Big Silicon to lie about RISC\'s performance in order to hurt x86\'s marketshare? Sure, it could happen. And that skepticism is important. It\'s arguably part of the scientific process. Look at the results of an experiment, replicate the input and ensure that the output is reliably the same.

\r\n

But you can\'t be sure until you\'ve duplicated the experiments that make the claim in the first place. Unfortunately, this often requires some pretty controlled environments, and possibly some pretty high end equipment.

\r\n

The bottom line is that I\'m never going to get around to doing that, I\'m never going to have access to those resources, and I\'m never going to have the understanding I\'d need to comprehend all the potential variables involved. In short, I just don\'t have the expertise. But I\'m willing to trust the expertise of a lot of people from all over the world working on this project. I\'m going to trust that because they all agree on similar findings, that what they\'re saying about the design and architecture of their CPU, that there\'s a high likelihood that their findings are correct.

\r\n

The same goes, as it turns out, for biological sciences. No matter how many one-off experiments discover that cigarette smoking is beneficial to your health, the wider scientific consensus is that it\'s harmful. No matter how man \"free-thinkers\" on the Internet discover that Covid-19 is actually no worse than the common cold, the worldwide scientific community asserts that it\'s actually harmful, and medical staffs across the globe assert that increased cases of Covid-19 cause bed and healthcare shortages for everyone else. Somebody online may assert that it\'s an impossibly unified globe-spanning political plot, but that relies on a bunch of untest-able opinions and interpretations of reality that fall well outside any scientific framework.

\r\n

It seems to me that this line of speculation makes about as much sense as asking whether your computer can really still add numbers accurately. Couldn\'t it occasionally be lying to you? The device you\'re using to listen to my voice right now not to scramble what I\'m saying and accurately play what I recorded in the first place is based on the same scientific principles used by those in biological sciences. We\'re feeding data into functions, whether the function is written in code, forged in silicon, or written on paper as a math formula, and we\'re observing the results. When every expert in their field, across the entire globe, agrees on the output, I think we do too. It\'s either that, or we\'d better all go build our own 8bit circuits out of chickens and batteries and just start to rebuild.

\r\n

So did the PDF I uploaded as part of the Scribus episode no longer contain a payload if the listener who downloaded it wasn\'t aware that the payload existed? Obviously not. If the listener lacked the foresight or expertise to investigate the PDF for a hidden file, then they could have posted an episode of their own about how my PDF was completely normal. They\'d have been confident in their findings. But you and I know that whatever experiments they might have used to come to the conclusion that Klaatu was NOT a liar was, in the end, insufficient. The payload did exist, but it was just outside this imaginary listener\'s detection or comprehension.

\r\n

Critical thinking is important. But at the same time, the scientific framework requires more than just critical thinking, just as building a RISC-V CPU requires more than just being a fan of reduced instruction sets. And solving the Covid-19 crisis takes a lot more than just critical thinking and a couple of backyard \"experiments.\" We\'re not in the Dark Ages any more, folks. Get vaccinated. Stay safe, and I\'ll talk to you next time.

\r\n',78,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','covid, science, risc-v, cpu',0,0,1), (3443,'2021-10-13','Neuton battery replacement',593,'Rho`n describes replacing the battery in his Neuton EM 4.1 electric lawn mower','

Audio Notes

\r\n

During the audio I repeatedly called it the Neutron mower instead of the Neuton mower. I was too lazy edit those mispronunciations.

\r\n

Introduction

\r\n

After recently reclaiming my Neuton EM 4.1 electric lawn mower from my parents, I needed to replace the battery to make it operational. This mower was purchased in the early 2000s, and replacement batteries for it are no longer available from the manufacturer. Thankfully replacement 12V 10A batteries are available through third parties.

\r\n

Replacing Parts

\r\n

I faced two issues with finding replacement parts. The Neuton mowers run at 24V and need batteries that can provide 10 amps of current. They come with a battery case that holds two 12V 10A batteries connected in series. The case holds the batteries and provides a connector and circuitry for a 24V DC charger. When I received the mower back from my parents, it didn\'t have a battery case with it. While the Neuton website is still online, and looks like you can order some accessories still, they no longer carry replacement battery cases or batteries. I was able to find just the case on EBay. I then found replacement batteries on Amazon.

\r\n

Installing the batteries in the case is simple. One side of the case has a lid. The lid is held in place by plastic notches on the bottom and two screws at the top. The screws have size 10 star heads. The batteries sit side by side in the case, with their terminals facing the lid. I connected the inner terminals (negative of one battery to positive of the other) with the jumper wire that came with the case. I then connected the outer terminals to the battery case terminal wires, slid the batteries all the way into case, closed, and fastened the lid.

\r\n

Conclusion

\r\n

The batteries are currently charging. The red charging light did come on when I plugged in the 24V DC charger, and nothing has exploded yet, so I am optimistic I will be able to use the mower again shortly.

\r\n

References

\r\n\r\n

Attribution

\r\n

The transition sound used between audio clips is found on freesound.org:
\r\nName: Harp Transition Music Cue
\r\nAuthor: DanJFilms
\r\nLicense: Creative Commons Zero

\r\n',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','electric lawnmower,lawnmower,rechargeable battery',0,0,1), -(3445,'2021-10-15','True critical thinking seems to be the key',4328,'A response to HPR 3414','
\r\n

Counter Point

\r\n

This show is a counter point to: hpr3414 :: Critical Thinking may make You Critical of the Covid Crisis\r\n

\r\n
\r\n

A response to Critical Thinking may make You Critical of the Covid Crisis

\r\n

(HPR episode 3414, produced by CoGo and released on 2021-09-02)

\r\n

Defining terms

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

Note the use of the terms fact, factual evidence and unbiased analysis. It is my contention that HPR episode 3414 fails in these regards in several places.

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

The term experiment is often used incorrectly in episode 3414. A better term would be observation or anecdote

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

Long notes

\r\n

Follow this link to read the detailed notes associated with this episode.

\r\n

Collected references:

\r\n
    \r\n
  1. Wikipedia article: Critical thinking:\r\n
  2. \r\n
  3. University of Greenwich article. What is critical thinking?:\r\n
  4. \r\n
  5. Wikipedia article: Experiment:\r\n
  6. \r\n
  7. Where does the six-foot guideline for social distancing come from?:\r\n
  8. \r\n
  9. Wikipedia article: Social distancing:\r\n
  10. \r\n
  11. How effective is a mask in preventing COVID‐19 infection?:\r\n
  12. \r\n
  13. Why Masks Work BETTER Than You’d Think:\r\n
  14. \r\n
  15. Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): Ventilation and air conditioning:\r\n
  16. \r\n
  17. Ventilation and air conditioning during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic:\r\n
  18. \r\n
  19. False Perception of COVID-19’s Impact on the Homeless:\r\n
  20. \r\n
  21. Vitamin D3 as Potential Treatment Adjuncts for COVID-19:\r\n
  22. \r\n
  23. Graphic Outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: case report:\r\n
  24. \r\n
  25. Response to - Graphic Outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: case report:\r\n
  26. \r\n
  27. Childhood Vaccination and the NHS:\r\n
  28. \r\n
  29. COVID-19 false dichotomies and a comprehensive review of the evidence regarding public health, COVID-19 symptomatology, SARS-CoV-2 transmission, mask wearing, and reinfection:\r\n
  30. \r\n
  31. Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines side effects and safety:\r\n
  32. \r\n
  33. TWiV 802: \"Another epitope with Shane Crotty\":\r\n
  34. \r\n
  35. UK parliament discussion on 2m rule.\r\n
  36. \r\n
  37. Government minister retracts mask claim.\r\n
  38. \r\n
  39. Nature paper on masks and aerosols.\r\n
  40. \r\n
  41. Our World in Data.\r\n
  42. \r\n
  43. Nature paper on COVID-19 and T cells.\r\n
  44. \r\n
  45. Antibody waning and COVID-19.\r\n
  46. \r\n
\r\n',225,100,1,'CC-BY-SA','COVID-19,social distancing,masks,aerosol,Vitamin D3,body temperature,vaccines',0,0,1), -(3444,'2021-10-14','The Psion series 5mx',1178,'A show where I talk about my experiences of the Psion 5mx, a portable computer from the late 90s','

The psion series 5mx is a portable computer from the late 90s, here\'s my episode talking about it.

\r\n\r\n

Apologies for talking quickly!

',381,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','retro, psion, programming, pdas',0,0,1), -(3452,'2021-10-26','Neuton battery test',324,'Rho`n describes testing the battery in his Neuton EM 4.1 electric lawn mower','

Introduction

\r\n

On today\'s show I test whether the battery replacement for my Neuton mower is a success. This is a follow up to episode 3443. After some audio recording difficulties with the blue tooth headset I used with my phone, we hear if the replacement was successful. Before I could test the battery, I needed to replace the mower key. I think it would have been simple to just jump the terminals with a wire and maybe some alligator clips to hold the wire to the key terminals, but I was worried this would not guarantee the wire shaking loose as I moved. I looked on EBay and found a replacement key for about fifteen dollars US, and decided it was worth the cost and the wait before trying out the mower.

\r\n

Testing the mower

\r\n

After putting the key in the mower, pulling and holding the safety levers, and then pressing the start button. The mower wouldn\'t start. I checked the key was set properly, and saw the green LED on the handle lit and indicating that power was available. I pulled the key and battery out, and then reseated both of them, checking once again that the power indicator was lit. After some fooling around with the safety levers and start button, I realized you had to push the start button and then pull and hold the safety levers for the mower to start. The mower runs well, and the cost of the batteries and key will even out over time from the savings on not paying for a lawn service.

\r\n

References

\r\n\r\n

Attribution

\r\n

The transition sound used between audio clips is found on freesound.org:
\r\nName: Harp Transition Music Cue
\r\nAuthor: DanJFilms
\r\nLicense: Creative Commons Zero

',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','electric lawnmower,lawnmower,rechargeable battery',0,0,1), -(3447,'2021-10-19','BlacKernel\'s Journey Into Technology: Episode 2',1249,'In which BlacKernel struggles to talk about Windows','

Talking Points

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

Show Notes

\r\n

Important Links:

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

Wikipedia Articles:

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nContact Me\r\n\r\n\r\n',396,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','technology, windows, w*ndows, losedows, introductions, linux, dos',0,0,1), -(3449,'2021-10-21','Linux Inlaws S01E41: The Halloween Documents',3956,'The Halloween Documents','

In this infomercial on Microsoft, our hosts discuss the infamous Halloween\r\ndocuments (\'tis the season after all), a set of ancient scrolls dating back\r\nmore than twenty years and giving an overview of the behemoth\'s then strategy\r\non open source and how to possibly combat it. But fear not, ye of little faith\r\n:-), all is well now as the episode shows also the long way Microsoft has come\r\nsince then and its adoption (and giving back!) as an enterprise technology.

\r\n\r\n

Plus: How to increase your market cap by using FLOSS. And last but not least:\r\nThe Dark Side is back by popular demand! With a special episode on the usual\r\nHalloween stuff including vampires, Transylvania, politicians, QAnon, Zoom,\r\nTeams and other horror topics (Ever wondered what happened to Angela Merkel\r\nafter she stepped down as Germany\'s chancelorette in 2021? Then don\'t miss out\r\non this episode!).

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',384,111,1,'CC-BY-SA','Microsoft, Google, The Dark Side, Halloween, Transylvania, Carmesine-colored Soy Milk, vegan vampire',0,0,1), -(3471,'2021-11-22','The Sony Walkman WM-F41',531,'A quick talk about one of my favorite Legacy Audio devices, a genuine Sony FM/AM cassette Walkman.','

This episode is just a quick talk about one of my favorite legacy audio devices, my Sony FM/AM cassette Walkman, model WM-F41.

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

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','audio, vintage audio, cassette tapes, tape players, portable stereos, audio repair',0,0,1), -(3468,'2021-11-17','Distro upgrade intervals on my Raspberry Pi',786,'In this episode I discuss Debian distro upgrade intervals for my raspberry Pi','

A discussion about Debian LTS distro upgrade intervals on my Raspberry Pi

\r\n\r\n

Debian release information

\r\n

My previous episode from last year where I covered the upgrade on my raspberry Pi from Debian Jessie 8 to Stretch 9

\r\n

A previous episode where I describe my raspberry Pi add-on board and what I use it for

\r\n',201,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Distros, Raspberry Pi, Debian',0,0,1), -(3741,'2022-12-05','HPR Community News for November 2022',3276,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2022','\n\n

New hosts

\n

\nWelcome to our new host:
\n\n Kinghezy.\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
3717Tue2022-11-01Video editing with Shotcut on a low end PCMrX
3718Wed2022-11-02Making Ansible playbooks to configure Single Sign On for popular open source applicationsJeroen Baten
3719Thu2022-11-03HPR NewsSome Guy On The Internet
3720Fri2022-11-04Practicing Batch Files With ECHOAhuka
3721Mon2022-11-07HPR Community News for October 2022HPR Volunteers
3722Tue2022-11-08Bash snippet - plurals in messagesDave Morriss
3723Wed2022-11-09HPR NewsSome Guy On The Internet
3724Thu2022-11-10My top Android appsArcher72
3725Fri2022-11-11How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport Ken Fallon
3726Mon2022-11-14Breaches ever reachingLurking Prion
3727Tue2022-11-15Expanding your filesystem with LVMRho`n
3728Wed2022-11-16Pinebook Pro reviewbinrc
3729Thu2022-11-17Contributing to SuperTuxKartCeleste
3730Fri2022-11-18Into ArizonaAhuka
3731Mon2022-11-21Speech recognition in Kdenlivednt
3732Tue2022-11-22My experience owning an Atari Jaguarm0dese7en
3733Wed2022-11-23SmiteSome Guy On The Internet
3734Thu2022-11-24Inetd: the internet super-serverbinrc
3735Fri2022-11-25i3 Tiling Window ManagerArcher72
3736Mon2022-11-28Metasyntactic wordsKlaatu
3737Tue2022-11-29Review of KOBO Libra H20 e-readerRho`n
3738Wed2022-11-30Intro to KMyMoneyKinghezy
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 25 comments in total.

\n

Past shows

\n

There are 6 comments on\n5 previous shows:

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 19 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2022-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

HPR RSS feeds and https\nlinks

\n

A question came up in November regarding the HPR RSS feeds. All of\nthe URLs in these feeds use \'http\' as opposed to\n\'https\'.

\n

Although this may seem odd, this is a fairly common thing to do,\nbecause the RSS standard (such as it is) does not cater for\n\'https\' links. There is a concern that passing an RSS feed\nwith such links to a validator (such as the W3C Feed Validation Service)\nwill result in it being marked as invalid.

\n

Older HPR shows on\narchive.org, phase 2

\n

Now that all shows from number 1 to the latest have been uploaded to\nthe Internet Archive there are other tasks to perform. We are\nreprocessing and re-uploading shows in the range 871 to 2429 as\nexplained in the Community News show notes released in May\n2022. We are keeping a running total here to show progress:

\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
\nMonth\n\nMonth count\n\nRunning total\n\nRemainder\n
\n2022-04\n\n130\n\n130\n\n1428\n
\n2022-05\n\n140\n\n270\n\n1288\n
\n2022-06\n\n150\n\n420\n\n1138\n
\n2022-07\n\n155\n\n575\n\n983\n
\n2022-08\n\n155\n\n730\n\n828\n
\n2022-09\n\n150\n\n880\n\n678\n
\n2022-10\n\n155\n\n1035\n\n523\n
\n2022-11\n\n230\n\n1265\n\n293\n
\n\n

Updated: 2022-12-03 16:10:11

\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), -(3464,'2021-11-11','Being irrational',777,'Being irrational is rational.','

When listening to HPR 3442 by Klaatu, which I recommend, some thoughts about how we think started rattling about in my head. In this show I riff on that and talk about the importance of our irrational mode of thought.

\r\n',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','philosophy,mathematics,science,chess,logic,music',0,0,1), -(3465,'2021-11-12','Walmart Onn 7 inch tablet gen 2',863,'Podcast about a new Android go Tablet I purchased ','

Just a basic podcast about a tablet.

\r\n

https://www.walmart.com/ip/onn-7-Tablet/930669857

\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Walmart, Android Go, Tablet',0,0,1), -(3466,'2021-11-15','Why HPR has less downloads',551,'A short summary on why podcast listening might be on decline.','

I did a show about why I do not listen to non-mainstream podcasts as much as I used to. For me two things happened: I switched from being in the car for 16 hours a week to being a remote sales person at home. So the 16 hours I listened to podcasts every week in the car went away. The second reason I reduced was that many of the podcasts I was listening to were presented by people who do not share my values. So I stopped listening to them. The third reason I listen less is the Army opened up the online book library to retired service members and I do a lot of audio books in the moment.

\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts, dowloads',0,0,1), -(3469,'2021-11-18','Linux Inlaws S01E43: The Great Battle or not',4138,'The Great Battle nor Not','

In this episode Martin and one of the Grumpies (as in Grumpy Old Coders)\r\nbattle it out: SQL or NoSQL - which technology is better? If you ever wondered\r\nwhy the Structured Query Language was invented in the first place and why the\r\nhipster abandoned ship for the latest (?) rage of the likes of the NoSQL\r\nvariety, this is for you. Plus: A whole family of never-heard-of sound effects\r\nmake their debut on this bumper of an episode.

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',384,111,1,'CC-BY-SA','SQL, NoSQL, Grumpy Old Coders, Hipster databases, mainframes, Execution planners',0,0,1), -(3448,'2021-10-20','Installing GuixSD',2679,'Rho`n records installing GuixSD to an external USB drive to be run on a Mac Mini computer','

Synopsis

\r\n\r\n

In this episode Rho`n records his adventure in installing GuixSD on an external USB drive which will be run on a Mac Mini computer. After overcoming the initial difficulty of finding a keyboard that would connect wirelessly to the Mac Mini while using the Guix installer and some network difficulties, he describes the installation steps.

\r\n\r\n

Guix has a graphical text based installer. It is reminiscent of the mid to late 90s Debian installers. Even with its old school feel, the installer is very nice. It is well laid out, has good onscreen description for each step of the installation process, and provides ample configuration selections from language, to to key board layout, to desktop and software selection.

\r\n\r\n

References

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

Attribution

\r\n\r\n

The transition sound used between audio clips is found on freesound.org:
\r\nName: Harp Transition Music Cue
\r\nAuthor: DanJFilms
\r\nLicense: Creative Commons Zero

\r\n',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Guix,GuixSD,installer,install,USB drive,Mac Mini,grub rescue',0,0,1), diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-14.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-14.sql index a86641e..9c2cae8 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-14.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-14.sql @@ -1,3 +1,16 @@ +(3445,'2021-10-15','True critical thinking seems to be the key',4328,'A response to HPR 3414','
\r\n

Counter Point

\r\n

This show is a counter point to: hpr3414 :: Critical Thinking may make You Critical of the Covid Crisis\r\n

\r\n
\r\n

A response to Critical Thinking may make You Critical of the Covid Crisis

\r\n

(HPR episode 3414, produced by CoGo and released on 2021-09-02)

\r\n

Defining terms

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

Note the use of the terms fact, factual evidence and unbiased analysis. It is my contention that HPR episode 3414 fails in these regards in several places.

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

The term experiment is often used incorrectly in episode 3414. A better term would be observation or anecdote

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

Long notes

\r\n

Follow this link to read the detailed notes associated with this episode.

\r\n

Collected references:

\r\n
    \r\n
  1. Wikipedia article: Critical thinking:\r\n
  2. \r\n
  3. University of Greenwich article. What is critical thinking?:\r\n
  4. \r\n
  5. Wikipedia article: Experiment:\r\n
  6. \r\n
  7. Where does the six-foot guideline for social distancing come from?:\r\n
  8. \r\n
  9. Wikipedia article: Social distancing:\r\n
  10. \r\n
  11. How effective is a mask in preventing COVID‐19 infection?:\r\n
  12. \r\n
  13. Why Masks Work BETTER Than You’d Think:\r\n
  14. \r\n
  15. Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): Ventilation and air conditioning:\r\n
  16. \r\n
  17. Ventilation and air conditioning during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic:\r\n
  18. \r\n
  19. False Perception of COVID-19’s Impact on the Homeless:\r\n
  20. \r\n
  21. Vitamin D3 as Potential Treatment Adjuncts for COVID-19:\r\n
  22. \r\n
  23. Graphic Outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: case report:\r\n
  24. \r\n
  25. Response to - Graphic Outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: case report:\r\n
  26. \r\n
  27. Childhood Vaccination and the NHS:\r\n
  28. \r\n
  29. COVID-19 false dichotomies and a comprehensive review of the evidence regarding public health, COVID-19 symptomatology, SARS-CoV-2 transmission, mask wearing, and reinfection:\r\n
  30. \r\n
  31. Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines side effects and safety:\r\n
  32. \r\n
  33. TWiV 802: \"Another epitope with Shane Crotty\":\r\n
  34. \r\n
  35. UK parliament discussion on 2m rule.\r\n
  36. \r\n
  37. Government minister retracts mask claim.\r\n
  38. \r\n
  39. Nature paper on masks and aerosols.\r\n
  40. \r\n
  41. Our World in Data.\r\n
  42. \r\n
  43. Nature paper on COVID-19 and T cells.\r\n
  44. \r\n
  45. Antibody waning and COVID-19.\r\n
  46. \r\n
\r\n',225,100,1,'CC-BY-SA','COVID-19,social distancing,masks,aerosol,Vitamin D3,body temperature,vaccines',0,0,1), +(3444,'2021-10-14','The Psion series 5mx',1178,'A show where I talk about my experiences of the Psion 5mx, a portable computer from the late 90s','

The psion series 5mx is a portable computer from the late 90s, here\'s my episode talking about it.

\r\n\r\n

Apologies for talking quickly!

',381,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','retro, psion, programming, pdas',0,0,1), +(3452,'2021-10-26','Neuton battery test',324,'Rho`n describes testing the battery in his Neuton EM 4.1 electric lawn mower','

Introduction

\r\n

On today\'s show I test whether the battery replacement for my Neuton mower is a success. This is a follow up to episode 3443. After some audio recording difficulties with the blue tooth headset I used with my phone, we hear if the replacement was successful. Before I could test the battery, I needed to replace the mower key. I think it would have been simple to just jump the terminals with a wire and maybe some alligator clips to hold the wire to the key terminals, but I was worried this would not guarantee the wire shaking loose as I moved. I looked on EBay and found a replacement key for about fifteen dollars US, and decided it was worth the cost and the wait before trying out the mower.

\r\n

Testing the mower

\r\n

After putting the key in the mower, pulling and holding the safety levers, and then pressing the start button. The mower wouldn\'t start. I checked the key was set properly, and saw the green LED on the handle lit and indicating that power was available. I pulled the key and battery out, and then reseated both of them, checking once again that the power indicator was lit. After some fooling around with the safety levers and start button, I realized you had to push the start button and then pull and hold the safety levers for the mower to start. The mower runs well, and the cost of the batteries and key will even out over time from the savings on not paying for a lawn service.

\r\n

References

\r\n\r\n

Attribution

\r\n

The transition sound used between audio clips is found on freesound.org:
\r\nName: Harp Transition Music Cue
\r\nAuthor: DanJFilms
\r\nLicense: Creative Commons Zero

',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','electric lawnmower,lawnmower,rechargeable battery',0,0,1), +(3447,'2021-10-19','BlacKernel\'s Journey Into Technology: Episode 2',1249,'In which BlacKernel struggles to talk about Windows','

Talking Points

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

Show Notes

\r\n

Important Links:

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

Wikipedia Articles:

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nContact Me\r\n\r\n\r\n',396,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','technology, windows, w*ndows, losedows, introductions, linux, dos',0,0,1), +(3449,'2021-10-21','Linux Inlaws S01E41: The Halloween Documents',3956,'The Halloween Documents','

In this infomercial on Microsoft, our hosts discuss the infamous Halloween\r\ndocuments (\'tis the season after all), a set of ancient scrolls dating back\r\nmore than twenty years and giving an overview of the behemoth\'s then strategy\r\non open source and how to possibly combat it. But fear not, ye of little faith\r\n:-), all is well now as the episode shows also the long way Microsoft has come\r\nsince then and its adoption (and giving back!) as an enterprise technology.

\r\n\r\n

Plus: How to increase your market cap by using FLOSS. And last but not least:\r\nThe Dark Side is back by popular demand! With a special episode on the usual\r\nHalloween stuff including vampires, Transylvania, politicians, QAnon, Zoom,\r\nTeams and other horror topics (Ever wondered what happened to Angela Merkel\r\nafter she stepped down as Germany\'s chancelorette in 2021? Then don\'t miss out\r\non this episode!).

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',384,111,1,'CC-BY-SA','Microsoft, Google, The Dark Side, Halloween, Transylvania, Carmesine-colored Soy Milk, vegan vampire',0,0,1), +(3471,'2021-11-22','The Sony Walkman WM-F41',531,'A quick talk about one of my favorite Legacy Audio devices, a genuine Sony FM/AM cassette Walkman.','

This episode is just a quick talk about one of my favorite legacy audio devices, my Sony FM/AM cassette Walkman, model WM-F41.

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

Links

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n',238,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','audio, vintage audio, cassette tapes, tape players, portable stereos, audio repair',0,0,1), +(3468,'2021-11-17','Distro upgrade intervals on my Raspberry Pi',786,'In this episode I discuss Debian distro upgrade intervals for my raspberry Pi','

A discussion about Debian LTS distro upgrade intervals on my Raspberry Pi

\r\n\r\n

Debian release information

\r\n

My previous episode from last year where I covered the upgrade on my raspberry Pi from Debian Jessie 8 to Stretch 9

\r\n

A previous episode where I describe my raspberry Pi add-on board and what I use it for

\r\n',201,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','Linux, Distros, Raspberry Pi, Debian',0,0,1), +(3741,'2022-12-05','HPR Community News for November 2022',3276,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2022','\n\n

New hosts

\n

\nWelcome to our new host:
\n\n Kinghezy.\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
3717Tue2022-11-01Video editing with Shotcut on a low end PCMrX
3718Wed2022-11-02Making Ansible playbooks to configure Single Sign On for popular open source applicationsJeroen Baten
3719Thu2022-11-03HPR NewsSome Guy On The Internet
3720Fri2022-11-04Practicing Batch Files With ECHOAhuka
3721Mon2022-11-07HPR Community News for October 2022HPR Volunteers
3722Tue2022-11-08Bash snippet - plurals in messagesDave Morriss
3723Wed2022-11-09HPR NewsSome Guy On The Internet
3724Thu2022-11-10My top Android appsArcher72
3725Fri2022-11-11How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport Ken Fallon
3726Mon2022-11-14Breaches ever reachingLurking Prion
3727Tue2022-11-15Expanding your filesystem with LVMRho`n
3728Wed2022-11-16Pinebook Pro reviewbinrc
3729Thu2022-11-17Contributing to SuperTuxKartCeleste
3730Fri2022-11-18Into ArizonaAhuka
3731Mon2022-11-21Speech recognition in Kdenlivednt
3732Tue2022-11-22My experience owning an Atari Jaguarm0dese7en
3733Wed2022-11-23SmiteSome Guy On The Internet
3734Thu2022-11-24Inetd: the internet super-serverbinrc
3735Fri2022-11-25i3 Tiling Window ManagerArcher72
3736Mon2022-11-28Metasyntactic wordsKlaatu
3737Tue2022-11-29Review of KOBO Libra H20 e-readerRho`n
3738Wed2022-11-30Intro to KMyMoneyKinghezy
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 25 comments in total.

\n

Past shows

\n

There are 6 comments on\n5 previous shows:

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 19 comments on 12 of this month\'s shows:

\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/2022-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

HPR RSS feeds and https\nlinks

\n

A question came up in November regarding the HPR RSS feeds. All of\nthe URLs in these feeds use \'http\' as opposed to\n\'https\'.

\n

Although this may seem odd, this is a fairly common thing to do,\nbecause the RSS standard (such as it is) does not cater for\n\'https\' links. There is a concern that passing an RSS feed\nwith such links to a validator (such as the W3C Feed Validation Service)\nwill result in it being marked as invalid.

\n

Older HPR shows on\narchive.org, phase 2

\n

Now that all shows from number 1 to the latest have been uploaded to\nthe Internet Archive there are other tasks to perform. We are\nreprocessing and re-uploading shows in the range 871 to 2429 as\nexplained in the Community News show notes released in May\n2022. We are keeping a running total here to show progress:

\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
\nMonth\n\nMonth count\n\nRunning total\n\nRemainder\n
\n2022-04\n\n130\n\n130\n\n1428\n
\n2022-05\n\n140\n\n270\n\n1288\n
\n2022-06\n\n150\n\n420\n\n1138\n
\n2022-07\n\n155\n\n575\n\n983\n
\n2022-08\n\n155\n\n730\n\n828\n
\n2022-09\n\n150\n\n880\n\n678\n
\n2022-10\n\n155\n\n1035\n\n523\n
\n2022-11\n\n230\n\n1265\n\n293\n
\n\n

Updated: 2022-12-03 16:10:11

\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), +(3464,'2021-11-11','Being irrational',777,'Being irrational is rational.','

When listening to HPR 3442 by Klaatu, which I recommend, some thoughts about how we think started rattling about in my head. In this show I riff on that and talk about the importance of our irrational mode of thought.

\r\n',268,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','philosophy,mathematics,science,chess,logic,music',0,0,1), +(3465,'2021-11-12','Walmart Onn 7 inch tablet gen 2',863,'Podcast about a new Android go Tablet I purchased ','

Just a basic podcast about a tablet.

\r\n

https://www.walmart.com/ip/onn-7-Tablet/930669857

\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Walmart, Android Go, Tablet',0,0,1), +(3466,'2021-11-15','Why HPR has less downloads',551,'A short summary on why podcast listening might be on decline.','

I did a show about why I do not listen to non-mainstream podcasts as much as I used to. For me two things happened: I switched from being in the car for 16 hours a week to being a remote sales person at home. So the 16 hours I listened to podcasts every week in the car went away. The second reason I reduced was that many of the podcasts I was listening to were presented by people who do not share my values. So I stopped listening to them. The third reason I listen less is the Army opened up the online book library to retired service members and I do a lot of audio books in the moment.

\r\n',129,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcasts, dowloads',0,0,1), +(3469,'2021-11-18','Linux Inlaws S01E43: The Great Battle or not',4138,'The Great Battle nor Not','

In this episode Martin and one of the Grumpies (as in Grumpy Old Coders)\r\nbattle it out: SQL or NoSQL - which technology is better? If you ever wondered\r\nwhy the Structured Query Language was invented in the first place and why the\r\nhipster abandoned ship for the latest (?) rage of the likes of the NoSQL\r\nvariety, this is for you. Plus: A whole family of never-heard-of sound effects\r\nmake their debut on this bumper of an episode.

\r\n\r\n

Links:

\r\n\r\n',384,111,1,'CC-BY-SA','SQL, NoSQL, Grumpy Old Coders, Hipster databases, mainframes, Execution planners',0,0,1), +(3448,'2021-10-20','Installing GuixSD',2679,'Rho`n records installing GuixSD to an external USB drive to be run on a Mac Mini computer','

Synopsis

\r\n\r\n

In this episode Rho`n records his adventure in installing GuixSD on an external USB drive which will be run on a Mac Mini computer. After overcoming the initial difficulty of finding a keyboard that would connect wirelessly to the Mac Mini while using the Guix installer and some network difficulties, he describes the installation steps.

\r\n\r\n

Guix has a graphical text based installer. It is reminiscent of the mid to late 90s Debian installers. Even with its old school feel, the installer is very nice. It is well laid out, has good onscreen description for each step of the installation process, and provides ample configuration selections from language, to to key board layout, to desktop and software selection.

\r\n\r\n

References

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

Attribution

\r\n\r\n

The transition sound used between audio clips is found on freesound.org:
\r\nName: Harp Transition Music Cue
\r\nAuthor: DanJFilms
\r\nLicense: Creative Commons Zero

\r\n',293,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Guix,GuixSD,installer,install,USB drive,Mac Mini,grub rescue',0,0,1), (3461,'2021-11-08','Changes to HPR Branding',2441,'Rho\'n, Dave and Ken read the entire email thread related to changing the HPR theme','

\r\nWe didn\'t have time to tackle the discussion in last months community news so today we dedicate an entire show to reading out all the comments relating to the HPR Branding.\r\n
\r\nSee https://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2021-October/thread.html\r\n

\r\n

\r\nYour comments are appreciated !\r\n

',159,47,0,'CC-BY-SA','HPR, Branding, Intro, Outro',0,0,1), (3453,'2021-10-27','Rust 101: Episode 1 - Hello, World!',1348,'In which BlacKernel introduces the cargo tool and goes into detail on the rust hello world program','

Talking Points

\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\nfn main() {\r\n  println!(\"Hello, world!\");\r\n}\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n

Show Notes

\r\n

Important Links:

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

Wikipedia Articles:

\r\n\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nContact Me\r\n\r\n\r\n',396,25,1,'CC-BY-SA','rust, programming, hello world, macros, functions',0,0,1), (3455,'2021-10-29','Podcast Recommendation: IBM and Quantum computing',193,'Highlights of a podcast from Moore\'s Lobby','

Moore\'s Lobby

\r\n

Ep. 34 | The Latest from the Lab: How IBM Research Is Inventing What\'s Next

\r\n

https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/podcast/ep-34-the-latest-from-the-lab-how-ibm-research-is-inventing-whats-next

\r\n
    \r\n
  1. Rss feed: https://eetech.libsyn.com/rss
  2. \r\n
  3. Interview with Dr. Jeffrey Welser\r\n
      \r\n
    • VP of Exploratory Science at IBM Research
    • \r\n
    • IBM Release first 2nm chip this year
    • \r\n
  4. \r\n
  5. Engineers vs Scientists and how they drive innovations
  6. \r\n
  7. Goal to replace the transistor when Moore\'s Law stops scaling
  8. \r\n
  9. Managing thermal loads
  10. \r\n
  11. Finding new structures and materials to control current
  12. \r\n
  13. Neural nets, image recognition and AI
  14. \r\n
  15. Quantum computing\r\n
  16. \r\n
\r\n',318,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','podcast, moore\'s law, quantum computing, qubits, encryption, cryptography, NIST, Josephson junction',0,0,1), @@ -255,7 +268,7 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (3712,'2022-10-25','The last ever CCHits.net Show',5756,'The team talk about the nearly 12 years of producing CCHits.net.','

Over 12 years ago, Jon \"The Nice Guy\"\nSpriggs went to a \"Pod Crawl\" with (among others) Dave \"The Love Bug\" Lee, where he\npitched the idea of a daily music promotion show, with a twist - it\nwould all be automated, and use text-to-speech to introduce\neverything.

\n

The first show was released\non 2010-10-24 and the last ever show (this one) was released on\n2022-10-12.

\n

Over the twelve years, Jon would go on to meet to meet Yannick and Ken Fallon, both\nof whom would go on to shape changes (big and small) to CCHits.

\n

This year, the cracks started to re-appear in the architecture\nunderneath CCHits - between APIs shutting down that were used to load\ntracks to CCHits, and the general framework being used to write CCHits\nnot receiving the care and attention it needed... and the team finally\ndecided to stop adding new tracks, and let the process build the last\nfew shows.

\n

This podcast gives you a peek behind the curtain to the team involved\nin the system, and gives you some of the high- and low-lights in the 12\nyears the site ran for.

\n',413,0,0,'CC-BY','music,creative commons,podcast',0,0,1), (3724,'2022-11-10','My top Android apps',579,'I walk through the top apps on my phone','

My most used apps

\n

AIO Launcher

\n\n

\"Main

\n

\n

\n

Termux: Terminal\nemulator with packages

\n\n

QKSMS Messaging

\n\n

Firefox browser

\n\n

Opera browser

\n\n

Brave browser

\n\n

Clear Scanner PDF scanner and\nOCR

\n\n

Antennapod

\n\n

Tusky

\n\n

K-9 mail client

\n\n

Viber

\n\n

Audio recorder

\n\n

X-plore dual-pane file\nmanager

\n\n

Librera E-book Reader: for\nPDF, EPUB

\n\n

Multi Timer

\n\n

US Amateur Radio Band Plan

\n\n',318,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android, Android apps, Mobile phone, Custom launcher',0,0,1), (3725,'2022-11-11','How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport ',124,'Ken shows you how to use this mapping tool to display transit routes in your area.','

\r\n\"\"
\r\nMap of Dublin showing the Temple Bar tourist area. A red arrow points to where you can change the profile.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nWith the Configure Map > Profile selection menu open, a red square surrounds the Bus icon to indicate the \"public transport\" profile is now selected.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nThe map now opens to show more information about public transport is now displayed on the map. This is highlighted with a red square.
\r\nClicking the bustop (highlighted with a red circle ) will show more information about the routes available at this location.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nOnce the transport stop is selected, a list of all the routes that service this location are displayed. Along with other routes that are available within a short distance.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nClicking any of the routes numbers/names will give a zoomed out map showing in red the route many of the stops towards it\'s source and destination.\r\n

\r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','OSMAnd, OSM, Maps, Public Transport',0,0,1), -(4001,'2023-12-04','HPR Community News for November 2023',0,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2023','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
3978Wed2023-11-01Driving in Virginia.Some Guy On The Internet
3979Thu2023-11-02FireStick and ad blockingoperat0r
3980Fri2023-11-03Huntsville to VicksburgAhuka
3981Mon2023-11-06HPR Community News for October 2023HPR Volunteers
3982Tue2023-11-07Conversation with ChatGPTArcher72
3983Wed2023-11-08ChatGPT Output is not compatible with CC-BY-SAKen Fallon
3984Thu2023-11-09Whoppers. How Archer72 and I made moonshine. Volume one.Some Guy On The Internet
3985Fri2023-11-10Bash snippet - be careful when feeding data to loopsDave Morriss
3986Mon2023-11-13Optical media is not deadArcher72
3987Tue2023-11-14The Grim DawnSome Guy On The Internet
3988Wed2023-11-15Beeper.comoperat0r
3989Thu2023-11-16LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023Ahuka
3990Fri2023-11-17Playing Alpha Centauri, Part 2Ahuka
3991Mon2023-11-20YOU ARE A PIRATE operat0r
3992Tue2023-11-21Test recording on a wireless micArcher72
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 3 comments in total.

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 3 comments on 3 of this month\'s shows:

\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://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2023-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

Example section

\n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), +(4001,'2023-12-04','HPR Community News for November 2023',0,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2023','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
3978Wed2023-11-01Driving in Virginia.Some Guy On The Internet
3979Thu2023-11-02FireStick and ad blockingoperat0r
3980Fri2023-11-03Huntsville to VicksburgAhuka
3981Mon2023-11-06HPR Community News for October 2023HPR Volunteers
3982Tue2023-11-07Conversation with ChatGPTArcher72
3983Wed2023-11-08ChatGPT Output is not compatible with CC-BY-SAKen Fallon
3984Thu2023-11-09Whoppers. How Archer72 and I made moonshine. Volume one.Some Guy On The Internet
3985Fri2023-11-10Bash snippet - be careful when feeding data to loopsDave Morriss
3986Mon2023-11-13Optical media is not deadArcher72
3987Tue2023-11-14The Grim DawnSome Guy On The Internet
3988Wed2023-11-15Beeper.comoperat0r
3989Thu2023-11-16LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023Ahuka
3990Fri2023-11-17Playing Alpha Centauri, Part 2Ahuka
3991Mon2023-11-20YOU ARE A PIRATE operat0r
3992Tue2023-11-21Test recording on a wireless micArcher72
3993Wed2023-11-22z80 membership cardBrian in Ohio
3994Thu2023-11-23Lastpass Responseoperat0r
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 4 comments in total.

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 4 comments on 4 of this month\'s shows:

\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://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2023-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

Example section

\n\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (3714,'2022-10-27','The News with Some Guy On the Internet',609,'Threat Analysis','

Threat Analysis; your\nattack surface.

\n

The Hacker News

\nNew\nChinese Malware Attack Framework Targets Windows, macOS, and Linux\nSystems.\n

A previously undocumented command-and-control (C2) framework dubbed\nAlchimist is likely being used in the wild to target Windows, macOS, and\nLinux systems.

\n

\"Alchimist C2 has a web interface written in Simplified Chinese and\ncan generate a configured payload, establish remote sessions, deploy\npayloads to the remote machines, capture screenshots, perform remote\nshellcode execution, and run arbitrary commands,\" Cisco Talos said in a\nreport shared with The Hacker News. Written in GoLang, Alchimist is\ncomplemented by a beacon implant called Insekt, which comes with remote\naccess features that can be instrumented by the C2 server.”

\n

\"Since Alchimist is a single-file based ready-to-go C2 framework, it\nis difficult to attribute its use to a single actor such as the authors,\nAPTs, or crimeware syndicates.\"

\n

The trojan, for its part, is equipped with features typically present\nin backdoors of this kind, enabling the malware to get system\ninformation, capture screenshots, run arbitrary commands, and download\nremote files, among others.

\n

Alchimist C2 panel further features the ability to generate first\nstage payloads, including PowerShell and wget code snippets for Windows\nand Linux, potentially allowing an attacker to flesh out their infection\nchains to distribute the Insekt RAT binary. The instructions could then\nbe potentially embedded in a maldoc attached to a phishing email that,\nwhen opened, downloads and launches the backdoor on the compromised\nmachine. What\'s more, the Linux version of Insekt is capable of listing\nthe contents of the \".ssh\" directory and even adding new SSH keys to the\n\"~/.ssh/authorized_keys\" file to facilitate remote access over SSH.

\n

The Hacker News

\nHackers\nUsing Vishing to Trick Victims into Installing Android Banking\nMalware.\n

Malicious actors are resorting to voice phishing (vishing) tactics to\ndupe victims into installing Android malware on their devices.

\n

The Dutch mobile security company said it identified a network of\nphishing websites targeting Italian online-banking users that are\ndesigned to get hold of their contact details.

\n

Telephone-oriented attack delivery (TOAD), as the social engineering\ntechnique is called, involves calling the victims using previously\ncollected information from the fraudulent websites.

\n

The caller, who purports to be a support agent for the bank,\ninstructs the individual on the other end of the call to install a\nsecurity app and grant it extensive permissions, when, in reality, it\'s\nmalicious software intended to gain remote access or conduct financial\nfraud.

\n

What\'s more, the infrastructure utilized by the threat actor has been\nfound to deliver a second malware named SMS Spy that enables the\nadversary to gain access to all incoming SMS messages and intercept\none-time passwords (OTPs) sent by banks.

\n

The new wave of hybrid fraud attacks presents a new dimension for\nscammers to mount convincing Android malware campaigns that have\notherwise relied on traditional methods such as Google Play Store\ndroppers, rogue ads, and smishing.

\n

The Hacker News

\n64,000\nAdditional Patients Impacted by Omnicell Data Breach - What is Your Data\nBreach Action Plan?\n

Founded in 1992, Omnicell is a leading provider of medication\nmanagement solutions for hospitals, long-term care facilities, and\nretail pharmacies. On May 4, 2022, Omnicell\'s IT systems and third-party\ncloud services were affected by ransomware attacks which may lead to\ndata security concerns for employees and patients. While it is still\nearly in the investigation, this appears to be a severe breach with\npotentially significant consequences for the company.

\n

Omnicell began informing individuals whose information may have been\ncompromised on August 3, 2022. Hackers may be able to access and sell\npatient-sensitive information, such as social security numbers, due to\nthe time delay between the breach and the company\'s report of affected\npatients.

\n

The type of information that may be exposed are:

\n
    \n
  • Credit card information.
  • \n
  • Financial information.
  • \n
  • Social security numbers.
  • \n
  • Driver\'s license numbers.
  • \n
  • Health insurance details.
  • \n
\n

The healthcare industry is one of the most targeted sectors globally,\nwith attacks doubling year over year. And these costs are measured in\nmillions or even billions of dollars - not to mention increased risks\nfor patients\' privacy (and reputation).

\n

The Washington Post

\n

How to\nprotect schools getting whacked by ransomware.

\n

Ransomware gangs are taking Americans to school. So far this year,\nhackers have taken hostage at least 1,735 schools in 27 districts; the\nmassive Los Angeles Unified School District is their latest target.

\n

Ransomware hackers breach computers, lock them up, steal sensitive\ndata and demand money to release their hold on organizations’ critical\nsystems. These criminals often attack schools because they are\nprofitable targets. If all ransomware victims refused to pay, the\nattacks would stop. Indeed, paying up might be illegal: The Treasury\nDepartment released guidance last year noting that giving money to\nglobal criminal organizations can violate sanctions law.

\n

The trouble is, saying no isn’t always easy. Los Angeles didn’t\ncapitulate, and the criminals leaked a trove of data — a consequence\nthat can prove more or less serious depending on the sensitivity of the\nstolen information.

\n

“Because we can,” said a representative of the ransomware gang that\ntook down Los Angeles Unified School District, explaining the\ncollective’s motivations to a Bloomberg News reporter. Schools’ task is\nto turn “can” to “can’t” — or, at least, to make success pay a whole lot\nless.

\n

CNET News.

\nVerizon\nAlerts Prepaid Customers to Recent Security Breach.\n

Verizon notified prepaid customers this week of a recent cyberattack\nthat granted third-party actors access to their accounts, as reported\nearlier Tuesday by BleepingComputer. The attack occurred between Oct. 6\nand Oct. 10 and affected 250 Verizon prepaid customers.

\n

The breach exposed the last four digits of customers\' credit cards\nused to make payments on their prepaid accounts. While no full credit\ncard information was accessible, the information was enough to grant the\nattackers access to Verizon user accounts, which hold semi-sensitive\ndata such \"name, telephone number, billing address, price plans, and\nother service-related information,\" per a notice from Verizon.

\n

Account access also potentially enabled attackers to process\nunauthorized SIM card changes on prepaid lines. Also known as SIM\nswapping, unauthorized SIM card changes can allow for the transfer of an\nunsuspecting person\'s phone number to another phone.

\n

From there, the counterfeit phone can be used to receive SMS messages\nfor password resets and user identification verifications on other\naccounts, giving attackers potential access to any account they have, or\ncan guess, the username for. Consequently, Verizon recommended affected\ncustomers secure their non-Verizon accounts such as social media,\nfinancial, email and other accounts that allow for password resets by\nphone.

\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Threat Analysis, Security Breach, Ransomware, Data Breach, TOAD',0,0,1), (3717,'2022-11-01','Video editing with Shotcut on a low end PC',695,'In this episode I explain how I use the shotcut video editor to edit video on a low end PC.','

Links

\n

Shotcut video editor website

\n

Useful\nShortcut keys for the Shotcut video editor

\n
C = copy\nV = paste\nA = duplicate\nX = ripple delete\nCtrl + X = ripple delete but send to clipboard\nS = split
\n

Tip not covered in my\nPodcast

\n

Splits are not fixed and can be adjusted. Once you\'ve split up clips\nand put them in the right order on the timeline you can still adjust the\ncut point even though you previously split the clip because the clip is\nreferenced to the original file in the playlist.

\n

Introduction

\n

Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio audience my name is Mr X\nwelcome to this podcast. As per usual I\'d like to start by thanking the\npeople at HPR for making this podcast possible. HPR is a Community led\npodcast provided by the community for the community that means you can\ncontribute to. The HPR team have gone to great deal of effort to\nsimplify and streamline the process of providing podcasts. There are\nmany ways to record an episode these days using phones tablets PCs and\nalike. The hardest barrier is sending in your first show. Don\'t get too\nhung up about quality, it\'s more important just to send something in.\nThe sound quality of some of my early shows wasn\'t very good. If I can\ndo it anyone can and you might just get hooked in the process.

\n

Well it\'s been almost a year since I\'ve sent in a show. Looking at\nthe HPR site my last episode was back in November 2021. I suspect like\nmany others life has become more complicated and I find I have much less\nspare time and because I have much less spare time I have much less time\nto pursue my hobbies and because of this I have less to speak about and\nbecause of this I have less time to record what I\'ve been doing and it\nall turns into to vicious circle. Fortunately I recently had some time\noff work and had a lovely holiday. During the holiday I ended up\nrecording some video which I decided I wanted to edit. I\'ve done some\nvideo editing in the past using various video editing packages. The best\nand most recent of which is shotcut.

\n

Specific details and\nequipment

\n

Video resolution 1920 x 1080, Codec h264 mpeg-4, Frame rate 30 frames\nper second.

\n

Computer Dell Optiplex 780. Fitted with 4 GB of internal RAM and\nonboard video graphics card.

\n

Shotcut version 22.06.23 Shotcut is a free open-source cross-platform\nvideo editor licenced under the GNU general public licence version\n3.0

\n

This episode will only cover basic shotcut video editing techniques.\nShotcut contains many advanced features and effects that will not be\ncovered in this episode. A lot of the workflow I’ll share with you today\nis intended to get around limitations imposed by my low spec PC

\n

I\'ll try my best to cover the video editing process in this podcast\nusing words alone; however I am conscious that an accompanying video\nwould make it easier to follow along.

\n

Shotcut workflow

\n

Start by creating a folder to hold all the required media files.\nAudio tracks and sound effects can be added to this folder later. Make\nsure all your video files are using the same frame rate in my case 30\nframes per second.

\n

Open each video file in VLC one at a time going through each video\nfile looking for the best portions of video. Make a note of where the\nbest portions of the video are by writing down the start and end points\nin minutes and seconds.

\n

I do this because the interface of VLC is more responsive than\nshortcut and the resolution of displayed video is far greater than the\npreview in shortcut. This makes it quicker and easier to find the best\nportions of video.

\n

Open shortcut and make sure the new project is set to the same frames\nper second as the media files you\'re working with, in my case 30 frames\nper second. You can check the frame rate of your project by looking at\nthe selected video mode in the new projects window. If you select\nautomatic it will ensure the project resolution and frame rate\nautomatically match that of your media files.

\n

Start by adding all the video files to the playlist, this can be done\nin a number of ways for example it can be done by clicking on the open\nfile button in the top toolbar or within the open files menu.\nAlternatively you can drag and drop files into the playlist. I find this\nto be the easiest way to add media files to a project. Once this is done\nsave your project.

\n

Drag the first file from the Playlist to the timeline making sure\nthat the start of the video starts at 0 seconds.

\n

Click on the timeline in the position where the first start point of\ninterest is needed. Use the S key to split the video at this point.\nDon\'t worry about being too accurate as this can be moved at a later\nstage.

\n

Repeat this process for the end point of interest.

\n

Repeat this again for all the other sections of start and end points\nof interest.

\n

Remove the unwanted sections of video by clicking on a section then\nhitting the delete key. This will remove the unwanted section leaving an\nempty space behind.

\n

Once all the unwanted sections are removed click on the sections of\nvideo and pull them to the left to close the gaps up. I find it useful\nto leave some space between the good sections of video as it makes it\neasier to see where splits are and makes it easier later on to rearrange\nthe order of the individual clips.

\n

Check the start and end points of the remaining sections of video to\nsee that the start and end points stop in the correct place. You can do\nthis by clicking the play button on the preview window. The video start\nand end points can be adjusted by dragging the section left or right in\nin the timeline section; this is where leaving spaces Between each\nsection of video can be handy as it allows for fine tuning.

\n

Add a new blank video track to the timeline to hold the next video.\nNote this wasn\'t required when adding the first video track but it is\nneeded for each subsequent track. A video track can be added by right\nclicking on an empty portion of the timeline and selecting add video\ntrack. Alternatively use the ctrl + I key.

\n

Drag your second video from the playlist onto the newly created blank\nvideo track in the timeline. As before make sure that the start of the\nvideo starts at 0 seconds.

\n

Before previewing any section of the second video track click the\nsmall eye shaped hide icon in the left section of the first video track\nlabelled output. This will prevent previewing both video tracks at the\nsame time.

\n

Repeat the process above of chopping the second video track into\nsections using the S key to split the video up. Remove the unwanted\nsections. Finally adjust the start and end points of the remaining\nsections.

\n

Repeat the steps above to add the remaining video files one at a time\nfrom the playlist to the timeline.

\n

When complete you end up with separate video tracks in the timeline\neach containing good sections of video.

\n

At this stage I can\'t be too specific about how to continue as there\nare a number of different options depending on your particular Project.\nYou can for example start by combining the good sections of video into\none video track by dragging them from one track to another then add if\nrequired an audio track or you can add the audio track first and then\ntry to sync things up to the audio track moving bits and pieces of video\ninto one video track remembering to hide the unwanted sections of video\nby clicking on the small hide eye icons. Don\'t do too much editing\nwithout saving the project. If you get a message about low memory save\nthe project then reopen it.

\n

To export the final video click on the export button in the toolbar.\nI pick the default option, this creates an H.264/AAC MP4 file suitable\nfor most users and purposes. You can check the frame rate is the same as\nyour original media files by clicking on the advanced tab. Click the\nexport file button and give it a file name. It may take some time to\ncreate the export file. This will be dependent on the speed of your\ncomputer and the length and resolution of your project.

\n

While Shotcut is far from perfect on my puny PC it is surprisingly\nusable and stable and is the best option I’ve found so far.

\n

Finally here are some general shotcut tips I have when doing video\nediting on a puny PC with limited ram, slow processor and built in\ngraphics card such as mine.

\n

General Tips\nwhen working with a low powered PC

\n

Close all open applications leaving only shortcut open this helps\nwith RAM usage

\n

Shortcut is surprisingly stable with a feeble PC such as mine. I\nwould still recommend saving your project regularly as it is quick and\nvery easy to do.

\n

If you get a message about running out of RAM then try not to do too\nmuch more editing before saving the project. Once saved close shotcut\nand then reopen it. The longer your project is and the higher your\nproject resolution the more RAM you will need.

\n

When you are about to export your final video save the project close\nshortcut reopen shotcut and immediately export your project as any\nprevious editing may be taking up precious ram.

\n

Be patient when clicking on the timeline to repositioned the play\nhead. Always wait for the preview window to update. This can sometimes\ntake a few seconds.

\n

When trying to sync video to audio you need to zoom in in quite a\nlong way before getting an audio preview. When doing this and moving the\nplay head you\'ll get a choppy version of the audio with this it is still\nperfectly possible to find the beat of the music allowing you to sync\nyour video to the music. If this doesn\'t seem to work for you then try\nzooming in closer.

\n

Ok that\'s about it for this podcast. Hope it wasn\'t too boring and it\nmade some sense. If you want to contact me I can be contacted at\nmrxathpr at googlemail.

\n

Thank you and goodbye.

\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','workflow, tips, video, editing, application',0,0,1), (3719,'2022-11-03','HPR News',594,'InfoSec; the language of security.','

InfoSec; the language of\nsecurity.

\n

What\nis Typosquatting and How Do Scammers Use it?

\n
    \n
  • Typosquatting, as an attack, uses modified or misspelled domain\nnames to trick users into visiting fraudulent websites; the heart of\nthis attack is domain name registration. Typosquatting is deployed by\nscammers to defraud unaware users. Attackers will attempt to: mimic\nlogin pages, redirect traffic, download malware, and extort users.
  • \n
  • Past Known Typosquatting Attacks.\n
      \n
    • Several\nMalicious Typosquatted Python Libraries Found On PyPI\nRepository
    • \n
    • Over\n700 Malicious Typosquatted Libraries Found On RubyGems\nRepository
    • \n
    • Security\nadvisory: malicious crate rustdecimal
    • \n
    • This\nWeek in Malware-Malicious Rust crate, \'colors\' Typosquats
    • \n
  • \n
  • Solutions to Typosquatting.\n
  • \n
  • DNS monitoring services.\n
      \n
    • Link to dnstwister: https://dnstwister.report/
    • \n
    • Link to whois: https://www.whois.com/whois
    • \n
  • \n
  • Password Managers.\n
      \n
    • Link to bitwarden: https://bitwarden.com/
    • \n
    • Link to keepassxc: https://keepassxc.org/
    • \n
  • \n
\n
\n

Two-factor and\nMultifactor Authentication.

\n
    \n
  • First, authentication. This is the process of verifying the\nvalidity of something; in our case, user credentials/identity. The most\ncommon way to authenticate is: USERNAME and PASSWORD.\nThis is just a single layer (single-factor authentication) and isn’t\nenough to discourage attackers.

  • \n
  • Second, 2FA (Two-factor Authentication). 2FA increases the\ndifficulty for attackers by providing users an additional layer of\nsecurity to accomplish authentication. Common 2FA methods are: TOTP/OTP\n(the One Time Password), Authenticator\nApplications (Bitwarden, KeePassXC,...), and Security Keys (Yubikey). This works similar to ATMs;\nto authenticate the user must provide both knowledge (account\nPIN) and a physical object (bank card).

  • \n
  • Last, but not least, MFA (Multifactor Authentication). Similar to\n2FA, MFA offers users security with the addition of biometrics\n(fingerprint scan, retina scan, facial recognition, and voice\nrecognition). Attackers must overcome the knowledge factor, Possession\nfactor, Inherence/Biometric factor, Time factor, and sometimes Location\nfactor.

  • \n
  • MORE helpful security information.

    \n
  • \n
  • 2FA/MFA Known Attacks.

    \n
      \n
    • Bots\nThat Steal Your 2FA Codes.
    • \n
    • hackers\nare cracking two-factor authentication
    • \n
  • \n
\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','InfoSec, Typosquatting, SFA, 2FA, MFA, Security',0,0,1), @@ -514,8 +527,9 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (3987,'2023-11-14','The Grim Dawn',2391,'Sgoti rambles about a video game called Grim Dawn.','
    \n
  • Source: Action\nrole-playing game.

  • \n
  • Source: Grim\nDawn.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Grim Dawn Game\nGuide.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Steam page\nfor Grim Dawn.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Grim Dawn Tools (Third party\nsite).

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Soldier\nClass. Soldiers readily charge into the carnage and unleash crushing\nmight upon their foes. Their physical prowess is unmatched and their\nability to survive through the most brutal conflicts makes them an\nexcellent choice for defense-oriented players.

  • \n
  • Source: Diablo 4

  • \n
\n

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons\nAttribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Grim Dawn, ARPG, Diablo 4, Video Games',0,0,1), (3988,'2023-11-15','Beeper.com',750,'operat0r talks about Beeper dot com a multi chat client','

I talk about Beeper dot com a multi chat client

\n

Beeper is a universal messaging app that lets you chat with anyone on\nany chat app, including Whatsapp, iMessage, Telegram and 12 other\nnetworks.

\n

Links

\n\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','chat,messaging,mobile',0,0,1), (3989,'2023-11-16','LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023',553,'LastPass was hacked, what should you do?','

In 2022, LastPass disclosed that it had been hacked, and I think by\nnow just about everyone has heard about it. Now we have evidence that\npassword vaults have been hacked. So what does this mean, and what\nshould you do?

\n

Links:

\n
    \n
  • https://krebsonsecurity.com/2023/09/experts-fear-crooks-are-cracking-keys-stolen-in-lastpass-breach/
  • \n
  • https://www.zwilnik.com/security-and-privacy/lastpass-hacked-what-does-this-mean/
  • \n
  • https://wtop.com/tech/2023/01/data-doctors-should-i-stop-using-lastpass-for-password-management/
  • \n
  • http://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1810
  • \n
\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','LastPass, password vault',0,0,1), -(3993,'2023-11-22','z80 membership card',934,'review of a kit','
    \n
  • intro\n
  • \n
  • lee hart\n
      \n
    • electrical engineer
    • \n
    • was there at the beginning of the computer revolution
    • \n
    • life long love of electric vehicles
    • \n
  • \n
  • the kit\n
      \n
    • piece of art
    • \n
    • z80 membership, minimum computer
    • \n
    • front panel gives self contained system
    • \n
    • boards, all parts and altoid tin
    • \n
    • great documentation, schematics, assembly guide and getting\nstarted
    • \n
  • \n
  • the assembly\n
      \n
    • great instructions
    • \n
    • easy to solder
    • \n
    • a few tricks to get the boards to fit in the tin
    • \n
    • i made a dedicated serial cable by modifying ftdi cable
    • \n
    • i made a battery pack
    • \n
  • \n
  • usage\n
      \n
    • front panel takes a bit of practice to use (locations of keys)
    • \n
    • found a z80 assembly language tutorial, hand assembly
    • \n
    • portable z80 machine to learn
    • \n
  • \n
  • take away\n
      \n
    • excellent kit
    • \n
    • if your looking for a gift, many to choose from
    • \n
    • excellent quality
    • \n
  • \n
\n

01 membership card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

02 membership card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

03 front panel card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

04 front card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

05 assembled
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

06 in the can
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

07 things added
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

08 fits inside
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

09 compleat
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

10 docs
\n
Click the thumbnail to see\nthe full-sized image

\n',326,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','z80, retro computing',0,0,0), -(3994,'2023-11-23','Lastpass Response',790,'I talk about lastpass','

I talk about LastPass.

\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','security,computers,internet',0,0,0); +(3993,'2023-11-22','z80 membership card',934,'review of a kit','
    \n
  • intro\n
  • \n
  • lee hart\n
      \n
    • electrical engineer
    • \n
    • was there at the beginning of the computer revolution
    • \n
    • life long love of electric vehicles
    • \n
  • \n
  • the kit\n
      \n
    • piece of art
    • \n
    • z80 membership, minimum computer
    • \n
    • front panel gives self contained system
    • \n
    • boards, all parts and altoid tin
    • \n
    • great documentation, schematics, assembly guide and getting\nstarted
    • \n
  • \n
  • the assembly\n
      \n
    • great instructions
    • \n
    • easy to solder
    • \n
    • a few tricks to get the boards to fit in the tin
    • \n
    • i made a dedicated serial cable by modifying ftdi cable
    • \n
    • i made a battery pack
    • \n
  • \n
  • usage\n
      \n
    • front panel takes a bit of practice to use (locations of keys)
    • \n
    • found a z80 assembly language tutorial, hand assembly
    • \n
    • portable z80 machine to learn
    • \n
  • \n
  • take away\n
      \n
    • excellent kit
    • \n
    • if your looking for a gift, many to choose from
    • \n
    • excellent quality
    • \n
  • \n
\n

01 membership card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

02 membership card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

03 front panel card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

04 front card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

05 assembled
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

06 in the can
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

07 things added
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

08 fits inside
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

09 compleat
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

10 docs
\n
Click the thumbnail to see\nthe full-sized image

\n',326,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','z80, retro computing',0,0,1), +(3994,'2023-11-23','Lastpass Response',790,'I talk about lastpass','

I talk about LastPass.

\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','security,computers,internet',0,0,1), +(3995,'2023-11-24','Creating Your Own Internet Radio Streaming Device',570,'Claudio talks about a couple of streaming radio solutions to make your own internet radio device.','

aNONradio: https://anonradio.net
\nTildeRadio: https://tilderadio.org

\n

Volumio: https://volumio.com/
\nmoOde Audio: https://moodeaudio.org/

\n',152,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','moode,raspberrypi,audio,internetradio,streamingradio,multimedia,volumio,anonradio,tilderadio',0,0,0); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `eps` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; @@ -645,7 +659,7 @@ INSERT INTO `hosts` (`hostid`, `host`, `email`, `profile`, `license`, `local_ima (149,'Trixter','trixter.nospam@nospam.oldskool.org','

I am a child of the early 1980s, defined by the personal computer explosion, new wave music, and post-modern artistic style of that era. Co-founded MobyGames. I\'m an assembly programmer, demoscener, unix systems engineer, husband, and father. I sometimes write things of dubious value at https://trixter.oldskool.org/.

','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Trixter'), (150,'Bariman','anthony.denton.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Bariman'), (151,'dodddummy','jason.s.dodd.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'D O D D Dummy'), -(152,'Claudio Miranda','claudio.nospam@nospam.linuxbasement.com','Mastodon: @claudiom@bsd.network\r\nE-mail: claudiom@sdf.org','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Claudio Miranda'), +(152,'Claudio Miranda','claudio.nospam@nospam.linuxbasement.com','Mastodon: @claudiom@bsd.network\r\nBlog: https://claudiomiranda.wordpress.com','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Claudio Miranda'), (153,'Doug Farrell','doug.farrell.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Doug Farrell'), (154,'MrsXoke','MrsXoke.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'MrsXoke'), (155,'MrGadgets','hpr.nospam@nospam.mrgadgets.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'MrGadgets'), @@ -984,17 +998,3 @@ INSERT INTO `licenses` (`id`, `short_name`, `long_name`, `url`) VALUES (1,'CC-0' /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `licenses` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; --- --- Table structure for table `miniseries` --- - -DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `miniseries`; -/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */; -/*!40101 SET character_set_client = utf8 */; -CREATE TABLE `miniseries` ( - `id` int(10) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, - `name` varchar(100) NOT NULL, - `description` text NOT NULL, - `private` tinyint(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT 0, - `image` text NOT NULL, - `valid` int(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT 1, diff --git a/sql/hpr-db-part-15.sql b/sql/hpr-db-part-15.sql index c4f0796..bec6127 100644 --- a/sql/hpr-db-part-15.sql +++ b/sql/hpr-db-part-15.sql @@ -1,3 +1,17 @@ +-- +-- Table structure for table `miniseries` +-- + +DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `miniseries`; +/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */; +/*!40101 SET character_set_client = utf8 */; +CREATE TABLE `miniseries` ( + `id` int(10) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, + `name` varchar(100) NOT NULL, + `description` text NOT NULL, + `private` tinyint(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT 0, + `image` text NOT NULL, + `valid` int(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT 1, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=123 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3 COLLATE=utf8mb3_unicode_ci; /*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */; @@ -439,4 +453,4 @@ UNLOCK TABLES; /*!40014 SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS */; /*!40111 SET SQL_NOTES=@OLD_SQL_NOTES */; --- Dump completed on 2023-11-15 19:56:06 +-- Dump completed on 2023-11-17 19:48:25 diff --git a/sql/hpr.sql b/sql/hpr.sql index 5f93edd..6bd5941 100644 --- a/sql/hpr.sql +++ b/sql/hpr.sql @@ -12599,7 +12599,19 @@ INSERT INTO `assets` (`episode_id`, `filename`, `extension`, `size`, `sha1sum`, (3986,'hpr3986.spx','spx',1950476,'15462e2b2ade5a60409434001d52b6b9329f1ff6','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), (3986,'hpr3986.flac','flac',41579627,'bc410fd59b298d7cc0257c46f726e77c4ff0d4af','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 99125669 samples'), (3986,'hpr3986.opus','opus',4030879,'9a55748359e2fed6475483761974a7561a4296f4','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), -(3986,'hpr3986.wav','wav',198252762,'f4a3efe7b82761d9c1f3140c0fdffd5e10bd9aef','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'); +(3986,'hpr3986.wav','wav',198252762,'f4a3efe7b82761d9c1f3140c0fdffd5e10bd9aef','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'), +(3993,'hpr3993.mp3','mp3',8120684,'6d00676cb4693d87ecebed2a5117b4f77ff4982d','audio/mpeg; charset=binary','setgid Audio file with ID3 version 2.4.0, contains:MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1, 64 kbps, 48 kHz, Monaural'), +(3993,'hpr3993.ogg','ogg',7924941,'dfa89dbd7ab0a0eebe5fcc09e49d9490b2e74056','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3993,'hpr3993.spx','spx',3834021,'7f67404912def1d0700473363c08cb63662e2350','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), +(3993,'hpr3993.flac','flac',87358042,'d4eadf56d6a6418d05dce3e9748efba9408f6186','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 194886000 samples'), +(3993,'hpr3993.opus','opus',7924941,'8474cf9fe9730b5ce96fc2a6a398ef9c0d6bbe91','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3993,'hpr3993.wav','wav',389772102,'2720c2a93faa8a39c003a764c2a7f465c50fb2a9','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'), +(3994,'hpr3994.mp3','mp3',6971564,'b277bc12b5fc62b99973304e9cc45352760e3eee','audio/mpeg; charset=binary','setgid Audio file with ID3 version 2.4.0, contains:MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1, 64 kbps, 48 kHz, Monaural'), +(3994,'hpr3994.ogg','ogg',8436900,'0721ccd82b77531e79dd0e893a4fcebf1f16c9ad','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3994,'hpr3994.spx','spx',3291408,'51e5922a2d4f4f6172a5aea72c1352cdadc1c813','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Speex audio'), +(3994,'hpr3994.flac','flac',59778226,'fdca142bef4ffaea4ea7f7ea9a7b9174bb2a0d71','audio/flac; charset=binary','setgid FLAC audio bitstream data, 16 bit, mono, 192 kHz, 167304312 samples'), +(3994,'hpr3994.opus','opus',8436900,'98db56a7ef9db79c1bf810daf79365545b5eb6f1','audio/ogg; charset=binary','setgid Ogg data, Opus audio,'), +(3994,'hpr3994.wav','wav',334608726,'0c03027c393e967502f04179271e4161cb0e3fc3','audio/x-wav; charset=binary','setgid RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, mono 192000 Hz'); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `assets` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; @@ -12620,7 +12632,7 @@ CREATE TABLE `comments` ( `last_changed` datetime NOT NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp(), PRIMARY KEY (`id`), KEY `comments_eps_id_idx` (`eps_id`) -) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=3826 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3 COLLATE=utf8mb3_unicode_ci COMMENT='New comments table populated from c5t_* tables'; +) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=3827 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3 COLLATE=utf8mb3_unicode_ci COMMENT='New comments table populated from c5t_* tables'; /*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */; -- @@ -16449,7 +16461,8 @@ INSERT INTO `comments` (`id`, `eps_id`, `comment_timestamp`, `comment_author_nam (3822,3971,'2023-10-28 22:48:22','kdmurray','Great Series','Really enjoying the series sgoti. I appreciate that you\'ve gone to the trouble of gathering people together to try to expand the number of voices for this topic and all the ancillary things as well like the role of the Internet in how people think about their offline relationships.','2023-10-29 10:25:45'), (3823,3978,'2023-11-05 18:50:42','Kevin O\'Brien','Good show','This was interesting and I enjoyed seeing the perspective of an operator. I have made it a practice to be courteous to truck drivers because they have enough weird stuff to deal with.','2023-11-05 19:06:21'), (3824,3981,'2023-11-06 10:42:23','Hobson Lane (hobs)','Ken\'s comment about demand avoidance','Love the monthly Community News shows. Ken\'s comment about resisting the demands of his past self from reminders apps struck a chord with me. I\'ve been struggling with PDA (persistent/pathological demand avoidance) myself. I\'ll record a response show to summarize some things I\'ve learned from other podcasts that help boost my intrinsic motivation -- things like random rewards (to prevent external rewards from swamping your intrinsic motivation dopamine high). Dave\'s idea to use rituals and habits is also something that sometimes works for me. Rely admire the high quality open source technical infrastructure that keeps this community thriving and the supportive vibe of all the hosts and contributors. It gives me hope for the future of social media and the Internet.','2023-11-06 10:45:43'), -(3825,3984,'2023-11-09 15:21:35','Trey','Really? You are sharing this with the world?','Dude! I thought we were keeping this on the down low? And you are naming names?\r\n\r\nNow I need to contact witness protection AGAIN!\r\n\r\nSMH...','2023-11-09 15:26:35'); +(3825,3984,'2023-11-09 15:21:35','Trey','Really? You are sharing this with the world?','Dude! I thought we were keeping this on the down low? And you are naming names?\r\n\r\nNow I need to contact witness protection AGAIN!\r\n\r\nSMH...','2023-11-09 15:26:35'), +(3826,3989,'2023-11-17 02:10:27','Trey','Changing passowrds','One consideration when it comes to the LastPass breach is that attackers are actively working to compromise individual vaults exposed by the data. They seem to be targeting known cryptocurrency traders, but if you had a weak or guessable password or low iterations of encryption, the information you stored in your vault may become available to attackers. It is recommended that, whether you choose to stay with LastPass or not, you change all of the passwords, keys, important secrets, etc which you stored in your vault.','2023-11-17 13:02:07'); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `comments` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; /*!50003 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */ ; @@ -20255,7 +20268,7 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (3712,'2022-10-25','The last ever CCHits.net Show',5756,'The team talk about the nearly 12 years of producing CCHits.net.','

Over 12 years ago, Jon \"The Nice Guy\"\nSpriggs went to a \"Pod Crawl\" with (among others) Dave \"The Love Bug\" Lee, where he\npitched the idea of a daily music promotion show, with a twist - it\nwould all be automated, and use text-to-speech to introduce\neverything.

\n

The first show was released\non 2010-10-24 and the last ever show (this one) was released on\n2022-10-12.

\n

Over the twelve years, Jon would go on to meet to meet Yannick and Ken Fallon, both\nof whom would go on to shape changes (big and small) to CCHits.

\n

This year, the cracks started to re-appear in the architecture\nunderneath CCHits - between APIs shutting down that were used to load\ntracks to CCHits, and the general framework being used to write CCHits\nnot receiving the care and attention it needed... and the team finally\ndecided to stop adding new tracks, and let the process build the last\nfew shows.

\n

This podcast gives you a peek behind the curtain to the team involved\nin the system, and gives you some of the high- and low-lights in the 12\nyears the site ran for.

\n',413,0,0,'CC-BY','music,creative commons,podcast',0,0,1), (3724,'2022-11-10','My top Android apps',579,'I walk through the top apps on my phone','

My most used apps

\n

AIO Launcher

\n\n

\"Main

\n

\n

\n

Termux: Terminal\nemulator with packages

\n\n

QKSMS Messaging

\n\n

Firefox browser

\n
    \n
  • Firefox browser
  • \n
\n

Opera browser

\n
    \n
  • Opera browser
  • \n
\n

Brave browser

\n
    \n
  • Brave browser
  • \n
\n

Clear Scanner PDF scanner and\nOCR

\n\n

Antennapod

\n\n

Tusky

\n\n

K-9 mail client

\n\n

Viber

\n
    \n
  • Viber

    \n
      \n
    • Android and Fedora/Ubuntu desktop app
    • \n
    • App image
    • \n
  • \n
\n

Audio recorder

\n\n

X-plore dual-pane file\nmanager

\n
    \n
  • X-plore dual-pane file\nmanager
  • \n
\n

Librera E-book Reader: for\nPDF, EPUB

\n
    \n
  • Librera E-book Reader

    \n
      \n
    • Books\n
        \n
      • Star Wars: Dark Tide I: Onslaught

        \n

        The New Jedi Order #2

        \n
          \n
        • Star Wars Dark Tide I:\nOnslaught
        • \n
      • \n
      • Boba Fett: A Practical Man

        \n
          \n
        • Boba Fett: A Practical Man
        • \n
      • \n
    • \n
  • \n
\n

Multi Timer

\n
    \n
  • Multi Timer
  • \n
\n

US Amateur Radio Band Plan

\n
    \n
  • US Amateur Radio Band Plan

    \n
      \n
    • Quick reference of band and privilege restrictions
    • \n
  • \n
\n',318,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Android, Android apps, Mobile phone, Custom launcher',0,0,1), (3725,'2022-11-11','How to use OSMAnd with Public Transport ',124,'Ken shows you how to use this mapping tool to display transit routes in your area.','

\r\n\"\"
\r\nMap of Dublin showing the Temple Bar tourist area. A red arrow points to where you can change the profile.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nWith the Configure Map > Profile selection menu open, a red square surrounds the Bus icon to indicate the \"public transport\" profile is now selected.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nThe map now opens to show more information about public transport is now displayed on the map. This is highlighted with a red square.
\r\nClicking the bustop (highlighted with a red circle ) will show more information about the routes available at this location.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nOnce the transport stop is selected, a list of all the routes that service this location are displayed. Along with other routes that are available within a short distance.\r\n

\r\n

\r\n\"\"
\r\nClicking any of the routes numbers/names will give a zoomed out map showing in red the route many of the stops towards it\'s source and destination.\r\n

\r\n',30,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','OSMAnd, OSM, Maps, Public Transport',0,0,1), -(4001,'2023-12-04','HPR Community News for November 2023',0,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2023','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
3978Wed2023-11-01Driving in Virginia.Some Guy On The Internet
3979Thu2023-11-02FireStick and ad blockingoperat0r
3980Fri2023-11-03Huntsville to VicksburgAhuka
3981Mon2023-11-06HPR Community News for October 2023HPR Volunteers
3982Tue2023-11-07Conversation with ChatGPTArcher72
3983Wed2023-11-08ChatGPT Output is not compatible with CC-BY-SAKen Fallon
3984Thu2023-11-09Whoppers. How Archer72 and I made moonshine. Volume one.Some Guy On The Internet
3985Fri2023-11-10Bash snippet - be careful when feeding data to loopsDave Morriss
3986Mon2023-11-13Optical media is not deadArcher72
3987Tue2023-11-14The Grim DawnSome Guy On The Internet
3988Wed2023-11-15Beeper.comoperat0r
3989Thu2023-11-16LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023Ahuka
3990Fri2023-11-17Playing Alpha Centauri, Part 2Ahuka
3991Mon2023-11-20YOU ARE A PIRATE operat0r
3992Tue2023-11-21Test recording on a wireless micArcher72
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 3 comments in total.

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 3 comments on 3 of this month\'s shows:

\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://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2023-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

Example section

\n
    \n
  • Bulleted list item 1

  • \n
  • Bulleted list item 2

  • \n
\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), +(4001,'2023-12-04','HPR Community News for November 2023',0,'HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in November 2023','\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
IdDayDateTitleHost
3978Wed2023-11-01Driving in Virginia.Some Guy On The Internet
3979Thu2023-11-02FireStick and ad blockingoperat0r
3980Fri2023-11-03Huntsville to VicksburgAhuka
3981Mon2023-11-06HPR Community News for October 2023HPR Volunteers
3982Tue2023-11-07Conversation with ChatGPTArcher72
3983Wed2023-11-08ChatGPT Output is not compatible with CC-BY-SAKen Fallon
3984Thu2023-11-09Whoppers. How Archer72 and I made moonshine. Volume one.Some Guy On The Internet
3985Fri2023-11-10Bash snippet - be careful when feeding data to loopsDave Morriss
3986Mon2023-11-13Optical media is not deadArcher72
3987Tue2023-11-14The Grim DawnSome Guy On The Internet
3988Wed2023-11-15Beeper.comoperat0r
3989Thu2023-11-16LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023Ahuka
3990Fri2023-11-17Playing Alpha Centauri, Part 2Ahuka
3991Mon2023-11-20YOU ARE A PIRATE operat0r
3992Tue2023-11-21Test recording on a wireless micArcher72
3993Wed2023-11-22z80 membership cardBrian in Ohio
3994Thu2023-11-23Lastpass Responseoperat0r
\n\n

Comments this month

\n\n

These are comments which have been made during the past month, either to shows released during the month or to past shows.\nThere are 4 comments in total.

\n\n

This month\'s shows

\n

There are 4 comments on 4 of this month\'s shows:

\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://lists.hackerpublicradio.com/pipermail/hpr/2023-November/thread.html\n\n\n

Events Calendar

\n

With the kind permission of LWN.net we are linking to\nThe LWN.net Community Calendar.

\n

Quoting the site:

\n
This is the LWN.net community event calendar, where we track\nevents of interest to people using and developing Linux and free software.\nClicking on individual events will take you to the appropriate web\npage.
\n\n

Any other business

\n

Example section

\n
    \n
  • Bulleted list item 1

  • \n
  • Bulleted list item 2

  • \n
\n\n\n',159,47,1,'CC-BY-SA','Community News',0,0,1), (3714,'2022-10-27','The News with Some Guy On the Internet',609,'Threat Analysis','

Threat Analysis; your\nattack surface.

\n

The Hacker News

\nNew\nChinese Malware Attack Framework Targets Windows, macOS, and Linux\nSystems.\n

A previously undocumented command-and-control (C2) framework dubbed\nAlchimist is likely being used in the wild to target Windows, macOS, and\nLinux systems.

\n

\"Alchimist C2 has a web interface written in Simplified Chinese and\ncan generate a configured payload, establish remote sessions, deploy\npayloads to the remote machines, capture screenshots, perform remote\nshellcode execution, and run arbitrary commands,\" Cisco Talos said in a\nreport shared with The Hacker News. Written in GoLang, Alchimist is\ncomplemented by a beacon implant called Insekt, which comes with remote\naccess features that can be instrumented by the C2 server.”

\n

\"Since Alchimist is a single-file based ready-to-go C2 framework, it\nis difficult to attribute its use to a single actor such as the authors,\nAPTs, or crimeware syndicates.\"

\n

The trojan, for its part, is equipped with features typically present\nin backdoors of this kind, enabling the malware to get system\ninformation, capture screenshots, run arbitrary commands, and download\nremote files, among others.

\n

Alchimist C2 panel further features the ability to generate first\nstage payloads, including PowerShell and wget code snippets for Windows\nand Linux, potentially allowing an attacker to flesh out their infection\nchains to distribute the Insekt RAT binary. The instructions could then\nbe potentially embedded in a maldoc attached to a phishing email that,\nwhen opened, downloads and launches the backdoor on the compromised\nmachine. What\'s more, the Linux version of Insekt is capable of listing\nthe contents of the \".ssh\" directory and even adding new SSH keys to the\n\"~/.ssh/authorized_keys\" file to facilitate remote access over SSH.

\n

The Hacker News

\nHackers\nUsing Vishing to Trick Victims into Installing Android Banking\nMalware.\n

Malicious actors are resorting to voice phishing (vishing) tactics to\ndupe victims into installing Android malware on their devices.

\n

The Dutch mobile security company said it identified a network of\nphishing websites targeting Italian online-banking users that are\ndesigned to get hold of their contact details.

\n

Telephone-oriented attack delivery (TOAD), as the social engineering\ntechnique is called, involves calling the victims using previously\ncollected information from the fraudulent websites.

\n

The caller, who purports to be a support agent for the bank,\ninstructs the individual on the other end of the call to install a\nsecurity app and grant it extensive permissions, when, in reality, it\'s\nmalicious software intended to gain remote access or conduct financial\nfraud.

\n

What\'s more, the infrastructure utilized by the threat actor has been\nfound to deliver a second malware named SMS Spy that enables the\nadversary to gain access to all incoming SMS messages and intercept\none-time passwords (OTPs) sent by banks.

\n

The new wave of hybrid fraud attacks presents a new dimension for\nscammers to mount convincing Android malware campaigns that have\notherwise relied on traditional methods such as Google Play Store\ndroppers, rogue ads, and smishing.

\n

The Hacker News

\n64,000\nAdditional Patients Impacted by Omnicell Data Breach - What is Your Data\nBreach Action Plan?\n

Founded in 1992, Omnicell is a leading provider of medication\nmanagement solutions for hospitals, long-term care facilities, and\nretail pharmacies. On May 4, 2022, Omnicell\'s IT systems and third-party\ncloud services were affected by ransomware attacks which may lead to\ndata security concerns for employees and patients. While it is still\nearly in the investigation, this appears to be a severe breach with\npotentially significant consequences for the company.

\n

Omnicell began informing individuals whose information may have been\ncompromised on August 3, 2022. Hackers may be able to access and sell\npatient-sensitive information, such as social security numbers, due to\nthe time delay between the breach and the company\'s report of affected\npatients.

\n

The type of information that may be exposed are:

\n
    \n
  • Credit card information.
  • \n
  • Financial information.
  • \n
  • Social security numbers.
  • \n
  • Driver\'s license numbers.
  • \n
  • Health insurance details.
  • \n
\n

The healthcare industry is one of the most targeted sectors globally,\nwith attacks doubling year over year. And these costs are measured in\nmillions or even billions of dollars - not to mention increased risks\nfor patients\' privacy (and reputation).

\n

The Washington Post

\n

How to\nprotect schools getting whacked by ransomware.

\n

Ransomware gangs are taking Americans to school. So far this year,\nhackers have taken hostage at least 1,735 schools in 27 districts; the\nmassive Los Angeles Unified School District is their latest target.

\n

Ransomware hackers breach computers, lock them up, steal sensitive\ndata and demand money to release their hold on organizations’ critical\nsystems. These criminals often attack schools because they are\nprofitable targets. If all ransomware victims refused to pay, the\nattacks would stop. Indeed, paying up might be illegal: The Treasury\nDepartment released guidance last year noting that giving money to\nglobal criminal organizations can violate sanctions law.

\n

The trouble is, saying no isn’t always easy. Los Angeles didn’t\ncapitulate, and the criminals leaked a trove of data — a consequence\nthat can prove more or less serious depending on the sensitivity of the\nstolen information.

\n

“Because we can,” said a representative of the ransomware gang that\ntook down Los Angeles Unified School District, explaining the\ncollective’s motivations to a Bloomberg News reporter. Schools’ task is\nto turn “can” to “can’t” — or, at least, to make success pay a whole lot\nless.

\n

CNET News.

\nVerizon\nAlerts Prepaid Customers to Recent Security Breach.\n

Verizon notified prepaid customers this week of a recent cyberattack\nthat granted third-party actors access to their accounts, as reported\nearlier Tuesday by BleepingComputer. The attack occurred between Oct. 6\nand Oct. 10 and affected 250 Verizon prepaid customers.

\n

The breach exposed the last four digits of customers\' credit cards\nused to make payments on their prepaid accounts. While no full credit\ncard information was accessible, the information was enough to grant the\nattackers access to Verizon user accounts, which hold semi-sensitive\ndata such \"name, telephone number, billing address, price plans, and\nother service-related information,\" per a notice from Verizon.

\n

Account access also potentially enabled attackers to process\nunauthorized SIM card changes on prepaid lines. Also known as SIM\nswapping, unauthorized SIM card changes can allow for the transfer of an\nunsuspecting person\'s phone number to another phone.

\n

From there, the counterfeit phone can be used to receive SMS messages\nfor password resets and user identification verifications on other\naccounts, giving attackers potential access to any account they have, or\ncan guess, the username for. Consequently, Verizon recommended affected\ncustomers secure their non-Verizon accounts such as social media,\nfinancial, email and other accounts that allow for password resets by\nphone.

\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Threat Analysis, Security Breach, Ransomware, Data Breach, TOAD',0,0,1), (3717,'2022-11-01','Video editing with Shotcut on a low end PC',695,'In this episode I explain how I use the shotcut video editor to edit video on a low end PC.','

Links

\n

Shotcut video editor website

\n

Useful\nShortcut keys for the Shotcut video editor

\n
C = copy\nV = paste\nA = duplicate\nX = ripple delete\nCtrl + X = ripple delete but send to clipboard\nS = split
\n

Tip not covered in my\nPodcast

\n

Splits are not fixed and can be adjusted. Once you\'ve split up clips\nand put them in the right order on the timeline you can still adjust the\ncut point even though you previously split the clip because the clip is\nreferenced to the original file in the playlist.

\n

Introduction

\n

Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio audience my name is Mr X\nwelcome to this podcast. As per usual I\'d like to start by thanking the\npeople at HPR for making this podcast possible. HPR is a Community led\npodcast provided by the community for the community that means you can\ncontribute to. The HPR team have gone to great deal of effort to\nsimplify and streamline the process of providing podcasts. There are\nmany ways to record an episode these days using phones tablets PCs and\nalike. The hardest barrier is sending in your first show. Don\'t get too\nhung up about quality, it\'s more important just to send something in.\nThe sound quality of some of my early shows wasn\'t very good. If I can\ndo it anyone can and you might just get hooked in the process.

\n

Well it\'s been almost a year since I\'ve sent in a show. Looking at\nthe HPR site my last episode was back in November 2021. I suspect like\nmany others life has become more complicated and I find I have much less\nspare time and because I have much less spare time I have much less time\nto pursue my hobbies and because of this I have less to speak about and\nbecause of this I have less time to record what I\'ve been doing and it\nall turns into to vicious circle. Fortunately I recently had some time\noff work and had a lovely holiday. During the holiday I ended up\nrecording some video which I decided I wanted to edit. I\'ve done some\nvideo editing in the past using various video editing packages. The best\nand most recent of which is shotcut.

\n

Specific details and\nequipment

\n

Video resolution 1920 x 1080, Codec h264 mpeg-4, Frame rate 30 frames\nper second.

\n

Computer Dell Optiplex 780. Fitted with 4 GB of internal RAM and\nonboard video graphics card.

\n

Shotcut version 22.06.23 Shotcut is a free open-source cross-platform\nvideo editor licenced under the GNU general public licence version\n3.0

\n

This episode will only cover basic shotcut video editing techniques.\nShotcut contains many advanced features and effects that will not be\ncovered in this episode. A lot of the workflow I’ll share with you today\nis intended to get around limitations imposed by my low spec PC

\n

I\'ll try my best to cover the video editing process in this podcast\nusing words alone; however I am conscious that an accompanying video\nwould make it easier to follow along.

\n

Shotcut workflow

\n

Start by creating a folder to hold all the required media files.\nAudio tracks and sound effects can be added to this folder later. Make\nsure all your video files are using the same frame rate in my case 30\nframes per second.

\n

Open each video file in VLC one at a time going through each video\nfile looking for the best portions of video. Make a note of where the\nbest portions of the video are by writing down the start and end points\nin minutes and seconds.

\n

I do this because the interface of VLC is more responsive than\nshortcut and the resolution of displayed video is far greater than the\npreview in shortcut. This makes it quicker and easier to find the best\nportions of video.

\n

Open shortcut and make sure the new project is set to the same frames\nper second as the media files you\'re working with, in my case 30 frames\nper second. You can check the frame rate of your project by looking at\nthe selected video mode in the new projects window. If you select\nautomatic it will ensure the project resolution and frame rate\nautomatically match that of your media files.

\n

Start by adding all the video files to the playlist, this can be done\nin a number of ways for example it can be done by clicking on the open\nfile button in the top toolbar or within the open files menu.\nAlternatively you can drag and drop files into the playlist. I find this\nto be the easiest way to add media files to a project. Once this is done\nsave your project.

\n

Drag the first file from the Playlist to the timeline making sure\nthat the start of the video starts at 0 seconds.

\n

Click on the timeline in the position where the first start point of\ninterest is needed. Use the S key to split the video at this point.\nDon\'t worry about being too accurate as this can be moved at a later\nstage.

\n

Repeat this process for the end point of interest.

\n

Repeat this again for all the other sections of start and end points\nof interest.

\n

Remove the unwanted sections of video by clicking on a section then\nhitting the delete key. This will remove the unwanted section leaving an\nempty space behind.

\n

Once all the unwanted sections are removed click on the sections of\nvideo and pull them to the left to close the gaps up. I find it useful\nto leave some space between the good sections of video as it makes it\neasier to see where splits are and makes it easier later on to rearrange\nthe order of the individual clips.

\n

Check the start and end points of the remaining sections of video to\nsee that the start and end points stop in the correct place. You can do\nthis by clicking the play button on the preview window. The video start\nand end points can be adjusted by dragging the section left or right in\nin the timeline section; this is where leaving spaces Between each\nsection of video can be handy as it allows for fine tuning.

\n

Add a new blank video track to the timeline to hold the next video.\nNote this wasn\'t required when adding the first video track but it is\nneeded for each subsequent track. A video track can be added by right\nclicking on an empty portion of the timeline and selecting add video\ntrack. Alternatively use the ctrl + I key.

\n

Drag your second video from the playlist onto the newly created blank\nvideo track in the timeline. As before make sure that the start of the\nvideo starts at 0 seconds.

\n

Before previewing any section of the second video track click the\nsmall eye shaped hide icon in the left section of the first video track\nlabelled output. This will prevent previewing both video tracks at the\nsame time.

\n

Repeat the process above of chopping the second video track into\nsections using the S key to split the video up. Remove the unwanted\nsections. Finally adjust the start and end points of the remaining\nsections.

\n

Repeat the steps above to add the remaining video files one at a time\nfrom the playlist to the timeline.

\n

When complete you end up with separate video tracks in the timeline\neach containing good sections of video.

\n

At this stage I can\'t be too specific about how to continue as there\nare a number of different options depending on your particular Project.\nYou can for example start by combining the good sections of video into\none video track by dragging them from one track to another then add if\nrequired an audio track or you can add the audio track first and then\ntry to sync things up to the audio track moving bits and pieces of video\ninto one video track remembering to hide the unwanted sections of video\nby clicking on the small hide eye icons. Don\'t do too much editing\nwithout saving the project. If you get a message about low memory save\nthe project then reopen it.

\n

To export the final video click on the export button in the toolbar.\nI pick the default option, this creates an H.264/AAC MP4 file suitable\nfor most users and purposes. You can check the frame rate is the same as\nyour original media files by clicking on the advanced tab. Click the\nexport file button and give it a file name. It may take some time to\ncreate the export file. This will be dependent on the speed of your\ncomputer and the length and resolution of your project.

\n

While Shotcut is far from perfect on my puny PC it is surprisingly\nusable and stable and is the best option I’ve found so far.

\n

Finally here are some general shotcut tips I have when doing video\nediting on a puny PC with limited ram, slow processor and built in\ngraphics card such as mine.

\n

General Tips\nwhen working with a low powered PC

\n

Close all open applications leaving only shortcut open this helps\nwith RAM usage

\n

Shortcut is surprisingly stable with a feeble PC such as mine. I\nwould still recommend saving your project regularly as it is quick and\nvery easy to do.

\n

If you get a message about running out of RAM then try not to do too\nmuch more editing before saving the project. Once saved close shotcut\nand then reopen it. The longer your project is and the higher your\nproject resolution the more RAM you will need.

\n

When you are about to export your final video save the project close\nshortcut reopen shotcut and immediately export your project as any\nprevious editing may be taking up precious ram.

\n

Be patient when clicking on the timeline to repositioned the play\nhead. Always wait for the preview window to update. This can sometimes\ntake a few seconds.

\n

When trying to sync video to audio you need to zoom in in quite a\nlong way before getting an audio preview. When doing this and moving the\nplay head you\'ll get a choppy version of the audio with this it is still\nperfectly possible to find the beat of the music allowing you to sync\nyour video to the music. If this doesn\'t seem to work for you then try\nzooming in closer.

\n

Ok that\'s about it for this podcast. Hope it wasn\'t too boring and it\nmade some sense. If you want to contact me I can be contacted at\nmrxathpr at googlemail.

\n

Thank you and goodbye.

\n',201,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','workflow, tips, video, editing, application',0,0,1), (3719,'2022-11-03','HPR News',594,'InfoSec; the language of security.','

InfoSec; the language of\nsecurity.

\n

What\nis Typosquatting and How Do Scammers Use it?

\n
    \n
  • Typosquatting, as an attack, uses modified or misspelled domain\nnames to trick users into visiting fraudulent websites; the heart of\nthis attack is domain name registration. Typosquatting is deployed by\nscammers to defraud unaware users. Attackers will attempt to: mimic\nlogin pages, redirect traffic, download malware, and extort users.
  • \n
  • Past Known Typosquatting Attacks.\n
      \n
    • Several\nMalicious Typosquatted Python Libraries Found On PyPI\nRepository
    • \n
    • Over\n700 Malicious Typosquatted Libraries Found On RubyGems\nRepository
    • \n
    • Security\nadvisory: malicious crate rustdecimal
    • \n
    • This\nWeek in Malware-Malicious Rust crate, \'colors\' Typosquats
    • \n
  • \n
  • Solutions to Typosquatting.\n
  • \n
  • DNS monitoring services.\n
      \n
    • Link to dnstwister: https://dnstwister.report/
    • \n
    • Link to whois: https://www.whois.com/whois
    • \n
  • \n
  • Password Managers.\n
      \n
    • Link to bitwarden: https://bitwarden.com/
    • \n
    • Link to keepassxc: https://keepassxc.org/
    • \n
  • \n
\n
\n

Two-factor and\nMultifactor Authentication.

\n
    \n
  • First, authentication. This is the process of verifying the\nvalidity of something; in our case, user credentials/identity. The most\ncommon way to authenticate is: USERNAME and PASSWORD.\nThis is just a single layer (single-factor authentication) and isn’t\nenough to discourage attackers.

  • \n
  • Second, 2FA (Two-factor Authentication). 2FA increases the\ndifficulty for attackers by providing users an additional layer of\nsecurity to accomplish authentication. Common 2FA methods are: TOTP/OTP\n(the One Time Password), Authenticator\nApplications (Bitwarden, KeePassXC,...), and Security Keys (Yubikey). This works similar to ATMs;\nto authenticate the user must provide both knowledge (account\nPIN) and a physical object (bank card).

  • \n
  • Last, but not least, MFA (Multifactor Authentication). Similar to\n2FA, MFA offers users security with the addition of biometrics\n(fingerprint scan, retina scan, facial recognition, and voice\nrecognition). Attackers must overcome the knowledge factor, Possession\nfactor, Inherence/Biometric factor, Time factor, and sometimes Location\nfactor.

  • \n
  • MORE helpful security information.

    \n
  • \n
  • 2FA/MFA Known Attacks.

    \n
      \n
    • Bots\nThat Steal Your 2FA Codes.
    • \n
    • hackers\nare cracking two-factor authentication
    • \n
  • \n
\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','InfoSec, Typosquatting, SFA, 2FA, MFA, Security',0,0,1), @@ -20514,8 +20527,9 @@ INSERT INTO `eps` (`id`, `date`, `title`, `duration`, `summary`, `notes`, `hosti (3987,'2023-11-14','The Grim Dawn',2391,'Sgoti rambles about a video game called Grim Dawn.','
    \n
  • Source: Action\nrole-playing game.

  • \n
  • Source: Grim\nDawn.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Grim Dawn Game\nGuide.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Steam page\nfor Grim Dawn.

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Grim Dawn Tools (Third party\nsite).

  • \n
  • Supporting Source: Soldier\nClass. Soldiers readily charge into the carnage and unleash crushing\nmight upon their foes. Their physical prowess is unmatched and their\nability to survive through the most brutal conflicts makes them an\nexcellent choice for defense-oriented players.

  • \n
  • Source: Diablo 4

  • \n
\n

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons\nAttribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

\n',391,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','Grim Dawn, ARPG, Diablo 4, Video Games',0,0,1), (3988,'2023-11-15','Beeper.com',750,'operat0r talks about Beeper dot com a multi chat client','

I talk about Beeper dot com a multi chat client

\n

Beeper is a universal messaging app that lets you chat with anyone on\nany chat app, including Whatsapp, iMessage, Telegram and 12 other\nnetworks.

\n

Links

\n\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','chat,messaging,mobile',0,0,1), (3989,'2023-11-16','LastPass Security Update 1 November 2023',553,'LastPass was hacked, what should you do?','

In 2022, LastPass disclosed that it had been hacked, and I think by\nnow just about everyone has heard about it. Now we have evidence that\npassword vaults have been hacked. So what does this mean, and what\nshould you do?

\n

Links:

\n
    \n
  • https://krebsonsecurity.com/2023/09/experts-fear-crooks-are-cracking-keys-stolen-in-lastpass-breach/
  • \n
  • https://www.zwilnik.com/security-and-privacy/lastpass-hacked-what-does-this-mean/
  • \n
  • https://wtop.com/tech/2023/01/data-doctors-should-i-stop-using-lastpass-for-password-management/
  • \n
  • http://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1810
  • \n
\n',198,74,0,'CC-BY-SA','LastPass, password vault',0,0,1), -(3993,'2023-11-22','z80 membership card',934,'review of a kit','
    \n
  • intro\n
  • \n
  • lee hart\n
      \n
    • electrical engineer
    • \n
    • was there at the beginning of the computer revolution
    • \n
    • life long love of electric vehicles
    • \n
  • \n
  • the kit\n
      \n
    • piece of art
    • \n
    • z80 membership, minimum computer
    • \n
    • front panel gives self contained system
    • \n
    • boards, all parts and altoid tin
    • \n
    • great documentation, schematics, assembly guide and getting\nstarted
    • \n
  • \n
  • the assembly\n
      \n
    • great instructions
    • \n
    • easy to solder
    • \n
    • a few tricks to get the boards to fit in the tin
    • \n
    • i made a dedicated serial cable by modifying ftdi cable
    • \n
    • i made a battery pack
    • \n
  • \n
  • usage\n
      \n
    • front panel takes a bit of practice to use (locations of keys)
    • \n
    • found a z80 assembly language tutorial, hand assembly
    • \n
    • portable z80 machine to learn
    • \n
  • \n
  • take away\n
      \n
    • excellent kit
    • \n
    • if your looking for a gift, many to choose from
    • \n
    • excellent quality
    • \n
  • \n
\n

01 membership card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

02 membership card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

03 front panel card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

04 front card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

05 assembled
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

06 in the can
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

07 things added
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

08 fits inside
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

09 compleat
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

10 docs
\n
Click the thumbnail to see\nthe full-sized image

\n',326,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','z80, retro computing',0,0,0), -(3994,'2023-11-23','Lastpass Response',790,'I talk about lastpass','

I talk about LastPass.

\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','security,computers,internet',0,0,0); +(3993,'2023-11-22','z80 membership card',934,'review of a kit','
    \n
  • intro\n
  • \n
  • lee hart\n
      \n
    • electrical engineer
    • \n
    • was there at the beginning of the computer revolution
    • \n
    • life long love of electric vehicles
    • \n
  • \n
  • the kit\n
      \n
    • piece of art
    • \n
    • z80 membership, minimum computer
    • \n
    • front panel gives self contained system
    • \n
    • boards, all parts and altoid tin
    • \n
    • great documentation, schematics, assembly guide and getting\nstarted
    • \n
  • \n
  • the assembly\n
      \n
    • great instructions
    • \n
    • easy to solder
    • \n
    • a few tricks to get the boards to fit in the tin
    • \n
    • i made a dedicated serial cable by modifying ftdi cable
    • \n
    • i made a battery pack
    • \n
  • \n
  • usage\n
      \n
    • front panel takes a bit of practice to use (locations of keys)
    • \n
    • found a z80 assembly language tutorial, hand assembly
    • \n
    • portable z80 machine to learn
    • \n
  • \n
  • take away\n
      \n
    • excellent kit
    • \n
    • if your looking for a gift, many to choose from
    • \n
    • excellent quality
    • \n
  • \n
\n

01 membership card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

02 membership card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

03 front panel card
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

04 front card back
\n
Click the\nthumbnail to see the full-sized image

\n

05 assembled
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

06 in the can
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

07 things added
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

08 fits inside
\n
Click the thumbnail\nto see the full-sized image

\n

09 compleat
\n
Click the thumbnail to\nsee the full-sized image

\n

10 docs
\n
Click the thumbnail to see\nthe full-sized image

\n',326,103,0,'CC-BY-SA','z80, retro computing',0,0,1), +(3994,'2023-11-23','Lastpass Response',790,'I talk about lastpass','

I talk about LastPass.

\n',36,0,1,'CC-BY-SA','security,computers,internet',0,0,1), +(3995,'2023-11-24','Creating Your Own Internet Radio Streaming Device',570,'Claudio talks about a couple of streaming radio solutions to make your own internet radio device.','

aNONradio: https://anonradio.net
\nTildeRadio: https://tilderadio.org

\n

Volumio: https://volumio.com/
\nmoOde Audio: https://moodeaudio.org/

\n',152,0,0,'CC-BY-SA','moode,raspberrypi,audio,internetradio,streamingradio,multimedia,volumio,anonradio,tilderadio',0,0,0); /*!40000 ALTER TABLE `eps` ENABLE KEYS */; UNLOCK TABLES; @@ -20645,7 +20659,7 @@ INSERT INTO `hosts` (`hostid`, `host`, `email`, `profile`, `license`, `local_ima (149,'Trixter','trixter.nospam@nospam.oldskool.org','

I am a child of the early 1980s, defined by the personal computer explosion, new wave music, and post-modern artistic style of that era. Co-founded MobyGames. I\'m an assembly programmer, demoscener, unix systems engineer, husband, and father. I sometimes write things of dubious value at https://trixter.oldskool.org/.

','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Trixter'), (150,'Bariman','anthony.denton.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Bariman'), (151,'dodddummy','jason.s.dodd.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'D O D D Dummy'), -(152,'Claudio Miranda','claudio.nospam@nospam.linuxbasement.com','Mastodon: @claudiom@bsd.network\r\nE-mail: claudiom@sdf.org','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Claudio Miranda'), +(152,'Claudio Miranda','claudio.nospam@nospam.linuxbasement.com','Mastodon: @claudiom@bsd.network\r\nBlog: https://claudiomiranda.wordpress.com','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Claudio Miranda'), (153,'Doug Farrell','doug.farrell.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'Doug Farrell'), (154,'MrsXoke','MrsXoke.nospam@nospam.gmail.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'MrsXoke'), (155,'MrGadgets','hpr.nospam@nospam.mrgadgets.com','','CC-BY-SA',0,'',1,'MrGadgets'), @@ -21439,4 +21453,4 @@ UNLOCK TABLES; /*!40014 SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS */; /*!40111 SET SQL_NOTES=@OLD_SQL_NOTES */; --- Dump completed on 2023-11-15 19:56:06 +-- Dump completed on 2023-11-17 19:48:25