hpr_hub/sql/hpr-db-part-0d.sql

1001 lines
474 KiB
SQL

(310,800,'2011-08-28 01:18:23','AG','','My apologies for the poor audio. Road noise caused by old vehicle and very sensitive bluetooth headset ;-) Nonetheless, I enjoyed the opportunity and welcome any feedback.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(311,800,'2011-08-29 05:37:24','Ken Fallon','Podcasting is a learning experience','Hi AG,\r\n\r\nDon\'t worry about it, we were able to hear your content. You already know why there was so much road noise, so now all you need to do is figure out how to improve it. I suggest going back and listening to D.S. Yates Lotta Linux Links podcasts to hear how he got around it.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(312,808,'2011-09-07 13:39:30','Broam','Error in interview notes','The LUG mentioned is incorrectly listed in the transcription notes. It should be \"UCLUG\" - the Upstate Carolina Linux user group.\r\n\r\nTheir website is www.uclug.org.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(313,810,'2011-09-09 19:01:30','Quvmoh','Arch show','Will be great to hear an Arch install show, Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(314,812,'2011-09-26 13:21:05','Klaatu','Angry','They\'re all patent trolls.\r\n\r\nIf corporate america justifies itself by saying that competition breeds excellence, then patents quell that.\r\n\r\nIf you just think that technology should keep advancing and getting better, then patents hinder that as well.\r\n\r\nThe only thing patents seem to be good for is to ensure that someone makes a lot of dough off something that probably wasn\'t even invented or developed in a vacuum.\r\n\r\nGreat show, Mr. Gadgets. I sometimes wish you had a video cast, where you dressed up in wacky pseudo-scientist outfits and did fun experiments that we could all try at home. But until you get that television deal, I\'ll settle for your very fine HPR audio shows.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(315,816,'2011-09-26 12:38:50','Klaatu','great information thanks','Great episode! Recipes sound delicious, although not having a kitchen I probably won\'t be trying them anytime soon.\r\n\r\nBut yeah budget living, or living minimally, is great. It\'s amazing how few bills you can have it you just simplify...and the fewer bills, the less work you have to do, which in the end leaves more time for haxooring.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(316,816,'2011-09-28 08:49:06','neddludd','Practical','Thanks Tracy for the useful information, I appreciated the re thinking of the survivalism term to include a whole lot more than stockpiling guns and ammo for the \"coming armageddon\"\r\n\r\nregards','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(317,818,'2011-09-26 12:26:15','klaatu','Agreed','I agree, the sansa devices make great little recording devices. I don\'t have a Clip, but I do have the fuze, and I used it at OLF to do interviews. The storage capicity, as long as you plan ahead and leave space for the recording, is great, the battery lasted the entire day and for days thereafter, and the mic and sound quality was fine. As much as I love my tablet (nokia n800), nothing but the storage is really anywhere near the quality that the fuze provided me.\r\n\r\nOn the other hand, the Fuze as a media player (even with Rockbox) leaves a little to be desired...','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(318,818,'2011-09-30 05:18:06','sgtron','','I bought a clip+ based on this podcast that I picked up on ebay for about $35 for a refurbished 8GB model, but unfortunately I didn\'t like rockbox on it. I found the rockbox navigation to be a bit flakey and the fm radio popped unless you exited the play screen. I do find the stock firmware fine for recording even though you can\'t monitor the sidetone.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(319,818,'2011-10-02 18:03:49','Fragilematter','Workarounds','Hey guys/Pokey! Sorry for joining the party so late, but I\'ve been behind on my podcasts lately.\r\nI\'ll get down to the subject, and that can be resumed in one acronim: R(F)TM. Rockbox is a complex piece of software and a lot of its functionality isn\'t obvious.\r\nFor instance, to lock the keys on the clip you need to press both the middle button (select) and home at the same time, while you are playing a song (rockbox devs name that the WPS - while playing screen). Also, if you are somewhere in the menus and you want to return to the wps you use the same key combo - home + select.\r\nAlso, at least on my Sansa e200, you can have it charge from a computer without accessing the disk by holding select while you plug in the usb cable. I don\'t know if it\'s the same for the Clip Plus.\r\nAs a closing note, if I recall correctly, the Clip Plus is still under development, especially the usb side of things, so you can expect improvements with each new release (unless you\'re using the current build, like I do).\r\n\r\nHere\'s hoping you have a nice day,\r\nFragilematter','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(320,818,'2011-10-03 05:52:49','sgtron','Thanks','Fragilematter, thanks for the reply and I\'ll try the current release to see what I think of that too.. I see the rockbox stable builds are released quarterly and the current one was just last month, so months to go before next release. ','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(321,818,'2011-10-10 16:13:26','lostnbronx','Your Idea Works','Pokey, a few years ago, I glued two paint-stirrers together to make a handle; cut the handle to size, sanded it down, and painted it. Then I put Velcro on one end and Velcro on the acrylic case that I have my Fuze in, and stuck it on. I hold the earbud cable to the handle with an elastic. The Fuze has has never fallen off by accident. \r\n\r\nThis is perfect for recording, and even general use, and the Velcro/handle combo helps to cut down on handling noise. The only change I\'d make now is that I should have stained the handle instead of painting it, as the paint began to wear badly almost immediately.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(322,818,'2011-10-26 15:13:39','pokey','Thanks for the feedback guys','Those are all great suggestions. I may need to use the velcro one, as i broke the clip off of my clip. \r\n\r\nThe lock screen function is a new one to me. I\'ll have to try it.\r\n\r\nYes you can charge the Clip without it booting into the stock firmware if it\'s powered on in Rockbox. That\'s how I charge it.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(323,820,'2011-09-24 03:50:08','DeepGeek','A Big-Name server you may not have considered','Hi, Klaatu,\r\nLoved the podcast. Your idea of urging listeners to try different servers was great, but your choices of nginx, apache, and lighttpd seemed to indicate an interest in \"big name\" webservers.\r\nI thought you might want to consider something else \"big name.\" Did you know that the webserver that powers AOL, aolserver4, is an open-source project? Check out aolserver.com. They boast not of some obscure benchmark, but rather of extreme scalability and a huge number of languages embedded and multiple API\'s, and multiple database platform support.\r\nI haven\'t tired it myself, but I thought you\'d like to know...\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(324,820,'2011-09-26 02:43:53','klaatu','aolserver','well let\'s wait for AOL to prove themselves before we go jumping to adopt their server. I\'ve personally not heard of them but I\'ll keep an eye out.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(325,820,'2011-10-04 12:34:23','klaatu','ADDENDUM','It was brought to my attention that I say something like \"it\'s better to have your server doing things like DHCP than to let your router handle it\"\r\n\r\nWhat I meant to say was...\r\n\"it\'s better FOR ME to have my server to DHCP and stuff than to let some little under-powered router do it\" -- but of course your network will be different from mine, with different needs and different loads and all that...so for you, it might make sense for you to just let your router handle DHCP.\r\n\r\nIf you have questions of course you can always email me and I\'ll answer whatever I can. klaatu-at-goListenToGnuWorldOrderOggcastForMyEmailAddress.com','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(326,820,'2011-10-05 21:14:50','Philip Durbin','sites-enabled, sites-available','Being a Red Hat guy, I hadn\'t heard of Debian\'s sites-enabled, sites-available convention, but I found some more about it here: https://www.control-escape.com/web/configuring-apache2-debian.html\r\n\r\nOn Red Hat systems, you could keep your VirtualHost config in /etc/httpd/conf.d/com_mysite_www.conf and disable it by changing the name to /etc/httpd/conf.d/com_mysite_www.conf.disabled. *.conf files in /etc/httpd/conf.d are included by default, as described here: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-disable-apache-modules-under-linux-unix/','2022-02-14 13:15:35'),
(327,820,'2011-10-06 13:07:52','klaatu','nice tip','Thanks for the tip. It has just so happened that I haven\'t really run that many web servers on RHEL or Fedora. I\'d like to do more but as long as I keep inheriting powerPC boxen I imagine it will continue to be Debian-based servers (thank you Debian!)\r\n\r\nBut I like this tip, so thanks.\r\n\r\nBTW if anyone is messing around with Drupal on a Fedora server, there\'s a nifty rpm, i think called drupal7, which centralizes the core drupal stuff into /usr/shared/ and allows you to symlink stuff in /var/www to point to the drupal sites. Really fun stuff.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(328,821,'2011-09-26 21:16:28','TheL0grus','','This has to be one of the worst reviews I have ever heard. I am typing this on my Acre a500 tablet. I spent a lot of time researching the tablet I wanted before I purchased one which the reviewer clearly didn\'t do. My first choice is this one ','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(329,821,'2011-09-28 16:46:37','Brad','Amazon Kindle Fire','I\'m excited to say that Amazon has their \'Android\' Kindle Fire tablet available for pre-order. I found out about it while listening to your tablet rant, and thought it would make a good update. \r\n\r\nThanks for all the content Mr. Gadget, keep up the good work!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(330,821,'2011-09-29 02:09:27','John','I agree... ','This is a copy of a post I made a while back about Android stuff...\r\nJohn Zimm - Aug 22, 2011 - Limited\r\n\"This is my response to Bryan on LAS and his ideas on HP and Linux ect.. I am a newbie to Linux. I have completely switched over to it. So, here I am enjoying my old HP desktop with Pentium 4. Then I learn about the bearded dude, and I loved what he is saying about GNU. So I started to feel like this whole Linux thing isn’t fake and is not lying to me. That is important. For example, I got made when I heard new ideas were formulated and High schools did not teach me these new things because they were not what we had been taught in the past… no flexibility, no courage and no respect for us to change the school books to reflect how history really looked or what led up to it. Or how we are animals ect. ect. You get the picture. So, now, after watching LAS and listening to other shows, I am interested in paying the data plan (for the first time) and getting a smart phone. So, I was really confused when I heard everyone talk about Android this and Android that. I don’t give a shit about a cheap knock-off of Linux, or something that runs Linux in the background, or how ever you say it. I wanted to stick with what I just learned… LINUX. Everyone was talking about how flexible and scalable Linux is, but I can’t have it on my phone? So, I moved on. I started to get interested in tablets… HOLLY SHIT, THOSE RUN THAT STUPID ANDROID, FAKE LINUX TOO. Remember, I am a newbie, so I don’t have a sense of where things in Linux came from or started, or how great Android is. Sorry if I don’t appreciate Android. But let\'s get real, The big company Google, didn\'t fit into my new found ideals. But, I want my Mint 11 on a tablet. Is that to much to ask for. I hate that I am not smart. I am just a geek-wanna-be. I hate that I can’t pick one device at a time, (phone or tablet) and make Mint 11 run on it, then upload an iso for everyone to use. So, when I heard Bryan say that about how we should not be relying on other OSs that can be pulled after 46 days… I am totally , totally totally, on board. I do have other skills, and maybe I can help in some way. Let’s get this BITCH rolling. When I used to daydream about this, I came up with naming the device that I was going to invent… wait for it… “L”. And after watching the LAS show, I came up with calling the distro, “GLD”, for GNU Linux Debian. PS,as I am about to hit share, I see a post below my,that says, \"Touchdroid, Android for HP Touchpad Project Started\". Why not Linux, for HP Touchpad project??????????????????????????\"','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(331,821,'2011-09-30 14:32:09','Sawyer','tablets are utilitarian toys','i get were you are coming from mr. g. IMHO: Tablets are just the new gadget with which to lure the money out of your wallet. I was fortunate in getting a $99 dollar hp touchpad. (I\'m a geek, i want a new gadget). It\'s a fun toy. WebOS is quiet good imo. The homebrew community has compiled new kernels, cli etc. I\'ve got it overclocked. Good stuff. Still they are just shiny toys. Even when i can install a proper linux distro, it will still be just a convienient coffee table device for quickly surfing to get tv listings or watching youtube vids. Oh lest i forget it is a great ereader, though a bit heavy. I\'m glad i have one, but i have better things to drop $500 on. One other thing. All these type devices are driven by the apps that consumers will buy. No apps no gadget goodness. Remember BeOS or OS2? Had them both at one time. Both stable and much better than Win3/95, but as a user there just wasnt much stuff beyond the os itself to do.\r\nI would like someone to make an argument that these tablets are more than consumer trinkets mostly (latest status/ego boost hotness), i\'d listen but i don\'t think it\'s going to happen.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(332,829,'2011-10-06 17:29:42','marcoz','fantastic','That was really enjoyable to listen to. Science-y, a bit technical.\r\n\r\nI liked this one a lot. I\'ve now added jodcast.org to my collection.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(333,829,'2011-10-08 23:32:48','klaatu','fantastic +1','Yeah, this one was really cool. Way over my head (so to speak) but really interesting. Plus that robot voice at the beginning is REALLY cool.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(334,830,'2011-10-11 22:44:54','Alison Chaiken','Excellent show','Enjoyed the Jamie Sharp interview, too. I posted the links on Google Buzz and emailed to interested folks. It\'s only through the hard work of folks like Hutterer and the Canonical contributors (despite their problematic cooperation) that we have device support for the latest hardware in Linux. Thanks, marcoz, for this good news!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(335,830,'2011-10-13 00:16:57','marcoz','thanks','for the kind words and I completely agree that it\'s only because people have rolled up their sleeves and gotten dirty that we are this far.\r\n\r\nIf you ever get a chance to attend XDS or XDC I highly recommend it. Lots of really smart people.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(336,837,'2011-10-18 20:24:37','san','','\"Debford\" = Deptford, thx.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(337,837,'2011-10-19 07:17:59','Ken Fallon','Corrected','Thanks - missed that one :)','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(338,838,'2011-10-19 21:02:43','Martin Peres','More links about what we talked about','Hey,\r\n\r\nJust wanted to give you some pointers to the things I talked about:\r\n\r\n- Arduide: https://mupuf.org/project/arduide/\r\n- Arduino music-player frontend: https://mupuf.org/blog/article/51/\r\n\r\nEditor\'s Note:\r\n--------------\r\nDue to site reorganisation the above links have changed to\r\n- https://mupuf.org/project/arduide.html\r\n- https://mupuf.org/blog/2011/06/14/an_arduino-based_frontend_to_my_audio-player_cmus/\r\n','2022-02-14 13:15:36'),
(339,845,'2011-10-28 14:05:08','klaatu','very informative!','very informative episode. all this fancy streaming stuff is still a mystery to me, something i\'ve really been meaning to mess around with. thanks for the very cool info, ideas, and leads on what i should be looking into!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(340,848,'2011-11-03 01:51:57','john','','I\'ve never heard Alan\'s voice before. He sounds remarkably like Eric Idle.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(341,850,'2011-11-09 03:35:08','klaatu','interesting and new informmations','nice work, inspector! this is mostly all new to me, i enjoyed hearing about these pioneers. thanks and keep \'casting.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(342,851,'2011-11-09 03:30:52','klaatu','welcome aboard!','welcome aboard seetee. where\'s all the other new hosts? and repeat offenders?! HPR is hungry.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(343,852,'2011-11-09 03:33:07','klaatu','i approve','of emacs','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(344,853,'2011-11-17 14:47:07','Miguel','','Worst interview ever?','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(345,853,'2011-11-19 01:35:00','gg','','I personally really enjoyed the inteview. I knew Pat was a guy with a\r\nvariety of interests, but had no idea a Linux guru would also be so\r\ninto new age spirituality e.g. McKenna, incense, etc.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(346,853,'2011-11-19 14:43:43','Hugh','Me','Everything Pat says is good as far as all good Slackers are concerned... Praise Bob. LOL','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(347,853,'2011-11-21 06:09:49','Ken Fallon','Any topic that is of interest to Hackers','Cross posting :)\r\n\r\nIt\'s not often that I comment on HPR episodes - other than to beg for you to send them in -but I want to make an exception for today\'s show. Episode 0853 :: Pat Volkerding of Slackware Linux chats with Klaatu\r\n\r\nI\'m not making this exception because it was \"better\", I would find it impossible to make such a call. The HPR community produces a massive amount of content and I have listened to every single one at least once. There has not been a single HPR show that I have not enjoyed and learned from.\r\n\r\nNor is it that it was submitted by Klaatu as given that he has submitted 12 1/2% of all shows, I would have written this long before now. Sure today\'s \'topic\' was special - a interview with Patrick Volkerding the man behind SlackWare, the longest continually developed Linux distribution - but we\'ve had other interviews with people of note before.\r\n\r\nThe reason for this deviation is simply because it embodies the qualities that I feel define Hacker Public Radio.\r\n\r\nIt\'s about taking a topic and exploring it, looking at all sides, exposing otherwise hidden and unknown facts, it\'s about events, it\'s about community, it\'s about people, it\'s about technology, it\'s about music, it\'s about history, it\'a about life, it\'s about questioning - everything - our very existence - space time - ancient cultures. In short it\'s about \"Any topic that is of interest to Hackers\"\r\n\r\nIf you have never listened to a HPR then this is surely the best sample of what you are likely to find. Sure it arrived just in time to fill an otherwise empty slot, the audio isn\'t perfect, it might not follow a script, random people wander in and out, there may be tangents from the topic at hand but if you can open your ears to listen you\'ll hear the passion of the community, our community. Then maybe, just maybe, you too will be inspired to share your unique point of view with us.\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php','2022-02-14 13:15:36'),
(348,853,'2011-12-14 09:33:55','lee','confused - www.cdrom.com?','Hello\r\n\r\nI am a long time linux user who started with Red Hat 5.1 and has worked consistently with Red Hat and Debian-based distros ever since. I have never really given Slackware much thought.\r\n\r\nI noticed in the photo above that the URL for slackware is given as https://www.cdrom.com. When entered in my browser, I get a site offering windows applications for download. \r\n\r\nJust thought I should warn people that the correct URL for slackware is slackware.com .\r\n\r\nIs this an old photo perhaps? \r\n','2022-02-14 13:15:36'),
(349,853,'2012-04-01 16:50:13','Jason','Note','Just a note that the picture is from 2000. Also, freaking hilarious interview. After 5 minutes of back story about the incense he\'s about to light: \"Oh wait this may be the wrong stick\". LOL','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(350,853,'2012-04-02 04:53:06','Ken Fallon','The photo is from wikipedia','So if you have a newer one you know where to send it (also to us :) )','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(351,853,'2013-01-13 21:03:14','Dustin Reeves','Fascinating!','really enjoyed this podcast, been following slackware since about 9.1 (2004~), while i dont actively use the distribution, ive always enjoyed reading patricks thoughts on software release cycles, and being as stable as possible. when this podcast strayed from the technical, it took us in a great new unexpected direction (who thought patrick was into mckenna?). really enjoyed, would love to hear more podcasts in the same vein.\r\n\r\nthanks\r\n\r\n-DR','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(352,856,'2011-11-15 07:03:15','gatton','excellent','I admit to being quite ignorant of emacs having always preferred the speed and simplicity of vim. But these emacs intro podcasts are making me take a second look. Thanks and I\'m really looking forward to the final installment.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(353,861,'2011-11-21 17:38:12','Scott Cann','Emacs','The rule of \"emacs dinners\" is you don\'t talk about \"emacs dinners\".\r\nGreat series Klaatu, I\'ve been using emacs for a few years and I still learned some stuff.\r\nThanks','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(354,861,'2011-11-22 12:43:09','Klaatu','Moar Emacs','Hey, thanks Scott! Had to go back a listen to the episode to get your dinner joke :-P\r\n\r\nEmacs is pretty great and there seems to be no end to what it can do. I\'ve been doing a lot of org-mode usage lately, and have been messing around with abbreviation-completion lately. Heck, SO many potential features. There probably could be an emacs-cast out there, although admittedly it would be a bit dry.\r\n\r\nHappy hacking. and all that.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(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'),
(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'),
(373,877,'2011-12-13 09:42:17','Abe','Cheers. ','I found this very interesting. ','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(374,877,'2011-12-13 17:44:48','Ken Fallon','Ditto','My first experience with Linux was the same. Installed now what ?\r\n\r\nThat ending was nasty !!! ;-)\r\n\r\nHurry up with part 2.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
(375,877,'2011-12-15 15:03:13','pokey','This is what HPR is about','What a great show. You hit this one out of the park. I loved hearing about the stuff that came before \"my time\", but I loved this episode from start to finish anyway. Thank you sincerely for pitching in, we really need it. \r\n\r\nI had a pretty crappy day yesterday, and you helped to make a crappy day better. Thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(376,877,'2011-12-15 15:53:07','Frank','Once You Slack, You Never Go Back','What am I running now? Why Slackware, of course (plus a few others along the way). ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(377,880,'2011-12-30 13:16:46','Morten Juhl-Johansen Zölde-Fejer','Introduction to audiobooks','I did an introduction to audiobooks a little while back:\r\nhttps://writtenandread.net/audiobooks-sampler/\r\nIf you would accept a recommendation, I would like to suggest listening to Dead Mech or Number One With A Bullet.\r\nThank you for an interesting discussion.\r\nAll the best,\r\nMorten','2022-02-14 13:15:37'),
(378,882,'2011-12-21 03:30:53','sigflup','hey','Wow, I had no idea that people were packaging yesplz! that\'s awesome!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(379,882,'2011-12-23 13:44:38','klaatu','yes we are','yes people are packaging yesplz :D \r\n\r\nIt should be noted that there is a NEW version of yesplz since this ep was recorded. You can get it here --> https://devio.us/~sigflup/yesplz_dec_19_2011.tgz','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(380,882,'2011-12-23 16:40:42','klaatu','slackbuilds updated!','for slackers, new slackbuilds for concr (the encryption library) and yesplz have been submitted. until they hit the sb.o servers, you can get \'em here..\r\nhttps://gnuworldorder.info/slackware/concr.tar.gz\r\n\r\nand\r\n\r\nhttps://gnuworldorder.info/slackware/yesplz.tar.gz','2022-02-14 13:15:38'),
(381,887,'2011-12-27 12:02:50','chattr','mp3 file is 404 not found','Got the notice of ep0887 when I just polled the feed, but trying to download the file ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr0887.mp3 ) returns 404 not found.','2022-02-14 13:15:38'),
(382,887,'2011-12-28 08:00:39','Ken Fallon','Forgot to post the mp3','Hi Chattr,\r\n\r\nI forgot to post the audio files. 100% my fault. Sorry about that - it should be updated now.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(383,887,'2011-12-28 14:22:31','Deltaray','Yggdrasil','Good show and quality.\r\n\r\nJust so you know, Yggdrasil was pretty significant as it was the first Linux distro with a CD-ROM based installation. There is actually a sizable Wikipedia article on it:\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yggdrasil_Linux/GNU/X','2022-02-14 13:15:38'),
(384,887,'2011-12-28 23:01:42','NYbill','Re: Yggdrasil','Yes, that\'s the one. Had anyone in the room still had a 3 1/2 drive we could have popped it in and see if it still worked. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(385,891,'2012-01-05 13:16:36','janitor','Emacs-org-mode','Thanks for the show\r\nI think emacs and org-mode is just what I\'ve been looking for I will let you know!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(386,892,'2012-01-04 16:44:17','Robert Wooden','org-mode use','I have begun listening to the HPR podcasts while at work.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been using Linux for ten years or so and as a result of everyones podcasts I am considering making a recording and sending it in. More on that later.\r\n\r\nThis message is to comment on this podcast. As usual, I found all the podcast very interesting. Of great interest was the conversation regarding org-mode and it\'s use by someone doing AutoCAD work and the manner in which he kept notes and tables relating to his daily job. This caught my attention because I use (not right now, anyway) to work in a related design field. Everyday I used an expensive proprietary cad design program designing kitchen and bathrooms, very similar to AutoCAD. So it was very easy for me to relate to his work use descriptions.\r\n\r\nThanks for another GREAT podcast.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(387,892,'2012-01-19 13:48:09','pokey','Thanks for listening.','Robert, thanks for listening. I\'m glad that people are enjoying listening to our big recording, and it was great that these guys brought such great and helpful content. It\'s great fun for me knowing that other people are listening to, and enjoying what we did.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(388,894,'2012-01-05 20:04:46','Becky Newborough','','Both Philip and I enjoyed ourselves immensely - thank you for inviting us along. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(389,894,'2012-01-08 15:58:32','DeepGeek','My own counter-show','Just wanted to add that episode #169 on steganography was my own counter show to episode #69. After being rebuked for my participation in the infamous #69, I thought it fitting to \"make things up\" by telling how to keep such things under wraps.\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(390,894,'2012-01-19 13:53:48','pokey','The pleasure was all mine','Becky, It was a real pleasure having both you and Philip on. You are lovely people, and I\'m very glad to have met you. Either of you are forever welcome on any show that I record. You really brought a lot to the conversation, and everyone loved talking with you both. Thank you for coming on, and helping us out.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(391,897,'2012-01-11 20:45:36','Deltaray','Better recording of PipemanMusic\'s cover','I was recording as well and got a better recording of PipemanMusic\'s cover of Before You Accuse Me. Enjoy:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.climagic.org/music/pipemanmusic-beforeyouaccuseme.mp3','2022-02-14 13:15:39'),
(392,899,'2012-01-12 15:31:54','Deltaray','Port 25 blocking','Its not the mail servers that are blocking port 25, its your ISP. Many large ISPs are blocking outbound port 25 connections from your home connection that aren\'t to your ISP\'s mail server. You can try connecting to a mail server on its SSL port (465) which usually requires authentication, if it allows it or the mail submission port (587), which is more recent thing.\r\n\r\nThey do this because so many people are infected with viruses and where being used as gateways to send spam. So they were trying to reduce the spam in everybody\'s inbox.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(393,899,'2012-01-13 04:32:12','chattr','wow, who\'s the guy with the laugh blowing my ears out?','content is very good, ty. first time I listened to this podcast (Sunday Morning Linux Review), so I don\'t know if other times the volume is similar to this one, but the guy with the laugh (Tony?) blows out my ears. too close to the mic? \r\n\r\nlooking forward to further episodes, if the volume gets dialed down a bit.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(394,900,'2012-01-19 18:49:20','Emil Dahlqvist','','Hey, very nice podcast to listen too! I my self is very excited to hear about the advices and thoughts you have on servers at home :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(395,903,'2012-01-17 23:30:52','new age techno hippie','Response to white house.goc pettition','This is the can response sent out but, I will put out an wpisode post back here if there is an open oline forum on the subject.\r\n\r\nCombating Online Piracy while Protecting an Open and Innovative Internet \r\nBy Victoria Espinel, Aneesh Chopra, and Howard Schmidt\r\n\r\nThanks for taking the time to sign this petition. Both your words and actions illustrate the importance of maintaining an open and democratic Internet.\r\n\r\nRight now, Congress is debating a few pieces of legislation concerning the very real issue of online piracy, including the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA) and the Online Protection and Digital ENforcement Act (OPEN). We want to take this opportunity to tell you what the Administration will support—and what we will not support. Any effective legislation should reflect a wide range of stakeholders, including everyone from content creators to the engineers that build and maintain the infrastructure of the Internet.\r\n\r\nWhile we believe that online piracy by foreign websites is a serious problem that requires a serious legislative response, we will not support legislation that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global Internet.\r\n\r\nAny effort to combat online piracy must guard against the risk of online censorship of lawful activity and must not inhibit innovation by our dynamic businesses large and small. Across the globe, the openness of the Internet is increasingly central to innovation in business, government, and society and it must be protected. To minimize this risk, new legislation must be narrowly targeted only at sites beyond the reach of current U.S. law, cover activity clearly prohibited under existing U.S. laws, and be effectively tailored, with strong due process and focused on criminal activity. Any provision covering Internet intermediaries such as online advertising networks, payment processors, or search engines must be transparent and designed to prevent overly broad private rights of action that could encourage unjustified litigation that could discourage startup businesses and innovative firms from growing.\r\n\r\nWe must avoid creating new cybersecurity risks or disrupting the underlying architecture of the Internet. Proposed laws must not tamper with the technical architecture of the Internet through manipulation of the Domain Name System (DNS), a foundation of Internet security. Our analysis of the DNS filtering provisions in some proposed legislation suggests that they pose a real risk to cybersecurity and yet leave contraband goods and services accessible online. We must avoid legislation that drives users to dangerous, unreliable DNS servers and puts next-generation security policies, such as the deployment of DNSSEC, at risk.\r\n\r\nLet us be clear—online piracy is a real problem that harms the American economy, threatens jobs for significant numbers of middle class workers and hurts some of our nation\'s most creative and innovative companies and entrepreneurs. It harms everyone from struggling artists to production crews, and from startup social media companies to large movie studios. While we are strongly committed to the vigorous enforcement of intellectual property rights, existing tools are not strong enough to root out the worst online pirates beyond our borders. That is why the Administration calls on all sides to work together to pass sound legislation this year that provides prosecutors and rights holders new legal tools to combat online piracy originating beyond U.S. borders while staying true to the principles outlined above in this response. We should never let criminals hide behind a hollow embrace of legitimate American values.\r\n\r\nThis is not just a matter for legislation. We expect and encourage all private parties, including both content creators and Internet platform providers working together, to adopt voluntary measures and best practices to reduce online piracy.\r\n\r\nSo, rather than just look at how legislation can be stopped, ask yourself: Where do we go from here? Don’t limit your opinion to what’s the wrong thing to do, ask yourself what’s right. Already, many of members of Congress are asking for public input around the issue. We are paying close attention to those opportunities, as well as to public input to the Administration. The organizer of this petition and a random sample of the signers will be invited to a conference call to discuss this issue further with Administration officials and soon after that, we will host an online event to get more input and answer your questions. Details on that will follow in the coming days.\r\n\r\nWashington needs to hear your best ideas about how to clamp down on rogue websites and other criminals who make money off the creative efforts of American artists and rights holders. We should all be committed to working with all interested constituencies to develop new legal tools to protect global intellectual property rights without jeopardizing the openness of the Internet. Our hope is that you will bring enthusiasm and know-how to this important challenge.\r\n\r\nMoving forward, we will continue to work with Congress on a bipartisan basis on legislation that provides new tools needed in the global fight against piracy and counterfeiting, while vigorously defending an open Internet based on the values of free expression, privacy, security and innovation. Again, thank you for taking the time to participate in this important process. We hope you’ll continue to be part of it.\r\n\r\nVictoria Espinel is Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator at Office of Management and Budget\r\n\r\nAneesh Chopra is the U.S. Chief Technology Officer and Assistant to the President and Associate Director for Technology at the Office of Science and Technology Policy\r\n\r\nHoward Schmidt is Special Assistant to the President and Cybersecurity Coordinator for National Security Staff\r\n\r\nCheck out this response on We the People.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(396,907,'2012-01-29 16:58:03','Bob Ibanez','Your HPR podcast','Hello,\r\nGreat info for people who want to learn to code.The only problem was it was hard to understand.Maybe use a mic for second podcast.\r\nBob','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(397,910,'2012-01-27 20:55:08','Deltaray','Another way','Sorry to be a wet blanket, but you can also do this in 3 easy steps using an SSH tunnel:\r\n\r\n1. Turn on GatewayPorts and PermitRootLogin in sshd_config on remote.server.hostname where you want the website to appear on the net.\r\n2. Open up port 80 in firewall on remote.server.hostname\r\n3. from your home machine, run ssh -R *:80:localhost:80 root@remote.server.hostname\r\n\r\nThen people can go to https://remote.server.hostname/ and it will go to the webserver on your local computer. Remember though, either way, you\'re still allowing access to your computer on the public internet and if that gets compromised, your local network. May not be what you expected.','2022-02-14 13:15:39'),
(398,911,'2012-01-30 14:22:46','Deltaray','The Secret Life of Machines','Oh MrX, you\'re my hero for mentioning The Secret Life of Machines. That show was excellent and is a great example of how different documentaries where before Discovery channel sold out in the mid 90s to the \"Least Common Denominator\" model of documentaries. I think the episode called \"The Radio Set\" is one of the best, and should be especially interesting for hackers.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.exploratorium.edu/ronh/SLOM/0206-The_Radio-big.html\r\n\r\nYou\'ll find yourself in good company with Tim and Rex.','2022-02-14 13:15:39'),
(399,912,'2012-01-31 14:11:18','Deltaray','Great episode','Short and to the point. I liked the \"wife considerations\" part.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(400,912,'2012-03-27 02:59:22','Broam','I didn\'t care for the whole \"wife\" part.','While it\'s important to consider non-technical users, don\'t talk about the listener\'s wife/girlfriend. It\'s bad form to assume the gender of the listener. You can talk about your wife/girlfriend, but don\'t assume we all have those.\r\n\r\nGood episode. I will probably do a follow-up in terms of other ways to cut the cord.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(401,917,'2012-02-10 04:59:35','dylan_c','Happy to see a new episode','It was great to hear a new episode of Uber leet hacker force. This is one of my favorite hpr series.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(402,917,'2012-02-21 15:39:12','klaatu','me too','yeah uber leet hacker force is one of my favourites too. i think it\'d be cool to see concr implemented in config files for fetchmail and stuff like that.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(403,918,'2012-02-09 08:23:48','Robert Wooden','feedback','Frank, I find your series interesting.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(404,922,'2012-02-16 11:22:25','brothermouse','OSM is legal, open, and hackable','Onlookers might consider leveraging the open/free OpenStreetMap data \r\n\r\nhttps://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OSM_Map_On_Garmin','2022-02-14 13:15:40'),
(405,922,'2013-05-07 07:32:44','Ralph','How to make the garmin usable first','Howdy,\r\n I have thought about getting a used Garmin to use with OpenStreetMaps. But, all the garmin units I have tried display a legal agreement when they are turned on. I won\'t agree to it, so I never get very far. Are there hacks for some units to remove the license nonsense? Pointers to that info would be appreciated. I have searched google every way I can think of and not found anything.\r\nThanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(406,924,'2012-02-16 13:18:35','Deltaray','Great show','Great show Dann. You spoke very clearly and were obviously prepared. Well done. Since shell stuff can be quite thick at times, maybe after every few minutes you should just take a breather to allow people to catch up. Maybe a joke or story or something. I liked all the philosophical stuff you started out with. Its good for beginners to hear all that.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(407,926,'2012-02-20 20:22:39','Stephen','same opinion on perl vs python','I have the same kind of attitude toward Perl. I appreciate its power and ubiquity, but for me as a *learner* the whole \"there\'s more than one way to do it\" approach is a big turn-off. Hence I too have steered more toward Python as a preferred scripting language.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(408,926,'2012-02-21 19:00:42','Paul Perkins','Why (still) C and Python?','I, too, went through a “C” phase and have ended up using Python. I looked at Perl and said “yuck!” And I looked at Genie and concluded that the lack of libraries and documentation ruled it out. I think I know the answer to your “heretical” question, “why are we not all using a language that is as efficient to run as C and as efficient to write as Python?”: It is a lot harder than it looks. Python (specifically CPython) looks terrible in benchmarks, but for many real applications it is slower than C, but not enough slower to matter. Also, lots of smart people have tackled the problem from lots of different directions (C++, OCaml, Java, Unladen Sparrow, etc.) with limited success so far. And change is slow just because being an early adopter of a language is expensive, and being a late abandoner is even more expensive. But take a look at the PyPy project and the “RPython” language.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(409,926,'2012-02-22 15:14:32','diablomarcus','Intermediate compiler','For all the flack that Perl gets, it does precompile down to simpler language and then that is run on the fly. Sounds just like what you were recommending','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(410,926,'2012-02-22 19:00:57','Deltaray','Do you actually want people to listen?','I stopped listening at about 15 mintues due to the cans and bottles. Calling in a show is ok, but trying to make it somehow sound \"cool\" by doing it while making a bunch of noise IMHO is not so good.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(411,926,'2012-03-08 21:53:28','Xoke','Compiling and compiling','Python -> C -> Assembly.\r\n\r\nIn short yes you can. But no-one would. \r\n\r\nWhen you compile it drops any comments you have and change variable names and can do other things, so you would then have this mass of code that is VERY unreadable. If you are good enough to read that and make any tweaks you simple would code in that language as lower languages gives you much more control.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(412,932,'2012-03-01 00:59:09','NYbill','Nice job','Nice job, man. I\'m going to have to listen a second time to soak that all in. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(413,933,'2012-03-05 12:45:57','dominic','','Nice Podcast, thank you!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(414,934,'2012-03-04 06:37:45','brother mouse','good show!','Enjoyed the shell-centric show. I even installed qrencode to dork around with it.\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(415,942,'2012-03-29 18:51:16','Xoke','Thanks!','Oddly enough I listened to this ep last week and this week our Windows 2008 server died. I swear they are unrelated!\r\n\r\nAnyway we now have a Zentyal server up and running, although I\'m still fine tuning a few things.\r\n\r\nThank you :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(416,943,'2012-03-19 13:29:37','qubodup','','Thanks for this guide, as part of ArchWomen, I\'m trying to streamline the \"get involved\" page of the Arch Linux wiki and bug reporting of course plays an important role.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad to hear that Ohio LinuxFest wants diversity. Can you be more specific about the steps the organization takes to promote this? Is there a diversity statement?\r\n\r\n(might be releavant: https://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Women-friendly_events )','2022-02-14 13:15:40'),
(417,945,'2012-03-21 01:26:53','pokey','I enjoy every one of these, and this was no exception.','Deepgeek, your shows are amazing. They are informative and often uplifting. I can\'t imagine how much work it must be to gather and summarize all of these stories that are so important to our community. Thank you for all of the hard work that you do, and for fighting the good fight.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(418,946,'2012-03-21 01:22:35','pokey','Great show','This was a lot of fun to listen to. I\'m seriously jealous of of the fun you guys will be having. I just attended NELF, and I\'d like to make you guys an offer. I\'m willing to send you our HPR booth kit in exchange for your Linux beer brewers. Think about it. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(419,947,'2012-03-21 01:17:51','pokey','Great show','This was fantastic! I really enjoyed it. Jared seems like maybe the nicest guy in the world. If I ever see him at a conference, I\'m making it a point to shake his hand.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(420,952,'2012-03-28 19:58:08','computothought','','If you like home antennas, try these: https://www.instructables.com/id/Antennas-TV-Wifi-and-etc/','2022-02-14 13:15:40'),
(421,961,'2012-04-09 18:16:41','Kryx','Thanks','sigflup,\r\n\r\n Thanks for your openness and sharing your story - having family members that have had similar experiences I understand that it is a different world in there. I wish you all the best in the recovery process.\r\n\r\nKryx','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(422,961,'2012-04-09 23:56:38','qubodup','Thanks for sharing','Hello,\r\n\r\nThank you a lot for sharing this. Listening to you describing your state and surrounding was a fascinating experience.\r\n\r\nIt reminded me of in-computer-game audio logs, like the ones in \"System Shock 2\" and \"Amnesia\" for example. (Warning: both these titles or screenshots, videos and descriptions of their content might act as triggers)\r\n\r\nBest wishes for feeling better and glad for you to not having to stay in there longer. I hope that talking openly about the events, as you did in this post, leads to more relief.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(423,961,'2012-04-11 09:59:08','brother mouse','thanks for sharing','I really appreciate your openness and willingness to share. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(424,961,'2012-04-12 12:58:59','claudiom','Thank You, sigflup...','Thank for sharing this experience on HPR. I have to say that it takes a lot of courage to open oneself in this manner. I hope and pray that everything improves for you soon.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(425,961,'2012-05-14 21:24:20','Frank','','What they said. \r\n\r\nI commend your courage is posting this.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(426,962,'2012-04-12 18:01:45','computothought','Do it to it.','Applying what Dann has taught so far. https://www.instructables.com/id/Mixing-the-command-line-and-the-gui/','2022-02-14 13:15:41'),
(427,964,'2012-04-17 14:20:25','Deltaray','Sound levels much improved','I just wanted to say that the sound levels are much improved. Thanks for fixing that.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(428,964,'2012-04-28 15:19:23','Mary','Thanks for your feedback','we are using mic filters now which helps Tony with the sound levels. He doesn\'t have to adjust them as much...as long as we remember to talk into the mic.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(429,964,'2012-04-28 17:10:53','Tony Bemus','Thanks','Deltaray, Thanks we have be working hard on making the best quality.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(430,965,'2012-04-18 01:49:37','bruce patterson','Excellent podcast','This is rapidly becoming one of my favorite segments hands down. Keep up the good work DG!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(431,966,'2012-04-17 13:59:27','Deltaray','Conversations','Great insight and it needed to be said. I had some great conversations with people at ILF this past weekend, some of whom I would consider elders from my point of view. The conversations with other people made for a great conference.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(432,967,'2012-04-25 18:08:09','MrJackson','','Both models come with 256mb ram now.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(433,977,'2012-05-03 05:26:29','Ken Fallon','Other plugin ?','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nWhat was the name of the other plugin that you used before. The one where you needed to do a math question.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(434,978,'2012-05-03 08:58:10','Kenn Crawford','Your review of Dead Hunt','Hi guys, \r\n\r\nJust wanted to say a big THANK YOU for taking the time to listen to Dead Hunt and for the great review! I appreciate your comments and learn a lot when people like you give an honest assessment. Your in-depth review was well thought out and I enjoyed hearing your praises and criticisms. That type of feedback is invaluable, so thank you for your honesty.\r\n \r\nWhen I was asked in an interview if I would change anything my answer was, without hesitation, \"the writing.\" There’s a lot of things I would change… especially in the prologue. The original story was teens but they were supposed to be college kids in the final draft so I don’t know what happened there. Major oversight! I also agree with your assessment of the diner scene: I should have included more description on how he found her and got her out. Good catch. Ditto for the bear… and A.I… and the chip… You gave me a lot to think about.\r\n \r\nI’m glad you would be interested in hearing the sequel, which I hope to finish writing within the next few months, and I do hope you guys are willing to review that one on your podcast as well. I really enjoyed your show!\r\n \r\nOnce again, thank you for your comments and honesty. It means a lot to me.\r\n \r\nSincerely,\r\nKenn\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(435,978,'2012-05-05 00:54:01','Stephen','free audiobook suggestions','I\'m not especially a zombie and/or gore kind of person, but I enjoyed this your latest book review (ep0978). Here are a couple other audio books I\'ve listened to and highly recommend, and I\'d really enjoy hearing your review of them too at some point.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.podiobooks.com/podiobooks/search.php?keyword=trader+tales\r\nThis is a series of audiobooks following the life and career of the main character from his first unprepared steps into the spacefaring cargo fleet as a newly orphaned late-teen through owning his own ship. No aliens, no space battles, etc., but in my opinion nevertheless thoroughly engaging.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.podiobooks.com/podiobooks/search.php?keyword=heavenfield\r\nAnother, shorter series, very different but equally excellent. Set in the near future on Earth where several rival factions have found a way into a kind of alternate dimension intersecting ours, the eponymous Heavenfield, and discover that we are not alone, and that our actions shape our reality for good or ill.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.podiobooks.com/title/the-leviathan-chronicles\r\nA race of superhumans lives secretly in our midst, and in a deep underwater base, seeking to direct mankind into a better future. But now there\'s a civil war among them, spilling into our world. The main character learns that she is not just one of these immortals, but a key to their very survival and torn between the factions.','2022-02-14 13:15:41'),
(436,978,'2012-05-08 12:56:12','klaatu','Kenn','Thanks for the feedback on our feedback, Kenn, but most especially thanks for your book! I really enjoyed it and while I don\'t remember what the blazes I said about it, any criticism I had was only because I liked the book enough to feel safe with little nit-picks. All in all, I loved the story and the writing, and you had me all the way til the end. And in the end, that\'s all that matters.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to the sequel!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(437,980,'2012-05-06 22:28:21','sigflup','wow','Fascinating episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(438,980,'2012-05-11 02:05:06','Nancy','great job Ken','I really enjoyed listening to this, one of the best! It is one of the great obstacles in modern life-how to obtain high speed internet in rural areas, and it\'s the rural areas that need it the most! It is only because I am good friends with our local computer guy/isp that I was able to finally receive high speed wifi at my home in rural New Mexico.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(439,980,'2012-05-29 12:27:45','pokey','Great interview. Great project.','Well done, Ken. You\'re the best.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(440,983,'2012-05-09 18:25:59','pokey','Congratulations','Congratulations on completing your series. Like you said, all good things must come to an end. And while I\'m a little sad that it\'s over, I\'m thrilled for you that it\'s complete. So many podcast series just fade away incomplete. \r\n\r\nIt\'s a great series that you put together here, and I\'ll be directing people to it in the future. It turned out really well in content and in quality. Thanks so much for being part of HPR. I look forward to hearing more shows from you if you get the time.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(441,984,'2012-05-10 17:54:47','Frank','','Excellent recursive (as they say in the show) choice for syndicated Thursday.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(442,988,'2012-05-16 19:22:15','Frank','','Absolutely fascinating. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(443,1000,'2012-06-01 21:41:35','Becky Newborough','','Well that was a hoot! I\'m glad that Philip and I could be a part of your 1000th episode celebration. We\'ll try the less serious version of our greeting next time :P','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(444,1006,'2012-06-11 22:45:29','klaatu','good show','Calling it a \"good\" episode feels a little trite, but it\'s an \"important\" episode. Very enlightening. Thank you so much for sharing, Sigflup! I just know you, of all people, _can_ deal with schizophrenia. And maybe more importantly, this community can deal with it, because you\'re one of us, so we\'re in it together. Don\'t hesitate to reach out to any one of us if you ever need anything, and keep fighting the good fight.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(445,1006,'2012-06-12 19:02:36','Deltaray','Cell phone interference in recording.','Was that cell phone interference I heard at 4:28? I\'m curious if you know if that was interference being heard over a speaker through the microphone or directly into the microphone? Interesting episode Sigflup.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(446,1006,'2012-06-14 00:59:52','sigflup','cell phone','That was gsm heard through the microphone from the phone in my pocket. No audio was made, just the interference picked up directly by the mic','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(447,1007,'2012-06-15 18:44:51','Frank','','A fascination story of versatility and adaptability!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(448,1008,'2012-06-14 11:48:40','pokey','I\'m trying this now, thank you.','Hey, Windigo, I just copied these files to my laptop, and I\'m looking forward to seeing how it works. I get this bug all the time, but not ever in a way that it is reproducible, so I\'ll just have to wait and see how well it works. For me, the only way out of the bug was to open and close my inventory or the game\'s menu. I\'ve gotten pretty good at opening and closing my inventory very quickly, but I like your solution better. Thanks a lot.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(449,1008,'2012-06-27 11:41:04','Windigo','Good Luck','Good luck, Pokey - hope it helps! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(450,1008,'2012-08-04 06:10:30','iron_houzi','Thank you!','Great fix. Just started playing and have ~12 friends and friends of friends playing on my server. Looking forward to your next Minecraft episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(451,1008,'2012-09-01 22:04:03','Antian','Other possible issue?','I\'ve also heard it\'s a keylogger or keystroke recorder that\'s been doing it, although I haven\'t tried it.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(452,1008,'2012-10-03 21:02:19','Marc','Fixed!','Fixed on ubuntu 12.04\r\n\r\nI love you.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(453,1008,'2012-10-16 19:33:38','terwarf','Thanks a lot','You saved (at least for me) a lot of (virtual) lifes! Working like a charm for hours now...\r\n\r\nThank you','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(454,1008,'2013-02-10 18:58:36','Bart','Worked','Worked great here on Ubuntu 12.10! I walked myself accidentally in a deep hole a bit too much. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(455,1008,'2013-04-02 11:57:53','Brodus8899','Working','Thanks bro it really helped me. Now I can record Youtube videos in peace. Subscribe and/or like to Brodus8899. ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(456,1016,'2012-07-24 21:07:10','goibhniu','Wrong Eelco!','Woops ... Eelco Visser != Eelco Dolstra\r\n\r\nSee here for some more papers and videos:\r\nhttps://nixos.org/~eelco/talks/index.html','2022-02-14 13:15:41'),
(457,1021,'2012-07-02 19:14:17','klaatu','lies','don\'t believe the lies. i didn\'t read the community news, i made it up.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(458,1024,'2012-07-05 21:52:22','Sigflup','Aww','Aww, thanks for the hugs','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(459,1024,'2012-07-06 16:10:30','Xoke','You\'re welcome!','Now if we can just win the Ubuntu UK podcast competition to win a raspberry pi for you...','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(460,1027,'2012-07-10 22:55:35','max','','thx, very useful!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(461,1028,'2012-07-15 16:35:22','the_remora','Goodwill Computer Works','Just finished listening to this episode and I have to say that I am jealous. We have what Goodwill calls a \"Computer Works\" here in Charlotte NC and they are not as cheep as you guys are saying, probably because they try to refurbish everything they get in but even the junk systems they have from \'05 they want about $100 for. I have found some stuff I thought was really cool. Such as a original working Xbox for $25 with all the cables and a controller. What I undersand of how goodwill does it 99% of the computer equipment in my region ends up in this storefront which does not sell clothes.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(462,1028,'2012-08-15 20:58:49','Urugami','Where does it come from?','Listening now, and NYBill is asking \"Who\'s dropping this tech stuff off?\"\r\nWell, when I was clearing out stuff after marriage/moving, I gave a LOT of tech stuff to Goodwill. Computers, cards, and even a full installation kit for SCO Unix, floppies, manuals, everything. \r\nI wish I could find out just who ended up with some of that stuff.\r\nI think I know who the waterbed went to; the employees were eying that up hard. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(463,1031,'2012-07-19 13:02:21','dave','','\r\nGreat info BrocktonBob\r\n\r\nAnother thing that may need to be changed is the -vf crop=640:480:0:0,scale=640:405 option\r\n\r\nSome movies will have different crop boundaries. I use mplayer dvd//:1 -vf cropdetect to to get this info before ripping. \r\n\r\nAnother tip is for the scale option. Here is your original code -vf crop=640:480:0:0,scale=640:405\r\n\r\nHere mencoder can preserve the aspect ratio whether the movie is full screen or wide screen by using a -2 like so\r\n\r\ncrop=640:480:0:0,scale=640:-2\r\n\r\nHop these tips help\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(464,1033,'2012-07-27 12:16:36','Mike Hingley','Alternate viewpoinr','My counter argument to the central point made by your podcast is this : \r\n\r\nI feel almost intrisictly opposed to the stock RTFM answer - here are my reasons why : \r\n\r\n1. Elitism\r\nThis may not be intentional - but when someone says \"RTFM\" the subtle message it puts out is \"I know the answer, but I\'m not going to tell you because I do not believe you are worthy of my time and energy because you have not displayed sufficient schooling in this area\". To me - this represents a knowledge elite, where those that can and do,laugh down their noses at those that can\'t. One thing I can\'t stand is elitism especially in the open source community, where access to information and resources is the ultimate leveller. \r\n\r\n2. Puts people off\r\nIt may be that the user asking that question has no background in the computer science aspects of computing, but approaches the use of computers like any other consumer device. For example : I recently fitted some smoke alarms into my house. the manual said that the light should flash every 45 seconds - but in reality it flashed every 10 seconds. I phoned the help line and spoke to a technician who answered the question. His response was much more useful to me as it answered my question directly. I now feel much more confident in my ability to work with electronics not only from this company, but from others, as I know there is an element of support.\r\n\r\n3. Adds nothing\r\nIn reality all information relating to Linux is either gathered by reading the manual or source, or through experience with the product. Therefore the stock answer to any query from anybody could be RTFM, and the chances are that there is a manual page or documentation out there that covers that subject.\r\n\r\n4. Makes assumptions about the users\r\nRTFM assumes that the user that has made contact is indeed able to read a manual. To make such an assumption based on no information does us a disservice\r\n\r\n5. In some instances - inappropriate for the communication paradigm\r\nIf I contact a IRC help chat channel and all I am told is RTFM, then the channel could be hosted by bots which just respond RTFM. If the help chat channel offers no help, then it ceases to be a useful tool.\r\n\r\n6. Aggressive\r\nThe use of offensive language in this term makes it inappropriate for use. I always pride myself that the communications I have made within the open Source community are free from swears - I would have no problem with my parents, or grand parents, or little nieces and nephews reading what I have written. \r\n\r\n7. Competition\r\nThe point is that Microsoft, Oracle etc already have this type of facility - where questions can be asked and answered. We\'re competing with these companies, and therefore we need to raise the bar. Making someone slog through a reference book to find out why their network isn\'t working isn\'t competing so well.\r\n\r\n8. Obtuse\r\nResponding to a technical query from a user with a technical acronym only compounds the issue. \r\n\r\n\r\nI want to table something : I\'d like to suggest that we censor ourselves from responding with RTFM - I\'d like to ban the term, and instead suggest that we start to write things in plain english. \r\n\r\nFor example : \r\n\r\nOh - I\'m sorry you\'ve experienced an issue with the FOO widget under Distrix. Let\'s see if we can\'t offer some advice. It looks like the issue is , which means \r\n\r\nThere are a number of things we can try : \r\n\r\n1. instruction 1\r\n2. instruction 2\r\n3. instruction 3\r\n4. instruction 4\r\n\r\nIf you want to learn more about FOO widget, then you can find the man page by going to terminal and typing man FOO.\r\n\r\n---\r\n\r\nOnce we have done this a few times we can start to formulate strategies to solving the issue, which we can document. \r\n\r\nThe important things I wanted to raise with my suggestion are : \r\n\r\n1. Empathy - we are empathising with the user. This helps to establish a bond, and the user may feel happier that at least someone understood the issue.\r\n\r\n2. Information - we are presenting the user with some basic information about the issue they are having.\r\n\r\n3. Tasks - we are presenting some ideas that the user can try \r\n\r\n4. Further information - we are instructing the user how to get more information about the issue.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(465,1036,'2012-07-24 05:25:52','brother mouse','mousetrap','Good timing; my first Kenwood rig (2m) arrives tomorrow on the Brown Truck of Joy. \r\n\r\nCurrently have a Baofeng UV-5R which is an incredible value for the money. Really like it. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(466,1036,'2012-07-26 13:23:50','claudiom','Nice!','Great stuff, Joel! Really enjoyed this episode. Can\'t wait to hear more.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(467,1037,'2012-07-24 08:46:44','C-Keen','Thank you!','I am looking forward to part 2, this must be one of the best episodes on HPR I have heard lately!\r\n\r\nNicely done!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(468,1037,'2012-07-26 13:23:01','claudiom','Great Information.','This was definitely a very informative episode and looks to be a very informative series. I used to solder a bit when I needed to repair some gadgets (Apple Airport Basestation is one example), but haven\'t done it in a very long time. Great amount of information on soldering irons and what to look for. Can\'t wait to hear more. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(469,1038,'2012-07-26 13:20:47','claudiom','Great interview.','Thoroughly enjoyed this interview. Kudos to pokey for this one. Seems like there should be more of these, maybe to provide something similar to what a particularly well-known FLOSS podcast on a particularly well-known \"netcast\" network does while actually providing it on FLOSS formats. ;-)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(470,1041,'2012-07-30 22:37:35','NYbill','Hope talks are up. ','In case anyone is interested in audio for the talks at HOPE9, they just went up:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.hopenumbernine.net/schedule/','2022-02-14 13:15:41'),
(471,1047,'2012-09-09 04:37:18','Peter64','Good Stuff','Can\'t believe how informative I found this one, Great stuff','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(472,1047,'2012-10-25 13:47:20','pokey','I love soldering - when I do it right','I was about to shout \"DON\'T FORGET YOUR SHRINK TUBING!\" when you remembered your shrink tubing. Well done.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(473,1051,'2012-08-15 18:59:18','pokey','Good show','Good show. I liked it. I\'d like to offer up a couple of suggestions, if I may.\r\n\r\nFirst is that your mic is good enough that you need a pop filter. When you say words that cause air to puff out of you, that air hits the mic element harder than the rest of your speech, and you get a \"pop\" sound. Do a search for \"DIY pop filter\" or \"how to pop filter\" and you\'ll find cheap or free solutions that work well.\r\n\r\nSecond is that the name Sean is pronounced like Shawn. It\'s just an alternate spelling. I\'m a Sean Fournier fan too, so I knew who you were talking about.\r\n\r\nI think you did a good job of leveling the audio between the talking parts and the music parts. That\'s hard to do properly, so well done... or \"Good on ya\'!\" as Peter64 might say.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(474,1053,'2012-08-21 19:54:43','Mike Hingley','I thought it already existed','Hi Zoke - \r\n\r\nI thought there was already a \'charity\' as such which existed to collect funds for open source and community projects : LinuxFund.org\r\n\r\nI don\'t know how / if we* would be able to use such an organisation, rather than reinventing the wheel (so to say), but even if we can\'t there is at least a template under which it could be established \r\n\r\n*by we I don\'t just mean HPR but all of the podcasts out there...','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(475,1056,'2012-08-20 19:49:43','Tris Linnell','Thanks!','Hi Ken,\r\nThanks for getting the interview up,\r\nGlad the SD card survived this time :)\r\nTris','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(476,1058,'2012-08-23 05:21:24','davidWHITMAN','HPR Booth at Oggcamp 2012','Ken,\r\n\r\nThe Oggcamp HPR booth looked great! Thanks for the effort and the pictures. \r\n\r\ndw','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(477,1058,'2012-08-25 08:16:17','devspmml','hackspace','the best show sofar from oggcamp.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(478,1063,'2012-09-01 12:21:47','Nerb','','The one really interesting thing in my mind as to rms view of things is that proprietary software should not exist even if it supports free software.\r\n\r\nHence Android, Red Hat Enterprise etc should not be allowed to exist since they mix proprietary software and money made from that with free software.\r\n\r\nHence, if you use a Google licensed Android device or a Linux distro such as for example Ubuntu or Fedora that is partially funded by proprietary software sales you are \"worse than a sucker\" and that is against the views of rms.\r\n\r\nIt also seems like you don\'t really know much BSD-licensed projects that are being used by various companies (even including big scary Apple) actually see contribitions back from those companies as it is still better for them if the community can also work on the features they added. \r\n\r\nThe problem for companies is generally not contributing back, the problem is usually having to open up linked products completely. This is why LGPL seems to be gaining popularity.\r\n\r\nI do think more software should be open, but I don\'t think it\'s likely to happen anytime soon as very few people are willing to pay money to support software that is free as in freedom since they can just get it also free as in beer. As long as proprietary software pays far better per hour for the developers it will still be there, and as long as it is the case I can\'t really blame developers.\r\n\r\nSo donate as much as you can to your favourite projects. If you can get people to donate $20 per hour total to these people it actually means they may be able to live on it.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(479,1063,'2012-09-13 21:00:50','Scott_babu','','Thank you.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(480,1063,'2013-08-24 03:32:19','dangerseeker','Sadly, You are totally wrong ;-)','The freedom RMS (and the GPL) is focussing on, is the freedom of the SOFTWARE, NOT the freedom of the USER!\r\n\r\nDon\'t get me wrong, I am very much in favour of the GPL, but sadly You don\'t seem to understand its implications.\r\n\r\nI think we can agree that the GPL want\'s to preserve the rights of all USERS(!) of the software. But the GPL does this by depriving all USER of an important right that only the AUTHOR of the software has: the right to change the licence!\r\n\r\nWith a \"permissive\" licence (i. e. MIT-licence) the user (of the MIT-licenced software) has the SAME right as the author, namely to change the licence at will (and then distribute it further under the new licensing terms).\r\nAny recipient of the (now closed) software has THE SAME right as the evil guy who has changed the licence: he can download the MIT-licenced software, change it and then change the licence at will, but he has not the same rights concerning the closed version by the evil guy...\r\n\r\nWith permissively licenced software any user of the software has the same rights as the original author!\r\n\r\nWith GPLd software you have 4 rights, with MIT-licenced software you have 5(!) rights.\r\nThe 5th right is to take away any right from the recipient of the software, now licence under YOUR terms...\r\n\r\nThe AUTHOR of GPLd software has the right (as an author) to relicence it under any licence he chooses. The USER of GPLd software does not have the right to relicence the software. This results in the software beeing offered to ALL users under (at least) the GPL.\r\n\r\nThe USER of permissively licenced software has the right to create a new piece of software, even by only changing the licence, based on the original software with his own licensing restrictions added.\r\nThe user of the permissively licenced software has TWO options: Take the permissively licenced software or take the closed version.\r\n\r\nIf this legal right is morally on the up and up can be discussed at a different time...\r\n\r\nThe other points about Big Corporations (TM) fear of GPL software and the viral nature of of the GPL are the product of years of FUD by Microsoft, Apple and other closed source software corporations and the failure of their legal departments to understand the intentions and restrictions of the GPL.\r\n\r\n\r\nYours\r\n\r\ndangerseeker','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(481,1065,'2012-09-11 09:26:29','SabreWolfy','Awesome','Awesome tip! :) I knew about using an Android phone as a wireless hotspot (which requires 3G as the uplink), but using USB tethering means the wireless can be used to connect to a wireless hotspot. Posting this while connected via USB tethering, after my attempts to fix my wireless didn\'t work and I lost wireless completely.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(482,1065,'2012-09-11 16:27:53','Ken Fallon','Agreed','We brought two WireLess Less laptops on line at OggCamp using this trick.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(483,1069,'2012-09-12 04:14:28','dw','','Very good content. Nice job Russ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(484,1081,'2012-09-29 11:28:38','Dave Morriss','Thanks Frank','Interesting episode which will make me learn to use the GIMP properly.\r\n\r\nBy the way, I think the insect in your picture is a Hoverfly, not a wasp. These guys are wasp/bee mimics. See https://beespotter.mste.illinois.edu/topics/mimics/','2022-02-14 13:15:42'),
(485,1083,'2012-10-02 10:50:20','Daniel Beecham','Oh the music.','The music is too loud, it\'s in the way. It should probably just go away completely.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(486,1083,'2012-10-25 13:44:12','pokey','','The music is loud enough to be distracting, but not completely so. It\'s a good episode. I\'m not a programmer, so I had to listen twice to follow along. Thanks for a good episode on an interesting topic, sigflup.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(487,1086,'2012-10-01 23:16:29','pokey','Great show!','That was so much fun to listen to. I wish I could have been there. Klaatu is one of my favorite people on Earth, and it was the highlight of my day to hear him get smacked down about the hover fly. :p Bravo! ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(488,1086,'2012-10-11 17:19:30','Krayon','/dev/random\'s Atom feed','pegwole! Shame on you sir! /dev/random has had an Atom feed since episode 1:\r\n https://devrandomshow.org/feed.php?f=atom.xml\r\n\r\nAnd yes, there\'s a link on the main page :P','2022-02-14 13:15:42'),
(489,1091,'2012-10-25 11:53:45','klaatu','great info','Hey, thank you so much for this episode. I have long wanted to beef up my vim installs. It seems, somehow, that emacs so famously does that, and yet no one in the vim world seems to talk about it all that much, so i was really struggling to find the good plugins for vim. \r\n\r\nThis episode was exactly what i needed! thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(490,1092,'2012-10-09 14:02:59','Morten Juhl-Johansen Zölde-Fejér','Linux in the Ham Shack','May be worth also linking Linux in the Ham Shack podcast:\r\nhttps://lhspodcast.info/','2022-02-14 13:15:42'),
(491,1094,'2013-01-15 02:24:25','nancy','','Hi fiftyonefifty, I was wondering whatever happened to the podbrewers podcast. Now that you introduced me to it, there haven\'t been any new ones! Am I the only female who listens to that podcast?','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(492,1096,'2012-10-17 01:21:18','Kevin O\'Brien','Another Keepass plus','Keepass is also available as a Portable App at portableapps.com. Just put it in a thumb drive and you can have your passwords with you at all times.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(493,1096,'2012-10-18 23:56:23','Jonathan Kulp','don\'t forget autocomplete','Hi Frank, very nice episode about keepassX. I just started using this about 3 months ago as well. One killer feature you didn\'t mention is autocompletion, doing Ctrl+Shift+N from inside a login field (or Ctrl+V from inside KeepassX) & having keepassx fill in both fields for you & press enter. It\'s awesome. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(494,1096,'2012-10-25 13:37:00','pokey','This sounds great','Good job on the show, and good job describing this software. I really should give this one a try. Thank you, Frank.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(495,1097,'2012-10-17 00:49:27','pokey','Syndicated Thursday Tuesday','It\'s a unique idea, but I like that we\'re trying it. It shows that we aren\'t afraid to take chances.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(496,1098,'2012-10-17 19:51:53','AukonDK','Great first episode!','Very Entertaining.\r\nI had a Spectrum 48k as a child and remember playing Jet Set Willy. My parents tell me a story of how they found me as a toddler, eating cheese from the fridge because they had been too distracted by JSW to feed me.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(497,1098,'2012-10-18 14:20:34','Frank','','This started my day with a smile.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(498,1098,'2012-10-18 16:33:41','Ken Fallon','Top of the Pops','I did just that. Do that now and it\'s copyright infringement. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(499,1098,'2012-10-19 09:07:11','Les \"Chief\" Pounder','Great show','Well done Becky, this was a very entertaining show. It\'s nice to hear a little back story about people in the Linux community.\r\n\r\nCongratulations on your first solo podcast.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(500,1098,'2012-10-25 13:34:44','pokey','Yaaaaaaay, Becky!','We\'ve been waiting on pins and needles for your first show. We all knew you could do it. I\'m thrilled that you know it now too. It was a very good show too - really a lot of fun to listen to. It was one of those shows that had people giving me funny looks, because I was listening to it (and smiling and laughing about it) out in a semi-public place while I worked. Keep \'em coming!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(501,1098,'2012-10-26 09:37:30','Becky Newborough','Thanks everyone','You have all left such nice comments that I may be tempted to record another podcast for your listening pleasure. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(502,1098,'2012-11-07 17:13:23','pokey','','\"You have all left such nice comments that I may be tempted to record another podcast for your listening pleasure.\"\r\n\r\nThat\'s what we\'re hoping.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(503,1101,'2012-10-23 16:14:15','FiftyOneFifty','','aparanoidshell tells me I likely could have avoided the necessity of taking ownership of volumes by using rsync rather than cp. Good tip.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(504,1101,'2012-10-23 18:44:27','AukonDK','Good stuff','Nice little episode 5150. I always avoided the encrypted home option for fear of exactly something like this happen. Good to know it is fixable.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(505,1101,'2012-10-25 17:38:15','FiftyOneFifty','','BTW, this one and I believe TermDucken sound odd be cause on my Um hunt and silence removal, I was was too aggressive removing the spaces between words. I didn\'t hear it playing clips back in Audacity, but it was pronounced when I listened to the whole ep on a mobile player before uploading it. Unfortunately, by that time, I needed to focus on other tasks and let the editing I\'d already done stand.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(506,1101,'2012-11-07 17:16:56','pokey','','FiftyOneFifty, It was a good episode regardless. I didn\'t mean to imply that it made the episode hard to listen to, or hard to understand, just unnatural. The content was very good.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(507,1101,'2012-12-10 15:16:33','LOrd Drachenblut','Full Disk Encryption recovery','on the topic of full disk recovery this has been covered on HPR before https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=0447\r\n\r\ncheers','2022-02-14 13:15:43'),
(508,1101,'2013-09-05 11:20:17','bro','','So had almost identical problem. I couldn\'t access the mounted home folder due to access rights. I couldn\'t su into root since I didn\'t have the password. But I could chroot to the current root (on the live distro) which made me root. I am currently copying the files so I will see how it goes','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(509,1102,'2012-10-24 13:24:29','Quvmoh','great show!','thank you!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(510,1102,'2012-10-24 23:50:10','Daniele Rossi','Amen brother!','My friend is an avid listener to your podcast told me about this episode. I stutter, too. In fact, I produce a podcast called Stuttering is Cool over at stutteringiscool.com and co-founded Stutter Social using G+ hangouts.\r\n\r\nWould love to have you come on my show some time. \r\n\r\nAnother thing I hate about the misconceptions about stuttering is people who are compelled to finish my sentences. But nothing beats \"Did you forget your name?\"','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(511,1102,'2012-10-25 00:05:35','Frank','','Thank you.\r\n\r\nI think your telling this story will undoubtedly encourage others to try to come out of the withdrawal that perceived inadequacies can impose. \r\n\r\nI knew a guy who could barely read and write, through no fault of his own; I know the energy and effort it took for him to admit it, then to do something about it.\r\n\r\nAny testimony that such can be confronted is valuable.\r\n\r\nYou did good.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(512,1102,'2012-10-25 00:42:50','stutterrockstar','','Love your honesty. It\'s hard dealing with people who don\'t understand stuttering. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(513,1102,'2012-10-25 13:13:56','pokey','This was a great episode.','I don\'t think I could call this a \"fun\" episode, but it was certainly an important one. You did a good job of covering a difficult and personal topic, and you expressed some ideas in a way that I can only describe as \"beautiful.\" Well done, Door.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(514,1102,'2012-10-30 16:22:22','AukonDK','Inspirational.','Thank you for sharing this with the world Door. Hearing your story only makes me appreciate your work more.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(515,1103,'2012-10-25 11:52:24','deepgeek','More, Please','Hi, Epicanus,\r\nI, for one, want to hear about your RAID/btrfs experiments!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(516,1103,'2012-10-25 13:24:45','pokey','Fantastic!!!','Wow, what a good job! Without any exaggeration whatsoever, I can say that this episode is well thought out, well executed, thorough, serious, important, technical, political and funny all at the same time. Of our 1103 episodes so far, this one is solidly in the top 20 (perhaps top 10) imo. I wish I could put out an episode this good. Bravo.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(517,1103,'2012-10-26 18:25:20','Epicanis','Et tu, DeepGeek?','\"Hi, Epicanus\"\r\n\r\nDagnabbit - I\'ve had this pseudonym for about two DECADES now, and suddenly in the last year this starts happening.\r\n\r\nI want to once again assure everyone that the exit of my digestive system is entirely unremarkable. There is nothing \"epic\" about it at all!\r\n\r\nThanks for the encouragement - I\'ll put together something on my btrfs experiment and a couple of other topics on my list!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(518,1103,'2012-10-27 13:58:48','Quvmoh','have to comment on two in one week','entertaining and informative, thank you!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(519,1103,'2012-10-30 16:17:47','AukonDK','Fabulous!','Great episode! Feeling pretty inadequate comparing my own efforts to this wonderfully and effortlessly funny performance. However, the message behind it is very encouraging and inspires me to step up my game.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(520,1103,'2012-10-31 11:25:05','JonTheNiceGuy (jon@sprig.gs | show@cchits.net)','A great episode & Media Conversion','Hi Epicanis,\r\n\r\nJust wanted to thank you for producing such an excellent show, which explains this subject so very well.\r\n\r\nI\'d love to discuss this subject with you (and, well, frankly anyone - email addresses are above), but in particular, the media converter project you mention.\r\n\r\nI already have a large chunk of this in my CCHits.net show generator code: https://gitorious.org/cchits-net/website-rewrite/blobs/master/CLI/library.php\r\n\r\nI\'d love to help out, or at the very least, talk about it further!\r\n\r\nAll the best,\r\n\r\nJon \"The Nice Guy\" Spriggs','2022-02-14 13:15:43'),
(521,1103,'2012-10-31 15:24:14','Ken Fallon','Join the dev mail list','Hi Jon/anyone else that wants to help\r\n\r\nPlease join the dev mail list at https://hackerpublicradio.org/mailman/listinfo/dev_hackerpublicradio.org\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:15:43'),
(522,1103,'2012-10-31 21:56:46','Epicanis','Guess I\'d better get to work!...','Quvmoh: Thanks for the encouragement!\r\n\r\nAukonDK: Bear in mind that it took me over a year of labor to make it seem \"effortless\", and in that time you put out *three* episodes, so I don\'t think you\'re doing too bad at all!\r\n\r\nJonTheNiceGuy: Thanks, I\'ll shoot you and email. I\'ve slowed down a bit on the project just because I got it to the \"barely minimally functional\" stage (I can now upload a .wav file, fill in the metadata, and have it fire off the process to successfully generate a .opus file from it, including [I think] \"album art\"). Still a lot to tackle, though. \r\n\r\nI\'m also working on a proposed upload form for HPR submissions that I need to get done, but I\'ll probably post the three topic ideas I have going for my next HPR submissions over at https://hpr.dogphilosophy.net for discussion soon. (I wasn\'t kidding about inviting people to pester me so I don\'t slack off...)\r\n\r\nThanks, all!','2022-02-14 13:15:44'),
(523,1103,'2012-11-06 20:38:16','Epicanis','Metadata in the media files','Regarding checking to see if the files play okay with the metadata I put in them, and how much of the metadata displays in the player that is used, here are my own results so far:\r\n\r\nVLC 2.0.4 (Linux, x86_64), Ogg: Plays fine, shows Artist, Title (no album art)\r\nVLC 2.0.4, mp3: Shows Artist, Title, Album Art\r\n\r\nFirefox 16 (Linux, x86_64) Ogg: Plays fine. No metadata. (No album art)\r\n\r\nJuK, Ogg: plays fine, shows Artist, Title, Album (no Album art)\r\n\r\nAmarok, Ogg: plays fine, shows Artist, Title, Album (no album art)\r\n\r\nDragon Player, Ogg: plays fine, shows Artist, Title, Album (no album art).\r\n\r\n(kid3 shows the album art, so it\'s in there...)\r\n\r\nWill be testing more and reporting later. Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(524,1103,'2012-11-07 17:07:07','pokey','I\'d love to be a fly on the wall...','Epicanis, and John The Nice Guy: I think listening to the two of you bounce ideas back and forth would make for some great listening! Now, if only there were a place on the internet that the two of you could submit a recording of suck a thing...','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(525,1103,'2012-11-08 01:53:56','Epicanis','More metadata testing','I\'m seriously annoyed to find so few players actually bother to decode album art in Ogg Vorbis files, but I finally DID find one...\r\n\r\nNightingale (fork from \"Songbird\" which dropped Linux) actually decodes and displays album art from hpr1103 corrrectly. Hooray!\r\n\r\nZVUE 250 (hardware mp3/ogg/\"divx\" player from 2006) - plays hpr1103 fine but shows no metadata.\r\n\r\npokey: I\'m not sure if the exchange would be all that interesting to listen to - right now we have several hours to a day or more to consider between replies! I should, however, be including some background on metadata in general in the next episode I do (which should be about geotagging) and in audio files specifically when I get around to doing the followup episode to HPR1103 (probably shortly after the geotagging episode and a shorter/low-priority btrfs one).\r\n\r\n(Also even more about metadata, probably, if I ever get around to doing the topic I\'m currently thinking about after those...)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(526,1103,'2012-11-13 13:39:26','pokey','OOPS!!!','I meant \"such a thing\" not \"suck a thing\"! My dyslexia is getting bad lately. I\'m really sorry I didn\'t catch that while proof reading. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(527,1103,'2012-12-05 02:27:03','Somewhat Reticent','Test listen cut short','Near-inaudible conversation invaded by full-volume horns results in hostile reaction. Sorry. \r\nI mute some ads on television for the same behavior. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(528,1103,'2012-12-05 02:39:53','Somewhat Reticent','Thanks for introducing Nightingale','Always good to meet freed software! ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(529,1103,'2012-12-11 21:30:55','dann','playback on sansa clip zip +','the ogg file worked just fine. I did not see any album art, but it did display the information and play without a hiccup.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(530,1103,'2012-12-16 18:27:06','Epicanis','Misplaced comments/Thanks Dann!','Looks like a couple of commenters ended up here instead of on whatever episode they were commenting on?\r\n\r\nThanks for testing, Dann - does the Clip Zip+ show album art for anything (mp3 or otherwise)?\r\n(I know my v1 Clip doesn\'t, and I don\'t think the other tiny Sansa device I have does either).','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(531,1108,'2012-11-04 02:52:06','AukonDK','Nice','Nice little ep. I\'m a Rockbox fan myself and it served me well before I got an android phone.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(532,1110,'2012-11-05 13:35:09','pokey','Cool episode','This was really neat. I\'m not a Dr. Who fan (in fact the theramin show opening music form the \'80s used to scare the hell out of me), but when I hear stuff like this, how cool the fans are, I sort of want to be.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(533,1110,'2012-11-05 13:59:30','klaatu','Brilliant episode, thanks','Wow this was so informative, so cool, and to top it off had music created with Zynaddsubfx. Where did this episode come from? what did we do to deserve such greatness? Thank you!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(534,1111,'2012-11-07 16:56:48','pokey','Another great monthly roundup show.','I enjoy these so much, wehether I\'m on them or not. I did really want to be on this one, but a flu kept me in bed all that day. I\'m really missing being on these.\r\n\r\nFiftyonefifty kicked himself a whole bunch, and I don\'t think he deserved most of his self inflicted punishment. However I owe him one kick: He incorrectly attributed the me with the idea for the New Year\'s Show. It was in fact Ken Fallon\'s idea (and it was a great idea), and it was the HPR community, all together, that pulled it off. From setting up the servers, to providing the audio content, the HPR community did it all. We pulled together and produced an event so good that I don\'t even have enough words to describe what happened here. All I did was volunteer to record it. I would be a fraud if I took any more credit for it than that. \r\n\r\nI am forever thankful to the people of this community for letting me be a part of it.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(535,1113,'2012-11-09 13:42:21','pokey','TermDuckEn','A terminal within a terminal within a terminal... now I get it. Nice one.\r\n\r\nFor all of our sane listeners, I\'ll try to explain it. A TurDuckEn is a revolting exercise in excess where a small hen is stuffed into a duck, and that is stuffed into a turkey for roasting. ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(536,1114,'2012-11-10 12:05:44','Ken Fallon','Part 2 !!!','Hi dude-man\r\n\r\nWhat a fantastic story. I love hearing about this type of stuff and am inclined to agree with you about the farming. Although as a child growing up on a farm, I couldn\'t wait to get away from it. Now my wife has convinced me that slow food is the way to go.\r\n\r\nPlease consider doing some HPR shows on this topic.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\nWhy hasn\'t the admin put a link to your website and the podcast rss feed. \r\n\r\n@admin -at- hpr \r\n\r\nhttps://dudmanovi.cz/\r\nhttps://feeds.feedburner.com/DudmanoviBlogAboutEverything\r\nhttps://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DudmanoviBlogAboutEverything/~5/RaYoYa6UWx8/Dudmanovi.cz-007-20121007.mp3','2022-02-14 13:16:29'),
(537,1114,'2012-11-13 13:35:49','pokey','Subscribed','I was torn up that you left it at such a cliff hangar (well done and good on ya\'). Now I\'ll have to go subscribe to hear the end of your story. Great episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(538,1114,'2012-11-13 18:31:45','AukonDK','Subbed!','Enjoyed this a lot, great to hear the story of a fellow ex-pat living in Europe. Will have to find time to listen to the back catalog.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(539,1114,'2012-12-05 21:42:53','Jill','Thank you','THANKYOU ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(540,1116,'2012-11-12 20:36:38','Vincent','Nice work!','I do enjoy RMS interviews.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(541,1116,'2012-11-13 02:47:24','kt4kb_Jon','hpr1116 :: Interview with Richard Stallman','That was a great interview. I have a better understanding of what Mr. Stallman stands for.... Many thanks! ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(542,1116,'2012-11-13 03:52:15','Quvmoh','great interview','I always suffer for the interviewer when it comes to mr Stallman but you did an awesome job!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(543,1116,'2012-11-13 13:31:34','pokey','Thank you','I love HPR, and I\'m thrilled when you guys enjoy one of my episodes. It means a lot to me that you guys liked it. \r\n\r\nOf course I welcome criticism as well, so if you have any I\'ll try to use it to make my future efforts better.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(544,1116,'2012-11-14 19:51:52','Broam','It was a very happy birthday','I had to mute my mic so quickly once he started singing. I was *howling* with laughter.\r\n\r\nThanks for the present, pokey.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(545,1116,'2012-11-15 19:44:24','Garjola','Great interview','Hey Pokey, that was an impressive work you did there. You were tactful, kind yet you asked very interesting questions on controversial matters.\r\n\r\nAt the end of the interview you said very important and true things that I agree completely on: he is a hero for us and we wouldn\'t be here if he had not initiated the Free Software movement.\r\n\r\nThank you, very, very much for this interview.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(546,1116,'2013-07-25 09:37:23','Jamison','Student','Awesome, Thanks. \r\n\r\nFound it from: https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-newbie-8/what-is-everyone%27s-opinion-about-the-free-software-foundation-4175470331/','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(547,1116,'2013-07-25 10:17:11','Jamison','Student','(Sorry as you can see from my links I edit my posts and should have asked\\mentioned) Wonder why he dose not program any more? (if you could add this to my thanks^?) :)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(548,1116,'2013-08-03 10:47:06','Josef Donnington','','Superb interview.\r\n\r\nIt enabled me to answer the following questions, that were posted on my blog by a guy called Tony.\r\n\r\n------------------------\r\nTony:\r\n\r\nIf you go to a backery and buy a cake, is it unethical if you don’t get the recipe as well?\r\nIf you buy a radio, is it unethical if you don’t get the construction plans for it?\r\nIf you buy some software, is it unethical if you don’t get the source-code?\r\nIf you buy a processor, is it unethical if you don’t get the “hardware description language”-description of the processor?\r\n\r\nStallman sees it as an ethical issue. Maby he is ultimately right. I simply don’t know.\r\nHe’s right that sharing is a good thing.\r\nBut is it really an ethical issue whether or not you get some recipe, construction plans or source-code??\r\n\r\n---------------\r\n\r\n\r\nAnalyzing this...\r\n\r\nTony wrote: \"If you go to a backery and buy a cake, is it unethical if you don’t get the recipe as well?\"\r\n\r\nThe analogy between recipe and source code, in the way you present it, is flawed.\r\n\r\nLet me explain: the cake is the OUTPUT of the recipe. If a recipe is freedomrespecting (by allowing unrestricted use, modification, and distribution with out without modification), then this does not apply to the OUTPUT, i.e. the cake. Put another way: the cake (output) is not the corresponding source of the recipe-steps performed. (See https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1116 at tracktime 30:58)\r\n\r\nTo fix the analogy. Here\'s an example of a violation of \"freedomrespecting recipes\":\r\nAssume a recipe-seller states: \"all my recipes are freedomrespecting.\" You then decide to purchase from him a recipe-executor-black-box, and a number of recipes on USB-stick. At home you plug in the recipes-USB-stick into the recipe-executor-black-box and select \"Grandma\'s ultraspecial chocolate cake\". The executor-black-box removes some ingredients from the connected ingredients-containers (flour, sugar, chocolate, etc.). You cannot see what\'s going on inside, but after one-and-a-half hours... out comes a cake!\r\nSo you tell yourself: well that\'s great, but I want to bake this cake with my own hands and change the steps slightly. You connect the recipes-USB-stick to your own computer, expecting to find the steps. But low and behold: you find that the \"recipes\" are only in a machine-readable binary format, that you cannot decipher them.\r\nThis is a freedomrespecting recipe violation!!! If the recipes really were free, you would have received not only the binary format, but the steps of the recipe in human-readable english as well!\r\n\r\nNow lets say you have aquired a freedomrespecting recipe for a cake (and here I really mean a free recipe, in that it is not obfuscated or coded; but instead a description of steps). Lets say you have a bakery and sell a customer the cake (baked according to the recipe): do you have to give the customer the recipe?\r\nNo, since the cake is the output. You are not selling the customer the steps to produce the cake.\r\n\r\nBut now you might try and apply this to software and say: \"But look here: the binary program is the output of the source code. So if you pass on the binary program, you don\'t have to pass on the souce code, right?\"\r\nThis would be a misunderstanding, since the program is NOT the output of the source code. Instead: the program is merely the output of a compiler. But the binary program is a direct transformation of the source code: The steps in the program, are still the steps in the source code. We say: the source code is the \"CORRESPONDING SOURCE\" of the program binary.\r\nThus with free software, the software ... in all the forms it is distributed: binary, etc. needs to include the \"corresponding source\", that give one the freedom to modify it.\r\n\r\n\r\nTony wrote: \"If you buy a radio, is it unethical if you don’t get the construction plans for it?\"\r\nThis analogy between construction plans and souce code is also flawed.\r\nThe construction plans can be free (freedomrespecting). But the construction plans are not the corresponding source of the radio: The radio does not perform the construction steps. The radio does not have a corresponding source, since it is the output of the construction steps.\r\n\r\n\r\nTony wrote: \"If you buy some software, is it unethical if you don’t get the source-code?\"\r\nDepends on your view. You can certainly argue: yes. First off: the steps the program runs, are the steps that are described in the source code. Furthermore: if the program runs on a general purpose computer, then you could easily change it (lets say it is not software that is burned into a ROM for an applianc like a toaster.) Then it is only fitting that you should really be able to make use of this possibility (changing the program on your computer), and that requires a form of the program that is best suited to do that job: the corresponding souce. \r\nOn the other hand: If you have proprietary software, then - even though you are running the software on a device that easily allows changes - the owner of the propriertary software has deliberately decided to make this difficult or illegal for you to do. Then only the owner controls the program, and you might be called a fool for using it.\r\n\r\n\r\nIf you buy a processor, is it unethical if you don’t get the “hardware description language”-description (HDL) of the processor?\r\n\r\nDepends on your intent: do you want to analyze what the processor\'s logic is doing, and then have the possiblity to make changes to the processor and create your own (with the guarantee that your logic will be on the chip [and not some fab\'s back-door logic])? \r\nIf you buy a processor created by a fab with modern photolithography, then you get a chip that you cannot change. In that case you don\'t need the HDL-description. BUT: if you buy the whole fab itself (oh: so you have those billions of dollars?!), then you have the possibility to make changes. In that case you\'d be a fool, if you don\'t insist on getting all steps, and descriptions, etc. for making the processor chip, and being able to change it, for example if the chip happens to have a serious bug! If you cannot fix the chips hardware-bug, you\'ll probably be out of business very soon.\r\n\r\nIf on the other hand you buy a FPGA (not so expensive: say 500 dollars or cheaper), and the processor is synthesized on that FPGA, then you can change the hardware-description (via the HDL) and load the changes onto the FPGA. In that case, you\'d be a fool, if you don\'t get the freedomrespecting HDL-description (e.g. in Verilog or VHDL code), in order to actually do that.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nThe free software definition (of Stallman), applies to the source code and to the binary program. The 2 (source and binary) are linked: the steps in the binary program are the steps in the source code: they are just a transformed version of the same thing. Except that one is easy to change (source code) and the other is incredibly difficult to change (binary program).\r\nThe source code is the corresponding source of the binary program. Free software gives you the freedom to make changes (that you can realistically realize, since that\'s what you can do on general purpose computers), by providing you with the corresponding source.\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:29'),
(549,1116,'2013-08-03 11:54:26','Ken Fallon','Josef Donnington - Record this as a show','Hi Josef,\r\n\r\nYou should record this as a show.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(550,1116,'2014-02-19 01:56:21','pokey','','Josef Donnington:\r\nI have to say, I agree with Ken on this one. :)\r\n\r\nGarjola, Jamison, Broam, Vincent, Josef, Ken, KrazyTelemarketer, Quvmoh and everyone else: Thank you so much for listening. I was thrilled to have the chance to do the interview, and I\'m so grateful to the HPR community, for building up the reputation of the \"brand\" of HPR. Interviewing RMS was and is so far out of my league that I never would have thought that I could have done it on my own. But doing such a bold thing on behalf of HPR seemed perfectly natural. Obvoiusly doing something on someone\'s behalf also comes with certain responsibilities, like maintaining if not advancing HPR\'s reputation, and I try so hard to do that when I do something bold for HPR. I can\'t thank all you guys enough for your positive feedback. It makes me feel like I succeeded in my responsibilities to HPR while I borrowed the HPR name to do something risky and fun.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(551,1120,'2012-11-23 15:22:15','AukonDK','Sweet!','Tried out Razor-QT earlier in the year but ended up getting some more memory and running KDE. Was going to move to XFCE to make things snappier but certainly gonna check out Razor again.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(552,1120,'2012-11-25 22:37:51','deepgeek','Wish for a all-qt system','I do like the idea of an all-qt system, but IMHO, there are two things holding it back.\r\n\r\n1) email - no lightweight alternative to kmail. There is a heave mysql based client listed at qt-apps.org, and the one listed on the razor-qt site is an imap-only client.\r\n\r\n2) webrowser - needs a lightweight one that can have cookie & javascript whtielisting. A choice between gecko and webkit would be nice, but not imperative.\r\n\r\nPersonally, I can\'t get away from having a \"mixed system.\" Most annoying thing for me is having a different \"file chooser\" dialog box for everything.\r\n\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(553,1120,'2012-12-01 18:47:12','Klaatu','Wish for a all-qt system','deepgeek:\r\n1) mutt in a qt-based terminal technically qualifies, right ;-)\r\n\r\n2) arora has been forked to flam. you should check it out. I am not sure about the whitelisting stuff, but it\'s a good qt-based browser.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(554,1121,'2012-11-19 23:33:31','klaatu','In this episode','I continue my Networking Basics series with a SAMBA howto.\r\n\r\nJust thought you should know.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(555,1133,'2012-12-06 16:49:12','pokey','Good idea','I loved the tea break with the HPR promo in the middle. It was a great idea. It reminds me of one of Klaatu\'s coffee breaks on Gnu World Order. I\'m really sorry that it didn\'t execute as well as it was planned.\r\n\r\nI\'m guessing that you did that in audacity, and I\'d bet that either one of two things happened. Just guesses, but:\r\n\r\n1.) you didn\'t unlink the tracks before pasting it in, or\r\n\r\n2.) you used \"truncate silence\" before \"mix and render\" \r\n\r\nThe first thing would be pretty obvious, so it probably wasn\'t that. The second would have removed the silence somewhere off screen if you had been zoomed in enough. If it was neither of those two things, I\'d be really interested to find out what you think caused it.\r\n\r\nFor anyone using audacity, one suggestion is to use the high speed playback and listen to the whole track before your final save and export. If it\'s a track that you edited, then listening to it at 2X is fairly easy to do, even if you aren\'t used to listening to audio at that speed, because you\'re used to listening to that track.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(556,1133,'2012-12-08 17:55:20','Dick Thomas','ooops','yeah, used truncate silence. tbh it was my 1st ever time installing and using audactiy so I was stumbling around lot but I will try harder next time','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(557,1133,'2012-12-14 12:56:01','pokey','','Yup. Truncate silence is good, but if you\'re doing multi-track, then you want to truncate the silence in your source tracks before they are combined into the same project, or as the very last thing that you do before exporting, but certainly after \"mix and render.\"\r\n\r\nIt was a good episode regardless. I\'m looking forward to the next one.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(558,1134,'2012-12-08 23:29:06','Lola Lariscy','','Space Janitors is awesome!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(559,1136,'2012-12-11 20:01:31','Heisenbug','Great show','Nice show, and your voice sounds very clear even when sped up to 1.75X (which I listen to your podcast at)','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(560,1136,'2012-12-13 18:46:44','pokey','Great stuff','I\'m looking forward to this series. I took a MS Word class back in college... Oh, how wrong it all was!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(561,1137,'2012-12-13 18:43:58','pokey','','OpenStreetMap is a fantastic project, it\'s very easy to get involved. Contrary to popular belief, you don\'t need any special hardware. The online editor overlays the editable, map over satellite imagery so you can basically just trace and label what you see.\r\n\r\nFor people who need a goal in order get started on a project, here are two easy ones which will improve the map tremendously:\r\n\r\n1.) Learn how to label a street as one-way, and correct all the one-ways in your neighborhood.\r\n\r\n2.) Learn how to label a section of road as a bridge, and how to specify that the bridge is higher than what it is intersecting, then label all of the bridges in your town.\r\n\r\nThe first one is easier, and should take you about 5-20 minutes to learn, and maybe an evening to complete. The second one is a little trickier, and may take you an evening to learn (if you don\'t do the first one first), and another evening to complete. Currently, both of these things seem to be a real problem for navigation apps that use OSM data. So correcting either will make a huge difference to someone trying to navigate in your area.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(562,1138,'2012-12-13 17:04:36','cobra2','DUDE!','What an awesome show. Thanks for the show notes and going in depth like that. I love it. Keep it up man.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(563,1138,'2012-12-13 18:18:36','pokey','Nice!!!','You just taught me more about python in 10 minutes than I was able to learn in a week when I tried it on my own. I may have to give it another go.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(564,1142,'2012-12-19 10:00:08','calum','loved the show','loved the show, listened to it on my ipod before i sell iPod to Gadgets but now ive bought an excellant radio so will never miss a show','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(565,1144,'2012-12-23 16:45:50','chalkahlom','','enjoyed the cast.\r\nbut no mention of librivox.org hmm!','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(566,1149,'2012-12-28 15:27:09','FiftyOneFifty','Optimal zoom','You probably already went over this, but my pet peeve is word processors that default to a page view that only utilizes a third of the width of the screen, making text tiny, and people whose job it is to type up correspondence every day leave it that way because they don\'t know better. I prefer \'optimal\' over \'page width\'; why would I want to see the white sace in the margins?','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(567,1152,'2013-01-08 13:45:44','Dude-man','Links I should have added to notes/mumble chat','I should have added these two links, related to nutionaly dense food we chatted about.\r\n\r\nhttps://westonaprice.org \r\n\r\nhttps://realmilk.com','2022-02-14 13:16:29'),
(568,1156,'2013-01-08 13:44:01','Dude-man','What is healthy food','Really enjoying listening to the talk about food :) I love good food, my weekness or perhaps strength.\r\n\r\nWould love to get together with a few people and chat more in an HPR episode if anyone is interested.\r\n\r\nJust a few comments - :)\r\n\r\nSalt is inportant - but needs to be mineral rich not just processed sodium etc\r\n\r\nVegtables/fruits are not healthy per say, and shouldn\'t be emphasised. But like all food it needs to be processed appropriatly, most vegtables could be beter fermented, or/and consumed with lots of butter, whats more they taste so much better that way.\r\n\r\nGrass fed is started to be used like all the other terms to sell and make something sound better. But it does make a difference the percentage of grass/hay fed to cattle, 100 % being best IMHO, which we do with our cows. So ask awkward questions to know what grass fed actually means when you pay more money for it.\r\n\r\nNice conversations\r\n\r\nHeres the link to what I think is a great source of info for anyone interested in scientific studies done in the 1920/30\'s with actual people who lived on the foods for many generations. And documents what happened to them when they changed to modernized foods a few years later. Something I think most thoughfull geeks would appriciate instead of many of the crazy nutrunists go on about.\r\n\r\nhttps://westonaprice.org \r\nhttps://realmilk.com','2022-02-14 13:16:30'),
(569,1156,'2013-01-08 14:52:14','Stacy','Newtotheshow','The food talk deserves its own pod-cast, with the same guys. It almost got a tad argumentative, but in a good natural way. I actually learned something. Hope they consider it in the future. I would defiantly listen. \r\n\r\nNot sure if it was an inside joke amongst the regulars, but the drunk guy \'web\' got really tiresome in part 5 and almost unbearable in part 6. I guess he\'s the boss, because it seems nobody wanted cut him off. Not all bad, thanks to the drunk guy I learned about crunchbang. What a cool distro! Other than that it was a great set of shows. \r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(570,1156,'2013-01-15 18:02:45','pokey','','Stacy: Sorry about that. I didn\'t want to kick anyone. I just don\'t have it in me to hurt people\'s feelings, and I guess I was afraid that I would have done that.\r\n\r\nNo one\'s really in charge, but I was a moderator on the server at the time so it would have been up to me if it had needed to be done. There\'s a fine line between moderating and being the \"fun police\" and I really didn\'t want to be the latter. Most of us who were on the show know (or at least know of) one another, so that makes it even harder to be harsh. \r\n\r\nThere are a couple of us who have had one or two too many on an open mic recently (myself included), and you\'re right that it isn\'t any fun to listen to (especially when it\'s yourself, trust me...) even if it seems fun at the time. I don\'t personally mind if someone wants to drink on a podcast, but I\'ve decided not to do anymore, because I was rude, annoying and repetitive when I did it. Maybe that should be the cutoff for future community shows: If you sound as bad as pokey did that one time, you\'re out.\r\n\r\nI appreciate your feedback, and I do take it to heart. We\'ll try to do better next year.\r\n\r\nIf you want to suggest a more formal guideline, feel free to run it past the mailing list hpr@hackerpublicradio.org and we will certainly discuss it. Even better would be if you subscribed to the mailing list and discussed it with us also.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(571,1158,'2013-01-12 09:48:11','Dude-man','More information for the interested','Well just listening back to myself and others about food etc and the FDA and fake,. bad and dishonest science in nutirition which effects our children. Heres a video, 2 hours and I\'d really sugest, encourage following along and following the leads for yourself.\r\n\r\nhttps://youtu.be/fvKdYUCUca8\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nAnd of course \r\nhttps://westonaprice.com\r\nhttps://realmilk.com\r\n\r\nAnd another thing is learning dificulties and different degrees of Autisum which is growing now a days, there is a transitional diet, with much information of success in helping these children, and again not yet know in the mainstream https://www.westonaprice.org/childrens-health/gaps','2022-02-14 13:16:30'),
(572,1159,'2013-01-11 16:38:06','Charles in NJ','Thanks for Posting This','It sounds like we now have another new conversational direction for HPR. I thought you did a great job of setting the table for what could be a series on the topic of food.\r\n\r\nYour show, coming as it does in the early part of the year, gives me an opportunity to do my own homework and check your statements.\r\n\r\nIf I find any new information that would shed light on this topic, I would now feel comfortable using HPR to make that available.\r\n\r\nMost of all, thanks for posting this as a first word in what could be a very interesting conversation. It sounds like you\'ve done a lot of work and thinking about this fundamental topic.\r\n\r\nCheers!\r\n\r\nCharles in NJ','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(573,1159,'2013-01-12 09:50:25','Dude-man','Something else, more hard facts a video','Heres a video, 2 hours and I\'d really sugest, encourage following along and following the leads for yourself.\r\n\r\nhttps://youtu.be/fvKdYUCUca8\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nAnd another thing is learning dificulties and different degrees of Autisum which is growing now a days, there is a transitional diet, with much information of success in helping these children, and again not yet know in the mainstream https://www.westonaprice.org/childrens-health/gaps','2022-02-14 13:16:30'),
(574,1159,'2013-01-13 20:39:36','Ken Fallon','Tales from the green valley','Hi All,\r\n\r\nI would recommend that everyone interested in this topic, take the time to watch the excellent \"Tales from the Green Valley\" which describes life on a British farm in the 17th century prior to industrialization. In the series has historians live the life, eat the diet and farm using the husbandry practices that were in use at the time. \r\n\r\nInterestingly everything described in the entire series is based on an account written in books and letters of people who actually lived at the time and who themselves documented their own lives. They make a point of giving the reference to the person who documented it and in what book or letter it was published. Unfortunately I didn\'t make note of each of the references but it would be fascinating resource to get the first hand accounts from people who lived the life and see how that compares to someone viewing it as a complete outsider.\r\n\r\nThe link to the series is here:\r\nhttps://www.petersommer.com/about-peter-sommer-travels/tales-from-the-green-valley\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:16:31'),
(575,1159,'2013-01-17 12:22:37','Dude-man','Re:Tales from the green valley','Just taking a look Ken, was wondering how exactly it was related to the episode, does the video support or appose/question any facts I mentioned, you wern\'t very specific ?','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(576,1159,'2013-01-17 12:47:55','Dude-man','Great examples of the past are historical re-enactments by book experts.','Just watched again these episodes on youtube... here are some thoughts.\r\n\r\n\"modern health and safty means they can\'t actually live here\"\r\n :)\r\n\r\nNice get a bunch of experts to try and recreate something, and prove its not possible.\r\n\r\nAn expert who\'s never actually plowed before :) oxen that are overweight and out of condition, I\'m talking about the tv people, not neccessarily the ox owners., just guessing as it is for TV after all.\r\n\r\nits really an interesting demonstation that even apparent experts can\'t quickly learn skills even though they are very exicited to try, and perhaps well meaning to at least recreate history., and create some TV at the same time\r\n\r\nwatching idiots chasing pigs was very funny :)\r\n\r\nbut still there is no mention of anything relating to my episode that I can see ?\r\n\r\nAre you trying to say that this serious shows that people can\'t go back to those times, as show and apparently demonstated in these self proclaimed experts playing at recreating somthing.? That wasn\'t what I thought I was saying in the episode, at least no my intention.\r\n\r\nAlthought the serious is interesting, I don\'t fully see how its related to my episde, or modern homesteading, other than to demonstate that modern people are pretty inept and out of touch about what is food, where it comes from, and what is good for them, and of course how to live in nature and produce their own food.\r\n\r\nI know Ken, as you explained to me you grew up on a small dairy farm in Irland and have experience, as I do, in mowing grass/milking etc and it didn\'t sound like you\'d ever want to go back, and the way you explained it I\'d have to agree with you, however I concioulsly chose to do it at the age of 30, relearn all the skills required using modern technology where appropriate and avantagous. Basicly bringing the knowledge about food and change in the shape of our children it effects to allow me or anyone else to make concious descitions as to how they want to live, not just seeing a crude historical re-inactment with no relation as to why they might want to return to any of the values of living with nature and having healthy food.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(577,1159,'2013-01-19 06:05:28','Jacob Dalton','Hacking and Permaculture','Dude-Man I was wondering if you\'ve heard of Open Source Ecology--it\'s a project that is pretty much built out of hacking and permaculture.\r\n\r\nhttps://opensourceecology.org/','2022-02-14 13:16:31'),
(578,1159,'2013-01-19 10:29:19','Ken Fallon','RE: Great examples of the past are historical re-enactments by book experts.','Have you watched the entire series or did you dismiss it just because they were not allowed to sleep in a building that had been derelict for years ? Having watched the entire series your comments seem to contradict everything I got from the show. Even if you seem to think it\'s a crude historical re-enactment, I am very disappointed that you could not see past that and notice as I did that as the series progresses they each hone their particular skills. Case in point the Oxen and the men develop their muscles and take pleasure and satisfaction from the hard labour so that by the end the humans and animals had formed genuine bonds. \r\n\r\nHowever we are all entitled to our opinions so to make it clear, what I was trying to point out is that there is a wealth of information available to you on living with nature and having healthy food from the writings of peoples who lived prior to the onset of Industrialization. While you may mock the historians who like yourself were attempting to recreate the skills lost to time, the information they were basing their actions on was written by people who will have used those skills all their lives. Those peoples left detailed records of their traditions, practices, diets, technology describing how life was lived for centuries. If you can see past the reality show aspects, you might want to chase down the books that they mention in the show which should be out of copyright by now. There is probably an equivalent stock of literature available to you from the Czech Republic.\r\n\r\nIn your show you mentioned that the families were inaccessible in the winter, so I understand Weston A Price would have only seen the societies during a time of plenty. He may have seen them as healthy people and attributed it to their diet, which given he was only there for the summer would have been full of rich fatty foods. This would seem to agree with what the historians say the diet of a homesteader would have been in the summer. This would seem to back up your point of giving our children rich fatty foods as the evidence as presented would suggest that this would lead to health.\r\n\r\nHowever as the historians point out, during the winter their diet changed radically to the point of starvation. I don\'t know if Dr. Price took this into account or not but if you assume that he did then the advice to eat fatty foods should be given with the caveat that it should be for a short period of time and that you should also starve yourself for a significant portion of the year. If you wish to eat a pre-industrialised diet, then research that diet and present it in it\'s entirety with evidence from multiple sources. Sources which this television series proves are available to you.','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(579,1159,'2013-01-19 12:13:36','Dude-man','Sorry but you\'ve not studied much yet ?','Yes, to the best of my knowledge about a year ago, when I first came accross the whole BBC historical episodes, I watch the whole thing. Which is one of the problems with youtube, you can spend many hours watching everything in one go, loved it. And don\'t get me wrong I enjoyed it very much, have first hand learnt or at least tried many of the skills to varying degrees of success over the last 10 years, really about my whole journey is to actually comprehending technology, and I mean in its real definition of the word, hence why I started my own podcast on T E C H N O L O G Y and not just how techknology is being presented by computer/gadget tech journalism and sellers etc (Nothing against them, I love a bit of computer tech as much as the next man). \r\n\r\nThe reason I replied to you reference to these programs is that I didn\'t see exactly how it was related to the dietary information and the shapes and builds of children/adjults when different foods were eaten. The evidences I based the whole episode where in the notes, which you or anyone else is free to follow up and research into the actual information given. The food\'s and habits and hense health was already modified during those periods historically reconstructed in the BBC\'s series, and many of the practices were actually the start of what we now have and consider normal today. Also many of the practices shown are actually part of the reason why many people could be fooled into leaving the country side, where they should be healthy and happy, to the city from the false promise of an easy and more afluent life without the drudgery and ill health they HAD come to experience in the country side by actual BAD practices in order to sell often what was the best of their produce, cheaply to the city merchants so the country people could buy cheap low nutrient dense and stomach filling foods. \r\n\r\nIt seems to me that this is something more personal with you as your childhood background on an actual farm has convinsed you that its a bad way to live, and perhaps how you were doing it it was ? I don\'t know ? However when the clever people actually return to the country side, relearn the skills, judge in a balanced way how the old and new can be used together, and more importantly, which was the point of my presentation, actually understand what healthy food is, and educate and share the information to consumers can therefore actually sell direct (no merchants) and get a fair price which would mean they don\'t have to go down the path of continually cutting corners and chepening the food they may sell.\r\n\r\nBefore you quote me yet more things that you think I\'ve not read or don\'t understand, why don\'t you follow up on the information I\'ve shared and look more deeply at what is presented, these things I\'ve mentioned are beyound being merly my own opinion.\r\n\r\nI repeat, the journey towards industrializtion happened gradually, the cheapening of our foods, even in the coutry also was gradual, and in the societies you mention where documention was made these were subject to those slow changes. This is why the book by Weston A Price is such a treasure as he found and studied 14 groups who were isolated, to you understand the significance of that ? they were actually through necessaty following what they had done for many generations and hadn\'t been exposed by the gradual pressuers of external trade and merchants expoloytation which if you had the connections to the larger world would have effected all other peoples.\r\n\r\nAs for not having enough foods during winter time, you are talking nonsense, what you say may be true in that it actually happened. However understanding food technology, how hight quality foods can be harvested and stored for long periods, if you don\'t try and buy suger/coffee and other crap from merchants from presure of wifes or apparent perseption of luxsury, then people would/could of had more than enough food for themselves. Of course assuming the crazy burdon of taxes to cripple people and steal from them wasn\'t also in effect, forcing them to give up their wealth of good foood made from their own labour.\r\n\r\nI ask you kindly to actually study the two books or website I mention so you can avoid just sounding plain stupid, as your trying to defend you current life position, which I\'m not intentionally trying to undermine. This episode was to upset anyone, just allow anyone make a concious decision based on actual good science. If you look at the foods suggested to eat during religious fasting, for apparent clensing and the times of year these were eaten I can help us think a bit why these rules may have been made, when we understand what those foods actually do to us.\r\n\r\nHave you seen yet the 2 hour video I posted in the comments to these videos ?\r\n\r\nIf you feel so strongly about this, I\'d be happy to talk with you or record another episode with your help, or your wifes, you mention she\'d heard of the books. Otherwise I think it would be better to actually study what I mentioned and comment in relation to those things, not trying to proof that its somehow a burdemsom and toiling life with no meaning and something we can\'t go back to (I think we\'d never want to go back to those historyical times presented in the bbc serious) however there is something to learn and change in our current lifes.\r\n\r\n/END Rant','2017-09-09 07:41:23'),
(580,1159,'2013-01-19 12:29:58','Dude-man','reply to #6 - Jacob Dalton','Yes I\'d come accross opensource technology a few months ago, had a good look but was disapointed. While I love tech, all tech, what I love best is tech that serves us and is practical, I know its possible to get so into building something that we loose site of the forest for the trees, and actually spend all our time re-inventing something that already exists and can be bought cheaply second hand (a tractor, look at his plans for an ultra modern tractor), or not actually being balanced enough to realize that in many areas trying to solve everything with new technology actually negates the human, relationship, family participation and strengh of community gained by doing somethin conciously in a none-modern tech way.\r\n\r\nThe peace of mind, strengh of charictor, bond and depth of relation within family and society at large through picking conciously how we do thing based upon the effect they actually have on us. Which was my whole motivation and reason for developing my podcast, which to be honest I loose interest in a little, nothing personal against you or anyone else.\r\n\r\nA good example for who most of the weston world percieve and practice tech is the USA\'s space pen, millions, perhaps more money to develop a pen that can write upside down etc etc. The Rusians solution, less than a $, a pencil. Sometimes our heads can be so far up our own A?????\'s that we don\'t see the simple solution. \r\n\r\nAnd that is what I took away from that site, no offence meant.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(581,1159,'2013-01-19 17:15:35','Ken Fallon','RE: Sorry but you\'ve not studied much yet ?','Hi Dude-man,\r\n\r\nAs we said on the New Year Show, HPR is about challenging and expanding the discussion and with that in mind what I would like to establish is an alternate source of information to either corroborate or refute the evidence Dr. Price presents. I accept that you are greatly affected by his works but not to challenge the theories would simply be unscientific and would elevate his book to that of a religious work that must be accepted on faith alone. Therefore I want to find a literate people who were isolated in a manner described by Dr. Price and who documented their own lives. By comparing both works we get a fuller picture of the truth.\r\n\r\nI am genuinely surprised that you would say that people in the 1600\'s were already affected by industrialization of the food chain. At the time the only industrialization would have be localized to water mills which were isolated and not available everywhere. The industrialization that you speak of is generally accepted to have started after 1760 a full hundred years after the time period in discussion in the show. \r\n\r\nDo you have a specific time period in mind where the type of life studied by Dr. Price would have been practiced on the Islands of Ireland or England ? The reason I focus on those is because those regions are the places where I am most familiar with and it would greatly assist in my ability to be able to call information to hand. I would appreciate it if you could keep your reply civil and avoiding drawing conclusions about other peoples live choices.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(582,1159,'2013-01-19 20:23:37','Dude-man','Confused','I\'d still suggest that you or anyone interested first look into the souces of information and the actual research that W A Price did do and present in lay persons language for the general good of normal people in his main book. If you consider this or anything I\'ve said religious in some way I\'m sorry for you about that, and you still seem to miss the point. Did you watch the 2 hour video I shared ?\r\n\r\nThe foods we eat are not only effected by the degree of visible industrialization in its production or pressesing, although that does later effect our foods in a very big way, but more importantly our foods and that which our ansesters ate, even back to roman times or perhaps later ? was effected by your position or status in life what you could afford or what you couldn\'t and perhaps actually choise to sell the best in order to by a larger quantity of something of less value or other things that might be anti foods in fact. Industrialization has just made these foods and the effects much more obvious. A choice to eat predomantly low nutrient foods, grain, potatoes, rices, just a few examples and reduce the nutrient dense foods in diets, has happened throughout the ages, for perhaps simular reasons, but I\'m not a historian.\r\n\r\nSo which that I hope you understand the pointless ness in entering into some discussion, along your line of reasoning, as your missing the point through your current lack of knowlege of what actual food is good to eat, which foods would be preferable sold to markets and therefore depriving a family of the best nutrition no mater which time in history you care to look at. The isolated peoples had plenty, generally had little need to trade or aquire more expensive things at the cost of their valuable and priced foods, and that is the point.\r\n\r\nLets have a talk about it more, if your still interested, when you\'ve at least had chance to follow up the links, references, books, videos I mentioned. If they still interest you or anyone else ? I have nothing to proove, or to say which isn\'t said and stated clearly by more clever and respected people than me and after all the proof is in the pudding, which I and many people are already greatfull to around the world. And I\'m sure you know the origins of pudding has nothing to do with what we have come to think it means.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(583,1159,'2013-01-20 08:30:03','Ken Fallon','RE: Confused','Hi Dude-man,\r\n\r\nI am not discussing the findings as yet because I have yet to get an independent verification of the work. I appreciate that is difficult but we should be at least able to determine what the selection criteria was for the sample groups studied by Dr. Price. Can you share with us what definition he assigned to determine that the \"isolated peoples\" were isolated enough. \r\n\r\nWould you accept that Ireland in the period of 400-800AD would meet the definition you give of \"The isolated peoples had plenty, generally had little need to trade or aquire[sic] more expensive things at the cost of their valuable and priced foods\". Ireland at the time was outside the sphere of Roman influence and had abundant resources. There is also a wealth of documents describing the diets and lives of it\'s people at the time.\r\n\r\nWould you agree that this is a suitable basis for comparison ?\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(584,1159,'2013-01-20 10:01:49','Dude-man','Really ?','Really ? are you serious about this Ken ? take a look at the books follow the references there, you don\'t need me or anyone else to provide you what is already available. Your picking a pointless argument pretending to be all scientific about it, really ? \r\n\r\nIf you had one ounce the humility that many of the people involved in these researches had you\'d at least study openly what they\'ve provided, before asking for counter evidence. Have you studied the actual suplied evendence ? do you know what counter evidence your even asking for ?\r\n\r\nUnless you actually answer my ? in the replies above, read or watch the available information you just wasting your\'s, mine and everyones time, just study the information I\'ve shared and find counter arguments if you care to disprove something or have points to make.\r\n\r\nI repeat... \r\n\r\nLets have a talk about it more, if your still interested, when you\'ve at least had chance to follow up the links, references, books, videos I mentioned. If they still interest you or anyone else ? I have nothing to proove, or to say which isn\'t said and stated clearly by more clever and respected people than me and after all the proof is in the pudding, which I and many people are already greatfull to around the world. And I\'m sure you know the origins of pudding has nothing to do with what we have come to think it means.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(585,1159,'2013-01-20 10:09:46','Dude-man','Is this the scientific method ?','Is this the scientific method ? Which I make no claim to understand or follow. I\'m just applying my common sense and reading as much and as many different opinions as possible. Seeing all the time which financial interests may be invested towards any particular opinions presented.\r\n\r\nIf you not going to discuss anything unless its been validated by an apparent offical scientific study, I do ask you to show me how the information in the video link I posted above is actually wrong and those studies which are the basis for the low fat/colestoral premise are all in correct, and we should be eating vegatble oil, lots of fruit and vegatables if we want to be healthy, as we are advised by offical scientific studies ? Please show me how the information in the video is a lie and I\'m wrong and religious as you say ?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(3757,3856,'2023-05-30 23:48:56','=','toy soldiers','https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGag8Qllgnw','2023-06-01 10:06:11'),
(3758,3868,'2023-05-31 13:18:07','JWP','The News show','Hi I really liked the news show easy to follow.','2023-06-01 10:06:11'),
(3759,3872,'2023-06-08 19:02:50','Kevin O\'Brien','I\'m glad you are enjoying my shows','I didn\'tgo into a lot of detail on the older shows, but I can assure you I am going into more detail as the series goes on.','2023-06-08 20:54:44'),
(3760,3871,'2023-06-10 17:47:35','Mechatroniac','hpr3816','Hi Retro; \r\n\r\nSpot welding looks like an excellent way to connect new cells, I remember one video where someone used a couple of car batteries and a momentary switch and got really nice results. \r\n\r\nHowever as these are already used cells, they will fail more quickly. I\'ve had to replace a cell three times recently from the 20 cell battery that I\'ve been using about a year. \r\n\r\nThe spot welding is harder to take apart, they come that way in factory made batteries and you have to pull or cut them off, which usually leaves some metal still attached. For this reason it is better to use solder for older cells in my opinion.\r\n\r\nAs for safety, I am tempted to clamp my solder iron to a cell and leave it on maximum heat for 5 minutes to see what happens, probably nothing spectacular. I only heat for about 10 seconds or so max because I don\'t want to damage it\'s capacity. The metal of the cell itself acts as kind of a heat sink so it doesn\'t get as hot as a small component would, and soldering irons are built to melt solder. I\'ve done over 100 solders on to bare cells without mishap or loss in capacity. \r\n\r\nThe main danger is cutting yourself while taking apart a battery pack, the conductor strips are thin and very sharp when you cut them. Other hazards are shorting stuff out with your metal cutter and seeing bright sparks. I once punctured one of the flat cells by accident and it started to get hot and smoke and smelled awful, but I can\'t see that happening with 18650s.','2023-06-10 17:51:39'),
(587,1161,'2013-01-15 23:37:05','pokey','This one was awesome!','This is what Hacker Public Radio is all about. Well done, Beto, and thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(588,1161,'2013-01-20 16:07:46','Ken Fallon','Google Service','Hi Beto,\r\n\r\nGreat show by the way. I had been looking into it myself but wasn\'t clear about something. Wouldn\'t it be possible for someone in Google to access your server as they maintain the key ? Not saying they would or anything but could you go into the privacy and security implications of this. \r\n\r\nKen. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(589,1164,'2013-01-17 12:33:01','cobra2','GIT!!!','NOM NOM NOM NEED MORE GIT! Kudos bud.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(590,1164,'2013-01-20 16:03:10','Ken Fallon','Great show and Great Shownotes','Hoi Johan,\r\n\r\nWhat an excellent first episode. I found myself drawing the A and B branches until I twigged that your show notes has it all drawn out.\r\n\r\nWell done. \r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(591,1164,'2013-01-20 16:59:15','pokey','Another one for the history books!','This is a great episode. You did a fantastic job of explaining the basic idea of git, and why someone would want to use it instead of being ugly and stupid. Well done, JohanV. \r\n\r\nMOARRRRR!!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(592,1166,'2013-01-22 18:26:01','klaatu','Timely','I /just/ set up an internet radio station! I\'ve been custom-rolling some scripts to semi-automate it and have also been looking into MPD which my friend Delwin told me can now pipe to icecast. This episode is great and couldn\'t have happened at a better time! thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(593,1166,'2013-01-30 16:58:45','Greg Hauenstein','Airtime is great','I\'m a huge fan and can\'t wait to use it in a future project.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(594,1166,'2013-03-05 19:28:52','Jonathan Inge','','Thanks for the info. I run an Internet radio station for a college and have been looking for free, functional, easy-to-use automation software.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(595,1175,'2013-02-09 00:04:03','Peter64','Good stuff','Thanks Lord D, been wanting to know something like this for ages','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(596,1178,'2015-03-29 10:12:37','Tomas','Broken links','The link to the videos from the FSCON interviews appear to be broken. The link to Laura Creighton seem broken as well.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(597,1183,'2013-02-13 21:48:56','Heisenbug','','Good show.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(598,1183,'2013-02-13 23:03:46','quvmoh','','Looks like the Boise Lug notes have not caught up with this episode.\r\n\r\n steam games https://store.steampowered.com/browse/linux/\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:32'),
(599,1183,'2013-02-19 03:12:33','quvmoh','notes updated','https://www.boiselug.org/node/199','2022-02-14 13:16:32'),
(600,1184,'2013-02-14 22:26:12','Jonathan Nadeau ','Thank you','Hey Guys thanks for the kind right up. Thanks to all that have pledged and made this possible so far. HPR ROCKS! ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(601,1184,'2013-02-16 22:49:10','Jonathan Nadeau ','update ','I just wanted to let everyone know that we are down to only needing 851 more pledges!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(602,1184,'2013-02-18 00:29:04','Jonathan Nadeau','update with the campaign ','We are now down to needing 592 more pledges to meet the 1000 pledges at $5!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(603,1184,'2013-02-18 17:02:59','davijordan','','You should be able to get around having a monitor at boot time maybe with one of these.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?200444-DVI-to-VGA-Dummy.....56K!\r\n\r\nhttps://blog.zorinaq.com/?e=11','2022-02-14 13:16:32'),
(604,1184,'2013-02-20 07:32:25','William','Hmm','While listening I couldn\'t help but think it would be much easier for blind people to use a command prompt and lynx-like applications. Perhaps money would be better spend building text based apps for whatever it is that blind folks would like. A text based twitter client specialized for the disabled, stuff like that?\r\n\r\nTabbing through 2d laid out forms - is that really the best way to be doing this?\r\n\r\nI\'m not blind, but back in the day, I was able to use Windows 95 without a screen to do a few simple things, such as change screen resolution. And it\'s cool that people who do this a lot get really good at it, but most people shouldn\'t have to install so many times that they\'d get really good at using a GUI without being able to see it.\r\n\r\nAlso on indiegogo the figure of 1 billion people with disabilities is mentioned. Are there really that many people disabled to the point where they need a special operating system? I admire the project and its goals, but is that not overstating the problem unnecessarily? \r\n\r\nI apologize if this sounds harsh. I plan on donating and wish the project luck.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(605,1185,'2013-02-18 05:43:21','pokey','Great episode','Maybe I\'m just biased, because I\'m a big fan of Jezra, NYBill and Shooting the Breeze, but I don\'t think so. This was a lot of fun to listen to. I nominate Jezra and NYBill to be our annual prediction show guys, and if they decide to shoot the breeze, then so be it.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(606,1187,'2013-02-20 14:37:44','klaatu','Emacs as a daemon whut!?','Oh my gosh, that is brilliant. I am going to start doing that right now! Thank you so much for the tip!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(607,1187,'2013-02-21 16:29:14','Garjola','Emacs daemon, yes but ...','Just one thing. I like running emacs as a daemon, but it may not always be convenient, since emacs is not multi-threaded. Therefore, you will have several frames using the same emacs process, and this is not what you want if one of you emacs applications (org-mode, gnus, etc.) are going to do CPU intensive stuff!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(608,1188,'2013-02-21 21:58:56','klaatu','Two emacs shows in a row','Two emacs shows in a row. Somebody up there must like Emacs.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(609,1190,'2013-02-24 03:17:36','Jon Kulp','LibreOffice','I\'m enjoying your series on LibreOffice. Last semester I spent about 90 minutes talking to my graduate students about styles in word processing, and once they understood what it was all about they were completely blown away by the power of it. They kept asking me, \"why has no one ever told us about this before?\" I have a couple of screencasts about using regular expressions in LibreOffice in case you are interested. Go to YouTube and search for \"jonkulp\" and \"libreoffice\" and you will find them. One of them has what I feel is a pretty magical transformation of a multiple-choice test from one layout style to another using some regex. Anyway I am looking forward to your future episodes.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(610,1197,'2013-03-05 21:58:06','klaatu','cool stuff','Wow, that\'s some amazing stuff. I like the markdown2latex a lot! I\'d love to hear more from you on HPR about how/if Linux plays into your \"day job\" and what you use as a music hist professor','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(611,1197,'2013-03-06 17:26:15','Ken Fallon','Welcome Welcome','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nGreat episode and great topic. I could listen to shows on scripts all day !.\r\n\r\nOne thing though is that the stick script could also be done using youe ~/.ssh/config file. See https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=0386\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:16:33'),
(612,1197,'2013-03-07 21:56:59','Frank','Thank you','I want to learn more about bash, and just doing stuff because it\'s in a tutorial doesn\'t excite me. I have been looking for some ideas for scripts to write for myself to help motivate me to learn, and you gave me some good ones.\r\n\r\nBy the way, you are not the only person who grapples with selecting a topic for a podcast. Don\'t feel alone in that.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(613,1197,'2013-03-21 16:00:59','Bradley','ssh_config','Ken beat me to it, but you can alias SSH hosts, specify keys, usernames, ports, almost any command line parameters using the ~/.ssh/config file. See man ssh_config for details. \r\n\r\nI use it with some password-less ssh keys to allow me to move about my ssh hosts seamlessly. Not too safe I know..\r\n\r\nI\'ve also found it useful to add port forwarding to make an ssh proxy to my home network. All to evade my company\'s decency filters when necessary.. I mean to proxy from an insecure location.\r\n\r\nThanks for the interesting podcast.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(614,1197,'2013-03-21 20:48:02','Urugami','Great Episode','Jon, thanks for the great script ideas. Between your scripts and ones that were linked in links and links, etc, I may be able to tweak a few of my own.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(615,1197,'2013-09-27 22:07:00','Dangerseeker','LaTeX and UTF8','Hello,\r\n\r\nI really liked this episode, because it showed how to use the power of bash to simply make your life easier.\r\n\r\nAnd I am happy to inform you that LaTeX handles UTF8 characters just fine, I use them every day. ;-)\r\n\r\nJust import the package \"inputenc\" with the option \"utf8\" and it should work like magic:\r\n\r\n\\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}\r\n\r\n\r\nThank You for the entertaining podcast\r\n\r\nDangerseeker','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(616,1198,'2013-03-17 05:36:31','kt4kb_Jon','The Witch Hunter Chronicles','The Witch Hunter Chronicles: Great!!!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(617,1199,'2013-03-08 03:42:50','Frank','','There has to be some kind of synergy in my recording having been posted right after Lostnbronx\'s, in which he talked of OTR.\r\n\r\nYeah, I know, commenting on my own stuff etc.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(618,1199,'2013-09-14 02:16:14','Jamison','This is Sweet :) Thanks Frank+ ','I plan on spending sometime at these sites ;) \r\n\r\nVLC and its plugin for Firefox (along with DownloadHelper especially for when I want to DL and speed media up to take more in like I see oldradioworld lets me) works good for me on most *nix flavors for almost any .format\r\n\r\nHappy Listening','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(619,1199,'2013-09-20 21:51:55','Muskrat Bill ','myoldradio.com ','Hello Frank...I love OTR...been listening to old radio shows since the early 70\'s.\r\nQuestion...I have been using the myoldradio.com site for years with no problem. A few days ago I started getting red security alerts from my anti virus programs. They say there is a serious malware threat. Have you heard anything about this? I really miss that site as they have a huge \"information please\" collection...one of my favorites. I welcome any info you can provide.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(620,1199,'2014-07-26 18:29:59','Don Frey','','Cannot register, forgot password\r\nbut it has not been sent.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(621,1199,'2014-08-08 13:46:56','Mike Ray','OTR','Greate show Frank. Good to hear passion about a favourite subject. Night Beat is one of my favourites, followed by Richard Diamond and any other of the gumshow type shows. Always makes me smile to hear how things have changed, like the tobacco advertising and sponsorship in the later episodes of Richard Diamond. Rightly not allowed today','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(622,1203,'2013-03-13 23:07:17','Klaatu','Checkmate','I told you all that Chess would be back. NOW do you believe me??','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(623,1203,'2014-03-14 18:50:50','Steve Kemp','Thanks for your templer coverage','It is nice to see other people seeing/using templer, and bug reports/suggestions are always welcome.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(624,1206,'2013-03-20 14:35:48','NYbill','','Just a follow up tip. While making changes to MediaGoblin\'s theme, I would check the site in a browser. But, the changes didn\'t seem to work. \r\n\r\nIt didn\'t dawn on me until I had apache shut down, and was still able to see my site, that I was being shown the page from Firefox\'s cache.\r\n\r\nSo, when making changes, remember to clear your browser cache. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(625,1206,'2013-03-22 00:20:18','CPrompt^','','I really enjoyed this episode. It was actually nice to hear the troubles and resolutions and how it all worked. Should do a few more episodes like this. The format was great IMHO!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(626,1213,'2013-04-10 11:49:57','brother mouse','Neat topic','After listening I cranked up apt-get and installed units. \r\n\r\nIt\'s come in handy a couple of times since then. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(627,1215,'2013-04-10 11:51:56','brother mouse','Thanks!','I\'d heard about pair programming but didn\'t know how it worked in the real world. I appreciate the show. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(628,1216,'2013-04-04 02:00:22','Marty','-.. .. --. - .- .-.. / -.. .- - .- / - .-. .- -. ... ..-. . .-.','.... .- / .... .- / ...- . .-. -.-- / ..-. ..- -. -. -.--','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(629,1216,'2013-08-27 13:26:18','Ken Fallon','see also','https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1343','2022-02-14 13:16:33'),
(630,1219,'2013-04-06 21:54:47','pokey','Wow, good timing.','I just bought my first muzzle loader (in-line). I\'m WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY behind on my podcasts, but this one is getting bumped to the top of my personal queue. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(631,1219,'2013-04-10 11:51:02','brother mouse','liked it','I\'ve been sniffing around the black powder idea for a while and this helped me understand some of the concepts. Thanks for doing the show. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(632,1219,'2013-04-25 12:56:11','pokey','Very helpful.','Thank you for all of the great tips in this show. It was very entertaining as well as informative. My muzzle loader is a Thompson Center Omega, but I haven\'t even fired it yet, so I learned a whole lot of very important and relevant things from you in this ep. \r\n\r\nI heard this episode right before Tracy\'s excellent episode on fish-food. ;) You can consider me a new Techie Geek listener. I don\'t know why The TechieGeek never pinged my radar before, but I\'m definitely a fan now, and I haven\'t even heard the show yet.\r\n\r\nGreat show, and thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(633,1220,'2013-04-08 15:29:52','Arold','Nice subject','Hello FiftyOneFifty,\r\n\r\nI really liked this episode! Also, the greater subject of Arch and Arch based distro is very interesting to me right now.\r\n\r\nYou may have notice that Cinnarch just got a new version out (2013.04.05) in which the graphical installer is available. So, it may be worth a second look.\r\n\r\nOn another hand, Manjaro is a great distribution. I highly encourage you to take a look at it. It is more mature than Cinnarch and look just as gorgeous. The XFCE spin seems to be a bit more polish than the Cinnamon spin, but they are both really nice.\r\n\r\nFinally, I can\'t wait to hear your episode entitled \"I have install Arch, now what?\". I have lots of interrogations regarding the use of Arch, particularly on the subject of how I should manage the AUR... Should I use a AUR helper or do everything by hand? If I want to use an helper which one should I use? If I want to do everything by hand, how do I search the AUR from the command line? Is there a better way than elinks?\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\n\r\nArold\r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(634,1223,'2013-04-25 12:48:58','pokey','Great ep','I liked this one a lot. I love the \"how I got into Linux\" shows, and this one has got to be in the top 3 of that category.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(635,1224,'2013-04-12 17:30:19','FiftyOneFifty','','I recently found out from a post by Knightwise https://knightwise.com/zombies-mechs-and-plenty-of-gore-this-must-be-jake-bibles-doing/ , Dead Mech is part of a trilogy by Jake Bible, but the other two books are only available in print form https://jakebible.com/buy-signed-copies/ I meant to edit my show notes before my review aired, but I procrastinated too long.','2022-02-14 13:16:33'),
(636,1224,'2013-04-25 12:47:25','pokey','good review','This was a fair review of an audiobook that I liked. Nice work. I thought the ditch digging added a lot to the show, btw. Well done, buddy.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(637,1225,'2013-04-12 23:34:46','goibhniu','Great show, thanks!','I started listening to it on my way to work this morning and finished it on the way home .. really informative and interesting. I appreciated the technical details and I\'m curious to know more about the aztec and chinese versions you mentioned at the start. I look forward to hearing the next ep. Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(638,1225,'2013-04-25 12:42:01','pokey','NICE!!!','This was awesome. It was so much fun to listen to. My wife has a degree in fresh water fish-ology, so I should make her listen to it, but I can\'t promise that that will happen. I asked her if she\'d ever heard of aquaponics, and she was like \"Of course,\" and walked away. I think she thought I was too excited about it, and was going to ask if I could make one. It was a good show, and it did get my gears turning.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(639,1228,'2013-04-25 12:32:10','pokey','Nice one','Thanks for keeping the network alive, 5150, and for doing it with style. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(640,1229,'2013-04-18 22:02:40','jezra','Thank you very much!','I listened to your show today during my commute and I wanted to thank you for sharing your experience. Now I am listening again.... just because.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(641,1230,'2013-04-19 16:47:35','threethirty','GIVE \'EM HELL','https://plus.google.com/u/0/117425941598597496552/posts/Y7fcdcFxmi3','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(642,1230,'2013-04-25 12:30:14','pokey','Interesting','Thanks for doing a show on this topic. I don\'t have much to say about it, because you are the first to bring it to my attention, but it gives me a lot to think about. I guess the only conclusion that I can come to is to repeat the oft repeated caution about not letting your code project depend on proprietary markets, IDEs, etc... I know it\'s not a helpful thought at this point, but it\'s all I can come up with. It was a good show. Thanks for putting in the work.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(643,1232,'2013-04-25 12:22:09','pokey','Great LITS','This one was really good, Dann. They\'re all good, but I was able to follow this one better for some reason. I really enjoyed it. Thanks, Dann.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(644,1233,'2013-04-25 12:20:30','pokey','I loved it!','This was a great listen. I got my Ingress invite from Epicanis, and have been playing for a few weeks now. I have a slightly different take on the game, and I\'d love to do some sort of community colab on the topic of mapping games/activities.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(645,1233,'2013-04-30 00:59:35','Epicanis','Thanks, Pokey!','Hopefully you weren\'t the only one!\r\n\r\nI like the idea of doing some collaboration on mapping-related pastimes - the field is broad enough it\'s probably worth several episodes! \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(646,1233,'2013-05-01 19:49:46','lobath','Great Episode','Great intro, script, vocals and audio quality. A quality episode.\r\n\r\nL7 Enlightened, Green Bay, WI\r\nBeen playing for a few months now as well, and I\'ve been lucky to have a pretty active area with well grouped portals, so level hasn\'t been an issue. I\'ve enjoyed the experience so far, thanks for bringing it to HPR. \r\n\r\nI usually tether my Nexus 7 to my phone since the phone processor and screen are really too old to run the game well. I must look a bit silly driving & walking around town staring at my screen. Most of my time has been spent over winter so I\'ve put quite a few extra miles on my car, but I did get out for a few walks as well. Looking forward to getting out farther afield this summer.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(647,1233,'2013-05-07 03:50:56','Epicanis','Thanks, lobath!','Now there\'s an interesting coincidence - another Level 7 Enlightened with a Nexus 7.\r\n(I just got one as a birthday present from the Minister of Domestic Affairs here at the Asylum for the Sufficiently Nerdy). Tethering it to play Ingress is a huge improvement over the Samsung Mesmerize that I was cursing in this episode.\r\n(Not too long after the episode was recorded, I was able to get the phone warranty-replaced - the replacement Mesmerize so far doesn\'t seem to have the irritating radio problem and runs pretty well since I rooted it and purged it of the bloatware, but it\'s still not nearly as nice as the tablet.)\r\n\r\nI\'m working on putting together episode 2 on this topic - anything you\'re particularly interested in hearing about?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(648,1235,'2013-05-07 04:08:16','Epicanis','Nifty project!','A lot of useful information in this episode for me, since I just got a RaspberryPi to play with myself.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(649,1235,'2013-05-13 05:18:56','rukin','welcome future','Hi Sigflup!\r\n\r\nnice project! welcome future.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(650,1236,'2013-04-29 08:04:11','gws','I thought it was pronounced \"thttpd\"','Like Bill The Cat said it, instead of spelling it out.\r\n\r\nLong live thttpd!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(651,1236,'2013-04-29 23:25:49','klaatu','thttpd','Yeah somewhere the title of this ep must have gotten mangled; he\'s speaking of course about thttpd.\r\n\r\nAnyway, IMHO, hiawatha and nginx are great servers and thttpd, however simple and lightweight, never did get my UTF8 encoding right. (either that, or it was user error....which....is a definite possibility)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(652,1236,'2013-05-03 16:24:13','Epicanis','Slightly disappointed this show didn\'t go longer','Seeing the link to the Hiawatha web server, I was kind of hoping the episode would talk a little about it...\r\n\r\n(It\'s nice in general to hear about not-Apache webservers for a change. We\'ve long since moved on past the idea that email necessarily means \"Sendmail\", but the internet in general seems to have trouble moving beyond \"www means Apache\").\r\n\r\nCherokee is a good alternative as well, though they\'ve been way too slack about making real releases out of their updates over the last year or so.\r\n\r\nStill a good episode, and although I\'ve never used thttpd myself, I agree with the general sentiment expressed wholeheartedly!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(653,1239,'2013-05-05 18:56:48','dodddummy','Doing is an essential part of the definition','I disagree with the gentleman who kept saying that the search for knowledge is all that\'s needed. A hacker needs to apply the knowledge.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(654,1239,'2013-05-07 02:51:13','Epicanis','I agree, dodddummy','I think curiousity is a necessary component of any good hacker (or rather, I don\'t think someone could become a good hacker without having a decent amount of curiousity), but to me it\'s the USES of the aquired knowledge that make the difference between mere learning and \"hacking\".','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(655,1239,'2013-05-21 12:08:11','ClaudioM','On \"music...\"','Seems as though the topic of whether music would be something of interest to hackers as well as what is considered music has inspired me to make a rebuttal episode for HPR. Be on the lookout for it... ;-)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(656,1241,'2013-05-06 11:56:09','Helvetin','Oh no','I didn\'t want to encroach anyone\'s style :-) thanks for the nice comments ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(657,1241,'2013-05-13 17:10:43','Epicanis','Yes, please review my PHP code!','In addition to checking for security screwups that I may have overlooked, I\'d be interested in any general commentary or suggestions. I\'m pretty much self-taught on PHP so if I\'ve developed any bad habits I\'ll never know until someone else looks at it...\r\n\r\n(I should also clarify that my \"If *I* were Emperor of $whatever\" schtick is just shorthand for \"if there were no practical impediments and I could just declare something done and it would be done that way with no further effort on my part\", not a reflection of an assumption that there IS an Emperor of $whatever...)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(658,1247,'2013-05-15 20:22:05','timttmy','mplayer','Hi Jon, \r\nI\'ve pulled in live streams in the past using mplayer with the -dumpstream option (mplayer https://yoururl/stream.mp3 -dumpstream) and started and stopped the operation with atd (I never fully gotten my head around cron).\r\nI\'ll take a look at streamripper. I like the sound of the option to specify the duration of the rip as an argument of the utility. \r\n\r\nCheers\r\nMarshall\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:33'),
(659,1248,'2013-05-15 02:16:43','mvario','Thanks','Nice, thank you. I look forward to part 2.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(660,1248,'2013-05-20 02:40:00','klaatu','eee17','I\'m running e17, on Slackware, on my eeePC 901. Works beautifully, has lots of interesting and unique little features, and is fun to explore and experience.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(661,1251,'2013-05-21 14:19:10','pokey','Sorry for the droll read.','I was very tired, not feeling very well, and had been fighting with hardware for three days. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(662,1252,'2013-05-21 14:17:32','pokey','BRILLIANT!!!','What a fantastic show. I loved it. It was interesting, informative, educational and nostalgic, and your summation at the end was perfect. Decisive and upbeat. I hope to hear much more from you. Thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(663,1252,'2013-05-30 16:48:15','Brad','Printer Sounds','Great podcast, the machine details and technology progression were very informative. I\'m looking forward to future episodes!\r\n\r\nYou\'re segment about recognizing the printer sounds reminded me of a Man or AstroMan? show that I went to a while back. They brought out and Apple II with a Dot Matrix printer and played a song titled A Simple Text File. A pretty interesting and nostalgic use of the now antiquated technology in music. \r\n\r\nhttps://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000YDR62I/ref=dm_dp_trk11?ie=UTF8&qid=1369931453&sr=8-15','2022-02-14 13:16:34'),
(664,1253,'2013-06-02 09:06:01','pegwole','Aww yeah','Vmstat baby!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(665,1254,'2013-06-11 06:03:39','AukonDK','Thanks!','I hadn\'t heard of x2go and it works great!\r\nI\'ve started using my work box (xubuntu 12.04) as a server and using its screen on my laptop so I can share the screen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(666,1258,'2013-05-31 01:24:29','Klaatu','Building is the way to go','Great episode. I built my first box about a year ago with the help of some friends in IRC, and since then I can\'t imagine getting a computer that I have not assembled myself.\r\n\r\nVery informative episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(667,1259,'2013-05-31 23:45:52','davidWHITMAN','Scratch','Ms. Cupcake,\r\nMr. Klaatu,\r\nIs the scratch project coded in perl? \r\n\r\nAnd if it is will you be appearing on FLOSS Weekly? (snicker)\r\n\r\nA very good show. Thank you. \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(668,1259,'2013-06-04 09:08:55','kdmurray','Scratch - Great Resource','Since being introduced to Scratch on your HPR episode I\'ve played around with it a few times. I can\'t wait until my little one gets a bit older so I can start sharing things like this!\r\n\r\nGreat job. Hope you two do another show in the future!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(669,1259,'2013-06-04 18:36:59','Navigium','Scratch 2','Listened to this today. I was a bit irritated that you both seemed very excited about Scratch 2. Scratch 1 is based on open technology. Scratch 2 is based on the proprietary Flash platform and won\'t run as well on Linux platforms and I guess I will never be able to upgrade Scratch on my OpenBSD system. So to me this is not something to be excited about but the reason to hope that one of the upcoming HTML5 based alternatives soon will replace Scratch.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(670,1259,'2013-06-16 20:55:45','doubi','','@davidWHITMAN, nope, as Klaatu mentioned in the show, Scratch is programmed in Squeak, not Perl.\r\n\r\nThanks for the show guys, have shared it with my non-techie educator friends, will be interested to hear what they make of it.\r\n\r\nCyanide Cupcake, I didn\'t quite understand the part where you were talking about talking to other teachers who were worried that they hadn\'t been taught programming themselves. I think you used the example of English teachers. Were they curious about incorporating Scratch into their English lessons, or did they happen to have to teach I.T. sometimes as well in their schools?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(671,1261,'2013-06-03 19:42:24','pokey','Damnit, Ken! ','You could listen to me read the phone book!? You just made me choke on my coffee. I almost laughed it right out my nose. \r\n\r\nAnyone who doesn\'t get why this is so funny should go subscribe to the mail list.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(672,1270,'2013-06-14 19:56:22','Tony Bemus from SMLR','Thank you Jon','I loved listening to this Episode. To range from History to current computing was great! Thank You Jon','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(673,1270,'2013-06-25 23:35:32','Jon Kulp','yup','so glad you enjoyed it. It was a lot of fun for me to do as well.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(674,1271,'2013-06-18 21:25:48','klaatu','Yes','The answer is \'yes\'.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(675,1271,'2013-07-02 17:22:51','Joey','','Just wanted to say what an exellent episode this was. Very well written and presented.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(676,1273,'2013-06-24 09:12:49','replaceits','','Just wanted to point out that it should be \"cat\" not \"cut\"!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(677,1273,'2013-06-24 18:40:42','Ken Fallon','Thanks','Fixed','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(678,1280,'2013-06-29 22:15:02','davijordan','','Additional homemade antennas:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.instructables.com/id/Antennas-TV-Wifi-and-etc/\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:34'),
(679,1284,'2014-06-16 22:07:14','ash','Dyslexis','I am looking for a program that can write the words I say to text and read out the text I have written. For now I Orcra from gimp and using debian as the operating system. Would hear whether you can use blather about this? \r\n\r\nAbout the installation of blather. \r\n\r\nhttps://paste.jonkulp.net/lolilabuje\r\n\r\nAnd I get this \r\n\r\n**Error**: You must have `autoconf\' installed to.\r\nDownload the appropriate package for your distribution,\r\nor get the source tarball at ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/\r\n\r\n**Error**: You must have `libtool\' installed.\r\nGet ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/libtool-1.2d.tar.gz\r\n(or a newer version if it is available)\r\n\r\n**Error**: You must have `automake\' installed.\r\nGet ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/automake-1.3.tar.gz\r\n(or a newer version if it is available)\r\ncp: kan ikke udføre stat() på \'./src/gst-plugin/.libs/libgstpocketsphinx.so\': Ingen sådan fil eller filkatalog\r\nroot@Stationer:/home/root/pocketsphinx-0.8# get_blather\r\nbash: git: command not found\r\nroot@Stationer:/home/root# conf\r\ncp: kan ikke udføre stat() på \'/home/root/blather/commands.tmp\': Ingen sådan fil eller filkatalog\r\nbash: /home/root/bin/blather.sh: Ingen sådan fil eller filkatalog\r\nchmod: kan ikke tilgå \'/home/root/bin/blather.sh\': Ingen sådan fil eller filkatalog\r\n\r\n\r\nGreetings from Ash','2022-02-14 13:16:34'),
(680,1284,'2014-07-07 10:57:32','Jon Kulp ','Help for Ash','Hi Ash, \r\n\r\nsorry for the delay in responding but I only just now heard that there was a comment on this episode. It looks from the error message as if you need to install the \"build-essential\" package and also the \"gnome-common\" package (for autoconf). That\'s not to say that blather will necessarily do what you need it to do (it can\'t do dictation) but this should help you get past those error messages at least. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(681,1286,'2013-07-09 07:59:21','Ken Fallon','Excellent','I just realized, that when I ask people to help out. Not only do I get the problem solved but we also get another episode !\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(682,1287,'2013-07-13 02:25:01','Erm','Have you heard of bitlove?','You guys were talking about using bittorrent sync to transfer episodes.\r\n\r\nBitlove.org offers a service that automatically creates .torrent files with webseeds for podcast rss feeds.\r\n\r\nI use it on my site music.the-erm.com and it has a js script that works with wordpress that will create button/link to download the .torrent file. As I recall they had an API that could be used to create your own if not.\r\n\r\nIf you need a php script that has download resume capabilities with a bandwidth limiter I have one of those. Just email me and let me know. I\'ll send it to you.\r\n\r\nAlso I think bittorrent sync recently added versioning with 1.1.27 (but their faq isn\'t updated so I might be mistaken I seem to remember it in the release notes, but I can\'t seem to find them on the site.)\r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(683,1287,'2013-07-14 21:39:17','Epicanis','I really like the updates!','The changes to the hacker public radio website are going great, in my opinion, as is the new scheduling system.\r\n\r\nAs self-appointed Minister of Opus Codec Advocacy, if you can\'t justify adding a fourth feed, I\'d suggest polling the speex users (perhaps prepend a short recorded message to the .spx feed episodes for a while?) to find out if any of them can NOT handle .opus as well. (Opus\' support is already more widespread than speex\'s is.) If there are no objections, I would suggest replacing the ~28kbps .spx feed with opus encoded at \"--bitrate 20\". This looks like it should be roughly a high enough bitrate that speech quality should be outstanding, while leaving enough bitrate for the possibility for the opus encoder to switch to MDCT mode (\"CELT\") when it detects non-speech sounds occasionally.\r\n\r\nThe quality should remain the same or probably even better, while reducing the file downloads by an average of around 25%-30% more beyond what speex already gets it down to.\r\n\r\nAlso too, sorry for missing the show recording. We\'re starting to hit our \"busy season\" here.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(684,1290,'2013-07-12 22:21:03','aaronb','Curse you multisystem','Multisystem and unetbootin support my distro hopping addiction.\r\nIf you carry a usb thumb drive, Please put puppy linux on it to help your Windows friends. And put your favorite linux distro on it to so them what real computing is like. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(685,1290,'2013-07-21 16:58:43','Randy Noseworthy','Webupd8','I know I\'ve found Multisystem to be very useful and saves on the burning of the CD/DVD disks. I think that I\'d use the WebUpd8 post to pimp to others. \r\n\r\nhttps://www.webupd8.org/2010/03/how-to-create-multiboot-liveusb-using.html','2022-02-14 13:16:35'),
(686,1294,'2013-08-05 15:30:10','pokey','Thanks for some more insight','I was almost afraid to listen to this one, but you kept it understandable and relevant. We\'re all pulling for you, sigflup. Please hang in there.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(687,1296,'2013-07-24 02:03:08','Epicanis','Nifty topic!','s/ultraviolet/infrared/g\r\n\r\nBut I knew what you meant. Also, I learned stuff (I never really thought before about how much of the heat from a fire is radiational rather than convective). This information will come in handy next time I need to set something on fire...','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(688,1296,'2013-07-25 12:48:29','pokey','Thanks','Ultraviolet, infrared... bah humbug! I can\'t see either, so what\'s the difference? \r\n\r\nYeah, that was the big difference for me too. Once it was explained to me how much radiant heat comes off the fire and is just wasted, I started making my fires a lot better. For instance, if I make a fire to heat up with, I put a great big log at the back to deflect heat back at the fire and at me. I also try to keep my burning logs above my fire ring (but below the top of the big log at the back) if I want heat. If I want to cook, or if it\'s hot out, I\'ll try to keep my logs below the top of the fire ring. \r\n\r\nWhen I really realized to potential of the radiated heat was the time me and some friends were at a really big bon fire (REALLY BIG, like >1/4 acre, and the pit was an unused quarry). we were at least 25-35 yards away from any actual burning wood, and we still all got too hot to stand there unless we had something to \"shade\" ourselves with. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(689,1301,'2013-08-05 15:27:42','pokey','Thanks','I listened to this one while pulling an all nighter and you guys kept me going through the last (hardest) stretch. I was up sewing a hammock (the one I dented all those pictures of) for a camping trip, and you three (I\'m counting Mrs. nybill) were great company. Thanks for keeping me going.\r\n\r\nYou\'re funny.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(690,1301,'2013-08-29 19:51:35','Quoud','Live (or not) broadcasting to remote musical instruments','While listening to you guys talk about guitars a pretty cool idea came to me, not sure if it\'s out there yet. I thought would be cool for hacker/guitar enthusiasts to mod a guitar or hack together a peripheral device/program that would allow users across the interwebs to control your guitar remotely. I figure since so many guitarists love sharing videos of themselves playing guitar to youtube and what not, why not \"live broadcast\" a live jam session to whoever is interested to listen!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(691,1302,'2013-07-30 02:41:09','Jon Kulp','Nice show','I really enjoyed your first show, great to have you on board. you might just save the HPR audience from my threat of doing an episode about how to fold fitted sheets. ;) you mentioned that you would like to hear how are the people got into Linux and you can probably find many of these episodes in the hpr archives. I did not do a separate episode about getting into Linux but I did talk about it with NYbill during the course of my first HPR appearance here https://www.hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1028 at about 22 minutes into the episode. I\'m looking forward to your future shows. --jk','2022-02-14 13:16:35'),
(692,1304,'2013-08-03 11:41:44','Ken Fallon','Excellent Episode','Hi John and Son,\r\n\r\nGreat show. Some of my fondest memories was in the blacksmiths when I was a lad. \r\n\r\nKeep up the good work.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\nPS: @Son: You owe me a show !','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(693,1306,'2013-07-29 04:24:21','Christopher M. Hobbs','Email Update','Note that I can now be reached at hobbsc@ma.sdf.org. My ACM address is going to be closed soon.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(694,1309,'2013-08-08 21:26:32','Frank','','I commend both of your for addressing this topic. \r\n\r\nBecause you are not members of the professional chattering classes and are sharing your own experiences, your testimony is all the more powerful and valuable.\r\n\r\nI suspect and hope that this episode will find an audience beyond HPR\'s regular listenership.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(695,1309,'2013-08-22 15:19:33','gerryk','','A deviation from what we have come to expect from HPR, but, as it turns out, a very interesting, and touching one. \r\n\r\nThank you both for your openness and empathy. I believe that your story will bring others some comfort, if not hope (there\'s that word again).','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(696,1309,'2013-08-25 02:51:54','pokey','','This gets my nomination for the most beautiful episode of HPR ever. \r\n\r\nThank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(697,1311,'2013-08-16 15:23:24','Randy Noseworthy','Thanks','Sounds like Baking Soda and Vinegar are the basis for most of your cleaning and things to keep yourself smelling noseworthy. :P But the deodorant, isn\'t an antiperspirant is it? ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(698,1311,'2013-09-04 18:16:32','Windigo','Simpler solutions','As somebody who\'s used a drying rack in my home for years, I really enjoyed this episode quite a bit!\r\n\r\nI\'ve recently moved into a cabin in Northern California, and find myself going back to older technology and methods of doing things. The Internet isn\'t as reliable here, so we\'re making due with what we have.\r\n\r\nIt\'s funny how a lack of amenities makes you appreciate the lower-tech ways of doing things. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(699,1312,'2013-08-01 18:39:42','deepgeek','Criticism Well Taken','Hey, Epicanis,\r\n\r\nThanks for the criticism of my two examples, before going into this interview, I really focused on researching Birgitta to the exclusion of all else, Next time, better, I promise.\r\n\r\nDid I mention that I was working off of a memorized set of questions? Listening to this in retrospect I think I hear Birgitta raise her impression of me mid-interview when she realizes that this is what I was doing....\r\n\r\nThanks also for \"loopholeing\" me in!\r\n\r\nyours,\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(700,1312,'2013-11-19 06:40:06','Epicanis','Dang it, I hate when I miss comments for so long','In my defense, August was an EXTREMELY busy month for me.\r\n\r\nNo need to apologize for anything - I had fun looking up the information on Leary and Reich, and you still did a heck of a lot more work on this episode than I did. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(701,1312,'2013-12-31 23:09:19','otak','','Thankyou so much deepgeek this was awesome and informative.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(702,1313,'2013-12-28 18:48:24','Yvan ','Script links don\'t work','Hi,\r\nI was very interested for yours script but these URLs are broken :\r\nhttps://paste.jonkulp.net/view/32922107\r\nhttps://paste.jonkulp.net/view/d47bbeca\r\nIs it possible to see them ?\r\nYvan','2022-02-14 13:16:35'),
(703,1314,'2013-08-17 04:45:17','Jason','Thanks for the overview','I haven\'t used this distro since it was called Mandrake but I remember really liking it. I was wary of it being rpm based since I\'d gotten tired of \"rpm hell\" on Redhat 5 & 6. But it worked well with my hardware and was pretty stable. \r\n\r\nI\'ve used PCLinuxOS off and on which is a derivative but I think I\'ll give Mageia a whirl now that I\'m back on OpenSuse (just can\'t stay away from rpm I guess). Thanks again!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(704,1317,'2013-08-20 17:39:27','NYbill','','Hey, cool to put a voice to a nick. And welcome to the club! ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(705,1324,'2013-08-29 18:54:11','whtspc','','sigflup, what tunes are playing in this cast? Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(706,1324,'2013-08-31 02:27:43','sigflup','','Hmmm... These shows are delayed some and i honestly don\'t remember. I think it\'s from a YouTube mix video','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(707,1328,'2013-09-04 03:11:08','Christopher M. Hobbs','wow...','Amazing, amazing podcast. I absolutely loved this episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(708,1328,'2013-09-04 17:15:50','HPR Admins','This show is of interest to hackers.','\r\nThe HPR Community.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(709,1328,'2013-09-04 18:22:16','Frank','','I commend you, both for opening this world to strangers and for having the courage to do so. \r\n\r\nI have shared this link with my daughter, who has her Masters is working as therapist with a goal of certification as an LCSW.\r\n\r\nAlso, the drawing is quite powerful. When I first saw it, I was wondering which painter did it.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(710,1328,'2013-09-06 01:06:08','Johninsc','','Courageous and quite interesting. I certainly hope for the best as you deal with this in the future.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(711,1328,'2013-10-29 22:52:01','z','Thanks','Thanks for sharing.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(712,1330,'2014-02-03 01:18:29','Michael','c is the way ','a couple of years ago I pulled out an old book I had from decades ago (K&R \"the C Programming Language\")\r\nand made some tiny cgi\'s in c. (compiled with gcc)\r\n\r\nnothing gives me dynamic pages on a web server faster than those!\r\n\r\nand I\'m talking about the real world here .. data is read from disk! (modern operating systems have pretty good caching for disk reads anyway)\r\n\r\nnow I would love to see a federated social (forums/events/etc) platform done that way ... so that it could handle thousands of users on a raspi!\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(713,1331,'2013-08-25 06:14:03','NYbill','corrections','A couple quick things. Thinking back on this after recording, I think I did 2/3rds of the Arch update. The first step updated the system except Bash and Filesystem. The second step brought in bash populating /usr/bin and most likely removing the files from /bin /sbin. The third step I forgot to do. Which would have brought in \"filesystem\" making the symlinks in /bin and /sbin to /usr/bin.\r\n\r\nI also realized while editing that I said /usr/sbin a couple of times when I meant /usr/bin. But, this was an \'off the cuff\' episode. So, I just left it as is. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(714,1331,'2013-09-18 18:01:57','FiftyOneFifty','Incredible ep','Very informative, nice to know Linode provides tools that emulate access to a bare metal host machine. I\'d have never thought of the 32 bit vs 64 bit compatibility if you hadn\'t pointed it out. Would you also have to match distro and release versions to get the same libraries? If not, would you have to have the same kernel version on the ssh server and client?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(715,1336,'2013-09-25 18:16:08','lobath','Great Story','Thanks for sharing, adding your Wordpress to my reading subscriptions.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(716,1339,'2013-09-29 09:20:22','Under Stated','Soooo Good!','What a show. Now, THAT\'S H.P.R. to a tee.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(717,1340,'2013-09-27 16:06:04','Frank','','This was really fun to listen to.\r\n\r\nI especially enjoyed real-life nature of the segment on soldering. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(718,1343,'2013-09-30 20:58:14','klaatu','short long long. long long long. short long long.','Wow, this is really cool. I never realised morse code was quite that flexible although it certainly makes sense that it is. I am impressed!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(719,1344,'2013-09-30 21:00:01','klaatu','And I thought they were extinct.','Really really cool. I might re-use your shell script, or at least parts of it, as I need incremental shots of some film frames. Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(720,1346,'2013-09-30 21:01:04','klaatu','smart','This is great advice, thanks. I think many of us Linux users get a little out of touch and forget how we felt, and what appealed to us best, when we were just starting out. Thanks for the tips!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(721,1346,'2013-10-01 16:49:35','Ken Fallon','Personal feedback','I agree for the most part. I have won more converts through leading by example, than by trying to force the issue. Also having a stock of Raspberry PI loners helps.\r\n\r\nI would argue that there are times when discussing free as in freedom can be used to good effect. I have used the argument when someone couldn\'t open a document on their word processor because the proprietary format had been updated.\r\n\r\nI have found the frugal argument to be more of a hindrance than a help. Namely the \"you get what you pay for\" or \"pay peanuts, get monkeys\" spring to mind. So rather than saying it\'s free, you can explain that large companies pay for support. Or, that you will be expected to contribute back in some way once you are up to speed. It usually say that in a Vito Corleone/Marlon Brando accent.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(722,1346,'2013-10-02 14:24:00','Glwx','Thanks for the feedback','Ken I agree with you about the \"oh it\'s free therefore it must be crap\" aspect of the frugality argument. I would say something to them like well, it\'s costs nothing to try so so it\'s not like you\'re out anything if it doesn\'t suit your needs or tastes. \r\n\r\nIt\'s a sad state of affairs our modern world finds itself in when we all look at things we expect to pay for with a certain skepticism looking for the \"catch\".','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(723,1347,'2013-10-01 12:17:46','Steve Kimber','','I wanted to listen to your previous three podcasts, before listening to the latest episode, having been out of the loop for nearly a year.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad I did, this is a very good series so far and extremely interesting to see and hear your progress, I also find the musical interludes very cool too, can\'t wait for the next one','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(724,1347,'2013-10-01 13:08:14','klaatu','Fascinating!','I love this insight into the creative process, thank you! Also, really cool find in Impro-Visor; I\'d not heard of it before. Thank you again!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(725,1347,'2013-10-30 00:58:11','CPrompt','Nice show!','Loved the show. Good explanation on how you put it together. \r\n\r\nI would love to hear some of your recordings if you have any!\r\n\r\nThanks for the show.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(726,1350,'2013-10-21 11:54:03','pokey','Excellent show.','I loved this episode. I don\'t know much about coding, but I love that you documented all the different steps that you took in building your project. I imagine that ONICS has the potential to be a very powerful tool for networking and security experts.\r\n\r\nI love that you gave us all the opportunity to experience this project at it\'s inception. So many of the tools that we use and admire have great stories behind them, and I\'ve wondered what it would have been like to be there at the beginning. Would we have been able to contribute feedback or suggestions or even just encouragement? Would we have recognized their importance without the benefit of hindsight? I think I know the answer now.\r\n\r\nThank you, Gabriel, for taking the time to share ONICS with us, and for making an episode of HPR about it. It was a delight to listen to. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(727,1350,'2013-10-24 05:48:19','Gabriel Evenfire','Thanks!','Well, thank you for the encouragement and support. It does make a difference. In any case, I\'m glad that the podcast was worth listening to. Now that I\'ve done a \"first\" show, subsequent ones should be less of mental hurdle.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(728,1350,'2013-10-30 14:21:16','gerryk','Awesome!','Hi Gabriel... thanks for an awesome show, and an amazing set of tools. I have cloned the repo\'s, and am just trying to find the time to have a play.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(729,1352,'2013-10-08 04:27:38','Stephen','so we are the test subjects?','Do I get two marshmallows for listening to the entire 1.3 hours of ambient sound of walking around by a highway? ;-) ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(730,1352,'2013-10-08 21:28:30','wrl','','I laughed so hard when my gPodder downloaded this. I thought waiting for actual content was just to prove a point, then I realized it was just a mistake.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(731,1352,'2013-10-11 07:52:38','Ken Fallon','What was that ?','At 1:04 in it sounded very much like relief ?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(732,1352,'2013-10-12 12:13:10','Epicanis','Also, huge bitrate','Ogginfo reports that the file is a 500kbps vorbis file. What the heck happened?\r\n\r\nI was also expecting this to be some kind of \"meta\" thing, with the real content popping up in the middle or the end as a virtual second-marshmallow for listening to a phone rattling around for an hour and a half in a pocket or backpack or wherever it is.\r\n\r\nYou owe us two marshmallows, Zachary De Santos!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(733,1352,'2013-10-13 15:18:11','Ken Fallon','huge bitrate','The huge bitrate would be my poor encoding. \r\n\r\nSo I guess, it\'s I who owes you a marshmallow.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(734,1352,'2013-10-13 16:47:27','Epicanis','Mind you, the sound quality was fantastic...','I must say, the reproduction at 500kbps Vorbis was flawless. You know, though, you could have gotten the same quality out of a mere 200kbps or so opus file. :-)\r\n\r\nIf you do find yourself reimbursing us for the marshmallows we are owed, you should at least get Zachary De Santos to cover half of them, since it was, after all, his idea/fault.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(735,1357,'2013-10-15 18:19:26','Frank','','I found the minimalism, as well as the acknowledgement that there can be life without a constant internet connection, absolutely delightful.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(736,1357,'2013-10-21 13:57:54','klaatu','internet is overrated','I agree. the internet is overrated and being online constantly is more distracting than useful. \r\n\r\nSure, there are times when it\'s maddening not to have an internet connection because you need something and you need it /now/ but, generally speaking, it can all wait until you check back in with the internet, download the infos you need, and then log off and get back to work.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(737,1357,'2013-10-22 02:11:22','James Michael DuPont','Thanks','Thank you for your comments, \r\nI look forward to sharing more stories with you.\r\nmike','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(738,1358,'2013-10-16 17:36:46','theru','','it is probably a good idea to have the key expire. I imagine there is a lot of keys out there where people did generate a key and then forgot what their passphrase was. \r\n\r\nAlso when you generate the key make a revocation cert. If you lose the key or it gets compromised you can then revoke the key. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(739,1358,'2013-10-21 13:54:57','klaatu','good point, theru','Yes, I had never thought about that use of expiry dates. Thanks.\r\n\r\nI also never thought to make the revocation cert at the time of key generation. That\'s a good idea.\r\n\r\nThanks for listening and thanks for the tips!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(740,1358,'2013-10-22 17:05:33','Bert','','I\'m pretty sure that encryption is done only with the recipient\'s public key. You want to use your own private key to save a copy in your \'sent\' folder, though. Evolution wants the sender\'s public key but that is AFAIK just a quirk that is specific to Evolution.\r\nGreat show!! I would like more people to get into gpg signing and encrypting messages.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(741,1358,'2013-11-04 16:01:45','theru','a bit for the tinfoilhats ','found this site on Hackernews some nice tips in there\r\nhttps://we.riseup.net/riseuplabs+paow/openpgp-best-practices','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(742,1359,'2013-10-17 18:48:11','Ken Fallon (as host)','How to quit smoking','As a reminder to anyone listening to this show, I covered stopping smoking in episode 145.\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=0145\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:36'),
(743,1359,'2013-10-18 05:58:22','etalas','I enjoyed this one','Probably b/c my dad smoked pipes and it reminded me of some of his habits. And we always had pipe-cleaners (the ones with red and white stripes) lying around ^^','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(744,1362,'2013-10-25 16:40:37','Ken Fallon','There is another way','While there usually is another way with perl, this time there is another way with the xslt. This is the xpath will select only the @type where the string is set to \"audio/ogg\" and then only display the first one.\r\n<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\r\n<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl=\"https://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform\" xmlns:exslt=\"https://exslt.org/common\" xmlns:content=\"https://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/\" xmlns:wfw=\"https://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/\" xmlns:dc=\"https://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/\" xmlns:atom=\"https://www.w3.org/2005/Atom\" xmlns:sy=\"https://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/\" xmlns:slash=\"https://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/\" xmlns:georss=\"https://www.georss.org/georss\" xmlns:geo=\"https://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#\" xmlns:media=\"https://search.yahoo.com/mrss/\" version=\"1.0\" extension-element-prefixes=\"exslt\">\r\n <xsl:output omit-xml-declaration=\"yes\" indent=\"no\" method=\"text\"/>\r\n <xsl:template match=\"/\">\r\n <xsl:for-each select=\"/rss/channel/item/enclosure[@type="audio/ogg"][1]\">\r\n <xsl:call-template name=\"value-of-template\">\r\n <xsl:with-param name=\"select\" select=\"@url\"/>\r\n </xsl:call-template>\r\n <xsl:value-of select=\"\'
\'\"/>\r\n </xsl:for-each>\r\n </xsl:template>\r\n <xsl:template name=\"value-of-template\">\r\n <xsl:param name=\"select\"/>\r\n <xsl:value-of select=\"$select\"/>\r\n <xsl:for-each select=\"exslt:node-set($select)[position()>1]\">\r\n <xsl:value-of select=\"\'
\'\"/>\r\n <xsl:value-of select=\".\"/>\r\n </xsl:for-each>\r\n </xsl:template>\r\n</xsl:stylesheet>\r\n','2022-07-15 03:50:57'),
(745,1364,'2013-10-29 16:24:21','Frank','','This was fascinating.\r\n\r\nI\'m old enough to remember party lines. There were teen-aged girls in the house on the corner--getting a line was always an adventure.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(746,1367,'2013-10-30 22:05:16','Windigo','Gotta love git hooks','Excellent episode! I use git hooks (post-commit) to automatically push any commits to a dev server back into the main repository, and it\'s been a life saver.\r\n\r\nI didn\'t realize you could cancel a commit with the right exit code, though - thanks for the tip!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(747,1367,'2013-11-03 12:06:58','CPrompt','The most interesting coder...','Nice episode jezra! \r\n\r\nHere\'s ya t-shirt :\r\nhttps://www.thinkgeek.com/product/f141/','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(748,1367,'2013-11-06 16:34:41','jezra','golden!','That shirt is awesome! Unfortunately, I think Dan would kill me if I wore that to work. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(749,1370,'2013-11-01 19:56:38','Windigo','Excellent first episode!','First of all, congrats on making the transition to contributor!\r\n\r\nI\'ve always been a little curious about static publishing. I\'m aware of the various technologies involved separately, but didn\'t know much about how they\'re used together to publish sites.\r\n\r\nThanks for the introduction, and extensive site notes. When I finally get up the motivation to try it out, I\'m starting here. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(750,1370,'2013-11-04 06:23:10','Tony Pelaez','Re: Excellent first episode!','Thanks for your feedback @Windigo, listening back to this episode, I think I could have included greater detail in the audio. I hope to have time to create an accompanying screencast soon. That being said, the commands you see above will get you up and running with a website on github. It also helps you get your mind around how this is done if you have a little knowledge of standard ruby tools such as \"rake\" and \"rubygems\".\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(751,1371,'2013-12-01 02:58:44','Epicanis','I realize it\'s a typo, but I like it...','\"Equipment that is nice to have to do a Linux Feast\"\r\n\r\nActually, a \"Linux Feast\" sounds pretty dang appealing. \r\n\r\nPerhaps at NELF2014, instead of a loud boozy \"after-party\" we could have a proper feast.\r\n(Do we have enough food-competent geeks and/or nerds going to NELF2014 that we could put on an OPEN-SOURCE feast?)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(752,1371,'2014-02-19 01:30:29','pokey','linux feast','well, I can make eggs...','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(753,1377,'2013-11-14 21:13:22','sgtron','awesome review','Thanks, Frank. Loved the review. Checked out the website. Nice tablet at great price. If I had better access to wifi it would be a no-brainer, but since I\'m out and about so much I\'ll have to stick with my 4G phone for now. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(754,1377,'2013-11-15 02:52:01','julian loui','','Thanks for a very lucid informative talk, Frank. \r\nListening to it make me feel as though I were at the November TWUUG meeting, which I couldn\'t attend. \r\n\r\nJulian\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(755,1377,'2013-11-23 02:52:18','Frank Bell','','Thank you for the kind words.\r\n\r\nI did a little experimenting when I was trapped in place without wireless last Saturday; I was able to tether the tablet to the hotspot from my cell phone quite smoothly.\r\n\r\nI am, quite frankly, enjoying the heck out of this device, far more than I ever expected to.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(756,1386,'2013-11-27 00:39:41','Quvmoh','great interview','although it was disappointing that the first order of business was to have a meeting on who to exclude from the paper :-( . look forward to the book. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(757,1387,'2013-11-10 22:36:55','Underruner','','Thank you hacker public radio for the opertunity to contribute.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(758,1387,'2014-06-27 00:30:29','pokey','Awesome show','I\'m way behind in all of my podcast listening, but I\'m trying to catch up. I just listened to this episode, and I was blown away. First at how creative you are, and also at how accurately you were able to describe everything that you did. I have the world\'s worst visual imagination, but I was able to picture everything that you described. I\'m very impressed that you were not intimidated by the programming of the Arduino, because I would have been. I thoroughly enjoyed what you said when you went off script as well. Bravo to you.\r\n\r\nMy only criticism is that I think your breakers are too big. if you ever drew 20 Amps of power through either circuit you would burn up your 14Gauge bus. You may wish to add fuses to your box or replace the 20 Amp breakers with 10 Amp breakers.\r\n\r\nWhen you get to the point of being able to choreograph your lights to music plase, please, PLEASE do the HPR song (or at least The Free Software Song). \r\n\r\nThank you for a great episode. It\'s going on my all-time favorites list.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(759,1388,'2013-11-20 01:26:17','sigflup','corrections','Hey, this is sigflup. I\'ve since learned that every function call is an event in the event loop inside the javascript vm. This means that functions aren\'t concurrently being processed like I thought they were in the podcast. Happy hacking','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(760,1390,'2014-06-27 00:45:45','pokey','Loved it','I really enjoyed this episode. Not only do you have a \"phone book quality\" voice (verifiable), but you also filled in several blank spaces in my understanding of encryption. I have a much better understanding now than before I listened. Thank you for another great episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(761,1392,'2013-12-19 12:56:21','pokey','Thank you','I never look up, but last night I listened to your episode on my way home from work. You inspired me to up and see if I could locate the moon. It was just about sunset, and the only thing that I could see was one absurdly bright point in an otherwise gray sky. My first thought was \"Oh, that must be the north star,\" since that\'s usually the first one to show up. But then I realizes that I was looking South (roughly), and the sky was brightest where the light was coming from, so it probably couldn\'t be a star. Right about the time that I was wondering if it could have been a satellite, you began to talk about the inner planets being visible, and appearing near the sun. From your descriptions I guessed that it must be Venus. I even got my binoculars (well, monocular, since a lens fell out) out and had a look that way. A quick search this morning verified that it was probably Venus. It was fun, and you inspired it, so thank you. I can\'t wait for the next installment. ','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(762,1393,'2013-12-05 14:27:43','Ace Frahm','','At 17:51, you incorrectly state that each person heard on the track should have their own Artist tag. Artist is a singleton tag, according to the specification.\r\nhttps://age.hobba.nl/audio/mirroredpages/ogg-tagging.html\r\n\r\nEach performer should have their own PERFORMER tag, and the ARTIST tag would simply summarize all PERFORMER and ENSEMBLE (that\'s a band name, or orchestra, or group, etc.) tags, for dumber software/hardware that can\'t easily show them separately.','2022-02-14 13:16:36'),
(763,1393,'2013-12-05 16:11:08','Ace Frahm','','From Hacker Public Radio 1393\r\n\r\nFailure to include metadata tags is like sending e-Mail without any text on the subject line\r\n\r\noggenc does NOT transfer attached pictures from flac input (though it DOES transfer all vorbiscomment metadata. FLAC stores attached pictures in a separate metadata structure so oggenc misses it. opusenc - at least in recent beta versions - DOES appear to transfer the attached pictures as well as the vorbiscomments, though. Another reason to upgrade to opus, I suppose...) \r\n\r\nThe 2 Most Important Meta-tag Systems\r\nID3 Version 2.3\r\n	.mp3 files\r\nVorbiscomments\r\n	.opus\r\n	ogg vorbis\r\n	.flac\r\n	.speex\r\n\r\nwebm/matroska\r\nwindows media\r\n.wav \r\n\r\nKID3-CLI 3.0 is a post-encoding metadata editor available on many platforms. Has a command line version too.\r\n\r\nPuddleTag on Linux for sure, Mac unofficially & possibly on Windows, supports multiple attached pictures & modern file formats, good for editing whole directories at once.\r\n\r\nLinux command line tag editors\r\nMPG123-ID3dump for .mp3 files including attached pictures, comes with MPG123 command line audio player\r\nID3TDD supports multiple pictures, but tags them all as 3-Front Cover\r\nvorbiscomment, but you must generate the METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE yourself. Package includes ogginfo tool which displays ogg vorbis metadata\r\nopustools package encoder & decoder, opusinfo displays metadata but doesn\'t dump pictures\r\nexiftool mostly used for photos, but can display metadata from pretty much every media file except for .opus\r\n\r\nThere are lots of media file formats, but the only one that uses ID3v1 or ID3v2.3 metadata tagging system is the .mp3 file format.\r\n	The LAME .mp3 encoder appears to accept only 1 attached picture on the command line.\r\n	.mp4 is an object-oriented file format, kind of like a special version of Quicktime format\r\n		Quicktime isn\'t a \"filetype\", it\'s a framework. But it gets used like a filetype.\r\n	The .mp4 specification includes an ID3 data object you could put an entire ID3 header into\r\n	.m4a is the audio version of a .mp4 filetype\r\n		You might see .m4a files with this ID3 data object populated by a valid ID3 object\r\n		But .m4a files typically come from iTunes, but Apple uses an undocumented proprietary format for metadata, so you probably won\'t normally see the ID3 object on a .m4a file from Apple\r\nThere are 2 or 3 other undocumented metadata formats you might run into as well (I don\'t know what they are.)\r\n\r\nID3 Version 1 is an UNRELATED bad old format with SERIOUS LIMITATIONS.\r\n	All metadata is crammed into a specialized 128B data structure at the end of an .mp3 file.\r\n	By putting the 128B at the end of an .mp3 file, crappy players that did not understand what it was would probably just interpret it as more sound a play it as some noise, or if your player crashed on the metadata, it would do so at least AFTER you got to hear the file\r\n	30B each of title, artist, album, comment\r\n	4B year\r\n	1B genre code number, which of course, limits the genres to 2^8 = 256 labels, that need to be looked up in a table to find the definition.\r\n	There are ~141 genre codes defined by ID3v1\r\n	None of them are \"podcast\"\r\n	\r\nID3 Version 2.3\r\n	Completely different than ID3v1\r\n	A whole bunch (~75?) of special data fields, each with their own special data structure at the beginning of the file\r\n	Each field has a special 4-character code to identify it, such as TCON for genre or TIT2 for title\r\n	The (~75?) special data fields use (~5-6) different KINDS of special data structures\r\n		Of these (~75?) special data fields, 39 fields use the text-class kind of special data structure\r\n		The text-based data fields have the same structure\r\n		Except for comments, which has its own structure\r\n		And except for the \"involved persons list\", which is a catch-all text field for stuffing in all the names & roles for everyone else whose role isn\'t defined in one of the other special fields.\r\n		When you stuff multiple entries into a text field, you separate them with a forward slash \'/\'\r\n		Attached Picture\r\n			Aside from the text-based special data fields above, the only other frame anybody normally uses is the \"attached picture\" field.\r\n			Not just a copy of a .jpg file or whatever image format\r\n			Specifies a MIME type of picture data\r\n			Has a free-form text description of the picture data\r\n			You can have multiple \"attached picture\" fields\r\n				Except for 2 \"file icon\" attached picture types, one copy each only\r\n			Has a number code to indicate what the picture is supposed to be\r\n				Cover art\r\n				Inside cover\r\n				Liner notes art\r\n				Artist headshots \r\n				Record publisher logo\r\n				Image of the silk-screened CD art on the disc it came from\r\n				Back cover\r\n				A brightly colored fish (the ogg format uses a cartoon fish for its logo, picture type 17)\r\n				etc.\r\n	\"Content Type\" = genre\r\n	The genre field is text in ID3v2, not a number code like ID3v1\r\n	But the ID3v2 specification still suggests adding the ID3v1 genre code number to this field\r\n	Text field TXXX\r\n		User-defined\r\n		You can have as many TXXX fields as you want, so long as the descriptions are different\r\n		A key name\r\n		A string value\r\n		Could be used to include vorbiscomments\r\n\r\nID3 Version 2.4\r\n	Don\'t bother using ID3v2.4\r\n	Not widely used\r\n	If Windows won\'t read your files\' tags, maybe someone tagged them with the ID3v2.4 format instead of the ID3v2.3 format.\r\n	Mostly a few backwards-incompatible renamings of a few tags\r\n	A few obscure new tags\r\n	When you stuff multiple entries into a text field, you separate them with a NULL, instead of the forward slash \'/\' used by ID3v2.3\r\n	Chapters\r\n		There was a 2005 method of stuffing another ID3 header into the first one to make chapter tags, but this was made 5 years after ID3v2.4, which isn\'t used much anyway, and only the BBC ever used it with their own player software, so you should never try to use this either. If you have to do some archaeology on an old BBC file, you might need to know this. Otherwise, just use vorbiscomments if you want to make an \"enhanced podcast\" with images that show up during playback like a slideshow, based on the chapter tags.\r\n\r\n.mp3 format only uses ID3 format metadata tags\r\nAll the other file formats we care about use Vorbiscomments\r\nhttps://wiki.xiph.org/Chapter_Extension\r\nhttps://www.linuxcommand.org/man_pages/vorbiscomment1.html\r\nhttps://wiki.xiph.org/VorbisComment\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VorbisComment\r\n\r\nVorbiscomments\r\n	All printable characters, must be text characters, no non-printable characters or control codes\r\n	You could search vorbiscomments with grep\r\n	Tag key names are case insensitive\r\n	You can create your own key names\r\n	All tags are OPTIONAL; you can have an ogg file with NO tags present and it will still be compliant\r\n	But there is a recommended standard for common metadata\r\n		https://age.hobba.nl/audio/mirroredpages/ogg-tagging.html\r\n		Singleton tags should only appear once\r\n			If one of these tags appears more than once (a non-compliant mistake), its last appearance should be displayed if there is only room to display one instance of the tag.\r\n		Genre should be TEXT not a number\r\n		You might put comments in the DESCRIPTION field, or make your own \"comment\" tag, although \"comment\" isn\'t in the recommended standard. You could put the same data in both places, although you\'re duplicating the data.\r\n		ISRC tag=\"International Standard Recording Code\", a special tracking code for commercial audio recordings \r\n	The chapter comments proposed tags are very similar to codes fed to .matroska tools to create tags for those files\r\n	Replay gain tags could be used/set by user\'s player software to select a relative playback volume for track adjustment, if you like.\r\n	Location supports geo-tagging the track, although what this means isn\'t clear. GEO_LOCATION\r\n		Is it where the track was recorded?\r\n		Is it thee location referred to in the content?\r\n		Is it the location where the intended audience is?\r\n		Is it a tag that specifies where user\'s device should be when it automatically starts to play?\r\n		Is it a bunch of waypoints of recordings of chapters you took at different scenic locations in a travelogue?\r\n	Attached pictures are a pain.\r\n		A visible picture is obviously not text-encoded (other than ASCII art). Not human readable.\r\n		Shouldn\'t be in the metadata anyway, should be an independent file inside the container\r\n		But ogg files don\'t support encapsulation of picture format files in the container\r\n		And .mp3 files have been including the binary encoded album art pictures for so long, it is standard practice in .mp3 format\r\n		Encoding a picture inside a vorbiscomments tag involves encoding it as printable text characters.\r\n			e-Mail programs have to do this kind of thing too, encoding pictures as text\r\n			5 or 10 years ago ( right now is 2013-12-05 ) people were doing this with an obsolete field called \"COVERART\" with the contents of the field being nothing more than the base64 encoded .jpg or .png file\r\n				Don\'t do this now, no one will ever see the cover art\r\n				Nobody ever implemented using this field\r\n				It was replaced long ago by an officially documented structure\r\n		METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE is the correct vorbiscomments tag name for a picture.\r\n			https://wiki.xiph.org/VorbisComment#Cover_art\r\n			A complete Base64 encoded data structure, includes\r\n				Width\r\n				Height\r\n				MIME type\r\n				Description [optional]\r\n				Picture Type number code ( similar to ID3 )\r\n			.flac uses vorbiscomments for its metadata\r\n				Except for attached pictures\r\n				Unlike .vorbis, .speex & .opus files, .flac files are not inside .ogg containers. .flac is its own container format.\r\n				.flac has its own attached picture block, very similar to .mp3 files\r\n					.flac also calls this tag \"METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE\"\r\n						But it does not have the same format as the vorbiscomments METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag!\r\n			.vorbis, .speex & .opus files\r\n				Don\'t have a special metadata block just for attached pictures\r\n				These build a .flac METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag, then Base64 encoded it into text that can be used as a valid vorbiscomment METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag.\r\n		The .flac & .opus LINUX command line file encoders allow you to include as many attached pictures as you want as switches\r\n		The LINUX command line ogg vorbis encoder does not allow you to include multiple pictures\r\n			BUT, the ogg vorbis encoder does accept .flac files for input\r\n				It will transfer the .flac file\'s metadata to the finished .vorbis file, including any extra pictures that were already in the .flac file\'s metadata\r\n		So if you make .flac files with complete metadata as the source to work from, you can generate .opus & .vorbis files without editing the metadata further\r\n		\r\n.mp4 is a Apple Computer Company format.\r\n	If you wanted to create an \"enhanced podcast\" that shows pictures at certain times specified by chapter markers, you\'d have to use special iTunes tags with .mp4 files to make it work, normally only on apple hardware, but WanAMP can also read this format and shows the pictures on a Windows box.\r\n	No one else knows haw to make them, as this is not documented well or supported on most other players.\r\n	You should just use Ogg Vorbis with vorbiscomments that have chapter markers instead.\r\n	\r\n.wav files\r\n	The lowest common denominator for audio files\r\n	Usually lossless PCM audio\r\n	Simple in structure, widely supported\r\n	.wav files support metadata, but they are badly documented\r\n	Audacity can include a limited set of tags in a .wav both as an \"info chunk\", whatever that is, AND as an ID3 tag\r\n	\r\n.webm is a special file format version of .matroska\r\n	.matroska metadata is even worse than ID3\r\n		Uses ~100 rigidly defined tag names\r\n	.webm uses ~70 of those .matroska tags\r\n	The tags are heavily video-related, seems to presume the .matroska files will only contain movies\r\n	Supposed to be object-oriented\r\n		Burying some tags inside other tags, such as a \"character\" tag inside an \"actor\" tag\r\n	\"thanks to\" tag is a catch-all for stuff that couldn\'t go anywhere else\r\n	This metadata is tacked onto the end of the file so in theory you don\'t ever need to reincode the video file if you need to change the metadata\r\n		Streaming media won\'t get the metadata until the entire file is played, unless the whole file is being buffered to the end before playback\r\n	.webm doesn\'t support attached pictures at all\r\n		.matroska has limited support for attached pictures\r\n			Allows a large and a small version of a \"banner graphic\"\r\n			Allows a large and a small version of an \"album art graphic\"\r\n	.webm audio files only exist as afterthought to video\r\n		You could make one with GNU Media Goblin\r\n			Useful only as a \"test\"\r\n\r\n.asf or .wma audio files are bad, obscure, Windows media file formats\r\n	.asf=.mp4\r\n	.wma=.m4a\r\n	.wmv=.m4v\r\n	All of these Windows media files are really just .asf format, similar to the way .m4a & .m4v are really just .mp4 format.\r\n	Metadata is limited\r\n		5 different metadata \"objects\"\r\n			Can contain different kinds of metadata\r\n			\"content description object\", a very small set of pre-defined metadata fields, 64kB each\r\n				title\r\n				author\r\n				copyright\r\n				description\r\n				rating\r\n			\"content branding\" object\r\n				Limited to a single banner image\r\n				album art\r\n				URL for copyright warning stored online\r\n			\"extended content description\" object\r\n				Random other metadata\r\n			\"metadata\" object\r\n				Seems to be an \"extended metadata content\" object that can refer to just one file inside the .asf container, not just all of them at once\r\n			\"metadata library object\"\r\n				Anything else\r\n\r\nNo browsers automatically display audio or video metadata by default, built-in. The web designer must write code to include this on the page.','2022-02-14 13:16:37'),
(764,1393,'2013-12-06 19:04:43','Epicanis','\"Artist\" tag(s)','Ace Frahm says:\r\n\"At 17:51, you incorrectly state that each person heard on the track should have their own Artist tag. Artist is a singleton tag, according to the specification.\"\r\n\r\nI dispute this - if you go to directly to the actual specification at https://xiph.org/vorbis/doc/v-comment.html, you will find this:\r\n\r\n\"Field names are not required to be unique (occur once) within a comment header. As an example, assume a track was recorded by three well know artists; the following is permissible, and encouraged:\r\n\r\n ARTIST=Dizzy Gillespie \r\n ARTIST=Sonny Rollins \r\n ARTIST=Sonny Stitt\"\r\n\r\nWorth a mention as a \"point of contention\" in a followup though - I\'m less inclined to give broken old software that doesn\'t correctly support the specification a pass, but it is true that an awful lot of software (including VLC) is still stuck in \"one value per tag\" mode.','2022-02-14 13:16:37'),
(765,1393,'2013-12-06 20:22:10','Epicanis','Good summary/questions, Ace Frahm!','Seems like you have enough questions there for a short followup all by yourself! \r\n\r\nJust to hit a couple of random ones here (I\'ll probably try to follow up in audio in the \"opus codec\" episode once I\'ve gotten caught up to that):\r\n\r\nBy \"3 or 4 others\" (metadata formats) besides id3 and vorbiscomments I was referring to RIFF INFO chunks (.wav metadata), webm/matroska tags, .wma microsoft-screwy-thing, and the undocumented special iTunes thing.\r\n\r\nI did count right around 75 individual id3v2.3 field (/frame/tag) names, though I didn\'t go back to confirm the exact number.\r\n\r\nMinor point - I need to enunciate better I think - it\'s \"id3ted\" rather than \"id3tdd\".\r\n\r\nGood question about the geolocation - it\'s \"any of those that are relevant\". For photographs, the geolocation is always assumed to be \"where the photographer was standing when the picture was taken\" and there aren\'t too many cases where any other interpretation makes much sense. (In a telephoto of an obvious landmark it might make sense to geotag with the location of the landmark instead, or for an image of a map, it might make sense to geotag the center of where the map represents). As far as I know, photo geotagging only supports a single geolocation per image as well [not necessarily counting geoTIFF], so options are limited.\r\nWith vorbiscomments explicitly designed to support multiples of all tags, the way I think of it is you put in a geo_location tag for any location that is relevant to the recording: imagine that someone wants to generate openstreetmap (or Google Maps or whatever) pages with markers that go with the audio files. The way I figure it, the geo_location tags should provide the locations of all of the markers that the hypothetical link-maker would want to show. (It\'s probably worth proposing a \"description\" addition to the geo_location tag now that you mention this, though: something like \"geo_location;35.1592;-98.4422;;Nowhere, OK used as example location\"\r\n\r\nAlso, thanks for teaching ME something - I usually tend to think of playback as something that doesn\'t need an internet connection, so I feel stupid for only thinking of web links to relevant pages (what I used the \"chapter###url\" tags for, e.g. the id3v2.3 chapter\'s URL should have been a link to the specification online) and somehow completely missed using it to pull a slideshow from the internet while playing. Now I have to try that... (For me, chapter marks are more about having convenient \"jump to:\" points in the audio.) It\'s worth noting that doing \"fetch pictures from the internet\" like that also makes it a way to put \"web bugs\" in audio files...\r\n\r\n(Finally: I should say I don\'t necessarily disagree with your contention of how one SHOULD use the \"artist\" tag...well, actually I do but less strongly and not because that\'s not what the specification says. The cases where it matters seem like they wouldn\'t come up TOO often in practice. The examples that come to mind are mostly things like \"Darryl Hall and John Oates\" and \"Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel\" and \"William Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan\", all of whom are so well known as duos that \"Hall and Oates\", \"Simon and Garfunkel\", and \"Gilbert and Sullivan\" are practically all single-word names (kind of like that \"colladoody\" video game people were going on about...) and makes sense as a \"singlet\". On the other hand, there\'s \"Ebony and Ivory\" (Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney?), where I think it would definitely be more appropriate to follow the specification and give each \"artist\" their own tag. I just think it\'s more consistent to use all of the tags the same as per specification, and more people using the tags correctly will encourage playback software to support it correctly.)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(766,1393,'2013-12-08 10:56:39','Ken Fallon','Metadata should not be included in the file','Hi Epicanis,\r\n\r\nVery informative show but I would argue that only metadata necessary for the playout of the file should be included in the file itself. Everything else should be included in a separate file that itself is dedicated to hold the metatadata. That file might include locations for where other item might be found, eg, a url to the poster location, or a link to the wikipedia article. \r\n\r\nThe main reason for this would be to keep the complexity of the playout device as simple, and therefore as cheap , as possible. Your argument that there is enough space in a media file to hold all the metadata breaks down, once you start adding metadata in multiple languages, or extending it to add reviews, sleeve notes, wikipedia articles, reviews etc. At that point the text begins to get very significant indeed and runs the risk of been outdated very quickly.\r\n\r\nFields like, Title/Artist/Album/Track Number/Length, should be included as they are (usually not always) the same in every language, and give playout devices enough information for to display something useful, while another another more compiles, independent, process gathers the richer metadata from all over the web.\r\n\r\nIn an ideal world a single additional field with a global unique identifier would be enough to identify the work to the player, and allow it to go out an locate the metadata file, which in turn would link to other sources of information.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(767,1393,'2013-12-08 18:56:22','Epicanis','Admins Against Tagging...','Egad, Ken_Fallon, I have to say I strongly and FUNDAMENTALLY disagree there. I guess I\'ll HAVE to record a followup now...\r\n\r\nWait. That was your plan all along, wasn\'t it? You sly devil!\r\n\r\nYour argument essentially goes to the point of opposing local storage of files or information at all. What you\'re describing sounds like the user just has a big literally-meaningless (locally) number, and his/her/its media player is meant to send that big meaningless number to one or more places scattered on the general internet to beg for relevant \"content\". (Your description doesn\'t take it that far, but once you\'re down to nothing but an audio and/or video stream and have gotten rid of everything else meaningful, and have mandated an internet connection to get it, why even keep the media itself locally?)\r\n\r\nI\'ll save the rest for a followup episode, so you win this round. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(768,1393,'2013-12-09 12:09:43','Ken Fallon','I\'m not an admin','First these are my own opinions. Second you completely misinterpreted my arguments so, first allow *me* to record a show stating my case and you can then record another arguing your point.\r\n\r\nThat way we get 3 shows !!!\r\n\r\nKen','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(769,1393,'2013-12-09 14:59:14','Epicanis','\"Charismatic Cult Leader\"?','\"El Presidente\"? \"Colonel\"?...\r\n(I actually have no idea what the [dis]organizational chart for HPR looks like, but I was equating your level of access with some form of administrative-level authority, even if you use it only sparingly and judiciously...)\r\n\r\n\"first allow *me* to record a show stating my case and you can then record another arguing your point.\r\n\r\nThat way we get 3 shows !!!\"\r\n\r\nAh, HA! I knew it! Will your nefarious schemes never end?\r\n\r\nSounds like a plan!\r\n\r\n(I should clarify that my leap to \"against tagging\" is largely based on an argument that any piece of information that is not actually ATTACHED to a file doesn\'t really count as \"tagging\", and, yes, I am intentionally engaging in a sort of \"inflatio ad absurdum\" there - I want more shows on this topic, too!)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(770,1393,'2013-12-19 13:01:28','pokey','','Well, I liked it.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(771,1396,'2013-12-10 20:56:14','Sarah Williams','listener','I\'d love to get this in sequence like an audiobook. Then get it to itunes or newfiction.com \r\n\r\nKeep it up.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(772,1397,'2013-12-19 13:04:16','pokey','Good show','It was great fun to listen to. You guys did a great job. I\'m sure it helped Ken\'s recovery to know that HPR is in good hands even when they aren\'t his own.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(773,1398,'2013-12-12 11:36:39','Mark Waters','Thanks','Just wanted to say thanks for this episode , it was well produced and very informative.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(774,1398,'2013-12-19 13:19:29','pokey','Great Episode','I really enjoyed this episode. Some of it I already knew, and most of it was new to me. I like when I know a little something when I start. It gives me more confidence in the new information. \r\n\r\nI have a couple of questions that I hope you wouldn\'t mind answering in a follow-up episode.\r\n\r\n1.) What was learned in 2011 that completed our understanding of how batteries work?\r\n2.) I forget my second question, but it was a good one. :(\r\n\r\nAs an aside, I have had really good results with Nickel Metal Hydride rechargeable batteries. They hold a charge for weeks and weeks with no noticeable drop in their run time, they store a good amount of energy (2200 mAh for size AA) and have a nice long runtime. I had one set of four AA batteries that I swapped back and forth in my flashlight (which takes two at a time) for almost five years. Sadly, I lost the flashlight with two of them in it, but I still have the other two in my Mintyboost, and they seem as good as ever.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(775,1398,'2013-12-22 17:44:41','MrX','Reply','Hi Mark, very sorry for the long delay in getting back to you, finding the time sometimes can be difficult. Thanks for the kind words, glad you enjoyed the episode, am still trying to find the time to do part 2, hopefully won\'t be too much longer.\r\n\r\n-----------\r\n\r\nHi pokey, again very sorry for the long delay in getting back to you\r\nTo answer you 1st question:-\r\n\r\nA lead acid battery consists of lead electrode and one side and lead oxide at the other, lead oxides don\'t normally conduct electricity. Apparently it was only in 2011 that we figured out how it was working. When electrons travel between the electrodes the lead oxide looses oxygen transforming itself into a conductor.\r\n\r\nHope this answer question\r\n\r\nSounds like your also a bit of a battery fan, just goes to show that batteries can last for years (if you look after them). Had a look at the Mintyboost, sounds very interesting, I would imagine it will be very handy :)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(776,1399,'2013-12-19 12:42:54','pokey','NICE!','What an awesome interview. I really enjoyed it. Ben was great, and quite a good \"get\" if I may say so. You asked some really good questions too. I was unaware that the Linux Voice guys had started, so thank you for bringing that to my attention. Looks like I have some catching up to do.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(777,1400,'2013-12-19 13:20:24','pokey','','Good show. This one is going to get a second listen. You guys have some very good ideas.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(778,1400,'2014-09-19 05:07:38','Krayon','CalDAV etc','CalDAV/CardDAV: For N900 sync\'ing, syncevolution, for Android sync\'ing, DavDroid. It creates local accounts that can be used with native Contacts and Calendars. It\'s free and open source, get it from https://f-droid.org/\r\n\r\nAny MCE remote (search on eBay) are as cheap as chips and should work great. I use them on my XBMC boxen.','2022-02-14 13:16:37'),
(779,1404,'2014-01-03 21:06:55','George','All these years....','...and I didn\'t know about the multitool. I\'ve needed that forever!\r\n\r\nI am curious, why 24-bit flac? HPR shows being (mostly) mono, voice recordings don\'t typically need that kind of encoding. I know that you are going to convert to ogg, mp3, speex and possibly opus, but still a 16-bit input file should be more than adequate in 99.999 percent of the cases. Only when music is involved might it be necessary to use 24-bit, but even then, unless the source is recorded @ 24-bit it\'s really un-necessary.\r\n\r\nAlso, I was surprised there was no effort made to do noise removal, or level the tracks. I frequently notice level differences between the intro/outro and main recordings, levelling could go a long way to helping with that.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(780,1404,'2014-01-05 20:43:40','Ken Fallon','Because....','Because for Archive.org will get the flac and they can then encode it from the best possible encoding available to us, to whatever new format comes along.\r\n\r\nFeel free to take a look at the encoding script and modify it as you desire. \r\ngit@gitorious.org:hpr-scheduling-system/hpr-scheduling-system.git\r\n\r\n/transcoding/hprtranscode\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(781,1411,'2013-12-31 14:03:10','Nido Media','correction','\"Thomas Gordon\" is actually \"Thomas Goorden\", as in https://piratenpartij.be/user/513','2022-02-14 13:16:38'),
(782,1417,'2014-01-07 06:16:38','Ed teach','Great','The content was awesome.\r\nFigure out how to have a moderator. People are \r\nInterrupting each other . One guy was \r\nBreaking up continually .','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(783,1417,'2014-01-09 16:00:15','Ken Fallon','It\'s not my fault !!!','Hi Ed,\r\n\r\nPeople are interupting each other because we are all calling in from around the planet. While mumble is good, it cannot compensate for the speed of light, and so two people on other sides of the globe both speak at the same time in what to them is a vacant space. Not a lot you can do about it.\r\n\r\nI would be very reluctant to have a moderator as it would interrupt the flow.\r\n\r\nWe could however set some guidelines for talking, eg keying up, so that others know you wish to talk. Also training people that a silence is ok for a while as it will be removed automatically in the post recording.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(784,1428,'2014-04-15 11:26:23','Seetee','Linux version','In Steam you can now choose to install the Beta-version of Sanctum 2 to try it out. Works really well!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(785,1430,'2014-02-04 15:27:52','Roan','','seq will do descending counts\r\n\r\nseq 100 -1 1\r\n\r\nseq FIRST INCREMENT LAST','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(786,1430,'2014-02-08 17:22:17','Cloud','Great podcast and brilliant idea for a series, but...','now I need to upgrade my broadband to allow for all these great videos that I wasn\'t getting before!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(787,1430,'2014-02-09 11:14:28','Dave Morriss','The power of modern Bash','The power of modern Bash\r\nI wondered why you used:\r\n\r\nseq 1 ${maxtodownload} | while read videopage;\r\ndo\r\n\r\nas opposed to:\r\n\r\nfor (( videopage=1; videopage<=${maxtodownload}; videopage++ ))\r\ndo\r\n\r\nor (if you don\'t like repeating \'videopage\' three times):\r\n\r\nfor videopage in {1..10}\r\ndo\r\n\r\nYou can even do more fancy stuff like:\r\n\r\nfor i in {001..0010}; do\r\n\r\nfor i in {0010..001}; do\r\n\r\nfor c in {a..h}; do\r\n\r\nI find I almost never use the \'seq\' command in today\'s version of Bash.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(788,1430,'2014-02-16 10:51:39','Ken Fallon','Because ...','I got into the habit of using while loops because it deals with spaces in input better or so I\'ve found., but mostly I can work in \"blocks\" up to the pipe \"|\" is one block. Test. Debug. Then on to the next block. That makes It easier to debug on the command line, where most of these start. \r\n\r\nNot using seq makes the script too bashey :) but that argument holds little water I know.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(789,1430,'2014-05-23 15:07:11','Jim Zatorski','Extra video downloaded','Is anyone else having an extra video appear EVERYDAY (usually the same one)?\r\n\r\nI have tracked it down to the \"--max-quality\" switch. The man page shows an expected \"=FMT\" clause.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(790,1430,'2014-06-10 08:10:42','APCR','','Thanks for the script. It works great. Can anyone tell me how to run it as a cron job? I have copied the file to /etc/cron.daily but it does not run. Do I have to run a script that actions this script?','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(791,1430,'2014-06-10 14:34:22','Ken Fallon','cron','To get this to work in cron you need to make sure that the script is executable. Assuming the script is called \"boyt.bash\" and is in your own bin directory \"/home/apcr/bin/boyt.bash\".\r\n\r\nchmod +x /home/apcr/bin/boyt.bash\r\n\r\nCheck that is runs by just typing:\r\n/home/apcr/bin/boyt.bash\r\n\r\nAfter that it should run in cron.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(792,1430,'2015-03-03 04:59:39','Ian','','I have copied the script but when I try to run it it says:\r\n\r\ntoshy@toshy-Satellite-A300:~/Desktop$ ./boyt.sh\r\nawk: line 0: regular expression compile failed (missing operand)\r\n\"|?\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(793,1430,'2015-03-05 09:29:31','Ken Fallon','','One thing I missed is that the logfile needs to exist the first time you run it so it may produce errors.\r\n\r\n@Ian I just tried it on another computer and it didn\'t complain. It could be that copying and pasting from the web page is causing problems. Try downloading it with wget\r\n\r\nwget -O ./boyt.sh https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1430-downloader.bash.txt\r\n\r\nthen running it \r\n\r\nsh +x ./boyt.sh','2022-02-14 13:16:38'),
(794,1432,'2014-01-18 17:56:02','Donald Desjardin','Mildly miffed comment','When the presenter of this show talked about how the Farenheight numbers were crazy/random/strange, I vaguely remembered from my early grade school days that there was a logical reason for the numbers.\r\n\r\nSo I tried to look up the reasons as I remmebered them, but couldn\'t find anything on the web.\r\n\r\nFrom what I remember (almost 50 years ago) the person that developer the F scale (just like Mr Celcius) also wanted to use some known standards, and the coldest temp known and used was the freezing point of ocean water roughly zero F (it depend on the amount of salt/saturation in the water), and the 100 measurement was not the hottest point known (because they were still discovering hotter things), but the human body (98.6 is pretty close to 100, and i don\'t think they had the decimal precision then).\r\n\r\nHope that clear it up and makes un American\'s look a little less strange :-)\r\n\r\nThanks,\r\n\r\nDon','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(795,1432,'2014-01-21 17:38:58','Ken Fallon','\'twas I','Hi Don,\r\n\r\nI\'m the one that was ranting about the arbitrariness of the Farenheight scale. You are of course correct that the celcius scale is equally arbitrary, but at least there is a known reason for it. So I was thrilled to hear your explanation but my hopes were dashed by none other than the US Navy, https://www.onr.navy.mil/Focus/ocean/water/temp3.htm \"The freezing point of seawater is about 28.4°F (-2°C), instead of the 32°F (0°C) freezing point of ordinary water. \" \r\n\r\nBut then wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Gabriel_Fahrenheit) explains \"The lowest temperature was achieved by preparing a frigorific mixture of ice, water, and ammonium chloride (a salt), and waiting for it to reach equilibrium. The thermometer then was placed into the mixture and the liquid in the thermometer allowed to descend to its lowest point. The thermometer\'s reading there was taken as 0 °F. \"\r\n\r\nNot that seems to support your point but then we have \"The second reference point was selected as the reading of the thermometer when it was placed in still water when ice was just forming on the surface. This was assigned as 32 °F. \" - Which begs my question why pick 32 degrees for that ?\r\n\r\nContinuing \"The third calibration point, taken as 96 °F, was selected as the thermometer\'s reading when the instrument was placed under the arm or in the mouth.\" So he may have been using a multiple of 32 but why ?\r\n\r\nAlso - you owe me a show :)\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:38'),
(796,1432,'2014-01-26 07:49:54','Ken Fallon','5150 make a complying argument for Fahrenheit','0 Fahrenheit - Really cold outside\r\n100 Fahrenheit - Really hot outside\r\n\r\n0 Celsius Fairly cold outside\r\n100 Celsius Dead\r\n\r\n0 Kelvin Dead\r\n100 Kelvin Dead\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(797,1433,'2014-02-01 01:28:27','Mike','I found a guide on making chapters','https://stackoverflow.com/questions/53705/creating-mp4-m4a-files-with-chapter-marks\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'ll look into that.','2022-02-14 13:16:38'),
(798,1434,'2014-01-30 13:55:43','ToeJet','Account Free Android Project','I must have missed the link :)','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(799,1434,'2014-01-31 19:40:40','Windigo','This is relevant to my interests','I\'ve been greatly interested in tablet computing, but have been dismayed at the Google/Apple-centric environment out there. \r\n\r\nThis kind of tutorial/episode seems like an excellent way to start breaking away from that. Thanks for posting it!\r\n\r\nHave you considered trying an alternative ROM, like Cyannogenmod? I\'ve never done anything close to it, but I\'ve heard it thrown around as an option...\r\n\r\nThanks for the first episode, here\'s hoping it\'s not your last!','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(800,1434,'2014-03-21 15:19:43','Adventureboy','Thank You.','I have been planning to set up my Nexus 7 is a similar way. I will be rooting and using Cyanogen Mod but I will be using your guide as a template for the rest of my configuration. What are your thoughts on using Amazon\'s app store for commercial apps? I would like to use it to get things like Netflix and Audible and Amazon wouldn\'t have as much control over the entire device as Google would.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(801,1434,'2014-10-17 14:08:28','ToeJet','Couldn\'t root.','I was not allow to root when I did this. When developed, I was working as Mobile Device Manager for an international company. Rooted devices are not allowed on a corporate network. Also rooting causes issues when there are OS updates. I\'m pretty sure many other people are in similar situations.','2017-09-09 07:41:24'),
(802,1441,'2014-02-11 16:30:36','David L. Willson','Thanks!','Pokey,\r\n\r\nThanks for pissing them off so much that this show happened. I loved it! It took me back to the golden days of LUG Radio. I miss that show.\r\n\r\nKeep up the good fight.\r\n\r\nA few things they missed:\r\n\r\nOn Bug #1: We did win.\r\n\r\nOn free software not mattering. Of course it matters. When Aq mentioned all the things you can switch to when the thing you use now pisses you off, he listed several Linuxes, one MacOS, and one Windows. The switch cost between versions of Linux is much lower than the switch cost from MacOS or Windows.\r\n\r\nOn not being an ass-hat. It is perfectly possible to win with free software, to love free software, to be it\'s passionate advocate, without caring that someone else loves proprietary software. Proprietary software isn\'t evil, it\'s ineffective for a particular set of desired outcomes.\r\n\r\nOn command-lines. Really, Aq? It\'s a bug if there\'s not a GUI to do everything the user wants to do? Interestingly the CLI way of doing most things is the same for several years, if not eternally, but the GUI changes with the wind. Linus gave the GNOME project hell over this very thing. Stop breaking user-space without a good reason, and I\'ll stop teaching people to solve their problems from the CLI whenever possible. CLI\'s are powerful, so are chain-saws. The fact that they\'re both scary just adds to their beauty.\r\n\r\nOk, enough, or someone will tell me to record it, rather than writing it.\r\n\r\nGO POKEY!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(803,1441,'2014-02-19 01:28:40','pokey','Wow. Thank you.','David, I agree with everything you\'ve said here (with the exception of proprietary software not being evil), and I\'m flattered that you\'ve taken the time to say them so well. I wish I could have made these points durring the recording. \r\n\r\nI am SUPER HAPPY whenever someone likes a show that I\'ve done. It makes my day when it actually resonates with a real person. I often feel like I\'m not articulate enough when I need to be, so I feel like when someone likes one of my shows, that means it\'s a special person. Thank you for making my day.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(804,1441,'2014-03-08 14:00:25','sil','Replies','Yes. Yes, it\'s a bug if there\'s not a GUI way to do a thing that a user wants to do. I am of the opinion that the advantages of Ubuntu being wildly popular all around the world are advantages that I want to see -- much better hardware support, much better software support, no longer being a second-class citizen in many things -- and that most people are not interested in using the CLI, and teaching them to do so is the wrong approach.\r\n\r\nAs you say, it IS perfectly possible to win with free software, to love free software, to be its passionate advocate, without caring that someone else loves proprietary software. But not everyone does. And the people who castigate you make the environment so unpleasant that they\'re what drive you out. It seems that the \"advocate open source\" model has become, for some people, the \"chastise those who are insufficiently dedicated to open source\" model, and hearing that all the time is very, very tiring. It doesn\'t matter if there are a hundred nice people for every one nasty person, because you never get to hear from the nice people, just the nasty ones. And there is no culture of nice people calling out the nasty ones and stopping them doing it, because then the nice people look insufficiently dedicated and so become targets of zealot ire too.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(805,1441,'2014-04-02 16:41:24','pokey','Sil, I can not disagree with you more.','At the time of this writing, HPR has almost 1500 episodes. Almost all of them are dedicated advocating, Free/Open Source Software, GNU/Linux, Open Standards and/or Free Culture and ALMOST ALL of them (I cant think of any exceptions) are hosted by NICE people being NICE. \r\n\r\nI\'m familiar with the attitude that you\'re describing, but I think it\'s the exception these days. I\'m somewhat of a late-comer to Linux/Free Software (2007ish), so maybe I\'m not an acceptable measuring stick, but I don\'t even remember a time when that attitude was the rule.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(806,1441,'2014-04-06 13:33:57','Ken Fallon','Ubuntu != the only GUI','Hi Stu,\r\n\r\nre: \"..most people are not interested in using the CLI, and teaching them to do so is the wrong approach...\"\r\n\r\nIt may be the wrong approach but there is no one single unified way to do things via the GUI. Fact.\r\n\r\nEven within the Ubuntu family common tasks like copying files, adding printers, adding packages are all in different locations. \r\n Ubuntu GNOME - Ubuntu with the GNOME desktop environment \r\n Kubuntu - Ubuntu with the K Desktop environment\r\n Lubuntu - Ubuntu that uses LXDE\r\n Mythbuntu - Designed for creating a home theatre PC with MythTV\r\n Ubuntu Studio - Designed for multimedia editing and creation\r\n Xubuntu - Ubuntu with the XFCE desktop environment\r\n\r\nWere Ubuntu/Canonical actually serious about this vision, then a lot more work would be paid to pushing common methods of doing things in the GUI to the Free Desktop or some other upstream project. Taking care of the translation and accessibility support as you go.\r\n\r\nRight now when a friend asks how to do something and they need it done urgently, the only common way we have to *help* them is to do so in the command line.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(807,1449,'2014-02-20 09:00:40','Ken Fallon','Ask and ...','Thanks Peter64','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(808,1456,'2014-03-06 12:05:01','deepgeek','fahrenheit','Just a note on the \"arbitrariness\" of fahrenheit mentioned in the show. fahrenheit\'s original \"set points\" were original what was thought to be human body temperatures in the time it was invented. Thus, a healthy human was pegged at 100 degrees, later advances in accuracy adjusted that to 98 degrees.\r\nThe two are just as arbitrary, using 100 degrees for boiling water or what temperature you think a healthy person should be at.\r\nNot that I\'m all that fond of either system, I just wanted to point out the historical tidbit.\r\n---\r\ndg','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(809,1458,'2014-09-09 09:54:41','Klaatu','Synfig','Synfig is one of my favourite applications. Truly a killer app. Thanks for this very informative interview.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(810,1463,'2014-03-13 19:27:30','claudiom','Well said!','Great episode, sigflup! I know exactly what you mean when you talk about keeping a balance with programming and personal life, especially when you have a partner in your life. While mine wasn\'t due to programming, I did focus a lot on computers and music, mainly with composing music on my computers and just my fascination with computers and FOSS operating systems in general. I was also fascinated with retrocomputing and making lots of that FOSS work on them. This did take a lot of time away from my wife at the time. Well, that part of my life is in the past and I\'m with my current wife, but I have learned from my mistakes in the past. There needs to be a balance between our passions of interest and our passion for the ones we love. As much as I love that kind of stuff, my wife is much more important to me. She may not have any interest in this part of my life that I do enjoy, but I\'m fine with that. I love her and dedicate my time to her primarily. None of these things should ever become more important than our loved ones in our lives.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(811,1463,'2014-03-14 19:35:00','deltaray','great','Great episode and stories Sigflup. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(812,1463,'2014-03-20 00:34:34','David L. Willson','Right there with you','I loved your stories. My \"I have a problem.\" moment was at 4AM, shivering in the garage, thinking, \"I really should get to bed soon. I have work in a few hours.\" :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(813,1465,'2014-03-23 23:15:42','Durandal','Great episode from a great series','Ahuka, I know you have heard it before but this is a great series! I found it really useful to take the concepts you have talked about and apply it in a real-world example.\r\n\r\nAlso thanks for covering international measurements. It really added value for me sitting in the UK.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to the calc series as spreadsheets is where I spend most of my life at work these days.\r\n\r\nThanks!!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(814,1466,'2014-03-19 11:54:31','Ron','Great info','I am interested in GPS\r\nthe only device I have owned is my N900 it works ok as a GPS.\r\nStarting to seem rally under powered.\r\nThe screen in small.\r\nI will now watch for a TOMTOM to purchase. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(815,1466,'2014-03-20 12:39:43','pokey','I never used an N900','I had an N810 and I used a couple of gps/map programs on it, but neither were complete enough (at the time) to get much use out of. The one that I remember I think was called NavIt. It showed a lot of promise, but it couldn\'t do offline navigation. \r\n\r\nThe TomTom is like an iDevice in that it \"just works.\" Meaning of course that it just does what it does, and nothing con be done differently than the way that the manufacturer has decreed. There are a few settings accessible to the user, but not much of any consequence. I bought mine used, and I\'d buy another used one if I needed it. I\'d even pay full price if I had to, but I\'d never buy one on the primaty market; casting my dollar vote for the way that the company behaves. They make devices which run a Linux kernel and they lock the device to their own management software, which only runs on Windows or Mac (and poorly at that).','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(816,1468,'2014-03-19 22:01:16','paradigm','Bedrock Linux','Hi, I\'m the founder and lead developer of Bedrock Linux.\r\n\r\nI made a point to pass your complements on the main people behind bedrocklinux.org\'s design.\r\n\r\nA key thing that may not have come across clearly which I wanted to elucidate: while Bedrock Linux happens to use chroot() behind the scenes, it is abstracted away from the end user. Moreover, things aren\'t as segregated as some may assume when they hear the word \"chroot\". From the end users point of view, you can just run programs and not worry about where they originate or how it works under-the-hood. If you want a web browser from one distro, steam from another, a window manager from yet a third, you can just do that and they all play along together as though they were all from the same distro. I may rework the documentation to put less emphasis on the word \"chroot\" to mimize possible confusion.\r\n\r\nThanks for helping get Bedrock Linux more attention! I agree - more TLC for smaller distros like Bedrock and Bridge would certainly be a good thing. Buuut maybe I\'m biased.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(817,1469,'2014-03-23 23:10:14','Durandal','Valued show, please keep it!','I understand the comments in the show and asking the question Ken.\r\n\r\nI agree that it works better when more people are involved and appreciate that when theres only 2 or 3 it may seem less valued.\r\n\r\nEveryone needs to make more of an effort to attend the recordings. This includes me. Might be a good way to get into making my own episodes.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(818,1470,'2014-03-31 19:08:56','jezra','what do you mean \'no one says that\'?','If the time is 9:04, I don\'t say \"four after nine\" or \"four past nine\", I say \"nine oh four\". Dag-nabbit! kids these days.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(819,1471,'2014-03-24 03:20:58','Jonas','Encryping stuff','Thanks for the episode. You seem to do more interesting things in your normal computer use than the rest of us do. I\'m interested in hearing more like this in the future. What seems mundane to you is really interesing to us regular desktop users. \r\n\r\nIs there a reason to use blowfish in partucular?\r\nWhen you say \"enter your key\", do you mean enter the password for the key created earlier? I\'ve created keys with and without password before.\r\nIf you want to see an encrypted file using a text editor or movie player, is there a program or script you use as a front end to decypt and play on the fly, or do you decrypt and then handle the file separately? I\'m wondering if you use a GTK or Python popup to ask for the key password or something like that. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(820,1471,'2014-03-27 00:46:38','sigflup','yo','Blowfish because it\'s fun. No other reason. \r\n\r\nKey as in the same key you entered. You are not creating a key/password pair, you are manually entering a key in and you\'re entering it in twice. once for decrypting and once for encrypting. \r\n\r\nI would handle decrypting separately. If you script/write something that handle\'s encrypted files that would be nice. So far I\'ve just been piping them into things.\r\n\r\nI hope that answers your questions. Mail me if it doesn\'t. pantsbutt @ @ g mail . com\r\n\r\nTHANKS FOR LISTENING!!!!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(821,1474,'2014-04-02 16:45:48','pokey','Time for an update?','Damn! This ep wasn\'t even out a week, and they Reved the UI. Do we need to do an update show?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(822,1474,'2014-04-03 13:27:27','Ken Fallon','Hummm let me think','yes.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(823,1476,'2014-04-17 20:01:36','Flip Marley','background music','What is the music playing in the background? And how can I get it?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(824,1477,'2014-04-01 13:09:05','DeepGeek','Happy April','Particularly loved the readings, thrown in as easter eggs, of bizzarrely boring techno dribble. If I had known that was going to be part of this show, I would have found something opaque to read from the great computer scientist Donald Knuth.\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Knuth\r\n\r\n---\r\nDG','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(825,1477,'2014-04-02 16:22:22','pok','No worries','I don\'t think any of us knew.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(826,1482,'2014-04-09 16:21:02','tonieee','Tux Radar is now Linux Voice','The guys who did Tux Radar have left Linux Format to form their own magazine, Linux Voice, so you can now find their podcast on their website (https://www.linuxvoice.com/).\r\n\r\nIn case you aren\'t aware Linux Voice magazine are going to give 50% of their profits to the free software community and make all their content CC-BY-SA 9 months after publication which is pretty awesome.','2022-02-14 13:16:39'),
(827,1482,'2014-04-14 01:46:06','brother mouse','the mousepad','Pocket Casts for android allows the setting of playback speedup on a podcast-by-podcast basis. \r\n\r\nThe only show I speed up is \"under the influence\" from CBC. That dude.... talks... so. slow.... I speed it up 20% and it finally sounds normal.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(828,1484,'2014-04-12 13:48:36','Ken Fallon','It\'s spelled with an E','https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_whiskey','2022-02-14 13:16:39'),
(829,1484,'2014-04-17 03:42:02','Deltaray','New Desktop Recording program','There is a great new Screen recording program that is easy to use, works well and works with OpenGL even. Its called Simple Screen Recorder (SSR)\r\n\r\nhttps://www.maartenbaert.be/simplescreenrecorder/\r\n\r\nAlso, I find kdenlive to be a decent video editor that\'s easy to use. I also use Blender, but I understand that the learning curve is a lot higher for it. There is also Lives, but I haven\'t used it.\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:39'),
(830,1484,'2014-05-30 20:39:52','FiftyOneFifty','','It\'s spelled S-C-O-T-C-H','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(831,1486,'2014-04-18 11:20:20','borgu','greate interview','great interview, listened to it 3 times now. will listen again. good job guys!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(832,1488,'2014-04-16 12:49:54','CPrompt','Good shows!','I listen to a lot of these same shows but there are a few that I will be adding to my podcatcher.\r\n\r\nTHanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(833,1494,'2014-04-25 05:22:55','freelikegnu','Building a PC','https://pcpartpicker.com/ is good for exploring some new build combos. My prefered method for obtaining pc hardware is leveraging reviews from amazon and newegg for parts I can find on ebay. Sometimes the stores are cheaper, but usually last gen parts are the best deal and are often in new condition. There really should be some mention about making sure ram is compatable with the CPU and sometimes the motherboard may be picky about ram specs. ','2022-02-14 13:16:40'),
(834,1495,'2014-04-25 19:18:03','anon','','This guy sounds like a teacher. He should produce online video courses.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(835,1496,'2014-05-04 22:44:59','timttmy','ciwiki -- a didiwiki clone','Just a quick note to say I enjoyed the episode and that I use ciwiki a fork of didiwiki. The main benefit of ciwiki is that you can choose to make pages private and require a user to login to view or edit the content. https://sourceforge.net/projects/ciwiki/ . We needed something simple at work to keep sales quotes in but we are quite a small company so a full CRM would be overkill so I thought a wiki might be a good idea. I looked at LOADS, but decided that didiwiki (well ciwiki) was simple enough that everyone could use it with around 10 minutes training. We have been running it for around 3 and a half years now and a quick \" ls .didiwiki | sed \'/.prev.1/d\' | wc -l \" shows that there are 1137 pages in our .didiwiki folder. I\'ve found that the built in browser search ctrl^ f works better when searching through page titles. Also backing it up is a piece of cake! I just have a script that runs at 4pm everyday which gzips the whole .didiwiki folder and emails it to me. The gzipped archive is less than 2MBs in size, another win for being plain text.\r\n\r\nAnyway, thanks for the show!\r\n\r\n--timttmy','2022-02-14 13:16:40'),
(836,1496,'2015-03-04 11:39:35','JPRedonnet','Ciwiki','Hi timttmy,\r\n\r\nI am pleased you like ciwiki. If you have some toubles with it, or if you need more functionnalities. Don\'t hesitate to send me an email. You will find me email addr on sourceforge.net/projects/ciwiki/.\r\n\r\nI\'am the developper of this fork,\r\nJP Redonnet.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(837,1497,'2014-05-19 22:13:16','Peter64','Thanks','Really enjoyed this, can\'t wait to listen to part two.\r\n\r\nThanks','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(838,1499,'2014-05-26 15:58:00','Dave Morriss','I enjoyed the history in your show','Thanks for this, I found it quite fascinating. My career in IT covered a number of the points you mentioned in your show, so it was good to reminisce. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(839,1500,'2014-05-09 17:31:12','Bert Yerke','','I attend the key-signing party at SCaLE every year. Phil Dibowitz usually hosts and has done so for many years. He recommends not to do any actual signing at the party but rather use a worksheet to verify the keys and then follow up at home or in your hotel room) after the party. First each participant reads his/her fingerprint while the rest of us check it off on the list. Then we form a \"conga line\" to verfy identity with some form of picture ID. Passports are the most trusted form of ID.\r\nThere is more information at Phil\'s website:\r\nhttps://www.phildev.net/pgp/gpgsigning.html\r\nHe also has a program to do some of the heavy lifting:\r\nhttps://www.phildev.net/pius/\r\nPIUS can be used to manage the party and to follow up after. It is a nice way to process each of the new keys, requiring intervention only to set validation level and it also mails the signed key to the owner automagically.\r\n\r\nHope that helps,\r\nBert','2022-02-14 13:16:40'),
(840,1500,'2014-05-10 07:35:07','Ken Fallon','Conga line fail ?','Hi Bert,\r\n\r\nYou might want to also listen to https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1461 where Dave reports on his experiences in a conga line.\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:16:41'),
(841,1500,'2014-05-15 15:10:45','Dave Morriss','Next time music?','Hey Bert,\r\n\r\nThanks for mentioning PIUS. I received a few signatures from people using this after this year\'s FOSDEM.\r\n\r\nI realise now what else was missing from the FOSDEM \"conga\" - music :-)\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(842,1500,'2014-05-17 21:31:30','Alison Chaiken','import existing keys from server into APG?','Has anyone figured out how to import existing public keys from a keyserver into APG? The help the app provides is quite limited. I don\'t see any advantage to creating a new key for my phone. Am I missing something?\r\n\r\nExcellent series, Ahuka. I installed mailvelope as well.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(843,1500,'2014-05-17 22:15:15','Alison Chaiken','not all keys appear in \"encrypt for\" list?','The list of keys I can encrypt for is much shorter than the list of keys I successfully imported. Anyone else have this problem? Restarting the browser did not help.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(844,1500,'2014-05-18 09:30:50','Alison Chaiken','Mailvelope, APG and K9mail working!','It has taken me a couple of hours, but I have Mailvelope, APG and K9mail working on my Android phone as well as on my laptop. I finally figured out that there is a hidden tab that allows APG to import keys from keyservers. For K9mail, since I use two-factor authentication with gmail, I had to set up an \"application-specific password.\" I put my secret key on my phone by MTPFS mounting it, copying the ASCII-armored secret key to Downloads folder, importing it into APG, and then remounting the folder to delete it. \r\n\r\nUseful links:\r\nhttps://www.minertechsolutions.com/blogs/how-to-configure-your-android-phone-with-gmail-using-k-9-mail-more/\r\n\r\nhttps://android.stackexchange.com/questions/54559/how-do-i-setup-a-gmail-account-with-2-step-verification-in-k-9-mail','2022-02-14 13:16:41'),
(845,1503,'2014-04-24 00:19:14','NYbill','Oops, misspoke...','I just realized, toward the end of the episode, I made a hypothetical example of a 3v AC wave going positive for 3v then negative for 3v. I called it \"3v peak to peak\".\r\n\r\nThis would of course be 6v, peak to peak.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(846,1503,'2014-05-11 04:50:30','Peter64','','Looking forward to listening to this one NYBill, have looked at these things numerous times, just don\'t have a good enough reason to buy one though.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(847,1503,'2014-05-12 21:26:16','Peter','Bugger','Now I not only want one of these but a breadboard, 555 timer & all the other cool stuff to play with, Good stuff.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(848,1503,'2014-05-29 19:14:32','NYbill','Ha, sorry Pete. ','I shouldn\'t show you my 3 multi-meters as well then... You\'ll want more toys. ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(849,1507,'2014-05-17 17:27:17','dodddummy','Tuxradar is still tuxradar, right?','If my memory is good for the one day since I listened, a listener gave feedback that tuxradar is now linux voice. And the hosts confirmed that. But tuxradar is still going and linux voice, while consisting of most of the old tux radar people is a different entity. In theory both will be awesome linux podcasts into the future and beyond.\r\n\r\nOr is my catcher fibbing to me?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(850,1507,'2014-05-19 14:47:26','Dave Morriss','You are quite right','It was a comment by tonieee on https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1482 pointing out that the hosts from TuxRadar had relocated to the Linux Voice magazine and podcast.\r\n\r\nApologies to all if we gave the wrong impression. I actually subscribe to both magazines and both podcasts and enjoy them all.','2022-02-14 13:16:41'),
(851,1509,'2014-05-15 18:51:41','ClaudioM','Working...','I have finally gotten an idea for a series that I think would be worthy of HPR. It\'s still in the planning stages, but I hope to have the initial episode available soon. I\'ll also be sure to throw in some random episodes on how I found Linux or something like that. Thanks again for HPR!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(852,1512,'2014-12-15 12:24:26','Måns Mårtensson','Teacher','I wonder if you know TiddlyWiki?\r\nhttps://tiddlywiki.com\r\nI\'ve been using it for music text books, note books etc...\r\nIt is searchable and downloadable as a single file. It can save changes from a browser and be used/edited locally on a pc or online via a plethora of backends or simply with a small php script.\r\nHere are a couple of examples I made myself: TW classic: https://xn--mns-ula.dk/sky/apps/files_sharing/get.php?token=45ea57138089eeb535e36cee53b8831076041bf5 \r\nThe new TW: https://bopland-tw5.tiddlyspot.com/\r\n\r\nCheers Måns Mårtensson, Denmark','2022-02-14 13:16:42'),
(853,1513,'2014-05-21 03:12:23','Phalax','Interesting','This show was really interesting. Love the for dummies way you present the otherwise somewhat hard to understand topic. Great show!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(854,1513,'2014-05-21 13:39:58','My5t3r102','','Really enjoyed this one. Found it interesting and engaging. I would very much like to hear some of your other topics. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(855,1513,'2014-05-21 13:43:01','My5t3r102','Really enjoyed this one! ','Found it engaging and informative. Would very much like to hear you on other topics. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(856,1513,'2014-05-21 22:51:46','Quvmoh','Awesome','Best episode ever!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(857,1513,'2014-05-22 10:34:45','NE5C1U5','good','wow! this was actaully REALLY good! much better than all other stuff i heard here','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(858,1513,'2014-05-22 14:37:09','Epicanis','I guess I should do more of these','Thanks Phalax and My5t3r102 (and elmussol over on the blog) for the quick feedback - sounds like this format has at least a few fans, so I\'ve bumped it up on my \"potentially upcoming topics\" list and I\'ll plan on doing more.\r\n\r\nI have a pretty large stack of papers and subjects available, but more suggestions are also welcome!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(859,1513,'2014-05-23 13:24:22','mcnalu','Good and different','This was good and something rather unique too. Informative, funny, quirky.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(860,1513,'2014-05-24 10:18:37','Epicanis','There will be more','Thanks also Quvmoh, NE5C1U5, and mcnalu (and if anyone is waiting in the moderation queue, thank you, too.)\r\n\r\nAfter these comments, I\'ll definitely be doing more of these.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(861,1514,'2014-05-23 11:59:58','mcnalu','Enjoyed it','Enjoyed the show, and the very next morning I installed mhWaveEdit (via slackbuilds.org) and recorded and edited my next HPR show with it!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(862,1517,'2014-06-09 21:23:30','klaatu','every number','I did not know that any number greater than 1 was either prime or could expressed as a product of primes. Thanks for this informative episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(863,1518,'2014-06-02 12:22:31','davidWHITMAN','Great List','As an internet audio junkie this is a great list.\r\nThanks','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(864,1518,'2014-06-02 15:19:15','Ken Fallon','Working on my basement filling my nas','Thanks Dave. \r\n\r\nBoredom killer and NAS filler.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(865,1518,'2014-06-04 08:38:41','Dave Morriss','Thanks guys','Thanks davidWHITMAN and Ken Fallon for the positive feedback.\r\n\r\nI was convinced I had created the perfect soporific here, but maybe not after all :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(866,1522,'2015-02-16 16:05:10','Windigo','Creating a bridge interface','So glad you submitted this episode, Klaatu. I recently turned to Docker/containers to share my web development environment across machines/reinstalls, and stumbled when it came to create a bridge interface.\r\n\r\nFor anyone else looking, here\'s the command Klaatu mentioned:\r\n\r\nip link add br0 type bridge','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(867,1523,'2014-06-04 11:09:13','Ken Fallon','Comment Viewer','There isn\'t, as yet, the possibility of a RSS feed with this comment software but do have a page that lists all comments. This is linked on the P of HPR and under About > Show Comments\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/comments_viewer.php\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:42'),
(868,1523,'2014-06-07 13:29:26','Ken Fallon','New Comment Feed','Please test https://hackerpublicradio.org/comments_rss.php\n\nThere are some issues with the encoding not been UTF-8. This is a item that needs to be fixed with the comment system in general.','2022-02-14 13:16:42'),
(869,1523,'2014-06-08 14:12:49','Ken Fallon','Trigger comment','This is a test comment to trigger all the RSS feeds. By the way we get one comment spam every 2 minutes. Well done to all the spammers out there.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(870,1524,'2014-06-06 06:54:32','etalas','I\'ve thought the 8char key IDs aren\'t enough nowadays','Only listened to the first third yet (nice talk so far, questions from the audience are a little hard to understand) but I\'ve thought the eight character key IDs aren\'t enough nowadays b/c it\'s too easy to create a keypair that has the same first eight chars of an ID. I think there was something Debian-related about this a few years back.\r\n\r\nIn the meantime I came across those two helpful links regarding GPG/PGP:\r\n - why you should use subkeys: https://wiki.debian.org/Subkeys\r\n - a \"best practices\" for OpenPGP: https://we.riseup.net/riseuplabs+paow/openpgp-best-practices ([EDIT: replaced by https://help.riseup.net/en/security/message-security/openpgp/gpg-best-practices)\r\n\r\nkeep up the good work!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(871,1527,'2014-06-06 00:26:06','pokey','You too!','I thought I was the only one.\r\n\r\nI love GPS... probably to an unhealthy degree.\r\n\r\nThanks for the episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(872,1527,'2014-06-13 14:06:44','rocket-dog','','One question, are we there yet?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(873,1529,'2014-06-12 09:44:43','Ken Fallon','Disagree with your comments on LibReSSL','As ever I enjoyed this show and broadly agree with many of your points. I would first like to strongly disagree with the section where you discuss LibReSSL before adding another suggestion.\r\n\r\nYour Ad hominem argument against Theo de Raadt (10:23:00) was unmerited, and while people may criticise his tact, he has a long history of producing and managing secure projects.\r\nFrom https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theo_de_Raadt: \"He is the founder and leader of the OpenBSD and OpenSSH projects\". \r\n\r\nTo address your other points in that section.\r\n1. \"I would stick with OpenSSL and give LibReSSL a pass, at least until such a time as they show a long track record of success\".\r\nThe developers of LibReSSL have a long track record of success as they are the same people that bring you OpenSSH. They are noted for been able to produce secure software. So much so that Linux Torvalds said of the team, \"I think the OpenBSD crowd is a bunch of masturbating monkeys, in that they make such a big deal about concentrating on security to the point where they pretty much admit that nothing else matters to them.\" From a practical point of view everyone running any Linux Distribution is more than likely already running and trusting OpenSSH.\r\nFrom https://www.libressl.org/: \"LibReSSL is primarily developed by the OpenBSD Project\". \r\nFrom https://www.openssh.com/: OpenSSH is developed by the OpenBSD Project.\r\n\r\n2. \"A good general rule in security is that new code is much more dangerous than code that has been around for a long time\"\r\nThe whole heart bleed issue proves this to be false. The rule itself is based on the premise that if it\'s around a long time, many people have reviewed the code and many bugs have been fixed. This is a rewording of \"given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow\", Linus\'s_Law argument which you yourself criticise in the episode. \r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linus\'s_Law \r\n\r\nMany people skip the caveats in the formal version \"Given a large enough beta-tester and co-developer base, almost every problem will be characterized quickly and the fix will be obvious to someone\". The heart bleed code was caused by not having a large enough beta-tester and co-developer base, and yet this is exactly what the OpenBSD Project brings to the table.\r\n\r\nFurthermore LibReSSL is not \"new code\", but rather it is \"forked code\". They are fixing old existing bugs on OpenSSL and nothing is preventing OpenSSL from implementing the fixes they discover.\r\n\r\n3. Your argue that removing code and \"stuff they don\'t care about\" doesn\'t look good.\r\nI would point out that that is not a bad thing and was widely supported when LibreOffice forked OpenOffice. Michael Meeks celebrates this by publicising 38,714 known unused methods in LibreOffice. \"One of the unfortunate things that LibreOffice inherited, as part of the several decades worth of unpaid technical debt, is unused code that has been left lying around indefinitely. This was particularly unhelpful when mingled with the weight and depth of the useful code we have around the place.\"\r\nFrom https://people.gnome.org/~michael/blog/2012-01-09-unused.html \r\n\r\nSo finally I would suggest that \"Mono Culture is bad\" should be added to your list. Having (cooperating) competing systems, is not a bad thing as it encourages development, and innovation. Over reliance on any one piece of software is a bad thing. We saw that in the fields of Operating systems, web browsers and now in Security Libraries. ','2022-02-14 13:16:42'),
(874,1529,'2014-06-13 01:15:53','Kevin O\'Brien','Why I said that...','I still maintain that tested code is better than untested code, and nothing tsts it more than time. The OpenSSL code worked well for a long time until a very subtle error crept in. So the question is whether we will more quickly get to a more secure state by developing a mature code base or by throwing it out and starting over. In general, I maintain that fixing the mature code is a better practice.\r\n\r\nSecond, announcing almost immediately that that you have thrown out 90,000 lines of code (the number I recall) does not tom e suggest careful thought so much as a hack-and-slash mentality, and I don\'t like that in security. Calm deliberation usually works better.\r\n\r\nThird, from the reports I read one of the things that was discarded as an unnecessary feature was Windows compatibility. Even though I support free software, I recognize that we need to share the Internet with a shit-ton of Windows machines, and I would prefer that they be as secure as possible.\r\n\r\nI totally agree on Mono culture, and I hope that LibreSSL provides good competition. I did not mean to imply that LibreSSL should not exist, only that Iwould be very cautious about adopting anything unproven.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(875,1529,'2014-06-13 16:00:04','Ken Fallon','You many not have researched this enough','To be clear this is *not*, as you say, \"starting over\". They started with the existing OpenSSL code and worked from their. So they are using the exact same \"mature code\" and any issue they find are also issues in OpenSSL. Once fixed they are added to LibReSSL and _remain_ in OpenSSL. However, Do not mistake \"old code\" for \"tested code\". It was not tested, which was your third point \"Bugs are not shallow if the eyeballs are not there.\" Now that people *are* looking at the code bugs are been found. Case in point the new team brought on board by the Linux Foundation to help fix OpenSSL reported on 5th June 2014: CVE-2014-0224: \"a Man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack where the attacker can decrypt and modify traffic from the attacked client and server.\"\r\n\r\nSo let\'s look at what was actually removed in the first week. arstechnica have an interview with Theo de Raadt and he describes exactly what they removed.\r\nhttps://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/04/openssl-code-beyond-repair-claims-creator-of-libressl-fork/\r\n--------------------------------------------------------\r\nde Raadt said there were \"Thousands of lines of VMS support. Thousands of lines of ancient WIN32 support. Nowadays, Windows has POSIX-like APIs and does not need something special for sockets. Thousands of lines of FIPS support, which downgrade ciphers almost automatically.\"\r\n...\r\nThere were also \"thousands of lines of APIs that the OpenSSL group intended to deprecate 12 years or so ago and [are] still left alone.\"\r\n...\r\nDe Raadt told ZDNet that his team has removed 90,000 lines of C code. \"Even after all those changes, the codebase is still API compatible,\" he said. \"Our entire ports tree (8,700 applications) continue to compile and work after all these changes.\"\r\n--------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nSo to summarise the facts:\r\n90,000 lines of *unused* or *obsolete* code is removed from the LibReSSL code base.\r\n90,000 lines of *unused* or *obsolete* code remains in the OpenSSL code base.\r\n\r\nIf the Industry Average is 17.5 errors per 1000 lines of code*, and there are 90,000 lines of code, we can calculate that the OpenSSL code has 1,575 MORE errors than LibReSSL\r\n\r\n( 90000 / 1000 ) x ( ( 50 - 15 ) / 2 ) = 1,575 \r\n* \"Code Complete\" by Steve McConnell. \r\nBlame Charles in NJ if my math is wrong.','2022-02-14 13:16:43'),
(876,1529,'2014-06-14 20:49:15','Kevin O\'Brien','Good point','It looks like I may have been a bit hasty in my comments about the code being removed. Your points certainly seem reaosnable. Correction accepted.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(877,1531,'2014-06-17 17:36:15','Ken Fallon','Toaster ?!?','I do not think it means what you think it means\r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toaster\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:43'),
(878,1531,'2014-06-21 01:20:47','jezra','does a toaster really need to make toast?','P.S. \r\nhttps://www.jezra.net/blog/no_it_doesnt_make_toast_anymore\r\n','2022-02-14 13:16:43'),
(879,1532,'2014-06-17 17:49:01','Ken Fallon','Good plan','\r\nGood idea and also useful for HPR. Can you give us some sample files to work from please.\r\n\r\nCan you also give us clearer view on what the Inputs and Outputs are, as well as rules that you want.\r\n\r\nYou mentioned ifthisthenthat ( IFTTT ) but reading https://ifttt.com/privacy would not lend itself to FLOSS solution.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(880,1533,'2014-05-24 12:49:14','mcnalu','Erratum 2:','In the notes, the list is most used/liked FIRST. Doh^2!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(881,1536,'2014-06-24 18:45:04','NYbill','They still make them...','Just an FYI if anyone wants to get a kit like CPromt is talking about, there is still a company making them. Just do a search on Amazon or somewhere for a company called Elenco. These would make a neat \'retro\' electronics kit for a youngster. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(882,1536,'2014-06-24 18:57:47','NYbill','','Found it: https://www.elenco.com/search/searchdetails/130-in-1_electronics_playground=MjA0\r\n\r\n(admins: you can just paste this link to my last comment if you\'d like.)','2022-02-14 13:16:44'),
(883,1536,'2014-06-25 20:51:35','CPrompt^','Thanks!','That\'s awesome! Glad they still make these. Was great fun when I was young...and now :)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(884,1536,'2014-06-26 10:52:52','Ken Fallon','Available at amazon','These are available in Amazon :) Ordering some this weekend.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(885,1536,'2014-06-26 18:08:05','NYbill','','Yea, we played with one when we were kids as well, Cprompt. It was at my Grandparents house. The Radio Shack one. Probably the same one you had. I remember my cousin and I doing a project once that was a \"dog whistle\" (humans can\'t hear it). We pictured getting all the dogs in the neighborhood howling and running up to us. \r\n\r\nWe wired the project up in about 30min, Then sat on the porch for hours disturbing not one dog. Heh... And because we couldn\'t hear it we had to keep checking the wiring thinking we had it hooked up wrong. \r\n\r\nYour going to get one Ken? Cool! I bet your kids will enjoy it. You could probably get a episode out of it with you and your son doing one of the projects and talking about it. (You owe me a show!) :P','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(886,1536,'2014-06-27 00:57:50','pokey','I had this!','I got this very kit for Christmas one year. I didn\'t complete many of the projects before I started experimenting on my own and fried a couple of the components, rendering most of the projects useless, but I did love it. If only I had been given this kit just a couple or few years later....\r\n\r\nGreat episode! It really brought back some fun memories. The projects that I remember completing were the door alarm, the flood alarm, the light meter and the fish caller. I know I did a couple more with the light sensor too, and of course I was circuit bending before circuit bending was called circuit bending. I\'m pretty sure that\'s how I fried components too.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(887,1536,'2014-06-30 20:11:40','Deltaray','Snap circuits','Snap Circuits (https://www.snapcircuits.net/) fit the bill these days for inspiring young kids to learn about electronics.','2022-02-14 13:16:44'),
(888,1536,'2014-10-20 22:40:54','plan9fan','','Great episode!!! Not only did I learn that my wife owns this very kit, but that she too was into electronics as a young adult. What a women.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(889,1537,'2014-06-27 01:05:54','pokey','Nice','I make my coffee in a percolator, and I like it much better than a drip machine. We decided to get ours after our third drip machine in 5 years burned out it\'s boiling coil, and we were pleasantly surprised at how much we like how this makes coffee. We also love that it can pour coffee without spilling any, which can not be said of 99% of drip machines that I\'ve used. I find that I like my coffee a little weaker when I percolate it than when I make it with a dripper. \r\n\r\nMy daughter just finished reading Little Brother by Cory Doctoro, and she liked the part about cold brew coffee, so we\'ll probably try that too. Maybe I\'ll be able to review it on the HPR_AudioBookClub. ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(890,1538,'2014-06-27 01:13:47','pokey','Good show. Thank you.','I don\'t have any websites, but I thoroughly enjoyed listening to you reason out your problem, your solution and the method you used to get there. I really like listening to your episodes. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(891,1538,'2014-06-28 16:38:41','Dave Morriss','Wayback machine','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nVery impressive show. You said you wished you had a before and after for your site.\r\n\r\nI looked on the Wayback Machine and there are old versions of the School of Music\'s site going back in time, though whether they are what you are looking for I don\'t know.\r\n\r\nHave a look at https://web.archive.org/web/20130128225830/https://music.louisiana.edu/ for example.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-14 13:17:16'),
(892,1538,'2014-07-07 10:52:51','Jon Kulp ','Thanks Dave! ','Wow Dave, thanks for the tip. Wayback indeed had the previous version of our site. Kinda scary. I just want it to go away haha! ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(893,1549,'2014-07-18 19:21:46','pokey','Cool stuff','Indeed! Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(894,1551,'2014-07-25 04:56:12','pokey','Very interesting','And very tempting. Have you made any profit from this yet?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(895,1553,'2014-07-25 04:54:34','pokey','Fun ep','I listened to this on a long drive, and it kept me sane in some insane traffic. Thank you. I don\'t think we share the same taste in music, but I really enjoyed the talkie bits.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(896,1554,'2014-07-22 07:45:01','Colin ','Journey comments','Hi guys, great episode!\r\n\r\nMy comments on the journey were really well covered. I did think that a bit more description would be nice. Not like Tolkien, but just some basics, to give more of an idea of there surroundings. I also thought that there is little sense of time in terms of there travels. I do accept the point that the book is probably more accessible partly because this is not detailed.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(897,1554,'2014-08-03 15:53:40','brijwhiz','Journey comments and next book podcast','Hello team, fabulous choice. The last time I heard the audio bookclub it was a long time ago and thanks to this podcast I heard the fantastic series of the solar clipper. \r\nOnce again I had the pleasant experience of listening to a fantastic podiobook thanks to your recommendation. \r\nIn addition to thanking you I wanted to add two points from my side.\r\n\r\n1. Journey comments:\r\n\r\nI agree with all of you that Tolkein and Robert Jordan style meandering (while I love it) may not work for all. However having no sense of time or space does make the book a bit less in my opinion. I think Nathan Lowell found a happy medium path in his solar clipper series where the vast expanse of his universe is shown without being over detailed. \r\n\r\n2. I have already bought his print books to read, but I was very interested to find out if he ever did come out with another audio book. I thought I heard mention of it, but I could not find it on the interwebs.\r\n\r\nOnce again thank you all for your efforts.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(898,1558,'2014-07-23 18:12:12','Mark Waters','Thanks','Thanks for sharing , that was a great episode , makes me want to go urban exploring.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(899,1558,'2014-07-24 07:42:14','Ken Fallon','You *must* get a recording device for mobile interviews','Hi Christopher,\r\n\r\nA fantastic episode. As I was listening to all the tours you got I couldn\'t help thinking \"record that as a HPR show\". \r\n\r\nSo get yourself a Zoom, and a Sanza Clip as a backup and get recording. Getting some business cards printed out also helps as it makes the people more comfortable been recorded.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(900,1558,'2014-07-25 04:50:45','pokey','Cool topic','I almost thought I was listening to myself though. I explore in much the same way, and would have given many of the same tips, right down to the hammock. +1 for acting natural, being truthful, and avoiding private property. The shopping bag was a new one on me though. I\'ll consider it.\r\n\r\nI prefer to explore on my free time, and nap on my lunch break. I like to walk for hours when I\'m in the woods.\r\n\r\nI made my own hammock for camping, and I made a small one just for sitting in if i\'m out walking in the woods. I had to re-tie it several times to get it right, but it\'s nice to sit in.\r\n\r\nIf you record traces of the trails that you walk, I\'d be happy to add them into openstreetmap.org for you, if you\'re interested, and if you\'re not already editing it yourself.\r\n\r\nI love exploring buildings too, and I do it every chance I get. I love to see attics, basements, sub-basements, frame work, etc... I love to see how old buildings were built, and just honor the craftsmanship. Sometimes you get to see \"so-and-so was here\" and a date from long ago. That\'s always a real treat. I once got to go in a clock in a tower, and watch the guy wind it.\r\n\r\nThanks for the great episode. It was a real treat.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(901,1558,'2014-07-30 11:42:00','Beeza','Lunchbreak Exploration','I loved this episode.\r\n\r\nI\'ve worked in all sorts of places and always spent my breaks exploring my surroundings - sometimes within a building and sometimes further afield.\r\n\r\nWhen I used to work for a UK government department I was staggered at how easy it was to access some supposedly restricted areas.\r\n\r\nMany office buildings have a floor above the top of the liftshaft. It\'s not so much that you\'re not supposed to go there - just that nobody expects you to. That often provides unofficial access to adjacent companies in shared buildings.\r\n\r\nYour tip to \"look like you have a right to be there\" is fundamental to the whole \"hobby\".','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(902,1563,'2014-07-31 07:59:58','etalas','','You know, you could just put a little function for your incremental sleep and subshelling/backgrounding on top of your rc.local executing the cmd passed as parameters and then use this w/o needing to remember to increase the sleep parameter.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(903,1566,'2014-08-05 08:30:25','Steve Bickle','How /etc is pronounced','/etc is not pronounced etcetera because it actually stands for \'extended text configuration\' hence the et\'c pronunciation.\r\n\r\nOk that\'s me done with my \"somebody\'s wrong on the Internet\" moment for now ;-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(904,1566,'2014-08-07 13:53:05','Dave Morriss','Et cetera, and so forth','Hi Steve,\r\n\r\nThanks for responding to my random mutterings.\r\n\r\nYou know, I had never heard that explanation, and didn\'t know there had been/is a war about this pronunciation.\r\n\r\nHere\'s my experience: I encountered my first Unix system in the 1970\'s. I was working at Lancaster University and we were evaluating a Harris (sp?) system. We reckoned the directory was \"et cetera\" and nobody told us otherwise. We didn\'t buy a Harris.\r\n\r\nAt my next job in the 1980\'s I attended a course run by HP on their HP-UX system where I am certain the trainer called /etc \"et cetera\". We did end up with HP, Sun, Apollo, SGI and DEC Unix flavours thereafter, and in none of them was /etc ever anything other than \"et cetera\".\r\n\r\nI have heard it called \"slash ee tee cee\" but that\'s probably an anomaly.\r\n\r\nPlus, Wikipedia reckons \"et cetera\" is correct and \"extended text configuration\"/\"et see\" is a backronym. I have to say it certainly smells of backronym and folk etymology to me :-)\r\n\r\nI rest my case ...','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(905,1566,'2014-08-08 13:10:08','Mike Ray','/etc blah blah','I agree with Dave. My first encounter with Unix was with a Honeywell Bull System V box in 1991 and technical and educational docs from Honeywell Bull themselves called it \'etcetera\'. I like the pronunciation \'etsy\' though','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(906,1568,'2014-08-11 04:24:36','klaatu','Amazing!','This is really really cool! I am not really interested in voice-driven computing myself but I have to admit that this is really pretty nice.\r\n\r\nOn the flip side of all this, I wonder what is involved in creating the voice for the computer. If someone sat down and recorded every word in the dictionary, can those samples be strung together for a more natural-sounding computer voice? or is it more technical and programmatic than that?\r\n\r\nOne wonders.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(907,1569,'2014-08-08 11:52:18','Dave Morriss','Thanks for an impressive show','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nThanks for your comprehensive explanation of this subject.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a difficult one to convey in a podcast, but the very detailed notes and examples helped enormously.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(908,1569,'2014-08-10 21:03:44','Mike Ray','Hope it wasn\'t too long and technical','Thanks Dave. I tried very hard to make a complex subject as engaging as possible. It\'s likely to be pretty boring for a lot of listeners. SQLite3 makes writing a real-world example very simple though. I hope that nice Mr. Fallon feels suitably chastised','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(909,1569,'2014-08-11 12:57:23','Ken Fallon','Brilliant episode but I\'m still not convinced','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nNo doubt about it, this was a brilliant episode on Many-to-many data relationships. The episode and show notes are excellent, and you even made *some* progress in convincing me that a linking table may be needed. I would have liked a more detailed explanation as to why it\'s a bad idea to use a comma separated list backed with actual processor utilization tests to prove this. Even then I\'m willing to argue that the choice of a more inefficient method, is better if the system can be kept simpler. Remember that HPR is a volunteer run effort and we cannot guarantee that we will always have DBA\'s available to help out. I am more than happy to select a less efficient process if it means that more people can understand it.\r\n\r\nDon\'t forget that the purpose of the database is to support the distribution of shows. The shows are primarily distributed using RSS and therefore we do not have a choice in the data model, as that is imposed upon us. While a show->host may be better modeled in a Relational database as a many to many relationship the fact is that in a RSS Item element it is a 1:1 relationship. As in: there can be only one //item/author element in the feed, so what we are trying to do isn\'t even possible in RSS 2.0. In the Atom syndication standard it is possible to do it using either multiple atom:author or atom:contributor elements. However even in that case it is still a 1:n relationship and not a many to many. A show is an independent item and has 1 or more authors or 0 or more contributors.\r\n\r\nAlso the use of an RDBMS is a legacy of our history and could change in the future. As DeepGeek suggested a long time ago, it should be possible to run the entire system using XSLT to merge XML fragments. This is now well supported by Atom (atom:source) and HTML5 (html:article). In this case the back end could conceivably not even have a database.\r\n\r\nAs Dave is aware, I may change my mind over night and accept your vision but today I\'m still not convinced. \r\n\r\n- https://www.rssboard.org/rss-specification#ltauthorgtSubelementOfLtitemgt\r\n- https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4287#page-24\r\n- https://www.w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/sections.html#the-article-element\r\n- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_database\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:17:17'),
(910,1569,'2014-08-11 17:38:05','Mike Ray','Scalability','Hello Ken. I take your point about XML Atom feeds. A big drawbig of XML is it is stuck with representing top-down, tree-like structures.\r\n\r\nWhat you are doing by putting a comma-seperated list of values in a single column of a table is turning another table through 90 degrees. The problem, apart from the obvious one of there now being data items in this table that are not identified by the key, is one of scalability. How long is the field? 1024 characters? What happens when it runs out of space?\r\n\r\nI know that in this application you are not exactly writing a multi-user client/server database application with many concurrent users and transactions happening every few tens of milliseconds, but compromises should not be made in the interest of programmer comfort with the SQL. That ultimately leads to performance compromises.\r\n\r\nBut even with the largish number of shows to date and the number of hosts, it doesn\'t represent a big dataset. But a system which can support something big from the start will not need tearing down and re-hashing as things grow.\r\n\r\nI guess your hands are a bit tied if you don\'t know the future platform resources, like whether you will always have a sensible RDBMS back-end available.\r\n\r\nMy show was pretty theoretical. I\'m more used to large systems. In the past I have worked on e-commerce systems for big vendors, and on world-wide client/server stuff.\r\n\r\nI usually take the attitude that a heavy-duty solution can handle small-fry without breaking into a sweat, but the reverse is not true. That\'s scalability','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(911,1569,'2014-08-16 18:43:51','Ken Fallon','Scalability is not an issue.','I figured out that we could comfortably store 10,000 comma separated hosts into a row before we would have to worry. That episode would take five hours just to introduce the hosts. \r\n\r\nI don\'t think that Scalability is an issue.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(912,1569,'2014-08-16 21:46:12','Mike Ray','Scalability','Some time in the year nineteen-canteen, the first man to write a mainframe program said; \"nah, I\'ll just use two bytes for the year...\" :)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(913,1569,'2014-08-19 18:25:06','Ken Fallon','Straw Man Argument','Unlike you\'re mainframe programmer who knew there would be a problem in at most 50 years, our problem might arise in 2319, assuming the current rate of hosts coming to the network, and ignoring the fact that there are only about 80 hosts active in any given year, and assuming all our hosts live to be to a grand old age of 370 or so, and that they are all available to be in this show. Even then it would still take over 5 hours to introduce them and we would probably just put them under Various Hosts at that point, like we do for the New Year Show. Which incedently has under 100 listeners, let alone contributing hosts.\r\n\r\nSo why is it a bad idea to use a comma separated list in the case of HPR ?\r\n\r\nRemember I intend to get at least one more show out of you or Dave on this topic.\r\n\r\n/me struggles not to say \"because it\'s more elegant\"\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(914,1569,'2014-08-21 10:24:54','Mike Ray','New host name','I\'m going to make a new show under a host name containing a comma :-p','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(915,1569,'2014-09-03 13:57:38','Ken Fallon','How do you deal with tags','I can see the usefulness of many to many relationships but I\'m curious to know how \"tags\" are supposed to be modelled in a RDBMS','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(916,1569,'2014-09-03 22:03:24','Dave Morriss','Dealing with tags','I\'d have thought the answer was more of the same many-to-many stuff.\r\n\r\nSo what is a a tag? I would expect it to be a descriptive string, perhaps one already used in a system, or maybe a new one. Usually you\'d want to refer to existing tags when tagging an entity in your database I imagine, so you can see if the tag is \"open source\" or \"open-source\".\r\n\r\nIn your interface, if you wanted to re-use a tag for a new entity then would be good if your system offered it in a menu or a list or let you start typing it and generated the matches as you type (like Google does in browsers). To do that you\'d need a searchable table containing one tag per row. If you were typing in a tag and you made a typo the error would be more obvious in such a scheme. (You\'d need Javascript to do this in a browser though.)\r\n\r\nThen a tagged entity associated with many tags would have multiple entries in a cross-reference table. You\'d probably want to store your tags with a case-insensitive variant or build a case-insensitive index too.\r\n\r\nYou wouldn\'t want to store the tags in a comma-separated list in the entity (no idea why I thought of that design) since you couldn\'t then implement a rapid lookup as you typed. Plus you\'d have duplication, couldn\'t easily build an index, etc, etc.\r\n\r\nDoes that make sense? Mike can probably explain this more clearly :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(917,1569,'2014-09-04 19:26:30','borgu','','I\'ve somewhat mixed feeling about this ep. Mike starts explaining in good, simple and easy to follow way and then just drops it :( He just needed to continue in similar fashion. Like, one can point from artist_table to genre_table and back but in order to preserve many-to-many nature of data one would have to have multiple copies same data at each side and leave behind the uniqueness of keys and then to change, for example, artists name one would have to change in multiple records at once and queries would have to filter through a lot more data and so on... it would be terribly inefficient and wasteful but it would work... and it would be obvious to listener why this is a bad design... and in an effort to improve it one can evolve it to have third intermediate table...\r\n\"believe me this is bad\" will not cut for explanation :(\r\n*sigh*\r\nsorry, I guess I\'m ranting..','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(918,1569,'2014-09-05 01:01:52','Mike Ray','Tags','An RDBMS is a (potentially) huge exercise in set theory. So a collection of tags associated with, for example, a show, is a \'set\'. SQL provides the \'in\' clause for such things:\r\n\r\nselect show from tbl_show\r\nwhere \'elephant\' in\r\nselect tag, show_id from shows;\r\n\r\nor something like that.\r\n\r\nI\'ve never even exposed my brain to how something like Google indexes the world\'s web sites. But you can bet they don\'t use a comma-separated list in a single table column.\r\n\r\nI think we just found a subject for my next database show...set theory and the \'IN\' clause.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(919,1569,'2014-09-05 03:16:50','Mike Ray','More about tags','Actually thinking more about this. It\'s another simple many-to-many.\r\n\r\nA show can have one or more tags, and a tag can appear for one or more shows.\r\n\r\nSo, using the same diagramming I used in my show notes, and I hope the arrows don\'t screw up the form submission:\r\n\r\nshow------tag\r\n\r\nThe tag table only has one row for any possible tag. And here tags need to be cleaned up, probably all made lowercase and with apostrophes removed etc.\r\n\r\nThen the show_tag_xref table just has a row consisting of two columns:\r\n\r\nshow_id\r\ntag_id\r\n\r\nBoth columns have \'not null\' constraints and there is a compound unique index.\r\n\r\nThen an SQL query something like this can be looped to insert tags into the tags table with an \'after-insert\' trigger to insert into the show_tag_xref table and the tag_id of the tags table is an autoincrement column:\r\n\r\ninsert into tbl_tags (strTag) values (?)\r\nwhere ? not in(\r\nselect str_tag from tbl_tags\r\n);\r\n\r\nAnd then queries similar to those I did for the 1569 show notes are used to pull shows from the pool by tag.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a while since I did any professional MySQL programming but I think it now has triggers and autoincrement columns, and stored procedures.\r\n\r\nA breeze in Perl using the DBI.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(920,1569,'2014-10-07 23:49:34','Mike Ray','@Borgu','I thought it was pretty clear. But it\'s always possible to find a better way to explain it. I got a bit lost at the point I talked about a circular reference. That could have been better. But I guess an explanation that didn\'t have a 100% perfect explanation is better than no show at all. \r\n\r\nI did this show in response to a real-world discussion. I\'ll not bother with any more about RDBMS matters.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(921,1569,'2014-10-08 07:46:15','Ken Fallon','Noooooo','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nPlease continue to send in shows on anything you like. I think the feedback has been overall excellent on your show and I personally want to hear more on RDBMS as do many other listners.\r\n\r\nKeep them coming.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(922,1570,'2014-08-11 04:20:58','Klaatu','JFS works for me.','Always good to hear a little about JFS. I have been using JFS on my main 500GB SSD drive as well as my 64GB thumbdrive for, I think, three years now. So far I have nothing but good things to say about it. \r\n\r\nI do not have a whole lot of data about it, except that it has been working quite nicely and without incident. \r\n\r\nA 256GB SSD drive, only a few months old, using a filesystem that is *not* JFS, has recently died. I am tempted to take this as a vote of confidence for JFS, but lack of any real causal data for the failure prevents me from considering it seriously.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(923,1577,'2014-08-21 01:43:06','x1101','Thanks!','I was actually about to build something very like this myself! Playing with it now and loving it!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(924,1577,'2014-08-23 16:43:44','guitarman','Cool','Glad you are enjoying it x1101. I like the philosophy of it, plus its very performant. If you need help with it aside from the handbook which is great on the getnikola website, they have an IRC chat room on freenode: #nikola where the devs and a few users hang out. I\'ve gotten some good help there as well. \r\n-Cheers','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(925,1580,'2016-05-06 01:39:36','Ramiro','FAT, FAT32','Perhaps you could change the name of the Podcast from \"FAST and NTFS\" to \"FAT and NTFS\"','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(926,1580,'2016-05-06 09:29:24','Dave Morriss','Title change','Thanks Ramiro. This typo obviously slipped through the net in 2014, but has now been corrected','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(927,1580,'2016-05-08 15:47:58','Ken Fallon','Done','Changed fast to fat','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(928,1587,'2014-09-05 14:24:47','chalkahlom','','fine show indeed! Many thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(929,1588,'2014-09-04 01:30:38','Stephen','re the reader','I agree with your collective assessment that the reader did well. But one thing really bugged me repeatedly--he made the classic non-local mispronunciation of the city of Kissimmee. It is *not* KISS-im-mee; it\'s kis-SIM-mee.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(930,1588,'2014-09-10 02:15:07','Fifty OneFifty','Cast member areas of the Haunted Mansion Facade','https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgnKtJpmVfk','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(931,1590,'2014-09-06 16:25:17','Jonathan','Great Show','Thanks for this great introduction to XFS. I had been wondering why Daniel Robbins (creator of Gentoo, Funtoo) recommends it. While it seems ideal for enterprise use, for personal use it\'s a bummer that you can\'t resize (shrink) it. Guess I\'ll be sticking to my tried-and-true ext configuration in my next system setup.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(932,1591,'2014-09-30 14:22:38','mordancy','lighting your charcoal chimney','The best and cheapest way I have found to light the charcoal in my charcoal chimney has been to use either newspaper or paper towels. Put as much vegetable oil or cooking oil on it as you can. Then it will act like an oil lamp and the paper will burn until all the oil has cooked off.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(933,1593,'2014-09-12 20:49:14','johanv','Very cool','I really enjoyed this episode. I used to program in C++ more than 10 years ago. At that time, I didn\'t understand how overloading the ()-operator could be useful, but now I realise that I needed just that back then to make the mathematical library I was working on way more intuitive to use.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(934,1594,'2014-09-16 12:46:33','johanv','Linux for the kids','I really like it that you introduce your kids to Linux. I try to do that as well. I installed a Doudou-Linux box for my 4yo son, and he\'s finding his way pretty well (https://www.doudoulinux.org/web/english/index.html).\r\n\r\nI hope he won\'t get stuck into the Windows world after some time just because my wife doesn\'t want to abandon Windows. She\'s a teacher, and teachers often tend to love Microsoft Office.\r\n\r\nI guess I will have to make sure that there is always something on the Linux box that is more interesting than the Windows stuff. Shouldn\'t be too hard, I suppose.','2022-02-14 13:17:17'),
(935,1594,'2014-09-17 00:52:08','FreeLikeGNU','Open Spades','After listening to your article I did some research and found there is FOSS alternative called OpenSpades: https://github.com/yvt/openspades/releases/tag/v0.0.12 \r\n\r\nThere are Linux build instructions here: https://github.com/yvt/openspades/blob/master/README.md','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(936,1594,'2014-09-20 11:54:57','Andrew Conway','','Johnv - children start out open minded - sounds like we\'re both keen to stop our children from sliding into the closed world!\r\n\r\nFreeLikeGNU - thanks, I wasn\'t aware of that and will check it out and tell my son about it.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(937,1596,'2014-09-16 05:54:04','Ken Fallon','Let everyone be a hacker','First let me say that this was a brilliant episode. \r\n\r\nI do however want to question your assumption that real life Hacking is a bad thing. For years we have fought the use of Hacker as the evil stereotypes as portrayed by media. Surely it\'s a good thing that the word is now been extended so that anyone can feel that they are a hacker.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(938,1596,'2014-09-17 13:19:14','Michael','You nailed it!','Wow. I\'m in general not oposing the wider scope use of the term. I think everybody does it to a certain extend, if they call it hacking or not, and that it lies in the nature of mankind. Therefore I personally do no want to limit it to coding and computer technology, nor do I feel the need \"to claim it back\".\r\nHowever, Klaatu has a point and his explanation absolutely resonated with me. It,s honest and thorough and the best one I have encountered so far!\r\n\r\nThank you for that.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(939,1596,'2014-10-18 04:20:46','Gabriel Evenfire','','While I can see where you are coming from Klaatu, I still have to disagree with your prespective. Let us consider the timeless Jargon File which I largely agree with: \r\n\r\n\"Hacking might be characterized as \"an appropriate application of ingenuity\". Whether the result is a quick-and-dirty patchwork job or a carefully crafted work of art, you have to admire the cleverness that went into it.\"\r\nhttps://www.catb.org/jargon/html/meaning-of-hack.html\r\n\r\nSo, hacking doesn\'t necessarily have to involve lengthy effort or careful craft. Unfortunately, what is ingenious to one person is banal to another. While pop-culture may may apply the term \"hack\" trivially, perhaps in the eyes of many in this world, everyday tips and tricks do seem ingenious. In that sense, pop culture is using the term correctly. Of course, among true \"hackers\" (see Appendix B) this wouldn\'t be considered to be the case. But to each their own. It\'s better than perverting the term to only mean \"break into computers.\"\r\n\r\nCheers,\r\n - Gabriel Evenfire','2022-02-14 13:17:17'),
(940,1597,'2014-10-12 00:25:01','noName','','Thanks Steve. Enjoyable and informative listening.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(941,1598,'2014-09-18 07:34:22','gigasphere','Great episode','Thanks Ahuka, I found this episode really useful in assisting my understanding of the subject particularly when talking about the salted hash and which hashing algorithms are the minimum standard now.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(942,1598,'2014-09-21 00:03:01','Kevin O\'Brien','Thank you for the comment','Thank you gigasphere for the comment. It is nice to know I\'m giving useful information. We have more to come.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(943,1599,'2014-09-19 15:01:51','laindir','This is me laughing','Absolutely loved the part after the interview. It gives a real sense of the work they\'re doing and the incredible strides in quality that have been made in open source TTS tech.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(944,1599,'2014-09-21 00:06:30','Kevin O\'Brien','Great show','I really enjoyed this show Ken. I appreciated learning more about how you develop an application like this. Please do have Ingmar back at some time to continue.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(945,1599,'2014-09-22 20:05:55','johanv','Dutch voice','I am certainly looking forward to a follow up show about creating a Dutch voice. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(946,1599,'2014-09-23 15:45:00','davidWHITMAN','Mary TTS','Great show. Gotta admire those who have put the effort imto projects like this. go GNU!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(947,1599,'2014-11-09 15:01:29','Steve Bickle','How to for Debian','I\'ve put together a how-to showing how to get MaryTTS installed and running on Debian. It is at https://blog.bickle.co.uk/podcasts/marytts-voice-synthesizer-how-to-for-debian/','2022-02-14 13:17:18'),
(948,1599,'2014-11-13 15:39:59','Mike Ray','MaryTTS howto etc','Thanks for the great howto on installing MaryTTS.\r\n\r\nI have installed it and run it on my Debian desktop and I have to say so far that I fail to see what everybody is raving about.\r\n\r\nWriting any kind of software speech synthesiser is a massive undertaking and I take my hat off to anybody that can do it.\r\n\r\nBut to those who gripe about eSpeak and rave about MaryTTS I have to say; eSpeak is lean and mean and supports dozens of languages. MaryTTS on the other hand is bloated and the voice I have heard is not very much better than I am used to with eSpeak.\r\n\r\nSpeaking as a blind computer user, small footprint and fast, crisp operation is far more important than the sound of the voice. I fail to see how I could write a long text document on a modest machine and expect MaryTTS to keep up with the fact I have been typing for thirty years.\r\n\r\nAnd I am speaking as a blind person.\r\n\r\nWith one or two notable exceptions, possibly the use of a TTS engine by children with print disabilities other than blindness, nobody need look any further than eSpeak, IMHO.\r\n\r\nWhere something like MaryTTS _might_ win, is in the creation of static wav files for repeated use, but for on-the-fly tts, nothing beats eSpeak.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(949,1599,'2014-11-26 23:24:36','Steve Bickle','Horses for courses','Mike, \r\n\r\nI am not a TTS developer either, I agree that eSpeak is a fantastic piece of code. As someone who started programming on the ZX81 and Atari 400 I can appreciate compact code. \r\n\r\nThe eSpeak voice is intelligible, and so I\'m lead to believe, can still be understood at high speeds. \r\n\r\nThe eSpeak voice is generally not aesthetically pleasing to those less familiar with TTS. I think Ken was looking to the MaryTTS voices to find something more appealing to the general listener.\r\n\r\nHaving had a little more time to play with MaryTTS I can now appreciate that although seemingly more natural some elements of the voices are less intelligible at times. This may be the clipping you referred to on the mail list (I don\'t know because I don\'t really have a vocabulary to describe TTS voice quality). What I have noticed is that there are two types of MaryTTS voices, conversely to expectations the ones with the larger data-set appear to be less intelligible. \r\n\r\nWhich if any of the Mary voices are the clearest/cleanest?\r\n\r\nThe goals of eSpeak and MaryTTS are somewhat different, the Mary project appears to be a university research project. Having had a bit of a dig around in the MaryTTS code, I\'ve found that it includes a lot of tools for recording and creating voices. There is also a whole range of effects processing and other tools to amend the vocal output model. Its definitely not a light weight TTS solution, but I don\'t think that was ever the intention.\r\n\r\nI did notice that eSpeak can create static wav files using the -w switch so it probably wins there too.\r\n\r\nWhere MaryTTS or similar projects may win out over eSpeak would be to provide a more suitable voice to those who rely on speech synthesis to be able to speak. I recently heard this TED talk. https://www.ted.com/talks/rupal_patel_synthetic_voices_as_unique_as_fingerprints . The voices featured here appear to be a great improvement over MaryTTS, but I don\'t know what software they are using or if it is open source. ','2022-02-14 13:17:18'),
(950,1599,'2014-11-26 23:29:30','Steve Bickle','Maryspeak project now on github','Just wanted to add a quick note to the episode to say that the maryspeak project is on now on github along with the documentation in markdown files at https://github.com/scbickle/maryspeak','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(951,1599,'2014-11-29 00:31:12','Mike Ray','maryspeak, great stuff','Hello Steve. Great stuff again with maryspeak. I\'ve cloned it from github and at the moment I can\'t get any speech out of it but I suspect that\'s a permissions issue or something. Which user does maryspeak run as? If it runs as the user that executes the maryspeak command I would expect sound if the user belongs to the \'audio\' group. I will solve it though because I am sure it is something I have not done.\r\n\r\nI will pass this stuff on to Fernando of the F123 project because he has aksed me if I can produce a MaryTTS speech-dispatcher module and maryspeak may be an easy to hack the espeak-generic module to make marytts-generic.\r\n\r\nOn the subject of eSpeak; I suspect some folks have problems with languages other than English. Certainly Fernando says it is hard to understand when it is speaking Porteugese (I probably spelt that wrong).\r\n\r\nI guess this is quite possible since I doubt Jonathan Duddington is polyglot :)\r\n\r\nNice to see that the maryspeak repo also contains the MaryTTS Debian howto.\r\n\r\nThanks again.\r\n\r\nMike','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(952,1601,'2014-09-22 13:12:22','tcuc','Great episode! ','I enjoyed this episode, i have installed a LAMP stack before and the reason i listened to this episode was that my hands were full and i couldn\'t skip. but I\'m glad i listened, the way you explained the installation and defining things as you mentioned them made it easy to understand.\r\n\r\nonly thing i didn\'t hear that i was waiting for was that you didn\'t mention Virtual machines! their great for testing software and server applications. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(953,1601,'2014-09-30 00:12:18','Klaatu','The host responds','Great point, tcuc. I guess I wasn\'t thinking about VM\'s or docker images or anything else, because I was seeing this as an introductory episode to the LAMP stack as A Thing.\r\n\r\nI am making note of your idea, though, and might just record something about the use for VM-based web hosting later!\r\n\r\nThanks for listening, and for commenting!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(954,1604,'2014-10-01 02:49:18','Christopher M Hobbs','What a great episode!','I really enjoyed hearing your story about how you started using GNU Linux! It was very entertaining and it sounds like you\'ve come a long way!\r\n\r\nThanks for recording an episode! Happy Hacking!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(955,1606,'2014-10-05 09:20:51','Ken Fallon','VNC is not secure','Hi Klaatu,\r\n\r\nYou mentioned several times in the show that VNC is secure, that is not the case unless people tunnel the session over ssh or a vpn as you have done. This was not clear and may lead someone to assume that VNC in itself is secure.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/research/dtg/attarchive/vnc/sshvnc.html\r\n\"VNC uses a random challenge-response system to provide the basic authentication that allows you to connect to a VNC server. This is reasonably secure; the password is not sent over the network. Once you are connected, however, traffic between the viewer and the server is unencrypted, and could be snooped by someone with access to the intervening network. We therefore recommend that if security is important to you, you \'tunnel\' the VNC protocol through some more secure channel such as SSH.\"\r\n\r\nEven the \"reasonably secure\" statement is challenged here:\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_Network_Computing#Security\r\n\"By default, RFB is not a secure protocol. While passwords are not sent in plain-text (as in telnet), cracking could prove successful if both the encryption key and encoded password are sniffed from a network. For this reason it is recommended that a password of at least 8 characters be used. On the other hand, there is also an 8-character limit on some versions of VNC; if a password is sent exceeding 8 characters, the excess characters are removed and the truncated string is compared to the password.\"\r\n\r\nI have also seen VNC security questioned for not requiring a username and password.\r\n\r\nRecommendations:\r\nuse the -localhost option so that only local (and tunneled) connections are allowed\r\nuse ssh tunneling\r\nuse the maximum size password allowed','2022-02-14 13:17:18'),
(956,1612,'2014-10-07 20:59:07','corenominal','From another X61 user','Great episode. I love your speaker hack, very clever idea. I also purchased a refurbished X61 a few years back (the non tablet kind) and it\'s a great little machine. Like you, I also use it as a machine to take on the road and I took it to this year\'s OggCamp, where Beni ended up using it for his talk about Lernstick. Interestingly, or not, Beni used it because his Chromebook did not have VGA out. I like that old hardware can sometimes be more useful than new stuff :)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(957,1612,'2014-10-08 18:20:26','NYbill','','Ha, and we were both EEE1000 users once upon a time as well. (Well, I still use mine. I use it for LUG/2600 meetings, travel, etc...)\r\n\r\nYea, the x61\'s are decent rigs. I little old, a little chunky. But, they seem to be rock solid. \r\n\r\nI\'m bummed I missed you guys at OGGcamp this year. But, it was cool to see the HPR table picture. Who knows, maybe I\'ll see everyone next time. ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(958,1612,'2014-10-23 01:12:28','pokey','Great episode','I loved it. Thanks Bill. Were did you buy it? I\'ll listen again, incase you don\'t answer.\r\n\r\nMy wife\'s laptop just broke. Maybe beyond repair. So I\'m looking at my options now.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(959,1612,'2014-11-03 13:24:24','Charles in NJ','Returns are fun','Thanks for this episode. I have used only old and refurbished computers at home since I began to use Linux. Refurbs give you the freedom to experiment with mods that you might not be willing to try on a new machine. Your speaker hack is a great example of the possibilities for making a truly custom rig. \r\n\r\nIf you feel like doing more about PLCs or projects with inexpensive programmable microcontrollers, those would be fun to hear, as well.\r\n\r\nLoved the show!\r\n\r\nCharles in NJ\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(960,1612,'2015-08-15 13:06:39','NYbill','Sorry I\'m late...','Sorry I\'m quite late to these comments, guys. I bought that rig via Micro Center, Pokey. You\'ve probably bought something by now. But, just in case anyone reads this in the future, New Egg, Tiger Direct, The Lenovo Outlet, and The Dell Outlet also sell referbs. \r\n\r\nAnd thanks for the kind words, Charles in NJ. Yea, I\'m always hacking on something. Its fun to blab about the projects on HPR as well. \r\n\r\n(Yes, this is me getting better at checking comments. Its only been about 9 months. Heh...)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(961,1616,'2014-10-14 07:27:35','johanv','Do you have a blog post about this?','This seems a very interesting episode to me. Do you have a blog post about this? I didn\' t listen very attentively. :-)\r\n\r\nIf not, I will of course happily listen again :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(962,1617,'2014-10-21 12:43:07','pokey','Fun game','The show was ace! Thanks for the tip.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(963,1619,'2014-10-17 07:08:23','Mike Ray','Excellent show','Thanks for an excellent show! A complex and interesting subject covered in an interesting and pleasing way. More of the same please','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(964,1619,'2014-11-09 11:36:14','Alison Chaiken','Very valuable content','I really enjoyed listening and look forward to consulting your links. I work on the ARM Linux kernel on a different processor and appreciate the opportunity to learn more about how boot-time initialization really works and how ELF varies among processors.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(965,1620,'2014-10-17 12:49:49','cybergrue','Dangerous advice','Another good episode, but the advice on using haystacks was dangerous. As you mentioned, the search space is becoming to large to sytematiclly search, so password crakers have evolved. One method they use is to take found words (not just out of a standard dictionary, such as all the words in wikipedia, other languages, leaked password lists, etc.) and try these plus varients like padding with additional characters, combining multiple words together (with and without spaces). In one news story, a password cracking package was breaking passwords that were 55 characters long! https://arstechnica.com/security/2013/08/thereisnofatebutwhatwemake-turbo-charged-cracking-comes-to-long-passwords/\r\nThese passwords were weak (common words strung together like the xkcd advice are particularly vulnerable) https://xkcd.com/936/ but it does show there are no short-cuts in creating a good password, it has to be completely random, mixed cases with symbols and numbers and long!\r\nI would have submitted a responce show, but I think that this is too important, and that you should be the one to say this.\r\n ','2022-02-14 13:17:19'),
(966,1620,'2014-10-17 18:06:45','John','','Thanks, very interesting information. I appreciate you taking the time to do this, and the other podcasts you contribute. All the best, John','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(967,1620,'2014-10-21 19:34:45','Kevin O\'Brien','Please do a show','Cybergrue, I think you should do a show. It would be a great contribution. I have never thought that my opinions were the last word on anything, and I welcome dialog, as Ken Fallon can attest.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(968,1620,'2014-10-22 06:15:53','Ken Fallon','Very good show but 2 comments','1. The use of the word Hacker without prefixing it with malicious\r\n2. Many systems restrict the length and type of characters that can be used\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(969,1620,'2014-10-22 20:42:21','Kevin O\'Brien','Yes and ...','Guilty on the first point. I should have been more precise.\r\n\r\nOn the second point, are you saying that it is _good_ to restrict length and characters in passwords? Because if so I would love to hear your reasoning. Maybe I missed something in my analysis.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(970,1620,'2014-10-23 17:17:44','pokey','Another Excellent episode','Full of Great information, and presented in an entertaining way, by a man who could (and did) keep listeners engaged while reading the phone book. Thanks for everything you do for HPR, Ahuka.\r\n\r\ncybergrue, \r\n1. a great point. Thank you. \r\n2. Please do a show detailing this. You\'re a member of our community, so we want to hear from you as well. It doesn\'t have to be long, it just has to be you. TIA.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(971,1620,'2014-10-24 19:36:47','Ken Fallon','NO!!!','No length restrictions are not good, nor are charachter restrictions. Yet it is a fact that these restrictions exist.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(972,1620,'2014-10-30 11:35:35','Mike Ray','Pasting passwords?','This is probably a stupid question about passwords. I recently had reason to believe I had been attacked by a key-stroke harvesting nasty, and it prompts the question; is it a good idea, or even is it remotely effective, to paste a password from the clipboard if it has been copied from another document? This at least gets round the key-stroke bandits, right?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(973,1622,'2014-10-21 18:32:46','mysterio2','Excellent interview.','I found this interview thoroughly engaging and informative. Hearing the business case for open source was interesting and an interesting juxtaposition to the more common ideologically based statements of open-source advocacy one hears. Keep it up!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(974,1622,'2014-10-21 19:32:20','Kevin O\'Brien','Great interview!','I really enjoyed this interview with Michael Tiemann, semioticrobotic. You are taking this series in an interesting direction, and I look forward to more.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(975,1622,'2014-10-22 13:37:11','semioticrobotic','Thank you!','Thanks to everyone for listening and for your support. I loved, loved, loved doing this interview—a real dream come true. Another outcome was this article:\r\n\r\nhttps://opensource.com/business/14/8/interview-michael-tiemann-red-hat','2022-02-14 13:17:19'),
(976,1622,'2014-10-23 17:08:27','pokey','Awesome!','An awe inspiring interview with an inspirational interviewee. You had some really great, engaging questions. This may be the best interview on HPR so far. Congratulations on a job very well done.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(977,1629,'2014-10-30 00:39:58','Mike Ray','Clarification on my email address, nasty tts','I was a bit alarmed to hear the pronunciation of my given email address at the start of show 1629, Banana Pi First Impressions.\r\n\r\nPlease note it is NOT raspberrypi.org but raspberryvi.org, VI for \'visually impaired. When I set up the email list and web site I checked with the Raspberry Pi Foundation whether they were happy with that. They said yes.\r\n\r\nI\'m not associated with the Foundation in any way, nor is my email list and web site','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(978,1630,'2014-11-01 13:41:28','Mike Ray','Another excellent episode','Another great episode of Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi. I like the loading of executable code with xmodem over the UART Looking forward to the next.\r\n\r\nOnly issue I have is that one of the PDFs pointed to in the first episode for download is password protected.\r\n\r\nI\'d like to get a list of all the ARM ASM instructions.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(979,1630,'2014-11-01 23:24:00','Gabriel Evenfire','Password protected PDF...','Hey,\r\n\r\nGlad you are enjoying the series...\r\n\r\nI just tried all the PDFs wtihin firefox and all opened up without asking for a password. Was it the ARM ARM that was giving you issues?\r\n\r\nI found a second link that has that document.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.scss.tcd.ie/~waldroj/3d1/arm_arm.pdf\r\n\r\nThe ARM instructions are in section A3. \r\n\r\nHere is a quick reference card that I found online and have used on occasion.\r\n\r\nhttps://users.ece.utexas.edu/~valvano/Volume1/QuickReferenceCard.pdf\r\n\r\nNow the RPI\'s ARM basically has support for \"regular ARM\" which is like 32-bit RISC, \"thumb\" which has a compressed form of regular ARM in 16-bit instructions and \"jazelle\" which is a mode where the ARM can interpret java bytecodes. \r\n\r\nRegular is simple and elegant, and so is thumb from what I can see. But I have never used it. I\'ve no interest in the Jazelle instructions for the time being. Now, newer ARM processors have support for 64-bit instructions mixed with 32-bit instructions (maybe even mixed with 16-bit instructions?). I\'m not a fan of what they did there.\r\n\r\n If you are still getting issues, email me. (see my profile)\r\n\r\nCheers,\r\n -- Gabriel Evenfire','2022-02-14 13:17:19'),
(980,1630,'2014-12-16 15:11:22','Alison Chaiken','Would make a great basis for a hackfest','Parts 1 and 2 have about the right amount of content for a weekend workshop. It would be fun to have a \"Bare Metal Programming on the Raspberry Pi\" session as part of some weekend hackfest.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(981,1636,'2014-11-10 06:11:40','victor','Great episode! ','Hi dave. I really enjoyed this podcast! First I\'d like to comment about your French press being to difficult to press. I think either your coffee was ground too fine or you added too much coffee to the press. \r\n\r\nI own a French press and i haven\'t used it since i bought a moka pot this past summer. It\'s my favorite way to make coffee at the moment. \r\n\r\nI\'d like to recommend investing in a burr grinder to improve your coffee experience. The encore electric grinder by baratza is an entry level burr grinder. It retails for $150 USD. Hand grinders work well too. Hario & porlex make some that sell for around $30. \r\n\r\nAlso, try buying local freshly roasted coffee! ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(982,1636,'2014-11-12 19:39:37','expatpaul','Bialetti','I recently aquired a Bialetti Moka Pot (a six cup model) it really is superb. I have to agree that it makes the best coffee I\'ve made.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(983,1636,'2014-11-12 21:56:53','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feedback','victor: Glad you liked the episode. I suspect the French press I mentioned was poorly made, since others I\'ve owned since then have not been as stiff to operate. I have a metal one now which has a very smooth action, and I use it occasionally to make some slightly less strong coffee than the moka pot.\r\nI do actually have a burr grinder. It\'s an attachment to my old Kenwood Chef food mixer and it does a pretty good job, even though it seems to be almost an antique. I got out of the habit of grinding my own beans, though I used to use the grinder a lot years ago. You have prompted me to go searching for what\'s available here in Edinburgh and to get back into using it - thanks!\r\n\r\nexpatpaul: Good to hear that you\'re enjoying the delights of coffee made this way.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(984,1636,'2015-02-19 23:58:55','1093i3511','','There\'s a company located in Germany producing a variation, or better said a combination, based on the same principle. But using an electric kettle bottom piece. Thus you won\'t have to use your stove. \r\nUsing it since 5+ years on a daily basis. \r\n\r\nhttps://www.rommelsbacher.de/en/products/coffee/details/eko-366e/','2022-02-14 13:17:19'),
(985,1636,'2015-02-20 11:36:08','Dave Morriss','Rommelsbacher EKO 366/E','Hi 1093i3511,\r\n\r\nThat\'s certainly an impressive looking device. Thanks for pointing it out.\r\n\r\nHowever, the Luddite in me tends to prefer the simplicity of the Bialetti (currently around 20GBP on Amazon UK) to this machine (around 73GBP), though I agree that the necessity of a stove makes the German device a good choice for many.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(986,1637,'2014-11-14 11:19:39','Mikael','re Facebook','Thanks for an interesting episode, FiftyOneFifty. :)\r\n\r\nIt is great to hear how people gather into communities, and even sort of spontaneous communties, to help out.\r\n\r\nBefore, I would never have thought of joining facebook, but I did a few weeks ago. Not for general \"social\" reasons, but mostly having to do with issues related to my health. There are very useful small communities on FB, and it is a very easy way to connect to people. It has meant a lot to me.\r\n\r\nThere are lots of problems with FB, but as you say, communities are made of people. That a corporation should be the intermediary is not nice, but FB can be a very useful tool.\r\n\r\nAs long as one doesn\'t put all one\'s (\"social\") eggs in one basket.\r\n\r\nTake care\r\n\r\nMikael a.k.a inscius\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(987,1637,'2014-12-02 10:59:07','gigasphere','Great episode','Hey 5150,\r\n\r\nThanks for episode, it was a really good listen and makes you remember that it is the people that make the difference!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(988,1640,'2014-11-18 08:06:10','johanv','Thank you for explaining this','Hi,\r\nThank you for this informative episode. Now I actually have a clue about how these encryption algorithms actually work.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(989,1640,'2014-11-18 20:03:40','Kevin O\'Brien','You\'re welcome','Glad you liked it johanv. They are fun to do, and I am working on some more.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(990,1641,'2014-11-18 08:31:49','Mikael','','Nice episode, Johan. Some great points made. I enjoyed it very much.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(991,1642,'2014-11-18 19:20:46','Mike Ray','MaryTTS, clipping','Great episode, but does anyone really think the serious clipping on the MaryTTS intro makes it more tolerable than eSpeak? It is so badly clipped I could hardly understand every word','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(992,1643,'2014-11-20 20:03:01','0xf10e','','Have you ever tried `rsync --recursive ~/LocalFolder/. you@server:/home/you/RemoteFolder/.`?\r\nThe \'/.\' tells `rsync` \"this directory\" and combined with \'--recursive\' (or an option enabling \'--recursive\' like \'--archive\') you can easily (r)sync a directory with all possible filenames without worrying about \"extensions\".\r\nWon\'t create the target directory but works nicely if it\'s already created.\r\n\r\nAnd there\'s actually a text/console interface for unison (package \"unison240-text\" on Fedora 20) so you /can/ initiate a sync without the GUI ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(993,1643,'2014-11-21 21:57:47','Frank','Two supplements on Unison','Unison is really neat, I’ve been using it for a long time now to sync between several machines. I would like to make two additions to your explanations.\r\n\r\n1) Unison in fact does *not* need the GUI installed. To set up the profile, you can also use an editor with the help of the (admittedly longish) documentation. And if used with the options -auto -ui text (it may select -ui text automatically, if no GUI is installed), it will show you the file list on the terminal and ask you for input there if needed.\r\n\r\n2) To be more flexible in what can be synced (and to address your problem of capitalisation), I use the following trick:\r\n- Create a new subdirectory in ~/.unison for each profile (I call them \"-links\" with being the ssh hostname for the remote sync partner). This subdirectory becomes the root directory for your profile.\r\n- Fill that subdir with symbolic links to the items you want to sync. E.g. cd ~/.unison/laptop-links && ln -s /home/myname/Documents docs\r\n- That way the directory to be synced can be called whatever you like, as long as the two symlinks have the same name on both sides.\r\n- This also allows me to sync single files within a directory (e.g. ~/.vimrc) but not the dir itself, and also to sync directories that don’t share the same root, such as ~/docs and /mnt/data/music.\r\n- Lastly, to make it all work, you must tell Unison to follow the symlinks you made. For this, add this to the profile config:\r\nfollow = Regex [^/]+\r\nThe Regex (regular expression) simply matches any character that is not a slash, hence everything on the topmost directory level (until the first slash).\r\n\r\nCheers.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(994,1643,'2014-12-04 22:16:44','bort','','hi fiftyonefifty\r\n\r\nthanks for your podcast on Unison.\r\n\r\none thing i would add to what you said is both backends need to be the *exact* same version.\r\n\r\nwhen i tried to get it working between two ubuntu machines (10.something and 12.something) they installed different versions by default and therefore wouldnt talk to each other. It took me AGES to work out what i was doing wrong.\r\n\r\ncheers','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(995,1643,'2015-01-06 13:25:55','Ken Fallon','Workaround to my unison issues','On Fedora you can install different versions. So now I have the following versions installed.\r\n\r\nunison-2.13\r\nunison-2.27\r\nunison-2.40\r\n\r\nFirst I create the profile in unison-2.13, which fails to sync.\r\n\r\nThen I open the existing profile with unison-2.40 and it syncs.\r\n\r\nA hack.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(996,1647,'2014-11-29 20:04:24','Broam via 5150','','The recipe we used for Keema Paratha\r\n\r\nas taken from:\r\n\r\nBeranbaum, Rose Levy. 2003. The Bread Bible. New York, NY: WW Norton &\r\nCompany, inc.\r\n\r\nISBN 0-393-05794-1\r\n\r\nRecipe is on page 232.\r\n\r\n\r\nNeeded equipment: (not in recipe, but it\'ll save you time)\r\n\r\nRolling pins, 1 per person is best\r\nClean counters or cutting boards\r\nTea Towels or Oiled plastic for covering dough\r\n We usually go with the towels to cover.\r\nBrush suitable for use with butter\r\nSkillet (cast iron or nonstick), bigger is better\r\nAn extra skillet & spice grinder if using whole spices\r\nTurner suitable for use on skillet\r\nCouple of mixing bowls\r\nMeasuring spoons\r\nStand mixer or food processor capable of mixing dough (or by hand)\r\nFood scale\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n290g (2c) Whole Wheat Flour, as fresh as possible\r\n(alternately, equal parts Whole Wheat & Unbleached All-Purpose Flour)\r\n6.6g (1t) salt\r\n11.7g (1.5t) dry milk\r\n177g (3/4c) water at room temperature\r\n\r\nThis makes one batch of dough. The filling recipe below fills two\r\nbatches of dough. (We made 4 batches of dough as you may recall.)\r\n\r\n(It is possible to swap half the water with scalded milk that has been\r\ncooled back to lukewarm. We did not do this; we used the dry milk.)\r\n\r\nThe recipe itself calls for a Food Processor or to do it by hand. We\r\nused a stand mixer, so this is somewhat from memory.\r\n\r\nWhisk together all of the dry ingredients first until well-blended. Then\r\nmix in the water. We mixed for about 5 minutes or so (the food processor\r\nsays 45 seconds; the hand method says 10-15 minutes). The dough will be\r\nsmooth, soft, and very slightly sticky. You should be able to handle it\r\neasily.\r\n\r\nLet the dough rest for 30 minutes to 3 hours.\r\n\r\n\r\nMEAT FILLING\r\nWe ended up using a lot more ground spices than whole spices. This is\r\nthe unmodified recipe in the book; it\'s more complicated than the\r\nsimplified version we used. Substituting ground & dried spices is\r\neasier and more portable (we pre-mixed) but you lose flavor.\r\n\r\n28g (2T) of your favorite frying fat\r\nbay leaf\r\n3 whole cloves (or equivalent amount ground)\r\n1 cinnamon stick\r\n~142g (~1c) 1 medium onion, finely chopped\r\n2cm piece of ginger, peeled & minced\r\n3 medium garlic cloves, minced\r\n1/2T coriander seeds (no weight noted)\r\n1/2T cumin seeds (no weight noted)\r\n1/2t ground turmeric\r\n1T plain yogurt (we often use strained (\"Greek\") yogurt)\r\n1T tomato sauce (we often use paste)\r\n\r\n454g (1lb) beef, preferably chuck (85% lean, 15% fat).\r\n Too lean and the mixture is dry; too rich and you\'ll have to drain\r\nout flavor.\r\n\r\n1/8t ground mace\r\n we substitute allspice, even though it\'s not similar at all.\r\n You may just wish to double the nutmeg.\r\n1/8t ground nutmeg, preferably fresh grated\r\n5g (3/4t) salt\r\n1/2t cayenne pepper\r\n recipe calls for 1/4 to 1/2. We recommend 1/2.\r\n1/4c water\r\n\r\n\r\nWhile the dough is resting, start the filling. It will keep 3 days,\r\nand this makes enough to fill TWO batches of dough.\r\n\r\nHeat frying fat over medium heat until hot.\r\nAdd bay leaf, cinnamon stick, and cloves.\r\nFry until the bay leaf gets a bit dark.\r\n(if not using whole spices, skip this step and jump right to the onion.)\r\n\r\nLower the heat (to low), add onion, ginger and garlic; sauté & stir.\r\nIn about 10 minutes onion will darken to medium brown.\r\n\r\nWhile this is going on: Dry-roast coriander & cumin seeds over medium\r\nheat about 2 minutes. They should smell fragrant. Allow them to cool,\r\nthen grind in your spice grinder. If not using whole spices, ignore\r\nthis section.\r\n\r\nAdd coriander, cumin, and turmeric to onion mixture, sauté for 2\r\nminutes; stir constantly. Add yogurt; stir 1 minute. Add tomato sauce;\r\nstir & cook 3 minutes.\r\n\r\nAdd meat, raise heat to medium. Sauté, break up lumps with your\r\nspoon/spatula/turner, until meat is browned.\r\n\r\nAdd mace, nutmeg, salt, cayenne, and water. Lower heat to lowest\r\npossible setting. Cover. Simmer for 45 minutes. If all the water\r\nevaporates, add more a small amount at a time. The mixture should be\r\ndry when you are done.\r\n\r\nLet filling cool, then remove the bay leaf, cinnamon stick, and cloves\r\n(if you used whole spices. They are a pain to fish out; we tend not to\r\nuse whole spices for these three.)\r\n\r\n(Broam\'s note: also the cooking time is a bit much. We didn\'t let it\r\ngo 45 minutes; we cooked it on low until most of the water evaporated,\r\nthen let the mixture cool.)\r\n\r\n\r\n48g (1/4c) clarified butter / ghee\r\n (Broam sez: You can substitute regular unsalted butter, or you can\r\nattempt to clarify it yourself, which is a bit labor intensive. Don\'t\r\nuse vegetable ghee, unless you\'re a vegan.)\r\n\r\n\r\nShape Dough:\r\nDivide dough into 8 even pieces; roll into balls. (The recipe has you\r\nroll into a long rope, then cut. This is not strictly necessary). Work\r\nwith one piece of dough at a time lest the others dry out.\r\n\r\nWith floured fingers, flowered rolling pin, and a floured surface,\r\nflatten the balls of dough and roll into a 12cm (5\") circle. Flour the\r\ndough lightly if it sticks. Once rolled out, brush the excess flour\r\noff. Brush the dough lightly with clarified butter, fold over, and\r\nbrush again. Fold over one more time.\r\n\r\nAfter all the balls are buttered and folded, roll them out again. The\r\nrecipe says that you should be able to roll these into an 18cm (7\")\r\nround but we have never gotten our dough that stretchy.\r\n\r\nPlace 1/4c of the meat filling on top of the dough. Take another piece\r\nand place it on top of the first piece. Fold the edges over 1cm (1/4\")\r\nand press to seal in the filling.\r\n\r\nFlip the filled parathas over and use the rolling pin very gently. The\r\nmeat should not come through the dough.\r\n\r\n(Broam says: Do not stack the parathas when finished. They\'ll stick\r\nand it\'s a *nightmare* to separate them.)\r\n\r\n\r\nFRY The Parathas\r\n\r\nHeat large skillet over medium-low.\r\n\r\nBrush pan with remaining clarified butter.\r\nPlace paratha in (you can cook a few at a time if they\'re small), fry\r\nfor 90 seconds. Brush surface with butter. Flip. Fry 60 seconds.\r\n\r\nThe dough may puff up a bit but will deflate when it\'s removed from\r\nthe heat. (Broam says: ours never do. YMMV).\r\n\r\n\r\nSERVE the Parathas\r\n\r\nCut into 4 wedges. Keep finished parathas warm in a low oven (\"warm\"\r\nsetting) covered with foil while you cook the rest. (You can stack\r\nthem here.)\r\n\r\nCan also be eaten at room temperature. Will keep overnight.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(997,1648,'2014-11-27 18:23:23','Tom Rodman ','Thx for covering bash substring expansion','Enjoyed your podcast. Thanks for your work. I\'ll\r\nhave to start using the substring feature.\r\n--\r\n\r\nAnother example:\r\n\r\nEx\r\n $ forwork=Mustang\r\n $ car=forwork\r\n $ echo ${!car}\r\n Mustang\r\n\r\nEx\r\n $ set -- joy pain bliss; myargc=$#; echo ${!myargc} \r\n bliss\r\n $ set -- joy pain bliss; myargc=$#; echo ${!$#}\r\n bash: ${!$#}: bad substitution\r\n\r\nMore bash tips at:\r\n\r\n https://TRodman.com/blog\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:20'),
(998,1648,'2014-11-29 18:22:36','Mike Ray','Great stuff','Thanks for a great podcast Dave. Learned some stuff I didn\'t know.\r\n\r\nI particulalry like:\r\n\r\necho ${var:?undefined}\r\n\r\nAnd, something I\'ve now incorporated into some scripts I have for conversion of one audio file type into another:\r\n\r\nMP3=${M4A%.m4a}.mp3\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(999,1648,'2014-11-29 22:41:45','Dave Morriss','Thanks Tom','Glad you enjoyed the podcast and found it useful.\r\n\r\nI didn\'t want this episode to go too deep into Bash, so I deliberately drew the line at dealing with indirect references and positional parameters. I was almost ready to cover indirection, but finally decided not to. Perhaps next time!\r\n\r\nYour example of \'echo ${!$#}\' failing is, I assume, because Bash performs just one scan for parameter substitutions. In this case, even if it performed two passes, this would resolve to \'echo ${!3}\' which returns nothing.\r\n\r\nI tried this:\r\n\r\n$ set -v -- joy pain bliss; myargc=$#; eval echo \\${!$#}\r\n\r\nwhich does do two passes. First time the backslash is dropped and $# returns 3 and second time Bash executes \'echo ${!3}\' which does nothing. It\'s not illegal this time, but is counter-intuitive.\r\n\r\nThis one returns \'bliss\':\r\n\r\n$ set -v -- joy pain bliss; myargc=$#; ind=myargc; eval echo \\${!$ind}\r\n\r\nBash is pretty cool!','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1000,1648,'2014-11-29 22:54:04','Dave Morriss','Thanks Mike','This one was fun to do particularly because it helped to drum this stuff into my head.\r\n\r\nI find myself using the suffix removal trick quite often. For example, today I typed the following one-liner to make ImageMagick convert some JPEG files to PNG and reduce them to a more manageable size:\r\n\r\nfor f in P*.JPG; do convert $f -resize 640 ${f%.JPG}.png; done\r\n\r\nGlad you found it useful.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1001,1648,'2014-12-04 10:40:14','Jon Kulp ','','Geez just when I think I\'m pretty good at something, along comes Dave to show me a whole category of cool bash tricks that I never tried before. Thanks :) ','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1002,1648,'2014-12-05 21:30:57','Dave Morriss','Thanks Jon','Glad you liked it. Thanks for the feedback :-)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1003,1648,'2014-12-10 19:32:11','musicpeace','Thanks Dave! & also for Magnatune','This was a really interesting topic to hear over audio, and your notes are great. Great that you mentioned your past podcast about Magnatune; Looks like a great distribution model for artists (&music fans). I look fwd to working through these, as well as other music apis like Soundcloud, as well as hearing your recent show about podcast/audio. Peace ;','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1004,1648,'2014-12-13 22:52:16','Dave Morriss','Magnatune','Yay musicpeace.\r\n\r\nGlad you liked the show. Yes Magnatune is great. John Buckman, the founder, is an impressive guy. The music really suits my tastes and is good value. I have a lifetime membership.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1005,1649,'2014-11-27 10:07:06','Steve Bickle','Great Episode','Mike, \r\n\r\nGreat episode, this is the kind of thing I really like to hear on HPR. It\'s a shame that the BMC driver can\'t be fixed, especially since this bug has introduced an accessibility issue. I guess the driver in question is not open source though.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1006,1649,'2014-11-27 23:37:25','Mike Ray','Pi Accessibility','Hello Steve. There is one guy at the Raspberry Pi Foundation who is aware of the problem and is going to try to get around to trying to fixing the sound driver. But as it is not broken for most applications and only seems to badly affect this accessibility issue I guess it is low priority. Personally I think using the GPU directly for tts is a good idea anyway as I have had all kinds of problems with ALSA and pulseaudio in the past\r\n\r\nI\'m now working on an Emacspeak server and then a speech-dispatcher module which also use my code library.\r\n\r\nI think speech-dispatcher might already be ok but I suspect it is because the sd espeak module has the audio chunk size set so high that the stuttering doesn\'t occur but it eats up RAM as a result. My audio library is much leaner\r\n\r\nI\'m going to try to come up with an alternative to speech-dispatcher which will interface to Orca and run in a much smaller footprint.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1007,1649,'2014-11-28 16:26:35','Tony Wood','','Brilliant, Mike! I\'m most impressed.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1008,1649,'2014-11-29 17:10:33','Mike Ray','Over to you Tony','Hello Tony. What\'s the subject of your first HPR podcast going to be? Self-drive cars? I should explain that Tony has been kind enough to give me some lifts to our local Linux User Group in a car that almost, but not quite, drives itself','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1009,1649,'2014-12-02 13:09:28','gigasphere','Thanks Mike!','Great episode Mike! It is really good to hear these kind of episodes. Also thanks for posting the links and how-to for us to do it ourselves. I had noticed the clipping recently whilst trying out espeak.\r\n\r\nI completely agree about your point on accessable terminals.','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1010,1649,'2015-11-29 01:48:33','Steven','Question about your mods','Good evening, I have tried your mods to stop the stuttering, and so far it looks very good. \r\n\r\nUnfortunately now eSpeak reads all the boot information as the computer boots. Is there a simple way to stop espeak from saying all the boot information?','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1011,1649,'2015-12-01 17:06:59','Mike Ray','Quiet boot','I\'m not sure why the boot messages should suddenly only start being heard when the audio code I wrote is employed.\r\n\r\nBut to silence them I think you can put \' quiet\' at the end of the single line in /boot/cmdline.txt, with no quote of course','2017-09-09 07:41:25'),
(1012,1651,'2014-12-01 01:25:53','Mike Ray','Comment about the RPI GPU in com news for November','Just listened to the com news for November. I don\'t know what\'s been worse this month, 5150\'s snoring or ken Fallon\'s singing :)\r\n\r\nAbout the GPU on the RPI; it\'s actually a pretty powerful little device. I think the GPU is every bit as powerful as the actual CPU. It supports hardware graphics acceleration as well as audio rendering and I have had CD quality audio playing at the same time as TTS through my OMX code and it never misses a beat. I can\'t speak for video though of course, but again I suspect it would manage pretty much anything any game can throw at it.\r\n\r\nBut then the last game I played was Duke Nukem 3D about fifteen years ago :)\r\n\r\nIt\'s also possible to split the RAM in different proprtions between the GPU and the CPU','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1013,1651,'2014-12-01 14:45:26','Dave Morriss','Ken Starks\' Indiegogo campaign','I forgot to send Ken the link that was mentioned on the Community News when we were talking about Ahuka\'s show hpr1639 last month. This was a recording of Ken Starks\' talk at Ohio Linux Fest 2014. David Whitman also posted details of the campaign on the HPR mailing list on 2014-11-08.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.indiegogo.com/projects/deleting-the-digital-divide-one-computer-at-a-time\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1014,1654,'2015-01-08 04:47:09','Klaatu','Very informative','This is the kind of show I love: hard facts provided as straight-forward information in plain english. Well done, sir!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1015,1656,'2014-12-08 18:24:07','Mike Ray','The Dave Morris National Audio Player Museum','Great show Dave. Just a suggestion with how to fix the joystick on the iRiver...you can get aerosol cans of compressed air from camera shops and probably from the likes of Maplin as well.\r\n\r\nA blast of air into the little gaps around the joystick might shift the crud.\r\n\r\nI think the cans come with a little tube like the ones that are taped to the side of a can of WD40','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1016,1656,'2014-12-08 21:28:51','p','','Strange you never tried the iRiver Clix2 which was an excellent player','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1017,1656,'2014-12-09 16:13:57','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feedback','Mike: Perhaps I should be charging admission to the museum :-)\r\nThanks for the compressed air idea. I have recently bought one of these but it never occurred to me to use it for the old iRiver. I\'ll be trying it soon.\r\n\r\np: I never followed up on the iRiver Clix2. It looks superb but was pretty expensive if I recall correctly. Also, it doesn\'t take Rockbox and seems to have issues with interfacing without the Windows software, if I understand the reviews correctly. I see they are available on eBay so I might pick one up to check it out. Thanks','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1018,1656,'2014-12-10 21:22:37','p','','Should have said what an interesting podcast this was made in your usual laidback way. The Clix2 works fine with Linux (you simply expose the file system using mtp - it has two modes of connection) which was one of the reasons I bought it; I dislike the idea of syncing preferring to copy files across manually. I think it does come with some windows only software but I\'ve never used it.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1019,1656,'2014-12-13 22:17:16','Dave Morriss','iRiver Clix2','This device sounds really nice. I must lay my hands on one for my collection.\r\n\r\nI use MTP for my Samsung YP-Q1, mounting it with mtpfs, so this isn\'t a problem. I currently generate playlists for RockBox when I upload files, so I\'m hoping I can generate the same format files and put them somewhere for the Clix2 (assuming I find one).\r\n\r\nThanks again.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1020,1657,'2014-12-19 10:33:07','Dave Morriss','Thanks Jon, this is brilliant','This is an excellent episode and very useful.\r\n\r\nI too am a Gutenberg user and have been meaning to reformat some of the books I have downloaded. You have given me some great tips about how to get started.\r\n\r\nThanks','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1021,1658,'2014-12-12 11:37:30','Daven','Thanks!','Thanks for mentioning my podcast and website. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1022,1658,'2014-12-19 23:35:39','NYbill','Another podcast for the catcher. ','Ha, the Daily Knowledge Podcast is pretty neat. I\'ve added it to Beyondpod. \r\n\r\nThanks for the heads up. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1023,1659,'2014-12-18 22:27:58','NYbill','Ah it just clicked!','Hey Jon, we\'ve known each other for a while online. After OGGcamp 2013, in IRC, I couldn\'t place meeting you (in person) and asked, \"Did anyone introduce us?\" \r\n\r\nThey hadn\'t. \r\n\r\nBut, hearing this episode, I think I just put the face to the name. You\'re the guy at the Fedora table! ;)\r\n\r\nCool, maybe I\'ll catch you at a future OGGcamp. I\'ll be sure to come over and say hello. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1024,1660,'2014-12-12 22:14:36','Loomx','','Hi,\r\n\r\nThanks, I enjoyed listening :-)\r\n\r\nA minor correction: since 14.1 the iso is an isohybrid file, so you can use dd to put it straight onto a pendrive and install from that.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1025,1660,'2014-12-13 00:13:16','Mike Ray','Great episode','Thanks for a great show. Slackware was the first distro I encountered in about 1997 or thereabouts, back when I could still see.\r\n\r\nI would like to get it going again but it is not at the front of the pack for accessibility.\r\n\r\nI have done what was suggested above and DDed the DVD ISO to a USB key and had a read.\r\n\r\nThere seems to be a kernel which supports speakup using hardware synths. Luckily I have a laptop with a serial port and I collect old hardware synths.\r\n\r\nSo I have the tools I would need to get it up and running.\r\n\r\nI would like to create a talking version which will talk OOTB with a software synth; eSpeak. The software speech kernel module is not currently included.\r\n\r\nOne question I have immediately is; why does my USB stick end up read-only and can I change that and still have it bootable?\r\n\r\nI guess this might be the first step towards getting a talking software speech version done\r\n\r\nThanks again.\r\n\r\nMike','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1026,1660,'2014-12-13 09:28:02','Beni','Thanks guys','Hey all,\r\n\r\nThanks for you feedback.\r\n\r\n@Loomx interesting. For some reason it didn\'t work for me until I ran the scripts that makes it hybrid. Must have done something wrong. Maybe it failed for a totally different reason.\r\n\r\n@Mike I believe CD iso images are read only by design, no matter whether the medium they\'re copied to could be written on. There is another slightly less intuitive way to create a installation usb drive. There is a usb image here:\r\n\r\nhttps://mirrors.slackware.com/slackware/slackware-14.1/usb-and-pxe-installers/\r\n\r\nwhich can be copied to usb using the usbimg2disk.sh script. But you will have to copy the contents of the installation DVD over to the stick yourself to get a full installation medium.','2022-02-14 13:17:20'),
(1027,1660,'2015-01-08 04:46:06','Klaatu','slacker','Great overview of Slackware. I do think the hardest part about Slack is indeed not doing the research. By this, I mean one doesn\'t read the docs, or one doesn\'t go out and look for information when needed. Part of this, I think, is because that information isn\'t really being shouted out by every Linux news site one goes to, so one does have to go look for it a bit.\r\n\r\nBut https://docs.slackware.com is definitely a great resource, as are the sites of other Known Slackers.','2022-02-14 13:17:20'),
(1028,1663,'2014-12-25 13:38:23','dodddummy','BIT rss feed issues','I added the BIT rss feed to gpodder but new shows don\'t register. Do I have to register for the rss to work?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1029,1663,'2014-12-25 19:02:43','Dave Morriss','Re: BIT rss feed issues','I asked Greg Greenlee and he pointed to https://www.spreaker.com/user/6698969/episodes/feed for the podcasts.\r\n\r\nHe said he was going to make this more plain on the BIT website.','2022-02-14 13:17:21'),
(1030,1664,'2014-12-20 09:12:35','0xf10e','Cool stuff ^^','Very nice start, looking forward to more!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1031,1664,'2014-12-22 15:10:11','Colin','Thanks Dave!','Hi Dave, good episode and very interesting. Like 0xf10e, I\'m looking forward to the next one.\r\n\r\nI followed the links on the slide rule and started to read about how it worked. Having never used one I was quite confused. Any chance of a slide rule tutorial?\r\n\r\nColin\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1032,1664,'2014-12-22 19:10:31','Dave Morriss','Appreciate the feedback','Thanks 0xf10e and Colin. The next episode is currently being constructed.\r\n\r\nRegarding slide rules, my old Mathematics teacher would be rolling on the floor at the thought of my giving a tutorial I expect. However, I\'d quite like to have a go. I\'ll see what I can do.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1033,1665,'2015-01-18 12:30:21','Steve Bickle','What version of LibreOffice was the example created in?','Ahuka,\r\n\r\nThats a really clear explanation of pivot tables, I\'m sure I\'ll find a good use for these at some point. Thanks.\r\n\r\nWhen trying to create a pivot table on the sample sheet you provided, It resulted in #VALUE errors in the totals of the resulting table. So I updated to the latest version of LibreOffice. I still had the same problem. \r\n\r\nSo then I then use a clean sheet with the data-set from sheet 1 of your example, then pivot tables worked fine as you described. \r\n\r\nHence the question about what version of LibreOffice was the sheet created with?\r\n\r\nI ask because there may be a compatibility bug between versions that I should report.\r\n\r\nSteve','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1034,1665,'2015-01-18 12:33:47','Steve Bickle','Last comment really belongs on ep 1655','OOPS!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1035,1665,'2015-01-19 19:48:00','Kevin O\'Brien','LibreOffice Version','It was 4.1.6.2. I know that is not the most current version, but I do\r\nthese in advance and schedule them out.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1036,1666,'2014-12-22 14:41:21','Mike Ray','Another great episode','Thanks for another great episode Gabriel. I\'ve been looking forward to this one.\r\n\r\nI hope there are more in the series and I\'m particularly curious about sound rendering via the GPU','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1037,1666,'2014-12-24 17:50:44','Gabriel Evenfire','Re: Another great episode','Thanks for the feedback, especially letting me know what you\'d like to hear next. I greatly enjoyed your episode on how to fix the sound by sending directly into the driver.\r\n\r\nNow I may be wrong, but good use of the sound or GPU may first require me figuring out how to use the floating point unit, at least to use it well.\r\n\r\nTo be honest, it\'s an area that I\'ve learned very little about. That makes it a great topic to explore, but it also means it may take me a bit longer to pull it together.\r\n\r\nCheers,\r\n -- Gabriel Evenfire','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1038,1667,'2014-12-28 00:35:17','davi jordan','','We like Flatpress as it has so far not required that a database be used to set up like WP and the rest. Perfect for the RPi. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1039,1667,'2015-01-01 04:56:43','Rill','T for the tip.hanks','Good to know. I haven\'t heard of this one.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1040,1672,'2015-01-04 12:31:12','Steve Smethurst','Correction','In the podcast I wrongly stated that both my computers use systemd. Of course, Mint 17.1 installed on my laptop uses init. The podcast is based on Fedora 20 installed on my desktop. Sorry for any confusion. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1041,1672,'2015-01-04 15:54:48','Alison Chaiken','Thanks for informative episode','I\'m giving a talk this week (Jan 2015) on systemd and have made some slides that reinforce and complement yours:\r\n\r\nhttps://she-devel.com/systemd_talk.pdf\r\n\r\nI\'ve also posted the files for my demos, which I\'ve recorded.\r\n\r\nThanks for your hard work,\r\nAlison Chaiken','2022-02-14 13:17:21'),
(1042,1673,'2015-01-08 04:41:01','Klaatu','great episode!','Thanks for this great information about ZFS. I was really not clear on how to implement it, but it doesn\'t seem so scary now that you have explained the options. Thank you! \r\n\r\nGreat first-podcast-ever, by the way!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1043,1683,'2015-01-22 21:14:44','Epicanis','Timely information!','I\'m actually trying to get an \"audio adventure\" sort of project going myself, and up to this point I wasn\'t sure anybody was doing anything like it other than perhaps \"Welcome to Night Vale\".\r\n\r\nAll I\'ve gotten so far is an 80-second \"teaser\" I did on a whim just to see what it was like trying to blend in multiple bits of dialog, perform several voices, mix in sound-effects, and overlay music, which at least demonstrates to me that I\'m technically capable of producing something that doesn\'t suck horribly. It\'s nice to hear that there are people still working in this art form in the modern era on the internet - at least if I can get going, your episode lets me know there are plenty of people who have a heck of a lot more skill and experience who I might be able to get advice from...\r\n\r\nNow I need to go back and listen to the previous episode of yours from this series!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1044,1683,'2015-02-27 16:56:13','Charles','Patronage as an alternative to marketplaces?','As a long time fan of audio dramas, I really enjoyed this podcast. So thank you for recording it.\r\n\r\nIn the podcast you discussed what it might take to have audio drama become a viable paying outlet of \"content\". You seemed to focus particularly on making audio drama a first class citizen in the existing marketplaces (e.g. Amazon or iTunes). That is certainly one way to go. However, those places are just retailers, and they retail what is already popular. I don\'t think you can actually count on them to innovate in this space.\r\n\r\nI wonder if a better way to develop a market for audio drama is to build your audience and provide an easy way for fans to pay for content. Crowd sourcing patronage seems to be getting some traction. Patreon, for instance, provides a platform for creators to reach their fans directly and for fans to directly compensate their favorite creators. Snowdrift coop is a platform that might suitable for creative commons style work (assuming it launches successfully). \r\n\r\nIt\'s still a heck of a lot of hard work, but if you followed a patronage model, the the hardwork of building a fan base won\'t get filtered by the business models of the retailers whose interest don\'t necessarily align with either the creators or the fans. Additionally, a patronage model can provide a base for successful creators to make inroads into the more traditional (mainstream) marketplaces.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1045,1687,'2015-02-04 07:29:45','Mark Waters','Thanks','Thanks for sharing your OPML ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1046,1690,'2015-01-23 07:07:11','Mike Ray','3v3','Good show. Beat me to it...I have show notes for three shows about Arduino, just need to do the recordings.\r\n\r\nJust a note about 3v3 on the Arduino board. This is not a typo; it is common practice in electronics to replace the decimal point with the unit. So 3v3 is 3.3 volts, 2n2 stamped on a capactor or on a circuit diagram is 2.2 nano-Farads and 4k7 against a resistor on a circuit diagram is 4.7 kilohms.\r\n\r\nMy Arduino shows were going to be about the command-line tools available for programming.\r\n\r\nI will wait and see what your next show(s) contain so I don\'t duplicate your great efforts','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1047,1690,'2015-01-23 16:21:26','Tcuc','Nice, great quality :-) ','Thanks for a good quality episode! I\'m studying electronics, and of like to say that this is very accurate ;-) and if you want to discuss terminology, please ask. I love to talk about electronics :-D ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1048,1690,'2015-03-20 06:05:44','Mirwi','Great show!','Heavily catching up, just listened yesterday.\r\n\r\nLoved it. It was entertaining to listen to you doing every single step and seeing you do it before my minds eye. I\'d never thought about describing it in such detail, but you have a point there. Surely there are a lot of listeners just starting out with this stuff and you pick them up right at the beginning, to lead them further on.\r\n\r\nThe 3V3 are sorted out by Mike, so let me comment on the \"speaker\". It\'s worth noting that whenever you say speaker, you actually mean \"buzzer\". The buzzer includes already some electronics to generate the tone, so we hear the beep. With a speaker (or headphone,...) on its own, you only will hear crackling sounds the moment you close or break the circuit. Due to the low resistance of the speaker coil, there can be a high current flowing, which might damage it. So when using a speaker, please add a series resistor or capacitor. \r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1049,1691,'2015-01-27 22:09:32','mcnalu','Arduislack','Really enjoying this Klaatu. Very timely as I\'m getting my 10-year-old son into playing with his arduino and breadboard. Not only that, but we\'re using Slackware! So I\'m picking up lots of useful tips from this series.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1050,1691,'2015-01-29 18:47:35','archer72','','Very enjoyable show. I would consider getting an arduino if I can find a use case for it. Looking forward to the next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1051,1693,'2015-01-29 21:58:55','Dave','Great tutorial','That was great. I didn\'t know it was possible to write files outside the filesystem.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1052,1693,'2015-01-29 22:38:29','incandenza','My favorite so far','Awesome episode! Been listening to HPR for a few months now. This one was my favorite so far. I enjoy when as as listener I get to follow along on a deep dive into a particular command. Learned a lot. Thanks CJ!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1053,1699,'2015-02-05 11:29:20','FiftyOneFifty','Play dat funky music','Where did you get the funky bumper music?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1054,1699,'2015-02-05 13:29:02','Mike Ray','Thanks for asking the right questions','Well done Ken, so far. I\'ve enjoyed the Fossdem interview casts so far. Don\'t usually get much from the interview episodes but this has been good.\r\n\r\nThanks for asking the right questions about accessibility. I have had to smile at some of the reactions. Like the guy saying they are trying to get it right for 99% of the users before bothering to do anything about accessibility. And your response was quite right, because we all know that is a moving target.\r\n\r\nWas dismayed you didn\'t ask about accessibility to the DouDouLinux guy, who said a lot about what\'s on the screen.\r\n\r\nAnd their tag-line: \"...pleasant as possible; while also making computer use more accessible to all children on earth, without discrimination...,\". I bet blind kids haven\'t even occurred to him.\r\n\r\nI\'m dying to see if Linux Mint features in the last episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1055,1700,'2015-02-06 08:32:04','Mike Ray','Such a parcel of rogues','Brilliant. A mammoth feat of editing.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1056,1700,'2015-02-06 20:48:54','FiftyOneFifty','Thanks for the memories','Thanks for the great ep, everything one needs to know about HPR in ten minutes. I appreciate the amount of time that you must have spent editing.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1057,1700,'2015-02-11 06:55:33','Mikael','Thank you, Ken','This episode just made me smile :-)\r\n\r\nI can only imagine the amount of work you put into this episode, Ken\r\n\r\nThank you for all the work you do for the community.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1058,1700,'2015-02-11 22:57:47','Epicanis','Not what I was expecting...','That was...awe-inspiring!\r\n\r\nFrom the description and the fact that it was \"only\" ten minutes as reported by the feed, I was expecting a short simple retrospective of some sort.\r\n\r\nInstead, I ended up literally slack-jawed as I listened and realized that if you got everyone who has contributed to HPR at least once together and just had them announce themselves that it\'d still take over *8 minutes* to get through all of them...so far.\r\n\r\nI hope you saved all that as a starting point for when the 3000th episode comes up! That was a LOT of original audio to dig through.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1059,1700,'2015-02-12 17:30:37','JM','great work!!','I was giggling when I hear my name go by...great stuff!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1060,1702,'2015-02-12 07:08:39','borgu','reactos moar!','Ken! That russian guy from ReactOS was great! He totally made my morning. He\'s attitude and that funny russian accent and his project!I love it! Please, make moar interviews with him! Moar interviews.. moar..... :D','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1061,1702,'2015-03-05 03:59:26','Alison Chaiken','Thanks for these segments','I really enjoyed listening to them.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1062,1703,'2015-02-13 11:35:36','Ken Fallon','K3b','Sadly K3B was missing from the list. Definitely one to review.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1063,1703,'2015-02-25 16:56:45','Charles','','This was a nice informative introduction to these rippers. I greatly enjoyed the music intermissions too. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1064,1707,'2015-02-23 04:54:51','Marshal Mellow','Good job','Good delivery, adequate sound quality, and informative content.\r\n\r\n Good going Bezza. looking forward to more.\r\n\r\n MM','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1065,1710,'2015-02-26 12:28:28','johanv','Nice!','Thank you for sharing this. I didn\'t know about this rdesktop alternative. Now I don\'t have to worry about the \'CredSSP required by server\' messages any more.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1066,1712,'2015-03-02 12:29:18','Beeza','Follow-up Episode Please','Hi Mike\r\n\r\nThis was a fascinating hint of some of the equipment which enables you to use computers.\r\n\r\nI am sure it would be helpful for HPR listeners generally, and developers in particular, to hear an episode describing exactly how you manage to code and navigate round a desktop and web pages without the benefit of sight.\r\n\r\nKnowing how complex some web pages and applications can be, I simply cannot begin to understand how you do it.\r\n\r\nFrom a developer\'s perspective I\'d be very interested to know how you can test applications, use debuggers and so on.\r\n\r\nYou mentioned having a box of SD cards. How do you work out which is which?\r\n\r\nIf you could describe what would make life easier for you, in terms of GUI and web page design, perhaps it might just make us a bit more thoughtful when we layout our designs.\r\n\r\nRegards\r\n\r\nBeeza','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1067,1712,'2015-03-02 13:08:37','Mike Ray','Follow up to \"what\'s in my crate\"','Hello. OK, I will do just that. And explain the mechanisms that exist in Linux to support access technology, the actual tools that exist and how I do stuff','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1068,1714,'2015-03-26 09:35:28','0xf10e','','Nice introduction to Vim!\r\n\r\n`vi` on a Linux system (say CentOS) normally is a stripped down Vim as far as I can tell. On FreeBSD `vi` is part of the base system and thus has the \"can\'t go back in insert mode\" limitation (I, too, stumble upon now and then…).\r\n\r\nI think OS X comes with Vim out of the box but it sure behaves as on any other BSD/unixiod OS in regards to `~/.vimrc`.\r\n\r\nBTW - for anyone wanting Vim on their server: the not full-blown-including-X11-support pkg on FreeBSD is \"vim-lite\" and \"vim-nox\" on Ubuntu','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1069,1714,'2015-03-26 12:38:43','Dave Morriss','Stripped down Vim','Hi 0xf10e,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comments. You are right about the \"standard\" Vim on Linux. I had forgotten. Recently when I set up a new Raspberry Pi (Raspbian) I found the issue you mention and had to install several extra vim-related components to get what I wanted.\r\n\r\nI have actually put full-blown Vim on my server, then if I want gVim, I have transferred the screen back to my workstation over X. I use \r\n\r\nssh -x user@server\r\n\r\nto login, then when I type \'gvim file\' the window appears on my desktop. I may have had to do other configuration that I have forgotten about to make this happen, probably something with \'xhost\'.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1070,1714,'2015-03-30 06:30:42','0xf10e','','`ssh -X` should do fine for gvim without additional configuration (as long as the server\'s sshd is configured to allow X-Forwarding).\r\nBut I prefer vim staying in the terminal and _not_ responding to any mouse input ;) ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1071,1716,'2015-03-02 13:59:48','Mike Ray','\'Parcel of Rogues\' and access tech','Hello. Just listened to the community news for Feb. The \'Parcel of Rogues\' comment I made about hpr1700 was a Burns quote. I thought Dave might have picked up on that given where he lives.\r\n\r\nKen, if you send me your hat-size I\'ll send you a brown paper bag to put over your head while you dabble with the access tech us blind folks use.\r\n\r\nIt might have the double-benefit of drowning out your singing ;-p\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1072,1716,'2015-03-02 15:50:26','Dave Morriss','Robert Burns','Hi Mike.\r\n\r\nI\'m afraid that Burns quotes are lost on me. It did seem like quite an apposite phrase nevertheless. I\'m proud to be one of the \"Parcel\" :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1073,1716,'2015-03-02 19:06:25','Mike Ray','Also in the parcel','I lived for nearly eight years just along the coast near Prestonpans, but I\'m also in that parcel of rogues. My tongue-out smiley went wrong in the first comment thanks to an access tech fault that falsely reports some characters as being on the screen twice...when I deleted what I thought was an extra dash it was the colon in :-p','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1074,1716,'2015-03-02 22:02:31','Dave Morriss','Fear and Lothian','You obviously absorbed more Scottish culture in your eight years than I have done in my thirty or more!\r\n\r\nYour original smiley was fine. A semicolon dash p looked to me like a tongue-out wink.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1075,1718,'2015-03-04 01:10:07','Mike Ray','Great podcast','I was right there! It was all I could do at the end of this podcast not to go and wash the oil and grime from 5150\'s toolbox off my hands :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1076,1720,'2015-03-29 05:40:28','EllusionSK','Great show','Just wanted to comment that I really enjoyed the show, keep\'em coming. Hopefully in privacy / security / crypto etc','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1077,1721,'2015-03-09 04:20:39','ARMed','Part 1','It would be nice if you had the link to part 1 in the description too.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1078,1721,'2015-03-16 17:53:32','Phalax','Good job','Hey there Mike.\r\nThank you for this fantastic series. You make a difficult topic understandable. ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1079,1722,'2015-03-09 17:56:41','mike dupont','https://kansaslinuxfest.us','https://kansaslinuxfest.us','2022-02-14 13:22:26'),
(1080,1722,'2015-03-10 20:28:19','FiftyOneFifty','I\'m a big dummy and got the URL wrong','Mike is right, like a big dummy I got the URL wrong, even though I\'ve had the page open for the last couple months and all the time during which i was compiling my show notes. Dave Morris was able to fix the show notes for me, but i was busy all weekend and didn\'t deliver the revised audio to Ken Fallon in time. Sorry folks.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1081,1723,'2015-03-11 01:02:16','Ken Fallon','I listen to all shows','Hi Kevie,\r\n\r\nI listen to each and every show. Even the Scottish ones :)\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1082,1723,'2015-03-12 07:55:51','Dave Morriss','Excellent show','Hearing the story of how you introduced your students to FLOSS brought a big smile to my face.\r\n\r\nIt\'s so sad that a knowledge of how the world works, critical thinking and similar topics aren\'t already on the curriculum.\r\n\r\nThanks Kevie','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1083,1724,'2015-03-16 17:49:51','Phalax','Great series','Thank you Dave for this great series on Vim.\r\nReally makes my fingers itch. ;) ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1084,1724,'2015-03-16 22:23:30','Dave Morriss','Thanks Phalax','Glad you\'re enjoying it. There\'s more to come soon','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1085,1724,'2015-03-17 12:43:12','johanv','You always learn new things','I am a vim user for more than 10 years. And there is still so much that I don\'t know; I keep on learning new things. E.g. thanks to wonderful podcasts like this one :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1086,1724,'2015-03-17 14:40:05','Dave Morriss','Thanks johanv','If researching these shows has taught me anything it\'s been that there is so much more to learn about Vim. It is vast!\r\nThe whole point of doing them is to share what I have found out, and I\'m happy to say that along the way I\'m finding out still more :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1087,1726,'2015-03-17 15:13:50','johanv','LOL!','Thank you for the reminder :-)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1088,1726,'2015-03-21 18:43:06','anonymous','good points','maybe I\'ll do one. MAYBE....','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1089,1726,'2015-04-06 16:29:35','Andres','I uploaded one as a result of this','Uploaded an episode that ticks all the boxes.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1090,1726,'2015-05-23 02:52:24','Epicanis','I should do an episode nominating myself for an award...','...because based on this episode, I probably have the most ridiculously lame excuses (plural!) for not getting the three that I\'ve got in progress finished and uploaded yet. The excuses presented here sound perfectly rational by comparison.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1091,1727,'2015-03-17 16:09:37','archer72','','Great show! \r\nI have one tip. The rc file can be reloaded without restarting mutt. The command will do the same thing, and show any errors in the file setup.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1092,1727,'2015-03-19 07:57:34','Jonas','','Great show. I\'m installing mutt now. I didn\'t realize you could use vi/vim as a mail editor/writer. I was also interested to hear how to use text web browsers and urlview in a text mail client. Great stuff. \r\nIt\'s always interesting to hear the different subjects the hosts have to talk about. Keep up the great work!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1093,1727,'2015-03-21 15:08:39','rstackhouse','Automating alias file creation','Great show. I\'m a programmer so my brain is geared to finding automatable tasks. Almost as soon as you mentioned the alias file, I started wondering if there was a way to automate adding to it. This guy used a vim autocommand to do it: https://www.twodee.org/blog/?p=7108. This guy used a Mutt display filter: https://wcm1.web.rice.edu/mutt-tips.html. I\'m wondering about using procmail and some python for that purpose.','2022-02-14 13:17:22'),
(1094,1727,'2016-03-13 12:31:11','Leslie Satenstein','Retired ','A very nice podcast and I do appreciate the references.\r\n\r\nI intend to follow up with mutt.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1095,1727,'2016-03-15 03:08:46','Frank','','Good luck with Mutt and thanks for listening.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1096,1728,'2015-03-18 20:35:49','zloster','Other useful browser extensions for Firefox','First, congratulations for the good episode.\r\n\r\nI would like to add two extensions that are very useful to be privacy and security aware while browsing and in the same time require almost no user intervention:\r\n1) https://www.eff.org/privacybadger - this is a tool created by EFF (Electronic Frontier Fondation). It blocks spying ads and invisible trackers. The best part is that it learns which sites are trying to track you and automatically blocks them. You can always override/stop the block if you want;\r\n2) https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/ssleuth/ - it ranks an established SSL/TLS (the one\'s with https in front) connection and gives a brief summary rating with all the details and a numeric rank from 0 to 10.\r\n\r\nAnother useful extention that is not privacy related is https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/sqlite-manager/ - with it you can manage any SQLite database on your computer. For example Skype application have such a file where the content of all conversions are stored.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1097,1728,'2015-06-01 23:44:46','Bob Evans','Ad-Block Edge discontinued','Today I installed Ad-Block Edge and the mozilla.org download page said it would be discontinued on June 5, 2015.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1098,1728,'2015-10-30 18:29:43','Fin','Ad-Block Edge Successor','As Bob Evans noted, Ad-Block Edge has now been discontinued. I now use uBlock Origin as it is recommended by the creators of Ad-Block Edge. It continues to provide excellent ad blocking without a built in white list or spyware (AFAIK).','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1099,1729,'2015-03-19 17:10:54','Jon Kulp ','Beautiful!','how could your wife possibly call this ugly? It\'s excellent! Very impressive reduction of heat. Really enjoyed this episode, please post more!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1100,1730,'2015-03-21 18:14:23','Mike Ray','Arch Linux on RPI','Hello. Good episode. I\'m fast rethinking my ideas about American beer and realising it\'s not all Coors and Budweiser \'fizzy water\'.\r\n\r\nI have a script which will create an Arch image for flashing to an SD card. It will create images for either the original Pi or the Pi2.\r\n\r\nIt downloads a root file-system from archlinuxarm.org, creates a raw image file, creates file-systems in the file and then mounts them with kpartx and losetup before copying the file-system etc into the right place.\r\n\r\nHere\'s a public drip-box link to get it:\r\n\r\nhttps://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/59970788/make-rpi-arch.sh\r\n\r\nNow I\'m off round the off-license to get a couple of bottles of Guinnes Porter, carrying my Raspberry Pi on my back\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1101,1732,'2015-03-24 20:55:40','Daniel Worth','Best Show This Year.','Fantastic job on this. I find it VERY useful. More please!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1102,1732,'2015-04-01 04:11:03','Robert Stackhouse','Slashes','An easy mnemonic, at least for me, is to remember that slash direction, is the way the top corner of the slash is pointing. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1103,1732,'2015-04-05 23:06:45','Jonathan Kulp','How do I do this? Watch this screen capture and see','In case any of you are interested after hearing these episodes about\r\nthe digital make-overs of counterpoint textbooks, I made a\r\nscreencast showing the workflow that I use to create the\r\nembedded musical examples and put them in the book. I don\'t\r\ngo into any detail as far as the scripts that are run in the\r\nbackground, you just get to see magic in action.\r\n\r\nhttps://youtu.be/JWlKNe2nEE0','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1104,1736,'2015-03-31 02:35:07','Jonathan Kulp','','Very nice! Your episode reminded me that I wanted to try Ranger about two years ago but totally forgot about it. It\'s pretty amazing. Looking forward to some more episodes from you. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1105,1737,'2015-03-31 11:18:49','zloster','Small problem','The first two links in the notes have a broken href value: .','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1106,1737,'2015-03-31 12:31:28','Dave Morriss','Re: Small problem','Fixed!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1107,1737,'2015-03-31 18:56:47','Dave Morriss','Great show!','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nThis was enjoyable. A good way to help people nervous about Vim get past the first hurdles.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1108,1738,'2015-04-01 13:48:24','JimZat','Enlightening!','Thanks for this informative episode.\r\n\r\nI was shocked to hear both my credit card PIN and my voice-mail PIN listed.\r\n\r\nI am pleased that my ATM card PIN was not among the list of those listed.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1109,1739,'2015-09-09 06:49:16','FiftyOneFithty','Thanks for conpairing Zoom and Tascam','This ep came to mind recently when I was asked to forward the HPR H1 to another listener. I\'d been looking for an excuse to by a recorder for myself, and the Tascam DR-05 came up in the same search as the Zoom H1. It\'s probably apples to oranges, but LnB, your preference for the Zoom tipped the balance.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1110,1741,'2015-04-06 15:27:30','Mike Ray','Pearls before swine','Hmmmph! No more literary references from me in comments :-/. Seems like only Kevin knew what I was on about.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1111,1749,'2015-04-16 16:35:19','Jon Kulp','inspirational!','really loved this interview! He\'s the same age as my son, who is also interested in tech, though not quite the prodigy that this guy appears to be. Wonderful.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1112,1750,'2015-04-17 19:45:26','Jon Kulp','Correction/Improvement','I find now that I can streamline the \"capitalize this\" command by cutting out the last couple of xclip things, like this:\r\n\r\nxdotool key Control+c && $KEYPRESS \"$(xclip -o | sed \'s/\\(.*\\)/\\L\\1/\' | sed -r \'s/\\<./\\U&/g\')\"','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1113,1750,'2015-04-21 10:41:50','Dave Morriss','Fascinating stuff','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nThis was very interesting. I\'m impressed at how much you can do with such tools and Blather.\r\n\r\nI wondered, is there any particular reason why you don\'t define KEYPRESS as an alias. I think that\'s what I would have done. I\'d have added it to ~/.bash_aliases which I source in my ~/.bashrc.\r\n\r\nI\'m not sure that it adds a great deal since aliases are just shortcuts and don\'t offer much else in the way of features. Just wondering.\r\n\r\nThe sed tricks link makes good reading by the way.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1114,1750,'2015-04-21 15:26:30','Mike Ray','Terrific podcast','This was a great podcast. 19 minutes of inspiration. John\'s podcasts are always worth a listen but this was particularly good. I will definitely be having a go at some of this and investigating how I can make life easier with these tools','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1115,1750,'2015-04-22 00:59:18','Jon Kulp','Thanks Mike; Response to Dave','Thanks, Mike! So glad to hear you enjoyed podcast. \r\n\r\nDave, I don\'t really know why I didn\'t try using a bash alias for this. I have a bash alias file with something like 200 lines in it so I definitely know how to do it. Somehow it seemed like creating an environment variable in my blather launch script was the right way to go, and since that worked I never tried doing a different way. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1116,1750,'2015-04-22 11:54:47','Jon Kulp','Mike: ping me for help','Mike, If you\'re going to try to get blather up and running, let me know if I can help in any way. The script I wrote for Debian normally will get you to the \"hello world\" stage in one command, but it\'s possible that something could go wrong. If there\'s anything I can do to help you get started, let me know. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1117,1750,'2015-04-23 08:45:47','Mike Ray','Blather and xvkbd as shortcuts in Debian','Will do John. I\'ve just installed Debian Jessie RC3 on a laptop and I\'m setting up some keyboard shortcuts so I will possibly try to get Blather up and running with the x tools to do the same job','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1118,1750,'2015-09-27 12:29:01','Rob Blaine','Blather works great!','Hi Jon \r\n\r\nJust a word of thanks for all your scripts and debian installation script for Blather. I\'m a musician making use of Blather to reduce the number of hours spent using my hands on a keyboard and trackball. I also have a repetitive injury called hand dystonia, so I can definitely empathise with RSI sufferers. Your scripts are great help! - Best regards Rob. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1119,1750,'2015-09-27 22:40:51','Jon Kulp ','Blather','Hi Rob, thanks for the message, it\'s so great to hear about someone else using Blather to make life easier, although I\'m very sorry to hear about your injury. If it\'s any consolation, one of my colleagues here at the University suffered from focal dystonia and seems to have made a complete recovery and is performing again all the time on the violin.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1120,1750,'2015-09-28 19:35:10','Rob Blaine','Blather and RSI','Hi Jon, seems as though not enough people recognize the potential for programs like Blather. Thanks for the encouragement - I discovered some years ago via the net that retraining was the key to recovery (despite neurologists claiming I\'d never perform again) ........a very slow process, but definitely worth my while. I hope your surgery / injury improves with time, though I can imagine an amount of wrist pain is inevitable. Keep up the good work with Blather.......Thanks again! ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1121,1754,'2015-04-10 19:56:42','FiftyOneFifty','Disapointed','I thought this was going to be a podcast on Klingon battle cruisers.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1122,1754,'2015-04-23 02:27:06','Jon Kulp ','confused','Sorry Fifty, I don\'t even know what those are! Maybe you can record a follow-up. I actually thought the title might be confused with Star Wars droids, the Klingons never occurred to me.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1123,1754,'2015-04-29 05:26:51','thelovebug','Dmaj7','I found this incredibly interesting as a musician with virtually no formal training... I look forward to hearing more on the theory of chord progressions!\r\n\r\nThanks Jon!\r\n\r\nNext: Major 7ths? Probably my favourite chord to (over)use.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1124,1754,'2015-05-10 00:13:00','FiftyOneFifty','Explaining myself','The Klingon ship from the original Star Trek series was a class D7 battle cruiser https://www.ditl.org/Images/D/D7General1.jpg and you can still see the model still in use in the later series (Next Gen, DS9, Voyager).','2022-02-14 13:17:22'),
(1125,1754,'2015-05-10 10:47:49','Jon Kulp','I kinda see the resemblance...','That ship actually looks like it has some dissonance in it, such as the tritone between the C and the F♯ that I mentioned in the d7 chord the ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1126,1756,'2015-04-29 01:59:14','Jon Kulp','Ranger is phenomenal','thanks for this rundown of Ranger! I\'ve been using it for a couple of days and I\'m blown away by the instant preview of every file. I\'ve installed it on 3 machines where I only use ssh to work on em, so this is going to ease navigation on those considerably. Also love being able to use the familiar vim navigation and editing keystrokes yy and pp and so forth. Awesome!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1127,1757,'2015-04-28 15:02:44','Bill Ricker','epub','Nice podcast. The experimental epub long notes is a great idea. Constructive feedback : The code segments render in the popular FBReader as fixed width sans oblique font, and some lines are indented further than intended, including indenting the line number. The code however looks fine in the alternative \"E-Book Viewer\" app on my Open With menu. (I don\'t even remember what package that came with.) ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1128,1757,'2015-04-28 15:35:53','Dave Morriss','Re: epub','Thanks Bill,\r\n\r\nThe epub notes need work, I know. I have not yet done a comprehensive look at how different readers render them.\r\n\r\nAs soon as I can I plan to follow Jon Kulp\'s lead and build them with some of the tools he recommends rather than with pandoc, which I\'m using now.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1129,1757,'2015-04-28 17:18:30','0xf10e','exitcodes','Only 0 being true in shell is due to 0 being the \"everything is fine\" exitcode in UNIX.\r\nEverything else signals some kind of error. Which exitcode correlates to which error depends AFAIK on the command. But you can make your tools scripting friendly by exiting w/ 1 on invalid input, 2 on invalid configuration and so on.\r\nWhen you stick to values of 2^x you can even AND them and fill up all 8bits I think an exitcode can have! ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1130,1757,'2015-04-28 21:53:42','Dave Morriss','Re: exitcodes','Thanks 0xf10e,\r\n\r\nI guess I\'m easily confused :-)\r\n\r\nYou make some good points. I\'ve worked on (old, obsolete) mainframe operating systems where the exit code was caught and turned into a text message, and it was possible to write and register your own \"Message Text Module\" for your own application. I thought that was a good design.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1131,1758,'2015-04-15 09:04:00','FiftyOneFifty','KITT','I might have expected any story about the Knight Foundation would have taken me into the \"shadowy world of a man who does not exist\" ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1132,1758,'2015-04-29 18:44:06','0xf10e','VCS!','Dude, \"Use versioning - everywhere!\"\r\n\r\nSeriously, just initialize a local hg/git/fossil repo and commit your stuff now and then. They say \"commit early, commit often\" but if you had made a commit before doing your modifications you could have gone back to a known good state with a single command.\r\nAlso moving stuff around is nicer as any copy/clone of the repo has the history of all the changesets. Merging can get a bit fiddly but having the history* is a nice addition to the comments every code is lacking ;)\r\n\r\n*) of course, there\'s this problem…: https://xkcd.com/1296/','2022-02-14 13:17:22'),
(1133,1758,'2015-04-30 00:29:03','Cprompt^','Re: VCS','0xf10e,\r\n\r\nThanks. I actually just started using git for a lot of things including version control!\r\n\r\nI don\'t code often but from now on, when I do, there will be git involved.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1134,1759,'2015-04-30 20:44:48','Jon Kulp ','Welcome Aboard ','excellent job! I really enjoyed hearing about the Firefox OS and find it very intriguing. The fact that it runs in a web environment means that it\'s something I might actually be able to hack myself, since the main environment I know how to hack it is HTML. Also very nice audio quality. I will definitely look forward to hearing future episodes, and if you can say anything about eBook apps on the Firefox OS platform I would really be interested in hearing about that.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1135,1759,'2015-05-03 22:48:57','Stilvoid','Thanks','Thanks for the feedback. I was thinking of doing a follow-up to this at some point as I\'m still using Firefox as my main phone OS and there\'s an update due at the end of this month - I\'ll wait for that to come out. I\'ll definitely make sure to look into ebook apps.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1136,1760,'2015-05-03 02:42:05','Jon Kulp ','video demo: embedding table of contents in PDF','I made a screencast as a follow-up, showing the process of embedding bookmarks to make a table of contents: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5dv_02v0zzc','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1137,1762,'2015-05-08 16:21:42','Ken Fallon','Blade Runner','Tyrell: I want to see it work on a person. I want to see a negative before I provide you with a positive.\r\nDeckard: What\'s that going to prove?\r\nTyrell: Indulge me.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1138,1766,'2015-05-11 01:54:57','Jon Kulp','Haulin\'','okay so I was already listening to your episode at 1.5x speed and when you did the little demonstration to speed it up to 1.8 times it was really flying ha ha! I don\'t know what the actual speed would\'ve been at that point (2.7x?) but I had to slow it back down to normal speed on my podcast app and listen again to get the true effect.\r\n\r\n By the way I use Beyondpod with the Presto sound library and listen to nearly everything at 1.5x speed by simply adjusting the settings in the app. You can actually set a default playback speed for individual podcast feeds so that you always have the correct speed. I also listen at variable speed using Rockbox on my iPod fourth-gen. So I don\'t really need the variable speed to be built into the audio file, but I am intrigued by the silence truncation thing. Will definitely poke around with that a bit. Thanks for an interesting episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1139,1766,'2015-06-12 16:53:20','Urugami','Can it do this....','I\'ve been using the Truncate Silence function in Audacity to do this, since I was doing some editing of podcasts before listening, but didn\'t start speeding things up until I started using Podkicker with the Prestissimo plug-in. Accelerated listening has really helped me catch up with a 3-month backlog of podcasts. :)\r\nAnyway, to the question... I played around with the sox silence command for a while, trying it out, and got it to work as you said, but what I could not do was to leave the leading silence alone. Man pages, help pages, reference pages, etc all assume you want to get rid of the leading silence, and show how to do that, but don\'t demonstrate how to skip the leading silence. Nothing I tried worked. Is that something you\'ve tried to do?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1140,1767,'2015-05-12 09:39:21','Mike Ray','MIFOS, great initiative','Good interview. And what a great initiative. I mean, why should the richest 2% be denied \'financial inclusion\' in the developing world so that they too can join in the roller-coaster ride of boom and bust created by financiers and bankers creaming off the wealth in the good times and then blaming everybody else when things go titsup? :-p. Welcome to the wonderful world of global finance, developing world','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1141,1768,'2015-05-13 01:26:26','sigflup','Right awesome!','Right awesome, good show!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1142,1768,'2015-05-14 18:22:08','Steve Smethurst','Thanks, and more plase','I enjoyed the show and I will continue to listen if you continue the series. I studied some C years ago, but since got diverted into Perl, JavaScript and Python. Its nice to get close again to the silicon. Many of the basics; data types and flow control etc., are common to all C-like languages. My ears will pick up when you get into C specific topics like structs, memory allocation, pointers, etc. These things I remember to be specific to C, and are what made the language exciting for me, at that time.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1143,1768,'2015-05-16 01:52:34','Kete','','I didn\'t think there was enough C, but I enjoyed the recording','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1144,1768,'2015-05-25 07:12:52','kdmurray','A Good Start','Thanks for the show. This was a good first look at some C basics that I haven\'t been exposed to since school.\r\n\r\nI echo the call for more episodes in this series. You may yet make programmers of us all! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1145,1769,'2015-05-21 03:10:01','MoralVolcano','Dragon?','Is Dragon Naturally Speaking open source?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1146,1769,'2015-05-21 21:53:38','Jon Kulp','Nope','Sadly, no. It is very proprietary. But there is no open source dictation software that I am aware of. I only have this on my office computer, provided to me by the university. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1147,1770,'2015-05-18 17:43:40','jezra','For Arch Linux, this is in the AUR','Hi Arch Linux users. This package is in the AUR(Arch User Repository) https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/open-dyslexic-fonts/','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1148,1771,'2015-05-18 10:12:46','Dave Morriss','Very useful','This was very useful, thanks.\r\n\r\nI have used Audacity a moderate amount but hadn\'t noticed this feature. I have used labels for the last show I edited, which consisted of several pieces I wanted to join together. Being able to label them was very helpful, especially since some parts needed silence removal, and so on, and some did not.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1149,1771,'2015-05-25 07:10:36','kdmurray','Can\'t believe I\'ve never seen this','I\'ve been using Audacity to edit podcasts and other audio for almost a decade and have never seen this feature. Thanks for sharing with us Jon!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1150,1771,'2015-06-12 16:42:00','Urugami','','Thanks for doing this show. I\'ve been familiar with label tracks since I created my first one by accident many moons ago, but they never really lent themselves to what I\'ve doing in Audacity since then. However, it seems they could help me when I start to digitize my cassette collection.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1151,1774,'2015-05-22 09:35:45','Ken Fallon','You say Tomato','I think we can reveal Jon as a British Agent. He definitely said /təˈmɑːtoʊ/ \r\n\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shibboleth\r\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato#Pronunciation\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:23'),
(1152,1774,'2015-05-27 10:34:56','Mark','Wanted to try this before.','I had thought about flashing a router before, now Jon gave a few ideas as to why. So now I have a D-Link DIR-601 purchased at a garage sale to experiment with. So far the experience was good, taking only 10 seconds or less to flash dd-wrt on it. Looking forward to seeing what it can do. Thanks for the tip about using a router to connect a printer to the network. Now to find a router with USB connectivity as my old printer does not have that option.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1153,1774,'2015-06-01 18:43:14','FiftyOneFifty','Single board options','This is more of a reply to Ken Fallon\'s comments on the Community News than to the original audio. Ken, the Banana Pi router, with four Ethernet ports, is I believe the only single board solution if you want to build a firewall (though I\'m not aware that any of the firewall distros have been ported to ARM. Ken is right, most of the single board computers (with the exception of ODroid) drive the Ethernet port via the slower USB bus, and the only way to add another Ethernet port is to use a USB adapter anyway.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1154,1774,'2015-06-12 16:37:01','Urugami','','This is something I\'ve been wanting to do for a long time now, since my house is not set up to run wires everywhere. \r\nI\'ve been looking at the Gargoyle router mgmt software, based on OpenWRT, to flash onto my WRT54GL. When I\'m setting up the home office, this will definitely be on the list of things to do','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1155,1775,'2015-05-25 07:08:15','kdmurray','SonicPi Releases','Great show. I\'d never heard of SonicPi before and have been messing around with it since I heard the episode.\r\n\r\nIt also looks like a Windows MSI version has become available since the episode was recorded. \r\n\r\nLooking forward to hearing more music from the HPR community!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1156,1776,'2015-05-25 13:17:05','thelovebug','1776','Missed out on the chance of an Independence Day joke...','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1157,1776,'2015-05-28 11:51:24','Dave Morriss','Re: 1776','I always thought that film was a bit silly myself :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1158,1777,'2015-05-28 09:42:58','inscius','','Thank you, DJ Andrew and DJ Dave.\r\nNice episode with great music. I am also Magnatune member and did not know of most of the artists you played.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1159,1780,'2015-05-29 19:58:49','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this update','Thanks Ahuka,\r\n\r\nI was not aware of the problems suffered by Werner Koch regarding the funding of GnuPG. As a frequent user of this software this situation seems lamentable. His donation page is at https://gnupg.org/donate/index.html','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1160,1780,'2015-06-11 03:39:18','Alison Chaiken','TrueCrypt vs. GPG','Thanks for this wonderful series. I\'ve listened to them all, and, notably, installed K9-Mail and the encryption extension for Gmail after listening to that episode.\r\n\r\nI missed listening to this episode why one might consider using TrueCrypt when GPG is under active development. What features does TC have that GPG lacks?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1161,1780,'2015-06-17 17:49:15','Kevin O\'Brien','Audited','Bear in mind that any answer is provisional and for the present time, but the fact that TrueCrypt has been audited and passed the audit is a big advantage in my book. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1162,1782,'2015-06-02 09:52:20','Mike Ray','Chorustext!','Sounds like a great project. I have one nagging question which sprang out at me when the sliders were mentioned...\r\n\r\nWhat happens when the document is many hundreds of lines in length? do you need to move the line slider 0.000000001 millimetre to get to the next line? How does that work.\r\n\r\nOverall sounds like an exciting project','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1163,1782,'2015-06-02 17:22:33','Jon Kulp ','Awesome in Many Ways','It\'s hard to know where to begin to say how awesome this project is. It\'s brilliant in concept, effective in its execution, and it seems to be something that would really help visually-impaired users deal with text, especially when doing CODE, where you have to scroll through fiddly bits looking for curly braces, semicolons and the like. Apart from that, it\'s just really freaking cool. I encourage anyone who has not done so to go watch the video demonstrations. It\'s the kind of thing I would like to try to build myself just for the fun of it. Absolutely awesome, thanks for sharing, and please do more episodes for us!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1164,1782,'2015-06-08 10:44:08','Mike Ray','Smashing the monopoly of commercial gadgetry','If sighted folks knew how much companies charge for similar portable gadgetry aimed at blind people they\'d be shocked.\r\n\r\nCompanies always quote R&D costs of bringing a product to market for a very small market as the justification for charging $4000 for a portable Braille note-taker. Open Source and the hacker community are slowly going to crack this monopoly.\r\n\r\nIf I could still see to solder I would be building one of these.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1165,1783,'2015-06-03 00:58:20','Jon Kulp ','Updates Pain! ','Hilarious tale of Windows updates pain. I remember it well but haven\'t had to deal with it in a few years. Awful. Apart from requiring endless reboots and breaking things, those updates always took FOREVER to run. Thanks for an interesting episode, looking forward to more. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1166,1783,'2015-06-06 20:04:19','0xf10e','Entertaining episode!','I tell our few windows users an win7 installation takes a whole day because of all the updates to install…\r\n\r\nIn regards to cynical coworkers: https://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20111002\r\n\r\nAnd dude, nice voice!\r\nYou should read SciFi stories for escapepod.org!','2022-02-14 13:17:23'),
(1167,1783,'2015-06-07 07:37:22','Stilvoid','Seconded','Just listened to this and really enjoyed it. I\'d love to hear you do more shows on things that frustrate you - very funny :D','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1168,1784,'2015-06-04 11:44:00','Kevin O\'Brien','Great show!','I was really glad to see this in my feed today. I have backed all three of the projects Kimiko has done. As someone who performs music as well as listens, I think the open scores are just as important as the open recordings. Now I am waiting for the Chopin to be done.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1169,1784,'2015-06-04 14:27:26','Jon Kulp','Open Scores','Thanks Kevin. I agree about the scores, although you can get just about any public-domain scores for free in PDF format from the IMSLP website. The cool thing about these new scores is that you can get the source code and edit it. For example, near the end of the semester I grabbed the Musescore file for the fugue that I talked about in this episode and converted it to Lilypond code, then added a bunch of analytical markup in the code itself, things like text boxes, labels, and different colors for the noteheads to show where the fugue subject appeared, tell what key it had modulated to, etc. With the PDF the best that I could\'ve done would be to scribble all over it. When you have access to the source code you can do this kind of analytical markup much more elegantly. I\'ve also taken bits of these scores and use them to create the midi examples in my counterpoint book. Great projects all around by Kimiko Ishizaka!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1170,1784,'2015-06-04 14:35:19','Robert Douglass','Lady Gaga - fan of Bach and the Well-Tempered Clavier','It\'s no coincidence that \"artofcounterpoint\" chose the Lady Gaga song \"Bad Romance\" to write a fugue upon. The song itself directly quotes Bach\'s Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1. Compare the theme of Fugue #24 in B-Minor to this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qrO4YZeyl0I\r\n\r\n(I\'ve been told that the album release of the song doesn\'t have the same intro).\r\n\r\nIt\'s Bach! Lady Gaga starts her song off directly with Bach\'s theme.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1171,1784,'2015-06-04 18:52:07','Jon Kulp','Gaga Bach','Robert! I didn\'t realize HPR was on your radar. I had planned to give you a heads-up about this episode to make sure you guys knew the Open WTC was being featured. Thanks for listening.\r\n\r\nIt\'s funny I never noticed Lady Gaga\'s quotation before. That\'s such a weird subject that it hardly sounds like Bach, especially done electronically like that. I see a striking similarity between the subject of the D-sharp minor fugue featured in this episode and the Lady Gaga fugue subject, but it may just be b/c of the p5 leap at the beginning and the minor mode. ','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1172,1784,'2015-06-06 16:14:30','Ken Fallon','Now I\'m \"seeing\" this everythere ','Thanks Jon. \r\n\r\nThe only problem is now I\'m seeing these techniques everywhere.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1173,1784,'2015-06-06 19:46:56','Jon Kulp','Feature, not a bug','This is not a problem, you simply know what to call it now when you hear it. Impress your friends...','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1174,1784,'2015-06-07 19:29:31','Frank','','Great listening for a Sunday afternoon.\r\n\r\nIt occurred to me that, in terms of rigidity of structure etc., the fugue might be the sonnet of music.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1175,1784,'2015-06-08 13:52:03','Daniel Worth','Fantastic','I really enjoyed the listening, examining and explanation about the theory. I hope you do much more of this.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1176,1784,'2015-06-28 17:19:25','Alison Chaiken','Heard \"Fugue for Friday\"?','It\'s \r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUTlp0ODS7s\r\n\r\nThanks for a fine show,\r\nAlison','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1177,1784,'2015-06-28 23:33:06','Jon Kulp','Dragnet Fugue','Alison, It\'s so nice to hear from you! Thanks for listening, and also thanks for the tip on that fugue. It never would have occurred to me to write a fugue on that subject. This fugue is kind of unusual inasmuch as each middle entry seems to be almost like a complete new exposition, except for the fact that the texture does not drop down to a single voice again. Certainly unusual to see all four voices do the subject in succession in the middle entries like this. Cool piece, though!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1178,1784,'2015-07-08 04:10:33','FiftyOneFifty','Thanks','This comment is belated, since I meant to be on the Community News for June. Jon, since you have pulled back the curtain, I will never be able to listen to music in quite the same way again. To think I nearly skipped over this ep, and only listened due to \"politeness\".','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1179,1787,'2015-06-09 21:01:24','Jon Kulp','What about broccoli?','Thanks so much for the shout-out, Frank, but how could you possibly leave **broccoli** off your list of stir-fry-worthy vegetables?! Really enjoyed the episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1180,1787,'2015-06-10 13:41:52','Mike Ray','And baby corns','I was just thinking the same thing John. And what about baby corn-cobs?\r\n\r\nGreat episode. I love wok cooking.\r\n\r\nI think a good long-handled wok shovel is also a must, especially for that authentic chinese kitchen noise :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1181,1787,'2015-06-10 14:40:49','Frank','','. . . er, because I haven\'t figured out a way to stir-fry Hollandaise sauce?','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1182,1787,'2015-06-10 19:15:12','Jon Kulp','Hollandaise??','Hollandaise?? What does that have to do with broccoli? I don\'t think I\'ve ever even eaten hollandaise before!','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1183,1787,'2015-06-10 20:01:40','Dave Morriss','Thinks to stir-fry','Great idea for an episode Frank.\r\n\r\nI\'m a great fan of Asian food and stir-fry a lot; I have been doing so for more than 30 years..\r\n\r\nMy basic vegetable stir-fry includes onions (cut vertically into \"segments\" and separated), sliced garlic, carrots and celery (both cut first diagonally then into julienne), broccoli, peppers, and button mushrooms. Cauliflower also works, as do brussels sprouts, cabbage and of course Chinese vegetables like Bok Choy. Then there are varieties of legumes like French beans, runner beans, beansprouts and the classic mangetout which are fantastic. The list goes on and on.\r\n\r\nI like to use a standard steel wok with a flat bottom since it works best on my gas hob. One day I\'ll buy a new hob with a burner designed for a proper round-bottomed wok :-)\r\n\r\nAnyway, thanks for the episode. It was great to hear.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1184,1787,'2015-06-10 20:04:29','Dave Morriss','Things not thinks','I got so excited thinking about my next stir-fry recipe my ability to spell left me ...','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1185,1787,'2015-06-10 21:27:32','Mike Ray','Round-bttomed woks','I think in some places you can get some kind of iron ring to stand on your gas burner so that a round-bottomed wok will stand properly.\r\n\r\nI had one once which was really heavy, which it has to be if your going to violently slap the wok about the way the pros do.\r\n\r\nMuch better than a flat-bottomed wok','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1186,1787,'2015-06-10 21:54:57','Dave Morriss','Wok rings','I have a ring but not like the one you describe. It\'s quite light and moves around and isn\'t stable on a gas hob like mine. No way would I leave a hot wok unattended on such a thing; I feel it would tip over.\r\n\r\nThe item you speak of would be great but wouldn\'t it raise the height of the wok somewhat? My gas hob is at work-top height, which is high for using a wok. When I have a lot of food in mine I need to stand on a stool to do some hearty stirring. I\'m not particularly short but I reckon I\'d feel dwarfed by such an arrangement!\r\n\r\nSo a flat-bottomed wok is a compromise for me - even though the sides don\'t get as hot as they should for true stir-frying.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1187,1787,'2015-06-11 18:17:07','Frank','','John: If you haven\'t eaten Hollandaise, you haven\'t eaten; it\'s a very simple blend of egg yolks, butter, and cayenne. It\'s quite laborious to make by hand and get the correct consistency.\r\n\r\nIt\'s traditionally associated with eggs benedict and asparagus, but is quite nice with broccoli. You can find a never-fail recipe at my blog.\r\n\r\nSadly, most of what you get in average restaurants--the ones I can afford, for example--comes out of a can.\r\n\r\nRegarding bottoms, my wok has a flat area about 6\" in diameter at the bottom, then curves smoothly upward on the sides. My stovetop is about waist-high, so I have no trouble managing it. Perhaps someday I\'ll spring for a round-bottomed wok at the local Asian Market.','2017-09-09 07:41:26'),
(1188,1787,'2015-06-11 23:22:46','jezra','chicken and woks','After visiting the local butcher for some boneless skinless chicken breast, I put the breast in the freezer. An hour or so later the chicken is quite firm but not frozen solid. The firmness allows me to cut long strips of chicken that are paper thin. om nom nom\r\n\r\nIf the wok is created by hammering, the hammer dents on the inside of the wok will allow the cook to push food farther up the side of the wok than on a smooth walled walk. \r\n\r\nLoved the episode by the way. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1189,1787,'2015-06-13 04:28:26','Frank','','Heh.\r\n\r\nI did the opposite. I usually have skinless, boneless chicken breasts in the freezer. I thaw them partially, then slice them up.\r\n\r\nAnd thanks. I am continually impressed by the eclectic taste of the HPR community. This really is a nice place to be.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1190,1787,'2015-06-14 01:28:16','FiftyOneFifty','','I\'ve learn not to turn the heat up when I thought I turned if off and then walk away from the stove.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1191,1787,'2015-06-16 23:16:15','Frank','Thanks for the suggestion','Had broccoli tonight, with garlic, onions, mushrooms, bean curd seasoned with mild Hungarian paprika sauce, pepper, and \"Italian spice.\"\r\n\r\nThanks for the suggestion. Think I could have cut the broccoli into smaller bits, but it was still good.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1192,1788,'2015-06-11 18:55:03','Ken Fallon','So near and yet so expensive','€ 284, just to get there. Why are you torturing me !\r\n\r\nhttps://www.rome2rio.com/s/Amsterdam/Glasgow?dates=2015-7-10/2015-7-11','2022-02-14 13:17:23'),
(1193,1791,'2015-06-23 21:40:25','Dave Morriss','Yay for Bash scripts!','Great idea for a show and a most interesting script.\r\n\r\nI always like looking at other people\'s code; it gives an insight into how they think and solve problems, and there are often good ideas to make you consider how you\'d solve a similar problem. I\'m always looking for new and better ways of doing stuff.\r\n\r\nI never use \'getopt\' for example. It wasn\'t about when I first started using Unix and \'sh\', so I always use the older \'getopts\'. You have made me rethink this choice - thanks!\r\n\r\nThere are one or two parts of this script I don\'t quite understand so I have emailed you about them. This clunky comment system is not the best place to have such a dialogue.\r\n\r\nMore like this please!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1194,1791,'2015-06-28 16:30:57','Tony Pelaez','Google CL is broken','Unfortunately as of June 8th, Google CL is broken, so the upload to google photos no longer works. According to the developer\'s website this is likely not something that will be fixed. (Source: https://code.google.com/p/googlecl/)\r\n\r\nBecause of this and the feedback Dave provided, I am reworking parts of this script. If you are interested in following the changes, please keep an eye on the github gist where the changes will be posted.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1195,1793,'2015-06-18 17:30:51','Frank','','I completely understand mental blocks about thinking of a topic.\r\n\r\nWelcome to HPR.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1196,1793,'2015-06-19 18:56:03','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the show ','I was intrigued by what I heard of Go on \'FLOSS Weekly\' last year and more recently on \'The Changelog\' but I hadn\'t looked at it in detail yet.\r\n\r\nYour episode motivated me to look deeper and I\'m keen to try it out. Thanks for the useful links too.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1197,1793,'2015-06-22 16:27:05','Stilvoid','','The more I play around with Go, the more I like it. I\'ve been writing a fair bit of stuff in Go recently.\r\n\r\nThe latest is https://github.com/stilvoid/please/ which I wrote so I could talk to web APIs from shell scripts. Always good to have a reason to write some code :)\r\n\r\nOoh topic idea: how HTTP works.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1198,1794,'2015-06-19 19:58:17','Dave Morriss','Interesting lesson','I was aware of Schoenberg, Berg and Webern but have never found their music at all appealing, and have changed channels if they ever appeared on the radio. I feel I now have more of an insight into what they were trying to do, though sadly it hasn\'t made their music any more appealing.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1199,1794,'2015-06-19 21:58:59','Jon Kulp ','Still Ugly ','Dave, agreed. While the 12-tone technique has a certain elegance and analytical appeal, it didn\'t substantially increase the acceptance of the music by the general public. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1200,1794,'2015-06-20 10:42:44','Mike Ray','Atonal music vs. Unrepresentative visual art','It\'s interesting that changes in visual art away from the purely representative to things like impressionist, expressionist, Dada-ism and pure abstract didn\'t raise the same kind of objections as atonal music. Although there was some bad feeling from the traditionalists to impressionism I think that was just the usual \"old folks don\'t like change\" type.\r\n\r\nDoes this mean that things that offend our ears are inherently more palpably painful than things we look at?\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1201,1794,'2015-06-24 07:20:04','Ken Fallon','RSS feed','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nIs there any chance of wrapping these in an RSS feed. It would be great to be able to automatically add them to my feed reader. \r\n\r\nIt would make an excellent little daily podcast.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1202,1794,'2015-06-24 11:27:01','Jon Kulp','Enjoy pain?','Glutton for punishment, eh? ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1203,1794,'2015-07-08 04:15:32','FiftyOneFifty','Forbidden Planet','This ep reminded me of the theme from every SciFi film from the 50s, most notably the classic \"The Forbidden Planet\". I hope someone writes a script we can all lend our voices to and you can score.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1204,1800,'2015-06-29 13:44:35','Ken Fallon','Links','Do you have a text file of the links to the shows ? Or the YouTube ID\'s ?','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1205,1800,'2015-07-04 23:44:01','Kevin O\'Brien','Here you go!',' - Alton Brown: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7J0cDeX5eo02yAXwIvB1CQ\r\n - Alton Brown Television: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfDNi1aEljAQ17mUrfUjkvg\r\n - BBC Earth Unplugged: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbwp5B-uDBy-fS4bDA0TEaw\r\n - Braincraft: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt_t6FwNsqr3WWoL6dFqG9w \r\n - Brain Stuff - How Stuff Works: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiefLm_nIz_gOH7XHbgpdCQ\r\n - Candyrat Records: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMJecdKUslHToOEpeuRGwXg\r\n - David Brin: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtbMXq5siIn3l-u_HKbAmrw\r\n - Computerphile: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9-y-6csu5WGm29I7JiwpnA\r\n - Crash Course: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX6b17PVsYBQ0ip5gyeme-Q\r\n - Dan Carlin: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3RcjbuyF5M1U4R62zjE3hg\r\n - Deep Sky Videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo-3ThNQmPmQSQL_L6Lx1_w\r\n - Don Ross: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRd5EO6FvhIrqQnk0cscSDA\r\n - FW Thinking: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnf7ZZpBsuTxnQgy1TKbTIw\r\n - Hana Malhas: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpoMVaoVRf3Xvf10_EIZKrg\r\n - Healthcare Triage: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCabaQPYxxKepWUsEVQMT4Kw\r\n - How Stuff Works: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa35qyNpnlZ_u8n9qoAZbMQ\r\n - It\'s Okay To Be Smart: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH4BNI0-FOK2dMXoFtViWHw\r\n - Kurtz Gezagt - In A Nutshell: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsXVk37bltHxD1rDPwtNM8Q\r\n - Mental Floss: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpZ5qUqpW4hW4zdfuBxMSJA\r\n - Minute Earth: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeiYXex_fwgYDonaTcSIk6w\r\n - Minute Physics: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUHW94eEFW7hkUMVaZz4eDg\r\n - Monty Python: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGm3CO6LPcN-Y7HIuyE0Rew\r\n - NASA eClips: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClF3aQw6CLDObNG4T9VPPnw\r\n - nature video: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7c8mE90qCtu11z47U0KErg\r\n - Numberphile: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoxcjq-8xIDTYp3uz647V5A\r\n - Objectivity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtwKon9qMt5YLVgQt1tvJKg\r\n - Perioodic Videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtESv1e7ntJaLJYKIO1FoYw\r\n - Physics Girl: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7DdEm33SyaTDtWYGO2CwdA\r\n - Piled Higher and Deeper (PhD Comics): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUL-pmhmDcZDwsA4cX2HO5w\r\n - Science News: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBX5er6E37_yWB3gCM32p3g\r\n - SciShow: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZYTClx2T1of7BRZ86-8fow\r\n - SciShow Space: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrMePiHCWG4Vwqv3t7W9EFg\r\n - Sixty Symbols: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvBqzzvUBLCs8Y7Axb-jZew\r\n - Smarter Every Day: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6107grRI4m0o2-emgoDnAA\r\n - Space Frontier Org: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCe_aC8RselByR6B2UMnprQA\r\n - Stuff They Don\'t Want You To Know - How Stuff Works: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrrOic-og4HzhleZqOq4L-A\r\n - Takei\'s Take: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdU7LWHJbvi4QsIDoofsbNA\r\n - The Hillywood Show: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuYRxRuTAtmeE2AiR5WWWHQ\r\n - The Fab Faux: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsU8AeRj_497u2IMxVA6OcQ\r\n - The Frugal Computer Guy: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbZ8wD6pmGb9qHqvx9M4YBw\r\n - Veritasium: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHnyfMqiRRG1u-2MsSQLbXA\r\n - Vlog Brothers: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGaVdbSav8xWuFWTadK6loA\r\n - Vsauce: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6nSFpj9HTCZ5t-N3Rm3-HA\r\n - Welcome To Night Vale: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrvuY59InDI3iKvopKT8PEw','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1206,1806,'2015-07-06 18:32:04','Kevin O\'Brien','Sorry I missed it','I am listening to this show today, and I am sorry I missed it. But if you look at your up-loads you will see I cranked out 4 more shows over the weekend, so I hope I can be forgiven.\r\n\r\nAlso, you asked whether the material on my site (https://www.ahuka.com) it a transcript. Essentially it is. I always start by writing a page for my site, and then record the show pretty much by reading it. That said, I did ad lib a little bit, but it definitely serves the purpose of being a transcript (with screenshots!).','2022-02-14 13:17:23'),
(1207,1808,'2015-07-08 07:28:09','Mike','More, more','Great. Can we have \'Ballads of a Cheechako\' next?\r\n\r\nI love the lines about the northern lights.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1208,1810,'2015-08-08 22:37:25','amp','but it is not free software','Free as in freedom. Would not be unethical? ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1209,1811,'2015-07-13 04:26:33','Charlie Ebert','hpr 1811 Dave Morriss','My father worked for Control Data.\r\nI started coding in Fortran myself in 1975 post Vietnam.\r\nI was very interested in hearing your experiences. \r\nI felt envious there were people who didn\'t have to punch up their own software.\r\nCharlie\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1210,1811,'2015-07-13 15:43:36','Dave Morriss','Control Data etc','Hi Charlie,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment.\r\n\r\nYes, we got stuff punched up for free by the Data Preparation staff, though I did learn how to operate a card punch and how to prepare a program card to automate some stuff.\r\n\r\nYou should do an HPR show about your experiences!\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1211,1811,'2015-07-13 17:17:25','Mike Ray','Punched cards in a box','Great stuff Dave.\r\n\r\nIn the emergency queue there\'s a show I did about a thing I made out of an empty cereal box, some of my mum\'s knitting needles and some punched cards when I was about 7, under the supervision of my brother who is more geeky than me.\r\n\r\nIt was like the thing you described. Pulling a knitting needle out of the box made a card drop out of the bottom that corresponded to the needle pulled out. I used bamboo skewers in the show version.\r\n\r\nIn COBOL I seem to remember the sequence numbers were in columns 1 to 6. Column 7 was an asterisk for a comment, a solidus for a continuation, or nothing.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1212,1811,'2015-07-13 21:44:55','Dave Morriss','Notched cards and COBOL','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nGlad you liked the episode.\r\n\r\nYour emergency show sounds like fun. My kids would have liked that when they were young. I\'m sad we didn\'t think of something similar.\r\n\r\nI had forgotten the layout of COBOL cards, but I only ever wrote about two programs in it, and that was just for amusement!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1213,1812,'2015-07-15 10:01:15','Dave Morriss','Loved the ambient sounds','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nVery enjoyable. It was fun to be accompanying you on your walk. Thanks for the description of what was going on around you too.\r\n\r\nOh, and some of those headphones sounded interesting, as did the microphone.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1214,1812,'2015-07-15 10:56:00','Jon Kulp ','Heavy Breathing ','Thanks Dave, I enjoyed recording this way but am not a fan of resultant heavy breathing. Planning to record brief outdoor episode today but I think I\'ll just go sit by the swamp or something. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1215,1812,'2015-07-15 11:15:03','Dave Morriss','Breathing','Not heavy breathing, just breathing.\r\n\r\nDidn\'t bother me. A change in breathing rate is what sometimes happens when humans walk and talk!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1216,1812,'2015-07-17 12:26:09','John Corless','Great','Jon,\r\n\r\nI agree with Dave. This was really enjoyable to listen to. The very informal nature of joining you on a walk to work (and hearing commentary about what you saw along the way) was at least as fun as the intended content on headphones, which was also good :). Thanks!\r\n\r\nJohn\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1217,1813,'2015-07-15 05:42:26','0xf10e','grumpyness','You mean you get grumpy like a sysadmin or network operator when someone breaks their network? ;)\r\n\r\nBTW, did you know mplayer has a \'fbdev\' video output so you can play videos on the framebuffer, too?','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1218,1813,'2015-07-15 18:05:00','windigo','Re: Grumpyness','I did *not* know about mplayer\'s fbdev option!\r\n\r\nThis sounds like a wonderful future project. Thanks for the heads up! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1219,1817,'2015-07-24 19:54:36','CPrompt^','Great show!','Loved the show NYBill! Definitely do an update so we (I) can here the result. Let us know what version of the pedal you went with too.\r\n\r\nYou might be interested in these guys too : https://www.mojotone.com/\r\n\r\nI used to work for them a few years ago and they have some quality stuff. Nice kits that you can build on your own and such. Nice vintage style apps.\r\n\r\nThanks for the show! ','2022-02-14 13:17:24'),
(1220,1817,'2015-07-25 13:50:40','Ken Fallon','A series on Electronic Components','Hi NYBill,\r\n\r\nWhile you might think this is obvious, this episode is a great practical tip for starting electronic projects. \r\n\r\nCan I suggest that HPR listeners contribute a list of sites they use to get components and we can put that up on the gitlab repo and then sync it to the main HPR Website. eg\r\n\r\nLocation,Site, URI, Description\r\nWorldwide, Deal Extreme,https://www.dx.com/, Electronics & Cheap Gadgets shipped slowly but for free.\r\nNL,Conrad,https://www.conrad.nl/, Good quality but expensive Electronic components\r\n\r\n\r\nAlso I would love you or someone else to do a series on Electronics Components. This is a Resistor, they look like ..., they are used for ..., they cost about ...., there are the following types ...., etc etc.\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:17:24'),
(1221,1817,'2015-07-27 21:53:09','NYbill','Thanks guys','Thanks CPrompt^. That must have been an interesting place to work. And there will be a follow up. I told you how I found the board layout online. So, there will be some etching too. \r\n\r\nGood fun.\r\n\r\nYea, that idea did cross my mind, Ken. Do, an episode each for different components. We\'ll see if I get off my butt and do that. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1222,1823,'2015-07-31 12:45:42','Anon','','The sound quality is absolutely awful. Unbearable.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1223,1827,'2015-08-04 00:54:52','Charlie Ebert','Me.','Loved the episode. I use wax paper to cover my work and line the pan for baking\r\nto keep the bread from sticking.\r\nI have a couple of bread makers around as well but, don\'t use them for anything other than kneading the bread. They knead bread quite well and keep it at a slightly elevated temperature which is nice.\r\nI will have to look around for some of your ingredients, assuming our FDA hasn\'t banned them. \r\nInteresting show. \r\nI also like watching Alien Bob from Slackware fame post his bread experiments on the web. He bakes also.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1224,1827,'2015-08-07 15:34:39','Daniel Worth','Great!','I make a lot of food from scratch. I also make sour dough bread. I love hearing about other peoples processed for cooking. You did a fantastic job on this episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1225,1827,'2015-08-10 10:39:39','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feeedback','Thanks, the comments are most appreciated.\r\n\r\nCharlie: I\'d never thought of using such paper. I\'ve used what\'s known as \'greaseproof paper\' in the UK for cakes, but it\'s a pain to get it to fit neatly into tins.\r\nI\'ve never used the knead-only program on my bread maker, though I imagine that would be useful for making pizza dough for example.\r\nGood luck with the ingredients.\r\n\r\nDaniel: I\'d like to hear about your sour dough bread making methods some time!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1226,1828,'2015-08-05 11:17:23','Jon Kulp ','Awesome','Bill! Amazing job on this show, probably my favorite one this year. Looking forward to hearing the second in the series.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1227,1828,'2015-08-06 22:17:11','NYbill','','Thanks, pal. I thought I\'d record an episode while I was doing a project. Talk about it as I go. My thought process, troubleshooting, etc... \r\n\r\nAlthough, I felt the edit was a bit rough, I\'m glad you liked it. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1228,1828,'2015-10-18 03:52:31','Neandergeek','Great imprompto series','I just got my Uni-T UT61E, but I\'m still waiting for my USB cable. I may get the led back light added tomorrow. I\'ll follow up when I do.\r\n\r\nOne of the photos had what looks like a storage organizer for resistors in the form of one quarter of a circle. Do groups of four of them make stackable rings? Are they affordable and useful?\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1229,1828,'2015-11-02 22:15:19','NYbill','USB cab;e prices went up. ','Hey Neandergeek, cool you got one. Good luck with the LED mod if you attempt it. I wonder what color (yes there is a \'u\' missing there you UK lot) LED you will choose. \r\n\r\nYes, I\'m waiting on the USB cable as well. It seems the UNI-T ut7xx series has come out. The new series seem to be targeting the Fluke 289 type data logging meters. But, as soon as they came out the price of the USB cable seemed to jump from ~$11 to ~$18. Well, there is one on its way to me now. It should be here soon. \r\n\r\nIn the mean time, I can confirm that the UNI-T windows software does work with Linux/WINE. I just need the cable to make sure they can communicate. \r\n\r\nAs for the small curved containers, I\'ve had them for ~20 years. They are from a storage bucket type thing I had for work. It was a 5 gallon plastic bucket with stackable trays inside. Similar to this:\r\n\r\nhttps://tinyurl.com/nhfr2do\r\n\r\nThe small bins would stack into one of the bigger trays for holding tiny stuff. But, they were too small for work items. So, I used them for electronics parts at home. So no, I don\'t think they are available on their own. ','2022-02-14 13:17:24'),
(1230,1829,'2015-08-07 15:16:51','Fweeb','BQ Cervantes?','You mentioned that you were looking for an unaffiliated ereader. How about the BQ Cervantes[1]? It\'s a touch expensive, but it *is* unaffiliated and, as a bonus, the version I\'ve linked to runs an open source stack. I don\'t have one, but I\'m awfully tempted.\r\n\r\n[1] https://store.bq.com/en/e-readers/cervantes','2022-02-14 13:17:25'),
(1231,1829,'2015-08-07 16:31:12','cybergrue','One thing you missed','Another good show Jon.\r\nOne thing about the Kindle DX that you missed is that it can display full size pdf documents without resizing them, or reflowing. It works great for technical pdfs, like scientific papers with embed graphics and graphs for example.\r\nIt can handle very large pdf documents but changing pages is very slowwww. \r\n\r\nAlso, it can display other formats as well, plain ASCII text for example.\r\nOn mine, there is an experimental features menu item that claims it can retrieve web pages (via cellular I think) I have never used this feature so I don\'t know if or how well it works.\r\n\r\nThe DX appears to have been an attempt at a professional version of the Kindle and appears to have features that were not on other kindles, which explains its price and short life.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1232,1829,'2015-08-08 01:00:34','Jon Kulp ','good catch (PDFs)','you\'re totally right, I forgot to mention this. This is probably because I don\'t really like to read PDFs even on this, although they are certainly much better on the DX than on the smaller Kindles. I put a few scholarly article PDFs on there as well as a couple of musical scores, and they\'re not bad, but I think a tablet is better for PDFs. I seem to recall that there were two or three options for viewing the PDFs, including cutting off all the white space around the text, which would be a huge help except for most of the articles I read have a tiny footer across the very bottom that completely ruins this feature.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1233,1829,'2015-08-08 01:02:37','Jon Kulp ','Cervantes Reader','thanks for the heads up on this. I have not heard of the Cervantes reader but it looks great. Doesn\'t look like I can easily get one in the United States, though.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1234,1830,'2015-07-16 17:26:51','FiftyOneFifty','I thought this was about the dikes','Shoot, Ken, I thought this was going to be your long promised description of how the windmill and dike system worked.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1235,1830,'2015-08-11 21:01:34','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the insight','I always find it fascinating to discover how other parts of the world do the things they do. This was good.\r\n\r\nWe have a \"City Car\" scheme here in Edinburgh, but I\'m not sure if it\'s as sophisticated as the one you describe.\r\n\r\nMore please :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1236,1831,'2015-08-10 01:40:09','Jon Kulp ','1.7x','That\'s how fast, although if music is actually the focus of the show I\'ll listen at original speed. I do this for The Bugcast, for example. Almost all other shows are 1.7x.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1237,1831,'2015-08-10 15:08:27','Kevin O\'Brien','1.7x works for me','I routinely change the speed on all of my podcasts to 1.7x. so far, it hasn\'t really changed my ability to absorb background music. I think you just get used it.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1238,1831,'2015-08-10 15:25:23','A Shadowy Figure','Thanks, now I have a starting point',' Thank you Jon, I very much find your contributions both entertaining and informative. \r\n(royalty free) Music really isn\'t generally what I\'d like to focus on, but rather some sort of ambiance for the background to add something to the entertainment value of the presentations. or even transitional segments that include a musical or some other form of non-vocal cue\'s between \"thoughts\"/ segments.\r\nIn essence, adding some \"color\" to the \"audio\" presentation. (think radiolab or This American Life, etc.)\r\nI personally feel, adding these sorts of elements may encourage casual (hit and run) listeners to \"tun in\" again not only for the educational content, but for entrainment as well. Thanks again Jon ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1239,1831,'2015-08-17 18:42:04','Windigo','Normal - 1.5x','I\'ve started speeding up my [aud/pod]casts at work, and I keep it to 1.5x, although I\'ve heard there are some who go as far as 2x.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1240,1831,'2015-09-07 07:09:49','folky','It depends','It depends on the language and the recording quality.\r\nGermanspeaking podcast go between 1.5-2.0, swedishspeaking between 1.5 and 1.8 and english between 1.0 and 1.5 but mostly 1.3.\r\nMusicpodcasts always are going by 1.0.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1241,1832,'2015-08-11 08:01:01','0xf10e','thx, very useful','Nice episode, many little things I didn\'t know about markdown.\r\n\r\nWhile I prefer ReStructuredText* over markdown (just like I prefer Mercurial/Python/Golang over Git/Perl/Java) I have to use it on Gitlab and Github.\r\nSo like I said, very useful.\r\n\r\n*) and rst2pdf works w/o LaTeX ;)\r\n\r\nPS: one of the words you were looking for is WYSIWYG - \"what you see is what you get\"','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1242,1832,'2015-08-12 11:16:31','Jon Kulp','plus HTML as needed','Thanks I enjoyed this episode. One thing I would add is that whenever necessary you can freely add bits of HTML when the markdown syntax doesn\'t give you everything you need. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1243,1832,'2015-08-17 18:04:55','Dave Morriss','Excellent episode','This was a great episode.\r\n\r\nI use Markdown and Pandoc myself for all my HPR episodes, though I have not yet moved away from AsciiDoc when writing my own project notes and similar.\r\n\r\nA while ago, I had been looking for the best lightweight markup format and was very happy to find Markdown. Then I found Pandoc and very much appreciated its extensions and huge range of features.\r\n\r\nThanks for your great overview.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1244,1834,'2015-09-03 13:16:37','Dave Morriss','Very useful','The password card idea is really good. I\'d never come across it before.\r\n\r\nI also didn\'t know about pwgen. I used to use a tool called apg at my work but that was in the days when an 8-character alphanumeric password was regarded as highly secure.\r\n\r\nThanks for the ambient sounds of birdsong in this episode by the way :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1245,1836,'2015-08-17 16:47:10','0xf10e','you should put up some VPS based blog ;)','Something where you push markdown or rst to a Git or mercurial repository.\r\nThis way it\'s harder to lose the content as you have it in at least two places.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1246,1836,'2015-08-18 23:45:07','NYbill','maybe some day...','Ah, I never thought of it that way. Even if its not a \'published blog\' at least you\'ll keep your notes safe. \r\n\r\n...this method would make for a good HPR episode, 0xf10e. ;)\r\n\r\nNo pressure. :P ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1247,1837,'2015-08-18 08:30:46','0xf10e','correction on TRIM','Hey there, little correction on ATA TRIM: Fragmentation of files isn\'t the problem on SSDs but the SSD\'s controller needs to know which blocks it can reuse for leveling out the wear on the flash cells. As the SSD knows nothing about the FS it\'s storing data for it only can swap out blocks when they\'re overwritten at once.\r\nUNLESS of course when the OS tells the SSD \"I just freed those (logical) blocks, do whatever you want to them\". This why the SSDs controller can add those blocks to its free-list and reallocate the underlying flash-cell as soon as all logical blocks are freed - or remap the leftover logical blocks to free the rest of the flash-cell.\r\n\r\nOops, got a little long, didn\'t IR? ^^\"','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1248,1837,'2015-08-21 16:44:46','noah','minimizing writes','I just want to take a quick moment to disagree with your recommendation to put swap and/or /var on a traditional spinning disk in order to limit writes to your SSD. Yes, doing so may ultimately increase the expected lifetime of the drive, but you\'re missing out on the greatest benefits of the SSD by doing so. SSDs are extremely fast for random access patterns, but for sequential operations (such as reading or writing large files) they aren\'t significantly faster than spinning disks. The parts of your system that perform the most random access operations are likely to be swap and /var. Speeding up swap is quite possibly the single best application for an SSD in a linux system.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1249,1837,'2015-09-15 13:47:10','2BFrank','Good points','Hi, \r\n\r\nthanks for the clarifications. @noah: I\'ve found different opinions on this, you make a good point. On the other hand, I have the impression that my system (6GB Ram) is swapping very little...\r\n\r\n@0xf10e: Right, it\'s wear levelling not fragmentation. Thx for clearing that up! ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1250,1838,'2015-08-19 10:28:33','Jon Kulp ','The Very Essence','Windigo, I salute you. In this episode you have captured the spirit, The Very Essence of HPR. Either that or you were just trying to see if you could make Dave Morriss twitch enough to send shockwaves across the ocean and feel them over here. All of us listening I\'m sure were shouting suggestions at our audio players but every last one of them would have drained the Awesome out of your alarm system. I see no bugs here...','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1251,1838,'2015-08-19 16:20:57','Dave Morriss','I wouldn\'t have done it that way...','A fine, entertaining show, Sir!\r\n\r\nI didn\'t twitch excessively. I wasn\'t wild about the multiple \'sleep\' solution, but then neither were you.\r\n\r\nI thought the use of \'at\' was great.\r\n\r\nBack around 2005 I wrote a thing for my work (as a Sysadmin at a university) that allowed people to request migration of their mailboxes from a Unix mail system to Exchange by sending an email to a particular server. It slurped their mail out of one system and into the other using IMAP, but I didn\'t want there to be more than about 4 \'slurp\' jobs running at once because IMAP is not efficient.\r\n\r\nAnyway, long story short, I used \'at\' to schedule the work and to avoid bottlenecks. Supreme lash-up but it worked :-)\r\n\r\nYours was a perfect hacker story. Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1252,1838,'2015-08-20 15:46:17','NYbill','','I think the next logical step here is to enter the desired wakeup time into the Mini9 via clockwork. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1253,1838,'2015-08-20 21:32:29','Beeza','Geekdom At Its Very Best','This episode shows precisely why non-geeks think that geeks are weird, while giving us geeks a nice warm glow.\r\n\r\nYes, you could buy an alarm clock for pennies, but where would the fun and sense of achievement be in that?\r\n\r\nI once found myself in a hotel room without my phone or any other kind of alarm. I HAD to be up early to make an important meeting. My solution was to create a simple MS Access application (it was a company laptop) to poll the system clock until it reached 0530, then just repeatedly trigger the \"beep\". It took all of 5 minutes to code and test.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1254,1841,'2015-08-31 21:34:46','Windigo','Great first episode!','I\'m always a fan of \"How I Found Linux\" episodes, but not many have taken me to Eastern Berlin first!\r\n\r\nA fascinating story, and hopefully the first of many episodes. Welcome to HPR! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1255,1841,'2015-09-02 13:49:27','folky','Thank you','Thank you for your kind welcome, Windigo!\r\nBut it wasn\'t Berlin I lived in, instead a small town not far from the Baltic Sea.\r\nI already have ideas for more episodes. We will see when I have the time and if I dare to record my own voice.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1256,1842,'2015-08-25 19:19:48','0xf10e','Re: Car Malware ','I\'m expecting more ransom ware \"bricking\" cars than causing accidents.\r\n1st week: \"windscreen wipers and air conditioning are disabled until you pay 5 bitcoins\"\r\n2nd week: \"speed is limited to 30mph until you pay 10 bitcoins\"\r\n3rd week: \"your car won\'t start until you pay 20 bitcoins\"\r\n\r\nWay less incentive for law enforcement to come after them when they go for people\'s money instead of everyones safety.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1257,1842,'2015-08-25 20:00:59','Mike Ray','We\'re doomed I tell eee','I think I\'ll just make myself a tin-foil hat and sit in the cupboard under the stairs.\r\n\r\nJust wait till they start cracking train and bus systems\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1258,1843,'2015-08-27 06:40:23','Ken Fallon','Obsolete ?','Hi Dave,\r\n\r\nI could never get my head around these commands, and your show has clarified them for me.\r\n\r\nI have never been able to get a use case for this, that cannot be done using \r\n\r\ncd -\r\n\r\nThat jumps you back to the previous directory. Running it again brings you back to where you started.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1259,1843,'2015-08-28 11:49:33','Dave Morriss','Maybe obsolescent or outmoded','As I said in the episode, I use these less than I used to, though I do still use them.\r\n\r\ncd , cd- and cd only let you move between a given directory, the previous one and $HOME, whereas pushd and popd let you manipulate a much larger collection of directories.\r\n\r\nIf I\'m connecting to a remote VPS or something I might do this:\r\n\r\npushd -n ~/Community_News/; pushd -n ~/Database/; pushd -n ~/IA/; pushd -n ~/content_cleaning/\r\ndirs -v\r\n 0 ~ \r\n 1 ~/content_cleaning/ \r\n 2 ~/IA/ \r\n 3 ~/Database/ \r\n 4 ~/Community_News/\r\n\r\n(note the \'~/\' at the start to make these absolute paths)\r\n\r\nThen I might hop around between directories with for example:\r\n\r\npushd +4\r\n\r\nEven this has been largely superseded by screen and tmux, I will admit.\r\n\r\nI\'m probably just old-fashioned :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1260,1844,'2015-08-29 15:48:14','Mike Ray','Quality','I loved this show, as I do all of John\'s shows. The words \'this is John Kulp in Lafayette Lousiana\' is always a guarantee of quality.\r\n\r\nThe Marantz sound recorder sounds like a very nice piece of kit, and the sound quality was superb. Pity about the Compact Flash media.\r\n\r\nAnd the harpsichord music break was very pleasant','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1261,1844,'2015-08-30 20:32:15','Jon Kulp','Open Goldberg!','Thanks so much for the nice comments, Mike. Regarding the bumper music, I got it from the Open Goldberg Variations. Wonderful performance and completely free to download and share. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1262,1844,'2015-08-31 18:26:00','Kevin O\'Brien','Agree with Mike','I agree with Mike, I also find Jon Kulp\'s shows very good.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1263,1846,'2015-09-01 18:09:20','Mike Ray','Uni-T Meters','Great episodes on the Uni-T multimeters.\r\n\r\nI have a UT60A, which has an opto-isolated serial port. Sadly the software that comes with it is totally inaccessible to someone who, like me, can\'t see.\r\n\r\nSo I\'ve been writing my own to run on Linux.\r\n\r\nAdmittedly I started this a few years ago and did some initial work on reverse-engineering the protocol, which I can\'t find documented anywhere.\r\n\r\nHearing these episodes I was prodded into resurrecting the code and completing it.\r\n\r\nI have another multimeter which actually talks which is what stopped me completing the project once before.\r\n\r\nI think the UT60E, and possibly other models like your UT61E have similar ports and probably have serial ports also.\r\n\r\nIt\'s an impressive range of meters given the price.\r\n\r\nWhen I have something completed and talking I\'ll stick it on the web and do a show.\r\n\r\nIt would be good to get Blather to respond by making a measurement and reading it out aloud.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1264,1846,'2015-09-01 23:09:53','NYbill','','Thanks for the kind words, Mike. \r\n\r\nThat is just an episode I felt like doing because I felt I was a bit harsh on the UNI-T meters. You do get a lot of \"bang for your buck\" with those units.\r\n\r\nAnd yes, this one has the serial to opto-coupled connector as well. Who has a serial port these days anyway? \r\n\r\nI did see they sell a connector that will go to USB for sale. But, as I said in the episode, I don\'t really feel a need for that feature anyway. However, I\'m sure some do. \r\n\r\nAnd yes, if you could get one of these meters going text to speech, that is an episode I\'d like to hear.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1265,1846,'2015-09-02 13:06:23','Mike Ray','Unit-T meters and serial ports','Having written the first comment I took another look online and found some stuff about the standard DMM chip used inside this meter and all (I think) of the Unit-T meters.\r\n\r\nThe only problem I think might be the serial port. I am not sure yet whether it will work with either a PL2303 or FTDI USB to serial adaptor since the client software needs to raise either CTS or RTS, or both, to power the opto-couplers in the lead.\r\n\r\nIf Unit-T sell a USB to meter adaptor lead I\'d like to know where to get one.\r\n\r\nI particularly like the RMS feature, which you mentioned in the show is uncommon in such a cheap meter.\r\n\r\nI\'m jealous of your ability to add the timeout power modification though. Could have done that when I could see but not now.\r\n\r\nForever leaving my meters switched on and flattening batteries.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1266,1846,'2015-09-02 20:14:30','NYbill','','Here is the USB connector, Mike. It says it will work with UT61?. And I see UT60? is listed. I think they are using that question mark like an asterisks.\r\n\r\nhttps://tinyurl.com/p5vm7nx\r\n\r\nIts cheap enough. Maybe I\'ll throw one in the cart on the next Amazon order and see if I can get the UNIT software working with WINE. \r\n\r\n/me wonders if Ken or Dave is reading all this in a Community News. Lets be verbose. :P','2022-02-14 13:17:25'),
(1267,1846,'2015-09-03 17:21:45','Mike Ray','PL2303 USB-toRS232 and UT6?','I\'m happy to report that my software works with the meter plugged in to a PL2303 USB to serial adaptor. So either the opto-couplers are being powered somehow else or I have the termio set-up right, or there is some other magic about the adaptor. I didn\'t think these things supported the hardware handshaking pins.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1268,1846,'2015-09-07 13:44:10','davidWHITMAN','Damn You!','These good buys that NY Bill keeps bringing up are causing me to spend $.\r\nI bought 2 of the X-61 (and love them) and now this! \r\nActually need the ability to test capacitors. This can save a bundle! Just ask Flying Rich who lost a bundle.\r\ndw','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1269,1847,'2015-09-17 12:38:11','Gabriel Evenfire','I always look forward to your shows...','I always look forward to your shows sigflup, because I know there will be some really unusual technical material in them. This one is no exception.\r\n\r\nI\'ve never heard of emscripten before, but I\'m going to have to look into this. It reminds me of a project a while back to compile C code using gcc to MIPS assembly that would run on a MIPS interpreter in Java. (Someone billed it as a way to compile C programs that would never buffer overflow. Not exactly accurate, but the buffer overflows would never corrupt the interpreter\'s stack.)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1270,1848,'2015-10-01 20:00:12','tom_len','automatize login from command line','Hi, I just discovered this tool, w3m, and I was wondering if it could be possible to access to a page that requires login and password. i need it to be done automatically from commandline (i.e I wouldnt be pressing any keys, it\'s a headless server). Do you know if that\'s possible? I would need to grab some text, but once logged in (the url once in remains the same: https://www.paket.de/pkp/appmanager/pkp/desktop?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=pkp_portal_page_start). Thanks in advance','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1271,1848,'2015-10-27 19:34:17','Frank','','According to the man page, you can automatically log into a proxy. Perhaps you can bend that to your will. See the \"-pauth\" argument in the man page. I\'m skeptical that it will do what you wish, but it\'s worth a shot.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1272,1850,'2015-09-10 07:04:53','0xf10e','portable version of OpenSSH','Actually the portable version of OpenSSH is needed on every platform other than OpenBSD, not just not-unixoid ones ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1273,1850,'2015-09-17 12:21:29','Gabriel Evenfire','This could be a very fruitful series.','ssh is one of those swiss army knives that most people just use for the blade. I\'m looking forward to seeing where this is going. There\'s a lot of potential uses to cover. Klaatu already added an episode talking about ssh_config and there are lots of useful shortcuts one can include from that alone. So, I hope that more people (including you Ahuka) keep this going.\r\n\r\nAs always, thank you for a great show!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1274,1850,'2015-09-20 23:24:47','Kevin O\'Brien','Thank you','I\'m glad you enjoyed this introductory episode. I have recorded and uploaded several more, and I am not done. And Klaatu has also sent in an ssh show, so there is plenty to go around.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1275,1851,'2015-09-07 14:33:23','Mike Ray','Markdown show notes','Listended to Larry, Mo and Curly do the community news last night. I was sitting with my finger hovering over the button as the clock round to 01:: AM so I could download it (I need to get out more).\r\n\r\nMarkdown show notes are a great idea. I think Markdown is the best thing since sliced bread. But, how do you propose to keep the look of show notes consistent? I\'m thinking in particular of heading levels.\r\n\r\nI have to admit to being a bit anal when it comes to consistency. Maybe others are not so much so.\r\n\r\nPS: Pushd, Popd and Dirs sounds like the latest boy band.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1276,1851,'2015-09-08 20:50:50','Dave Morriss','Markdown etc.','If HPR contributors took to the idea of submitting Markdown notes I think that would be a tremendous leap forward.\r\n\r\nI imagine there would still need to be a human intervention step, though a much simplified one and this could include things like a consistency check if it was thought necessary.\r\n\r\nI admire your dedication to the Community News. It was good to have three stooges on the episode this month rather than the usual two.\r\n\r\nPersonally, I\'d visualised Pushd, Popd and Dirs as a sort of (comedy) legal firm ...','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1277,1851,'2015-09-08 21:23:26','NYbill','Electronics videos. ','I heard you say you discovered MJLorton on Youtube, Ken. I\'ve seen most of his videos. Here are two more presenters I follow. I\'ve seen them all. There goes your next 2 months... :P\r\n\r\neevblog \r\nthesignalpath\r\n\r\nEDIT: Well, Akismet won\'t let me post the URL\'s. So, for anyone interested you\'ll just have to run the above two names through your favourite search engine. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1278,1851,'2015-09-09 21:14:04','NYbill','','This is a test as I was having trouble posting links yesterday:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.eevblog.com/\r\n\r\nhttps://thesignalpath.com/blogs/\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:25'),
(1279,1853,'2015-09-11 20:21:15','Aaronb483','great name for podcast','I\'m sure because of the name of your podcast, you probably got a lot of interest.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1280,1856,'2015-09-14 07:14:15','0xf10e','','Nice intro to `~/.ssh/config`, klaatu.\r\n\r\nThe \"protocol 2\" option is the default for quite some time - as in \"more than 10 yrs\". I think the latest version of OpenSSH doesn\'t even compile with support for version 1 by default. At least the sshd.\r\n\r\nShortening hostnames comes really handy in cases like \" web-frontend.fancy-example-corp.co.uk\".\r\nAnd there\'s also patterns matching like \r\n\r\n Host *.fancy-example-corp.co.uk *.fancy-example-corp.com\r\n Username joe-the-admin\r\n identityfile ~/.ssh/work_rsa\r\n \r\n\r\n Host web-frontend1.fancy-example-corp.co.uk \r\n Port 56278\r\n \r\n Host web-frontend1.fancy-example-corp.co.uk \r\n Port 57427\r\n \r\nThis way you can group hosts with common options easily.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1281,1856,'2015-09-15 15:07:16','b-yeezi','Thanks','Thanks for this show. I immediately added a config file for the couple of accounts that I commonly use. The only that I added for security is to change the permissions of the file to 600 or 644. Keep up the great shows!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1282,1856,'2015-09-17 12:31:38','Gabriel Evenfire','Identity file','I\'m curious if, from your example, you are creating separate identity files for each host. I imagine not, but it\'s a possibility I\'d never considered before. I suppose it doesn\'t provide that much more security insofar as if someone can read one of your private keys from .ssh/ they can read all of them. But it does make me think.\r\n\r\nFor my part I have this ruby script to run ssh w/ shorthands to the different identities and accounts in our internal machines. This show is prompting me to do it the right way. (especially insofar as it will work with scp, sftp, and scripts that use them)\r\n\r\nThanks for the show. I\'m enjoying that people are starting break open the tools other than the \"blade\" in this ssh swiss army knife.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1283,1857,'2015-09-17 12:46:22','Gabriel Evenfire','A nice episode even for non-coffee people','I am not a coffee person. I\'ve tried. I can\'t seem to acquire the taste. Definitely prefer teas. But it was nevertheless entertaining to hear the process you go through. I\'ve heard people talk (rave actually) about \"french presses\" before, but never had a clue as to why they were useful. Hearing the process, I can start to imagine why. Thanks for the show!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1284,1857,'2015-09-18 09:07:00','Dave Morriss','I enjoyed this a lot','I liked the relaxed style and the detailed content.\r\n\r\nI have not used my french presses (or cafetières as we prefer to call them) for a while, I prefer to use my moka pot and brew a large strong coffee every morning. After listening to this I had a craving for coffee, so made some with some with Kenya medium ground I had all but abandoned in the freezer. \r\n\r\nIt was great, but that\'s double my normal daily intake. Thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1285,1857,'2015-09-24 18:31:17','Michael','You got my european mind.','Congrats, you got me for a (long) moment. Water at 200 degree - hu? After it finally dawned on me, I consulted an online converter to learn that 200°F means 93.3°C, which made a lot more sense to me... :-)\r\n\r\nOtherwise I second Gabriel above. Thanks for the show!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1286,1858,'2015-09-16 10:34:42','Jon Kulp ','Thank you! ','Another amazing tale of ingenuity! Well done, Bill, I loved this episode. Especially enjoyed the inadvertent detour into CAD and 3d printing. Of course the process of designing and printing 3d model is good for another episode... ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1287,1858,'2015-09-16 17:42:51','Mike Ray','Hacking at it\'s best','Great stuff. Hacking at it\'s best. Heard the names of some old friends too; 2N3904, 2N2222 :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1288,1858,'2015-09-16 21:44:19','NYbill','Thanks, Jon. ','Yea, that detour into 3D design and printing was interesting. A friend from our LUG, Jason, bought a 3D printer about 8 months ago. Asphere was interested in it and asked lots of questions. He then designed a part for one of his model rockets and asked if Jason could print it. \r\n\r\nBefore I knew it, Asphere bought his own 3D printer kit.\r\n\r\nWhile designing my parts I asked Asphere, \"Is this how it all starts? I\'ll want my own 3D printer soon.\" ;)\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1289,1858,'2015-09-16 21:48:21','NYbill','Ha, thanks Mike. ','Yep, those old 2N\'s...\r\n\r\nOne of those, \"If it ain’t broke, don\'t fix it.\" parts. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1290,1858,'2015-09-24 19:03:00','mirwi','Splitting hair...','I agree on \"old friends\" for the 2N3904 and 2N2222. However, I can\'t resist to add that these are, unlike the 2N7000, not MOSFETS but NPN BJTs (bipolar junction transistors). With the point being that BJTs need some amount of control current at the base in contrast to the virtually zero current at the gate of a MOSFET. Judging from the linked pictures, you have compensated for that by using a bigger capacitor to get to the desired turn on time.\r\nIn any case, thanks a lot for sharing this journey.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1291,1858,'2015-09-25 09:59:46','NYbill','Transitors','Thanks Mirwi,\r\n\r\nI started with a MOSFET but it wasn\'t doing what I wanted. So, I experimented with the transistors I had on hand and chose the one that worked best for me. \r\n\r\nHowever, I can\'t remember if I went into detail about the part change between episode 1 and 2. \r\n\r\nThanks for the clarification. You know, an episode on the finer points of transistors might make a fine HPR. ;)\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1292,1858,'2015-09-26 14:20:34','Mike Ray','Transistors','Sadly some of the \'old friend\' through-hole mounting transistors are beginning to disappear or at least be very hard to find. And those that are still there are rising in price, I guess to reflect the smaller numbers in which they are made. It\'s getting almost impossible to find the good old 2N3819 MOSFET I used to use to make oscillators, and even work-horses like the BC107/8/9 transistors are getting ridiculously expensive over here in the UK.\r\n\r\nAnybody remember scraping the paint off of the body of an OCR45 to make a photo-transistor?','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1293,1859,'2015-09-17 13:43:39','Mike Ray','Welcome return','Great episode Gabriel and great to see you back with more bare-metal programming.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to episodes about sound rendering on the GPU','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1294,1859,'2015-10-07 17:36:28','Eric','A better maze','Here is my code for creating a maze in Excel. It is actually fairly easy to make a true maze without any blocked sections. Basically, it grows out the walls from the edges. As long as they don\'t connect with other walls, you\'ll end up with a graph where every space can be visited from every other space.\r\nAskimet doesn\'t seem to like me posting code, so I\'ll just describe the algorithm.\r\n\r\n\r\nCreate a square of x rows and y columns. x and y must be odd numbers.\r\n\r\n\r\nPut a W in each cell of row 1, row x, column 1, and column x.\r\n\r\nFor each cell whose row and column is even, put an S.\r\n\r\nPut an O in all the other cells.\r\n\r\nW = Wall of maze\r\n\r\nS = Space in maze\r\n\r\nO = Open, not processed\r\n\r\nP = Possible next wall. We will determine these soon.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nAll cells whose row and column are even has to be a space. All cells whose row and column are odd will be a wall. I will call those pillars. The rest of the cells have an odd row and even column or even row and odd column. I will call them partitions. The algorithm will repeatedly pick another random partition to put between pillars in the maze.\r\n\r\nInitialized maze.\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\nWSOSOSOSOSW\r\nWOOOOOOOOOW\r\nWSOSOSOSOSW\r\nWOOOOOOOOOW\r\nWSOSOSOSOSW\r\nWOOOOOOOOOW\r\nWSOSOSOSOSW\r\nWOOOOOOOOOW\r\nWSOSOSOSOSW\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\n\r\nPossible finished maze.\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\nWSSSSSSSWSW\r\nWWWWWWWSWSW\r\nWSWSWSSSWSW\r\nWSWSWWWSWSW\r\nWSSSSSSSWSW\r\nWSWWWSWSSSW\r\nWSWSSSWSWSW\r\nWSWSWWWSSSW\r\nWSWSWSSSWSW\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\n\r\nAbove maze without the S spaces for clarity.\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\nW W W\r\nWWWWWWW W W\r\nW W W W W\r\nW W WWW W W\r\nW W W\r\nW WWW W W\r\nW W W W W\r\nW W WWW W\r\nW W W W W\r\nWWWWWWWWWWW\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nNote that the pillar and partition cells will initially be marked as open (O). An open partition is an undetermined cell that will be either a wall (W) or space (S). An open pillar is a pillar that has is not next to a wall.\r\n\r\nWhile there are still open spaces (O), loop.\r\n For each partition cell in the maze\r\n if the partition cell has two walls next to it, mark it as a space (S)\r\n if the partition cell has one wall (W) next to it, mark it as possible (P)\r\n otherwise leave it as Open (O)\r\n end the for loop\r\n Pick a random P and change it to W\r\nEnd the loop.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1295,1859,'2015-10-14 02:18:40','Gabriel Evenfire','Maze generation','That\'s an interesting algorithm. I can intuitively see why it works, but want to think of how I could prove it. One could put a start and endpoint to the maze in that case.\r\n\r\nThe traversal algorithm through a maze generated like that would probably just be a right-hand-rule variant since the walls would be a single connected component. The purely random generation that I mentioned in the podcast does not guarantee that of course meaning the right-hand rule could just lead the mouse in a circle forever.\r\n\r\nTwo ways that immediately spring to mind for ensuring the mouse always makes it to the cheese (barring running out of energy, eaten by cat, etc..) are:\r\n * scan the maze and mark the connected components and ensure that the mouse and the cheese land in the same connected component\r\n * scan the maze, mark the connected components and then take pairs of independent connected components and break walls between them to connect them until the maze is a single connected component.\r\n\r\nYour generation approach produces a much more sane and generally pleasing looking maze. I\'m wondering if there\'s a good way to then take that and \"shake it up a little\" to allow for disconnected wall segments, and such while retaining much of the pleasingness.\r\n\r\nOf course there\'s another possibility: add the notion of \"teleporters\" to the maze. :)\r\n\r\nThanks for the insight and the algorithm. That\'s what I like best about this little exercise: there are so many variations that one can make on it.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1296,1862,'2015-09-28 19:46:35','Ken Fallon','I just enabled a load of these','Hi Geddes,\r\n\r\nI just re-enabled a load of these. I didn\'t bother before as I mostly did re-installs but then I realized that I could keep my config in my home dir so it would move with me. \r\n\r\nExcellent reading and a great idea.\r\n\r\nKen. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1297,1862,'2015-10-16 18:54:42','Geddes','','Thanks Ken.\r\n\r\nGlad to know you found the article useful, and agree that it’s a worthwhile idea. I’ll be looking around for a follow up if I can find one.\r\n\r\nGeddes','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1298,1863,'2015-09-23 16:25:05','Jon Kulp ','Probably still will not switch to KDE, but... ','I really enjoyed both of these episodes about tweaking KDE, although I will probably still not adopt the desktop myself. This also is a pretty good idea to read old magazine articles that are still of current interest as hpr episodes, with some intro up front, as long as it doesn\'t run afoul of any licensing. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1299,1863,'2015-10-16 19:19:01','Geddes','Thanks for the feedback','Hi Jon\r\n\r\nFirst can I say thanks to you and Dave for the encouraging feedback from last month’s community news episode. I’m pleased that you both agreed it was a good idea to read a creative commons article. I’ll take that as approval from the HPR community, I’ll even take requests if anyone finds something of interest that I can convert to an audio show licensing permitting as you rightly point out. Hope it’s not too long before I can post another show whether it’s original content or not.\r\n\r\nThanks\r\nGeddes ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1300,1864,'2015-09-24 10:32:02','Jon Kulp ','Whoa remote scanning! ','Very cool, Dave! I\'ve got an old printer on the network too, but hooked up to my goodwill router via usb. Advantage of using a RasPi instead is the remote scanning. I never even knew that was possible at all, thought you always had to hook up with USB to scan stuff. Then again I never really thought about it that much. Usually I walk over to the University Library to do my scanning b/c they have awesome scanners for public use. Thanks for another great episode. ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1301,1864,'2015-09-27 10:51:01','Dave Morriss','Remote scanning, etc','Thanks Jon,\r\n\r\nI like that routers can run printers like this, but suspect the features are limited. I have plans to experiment with CUPS, perhaps configuring other queues for different sized stationery for example. I also have a very old DEC LN03 monochrome laser printer, circa 1987, which I\'d like to hook up if it still works. It needs a serial connection though, so that should be fun :-)\r\n\r\nThe scanning capability is good to have and has been used more than I would have expected. Quality is not particularly high, but it\'s good enough for most purposes.','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1302,1864,'2015-10-05 18:35:31','turtle','','Nice show.\r\nHere is a Cups ppd for the DEC LN03\r\nhttps://www.openprinting.org/printer/DEC/DEC-LN03\r\nHere is the manual for it https://vt100.net/docs/0ln03-ug/ \r\nAll you need is a usb to serial adapter. Looking forward to hearing about getting it running and putting that on the pi with the other printer.\r\nCheers\r\nTurtle\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:26'),
(1303,1864,'2015-10-06 15:03:47','Dave Morriss','DEC-LN03','Thanks Turtle,\r\n\r\nI had not got as far as checking drivers and manuals. Very useful.\r\n\r\nFrom my initial researches I wasn\'t sure whether a serial adapter could drive the printer. I don\'t know if it needs flow-control for example. However, I shall continue to investigate.\r\n\r\nI also have a 132-column matrix printer somewhere in the attic, but I think it has a Centronics parallel connector, so I suspect that could be challenge to get working! ','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1304,1864,'2015-10-07 14:38:43','Bob Evans','connecting to legacy printers','Hi Dave,\r\n Thanks for the timely episode. I am considering using a pi to serve my HP LJ-2200 printer to my home network.\r\n\r\nThe DEC LN03 uses RS-232/RS-422 for the serial connection. You should be able to use a USB-to-serial converter. I used an LN03 with PC clones and was able to run the serial link as fast as 19200 baud. User manual will indicate how to set serial parameters via dip switches near the data connector.\r\n\r\nI suggest verifying the print engine still works by printing a few test pages before trying to connect to a computer. I think there is a small square white button on the back that initiates printing of a test page.\r\n\r\nIt is probably difficult now to get toner or replacement parts like feed rollers for the LN03. When a nylon gear inside my LN03 fractured, I finally ditched that printer -- after about 20 years of use in a home office.\r\n\r\nBe aware that there are a few different LN03 models. Mine was a rare \"image\" printer that would only accept postscript. The model will determine what driver and settings you need to use.\r\n\r\nThe LN03 always keeps the fuser unit hot. This is a big power consumer and harsh to the mechanics that transport paper and the photo-sensitive band.\r\n\r\nThere used to be USB to parallel converters available for purchase. If you can find one of those you might be able to easily connect to the matrix printer.\r\n\r\n- Bob Evans','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1305,1864,'2015-10-07 19:16:01','Dave Morriss','Re: connecting to legacy printers','Thanks for the information Bob.\r\n\r\nI haven\'t checked the LN03 works yet, and it might not since it\'s so old. I\'m pleased to hear there\'s a good chance of running it from the Pi if it does though.\r\n\r\nThe university I worked at bought a pair of LN03\'s with a VAXcluster in 1987, and I had the job of setting them up back then under VMS. I\'m pretty sure neither of them were \"image\" printers. We later bought an LPS17 I think, and a LPS32, much faster higher volume printers with duplexers. I didn\'t offer to take them home when they were phased out though :-)\r\n\r\nI might have some supplies with the printer, but not much of anything, so it might be a short-lived experiment even if it does still print.\r\n\r\nI need to check out the matrix printer as well, though I don\'t really have a use for it any more, and only one box of line-printer paper!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),
(1306,1866,'2015-09-28 21:57:05','Frank','','Absolutely delightful!','2017-09-09 07:41:27'),