forked from HPR/hpr_hub
1001 lines
417 KiB
SQL
1001 lines
417 KiB
SQL
(1307,1866,'2015-10-05 16:53:29','combiner','','Yeah, It\'s not awkward. It\'s just as natural as a podcast can be and a real bliss. Please keep it up. Someone in the Urals is waiting for more stuff like this.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1308,1867,'2015-10-07 08:21:48','amunizp','3D print','Great program thanks.\r\nLutzbot is open hardware the otherone I think not.\r\nStl files as far as I know are not editable (binaries) problem of open washing in websites. Original CAD not available. Use freeCAD to do more.\r\nMagnet: use a tight tolerance to go in but use a larger chamber inside.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1309,1870,'2015-10-06 18:45:32','kdmurray','SSH Passwords','Just a quick clarification on a point made just after the 14m mark with regards to remote login to the SSH server from the Internet. Ahuka makes the comment that \"you\'re transmitting the password in the clear.\"\r\n\r\nAccording to the SSH man page all communications between the client and server, including password verification, are done using public key encryption.\r\n\r\n\"Finally, if other authentication methods fail, ssh prompts the user for a password. The password is sent to the remote host for checking; however, since all communications are encrypted, the password cannot be seen by someone listening on the network.\"\r\n\r\nWhen using an open and (possibly hostile network) something to keep in mind is to watch for the warning that the server\'s certificate fingerprint has changed. If this comes up for a server you use regularly be very, very suspicious.\r\n\r\nLove hearing about the security stuff. Keep it going! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1310,1870,'2015-12-10 08:19:51','0xf10e','yepp, no cleartext','1st thing is DH key exchange, basically \"no that we speak privately and securely let me tell you who I [the server] am\". Think about it. Any other way would leave the client open to a MitM spoofing the server\'s keys.\r\n\r\nBut, of course, when you ignore the changed fingerprint on the server you won\'t know who is receiving your credentials.\r\nWith pubkey auth you don\'t have to worry about losing anything usable to impersonate you. Also makes brute force login attempts infeasible due to the vast number of possible keys.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1311,1874,'2015-09-28 04:18:26','droops','Thanks','Thank you again Ken for keeping all of this together and thank you to everyone who has recorded and episode and truly been a part of the HPR community. It would not exist without you. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1312,1874,'2015-10-08 15:15:39','J.','','Wow, as a public school survivor, hearing all about your class makes me a little envious to be honest.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1313,1874,'2015-10-13 13:19:37','Dave Morriss','I loved this interview','I really enjoyed this. Congratulations and thanks Ken. \r\n\r\nIt was great to understand more about the history of HPR, and to get further insight into who the founders were, and what their motivation was.\r\n\r\nAnd droops - you sound like a hell of a teacher :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1314,1878,'2015-12-29 04:40:53','Erik','Commands','Would you be able to detail the commands you use for the luks encrypted ISO?','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1315,1880,'2015-10-16 13:39:53','Mike Ray','Great show','Great show Klaatu. Really enjoy anything about Arduino and general fiddling about with electronics.\r\n\r\nCurrently mucking about with RF transmitter and receiver modules and have considered using XBee. So this show was of interest.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1316,1881,'2015-10-19 20:24:03','Fin','Music fail','Why did the default theme play at the end, when clacke\'s a capella version was so good!\r\n\r\nInteresting journey BTW. The audio wasn\'t that bad.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1317,1881,'2015-10-23 16:00:35','Dave Morriss','Great episode','This was a very interesting show. I knew very little of what you spoke about, never having had an Amiga, nor having used dial-up with Linux. Thanks for the insight.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1318,1881,'2015-10-26 11:35:10','clacke','Thanks','Cool! Glad I added something new. I was worried that yet another Linux backstory might be redundant, but I guess everyone comes from their own direction.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1319,1884,'2015-10-27 19:07:10','Frank','','Thank you, Dave. A very nice piece of work.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been trying to understand regular expressions (I guess because I like puzzles). In addition to giving me a better understanding of bash, the examples you gave show similarity with some regular expression syntax, which in turn gives some context to regular expression syntax, so that it does not seem to be quite so foreign a language.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1320,1884,'2015-10-27 19:49:37','Dave Morriss','Thanks Frank, glad you enjoyed it','The regular expression subject is a complex one. I\'ve been wondering whether I should try and pass on what I know about it. \r\n\r\nStrictly this brace expansion topic is in the area of using patterns to match filenames. Confusingly this is similar but not the same as regular expressions. In later episodes in this (not-)series I want to talk more about filename matching then look at regular expressions in the context of Bash.\r\n\r\nReally, the regular expression subject could (should?) be stand-alone and should look at what\'s available in Bash, grep, sed, awk, etc. I use Perl regular expresions the most but I hesitate to go too deep there because they are mind-blowing :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1321,1884,'2015-10-28 22:01:14','Frank','','Indeed regular expressions are complex. They make my brain hurt.\r\n\r\nSeeing some kinship with shell commands--some indication that whoever perpetrated regex did not just make it up from the whole cloth--is somehow comforting.\r\n\r\nI recently stumbled over a great *beginner\'s* tutorial.\r\nhttps://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/using-grep-regular-expressions-to-search-for-text-patterns-in-linux#basic-usage\r\n\r\nWhat makes it so good is that it uses the GPL text found on every Linux computer for the exercises, so you can practice the examples and try different options as you read along.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1322,1884,'2015-10-29 11:44:38','Dave Morriss','Regular expressions','I skimmed through that tutorial, and it looks very good. Thanks for the pointer.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1323,1887,'2015-11-08 21:50:51','Bob Jonkman','Aerating boiling water','Hi JustMe: You mention that boiling the water will aerate it. Actually, just the opposite is true: Heating the water drives out the dissolved air, since gases are more soluble in cold liquid than hot liquid. Think of a carbonated soda, which is bubbly when it comes out of the fridge, but goes flat as it warms up.\r\n\r\nThe bubbles you see in water at a roiling boil is actually water vapour, the water itself turned to gas. If this gas cools it just becomes liquid water again. When you let boiled water cool down to drinking temperature it has a peculiar flat taste, which I think is because it has less dissolved air than fresh water from a mountain stream. If you vigorously stir previously boiled water with a whisk it\'ll re-aerate it, and remove some of that peculiar flat taste.\r\n\r\nThanx for the episode!\r\n\r\n--Bob, who needs to record his own HPR episode','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1324,1889,'2015-10-30 05:48:08','GNULinuxRTM','Execellent Episode.','Just listened while walking the Dog, on a cloudy, spooky night days before Halloween.\r\n\r\nLoved the delivery and working in all the HPR references.\r\n\r\nNow I gotta learn more about the meegopad T-02.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1325,1889,'2015-10-30 10:38:34','Jon Kulp ','Tremendous! ','Loved it! The HPR answer to Guy Noir, Private Eye. Looking forward to the follow-up. Nice work! ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1326,1889,'2015-10-30 12:35:52','Fin','Fantastic!','Fantastic production quality! More of the same please!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1327,1889,'2015-10-31 08:01:32','A Shadowy Figure','Like your work as well GNULinuxRTM',' Gotta admit, I\'ve never seen RTM without the other letter following the \"T\". \r\nThe Meegopad T-02 doesn\'t quit fulfill it\'s promises, but can be useful for limited purposes.\r\nI\'d wait to hear my follow up episode, before thinking seriously about owning one.\r\n\r\n Btw, I enjoy your delightfully cheesy transitions on your show.\r\nGood job over all. \r\n\r\n\r\n May stochasticity fall in your favor,\r\n\r\nA Shadowy Figure','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1328,1889,'2015-11-02 23:37:03','A Shadowy Figure','Wow, Just Wow..',' I\'m humbled to be mentioned in the same breath as the mighty Guy Noir Private Eye, especially coming from one of HPR\'s heavy hitters. Thank you John.\r\nI was apprehensive about posting this episode being as the idea of background music wasnt well received, and I didn\'t want to ruffle any feathers among the listenership, or those I poked fun at.\r\nI just wanted to share something entertaining, and have fun doing it.\r\nPre-production on the follow-up episode has already begun. :-)\r\nExpect more of the same.\r\nIt ought to be fun.\r\nAnd thanks for all of your support.\r\nNow wear did I put my trench coat? (can\'t write noir without a fedora and trench coat, ya know.)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1329,1889,'2015-11-03 20:31:54','Anon','Ocean Club...','My name is Norman -- Lou Norman\r\nI\'ve been in this business for 15 years\r\nIf people have a problem and don\'t want to talk to the police\r\nThey want to talk to me....\r\n\r\nKeep up the good work. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1330,1889,'2015-11-04 15:37:55','CPrompt^','Fantastic!','Loved loved loved this show! Very well put together. Certainly raised the bar on the level of shows.\r\n\r\nGreat job and please do more!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1331,1889,'2015-11-04 22:10:08','Frank','','As a both a mystery buff and a fan of OTR mystery shows, I found this absolutely delightful.\r\n\r\nIt was a cross between Barry Craig and Sam Spade.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1332,1889,'2015-11-05 02:38:33','David Whitman','Nice','Enjoyed this show. Thanks for the mention! ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1333,1889,'2015-11-05 03:30:41','Dennis Blanchard','Good job on mysterious technology.','Competition for A Prairie Home Companion - Guy Noir: Private Eye? Well done Mr. X. Whoda thunk that technology could be a mystery? I\'d write more but my Heathkit tubes have finally warmed up and I have a ham radio sked to meet.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1334,1889,'2015-11-05 23:05:43','(Mad Dog?) Dave Morriss','Brilliant!','You really had me laughing at the dramatisation. Very cleverly done. \r\n\r\nAnd there\'s a glossary of terms! Beautiful :-) ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1335,1889,'2015-11-08 22:42:33','REL','Mr','I think I just burst a valve...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1336,1889,'2015-11-09 09:35:41','A Shadowy Figure','Production has began on Pt.2','I really didn\'t take into consideration that this little project of mine would be so well received, so I was completely caught off guard when it came to creating Pt.2\r\nI was expecting to just do a straight run through on getting the T-02 up and running without even thinking about gathering more sound effects ect., then crafting something that resembles a coherent script.\r\nSo the follow up will take me about a weak or so to put together, then maybe another couple of days to tweak and edit. \r\nThe end result should be pretty cool. \r\nBut, I can see already the \"story\" is beginning to take precedence over the technical details of the Meegopad T-02, so it\'s likely there will be a Pt.3. (which will specifically address those details)\r\nIt ought to be worth it though.\r\n\r\nOh and as a heads up, every decent story requires a nemesis and/or villain or at least some sort of adversary as well as allies, so please don\'t take it personal if your nick get\'s cast as one of the \"bad guy\'s\".\r\nMore than likely, the cooler you are, the more despicable your character will be for absurditys sake.\r\nIt\'s all in fun, and no disrespect is intended.\r\n\r\n But generally speaking, the more shows you record, the more likely you are to find your nick in a smoky pool hall or horse racing track in a future episode or series I post.\r\n\r\n but I really want to hear, is what you\'ve got to share.\r\n\r\n Thank you all for your support, it is quite encouraging.\r\n\r\n You\'ll hear from me soon.\r\n\r\n A Shadowy Figure','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1337,1890,'2015-10-30 13:27:58','Jon Kulp ','Up with the $2 lapel mic! ','Sound quality was terrific, Dave. so glad you recorded this show and also really glad that my recommendation of the $2 microphone was so useful to you. My son and I listened to this episode while I was driving him to school and we were both totally cracking up at your son. Very funny stuff!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1338,1890,'2015-10-31 18:45:21','Mike Ray','Audio Quality','I can\'t agree with your comments about audio quality.\r\n\r\nThe \'anything is better than nothing\' mantra is quite correct IMHO.\r\n\r\nA requirement to strive for BBC quality is likely to discourage people. Even more so a suggestion to use some kind of online audio-enhancing service.\r\n\r\nIf you can\'t hear a podcast because you\'re driving a noisy car I suggest you listen to it when you aren\'t.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1339,1890,'2015-11-03 11:52:57','Jon Kulp','Better is better','Sorry but I agree with Dave on this one. Audio quality shouldn\'t be a barrier to submission, but everyone should aspire to make recordings that are 1) clearly audible at normal playback volume and 2) are not distorted or clipping. These criteria do not exactly constitute BBC-level standards. I don\'t care that much in the end. If the audio quality doesn\'t meet my 2 (very basic) criteria, I just delete that episode and wait til the next day for another one. \r\n\r\nIncidentally Auphonic is an excellent tool that can help with this and requires no technical expertise. I\'m not advocating it necessarily, but it\'s one very easy way to improve audio. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1340,1892,'2015-11-03 12:11:24','Jon Kulp ','Some Fowl Commentary','Genius as always! Loved the comments from your fowl wards...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1341,1892,'2015-11-03 15:47:15','Mike Ray','Kernel Sanders','Great episode.\r\n\r\nBut what happens if not all chickens are inside when the door shuts? Or, worse, the door shuts while a chook is standing on the threshold?\r\n\r\nMaybe a keypad on the outside of the door which they could peck for entry?','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1342,1892,'2015-11-05 18:15:34','jezra','','If it is dark outside, yet light inside of the coop, all of the birdies will be in the coop. \r\n\r\nAny bird that isn\'t in the coop when the door closes will be outside for the night and may end up being a meal for a raccoon, skunk, fox, coyote, or other predator. \r\n\r\nIf a bird is standing in the doorway when the door slides closed, there will be a \"door close error\" and I will receive a text message as well as an email. The 12V car antenna isn\'t powerful enough to crush whatever is in the doorway. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1343,1894,'2015-11-15 22:02:56','Steve Bickle','Exellent episode','This is one of my favourite HPR episodes. An amazing project, fantastic interview, fascinating content. Just want to say thanks to Ken and to both the interviewees. I listen to around 50 podcast and this was my podcast highlight of the week.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1344,1894,'2015-11-16 09:18:34','Dave Morriss','Great interview, great project','This was a fascinating episode. Thanks.\r\n\r\nI wasn\'t aware that mosquitoes were particularly prevalent in the Netherlands. I sympathise with the allergy issue; I am also allergic to bites but thankfully not to UK species (yet), and I don\'t think there are many in Scotland (yet). I was also unaware that there are mosquito species in the UK which are potential disease vectors - just waiting for the diseases to arrive?\r\n\r\nThere\'s an urgent need for new action against mosquito-borne diseases. I was listening to a podcast about the worrying growth of mosquito resistance to bed nets treated with pyrethroid insecticides just the other day. The technology discussed here which allows particular mosquito species to be recognised by their sound is very impressive. I hope it provides the information needed to understand the problem and to improve control.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1345,1894,'2015-12-10 23:49:21','Clinton Roy','','Great episode. Humbug is the name of my local unix group as well. ;) We have mozzies here in Brisbane by the truck load, ross river fever is probably the best known issue they give. Chickungunya just north in Indoensia is awful, you basically feel like you\'ve got arthritis in all your joints for a few months.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1346,1896,'2015-11-26 03:04:08','Eric Duhamel','Other ideas','anakep had another suggestion. \"I designed ~/.files.d to organize all my software and files.\r\nall my daemon-sotware, personnal code, backups, auto-backups.\"','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1347,1896,'2016-02-01 16:11:13','Boclodoa','','I have a directory for this purpose too, the name has changed several times, currently is \"code_from_beyond\", beyond my repo. It is too long, maybe it will change to codefb or something like that.\r\n\r\nI totally agree with the need of some directories which are not touched by the system, but only by the user.\r\n\r\nI don\'t like .files.d very much because it feels too generic for me.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1348,1897,'2015-11-11 02:22:24','Guy Watkins','Update the firmware','Sometimes a firmware update will add features to a motherboard. Like newer CPU support and more RAM support. So, see if a firmware update will allow you to go to 32GB.\r\n\r\nGuy','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1349,1897,'2015-11-11 06:21:16','m l hunt','Enjoyed your show.','I enjoyed your piece on an informational basis. And it\'s nice to hear someone from my neck of the woods, more or less (grew up in the Richmond area). Hope to hear from your again.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1350,1898,'2015-11-11 01:48:44','A Shadowy Figure','By-Tor and the Snow Dog Approve','Thanks Alpha32,\r\n\r\n I never bothered to put any music on my Macbook Pro, but I\'ve got a ton of archived podcasts on there I could transfer over to my external storage.\r\nThanks for the tip.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1351,1898,'2015-12-20 14:04:17','Frank','','Out of curiosity (I have never used a Mac): why do you need root to copy your own files?\r\n\r\nPS: to copy a file with space in the name, either escape the space with a preceeding backslash or enclose it in quotes.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1352,1902,'2015-11-23 12:12:09','Dave Morriss','Nice list','Hi Fin,\r\n\r\nThanks for this list. There were some good items in there that I\'d never come across before.\r\n\r\nHaving been wrangling Unicode recently I like what gucharmap offers.\r\n\r\nI use Okular for PDF viewing, but evince\'s annotation features are interesting. It\'s apparently available as \"Document Viewer\" under Xfce (which I currently use).\r\n\r\nPlenty of things to explore!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1353,1902,'2015-11-28 12:13:00','zloster','Nice list','I also would like to thanks for this list. I also use a lot of these programs.\r\nSome addition to the list could be: transmission-remote-gtk (www.webupd8.org/2011/12/transmission-remote-gtk.html) - if you want to manage the transmission-daemon running on remote machine and you don\'t like the build-in web-interface.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1354,1903,'2015-11-19 06:56:24','Ken Fallon','Another gem','Never knew this was possible.\r\n\r\nexcellent+=hpr1903\r\n\r\nSee what i did there','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1355,1903,'2015-11-23 11:28:23','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ken','Glad you got something out of this. Bash is surprisingly rich in features considering it\'s a command-line interpreter.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1356,1904,'2015-11-20 04:49:12','b-yeezi','Thanks','Great show. Thanks for the valuable information. I\'m not a system admin, but I am a full time Linux user that sometimes has to use a Windows PC for work. It\'s great to get some Windows command line basics from a trusted source, as searching for such commands online can lead to seedy websites. Keep up the great content!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1357,1904,'2015-11-25 17:10:08','Frank','','I add my thanks. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1358,1906,'2015-11-28 20:11:31','Dave Morriss','Some interesting packages','I was intrigued by Phatch and installed it to try out.\r\n\r\nIt\'s intriguing though a bit counter-intuitive (for me anyway) since it seems to start by assembling a tool chain, which I didn\'t expect.\r\n\r\nI then had difficulty working out how to apply the chain to some images. I shall persevere!\r\n\r\nI also tried xstarfish and like what it produces.\r\n\r\nThanks for pointing these out.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1359,1906,'2015-12-01 22:26:52','Windigo','Re: Phatch','It\'s definitely not a terribly intuitive interface. I think it applies all of the actions you add (in order) to each of the images, but you have to be *very* explicit when assembling your chain.\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'ll do a more in-depth show on how phatch works. Hmm...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1360,1906,'2015-12-02 09:54:42','Dave Morriss','Re: Phatch','Phatch seems to have a lot of potential. I can see a use for it myself; I like to assemble several pictures for HPR episodes, and I want to do things like strip metadata, shrink the size and make thumbnails. I can see that this might be possible but knowing how is the barrier. I looked at the documentation but it seems to be very short of actual instructions!\r\n\r\nSo, I know iPhatch is all about \"Do Stuff To Stuff\". I\'ve understood the \"Do Stuff\" phase a little, but find the \"To Stuff\" part cryptic.\r\n\r\nIf you\'ve mastered it yourself a show about your experiences would be great!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1361,1907,'2015-11-25 20:11:06','Jonathan Kulp ','Excellent ','Loved this interview and the project. Wish it had been a bit longer. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1362,1907,'2015-12-23 11:42:09','Charles in NJ ','Penn Manor','What Charlie & the amazing students of the Penn Manor school district have managed to create is truly inspiring. \r\n\r\nYou should drop everything for 5-1/2 minutes to catch Charlie\'s TEDx Talk on YouTube:\r\n\r\nhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=f8Co37GO2Fc\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1363,1908,'2015-11-28 22:01:21','Dave Morriss','Loved this!','A very cool project.\r\n\r\nI\'m in envy of your students.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1364,1909,'2015-11-26 09:49:54','Mike Ray','Calibre cli','Good show John.\r\n\r\nAmusing to hear one or two questioners at the end really struggling with the concept of doing \'something for nothing\'. Thought she might call you a communist :-)\r\n\r\nHow about a show talking about how you use Calibre\'s command-line to create your books? I\'m curious about how to create ePub books from either plain text, markdown or HTML','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1365,1909,'2015-11-26 12:57:03','Jonathan Kulp ','Valuing Musicians','Haha true she wasn\'t crazy about the \"free\" aspect, but to be fair, musicians face an ongoing struggle against people undervaluing their skills, whether it be someone balking at the \"outrageous\" price for private lessons or the \"scandalous\" fee to play at a wedding. People think music is all fun and games, but for professionals it\'s hard work, a highly specialized skill developed over many years. I think her questions were coming from the perspective of someone fighting to make sure musicians\' skills are properly valued. I get this.\r\n\r\nI\'ll definitely do a show about calibre conversions, both with the GUI and the CLI. Thanks for the comments!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1366,1909,'2015-11-27 02:02:14','b-yeezi','Great show','Thanks for sharing this presentation. I enjoyed the entire thing and will use some of your ideas in my own projects. I especially enjoyed your explanations of creative commons and free software in a way that was clear and accurate, but not too preachy. These concepts are so foreign to some people that is entertaining to hear their reactions when they are exposed to free culture. \r\n\r\nThanks again and I am looking forward to your next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1367,1909,'2015-12-01 18:12:59','Frank','','Though it\'s been a long time since I have to buy one, I fully share your sentiments about the college textbook industry. The publishers block the paths of learning, raise their flintlocks at students, and cry \"Stand and deliver.\"','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1368,1910,'2015-11-28 04:24:34','Matt','I didn\'t know this project existed.','Great episode! I\'m a long time Winamp fan too. I also like Qt based applications that are cross-platform. Thanks!\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1369,1910,'2015-11-28 17:54:36','Frank','Thanks','Glad you enjoyed it.\r\n\r\nThere\'s one thing I forgot, even though it was in my notes. Qmmp can be a little strange about playing URLs that have funky characters, such as parentheses, in them. Some of the old-time radio sites, most of which are hobbyist sites, have some very unusual URLs for the individual OTR episodes, mostly because the maintainers try to squeeze too much information into them. \r\n\r\nI sometimes end up falling back to XMMS, which still comes bundled in Slackware, praise Bob! for those.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1370,1910,'2015-11-29 19:28:53','Audiobooks lover','','I discovered this site randomly.. dont know where I can clicking and kept clicking... lols, but I am glad I did\r\n\r\nThank you for the great review. Obviously had heard of Winamp, but never Qmmp!! Trying it out right now\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1371,1910,'2015-12-02 12:49:43','Dave Morriss','Nostalgia','I used Winamp back when I couldn\'t avoid using Windows at work, and XMMP was my player of choice on Linux for a number of years. I tried Qmmp and it reminded me very much of those days. I\'m not sure I\'m going to use it, given that I\'m quite happy wtih Clementine, but it was nice to feel a bit of nostalgia. Thanks','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1372,1910,'2015-12-03 05:04:48','Frank','','\"it was nice to feel a bit of nostalgia\"\r\n\r\nMake me feel old, will you?:)\r\n\r\nWell, I am old, but I will never be a \"senior.\" I will be a cranky old man. You young whippersnappers and your new-fangled media players . . . .','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1373,1914,'2015-12-04 20:32:42','Windigo','One-upped','Nothing puts your crappy bash alarm clock into perspective like dynamic lighting and aesthetic music.\r\n\r\nDoes a roomba carry you a cup of coffee in the morning?','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1374,1916,'2015-12-21 17:46:37','Charles in NJ ','Experts Exchange','Gotta love a site that lets you add content for free, and then charges you to reference it later.\r\n\r\nBy the way, it is amusing to see what you get when you remove the hyphen in the URL:\r\n\r\nExpert Sex Change\r\n\r\nCan\'t make this stuff up.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1375,1917,'2015-12-09 02:56:00','Jon Kulp ','A possible outlet','Thanks for this great interview, now I\'m thinking about possible article topics...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1376,1918,'2015-12-25 12:19:14','Frank','','I use a play queue in cmus. Once that queue (around 20-25 minutes) is done, cmus goes back to random library playback.\r\n\r\nHere\'s the catch: what if the random piece after the classical music is also classical? In such a case you would not notice that it is time to get up, which is a problem I regularly encounter. I can\'t (and not really want) to have two different collection just to keep the two apart.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1377,1919,'2016-02-17 15:19:00','Otto Localhorst','a template for a \'loid\'','I would like to look at the template in search of something useful to print with a 3D printer, but I am not able to find the link (or the shownotes for the episode?). Could you please help me?','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1378,1924,'2015-12-17 01:39:58','Kevin O\'Brien','Great show!','I am really happy that my friend Fifty One-Fifty has continued the conversation on this topic. It is just what I love to see on HPR. It is like listening in on the conversation we might have had together at a conference.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1379,1928,'2015-12-25 03:19:13','A Shadowy Figure','Nice mix Cov','Thanks for sharing, I found the line up of different genre\'s refreshing.\r\n\r\n Looking forward to your next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1380,1928,'2015-12-31 13:43:07','tcuc','nice, i cant å wait for more.','I have heard a few episodes showcasing good creative Commons music. And I like having an easy way to listen to curated CC music😉 keep\'em coming😊','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1381,1928,'2015-12-31 14:29:38','David L. Willson','Yes','I ran to my desk at work to thank you for bringing me Billy Korg\'s problem.\r\n\r\nThank you for the excellent jams, Cov.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1382,1929,'2015-12-25 00:00:30','A Shadowy Figure','Thank you for this timely episode','Heya Dr. Kulp,\r\n\r\nI just wanted to take a minute out to say, These are the sort of episodes I \"tune\" in for.\r\nFor one, there informative. And secondly, their entertaining.\r\n\r\nBut as for the Flashlight, Would you take a chainsaw resistant desk for it?\r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1383,1930,'2015-12-29 23:01:07','Frank','','Nicely done. I do appreciate the big picture overview; it provides a context and frame of reference that many stories I\'ve read about SystemD do not.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1384,1931,'2015-12-28 01:34:29','Mysterio2','Great show.','Interesting and informative. Keep em coming!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1385,1931,'2015-12-28 23:19:14','A Shadowy Figure','Good job','Good job of keeping us interested with with a nice flow of interesting information.\r\n\r\n Looking forward to more.\r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1386,1932,'2015-12-31 06:10:00','A Shadowy Figure','Good interview','Heya Klaatu,\r\n\r\n Good job of asking questions that get to the point, and following up.\r\n\r\n Looking forward to more as always,\r\n\r\n You\'ve got good \"radio\" skills.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1387,1933,'2015-12-10 20:38:49','lostnbronx','Wow, Thanks So Much!','Fun, irreverent, and sprawling -- you guys are the best! Featuring \"Street Candles\" for this installment of the Book Club was very much appreciated!\r\n\r\nMy Favorite Quote:\r\n\r\n\"I listened to the wrong d@mn audiobook, and I\'m completely talking out of my @$$!\"\r\n-Pegwole\r\n\r\nThank you to everyone on the show, and to the HPR Community as a whole!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1388,1933,'2016-01-06 02:30:21','David L. Willson','dangit!','I *was* just about caught up with HPR, but now I\'m several episodes behind while I enjoy the pocket universe lostnbronx has created. This is great stuph.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1389,1934,'2015-12-16 03:08:38','A Shadowy Figure','Updated Show Notes','\r\n Special thanks to the following individuals from freesound.org for their sound effects used throughout this episode.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nRutgermuller \r\n\r\njaredi\r\n\r\nhybrid34\r\n\r\nlintphishx\r\n\r\ntimbre\r\n\r\ncameronmusic\r\n\r\ncr4sht3st\r\n\r\nhusky70\r\n\r\nmojomills\r\n\r\nultradust\r\n\r\nconleec\r\n\r\ningolyrio\r\n\r\ndapperdanial\r\n\r\nrobinhood76\r\n\r\nunfa\r\n\r\nkwahma-02\r\n\r\nstephsinger22\r\n\r\nlonemonk\r\n\r\nreg7783\r\n\r\nHigher quality stereo copies of this episode in .Flac, Ogg, and MP3 format can be found at the following link.\r\nhttps://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B6BAm4vn8c7QWnZLbnFib0JPc2M&usp=sharing\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nGlossary of slang terms used in this episode:\r\n\r\n\r\n “Came unglued” = going berzerk\r\n\r\n“Sang a little song” = provided information to law enforcement\r\n\r\n“Still” = whiskey making apparatus \r\n\r\n “Scoring Barbies” = Picking up women\r\n\r\n“G-Men” = Government employees. (Federal agents)\r\n\r\n“Makerspace” = 3-D Printing facility\r\n\r\n“Johnny Law” = Law Enforcement\r\n\r\n“C-Note” = $100.00 bill\r\n\r\n“Speakeasy” = illegal drinking establishment in prohibition era United States\r\n\r\n“68 Chevelle” = 1968 Chevrolet 2-door automobile\r\n\r\n“Ratting me out” = informing on someone\r\n\r\n“Frank Nitty” = 30\'s era Gangster, Al Capon\'s right hand man (Enforcer)\r\n\r\n\r\n Disclaimer:\r\n\r\nAll characters are fictitious renditions of HPR contributers.\r\nNothing about any individuals character is based on anything other than my personal convenience of using their likenesses in fictitious storytelling.\r\nNo disrespect is intended in any way.\r\n\r\n The genre that the character A Shadowy Figure lives in is hard boiled Noir.\r\nNoir reflects a past history that had different standards than we do now.\r\nI do not personally hold those antiquated world views. Nor do I promote them through this work of fiction. I would like to think this artistic creation does provide an opportunity to see how far we\'ve come as a society.\r\n\r\n But most of all, I\'d like to think that you the listener, are entertained and/or inspired by this presentation.\r\n\r\n Thank you all for your support.\r\n\r\n\r\n A Shadowy Figure','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1390,1934,'2016-01-01 04:54:47','Frank','','It was a rainy day. \r\n\r\nGloomy. Sad and empty. There was rain and not much else.\r\n\r\nBut I had errands to run. Gloom or not, errands must be run. \r\n\r\nI found myself driving up the street in my little pick-up truck, recycling waiting to be recycled in the bed, listening to some fellow who called himself \"A Shadowy Figure.\" \r\n\r\nHe was saying stuff. \r\n\r\nI wanted a drink, but I had left the Scotch at home. Any Scotch is better than every anything else, but, if you have no Scotch, you have to make do.\r\n\r\nI was beginning to wonder to myself, has this Shadowy Figure fellow taken his shtick one step too far. \r\n\r\nThen he said something.\r\n\r\nAnd I found myself laughing out loud all by myself in my little pick-up truck.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1391,1934,'2016-01-02 01:39:34','Jon Kulp ','$2 mic','Loved it! Awesome to hear the LPL Maker Space and the $2 microphone getting some love. Looking forward to the next installment.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1392,1934,'2016-01-03 20:07:08','Dennis','Love the subtle humor...','The \"prom dress\" and \"Groomin\' poodles,\" comments killed. Thank goodness, I already use a \"chainsaw resistant desk.\" In fact, mine is chainsaw proof!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1393,1934,'2016-01-03 21:52:16','Elizabeth Chandler','','Entertaining ... looking forward to Shadowy Figure\'s next installment!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1394,1934,'2016-01-04 01:32:36','Jane V. Blanchard','','I really enjoyed this episode and can\'t wait for the next. Well done!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1395,1934,'2016-01-04 17:14:08','A Shadowy Figure','Suitable for framing ',' Frank,\r\n\r\n I\'m going to print your response, put it in a frame, and hang it in my studio, to encourage me to aspire to write at least half as good as you. \r\nEvery word was perfectly placed, and brought with it, it\'s own ambiance.\r\n\r\n My standards have been raised, and I look forward to producing more of the same in the weeks to come.\r\n\r\n Also, Thank you Proff. Kulp, Dennis, Elizabeth, Jane, and The mysterious Dutch overlord behind the scenes, for your kind thoughts and words of encouragement.\r\n\r\n I look forward to living up to your expectations for the following episode.\r\n\r\n Sincerely,\r\n\r\n A Shadowy Figure\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1396,1934,'2016-01-08 15:59:22','Frank','','[blush] I listen to a lot of OTR.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1397,1934,'2016-03-10 14:18:34','Stilvoid','','I just got around to listening to part two of this having somehow missed part one. I loved it and immediately went back to listen to the first part.\r\n\r\nA refreshing break from the usual style of HPR episodes. Can\'t wait for part 3 :D','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1398,1936,'2016-01-07 04:34:05','Frank','','I want to second what Jon Kulp said. I think a episode or two about how to get the most out of IRC would be must useful. \r\n\r\nI have dropped in on various IRC channels from time to time, but, so far at least, I am not an IRC kind of guy. When it comes to IRC, at least, I\'m still just a whippersnapper.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1399,1936,'2016-01-07 18:25:27','Kevin O\'Brien','Farts','I have a near-uncontrollable urge to record three hours of farts and submit it.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1400,1936,'2016-01-08 05:24:01','Frank','','Kevin, if Zebra Pizza is still in business in Washington, D. C., they can help you accomplish your goal.\r\n\r\nLet us hope they are not.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1401,1936,'2016-01-08 06:58:59','Ken Fallon','Please do so','This would be acceptable as it would \"be of interest to hackers\". I have yet to meet a human under the age of 10 that is not completely absorbed by the topic. As we have many young hackers that are young and many more that are young at heart this would be an ideal addition to our corpus.\r\n\r\nAside from the sheer comedic interest of the show, our contributors may consider shows on the topic from different points of view.\r\n\r\n- historic https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatulence\r\n- medical https://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Flatulence/Pages/Causes.aspx\r\n- engineering, the ever excellent \"An Engineer\'s Guide to Cat Flatulence\" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whDN-4lbork\r\n- a form of art in itself https://heavy.com/comedy/2012/07/the-20-awesomest-pieces-of-fart-art\r\n\r\nRemember folks more than 3 show and it becomes a topic.','2022-02-14 13:17:26'),
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(1402,1936,'2016-01-10 17:14:34','Dave Morriss','Le Pétomane','Not to speak of the \"French flatulist\" Joseph Pujol who made his living farting on stage. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_P%C3%A9tomane\r\n\r\nI have a book on him called \"Le Petomane. Or gone with the wind\" published in 1967 for 5 shillings. \r\n\r\nFrom the blurb: \"Sarah Berhardt drew box-office receipts of 8,000 Francs but LE PETOMANE in a single Sunday took 20,000 Francs at the box-office\".','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1403,1939,'2016-01-10 14:05:52','Ken Fallon','Thanks','The exact right show at the exact right time.\r\n\r\nI am looking at doing something similar for jpg scanning.\r\n\r\nNow if Dave would only get off his donkey and send us in the show on how to scan via cups, we\'d be finished.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1404,1939,'2016-01-10 16:53:44','Dave Morriss','Very nice','Great show Jon. I like how pdftk can do so many things to PDFs.\r\n\r\nYou\'d expect me to comment on the script, so I tend to use \'find\' instead of \'ls\' in such cases. It has some powerful regular expression capabilities and is less error-prone than \'ls\' in my experience. It\'s more complex to get right though.\r\n\r\nKen: I don\'t think CUPS can scan. In my show 1864 I described how I\'d set up SANE to do scanning on my Raspberry Pi connected to my HP Inkjet/Scanner. That was for one-at-a-time scanning though, not bulk stuff.\r\n\r\nInteresting donkey-related fact: Thursday January 14th is The Festival of the Ass. I have it in my calendar','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1405,1939,'2016-01-11 12:08:04','el Mussol','where is Dave','As possibly the only HPR listener with donkeys, I would like to clarify that if Mr Morriss is sat on a donkey somewhere, it\'s not on one of ours.\r\n\r\npault','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1406,1939,'2016-01-14 13:54:10','Dave Morriss','Donkeys','It\'s my impression that Ken\'s donkey reference was euphemistic. So no actual donkeys were harmed ...','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1407,1941,'2016-01-11 14:01:17','Magnus919','Chronicles of a Cheap Geezer','Regarding blue-black ink, those inks were not dye inks like you\'d use in most fountain pens. They were an iron gall ink, which can foul an improperly maintained fountain pen. The iron gall ink goes on blue and as it oxidizes it bonds with the paper and settles into a blacker shade. This is really durable and for a long time in places like the UK, it was the ink legally required for use by registrars for recording legal documents because of its endurance and tampering resistance.\r\n\r\nI recently started a new blog (see my link) for having fun exploring sub-$25 fountain pens and other low-cost/high-value stationary supplies.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1408,1941,'2016-01-11 16:06:11','Dave Morriss','Thanks','Thanks Magnus919,\r\n\r\nI was aware of iron gall inks, my dad used to work in the Legal trade. I have been warned not to use such inks in a fountain pen. However, I wasn\'t aware that school ink was an example. Good to know.\r\n\r\nYour blog is looking interesting. Some nice looking pen photographs.\r\n\r\nSince the coment system here doesn\'t display the website (and I\'m an admin) I\'m showing it here:\r\n\r\nhttps://cheapgeezer.wordpress.com/\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-14 13:17:26'),
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(1409,1941,'2016-01-11 22:08:15','Frank','','I have long preferred fountain pens, ever since I started using one in school (no, we didn\'t have inkwells in our school desks in Birdsnest, Virginia). That one belonged to my father\'s mother and I used it until the barrel broke in two in the vicinity of the lever used to fill the ink bladder.\r\n\r\nI have six fountain pens in this here desk, plus the Waterman which I normally use.\r\n\r\nThere is an element of conceit herein, as, after you\'ve used a fountain pen for a while, the nibs wear to fit your hand and the pen will then write properly for no one else. \r\n\r\nI fear that I don\'t use fountain pens very often any more, as they have been made obsolete by duplex checks; unless you use a ballpoint, the duplex doesn\'t.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1410,1941,'2016-01-12 20:12:50','Dave Morriss','What\'s a duplex check?','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nI had a fountain pen with a lever+bladder filling action a long time ago but I think the bladder failed and it probably got thrown out since it was a cheap thing. Modern pen filler designs do a much better job I reckon.\r\n\r\nYes to the nib wear-in issue. I was taught never to share a fountain pen for that very reason, even though it seems churlish.\r\n\r\nI have no idea what a duplex check is. Cheques (as we Brits call them) are largely obsolete here now. Is it something to do with making a carbon copy (something many will probably not be acquainted with these days)? I assume that the issue is that a fountain pen can\'t apply enough pressure compared to a ballpoint. That is certainly the case.\r\n\r\nThanks for your comments.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1411,1941,'2016-01-12 20:40:32','Frank','','A duplex check (\"cheque\" in some ancient climes) is one that makes a copy of itself as you write it. \r\n\r\nUnder each check in the checkbook is a sheet of NCR paper, so that as you write, what you write is reproduced on the NCR paper. The NCR paper is formatted as the check, but does not bear any account numbers.\r\n\r\nA proper fountain pen does not exert enough pressure to create the copy.\r\n\r\nAside: I use electronic payments sparingly, not because I\'m agin\' \'em, but because I\'m afraid I\'d lose track. I spent lots of years figuring out ways not to overdraw my checking account and I don\'t want to change now.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1412,1941,'2016-01-13 15:34:28','Mike Ray','Nostalgia aint what it used to be','Great episode Dave. I remember desks with ink wells, although I never witnessed the wells being used.\r\n\r\nAt my primary school the top class were taught to use a fountain pen and we were each given a cheap pen which took cartridges (is that still a \'fountain\' pen?) and were expected to use it.\r\n\r\nIt was not until secondary school that ball-points were tolerated and then not by some of the older and crustier teachers.\r\n\r\nIf you are looking for a case, what about one of those old classic wooden pencil cases with a sliding lid? Some of them even had a swivel at one end which allowed access to a second compartment below once the lid was slid back.\r\n\r\nOf course then it would be mandatory to scratch \"Dave Morrison was \'ere\" on it with the point of a compass.\r\n\r\nI have known many people with a stationery, erm, I think \'fetish\' is the word you were looking for :-p and one of the regrets of ebing blind is I can no longer just use pencil (or pen) and paper to capture and diagram ideas','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1413,1941,'2016-01-14 11:53:21','Jonas','Great Episode','Thanks so much Dave.\r\nI really enjoyed the subject and the excellent detail. I went straight out and picked up a disposable Pilot for $2.25 American. I remember taking a calligraphy class that used fountain pens somewhere long ago. My grandfather had a couple inkwell pens. One had a lever on it. Another had the squeeze fill. I still have a sterling silver ink bottle. It\'s glass inside with a silver screw cap and silver exterior. I just ordered a similar priced Chinese pen and a Piolot MR. The disposable is a medium point and a little too wide. I\'m hoping the fine point I ordered will be closer to what I expect. \r\nI typically keep a G2 gel pen or Pilot precise pen until it runs out then switch to a different style as they get used up. I\'m looking forward to daily writing with fountains. \r\nNow if I could just stop watching the pen review videos, I may get time to write something. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1414,1941,'2016-01-14 12:53:59','Dave Morriss','Check vs Cheque','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nAs to the spelling question I reckon it\'s another case of parallel language evolution. Both the UK and the USA variants of English have been evolving in their own directions for hundreds of years. Spelling gelled in Britain earlier than in the US but the French variants became popular on this side of the Atlantic. Thus cheque/check with the French spelling being chèque. There\'s a tendency for both \"sides\" to tell the other they\'re wrong. I try to resist this personally.\r\n\r\nThanks for the explanation of \"duplex check\". I don\'t think anything like this has existed here. We simply note things like the date, payee and amount on a stub which remains in the cheque book after the cheque has been torn out, and tally them up from there.\r\n\r\nIn my case I use electronic transfer for almost everything these days. If my kids ask for money for Christmas they get it that way. I did create fake \"Bank of Dad\" notes for Christmas 2014 just for fun, so they had something tangible! For Christmas 2015 I didn\'t bother.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1415,1941,'2016-01-14 13:10:33','Dave Morriss','Re: Nostalgia','Thanks Mike,\r\n\r\nYou were lucky to have had access to fountain pens so young. Yes, I think the definition of \'fountain pen\' extends to cartridge pens. I believe anything with a nib and an ink reservoir fits that category.\r\n\r\nI actually have an old wooden pencil case of the sort you mention. Thing is, fountain pens really need to sit in individual spaces so they don\'t rattle together. That\'s what my cheapo leather case does, each pen has its own elastic loop. I know that this verges on the obsessional, but after spending £100+ (or possibly a lot more) on a writing implement you\'d want it to stay in pristine condition.\r\n\r\nYes, \'fetish\' is the word I was trying to avoid! Or possibly \'obsession\'. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1416,1941,'2016-01-14 13:48:51','Dave Morriss','Thanks Jonas','Delighted to hear that you are sampling some fountain pens. I hope you enjoy the Pilot MR/Metropolitan. Maybe you could record an HPR show about your experiences!\r\n\r\nYour sterling silver ink bottle sounds wonderful. You should show us some pictures in your HPR show! \r\n\r\nActually, I often use a Pilot G-TEC-C4 (0.4mm) gel pen. It has an ultra-fine point and is great for writing in small notebooks and so forth. That\'s if you have the small handwriting to match of course.\r\n\r\nI know what you mean about the pen videos. I watch a fair number of these myself. I so often end up wanting to buy the pen that was reviewed. They are dangerous from that point of view!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1417,1941,'2016-01-14 14:52:44','Mike Ray','Leftpondian spelling','I was once told some of the spelling differences which \'leftpondians\' use, like color instead of colour etc., were actually deliberate attempts, when the earlier American Dictionaries (was it Websters?) were compiled. It was an attempt to just put their mark on the language. I don\'t know if there\'s any truth in that','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1418,1941,'2016-01-14 16:00:40','Dave Morriss','Re: Leftpondian spelling','I have heard something similar, though I have never found a description of it that seemed completely reliable. \r\n\r\nThe story seems to be that Noah Webster \"rationalised\" spellings when compiling his dictionary, in some cases reverting to more ancient forms which didn\'t have the French influence that British spellings did. I don\'t know if that accounts for examples like the replacement of \'ph\' with \'f\' though. I\'d like to find a detailed explanation written by a linguist or similar academic, but so far I have failed to do so.\r\n\r\nI\'d also prefer to get away from the haranguing which is often resorted to on both sides of these arguments. \"Those *@*s over there don\'t know how to spell properly\". You know the type of thing.\r\n\r\nI quite like \'Leftpondia\' and \'Rightpondia\' by the way. Never encountered those before.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1419,1941,'2016-01-14 18:13:10','Mike Ray','Rationalising languages','I think any attempt to \'rationalise\' a language either as it is written or spoken is a hiding to nothing. It\'s too fluid and has too many things pressing on it from all sides.\r\n\r\nIf that wasn\'t true I guess we\'d all be speaking Espiranto by now.\r\n\r\nAnd certainly a people, wherever they are, have a perfect right to speak and spell their language as they like. As long as every other word in their podcasts isn\'t \'awesome\', grrrrr','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1420,1941,'2016-01-15 02:55:00','Jon Kulp ','Gotta try one now','Thanks Dave, my son and I really enjoyed listening to this while I drove him to school. I\'ve also sent a link to this episode to Trumpet Guy because he\'s a huge fountain-pen fanatic as well. I put one of the Pilot entry-level pins on my wishlist on Amazon, going to give this a try. In my new position I have to sign my name a **lot** nowadays so it might be more fun to do it with a nice pen.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1421,1941,'2016-01-15 15:54:25','Dave Morriss','Language rationalisation','Yes Mike, I can only agree. Haven\'t the French tried doing something like this in the recent past?\r\n\r\nOn the other hand, I rather regret the evolution away from certain singular and plural forms which seems to be ongoing. I\'m thinking of examples like the use of \'criteria\' where \'criterion\' is meant, or \'supernova\' where \'supernovae\' should be used. The battle is already lost with \'data\' and \'datum\' of course. This is probably old fart territory though.\r\n\r\nAs to \'awesome\' I always hear that as \'aweless\'. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1422,1941,'2016-01-15 16:42:50','Dave Morriss','Hope you enjoy your fountain pen','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nGood to hear you are tempted to join the ranks of fountain pen users. If you like your Pilot get yourself something classy like a Pelikan Souverän 600, 800 or 1000 to impress everyone :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1423,1941,'2016-01-16 00:49:18','Jon Kulp ','Umm...probably not','Well I think it\'s pretty safe to say that I will not be buying any of the Pens you mentioned there, Dave. Wow pricey!','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1424,1941,'2016-02-11 22:13:35','NYbill','Its been a bit of an adventure...','I\'ll just leave this here. ;)\r\n\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/m/~60yr-old-fountain-pen/\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:27'),
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(1425,1941,'2016-02-15 08:30:39','Dave Morriss','Old fountain pen','Hi Bill,\r\n\r\nGood to know that you tried out the Pilot Metro. It\'s a sweet pen.\r\n\r\nYour adventures into fountain pen \"archaeology\" sound fascinating. I think I remember this model, the Parker 21: it was one that was popular in the 1960\'s I think. It has a partly \"hooded\" nib, with only the front part showing, I believe.\r\n\r\nI have been cleaning out some of my pens recently. Disassembling them and leaving them to soak in warm water with a tiny drop of dish soap is the recommended way to loosen the dried ink. Brushing the nib and the feed underneath with an old (soft) toothbrush can help. In some cases, removing the nib and feed is very helpful, if it *is* removable of course.\r\n\r\nHey, I think there\'s at least one other HPR show here. You want to recount your experiences?','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1426,1941,'2016-02-15 12:57:14','Jonathan Kulp','Pilot Metro and Scheaffer','Dave, Bill, I recently got a pilot Metro fountain pen as well. It\'s pretty nice. Also Trumpet Guy gave me an old Scheaffer fountain pen that he had and it writes pretty well too. The ink flows a little faster in the Scheaffer than it does in the pilot. I can\'t decide whether that\'s a good thing or a bad thing yet. \r\n\r\nIn my new position at work I have to sign a lot of documents and whenever they are not in triplicate (which requires a ball point pen to put enough pressure) I use one of my new fountain pens. Had to see what all the fuss was about after this episode prompted more comments than any I can remember.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1427,1941,'2016-02-15 20:19:55','Dave Morriss','Sheaffer','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nThat name is hard to spell. It looks as if it\'s German so I tend to type \"Schaeffer\" a lot of the time! It\'s an American company from around 1912, however.\r\n\r\nI used a Sheaffer cartridge pen as a schoolboy. I still have it and am just in the process of resurrecting it.\r\n\r\nThere are various opinions about \"wet\" pens (I\'ve heard them described as \"juicy\" too). A broad nib needs plenty of ink to be delivered because it deposits more. Finer nibs conversely need less. However, much lower-quality paper doesn\'t suit wetter pens as the ink tends to sink in and \"feather\" or bleed through. On the other hand, a drier pen can be frustrating as the ink feed often doesn\'t keep up with the writing. Many factors to consider!\r\n\r\nI\'m glad you\'re enjoying the Metro. I\'d love to see the Sheaffer - we need a show on your experiences :-)\r\n\r\nAnother aspect of fountain pen usage you might enjoy is the huge selection of inks that is available. I\'m enjoying one called \"Ancient Copper\" from Diamine at the moment - a sort of reddish brown. ','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1428,1942,'2016-01-14 03:09:11','Jon Kulp ','KOReader uses normal directories','Enjoying the episode! I\'ve wanted to get a Kobo for a while but somehow ended up with a few Kindles instead. \r\n\r\nAnyway you might check out the KOReader (Kindle / Kobo Open Reader). I\'ve been using it on my jailbroken Kindle to read epubs. It doesn\'t pay attention to Metadata at all, it just has a file browser like it appears you prefer. It actually took me a while to get used to this because I\'m more used to being able to sort and search by Metadata. Look for my show on the KOReader next week... ','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1429,1942,'2016-01-20 17:49:11','Klaatu','KOReader','Thanks for letting me know about KOReader. I had not heard of it. My go-to reader on other devices has been either fbreader or epubreader in Firefox. Both have the concept of a \"library\" which I think is stupid (personally) but they\'re not bad.\r\n\r\nI\'ll check KOReader out sometime, though. Sounds nice.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1430,1943,'2016-03-16 02:37:18','David L. Willson','Firefly','\"So you probably see Firefly in everything.\"\r\n\r\n\"That\'s because it *is* in everything.\"\r\n\r\nLOL!','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1431,1944,'2016-01-14 09:00:03','Mike Ray','Using sshfs to mount Pi rootfs on faster machine for cross-compiles','Great show Fifty.\r\n\r\nI use sshfs to mount the root file-system of a Pi on my fast quad-core desktop Linux machine for cross-compiling stuff.\r\n\r\nI have tool-chains in /opt/toolchains and then I mount the Pi rootfs like this:\r\n\r\nsshfs root@raspberrypi:/ /opt/mnt/pi -o follow_symlinks\r\n\r\nThen I can specify that as -sysrrot when I compile.\r\n\r\nCompiling a kernel on a Pi takes about fifteen hours, it takes my desktop machine eight minutes!\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1432,1944,'2016-01-15 19:16:39','Frank','','I just tested this out. Thanks, Fifty!\r\n\r\nFor Slackers, there\'s a build on slackbuilds.org.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1433,1944,'2016-01-16 12:06:50','0xf10e','','I\'m pretty sure when using sshfs for multiple users would map everyone to the user you initiated the connection with.\r\n\r\nTo prevent yourself creating files under the mountpoint of your sshfs just make the dir r-x before mounting.\r\nShould give you enough of a heads-up when you try to store you downloads there.\r\n\r\nAnd btw: Mounting NFS at boot works fine and is just delayed until the network is configured.\r\n\r\nOtherwise a nice introduction ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1434,1944,'2016-01-18 17:27:58','Ken Fallon','no multiple users','As far as I know mapping multiple users to a sshfs conncetion was not possible.\r\n\r\nI created a new user and gave them the same group rights but after mounting neither the root or the test user were allowed to see the mounted connection.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1435,1944,'2016-01-21 17:01:44','Kevin O\'Brien','Great show','I\'m delighted that my friend FiftyOneFifty was able to build on the earlier shows that klaatu and I did on ssh. That is how I always envisioned this series working.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1436,1946,'2016-01-18 20:04:26','Frank','','Interesting. I haven\'t tried a noodle dish. I\'ll have to give this a try later this week.\r\n\r\nThe beans you picture are indeed what in the States are called string beans or green beans and the peas are called snow peas.\r\n\r\nIronically, at least in these parts, string beans don\'t really have strings--they don\'t need to be \"de-strung\"--and snow peas do.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1437,1946,'2016-01-18 21:37:38','Dave Morriss','String or no string','Thanks Frank. It\'s interesting how names change so much from region to region.\r\n\r\nI had always assumed that the \"string\" in string beans referred to the way they were grown, draped over a taut string. At least I have often seen them grown that way to keep the mature beans off the soil. They grow fine by themselves of course, unlike what we call runner beans which need sticks, stakes or hanging strings to grow up. These ones become very fibrous as they mature and take a bit of skill to de-string when preparing!\r\n\r\nAs to mange tout/snow peas the ones I buy very rarely have any strings in them. Maybe they are just harvested very young for the UK supermarkets. \r\n\r\nAnyway, I hope your noodle cooking experiences turn out well.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1438,1946,'2016-01-19 03:36:53','Frank','','I always thought that the \"string\" in string beans referred to their shape. They are also sometimes called snap beans, because you can \"snap\" the ends off to prepare them for cooking.\r\n\r\nThe Wikipedia article says that it refers to the \"string\" along the seam on one side of the bean, but, as I said, I observe that much more often in snow peas.\r\n\r\nOh, well, they\'ve probably all been cross-bred to oblivion anyway.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1439,1946,'2016-01-19 10:44:31','Mark Waters','Thanks','Just wanted to say thank you for this episode , I will certainly be trying your recipe out.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1440,1946,'2016-01-20 14:47:14','Dave Morriss','Thanks Mark','Glad you liked the show. Let us know how you get on with the recipe.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1441,1946,'2016-01-21 04:52:44','Frank','','My experiment was a qualified success.\r\n\r\nI did not use the same ingredients as you. I used carrots (inspired by you--I agree with Dennis the Menace as he sampled a carrot cake: \"Nothing that tastes this good could come from carrots\"), snow peas, mushrooms, celery, five cloves of garlic, three scallions, tofu, and a banana pepper (I should have used half a banana pepper). \r\n\r\nI was too lazy to go to Grand Mart, the local international supermarket which does indeed absolutely rock (google it), so I ended up using Thai noodles, because they were there in my local plain-jane American supermarket.\r\n\r\nI used too many noodles for the quantity of other ingredients and the dish was a little bit too spicy (should have used half a banana pepper, rather than a whole one), but, as I said, it was a qualified success. Susan liked it, despite the hotness. It will be better next time.\r\n\r\nThanks for getting me to try something new.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1442,1946,'2016-01-21 19:56:29','Dave Morriss','Banana pepper','Great to hear about your latest stir-fry experiment Frank. I must try some fresh chillies in the ingredient list some time. I have mainly used sauces added when eating the dish since my daughter is not a great fan of chilli. Personally I love hot food, though I have never eaten a banana pepper. I must look out for some.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1443,1948,'2016-01-22 21:58:56','b-yeezi','Thanks a lot','This episode exemplifies what I love most about hpr and vim. I\'ve been using vim for about 2 years now and lean new things weekly. I\'ve already added what I learned here in my daily workflow. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1444,1948,'2016-01-23 20:09:17','Frank','','I\'m really glad you found helpful. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1445,1951,'2016-01-27 04:32:57','Frank','','Thanks. \r\n\r\nThis is a topic I\'ve long wanted to know more about, if only to show off to my brother, who is Linux-curious, but sticks with Windows so he can play is antediluvian Star Wars game.\r\n\r\nI look forward to working my way through your long show notes and learning stuff.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1446,1951,'2016-01-27 13:50:59','Dave Morriss','Thanks Frank','I\'m glad you found it interesting. I hope the long notes help, I enjoyed researching and writing them.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1447,1952,'2016-01-28 16:09:26','Dave Morriss','Great show idea','I always enjoy shows like this. I found I either needed to be reading the notes as I listened or I needed to listen twice.\r\n\r\nI liked the way you explained those pipelines by breaking them into their components.\r\n\r\nMaybe the next release of \'fix_tags\' should have a -sum option to sum up all the audio lengths :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1448,1954,'2016-01-28 19:00:59','Dave Morriss','Most interesting and entertaining','I love shows like this. It felt like I was right there observing the pen making. I could almost smell the acrylic.\r\n\r\nThe results look great too. Thanks for sharing this with us.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1449,1954,'2016-01-29 00:10:54','Jon Kulp ','Acrylic smells','Glad to hear you enjoyed it, Dave. Wish you could have been here with us to turn a nice fountain pen for yourself. It was fun! BTW Trumpet Guy gave me my first fountain pen this week. Cheapo old Sheaffer pen he\'s had for years but I\'m enjoying signing documents with it. ','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1450,1954,'2016-02-01 16:57:03','Dave Morriss','Old Sheaffer','Great to hear you have officially joined the league of fountain pen wielders!\r\n\r\nYou should get yourself some fountain pen-friendly writing paper. Something from Rhodia or Clairefontaine perhaps. Then have a go at writing stuff: notes, letters, poetry, whatever. It can be a pleasure and very relaxing.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1451,1956,'2016-02-01 02:55:09','Mike Ray','xmlstarlet, yes please','Ken. There are folks out here who would be interested in hearing more about xmlstarlet and anything else you can share about working with XML.\r\n\r\nI have used expat parsers with various programming languages and toolkits for ages. Never got to grips with DOM type parsers and I\'m continually annoyed that expat isn\'t a validating parser.\r\n\r\nAnything you can tell me about other ways to work with XML would be cool.\r\n\r\nI think XML is a great thing. I\'d put in a box with markdown as one of the most important things to happen to online publishing and data-exchange for decades.\r\n\r\nOK I know you can\'t compare markdown with the huge importance of XML but I think anything that flexible that is based on pure text is great.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1452,1957,'2016-02-02 03:25:03','Mike Ray','Distros and Accessibility','Great job Ken.\r\n\r\nA mixed bag os responses from those distros you asked about a11y.\r\n\r\nThe most distressing parts were that the Debian guy didn\'t seem to know or realise that Debian is the best (imho) distro for a11y and is easy to install if you can\'t see. And the Magea guy who seems to think it\'s impossible for a blind person to use Linux at all.\r\n\r\nSomebody else mumbled about individual packages, missing the point that unless a distro can be installed and have the a11y stack enabled out-of-the-box, whether or not individual packages are accessible is irrelevant.\r\n\r\nI do think it would be a little unfair to plonk a sighted guy with no prior experience of a11y tools down in front of a PC wearing a blindfold. But I\'d love to sit a bunch of them down in a class room and have me lead them through it.\r\n\r\nI\'m sure that would be an eye-opener (pun intended).\r\n\r\nWhat was the brand and name of the little 8-core ARM64 gizmo the guy on the OpenMandriva stand was running?\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1453,1957,'2016-02-02 12:24:12','Ken Fallon','It wasn\'t really fair','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nYou have to remember that these were volunteers working on the booths and that it\'s not reasonable to expect every project member to be up to speed of every aspect of the distribution. Each project has their own way of doing things and that extends to working with accessibility. All the project leads were able to give me a high level view of their workflow to accessibility issues, and all were able to point me to the correct contact point.\r\n\r\nWhat I realized during the experience is that there was not one person there who is deliberately against working on accessibility. \r\n\r\nIt would help everyone if there was a central point where these contact points was listed so we could have an overview who is working on what. It would also be a good idea for to try and get an Accessibility Track going at FOSDEM to address issues across different projects. You might even consider joining the Distro tracks so you could give them feedback.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1454,1957,'2016-02-02 13:46:26','Mike Ray','A11y awareness','Fair comment. I\'m sure nobody you spoke to is against a11y (don\'t know if you spoke to Linuxmint yet, that might change).\r\n\r\nIt would be a good idea to list the contact points of all, or at least major distro a11y related contacts in one place. I can maybe try to pull some kind of list together for eyesfreelinux.ninja.\r\n\r\nMy problem currently, as for most people, is there aren\'t enough hours in the day.\r\n\r\nI\'m curious now about whether the ReactOS guys have \'reverse engineered\' oleacc32.dll and other aspects of the Win32 accessibility stack. I think I can probably guess the answer. But it would be good to see ReactOS mature into a really usable OS. Although how they get away with it is beyond me.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1455,1958,'2016-02-05 04:53:24','Trent Palmer','Awesome Episode!','This is just a fantastic episode of Hacker Public Radio. I spent this afternoon driving around SW Washington in a lift-gate tractor-trailer, making pickups and deliveries, while listening to this collection of interviews from FOSSDEM, and must report that I am entertained, inspired, and informed.\r\n\r\nThankyou, thankyou, thankyou! Hacker Public Radio 1958 is an awesome podcast.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1456,1958,'2016-02-05 12:26:55','Mike Ray','Dazzling achievement','I\'d second what Trent said.\r\n\r\nAnd more. Thanks Ken for, three, or was it four, shows containing a blistering array of interviews from FOSDEM.\r\n\r\nThe sheer variety of subjects and projects covered was impressive.\r\n\r\nIt must have been tiring, and I hope you didn\'t sacrifice your own enjoyment of the event to bring us the range of interviews you did.\r\n\r\nHighlights for me were mostly in the last one; picotcp, ptxdist and barebox, matrix.\r\n\r\nAnd the knitting lady, Siobhan (please excuse the missing accent over the \'a\') was a delight and a good one to end on.\r\n\r\nI wish there were more like Siobhan at my local LUG.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1457,1959,'2016-02-04 05:38:18','Mike Ray','More great interviews','Good stuff again.\r\n\r\nI especially liked the interview with the guy from LFS. Didn\'t quite grasp whether he himself is VI but he spoke very knowledgeably about a11y and mentioned using a Braille display so I guess he is.\r\n\r\nLFS is one of those things I keep meaning to plough through. Especially Cross-Linux from Scratch to build a distro from the ground up for a Pi.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1458,1967,'2016-05-15 18:34:53','Windigo','','Wrote a novel for the pleasure of using the word processor? If that isn\'t the quote of a hacker, I don\'t know what is. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1459,1972,'2016-02-25 15:17:24','Turtle','Nice show','I enjoyed your show, FYI Icepack Linux had a release in 2015 based on kernel 3.10.66. ','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1460,1972,'2016-03-03 01:35:44','m1rr0r5h4d35','Thanks','Thanks for the kind words, and the heads-up on Icepack linux! I had no idea they made a comeback.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1461,1973,'2016-02-25 07:27:18','Andreas','there is something missing...','Thanks for the upload, but the episode stops after 47 minutes. (The duration listed is around 2 hours...)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1462,1973,'2016-02-27 10:52:43','James Michael Du Pont','cut off','thanks ken for this, but the ending was quite abrupt, you have more?','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1463,1973,'2016-03-22 02:09:15','Charles in NJ','Does FSF Have an Original?','This file, and one that was sent to the mailing list, is truncated. There is an ending time stamp that goes out to 6900 seconds, but the end of file is encountered at 2703 seconds.\r\n\r\nIs this our recording? Or was it made by an FSF \"official\" recording tech? I don\'t see enough contents here to get past 45:03.\r\n\r\nCharles in NJ','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1464,1973,'2016-03-22 12:52:25','Ken Fallon','','The file is corrupt. We\'re trying to recover it.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1465,1976,'2016-03-18 08:31:19','Gan Ainm','Another great sed resource','The book \"Unix Text Processing\" by Dale Dougherty and Tim O’Reilly (INTERNET \"UTP Revi\r\nval\" RELEASE — 2004 available at https://home.windstream.net/kollar/utp/utp-1.0.pdf) features a very illuminating description of stream editing and sed on pp. 288. ','2022-02-14 13:17:27'),
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(1466,1976,'2016-03-21 22:05:08','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this','I find the book fascinating, never having done more than dabble with nroff, troff and the like. It seems a touch dated, but interesting nonetheless. I\'m not sure I\'d recommend it for a sed beginner though.\r\n\r\nI don\'t have a book recommendation to offer in return, having taught myself to use sed from manual pages and so forth. I started using sed on a DEC VAXCluster running VMS in the late 1980\'s. It had been ported to VMS from Unix and made my life much simpler, since VMS wasn\'t that good at doing this sort of editing.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1467,1976,'2016-05-26 14:07:50','Frank','','I put off listening to this until I had the time and peace to concentrate and follow along in the shownotes.\r\n\r\nAll I can say is that regex still makes my brain hurt (but, since I\'ve been fine-tuning my procmailrc file, I\'ve got something to practice on).\r\n\r\nI\'m going to listen again and then do the rest of the series, slowly and deliberately.\r\n\r\nThanks. If the brain pain goes away, I\'ll let you know.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1468,1976,'2016-05-26 21:38:30','Dave Morriss','Good luck with regex','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nRegular expressions are a language in their own right. It\'s not a trivial concept to get your head around. However, learning how to use them is very rewarding because they are everywhere.\r\n\r\nI used to use procmail for my mail back in the days when the university I worked at first connected to the internet and had access to TCP/IP and SMTP mail. (Prior to that we\'d used DECMail and the UK \"Coloured Book\" networking protocols). I found the regular expressions in procmailrc challenging, but gradually got the hang of them.\r\n\r\nI just posted the last episode of this series, number 5, today. I hope you make your way through them all and find them useful.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1469,1976,'2016-06-01 22:42:19','Frank','','Part of my issue with regex is, of course, that I don\'t have much need to use it, so learning it is more an intellectual pursuit. It\'s not like I was sysadmin, for example, except of my own little home network.\r\n\r\nThat\'s why editing my procmailrc helps--it gives me a need to learn it.\r\n\r\nIf I ever understand regex, I shall proudly claim the title of \"Linux Geek.\"','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1470,1976,'2016-06-03 21:15:11','Frank','LO and SED','I stumbled over this at Linux Questions. It somehow seems germane:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/blog/hmw-748559/regex-in-libreoffice-37035/','2022-02-14 13:17:27'),
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(1471,1976,'2016-06-05 17:05:20','Dave Morriss','Regex in Libre Office','As a long-term user of Libre Office, Open office before that and Star Office even before that, I love this feature and have used a lot!\r\n\r\nMy boss used to give me grief about not using Microsoft Word and adhering to the \"Corporate Standards\", but with a Unix box and later a Linux box on my desk I was *far* more productive the way I was :-)\r\n\r\nIn my experience the earlier versions of Word were not good, though regular expression capability did appear at some point. Microsoft\'s version of regex is of course different from the more standard versions found under Unix & Linux. Libre Office is much more conformant with the various standards I believe.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1472,1978,'2016-02-27 07:10:11','amunizp','Wrong audio','I uploaded the short version, I have one with 7min. Will convert now to see if I have time to upload it later. ','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1473,1979,'2016-03-03 18:18:23','Dave Morriss','Interesting episode','I enjoy porridge, or porage, as it\'s called here. I\'d noticed your episode in the queue a week or two back and went looking for \'pinhead oatmeal\' the Scottish name for these oats. My first try at cooking them on the stove was a mixed success, but I shall persevere.\r\n\r\nI have a slow cooker, but it\'s a large one, bought for cooking family meals, so I\'m not sure if it\'ll do a good job making a single portion. It\'s something to experiment with though.\r\n\r\nThanks for this, it was an interesting subject.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1474,1979,'2016-03-03 19:51:44','Jon Kulp','Slow-Cooker Size','Our slow cooker\'s also pretty big, I wouldn\'t want to use it to make just one serving, which is why it was critical that my wife wanted to eat this stuff too. If you\'re making an enough for two people, then the slow cooker is just barely not too big. You could make enough for two or three people and then reheat the next day but it\'s not quite as tasty that way.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1475,1979,'2016-03-03 22:28:32','Dave Morriss','The way of the oat','Strategies for me seem to be: try to perfect the stove-top method, get a smaller slow cooker, or something else.\r\n\r\nActually, my daughter has a small slow cooker. If she\'s not using it I might grab it for oaty duties during the mid-term break.\r\n\r\nMy son visited today and I was chatting with him about this subject. He found a recipe for steel-cut oats using a pressure cooker, which I have and use a lot. I might try that idea at some point.\r\n\r\nI\'m not too enthusiastic about the reheating approach, I have to admit :-)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1476,1981,'2016-03-08 08:08:08','folky','Change the name','When you repost the show that\'s been cut, please change the name of the file(s). Otherwise podcatcher as podget f.ex. wouldn\'t download it.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1477,1981,'2016-03-18 00:33:03','jezra','chicken coop?','I happen to have a chickencoop that is computer controlled. Perhaps I can help Ken with the blink stick.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1478,1983,'2016-03-10 21:45:08','aoskfla','Boop','Hey swift110. it\'s xen :D','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1479,1983,'2016-03-19 20:58:56','m1rr0r5h4d35','','Great job on the shows! I might be wrong, but I think you might find that the fourth USB port is also the esata port. I have a laptop that has a weird esata/usb port and I have found that it works, but USB devices don\'t plug into it as smoothly as a standard port. You may have to fiddle with it to get it to work.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1480,1985,'2016-03-11 21:26:15','Frank','','This made me smile.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1481,1987,'2016-03-18 03:21:19','Frank','','Thanks for the tip about using aplay to trigger an audible alert.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1482,1987,'2016-04-17 19:47:13','David L. Willson','changed my life','No, literally. I\'d never heard of the pomodoro technique before this show, and this is literally changing my life for the better. TYTYTY!\r\nNow, I\'d like to try your script, but where is it?','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1483,1988,'2016-03-16 20:05:33','Epicanis','Great topic, thanks!','I\'ve never gotten around to messing with Linux From Scratch, so I\'ve often wondered what it was like. Thanks for the episode!\r\n\r\n(I also think it\'s pretty funny that we\'ve ended up with two shows right next to each other about building Linux installations by hand, with the first\'s title containing the word \"scratch\" and the second\'s containing the word \"itch\", but I\'m easily amused anyway...)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1484,1989,'2016-03-17 16:21:44','b-yeezi','Brilliant show','Absolutely brilliant show. I would have probably chosen a minimal Debian install, but your solution takes up a lot less space. You have convinced me that Arch Linux makes the most sense for this type is set up. I will propose this solution the first chance I get. \r\n\r\nPlease make more.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1485,1989,'2016-03-18 11:21:17','Jonathan Kulp','Nice kiosk idea','Very entertaining! Love the production value, especially the espeak bot coming to get you. This is something I may actually try at some point because we could use a kiosk type thing running videos when we go out recruiting.','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1486,1989,'2016-03-21 18:16:43','Epicanis','Thanks, all!','This is the first tme I\'ve tried to do a \"tutorial\" sort of episode, sounds like I did okay!\r\n\r\nAnyone have an opinion on whether this was too low-level, or not low-level enough (i.e. needed less or more detailed information in the audio?)','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1487,1990,'2016-04-17 19:48:34','David L. Willson','found it!','Oh, here it is! TY again!','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1488,1992,'2016-03-25 19:57:45','bjorn again','thanks','great topic, and fun to hear how others do it; thanks for sharing','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1489,1993,'2016-04-05 03:48:55','sigflup','ratpoison','I love ratpoison! thank you for recording this','2017-09-09 07:41:29'),
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(1490,1994,'2016-03-25 17:09:50','brian','two thoughts while still listening','first thought... the \"star drive\" is called a torx, and is press fitted into the 3/8 drive socket. second, and most important, is for the extraction of the plastic plug... when you get to the point of inserting the screw into the pilot hole, just keep going with the screw... it will bottom out and extract the plug on its own.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1491,1994,'2016-03-25 18:22:48','Jonathan Kulp','Genius','Whoa genius suggestion! Didn\'t occur to me to keep drilling the screw. That would work the same way a crankarm extraction tool works on a bike. Will definitely do that next time I\'m in that predicament. And thanks for correcting me on the Torx head. Can never remember that and it\'s not like I\'ve never used em before haha! ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1492,1996,'2016-04-18 20:47:36','Urugami','File Naming','I\'ve never heard of Dr Bunsen before, nor his file naming convention. And yet, my hard drive and backup media are littered with files whose names look a lot like what he outlines. I usually just use MMDDYY..descriptive name.ext, only adding .HHMM after the Date string if I know ahead of time I\'ll be keeping multiple files from that day.\r\nWhile I can\'t say that it\'s been especially useful in locating any particular file I need, it does keep things in chronological order by default, and makes it easier to find reports from a given date.\r\n\r\nAnd here I thought I was being all efficient in a unique naming scheme. I should have know there\'s nothing new under the sun.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1493,1997,'2016-03-29 01:35:39','Mike Ray','Knockout Episode','Well done Dave. This is a knockout episode. Contains a lot of the more obscure stuff in sed that is really useful and hard to find examples of online.\r\n\r\nI personally like you reading out the command-line examples as I can make a mental note of what strings to search for in your show notes to refer back later.\r\n\r\nI\'ve used sed for years but it is an inexhaustible subject.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to the awk series, never having really got my head round awk :-p','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1494,1997,'2016-03-29 13:20:02','Dave Morriss','Careful what you wish for!','Thanks Mike, you\'re very kind.\r\n\r\nI too have used sed for many years, but I always ignored much of the weird and wonderful stuff it\'s capable of and made do with the \'s\' command and a few others like \'d\' and \'q\', as well as line addressing. In doing this series, I\'m at last learning how to do some more sophisticated things with sed, so it\'s fun to do.\r\n\r\nEpisode 4 is finished and waiting to be posted, and episode 5 (the really deeply weird stuff) is in production. I\'m trying to explain some of the examples in the GNU sed manual in 5, but I\'ll have to understand them myself first!\r\n\r\nYes, I\'d quite like to do a series on awk, and will if I can.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1495,1998,'2016-03-30 21:12:20','Frank','','Even though it was not the focus of your podcast, I found the bit about eastern Kentucky accents particularly interesting. Many persons fail to appreciate the rich variety of speech patterns, that the phrase \"Southern accent\" embraces. I\'m from eastern Virginia and my mother was from the hills of far northwestern South Carolina, and, though both accents were clearly \"southern,\" they were quite different.\r\n\r\nI remember once dropping down from the Blue Ridge Parkway somewhere in far southwestern North Carolina to head south to Atlanta and being almost unable to understand what the clerk at the gas station was saying. It was unlike any other variant I have heard, and I\'ve traveled extensively in the South. It was as far from my eastern Virginia accent as a Scottish brogue.\r\n\r\nEnjoyed the podcast, too. Even though I have no interest in brewing my own beer--my preferred tipple speaks Gaelic--it gave me a better understanding of the discussions of home-brewing that one is so likely to encounter these days.\r\n\r\nAfterthought: My trick for spotting a fake Southern accent: Using \"you all\" as a singular pronoun. Everyone knows \"you all\" is plural.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1496,1998,'2016-04-07 07:23:27','Ken Fallon','Would love to hear the full recoring','I\'d love to hear the full recording. I would be of interest to hackers.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1497,1998,'2016-12-27 19:04:18','m1rr0r5h4d35','','I am thinking about making the whole thing available, but I want to do a new recording in Audacity of the original. I still have the original tape, but I need to get a new cassette player in order to play it. Hopefully, I\'ll get this done relatively soon.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1498,1999,'2016-04-01 16:58:59','Jon Kulp','More on Ardour!','Welcome and thanks for a great episode! Glad you\'ve found us. I hope you\'ll make good on what you said about recording lots of episodes for HPR. It would be timely since I\'ve have to cut way back. Anything about audio recording, editing, and post-production will be enthusiastically received.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1499,1999,'2016-04-07 06:55:49','Ken Fallon','More detail','Please go into more detail about setting everything up. Especially compatibility between Jack/ALSA/Pulse.\r\n\r\nDon\'t forget the \"how I got into\" show as well.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1500,2000,'2016-04-04 08:58:50','Mike Ray','I tried very hard...','...to resist this but, after about 72 hours here goes...\r\n\r\nOh no, Ken\'s \"Fallon off the roof\"\r\n\r\n:-)','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1501,2000,'2016-04-04 21:37:00','droops','Very Good','I appreciate you recording this awesome show and for keeping this whole thing going for so long. Outstanding work everyone!','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1502,2000,'2016-04-05 18:11:26','Frank','','Absolutely fascinating.\r\n\r\nwait! I think I just saw Ken flying overhead.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1503,2000,'2016-04-07 06:54:07','Ken Fallon','Beep','Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep. Beepppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp. ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1504,2001,'2016-04-04 11:44:59','Jon Kulp','Not a Timing Belt','Hey guys, great show as always. \r\n\r\nRegarding the belt I changed on my truck, it is not a timing belt but a serpentine belt (or sometimes called a drive belt). The timing belt is different, a much more involved job that usually also means replacing the water pump. Cost something like $1000 when I had my mechanic do it on our old mini van. Would definitely not try that myself. \r\n\r\nGlad to hear that Ken survived toppling off his roof in the gale force winds. ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1505,2002,'2016-04-07 06:50:43','Ken Fallon','I\'m so jealous','I\'ve been looking for one since they came out and they are all sold out. I checked the dimensions and they seem to fit into a smint tin. No idea what I\'d use it for but that\'s not the point.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1506,2003,'2016-04-07 06:52:58','Ken Fallon','Installing this now','I want to monitor a FTP location and once new XML files are there, it triggers a parser to extract data and put it into a database. Which can then be queried over the web. Basically turning a file based interface into a web enabled one.\r\n\r\nGreat tip. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1507,2004,'2016-04-07 16:32:01','Ken Fallon','daisy chain','Great ep. Looks like its not for sale any more. Anyway I was wondering why you would daisy chain two meters','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1508,2004,'2016-04-07 21:35:37','NYbill','Americanism\'s?','I\'m not sure where we got the term. It might be an \"Americanism\". ;) I\'m just guessing here... But, Hippy\'s in the 60\'s would make necklace’s out of daisy\'s, tying the stems in loops. I think the term made it into the lexicon as to \'chain together\', \'Link up one after another\'. \r\n\r\nIn electronics terms it just means \"in series\". \r\n\r\nUntil you just asked, I never really thought about it.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1509,2004,'2016-04-07 23:12:31','Dave Morriss','Not an Americanism to my knowledge','\"Daisy chain\" is used in the UK too. I\'ve made them (from the real daisies) as a kid, some time before the Hippy era. You split the stem with a finger nail part way along such that it makes a loop, and stick the head of the next daisy through it. I had a fairly rural upbringing!\r\n\r\nLooking on eBay, I can see one of these meters for $61 (around £43) from Hong Kong. I bought a UNI-T on eBay from China after hearing your earlier shows, and am very happy with it. It was around £30.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1510,2004,'2016-04-08 07:53:35','Ken Fallon','Why not what','Why would you daisy chain two meters together. What is the use case to do that ?\r\n\r\nRemember some of us are beginners and so you need to explain the \"obvious\" points.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1511,2004,'2016-04-08 10:22:30','NYbill','','Yea, IMO the UNI-T is a better meter for the price, Dave. You have a good one there. \r\n\r\nAfter sending my last post I do recall hearing \"daisy chain\" in a Pink Floyd song. I know the term is out there on both sides of the pond (referring to a chain of flowers). Ken might have been asking why I would use that term when referring to two electric devices. Its just another term meaning \'in series\'. One hooked together after another. \r\n\r\nKen, you could have one meter reading current (amps) and a second meter reading the voltage. Or one reading volts, and a second reading Freq/Htz, etc...\r\n\r\nOr, if you\'re some nutter who happens to own like 6 meters. You do it just because you can! *maniacal laughter*','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1512,2005,'2016-04-10 22:33:18','NYbill','Well done.','Nice job, man. It makes me want to invest in a bit of equipment so I don\'t have to keep amplifying my audio in post. ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1513,2005,'2016-04-17 12:01:52','Ken Fallon','Such Effort','Hi Geddes,\r\n\r\nI am simply blown away by the effort you are taking with these shows. Thanks you so much for putting in all this effort.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1514,2006,'2016-04-17 12:03:04','Ken Fallon','Great Addition','Hi Nacho Jordi,\r\n\r\nGreat explanation. I hope this is the beginning of a series :)\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1515,2007,'2016-04-17 12:09:15','Ken Fallon','Suspect','Strange that the person holding first ticket went mysteriously missing.\r\n\r\nVery curious indeed. \r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1516,2007,'2016-04-18 19:29:34','Dave Morriss','I dunno what you\'re talking about','You can\'t prove anything, I left no trace...','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1517,2007,'2016-04-27 01:11:41','Alpha32','Interesting show','Another great show, Mr Morriss. How is the entroware\'s hardware compatibility with other distros? \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1518,2007,'2016-05-02 12:27:35','Dave Morriss','Thanks','Hi Alpha32,\r\n\r\nGlad you enjoyed the episode.\r\n\r\nI have to admit that I have not yet tried anything else on the laptop. I was waiting to see what Ubuntu 16.04 looks like, but I will try out some live versions of some other distributions very soon.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1519,2008,'2016-04-14 06:42:13','0xf10e','But Ken, ','…I can listen to HPR and prepare my lunch at the same time, but I can\'t record a show and cook at the same time :(','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1520,2008,'2016-04-14 17:46:13','Jonathan Kulp','sure you can!','Why not? I have recorded shows while walking to work, while riding my bike to work, while fixing the car, while driving in the car. Surely you could record a show while you cooked. All you have to do is clip the $2 microphone to your lapel, plug it into your phone, put the phone in your back pocket, hit record, and start talking while you cook. Easy!','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1521,2008,'2016-04-17 12:10:36','Ken Fallon','Thanks','Thanks to everyone that submitted shows. But we still have hundreds of free slots to fill. Keep the shows coming and keep sending out the message that we need contributors.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1522,2008,'2016-05-01 23:19:22','Frank','I don\'t quite get it','I never understood this issue: Why will HPR \"die\" if there are no more shows in the queue? What is the problem with a day without a show? Will the server crash with a Nullpointer exception? You said HPR has been broadcasting for more than 10!½ years. In that case we would be at show #3780-something now.\r\n\r\nGreetings from spring-y Europe','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1523,2008,'2016-05-02 17:52:58','Ken Fallon','Because it was','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nBack in the day, we were as relaxed in releasing shows as you suggest. It was fine for a while but then after a time, the shows were not been released as often. This is why there are only 2308 shows rather than the 3780 shows you say there should be. Around October 2010 there were a few months with very little activity, and people were saying that HPR had podfaded. \r\n\r\nI suggested we should either end HPR or continue it.\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2010-September/007639.html\r\nThis was prompted by a lostnbronx show \"hpr0560 :: Old soldiers\", which was an essay about how to gracefully end a podcast. \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=0560\r\n\r\nFollowing discussions the promise was made that we would continue as a community podcast. So that when the community decides it\'s time to finish the project, we play all the shows we have and close it down with grace and dignity.\r\n\r\nThis is why we have the text on each and every podcast. \"We are a Community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today\'s show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.\" \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/theme.php\r\n\r\nSo no shows - no HPR. Why drag it out.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:27'),
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(1524,2009,'2016-04-22 14:32:22','Ken Fallon','Great show','A great show. Can you send in a screen shot of the finished product please.\r\n\r\nAlso a general introduction/series on Screen and tmux etc would be great.\r\n\r\nThanks for this.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1525,2009,'2016-05-03 19:44:54','Eric Suess','Thank you.','This was an excellent show!\r\n\r\nI have been looking (or just not aware that I should have been) for something like screen. \r\n\r\nI really like this. Thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1526,2010,'2016-04-15 02:44:45','Zen_Floater2','squirrel','Glad to hear you didn\'t just pass away or go back to urban camping. \r\nFrankly, I I\'m surprised Plasma 5 is still not ready yet for Slackware, or anybody.\r\nBut that\'s really no reason to go hide in a cave young man.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1527,2010,'2016-04-22 14:33:35','Ken Fallon','Don\'t like xpath !','What - You don\'t like XPath !\r\n\r\nWhy if only someone recorded a show about that.\r\n\r\n/me digs his own hole on this one.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1528,2010,'2016-05-24 13:23:54','rstackhouse','','JSON\'s rise in popularity was due to its utility as a data transfer format in heavy client web applications. XML is very verbose in comparison with JSON. Back when JavaScript interpreters were slower, this bloat was a big deal. XML just takes longer to parse, and in an environment where type coercion is the norm, a lot of type information, in the form of XSD, just doesn\'t make sense. When you own both ends of a communication pipeline, a strict contract, isn\'t really necessary.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1529,2011,'2016-04-18 16:53:55','b-yeezi','Wow','For a data analyst like myself, the applications of the items covered in this episode are amazing. May start to use sed to analyze and manipulate gene sequences.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1530,2011,'2016-04-19 09:01:27','Dave Morriss','Thanks','Glad you found it useful.\r\n\r\nI started using sed (and later awk), at the university I worked at in the 1980\'s/90\'s, to process student record snapshots for loading into our home-brew identity management system. They were great for data validation (e.g. \"why is this guy\'s date of birth last week?\"). ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1531,2011,'2016-04-22 14:29:45','Ken Fallon','Nice one','Hi Dave,\r\n\r\nAnother great episode. \r\n\r\nI completely missed the .$$ thing before although I have seen it before.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1532,2012,'2016-04-22 14:49:09','Ken Fallon','Normal Parsers','Hi klaatu,\r\n\r\nCan you (do a introduction series on python and then) talk about the \"normal\' xml methods as well please.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1533,2013,'2016-04-20 02:33:41','sigflup','cool','cool beans. thank you for making this','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1534,2013,'2016-04-22 14:50:36','Ken Fallon','large complex files ','Hi klaatu,\r\n\r\nHave you compared the parsing times and performance when loading large and complex xml documents ?\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1535,2013,'2016-06-28 13:26:21','Luiz Rodrigo','THANKS!','Ow ! thanks for this article , is very helpful for me .','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1536,2014,'2016-04-21 09:09:36','Mike Ray','Great Show','Great second part to this. I love all the plasticky sounds and clicks of taking the thing apart and looking inside, putting it back together etc.\r\n\r\nI can really imagine the workbench strewn with test-probes and other electronic hackery detritis :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1537,2014,'2016-04-21 19:04:22','NYbill','Its a brand new bench! ','About 4 months ago my wife decided she no longer wanted a 4x6\' glass top desk that was in our spare room. So, I grabbed it. The glass top would be good for hot work. Soldering, hot air, etc... \r\n\r\nI set all my gear up on it and made a nice, clean, dedicated space in the computer room for electronics work.\r\n\r\nAnd... then I used it. It hasn\'t been clean since. :P\r\n\r\nYes, I confess, the bench/desk is how you describe it. Strewn with test gear, parts, and tools. Always with multiple projects going on at once. \r\n\r\nBut, that is how it should be! ;)\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1538,2014,'2016-04-25 19:47:56','Ken Fallon','Logging in android','Hi NYbill,\r\n\r\nDid I miss it or was it possible to log values over time in the app ?\r\n\r\nKen','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1539,2015,'2016-04-24 20:26:22','jan','','this should be positive to quite a few people! thx for sharing','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1540,2015,'2016-04-25 19:45:40','Ken Fallon','Great episode','Hi Joe,\r\n\r\nGreat episode the content will hit the mark regardless of anyone\'s beliefs.\r\n\r\nI am not familiar with your Church, so please feel free to record a episode on your Churches history, and what it stands for. I have no doubt that would be of interest to hackers.\r\n\r\nNaturally there may be people who do and do not share your views, but I\'m sure it would all get a better understanding.\r\n\r\nNaturally this invitation is open to all. \r\n\r\nReverend Ken pastor of the Church of send in more shows :)\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1541,2015,'2016-05-11 22:46:23','Todd','Great show!','I really enjoyed hearing how your church uses Linux and open source software. Our church used to use Linux in the sound booth, but we too started to use PRO Presenter so we had to switch to windows. We do still use Audacity to record sermons. ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1542,2016,'2016-04-25 19:52:21','Ken Fallon','Thank you Thank you Thank you Thank you ','I would have gotten lost at the first hurdle.\r\n\r\nAlthough you may not be able to determine if the the music was the HPR theme or not, could you determine if there was music in a section at all ?\r\n\r\nSay if we cut the first 3 minutes from the front and end of a episode, could it check if there was music in there ?\r\n\r\nThanks,\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1543,2016,'2016-05-23 16:36:49','laindir','Late','Quite behind on my listening, so I didn\'t even think to check for comments until I caught the community news show just now (just caught up to my episode last night). Frankly, I\'m way over my head. My very limited understanding of the fingerprint is that it\'s just a timestamped list of transitions between sounds. I don\'t know nearly enough about signal processing generally, nor about how Echoprint encodes those transitions specifically, to even speculate how one would begin to distinguish between music and speech.','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1544,2019,'2016-04-23 19:36:00','Matt (g33kdad)','Some photos','The following link includes a photo of the RPi in the bookshelf with the stereo as well as a screenshot of the Rune Audio app running on my Android phone.\r\n\r\nCheers,\r\nMatt\r\n\r\nhttps://cloud.thestrangeland.net/index.php/s/CdbU1povrcproZQ','2017-09-09 07:41:30'),
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(1545,2019,'2016-04-30 11:57:11','Jonathan Kulp','Muttonchop too','Thanks I really enjoyed this episode. I actually do something similar with one of my Raspberry Pis but I use Jezra\'s muttonchop audio server (https://www.jezra.net/projects/muttonchop) and control the audio either from my phone, tablet, or laptop. Mutton-chop has a web interface so you just need a browser on your remote device to control everything. I hook the Pi into a 1972 Marantz receiver. Like you, I found that I needed to get a USB audio interface b/c onboard audio was awful. I got a little dongle off of Amazon for about 8 or $10 and it sounds tremendous. Incidentally one of my favorite streaming stations is JazzStream: Capitol Public Radio (Sacramento)','2022-02-14 13:17:28'),
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(1546,2019,'2016-05-08 04:00:41','Matt (g33kdad)','Thanks, John','Thanks, John! I bet the Marantz sounds great! My dad had one when I was a kid.\r\n\r\nMatt','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1547,2020,'2016-04-30 21:27:33','Frank','','Fascinating. Thanks for shedding light on what to most is a mystery.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1548,2020,'2016-05-01 01:18:33','Jon Kulp ','Awesome! ','I loved this episode! Please do more car repair shows, this is something I want to learn more about. Ever since getting my 04 Ranger I\'ve been trying to do all of the repairs myself. Can always use tips from a professional. Thanks for a great episode. ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1549,2020,'2016-05-02 15:06:42','JimZat','Honest Auto Mechanics','Great show and information.\r\n\r\nI have a local mechanic that I use for items which I am unable to take care of myself. I have often felt guilty that he undercharged me for hours worked compared to \"book hours\".\r\n\r\nYour insight has relieved my guilt and made me even more confident that he a GOOD mechanic and I can feel comfortable referring friends to him.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1550,2020,'2016-05-05 14:32:26','mysterio2','','Great show, very useful info in understanding something we all have occasion to be involved with.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1551,2020,'2016-05-25 15:23:14','Todd','','Great episode','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1552,2021,'2016-05-10 02:24:41','Matt (g33kdad)','Thanks!','A big thanks to John and Dave for doing the community news this month.\r\n\r\nYour \"review\" of my show (2019) gave me some good ideas for future shows. Most specifically, a show on how I use ownCloud will probably come next.\r\n\r\nI love HPR! Thanks to all the hosts and admins','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1553,2021,'2016-05-11 12:27:13','Dave Morriss','Great!','Glad the show was useful. If the result of what we do is more shows in the queue then it all seems worthwhile :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1554,2022,'2016-05-03 22:32:28','Jon Kulp','What\'s in your cab?','Excellent show! Thanks so much for the taking the time to record and also to put together such detailed notes. A couple of follow-up topics occur to me: 1. \"what\'s in my cab.\" Always interesting to hear the kind of things people consider \"must have\" when they have to live in small spaces for a long period of time. 2. how to back up an 18 wheeler to a loading area. I\'ve always been amazed at how professional truck drivers can back those giant things into the most awkward places. Much respect!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1555,2022,'2016-05-04 14:57:58','JWP','Great Podcast','Hey I really liked your podcast thank you for being so clear about wants in your bag. I liked your simple approach to your items. The Wifi whips you got to do a show about that stuff for sure. Please build on what you shared I liked the recorder part a lot as drive a lot to.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1556,2022,'2016-05-08 01:22:23','Christopher M. Hobbs','Tell us about truckin\'!','Hey, wonderful episode! You had a lot of great tips about durable kit. I\'m going to look a few of them up.\r\n\r\nWould you consider doing an episode talking about truck driving? People see truck drivers every day and we don\'t know much about the world you\'re in!\r\n\r\nThanks for submitting a show and welcome to HPR!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1557,2023,'2016-05-04 08:02:18','Mike Ray','Pi3 in a Metal Box','If you put a Pi3 in a metal box it acts as a good Faraday cage and the WiFi and Bluetooth RF cannot get in or out.\r\n\r\nGood episode. I bought one of the PiBow cases recently and the layer pieces snapped apart in several places. Very poor quality in my opinion.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1558,2023,'2016-05-04 14:53:06','JWP','GNU Nano Editor','The GNU Nano Editor is a real hardcore editor for people who do not want to hurt themselves with an editor.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1559,2023,'2016-05-04 18:29:43','Dave Morriss','Faraday cage, Pibow and Nano','Hi Mike!\r\n\r\nThanks for confirming: yes I thought a metal case would block both WiFi and Bluetooth as you say. However, these are being sold as suitable for the Pi 3, though I imagine this is more to do with the size. Seems odd though.\r\n\r\nThe Pibow cases are made of quite thin acrylic - 2.8mm thick according to my digital callipers. Some layers have quite narrow pieces which wrap around items on the board like the USB connectors. Also you have to remove a protective film from each layer, which can put strain on these narrow parts as you peel it off. I have nearly snapped them on occasion, but the trick is to be slow and steady as you peel and support the weaker pieces. Once assembled the layers above and below keep everything nice and firm I find.\r\n\r\nHi JWP!\r\n\r\nThere\'s nothing inherently wrong with Nano, it\'s simple to use and does the job. I used Pico (on a VAX Cluster running VMS where it was the editor for the Pine mail client) for many years. However, it was a tremendous relief to move away to a more powerful editor like EDT and TPU on the VAX, then Emacs and Vi/Vim on Unix.\r\n\r\nFinding myself presented with Nano is a shock when my fingers and brain are trying to operate in Vim mode, so I want to install Vim as soon as I can - preferably with my own .vimrc and all the plugins I normally use!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1560,2023,'2016-05-07 14:01:47','Mike Ray','Metal boxes and Emacs','I suppose there may be enough holes in a metal Pi case to let some of the RF in or out but as the antennas are on the PCB it would be very inefficient compared to being put in a plastic case.\r\n\r\nEditors? Emacs of course is the only true editor, Emacspeak doubly so.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1561,2023,'2016-05-16 19:36:32','Beeza','Alternative Pi Server Setup','Hi Dave\r\n\r\nThanks for a very interesting show. \r\n\r\nI am using a Pi2 as a file server but avoided a lot of complexity buy using SSHFS. I can connect a client to the server with one line typed in a terminal window. From then on the server can be accessed as if it were a local folder on the client. Very simple, very reliable.\r\n\r\nI\'m not sure I followed the rationale for booting from the attached SSD, given that you still have to have a microSD card in the Pi.\r\n\r\nWhichever way you connect, a Pi + SSD is a great low-cost server solution. I\'m staggered that small businesses aren\'t so far buying them in huge numbers.\r\n\r\nI always enjoy your shows, Dave. Please keep them coming.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1562,2023,'2016-05-16 21:50:52','Dave Morriss','SSHFS; SSD','Thanks for the comments Beeza!\r\n\r\nI tend to use NFS out of habit. I spent many years setting up NFS between Unix systems and others at my work, so it\'s what I do. I have used SSHFS briefly, but not as a permanent thing. I will consider using it more.\r\n\r\nMy thinking about using the SSD was that it\'s built for long-term repeated use, whereas a microSD is not engineered to the same standards. I have heard of SD cards failing in the past and I don\'t want that to happen with this server. I reasoned that the microSD would get very light use in this configuration so would last longer. My information might be out of date though!\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1563,2024,'2016-05-06 04:40:55','b-yeezi','Interesting approach','This is an interesting approach to prevent creating new files from bad names. You should also consider the command line tool called detox. This tool is especially useful when you are dealing with entire directories of existing files with bad file names. ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1564,2024,'2016-05-30 16:29:10','Dave Morriss','Nice idea','I have been bitten by this over the years of using Unix and Linux and this is quite an original solution.\r\n\r\nPersonally, I have got into the habit of either using Tab while typing an existing file name so that the shell formats it for me by adding backslashes before spaces and the like, or by enclosing such names in quotes. However, the strategy of avoiding creating such file names is a good one. ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1565,2027,'2016-05-10 14:38:51','Steve Saner','','Well done on the audio description of the puzzle. I had an almost perfect picture in my head of it before seeing the pictures. That\'s not an easy thing to do.\r\n\r\nThe story itself was also great. One of the most fun shows to listen too.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1566,2027,'2016-05-14 00:45:33','Gabriel Evenfire','Glad you liked it','Very glad to hear that the puzzle description was clear. This was my biggest worry about the podcast: that it would be hard to imagine what was happening! Thanks for the feedback!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1567,2027,'2016-05-30 16:44:17','Dave Morriss','A most interesting show','Thanks for this. It really made me sit and think. I arrived at the \'true\' solution just before you mentioned it, which is probably more coincidence than anything else - I\'m usually poor at doing things like this!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1568,2027,'2016-08-03 15:59:23','Alpha32','Excellent show','This show was great. The magnet thing was hilarious, it seems that kids always come up with those incredibly simple solutions. Very reaffirming and entertaining. Thanks for sharing! ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1569,2028,'2016-05-13 18:17:49','Frank','','I found this fascinating.\r\n\r\nI used to do training and support for a company that manufactures security systems. We made the boards that the door contacts, PIRs, and the like connect to, but we didn\'t make peripheral hardware, other than card readers. I enjoyed hearing how the doohickey on the other end of the wire worked','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1570,2028,'2016-05-24 02:09:20','Bill','','Glad you liked it. Maybe you should do one from the other end as well and we can do competing podcast. ;)\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1571,2028,'2016-05-24 19:21:34','Frank','','I\'ve been out of that industry for almost 10 years. Not sure I remember enough to talk coherently about it.:)','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1572,2028,'2016-05-25 15:22:20','Todd','','Very interesting. Please do more.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1573,2028,'2016-05-30 16:46:22','Dave Morriss','Interesting subject','There was a lot I didn\'t know in here. I\'m looking forward to more!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1574,2028,'2016-06-03 10:50:42','Bill','','Any particular type things you guys would like to know about?','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1575,2028,'2016-06-03 19:28:57','Frank','','I would think that some persons would be interested in knowing how prox readers and cards work. I encounter lots of misconceptions about prox cards, such \"they send out a signal all on their ownsome.\"','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1576,2029,'2016-05-30 16:50:28','Dave Morriss','Was tempted to get one','I saw some of these, built and installed in a laser-cut plywood case, when I was at the Edinburgh Mini Maker Faire recently. I was tempted to buy one but didn\'t because I wasn\'t sure what I\'d use it for! They were selling for around £30 I think.\r\n\r\nGreat subject for a show!','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1577,2029,'2016-06-04 15:47:26','NYbill','','If it was a color screen it might be the same kit. There are a few other DSO kits out there with non-color screens. \r\n\r\nI\'m sure these things can be bought cheaply in bulk. Looks like someone might be making a bit off them selling them with a custom made plywood case. \r\n\r\nGood on\'em. The entrepreneurial spirit. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1578,2029,'2016-06-05 17:13:37','Dave Morriss','Pre-built kit','The company still have the item on their website, though it seems to be sold out. It seems to be the red PCB and a colour screen, so I guess it\'s genuine and might be the same model.\r\n\r\nhttps://curiouselectric.co.uk/products/osillo-tron-o-matic-2000-oscilloscope-kit\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:28'),
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(1579,2030,'2016-05-13 18:50:47','Frank','','Sometimes, nothing beats a book.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1580,2032,'2016-05-17 14:54:00','Peri Saner','Wife','Brilliant! Insightful! Funny! Well written and well-recorded. I even learned some things about you! This program has insights for the beginner as well as the experienced. A highly recommended listen.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1581,2032,'2016-05-17 19:24:34','Jonathan Kulp','Bring on the rockets','Very nice episode! Can\'t wait to hear about model rockets...','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1582,2032,'2016-05-18 19:48:27','NYbill','The old gray beards in the basement.','Its amazing how many of us discovered the Unix systems in the depths of our college basements. ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1583,2032,'2016-05-30 17:10:19','Dave Morriss','Really enjoyed this','An excellent show. A lot of old memories were triggered for me with your mention of VMS, SunOS, SPARCstations, Usenet and the rest.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to more shows.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1584,2034,'2016-05-19 04:06:55','Frank','','Oops. Looks like I made a typo.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1585,2034,'2016-05-20 12:56:31','Frank','','I made a couple of loaves of this yesterday, this time adding oats, as I found a can of steel-cut oats in the pantry.\r\n\r\nI used about a quarter cup of oats for two loaves, pouring boiling water over them and letting them soak for about two hours before mixing the dough. The results tasted good, but the oats seemed to add more to the texture than to the flavor, \r\n\r\nI note, though, that the results passed the girlfriend test with flying colors.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1586,2034,'2016-05-30 17:17:35','Dave Morriss','Must try this, or a modification thereof','Interesting recipe. There are some quite powerfully-flavoured seeds there and I\'m curious to find out how they taste in combination.\r\n\r\nI often use sesame, poppy and sunflower seeds and might put caraway in a rye-based loaf.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1587,2034,'2016-06-02 03:12:49','Frank','','It is quite good, but different. It\'s not for every day nor every taste, but I do quite like it. \r\n\r\nI cannot envision eating it with jam--I fear the sweetness of the jam would clash with the savoriness of the bread. As for rye and caraway, if I bake rye bread and forget the caraway, it fails the Hungarian girlfriend test.:)\r\n\r\nAlso, if you\'re a mystery buff, try some Kerry Greenwood mysteries. Kerry Greenwood makes words dance.','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1588,2035,'2016-05-20 12:50:09','Tony Hughes','building community','Really enjoyed this show, I like some of the idears you suggest. Getting some of the podcasters from popular Linux/tech podcasts to do guest shows for HPR and then publicising them on their site\'s. This would drive listeners to both HPR and the guest hosts show, this is a win situation to both party\'s. Also if hosts who have their own blog, blog about their shows at HPR this may also drive new traffic to the HPR site. I did a post on both my own and my Makerspace blog for this very reason after my first HPR show to be aired soon. ','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1589,2035,'2016-05-20 14:02:18','droops','Tech Podcasts','I am very out of the loop. What shows should we go after? What shows do you listen to?','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1590,2035,'2016-05-20 14:17:59','Dave Morriss','Show tags','Some great suggestions here. Thanks.\r\n\r\nAs far as the tag situation is concerned there is an ongoing project to add these (and summaries), where we\'re asking for Community assistance. Check out https://hackerpublicradio.org/missing_summaries_and_tags.html for the current state, and how to send updates. All contributions are very welcome!\r\n\r\nThe idea of explicitly linking to related shows is an excellent one, though some database redesign and code changes might be desirable to improve tag parsing and searching.','2022-02-14 13:17:28'),
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(1591,2035,'2016-05-20 19:32:27','Tony Hughes','Building Comunity','Hi Droops\r\n\r\nSome of the other tech related shows I currently listen to are:\r\n\r\nThe Ubuntu Podcast \r\nhttps://ubuntupodcast.org/\r\n\r\nThe Pi Podcast\r\nhttps://thepipodcast.com/\r\n\r\nmintCast\r\nhttps://mintcast.org/\r\n\r\nLinux Luddites\r\nhttps://linuxluddites.com/\r\n\r\nBad Voltage\r\nhttps://www.badvoltage.org/\r\n\r\nGeekRant\r\nhttps://elementopie.com/geekrant-episodes\r\n\r\nGoing Linux\r\nhttps://goinglinux.com/\r\n\r\nComputer America\r\nhttps://computeramerica.com/\r\n\r\nLinux Unplugged\r\nhttps://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/\r\n\r\nLinux Voice \r\nhttps://www.linuxvoice.com/category/podcasts/\r\n\r\nDan Lynch (former Linux Outlaws)\r\ndanlynch.org/\r\n\r\nAll the podcasts mentioned here are community driven and their hosts would make good guest hosts, or people to interview.\r\n\r\nI\'m sure other HPR listeners/hosts could suggest many more that I\'ve never heard of let alone listened to.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:29'),
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(1592,2035,'2016-05-22 09:00:15','amunizp','app','App that records flac and uploads to next slot would be great. Make it available on F-droid.\r\n\r\nI have wanted to do a python-kivy app, maybe just a RSS catcher only for HPR will catch enough attention. currently I am using antennapod for rss of comments','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1593,2035,'2016-06-18 03:00:35','FiftyOneFifty','','As far as transcription, lets look at the speech to text API\'s Mycroft uses (at least at roll out) or some of the algorithms developed for Sirius at https://clarity-lab.org/.','2022-02-14 13:17:29'),
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(1594,2037,'2016-05-26 21:52:35','Dave Morriss','Cooking! Yay!','Great show.\r\n\r\nI use those spices a lot - mainly in stewed apple - but I\'ve never tried them in porridge. I must sample them sometime.\r\n\r\nOn the subject of naming differences, we call the dry processed oats (crushed, ground, chopped, rolled, etc) \"oatmeal\". What you call oatmeal we call porridge I believe.\r\n\r\nYes, I think we need more cooking shows. Regional recipes sound like a great idea. As a Sassenach I\'m not sure I\'m the right person to talk about Scottish cooking though :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:31'),
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(1595,2038,'2016-05-25 02:10:33','Jon Kulp','Hilarious','Wow this might be the funniest HPR episode I\'ve ever heard. (the boat\'s on fire!!) As far as making a recording while I\'m doing something, it\'s all about the $2 lapel microphone, plugged either into my zoom H1 or my phone. Awesome show, Jezra!','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1596,2038,'2016-05-28 01:34:09','Dennis New','Hilarious Indeed','I lol\'ed a few times -- including the \"the boat\'s on fire\" Excellent show.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1597,2038,'2016-05-28 23:02:34','FiftyOneFifty','Good Times','But I am never going fishing with Jezra','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1598,2038,'2016-06-04 06:22:16','Kathy scogna','Director','Very funny. \r\nSo funny that I kept looking for the video....duh, this is public radio.\r\nGood job.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1599,2042,'2016-06-01 01:18:36','Kevin O\'Brien','Dan Carlin','Thanks for recording this Jane. I always enjoy seeing what other people are recommending. I am also a huge Dan Carlin fan. I have listened to every one of his Hardcore History shows, and stay current with Common Sense.\r\n\r\nFor anyone who loves US history, I can also recommend Ben Franklin\'s World, which is at https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/ . They bill themselves as a podcast about \"Early American History, which in practice means Colonial through the Civil War.','2022-02-14 13:17:29'),
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(1600,2042,'2016-06-01 11:39:40','Jon Kulp ','Ask Me Another ','I enjoyed this episode, thanks. if you like \"Wait wait, don\'t tell me,\" you probably would like \"Ask me another,\" if you don\'t already listen to it. Thanks also for mentioning the James Joyce podcast. I\'m a huge James Joyce fan and at one point studied his works quite closely. If nothing else, that podcast is guaranteed to have a steady source of new material for a really long time. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1601,2042,'2016-06-01 13:25:35','Dave Morriss','Frank Delaney et al','I thoroughly echo Kevin\'s comments about Dan Carlin. Also knew little about the history of First World War, even though my late father was fascinated by it, and our house was full of books about it. Dan Carlin drew a picture of events that horrified and fascinated me.\r\n\r\nIn the past I have listened to Frank Delaney a lot on BBC Radio, where he presented programmes called \"Bookshelf\" and \"Word of Mouth\", both absolutely excellent in my opinion. I shall follow your recommendation and try his podcast as well.\r\n\r\nThanks for such an interesting show.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1602,2042,'2016-10-04 08:27:46','elmussol','Re: Joyce','Just subscribed to Re: Joyce.\r\n\r\nThank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1603,2044,'2016-06-07 19:54:10','rocket-dog','','Hope you are doing well Bill. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1604,2044,'2016-06-11 12:35:21','NYbill','','Hey Rocket-Dog. Its been a long time! I doubt this is the place for a chit-chat though. :P Shoot me an email if you\'d like. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1605,2047,'2016-06-07 22:19:15','FiftyOneFifty','Neat little app, thanks','Even though there isn\'t a binary in the openSUSE repos, installation was as easy as downloading the source from Github, unpacking the archive, and running \"sudo make install\"','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1606,2049,'2016-06-09 10:14:22','pitfd','Server Setup','Dear Knightwise,\r\n\r\ngreat contribution. Would like to have one :-). As I am not well versed in \r\nserver stuff, would you mind to elaborate on server setup - may be\r\npoint out a good tutorial?\r\nthank you\r\npitfd','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1607,2049,'2016-06-10 11:46:38','Jon Kulp','CenterIM','Great episode! Especially liked the rundown of CLI apps. Got CenterIM running on my servers now. Thanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1608,2049,'2016-06-11 20:57:46','Jon Kulp','CLI word processing','I\'ve been trying out that CLI word processor, wordgrinder. This is really pretty cool. Once I figured out that you had to use the native .wg format to start out with and then convert it over to odt or HTML, it worked great. I like how it does a nice clean HTML conversion without any styling at all. You\'ve got very basic paragraph styles for headings and quotations, couple of basic character formatting options, it\'s just right. :-) Thanks for the tip.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1609,2049,'2016-06-17 01:54:56','laindir','Me too','I also find myself ssh\'d into my rpi as my daily driver--glad to know I\'m not alone. I loved the list of apps and have saved it for a re-listen. Inspiring.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1610,2050,'2016-06-21 22:26:21','Clinton Roy','','What a lovely episode, thanks :)','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1611,2052,'2016-06-21 01:57:55','gurdonark','Good listen','I enjoyed this episode. The \"how I got into computers/Linux\" sections were fun. If my small-town 1970s southern high school had had Logo programming books I would have been delighted--and to this day, Logo is my favorite way to draw. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1612,2053,'2016-06-18 02:53:18','FiftyOneFifty','','Good choice, literally my favorite mass produced bottled beer, I reviewed it back in the old Podbrewers days. I don\'t see it often here, and it\'s kinda spendy when it is.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1613,2054,'2016-06-17 13:12:06','amunizp','Headless?','Would this work for headless computers. I mean opening and closing minetest server running on a single board computer.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1614,2054,'2016-06-17 19:54:07','Jon Kulp','Probably','Yes, I think so. I\'m pretty sure that Jezra uses this on a headless computer in his house. You might go back and listen to my interview with Jezra from episode 1284 (https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1284) and see what he says about it.','2022-02-14 13:17:30'),
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(1615,2055,'2016-06-17 13:50:29','amunizp','+1 for nano','But a bit disapointed that it is in Facebook. I just use it and like it but not enough to join Facebook.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1616,2055,'2016-06-18 10:21:39','0xf10e','-1 for facebook, too','Nice show, but dude, that was some really bad noise!\r\n\r\nYou probably meant \"nano is an editor for _normal_ people\". I use vi-style keybindings in my shell but I have yet to notice to be imaginary ;P\r\n\r\nOh, and -1 for Facebook from me, too.\r\nNano should be careful not to be kicked out of GNU when RMS hears about this…','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1617,2056,'2016-05-16 20:14:46','Tony Hughes','Links to Blackpool Makerspace and Jam','I forgot to put links in for the Makerspace and Jam so here they are.\r\n\r\nBlackpool Makerspace\r\nhttps://blackpoollinux.wordpress.com/\r\n\r\nBlackpool Raspberry Jam\r\nhttps://blackpoolraspberryjam.co.uk/\r\n\r\nTony','2022-02-14 13:17:30'),
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(1618,2056,'2016-05-17 15:14:21','Tony Hughes','Interview with a young hacker','Confusing but I\'ve just realised we have two Wordpress sites the other one was for the LUG this includes both Makerspace and LUG posts.\r\n\r\nhttps://blackpoolmakerspace.wordpress.com/','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1619,2056,'2016-06-21 16:35:26','Jon Kulp ','Excellent! ','I loved this! I wish he\'d gone into more detail about his python library, but I salute him for having created one in the first place. Great stuff. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1620,2057,'2016-06-30 12:08:36','Luke','Steel cut oats','Sadly steel cut oats are really hard to find in UK supermarkets as everywhere just stocks rolled oats. You can order online but so expensive compared to rolled. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1621,2059,'2016-06-24 01:09:27','Jon Kulp','More!','Excellent first episode! I really enjoyed this. I hope you will do many more episodes in the future, maybe even expanding upon how you met your future wife at age 12! Truly crazy.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1622,2059,'2016-06-24 21:04:24','Todd Mitchell','','Thanks Jon, more to come!','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1623,2059,'2016-09-07 22:34:53','Stilvoid','Seconded!','I really enjoyed this episode. Please record some more :)','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1624,2061,'2016-06-28 01:12:38','Brian','','Great show, I like your idea\'s of motivating kids to write/take notes. I wish a teacher in my life would have taken the time to teach me this important skill. You should try to be a guest on the pen addict podcast. I think your views would be greatly appreciated.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1625,2061,'2016-06-28 21:04:26','jezra','','Excellent episode. Just a few of my observations on writing: During National Novel Writing Month, there are quite a few participants who choose to write their novel by hand. While it is true that writing long-hand is usually slower than typing, writing in short-hand can be much faster than typing.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/06/yeah-i-still-use-shorthand-and-a-smartpen/373281/','2022-02-14 13:17:30'),
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(1626,2061,'2016-06-28 22:03:29','Frank','','I\'ve always preferred fountain pens, starting with one that belonged to my grandmother; I started using that one in high school. I currently have a relatively inexpensive Waterman--with a bellows, not a cartridge--that is my favorite of the two dozen or so fountain pens we have lying about this house, many picked up at yard sales or resale shops.\r\n\r\nBut I\'m old. When I went to school, we were taught \"printing,\" which was presented as a precursor to \"writing.\" Not learning how to write, as opposed to print, was not an option. \r\n\r\nI agree wholeheartedly that there is a difference between taking notes and simple transcribing a lecture. Transcription does not promote synthesis of information in any form--one is too preoccupied with taking dictation to think about what is being dictated.\r\n\r\nWhen my own kids came home from school talking about some mysterious thing called \"cursive,\" I almost didn\'t know what the heck they were talking about.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1627,2061,'2017-01-02 04:19:28','m1rr0r5h4d35','Thanks for sharing!','I am actually a fan of fountain pens as well. I love them, but sometimes it is hard to explain the fascination to people who don\'t get it. I don\'t know about anyone else, but I do get tired of the \"why?\" every time I mention fountain pens. Good to know I am not the only one!','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1628,2062,'2016-06-28 17:16:30','Mike Ray','Baofeng UV5R','Interesting show. I\'m curious about the Baofeng. Does it talk out-of-the-box, and are ALL functions and menus spoken? In other words as a blind op would I be able to do everything with the radio that you can?\r\n\r\nG4XBF','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1629,2062,'2016-07-03 13:34:47','MrX','Re Baofeng UV5R','Yes it does indeed talk out of the box and almost all the functions are announced. Playing with the radio I notice that not all functions are spoken the band function button for example which changes between VHF and UHF function only beeps but you can go to any frequency directly at any time when in VFO mode which is spoken and you can then just type the frequency in directly. The VFO A/B is the same but again the same applies. Would imagine make an excellent radio for a blind op and you won\'t go far wrong at the price, best regards.\r\n\r\nMrX','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1630,2062,'2016-07-04 17:17:56','MrX','Re Re Baofeng UV5R','Just read your comment above again and realised I hadn\'t properly answered your question. yes most if not all the menus are spoken. When you push the menu button it announces “menu” and shows you on the display which option is selected. You can find out which option is being displayed by pushing the menu button a 2nd time, you would then push exit. \r\n\r\nTo change to another menu option you could either use the up down keys or use keypad entry which unfortunately only beeps within the menu option however again you can find out what option you are in by pushing menu a 2nd time. Hope this makes isn\'t too confusing and I still think a blind op could use it fine particularly if you upload a pile of frequencies to it using the open source chirp software. \r\n\r\nMrx\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1631,2064,'2016-07-19 16:38:15','Krayon','SLiM','FYI: SLiM (_S_imple _L_og_i_n _M_anager) should allow you to cycle through\r\nthe available DM\'s by pressing the F1 key. You simply stop on your desired DM,\r\nthen login.\r\n\r\nSLiM config within /etc/ somewhere ( /etc/slim.conf or /etc/slim/slim.conf\r\nprobably) can be used to define the choices.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1632,2066,'2016-07-04 19:47:31','Ivan \"Epicanis\" Privaci','This is a thing of beauty','I haven\'t listened to the episode, but I must say the inclusion of HTML in the feeds makes these Community News entries *much* easier to read. They used to show up as a smashed-together mass of text in my feed-reader.\r\n\r\nSpiffy work!','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1633,2066,'2016-07-08 11:30:34','Dave Morriss','Series page','I just listened to this episode, and noticed that I told Ken that the Series page (https://hackerpublicradio.org/series.php) was static. It\'s not, it\'s a dynamic bit of PHP like it always was. I just improved the database query and changed the layout.\r\n\r\nI was confusing it with the page about missing summaries and tags (hackerpublicradio.org/report_missing_tags.php) which is static and is regenerated with a Perl script and a template whenever there are updates to these items.\r\n\r\nProbably nobody noticed, but I like to be accurate if I can :-)','2022-02-14 13:17:31'),
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(1634,2066,'2016-08-04 22:17:08','Alpha32','World oat domination','Dave, we could start a pinhead/steelcut oat racket. I\'ll ship them from the US, and you sell them in the UK. I\'m guessing their rarity in the UK is because you had been importing them from Europe? The pinhead oat industry, an unforeseen casualty of Brexit? ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1635,2066,'2016-08-06 22:03:52','Dave Morriss','Made in Scotland','Alpha32: nice idea but Pinhead Oatmeal is produced in Scotland by Hamlyns of Banff, Aberdeenshire (see my picture at https://flic.kr/p/JH3hkk), and others too no doubt. I suspect that not much goes south of the border :-)\r\n\r\nAs to Brexit, in my nightmares I see us heading back to the days of my childhood where garlic was evil foreign substance and olive oil was for putting on burns and was kept in the medicine cabinet.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1636,2068,'2016-07-06 13:36:42','cybergrue','','GPodder was slow in my case because it was indexing all the files in its folder to maintain an internal database. You can set options in the GPodder options to delete files after x number of days. Also you can manually clean up files in the application. That said, never delete the underlying files because it will cause the GPodder database to become desynchronized which causes its own set of problems. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1637,2068,'2016-07-07 17:03:22','Frank','','As a Slackware user, I sort of kind of knew of the Church of the Subgenius, praise Bob, but I had not stumbled over their podcast.\r\n\r\nAll I can say is, how very strange.\r\n\r\nJust as an aside, I use podget to get my pods. I used to use podracer until it didn\'t like me any more.\r\n\r\nNone of that fancy GUI stuff for me.:)','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1638,2068,'2016-07-21 08:34:24','folky','','Thank you for your show!\r\nI too use podget (I talked about it earlier - HPR1992). My podget saves nearly all files in folders named with date. You get this by setting %YY%-%MM%-%DD% after the feed-urls in your serverlist. This way you can listen chronologically and can easy delete all you listened to without the need to know it for every file. You didn\'t have to use cleanup-function of podget either.\r\n\r\nDid you set MOST_RECENT=xx in your podgetrc? I set it to 30 and it works.\r\n\r\nOn the question of syncing between devices I recommend to use rsync. You can take a look at the script I wrote https://github.com/swegryps/bepackpod for inspiration.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1639,2069,'2016-07-08 04:53:35','b-yeezi','Thanks for the quick tips','I already know about countif. There is also a function called sumif, which is similar. Instead of counting, it will sum up the values of a given range if criteria is met in another range.\r\n\r\nConsider:\r\n\r\nred | 1\r\nblue | 4\r\ngreen | 6\r\nred | 4\r\n\r\n=sumif(A1:A4,\"red\",B1:B4)\r\nresult: 5\r\n\r\nThe sumproduct was new for me. I have already started to use it. Keep up the informative shows. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1640,2070,'2016-07-09 16:43:41','Frank','','It was nice to hear Project Gutenberg and Librivox get some publicity. They are two of the most worthwhile projects on the innerwebs.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1641,2072,'2016-07-16 00:45:52','Frank','','I hope I never have to do this, but I\'m glad to know it\'s possible. \r\n\r\nThanks.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1642,2072,'2016-07-17 17:31:45','brian','great info','I have had my best results with \"testdisk\", but definitely gonna play with this.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1643,2074,'2016-07-14 16:10:01','Ken Fallon','This show is of interest to hackers','Dont be afraid to share more.\r\n\r\nKen','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1644,2074,'2016-07-16 00:44:59','Frank','','A tale of kindness, gentleness, and truth, especially the truth that we must accept death as being as much a part of life as birth.\r\n\r\nThis caused me to remember an experience we once had, though the end was happier.\r\n\r\nMy new wife and I were going away to visit my parents over Thanksgiving, which is at the end of November in the States, and her younger sister was watching the house; sister allowed the cat to escape. Understand the cat was declawed was most decidedly not an outside cat. \r\n\r\nThe cat did not come back.\r\n\r\nLater on, in the spring, across the street neighbor called me over and there was Mittens, curled up next to his chimney, a shadow of her former self. When I brought her back in side, new wife shrieked and ran away, the poor thing looked so bad. The happy ending is that she (the cat) fully recovered and lived long enough to tame the Labrador we got several years later.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1645,2074,'2016-10-08 15:02:26','Another Frank','Touching','I usually listen to podcasts late in bed (basically to relax the eyes and eventually fall asleep). This one almost brought a tear to my eye when your tale came to the point of departure.\r\n\r\nI grew up with quite some cats and from those, two actually grew old in our household, the last one was blind for her last 1½ or 2 years. She was mostly outside, mind you. Poor thing.\r\n\r\nCats can be very sociable. They feel when you\'re ill and there\'s even been a story of a retirement home cat in England that sensed when a person was dying. Then, it went to that person\'s room, sat on the bed and spent cosy company until it was all over.','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1646,2078,'2016-07-26 18:44:13','NYbill','Mini9','Ha, our old Mini9 is still kicking huh? Good to hear its still being put to good use!\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1647,2078,'2016-07-28 18:21:20','Windigo','My favorite','Not only still kicking, but its been my primary machine for the past three weeks while traveling.\r\n\r\nIn fact, I\'m typing on it right now! Because it was in my bag! How meta!','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1648,2081,'2016-07-26 07:28:33','0xf10e','Nice work!',':D','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1649,2081,'2016-08-07 15:01:12','Alpha32','Brilliant!','Well done, Mr Morriss! I\'m constantly breaking things, so this one is getting bookmarked. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1650,2081,'2016-08-07 15:50:33','Dave Morriss','I hope it never happens to you!','Thanks for the comments.\r\n\r\nOne thing I don\'t think I said was that I ensured the drill bit protruded from the Dremel only far enough to get about 2mm from the base of the hole. I had visions of wrecking the laptop if I accidentally drilled into some other component.\r\n\r\nIf I had to do this again I\'d drill as far as I could, then I might try gluing a cocktail stick or thin nail into the hole in the plug with cyanoacrylate/CA/super-glue. I\'d use the gel type so it didn\'t drip all over the place and make the problem worse though. ','2017-09-09 07:41:32'),
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(1651,2081,'2016-08-07 20:01:21','Jonathan Kulp','I\'m in the Same Boat','The exact same thing happened on my daughter\'s laptop about 2 months ago. I still have not retrieved the tiny bit of headphone jack from inside the laptop. Our solution was to use a $10 USB audio adapter I had lying around for just such occasions when the audio goes belly-up on one of our computers. She\'s using that now and seems happy enough.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1652,2081,'2016-08-07 20:49:08','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the hint Jon!','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nMy daughter had actually survived perfectly well with the adapter of the sort you recommended to me during the semester. Thanks for alerting me to these devices by the way!\r\n\r\nI wanted to fix the audio jack problem because I thought the USB device was mechanically vulnerable, since it sticks out a moderate amount. My son destroyed a dual port on his laptop many years ago in an accident involving a large USB stick, so I have always regarded laptop USB ports as fragile.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1653,2082,'2016-08-13 10:57:08','Jonas','New perspective.','Thanks for the show. I always tend to change the EQ settings when listening to music, etc. I never really thought about it from the audio engineer\'s point of view. Specifically the idea of tuning different frequencies out of a recording to change the feel of the recording. Seems like what noise cancelling headphones do but more manual and precise. EQ after the recording is done feels kind of blunt and pointless after hearing what it\'s really for. I guess that\'s why they have all those sliders when you see studios on TV and movies. I have much more respect for audio production engineers now. \r\n\r\nMaybe on your next show, you can talk about the different ways you could record in a noisy multi-person room as compared to a smaller room with just one or two people. ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1654,2086,'2016-08-03 12:46:33','Tony Hughes','Whats in My Bag','Hi Guy\'s just a comment on your comment on my Show 2065 the Laptops I talked about were all bought at a local computer auction that I have been going to for about 9 years, and where most of my PC tech comes from, so not donated but bought at a very reasonable cost. The Lenovo X61s cost me £35 each and make brilliant little net books that if they get broken on the move I\'ve not lost a fortune. ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1655,2088,'2016-08-03 12:54:32','Tony Hughes','HPR 2088','Hi Knightwise really loved this show your experience with Linux goes a bit further back than mine I only took the plunge when Ubuntu came on the scene and I started to use it to Freecycle old kit here in the UK. I was so impressed with the reactions of those receiving the freely given PC\'s that I started to use Linux on my own box and have been Linux only since 2009 First with Ubuntu and then Mint. I have just upgraded to Mint 18 and so far it looks quite stable. ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1656,2088,'2016-08-03 21:13:26','Steve','HPR 2088','Great story and well told.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1657,2088,'2016-08-04 11:20:25','knightwise','Yeey Steve ! ','Hey Steve :) Very happy to hear that you found the show entertaining. I hope you have a lot of fun using linux, I think its even MORE fun if you can do it on hardware that other people have discarded. Gives you geek creds !','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1658,2088,'2016-08-24 10:02:53','other_Steve','','wish i could grasp this stuff. i hated computers and computing growing up but didnt understand the importance of oncoming onslaught of the computer age.presently 10 -15 yrs hunting and pecking and have tried to learn but, also have low iq, so im pretty much locked out of any hope of ever learning on my own..anywho thats my problem ! lstening as im typing,and the girlfriend and Prof Dad story is very cool. ty ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1659,2089,'2016-08-13 10:24:35','Dave Morriss','Great show','Hi Mr X,\r\n\r\nAn interesting show. Good to know you\'re having fun with the BlinkStick.\r\n\r\nI\'m looking forward to hearing about your Python project in due course.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1660,2090,'2016-08-08 19:22:32','b-yeezi','More interviews','I really enjoyed this show. Not only did it make Docker seem more approachable to me, but I liked hearing the different perspectives of beginner and experienced Docker users.\r\n\r\nI also enjoy the interview format, and want to hear more of them. I may have to try to make one myself.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1661,2090,'2016-08-18 00:56:33','Thaj','Thanks!','Groovy, Thanks. Don;t worry there are going to be more like this one in the future for sure. ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1662,2091,'2016-08-09 00:46:44','Jonathan Kulp','Ack!','Thanks this is a genius tool. Never heard of it before.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1663,2091,'2016-08-17 16:55:35','Ken Fallon','I love detox ','detox -vr *\r\n\r\nwow what an excellent tool.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1664,2091,'2016-08-19 16:30:03','Dave Morriss','Thanks for mentioning \'ack\'','Wow! I had never encountered \'ack\' before. It\'s amazing.\r\n\r\nI have written a bunch of Bash scripts to work with a PostgreSQL database (yes, I know, it\'s a bit like wearing a hair shirt; self mortification), and I found I could do things like:\r\n\r\nack --shell --pager=more psql .\r\n\r\nThere\'s no other easy way to do this that I know of.\r\n\r\nThanks very much for pointing this one out.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1665,2091,'2016-08-21 14:53:50','ivor','Interesting','I always love vim tips. So I got pulled in looking at the buffer search. Then I noticed the other tools mentioned. Most of them I know about and use all that are relevant to me very frequently. So now I\'m going to subscribe...','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1666,2093,'2016-08-10 02:13:12','Clinton Roy','','Very interesting, and important, thanks for the interview.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1667,2094,'2016-08-24 18:56:13','Dave Morriss','Using grep in a script','One thing I have learned while writing Bash scripts (for the hell of it sometimes) is that \'grep -q\' is useful for direct use in \'if\' expressions.\r\n\r\nYou could do:\r\n\r\nif wmctrl -l | grep -q \"LibreOffice\"; then\r\n wmctrl -a \"LibreOffice\"\r\nelse\r\n loffice &\r\nfi\r\n\r\nIt can reduce script complexity a fair bit.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1668,2094,'2016-08-25 16:49:58','Jon Kulp','Good tip','Aha! Very nice tip! It would save us having to redirect stuff to /dev/null, wouldn\'t it?','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1669,2094,'2016-08-25 17:31:42','Dave Morriss','grep -q','Yes, \'grep -q\' simply returns a zero (true) result if a match is found and writes nothing on standard output.\r\n\r\nI didn\'t know about this until relatively recently. The original Unix \'grep\' I encountered didn\'t have this and you\'d have to do things the way you did in your script. GNU grep was enhanced with many such features, which I think was a good thing personally. Others prefer the old \"clean\" way.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1670,2095,'2016-08-18 19:17:47','Ken Fallon','Not allowed in the EU','Excellent episode as always.\r\n\r\nIAMAL but in the EU at least it is not permissible to intercept all communications via a local ssl cert, even if a policy is in place about non personal use of computers. \r\n\r\nGoogle Chrome also implements checks to alert if the cert used on a site doesn\'t match the known cert (eg google.com turns out to be company.example.com)\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1671,2095,'2016-08-19 16:29:00','Kevin O\'Brien','Different in EU','Well, I am not a lawyer either, but it looks like EU and US are different in this regard. I can say that in the US the courts have ruled that it is legal since the company owns the computers.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1672,2095,'2016-09-21 15:03:16','clacke','Different within EU','Dropping in on the convo without having heard the episode (yet).\r\n\r\nI\'m in Sweden (which is in the EU), and the company I\'m currently contracting for are pretty careful about dotting their i\'s and crossing their lawyerly t\'s, so I don\'t believe they would be risking doing anything illegal.\r\n\r\nThey intercept TLS traffic, but I don\'t know if they store anything, or if it\'s just for the content filter to work and then gets thrown away. Maybe that makes a difference.\r\n\r\nGoogle Chrome uses the OS certificate list. So if you are on your company-issued Windows computer that has the firewall\'s TLS CA installed to facilitate interception, Chrome will accept the CA just as if it were a real CA. Firefox won\'t, because it has its own list.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1673,2096,'2016-08-18 19:38:12','Ken Fallon','Here\'s me with the questions','Any special significance to the \"%s\" ? \r\n\r\nDid not know this: ${FUNCNAME[0]}: \r\nnor this: ${BASH_LINENO[0]}:\r\nnor this: default=\"${2^^}\"\r\n\r\nWhy do this:\r\nprintf -v prompt \"$prompt\" \"[Y/n]\" \r\nand not this:\r\nprompt=\"${prompt} [Y/n]\"\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1674,2096,'2016-08-18 20:59:27','Dave Morriss','Some answers for you...','The \"%s\" is to be used in the prompt, as in:\r\n\r\nif ! yes_no_mk3 \'Do you want to continue? %s \' \'N\'; then\r\n\r\nIt indicates the point at which the possible responses are shown in the prompt, using capitalisation to denote which is the default. I used \'%s\' because I\'ll be using the prompt string as a format definition for printf, and \'%s\' means \"substitute a string of arbitrary length here\".\r\n\r\nThe use of printf to write the prompt string allows the format to be defined when calling the function. The way it\'s laid out is:\r\n\r\nprintf -v prompt \"$prompt\" \"[Y/n]\" \r\n\r\nbecause the \'-v prompt\' saves the result in variable \'prompt\' (rewrites it).\r\nThe \"$prompt\" is the format string like when you do:\r\n\r\nprintf \"The answer is %d\\n\" 42\r\n\r\ngiving:\r\n\r\nThe answer is 42\r\n\r\nIn this case however, the text to be substituted for \'%s\' is \"[Y/n]\".\r\n\r\nNone of this would work with:\r\n\r\nprompt=\"${prompt} [Y/n]\"\r\n\r\nIn my example function call above you\'d get \'prompt\' containing:\r\n\r\n\"Do you want to continue? %s [Y/n]\"\r\n\r\nNo substitution would happen.\r\n\r\nOf course you could redesign the function to simply append the \"[Y/n]\" to the prompt in the way you did. I just liked the flexibility of being able to place that part of the prompt where I liked.\r\n\r\nHope that helps.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1675,2097,'2016-08-05 09:25:34','Tony Hughes','New Toys','Just to say I made a mistake on the price of the new tower during the show mixing it up with the Dell laptop I also bought at the same auction, the Total price I paid was £184.80 which given these go on E-bay for £260+ not including delivery I thought was a Bargain.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1676,2097,'2016-08-19 19:17:12','Frank','','I remember slide rules . . . .','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1677,2106,'2016-08-31 21:43:37','Dave Morriss','I had forgotten hpodder','Interesting show.\r\n\r\nYour description of hpodder made it sound well worth looking at. Then I realised I\'d heard the name before, and on looking in my home directory found I had used it back in 2006. I even found the ~/.hpodder directory and the old Sqlite database. (Yes my homedir contains all the collected crud of many years of tinkering.)\r\n\r\nI have no idea why I stopped using hpodder. I eventually hacked together a system of my own around Bashpodder, so maybe that\'s why. Prior to that I think I was using Juice on the family Windows system and at some point gPodder.\r\n\r\nAnyway, it was nice to hear about hpodder again','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1678,2107,'2016-08-31 11:29:26','Fweeb','.PHONY','Did a quick `info make` and scanned through it a bit. The .PHONY target is kind of a safety net. See, normally, targets in a makefile share the name of the exact file being made. However, in the case of something like `clean`, there\'s usually no file with that name being produced, just a series of deletions. *However*, if there is a file named `clean` in the same directory as your makefile, that can cause some confusion for the make command. So, by using `.PHONY: clean`, you\'re telling make to disregard a file named clean if it happens to see it.\r\n\r\nI\'m less sure about .SUFFIXES. The section on that in the manual was long and starts with the phrase \"Old-Fashioned\"... so perhaps it\'s something that\'s not entirely necessary for your makefile at this point.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1679,2107,'2016-09-01 11:17:34','Jonathan Kulp','.REAL','Thanks for the info. It\'s funny I guess I could read info pages myself but normally I just look at other people\'s Makefiles for examples and never really understand what they\'re doing. Once it all works I\'m happy. Bit of trial and more error...','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1680,2107,'2016-09-01 14:00:14','Dave Morriss','\"Copy and paste programming\"','We have probably all been there. I believe the practice is called \"copy and paste programming\" nowadays. I have certainly written Makefiles by this method. I have tried to learn more about the subject by reading the GNU make manual but it\'s hard going!\r\n\r\nI\'d say it\'s certainly a subject for a series of HPR shows.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1681,2111,'2016-09-05 07:29:36','Tony Hughes','Show 2111','Hi Guys you wanted to know about the auction I use to buy my Computer equipment from. The company is called Northern Realisations they specialise in disposing of old corporate stock no longer required and much of what they sell goes into the refurbishment market. But they have a public auction once a month in Bolton in the UK. \r\n\r\nhttps://www.realnorth.co.uk/\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:31'),
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(1682,2111,'2016-09-07 07:30:51','kdmurray','Audio tours','Ken was looking for a name for the episodes that people record out in the world rather than in the studio. The name I\'m familiar with is a \"Soundseeing Tour.\" \r\n\r\nThese are always great because of their ambient nature and that they provide a unique perspective on the subject by recording it on location.\r\n\r\nThis might be a good series too !','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1683,2111,'2016-09-07 18:19:17','Ken Fallon','Love It','Love Audio tours ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1684,2113,'2016-09-07 02:35:07','mackrackit','','I found this episode very useful. It gave me a lot of ideas. Looking forward to more like it.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1685,2113,'2016-09-08 11:34:46','JONATHAN KULP','Worst ever?','I thought I heard you say at the end of this episode that it might be the worst HPR ever? No way! I really enjoyed this, was great hearing how you worked your way through the problem and arrived at a usable solution. Please do more!','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1686,2113,'2016-09-08 16:25:37','Gumnos','Cleaning up the script','You could clean up the script a bit by using a \"here document\" instead of a temporary SQL file, something like\r\n\r\n sqlite3 ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1687,2113,'2016-09-08 19:18:21','Kevin O\'Brien','Excellent show!','As I was listening to this show on my drive in to work I was thinking that it epitomizes what we mean by something of interest to hackers. I want to hear more from norrist.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1688,2113,'2016-09-08 19:28:17','norrist','','I have never heard of a \"here document\". Thanks for the tip.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1689,2113,'2016-09-10 22:02:47','Dave Morriss','I enjoyed this','A good topic for a show I thought. I enjoyed following your thinking and your solution. The audio was good and the background noise was not distracting at all.\r\n\r\nI never use full paths to commands, though I can see cases where perhaps I should. Have you been bitten by not doing this in the past? If so I\'d like to hear about it.\r\n\r\nI wondered why the date program used in the crontab entry was /bin/date whereas it was /usr/bin/date in the main script. Are you working across different OSes or architectures?\r\n\r\nLooking forward to more!','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1690,2115,'2016-09-11 04:42:20','b-yeezi','Thanks for parecord','Thanks for parecord. I will try it when I record my next episode. \r\n\r\nAs for cmus, I can\'t recommend it enough. I have a nas with a nfs share full of a few thousand songs. Must graphical music players choke when updating the library, but cmus handles it like a champ. I agree that the controls take some getting used to, but it\'s worth it in the end. Plus it fits an I3 workflow perfectly. ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1691,2116,'2016-09-24 16:57:19','Col','Info','Can you put a bit more info in the blurb about the talk? ','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1692,2116,'2016-09-24 18:21:07','Dave Morriss','Re: Info','Hi Col,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment.\r\n\r\nWhat sort of information were you looking for? Explanations of terms? Links?\r\n\r\nNot quite sure what you need.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1693,2119,'2016-09-15 18:17:11','Steve','How about some cajun cooking?','Enjoyed listening to this episode. I, for one, find your \"listen to me while I\'m doing something\" episodes quite interesting.\r\n\r\nYou commented on red beans and sausage preparations. If you had any recipes, tips, tricks, and methods to share on cajun cooking, I\'d love to hear an episode or two about that!\r\n\r\nThanks for the great episodes.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1694,2119,'2016-09-16 16:42:09','Jonathan Kulp','cajun cooking','Thanks for the comment, glad to hear you enjoy these things. As far as the Cajun food, I could try it but normally my wife is the one who makes these dishes, except one time I did the red beans and sausage in the Crock-Pot when she was out of town so I might be able to handle that. I could ask her to do her own episode, but somehow I don\'t think that\'s going to happen haha!','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1695,2119,'2016-09-20 03:56:50','MrsXoke','You Learn Something New Everyday','I cannot tell you how many times I have stood in the kitchen trying to level off the vegetable shorting in the measuring cup, only to have to try and scrape it out afterward. Then, I would have to work even harder to wash the shortening that remained out of the measuring cup. Imagine my shock and excitement when I listened to your podcast, and realized that the rest of the world has been holding out on m by not sharing the brilliance of the displacement method of measuring shortening. They are jerks, and you may be my new hero as I approach the holiday baking season. I was truly pleased to learn there is an easier way. Thank you.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1696,2119,'2016-09-20 12:39:56','Jonathan Kulp','Mom\'s wisdom','Haha it\'s good to know that this was helpful. I gotta give credit where it\'s due, though. It was my mom that taught me this when I was probably 10 or 12 years old. She knows how to do basically everything.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1697,2119,'2016-09-28 06:18:47','guitarman','Yum!','I\'ve made these twice in 2 days now... Couldn\'t resist. I\'ve upped the chocolate chips a bit since I\'m using gluten free flour and it needed a bit more chocolate to cover that up.\r\n\r\nThank you very much for sharing and inspiring me to make cookies - haven\'t made them in years. :)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1698,2120,'2016-09-24 03:26:37','b-yeezi','Nice','Ooooh I gotta try some of this stuff. More episodes, please.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1699,2121,'2016-09-23 03:18:43','Joe','Great Show','I agree that board games seem like yesterdays history. I think they like the 80\'s music will make a return. Digital pulls people apart where the analog brings them together. Like the presentation and look forward to playing the game.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1700,2121,'2016-10-02 20:04:45','notklaatu','Re: Great Show','Thanks Joe. I wish I had the moral high ground and could claim that I\'ve always supported analogue gaming, but the truth is I\'m only just discovering it myself, so up until now I reckon I\'ve been a part of the problem.\r\n\r\nThat said, it really does seem like we\'re more or less in a golden age for tabletop gaming. Granted, the RPG systems from and since the 80s have always been ahead of their time, but it feels to me like the board game and card game systems that have been popping up are truly clever, steeped in equal parts solid game-theory and imagination, and they have something for everyone. If ever there\'s been a time to get into analogue gaming, I think it\'s RIGHT NOW.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1701,2121,'2016-10-12 11:42:16','rtsn','!','Good stuff! \r\n\r\nTo be honest I was stupid enough to think that I was too \"cool\" for RPG:s and tabletop games when I was I young so I never got into it back then and this is something I\'ve regretted ever since. \r\n\r\nDark (o)ccult(s) sounds pretty interesting, I think I\'ll look into it. Thanks for a great episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1702,2121,'2016-12-05 00:18:44','m1rr0r5h4d35','Loved This','I was introduced to RPGs in the 5th grade, when a friend brought his copy of the AD&D Player\'s Handbook to school with him. I actually discovered Palladium Books\' system sometime later, and really liked it. Although, it seems not many others cared for that system, finding it bulky and cumbersome, which I understand. Still, It\'s one of my favorites. This game looks to be remarkably engrossing. I am going to have to try it out with my wife. Thanks so much!\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1703,2125,'2016-10-06 18:55:52','alpha32','creeper van','creeper van is the name I gave my work van. It\'s a windowless (in the back) white van. It\'s not very glamorous, but it holds a lot of computer parts.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1704,2126,'2016-10-19 21:06:34','kendal','','cool !!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1705,2127,'2016-09-27 18:04:08','John','Game Inspiring','It takes time to play a good analogue game how days where it takes two people. But I agree with the author that it is well worth the time. It allows you to be more creative in developing your adventure then today\'s narrow computer game stories. I download the Dark Occult game and plan to see if I can encourage other people to disconnect for a while and have some fun. Enjoyed the podcast and looking forward to the next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1706,2127,'2016-10-02 19:59:36','notklaatu','Re: Game Inspiring','There\'s something comforting and sublimely satisfying about sitting down with a good game, a good cup of coffee, and wading through all the different rules and exceptions to rules. It must be similar to the thrill that a lawyer gets when going to a legal library. Or, less repulsively, when a programmer reviews an API.','2017-09-09 07:41:33'),
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(1707,2129,'2016-09-29 16:24:45','alpha32','textbook?','mr. morriss, your series on awk, sed, etc. are brilliant. And a bit dense, i\'m going to have to come back to these with a notebook and more time. Are you also publishing a manual or textbook to go along with this? Wouldn\'t be a terrible idea... Thanks for your excellent work.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1708,2129,'2016-09-29 19:41:23','Dave Morriss','Re: textbook?','Hi alpha32,\r\n\r\nThanks for the compliments. I\'m sharing the awk series with b-yeezi this time since we\'re both keen to talk about it.\r\n\r\nYou\'ll have noticed that I like writing long detailed notes. I got into the habit of writing explanations of things when I started working in IT and kept a journal of stuff I\'d learnt. It probably followed on from my science education where we were encouraged to keep a lab book of what we\'d observed.\r\n\r\nSoon after I started running an adult evening class in Pascal, and wrote a series of handouts for my students that grew into a textbook at the end of the course. It was intended as a resource that they could refer to and learn from outside the classes.\r\n\r\nThe workflow I use to generate show notes (producing HTML from Markdown) allows me to turn on an ePub generation stage. I tried it out for some HPR episodes but wasn\'t happy with the results. I could look at improving this if anyone is interested and could recreate ePub format notes for the sed series for example. It\'s not a textbook as such but should be a comprehensive set of notes about the episodes that could be read on a PC or tablet.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1709,2130,'2016-10-02 14:12:28','clacke','I figured :-)','I thought, \"Hey, this is probably useful if you want to host something at gitlab and have an unofficial clone at \". One minute later ... yep. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1710,2130,'2016-10-02 16:11:54','clacke','explicit push','Very cool discovery! I never even considered the idea that you could have several URLs for a remote.\r\n\r\nAs you mentioned that this kind of mixed remote would make it \"impossible\" (without adding remotes) to push to only one of the URLs, I though I should mention something that probably not everyone knows:\r\n\r\nYou don\'t need to set up a remote to fetch or push. You can use an explicit URL instead of a remote name:\r\n\r\ngit push ssh://my.server/~/git/myrepo HEAD:master\r\n\r\nIn fact, because I forget what the various options are for managing references/branches, I often use this to remove a reference in the local repository.\r\n\r\ngit push . :refs/heads/whatever_branch','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1711,2130,'2016-10-08 09:17:18','klaatu','explicit push','Funny you mention the explicit push. I knew about it, or at least I knew about the explicit pull, because I use it when migrating git repositories at work...but only with local URI\'s. It never dawned on me that it could be done with non-local URI\'s. Thanks for the tip!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1712,2130,'2016-11-02 12:20:52','Dave Morriss','Thought I\'d never use this','This was interesting, but I thought I\'d never use it. However, I had an instance recently where making a GitHub copy of a repository on a GitLab instance was desirable. It was straightforward to set up and worked flawlessly.\r\n\r\nThanks for explaining the process.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1713,2133,'2016-10-12 11:45:49','rtsn','Good episode!','I just wanted to sat that I really enjoyed this episode. I love the \"light\"-technical episodes with a good balance between hand-wavy explanations and preciseness. It gets be interested and makes me want to learn more.\r\n\r\nKeep it up! ','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1714,2134,'2016-12-18 20:43:23','CPrompt^','Great explanation!','Great explanation of how systemd works with two services like this.\r\n\r\nI started working with systemd services and went back to this show to get some info. Good stuff!\r\n\r\nJust wanted to point out that in the show notes, there is a little bit of a typo.\r\n\r\nUnder the \"fakehalt.service\" you have listed in the Unit section :\r\nAfter=fakevm.service\r\nRequires=fakevm.service\r\n\r\nHowever, right below that you call the service fake.service\r\n\r\nYou say it correct in the audio but the show notes have the typo.\r\n\r\nThanks!\r\nC:\\','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1715,2136,'2016-10-31 01:10:02','John','Fluxx synchronicity ','Amazing Fluxx synchronicity, I purchased Fluxx Firefly card game about a month ago. I agree with how the game is set up is good but you can burn through the cards fast. Its fun to get started and they have a lot of different Fluxx games but the concept is the same across them all. Again love the card game prospective.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1716,2138,'2016-10-25 06:29:02','Krayon','Good fun!','NYBill,\r\n\r\nThanks for the episode, I always love these little games. This one is indeed\r\nfocused at beginners but can still be a bit of fun.\r\n\r\nI only just started trying it out so I\'m only up to level 16. Haven\'t come\r\nacross any challenge yet except the constant password typing :P\r\n\r\nI created an extremely over-engineered lil\' bashrc to ease typing a bit. With\r\nit, once you\'ve got the password, you simply type:\r\n sshnext\r\n\r\nAnd then paste the password.\r\n\r\nIt copies itself each level to ensure only people of your level can screw with\r\nyour stuff and to give you a working directory if you need one.\r\n\r\nOne need only (as bandit0) choose a base name for the directories (CHANGE_ME\r\nhere) and create the directory /tmp/CHANGE_ME.bandit0/ and the file\r\n/tmp/CHANGE_ME.bandit0/.bashrc, containing:\r\n\r\nset -o vi\r\n\r\necho \"Setting aliases\"\r\nalias rot13=\'tr \"[a-mn-zA-MN-Z]\" \"[n-za-mN-ZA-M]\"\'\r\n\r\n# In bash >= 3, BASH_SOURCE will tell us who we are\r\nmedir=\"${BASH_SOURCE%/*}\"\r\ndbase=\"${medir%.*}\"\r\nwd=\"${dbase}.${USER}\"\r\n\r\ngame=\"${USER//[0-9]/}\"\r\ncurr=\"${USER//[a-z]/}\"\r\n\r\nlast=\"$((${curr} - 1))\"\r\nnext=\"$((${curr} + 1))\"\r\n\r\nunext=\"${game}${next}\"\r\n\r\ndlast=\"${dbase}.${game}${last}\"\r\n\r\n# Create this file as the new user\r\n[ ! -d \"${wd}\" ] && {\r\n cp -a \"${dlast}\" \"${wd}\" && echo \"Created ${wd}\"\r\n}\r\n\r\nunset medir base game curr last next dlast\r\n\r\necho \"Working Directory: \\$wd == ${wd}\"\r\n\r\nfunction sshnext() {\r\n global wd unext\r\n\r\n ssh -t \\\r\n -o \"UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null\" \\\r\n -o \"StrictHostKeyChecking no\" \\\r\n ${unext}@localhost \\\r\n bash --rcfile \"${wd}/.bashrc\" \\\r\n -i\r\n}\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1717,2139,'2016-10-20 20:24:46','Klaatu','cool!','Wow, this is really slick. I\'m going to have give it a try (or at least something close to it. I know nothing of LaTeX, so I might skip that part). Thanks for the show!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1718,2139,'2016-12-20 16:01:32','Michael','\"Beamer\" vs. Projektor','Hello folks, I\'m late at listening and this is somewhat off topic but I just can\'t keep my mouth shut. Sorry for that.\r\nI coughed on the bit \"Beamer is obviously the German word for projector.\" You are virtually right and even the \"Duden\", as sort of a reference for the German language, backs \"Beamer\". However, I still don\'t want to call it a \"German word\". It is an English word, or derived from it, that is used by Germans. There is the matching word \"Projektor\" in German, just no one is using it to reference to a data projector. \r\nAlas, it is so common these days to call things by, what some people think might be, the English term for it. Just because it is supposed to be cool. An other great example of this is the use of the term \"public viewing\" in German to reference to watching a sports event on a giant screen in a public place like a town square. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1719,2140,'2016-10-19 23:05:40','Dave Morriss','Very interesting show','Great episode. I find you can always learn something from a fellow Vim user\'s list of plugins. There were several here I haven\'t used before, though I\'m trying them now!\r\n\r\nYou mentioned an \'ack\' plugin, but it wasn\'t on the list in your notes. Did you mean https://github.com/mileszs/ack.vim, or is there another one you use?','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1720,2140,'2016-11-08 02:29:27','b-yeezi','ack.vim','Yes, Dave. That is the ack plugin that I use. There is also https://github.com/rking/ag.vim, which is supposed to be better, but I haven\'t tried it.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1721,2141,'2016-10-17 18:15:52','ShortFatBaldGuy','Great podcast','Klaatu - Thanks, your episodes are always solid, and this one gave me 10 new things to go explore. It may have helped that it lined up with something I\'m currently playing with (some home automation and a tool for my wife\'s coworkers), so that made it that much better for me. Thx - Scott','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1722,2141,'2016-10-17 20:34:30','Jonathan Kulp','No Thanks ','Zero thanks for introducing yet another tool I\'d like to learn but have no time! Maybe next vacation. :) ','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1723,2141,'2016-10-17 23:38:01','JONATHAN KULP','Seriously though...','Fantastic show, man. I\'m very intrigued by this thing.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1724,2141,'2016-10-18 21:56:53','b-yeezi','Give bottle a try','Great episode. If you like Flask, you may want to also try out bottle for smaller projects, or if you just want to make a REST API. It has very similar calls, like app.route(), and it\'s default templating engine is pretty similar to Jinja2. You can use Jinja2 if you wish with bottle as well.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1725,2141,'2016-10-20 20:17:38','Klaatu','Cheers','Glad the ep is appreciated! As I say in the show, the only reason I ended up using Flask was because it\'s what we had installed at the day job. Bottle, Web2Py, and Django are all other similar projects which I probably should have mentioned in the shownotes, so people can click on links and read up on each to see what they are interested in. Either way, it\'s pretty fun to mess around with, and a great way to stay immersed in Python, if that\'s what you already know (or are busy learning and/or perfecting).\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1726,2143,'2016-10-26 03:01:22','Bambiker','','I cobbled the following together from what I learned in part 2. Maybe there\'s an easier way. \r\n vim `grep -ri \"tpl_header\" * | awk -F \":\" \'{print $1}\'`\r\n\r\nIt opens every file found in vim when grep finds the text \"tpl_header\" without quotes in the text. In vim, use :bn to hop to the next file and edit as you like. \r\n\r\ngrep -ri looks through every file and directory under the current directory disregarding the case of the search text. The * matches any file. I\'m in bash, so it may work differently in other shells. \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1727,2143,'2016-10-26 14:13:47','Dave Morriss','grep and awk','I\'d skip the awk part here. My solution would be:\r\n\r\n vim $(grep -ril \"tpl_header\" *)\r\n\r\nThe -l option to grep just returns the filename where a match occurred, so there\'s no need to use awk to separate it out from what grep returns.\r\n\r\nIn my case I usually keep vim backup files in the same directory so I\'d change \'*\' to \'*[^~]\' to omit those.\r\n\r\nAs an aside I prefer $() to back-ticks since they are more visible and (I think) nest better.\r\n\r\nThere are times when grep is unnecessary because awk can do the same job, but this isn\'t one. Quite the reverse!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1728,2145,'2016-10-21 06:05:01','b-yeezi','Love this Idea','Thanks for this show. I agree with your reasons for using markdown. It gets out of your way so you can write. I also find the idea of using git interesting, but I would be concerned about privacy. I guess you can host your own gitlab...\r\n\r\nCan\'t wait for your next show.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1729,2145,'2016-10-24 15:07:12','Fin','Nice! Licence?','Nice show! Sweet script! Is it up on a public git repo somewhere?\r\n\r\nTL;DR Would you mind adding a licence?\r\n\r\nYou might think of it as just a little, personal convenience script that doesn\'t mean much, that anyone can adapt if they please right? But, technically speaking, you\'ve got the copyright (by default) and I can\'t legally use this code.\r\n\r\nYou may consider it open source by being on a web page that is covered by the CC-BY-SA licence but they advise against it\'s use for software as it doesn\'t explicitly cover distribution of source code (see https://creativecommons.org/faq/#can-i-apply-a-creative-commons-license-to-software).\r\n\r\nI ask you to consider adding a licence to make it clear what people can do with your script. I\'d sure love to use it but, if I make changes and want to share it, we\'re in a grey area ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1730,2145,'2016-10-25 23:04:41','norrist','Version with copyright notice','Thanks for the feedback. Here is a link to the script with an ISC license header.\r\n\r\nhttps://norrist.devio.us/pub/todo.sh\r\n\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:31'),
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(1731,2145,'2016-11-30 20:47:38','Matt','question about the script','I love your script idea and will probably be copying lots of it. THANKS!\r\n\r\nhowever, in the last \"for\" loop where you cat your files into the new \"README\" file, i don\'t understand this bit:\r\n\r\n$(ls -r $DAILYPATH/2*md)\r\n\r\nmore specifically, the \"2*/md\" bit. Is this some kind of BASH specific notation? Is this a Mac thing?\r\n\r\nOTW, great episode and very helpful!\r\n\r\ncheers,\r\nmatt','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1732,2145,'2016-12-01 16:58:29','norrist','\"2*/md\"','There isnt anything special about \"2*/md\". All the files that I want combined into the readme are named by date and have the md suffix. so \"2*/md\" matches 2016-12-01.md as well as all the other daily files. The only reason for \"2*/md\" to be there is incase I have some other files in the directory that I dont want included in the readme.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1733,2145,'2016-12-04 00:08:05','Matt','of course!','thanks... i wasn\'t thinking about dates starting with 2... duh\r\n\r\nCheers,\r\nmatt','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1734,2146,'2016-10-24 21:56:04','spaceman','lulz','I didn\'t know it is CreativeCommon.\r\n\r\nthis game is a joke in terms of \"shocking humour\" i guess 4chan /b/ destroyed my humanity.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1735,2146,'2016-10-25 15:24:18','Windigo','Bees?','I\'ve had many fun games of Cards Against Humanity since my partner introduced it to me. I see it as a little bit of a social litmus test - a quick way to judge the humor of the people in a group.\r\n\r\nThis tabletop gaming series has been fantastic; thanks for all of the work put in!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1736,2148,'2016-11-02 20:14:48','NYbill','The real JYE Tech kit','Just played around with the new (real) JYE Tech DSO138 kit. Here is the splash screen when booting it up. Support he good guys: \r\n\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/m/booting-the-real-jye-tech-dso138-board/','2022-02-14 13:17:31'),
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(1737,2150,'2016-10-29 18:05:42','Mikael','','Great interview. Very fascinating!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1738,2150,'2016-10-30 21:09:21','Windigo','Superb interview','I feel like this episode should be playing in the Computer History Museum.\r\n\r\nIt is unbelievable to see how much work it took to get us to space, and how far we\'ve come with computing!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1739,2150,'2016-10-31 00:44:02','Kevin O\'Brien','Fantastic Interview!!','I loved this interview. IT was fantastic it hear about how he worked out the inner workings of those computers.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1740,2150,'2016-11-18 19:18:21','Frank','','Magnificent. I\'ve been publicizing this every way I can think of.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1741,2154,'2016-11-13 15:47:03','Dave Morriss','\"Sound-seeing\"','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nI believe the name for such podcasts is \"sound-seeing\" as in \"sound-seeing tour\". I think kdmurray mentioned this in a comment on show 2111 back in September. I remember hearing this term back in the early days of podcasting, around 2005 perhaps, when Adam Curry used to record such tours for his \"Daily Source Code\" podcast.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1742,2156,'2016-11-09 15:32:32','clacke','Ear candy','Mmm, I love hearing regexes spoken out loud. :-D\r\n\r\n\"bracket circumflex tilde ...\"','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1743,2156,'2016-11-09 22:48:51','Jonathan Kulp','Talkin\' Purty','Reminds me of \"Oklahoma\" lines by Ado Annie, \"Oh Will, don\'t start talkin\' Purty!\"','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1744,2159,'2017-01-11 16:43:51','nondescript','','I took a copy of COUP when visiting relatives over the holidays. It was a huge success. Thank you for bringing this game to my attention.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1745,2161,'2016-11-14 18:20:33','thelovebug','Nice!','I see what you did there, very clever!\r\n\r\nAudio quality was pretty spot on. What was the recorder you were using?','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1746,2161,'2016-11-15 15:08:24','clacke','Green beans','I was dead sure green beans aren\'t called green beans in English. Looked it up. They are!\r\n\r\nOr string beans, french beans ... but the canonical page is https://enwp.org/Green_bean .\r\n\r\nGreat episode! Short, sweet, brilliant.','2022-02-14 13:17:50'),
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(1747,2161,'2016-12-06 12:13:57','Inscius','Thanks','Thank you for kind comments, and sorry for slow reply. :)\r\n\r\nThe recording device is Zoom H2n.\r\n\r\nAs for translation of words, these days I often find myself using Wikipedia for that. It usually gives explanations of concepts etc, and in that way one can be a bit more sure what one want to say in a foreign language (as English is to me). Obviously, I wouldn\'t only use Wikipedia for translations (or as source in general).','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1748,2163,'2016-11-23 08:13:17','Otto','','A very interesting episode, many thanks.\r\n\r\nI always shied away from awk - yet another scripting language, but now I see how associative indexing (\"hashes\") may be useful.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1749,2163,'2016-11-27 13:58:23','Dave Morriss','Thanks','Glad you found it useful. Keep listening, b-yeezi and I will be talking more about such arrays as we proceed with the series.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1750,2164,'2016-11-18 09:19:28','folky','Crapette','Thank you for this good show about a game I thought about buying. But know I understand I don\'t have too because I already play something similar with rummy-cards. It\'s called Crapette and can be very addictive ;-) ','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1751,2164,'2016-11-18 19:52:59','Klaatu','Re: Crapette','Interesting! I hadn\'t heard of Crapette before. I\'ll look into it, maybe. I have to admit, I am not well-versed in all the hundreds of games possible with a standard poker deck (or two). I really need to start learning some, because, obviously, there\'s great power in simplicity.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1752,2165,'2016-12-29 10:02:01','njulian','','Thanks a lot for this episode. It gave me some ideas what else I can do during long trips. I have a question about the lectures from Khan Academy you\'ve mentioned. Is there any intended way to download these videos directly from khan? Because at the moment I\'m downloading them to my computer and move them manually on my phone. I mean, it works like this, but it feels like an unnecessary detour.\r\n\r\n\r\nAlso I had to laugh little when you said that some podcasts are like radio shows, because my favorite podcast, Chaosradio, is an actual radio show. They just put the show online along with music, news and weather forecast. But I still understood what you meant with that comment of yours.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1753,2166,'2016-11-25 20:57:41','chalkahlom','','very much enjoyed the show, and I was following along with my old \'Boots\' slide-rule. Thanks Dave','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1754,2166,'2016-11-25 23:33:07','Steve Smethurst','','I showd my students a virtual slide rule as example of analogue computer. Became fascinated with them and just bought a Faber Castell 52/82, duplex with 19 scales; of course from ebay. Not got it in the post yet. As a kid I used 4 figure tables but in O\'Level class I was allowed to use my brand new TI-30. Didn\'t get taught slide rule. I liked the LL scales, raising e^x. I new there had to be a way to have y instead of e, so I looked up raising arbitrary y by arbitrary x. Well cool! www.antiquark.com','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1755,2166,'2016-11-27 13:53:59','Dave Morriss','Thanks!','Thanks chalkahlom, glad you enjoyed it. I didn\'t realise that Boots (a UK-based pharmacy chain) sold slide-rules, but I see references to them online.\r\n\r\nCheers Steve. I don\'t remember being taught how to use a slide-rule. Maybe we were and I wasn\'t listening! I did use it a moderate amount, but not for anything very sophisticated. Perhaps you could tell us about the more advanced features by way of an HPR show at some point. You could demonstrate your new Faber Castell :-)\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1756,2168,'2017-05-29 13:50:41','rtsn','','Hi Klaatu, this was a fun and weird episode. Just wanted to check if you seen this https://blog.yunwilliamyu.net/2011/08/14/mindhack-mental-math-pseudo-random-number-generators/ couldn\'t help to think about you and this HPR episode while reading it. Best regards!\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:51'),
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(1757,2169,'2016-11-06 11:25:13','clacke','More discussion and XMPP','More discussion of Slack alternatives at https://quitter.se/notice/7891738 .\r\n\r\nI mentioned briefly in the episode that XMPP has extensions that make it better for mobile. https://getkaiwa.com/ brings up Message Archive Management (XEP-0313) and Message Carbons (XEP-0280). Would be great if somebody has been using these with multiple inermittent devices and has comments on how well they work.\r\n\r\nhttps://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0313.html\r\n\r\nhttps://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0280.html','2022-02-14 13:17:51'),
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(1758,2170,'2016-11-25 20:06:19','Mike Ray','Sound trap IO, a different application?','Great interview Ken.\r\n\r\nI have recently started to learn how to play a ukulele, and I mistakenly bought an electronic tuner without thinking it has LED tuning indicators. I started to think about connecting either a vibration sensor or a microphone to an Arduino and knocking something up, then I heard this interview.\r\n\r\nI have emailed the guys to ask them if the soundtrap board has any pins that might be capable of driving the acentric vibrating motor from an old mobile phone. In this way I could maybe make a tactile ukulele/guitar tuner.\r\n\r\nSoundtrap is an interesting project. ','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1759,2170,'2016-11-30 20:17:30','b-yeezi','Very Interesting','Thank you for the great show. I found the entire interview fascinating. \r\n\r\nI would love to see some example code for making a model for identifying species from a sound file from one of these devices. My mind is blown!','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1760,2171,'2016-11-28 20:26:52','Amy','HACK','It is super okay to hack. I was introduced to jihack11 at gmail dot com and dude impressed me. He did a great job, am happy and feel indebted to him forever.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1761,2172,'2016-12-06 00:41:38','norrist','Great show','I was following along thinking how fun this game sounded. When you said how everyone plays at once and there are no turns, I realized how much fun this game could be. The history of the game and the culture was a nice to hear as well. Excellent show.','2017-09-09 07:41:34'),
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(1762,2172,'2016-12-06 22:03:28','Steve','','Thanks for the comment. Indeed, the fast paced, barely controlled chaos of the game is it\'s appeal. It can devolve into hilarity at any moment.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1763,2173,'2016-12-01 14:27:42','Jonathan Kulp','You light up your life','I\'m posting this comment with the sole purpose of turning Dave\'s light on. :) Super cool episode Dave! One of these days I\'ll use the IO pins on one of my Pis. I have an LED-related episode in mind too, though a very different kind. Once the semester is over I\'ll stop just lurking and post a new episode. Thanks for a great show. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1764,2173,'2016-12-01 14:45:20','Dave Morriss','It worked!!','Thanks Jon,\r\n\r\nAs someone who studied Operant Conditioning back in my university days I am rather aware that I might have constructed a means of conditioning my own behaviour! I should work on a food reward dispenser system of some kind perhaps.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to hearing about your LED project at some point too :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1765,2173,'2016-12-03 14:57:32','Mike Ray','Twinkly Lights and MQTT','Terrific show Dave.\r\n\r\nI had never heard of MQTT until I heard this show. I was looking for an alternative to a XMLRPC client/server solution for a commercial project I am working on, and I have done work in the past for a company that makes communication gear for French metro operators. I note with interest that MQTT conforms to Cenelec standards and is already used by some railway hardware manufacturers.\r\n\r\nI\'m going to set my alarm clock for the middle of the night now just to post comments so that your little twinkly lights are on when you wander into your den in the morning :-)\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1766,2173,'2016-12-03 15:49:42','Dave Morriss','Re: Twinkly Lights and MQTT','Cheers Mike,\r\n\r\nYes, MQTT is really cool and quite simple.\r\n\r\nWhen I was working I did look at SOAP and XMLPRC as possible ways of shifting data between systems for account provisioning purposes, but never implemented anything. MQTT might well have been able to do what we wanted.\r\n\r\nIt\'d be interesting if you could tell us more about the sort of applications you have in mind for it.\r\n\r\nIt\'s always cheering to find the comment notification light on when I get up, so go right ahead :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1767,2173,'2016-12-03 18:33:48','Mike Ray','MQTT and hardware monitoring','Hello Dave. I can\'t say a lot in detail but I\'ve worked before on desktop client software which monitors the telemetry served up by microcontrollers embedded in communication equipment used by French Metro systems. It all stems from an overhaul of comms equipment that happened after the Mont Blanc tunnel fire highlighted that the systems used by all three emergency services involved could not communicate with each other.\r\n\r\nThe original protocol we developed was bespoke, but since the explosion in IOT and other such things customers are now much more fussy about the protocols in use and having them meet standards.\r\n\r\nA lot of folks are trying to stretch the point with SNMP, especially version 3 since it supports encryption, but in my opinion this is an incorrect use of the protocol which is designed to do exactly what it says on the tin, manage networks.\r\n\r\nSince MQTT already has found use in railway systems and complies with Cenelec we may be able to pursuade customers to abandon their misuse of SNMP and adopt MQTT','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1768,2173,'2016-12-04 20:00:52','Dave Morriss','MQTT uses','Thanks Mike,\r\n\r\nInteresting project. I don\'t know that MQTT provides a great deal of security itself. There is authentication built in but the documentation seems to suggest using TLS or VPNs for the security of messages.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1769,2176,'2016-12-05 21:28:16','clacke','Dioder','In the original IKEA tongue, \"dioder\" is pronounced rather close to \"de-order\". :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1770,2176,'2016-12-05 21:37:33','clacke','On the purpose of those XEPs','I\'ll probably bring this up again in my coming Overview of Slack Alternatives (yes, I now owe you such a show!), but before I forget:\r\n\r\nThe problems with naked XMPP, with multiple clients and with clients coming and going, are these:\r\n\r\n1. If nobody is online at the moment, your message will be lost in cyberspace, and you may or may not be told that this happened.\r\n2. If you have several clients online, they have priorities set to determine which client should get the messages delivered to it.\r\n\r\nSo what these XEPs do is that they add the ability to:\r\n\r\n1. Store-and-forward, so that the server holds any incoming messages, and delivers them when you get back online.\r\n\r\n2. Carbon-copy, which means that all clients currently connected will get any incoming messages, rather than just one of the clients.\r\n\r\n3. Message storage, which I\'m not sure how it\'s handled, but I suppose the server can back-fill a connecting client so that any messages received since last time will be sent to it, even if other clients have already received those messages.\r\n\r\nI\'m just inferring this from comments and from the titles of the extensions, I haven\'t actually used them.\r\n\r\nNow, talking about \"naked XMPP\" is probably not fair, because these extensions are supported by several XMPP servers, including the original ejabberd project and the rather popular Prosody project.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1771,2176,'2016-12-05 21:43:18','clacke','Arousing regular expressions','I did make the regex comment in a sort of Ha Ha Only Serious frame of mind, not a lewd one. :-)\r\n\r\nMy initial reaction was amusement that anyone would make the apparently futile attempt to convey regexes over audio, followed by love for the hackeresque pure devotion to the medium that would drive someone to make a serious effort, finally followed by a certain level of surprise and delight that the regex, unsuitable as it is for audio, actually carried over and was understandable!\r\n\r\nSo, part friendly mockery, part genuine delight. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1772,2176,'2016-12-06 17:12:51','Steve','Ham Radio Topics','This is not the first time that Ken has made a call for more ham radio topics. I would be interested and willing to do some shows on the topic, but I struggle a little to know how to approach it. What kind of show would you like to see Ken? An overview show of the hobby? Shows on any specific topic? Would anyone like to collaborate on a series?','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1773,2177,'2016-12-06 01:25:59','Clinton Roy','','This seemed..overly sweary for my tastes. And I\'m a sweary Australian..','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1774,2177,'2016-12-06 12:42:42','ShortFatBaldGuy','','Clinton Roy beat me to this. I\'m no prude, and drop the f-bomb as much as anyone, express yourself however you like. But as a helpful hint from your Uncle Larry, in a forum where the primary purpose is knowledge transfer, your colorful language only decreases your SNR and causes many to discount your message, perhaps completely.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1775,2177,'2016-12-06 13:42:29','Ken Fallon','This show is correctly flagged as Explicit','This show is flagged as EXPLICIT and therefore conforms to the HPR policy as detailed here:\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php#explicit\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:51'),
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(1776,2177,'2016-12-06 15:50:24','ShortFatBaldGuy','','Ken - I\'m not complaining about HPR (far from it!) or faulting you or the podcast for anything. I don\'t see the tags the way I navigate via my phone, so that is good to know. I also don\'t care that much about the specific language per se in most settings. My main point was that to me it seems out of place in what is primarily a knowledge transfer setting. Thx - Scott','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1777,2177,'2016-12-06 18:44:43','Ken Fallon','Tags are not visable','My comment got truncated. (I hate this comment system). \r\n\r\n(Quote)\r\nYour show will be signalled as containing explicit content\r\n\r\nGiven that we are an open forum for free speech we signal all our shows as \"explicit\" with the assumption that the listeners will apply the required discretion when playing the shows in public. The fact is that the majority of our content is technical in nature and therefore is often considered appropriate for any audience. If you feel that your show will be considered inoffensive in every region of the world then you can signal that when you upload the show.\r\n\r\nWhen dealing with content that is \"explicit\" or contains material that would best be suited for a mature audience, it has become traditional to include a short warning at the very beginning of the show before the intro, to allow listeners time to switch off the episode should they so desire. \r\n(Quote)\r\n\r\nAll feeds support the option to have the option \"explicit=0\" appended to the end and it will display content marked as \"Clean\" by our hosts\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/advanced_rss_settings.php\r\n\r\nAny changes to this policy can and should be discussed on the Mail List. \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/mailman/listinfo/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:51'),
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(1778,2177,'2016-12-06 18:52:16','Ken Fallon','Complaints are welcome','Hi Hi ShortFatBaldGuy,\r\n\r\nYou are completely within in your right to bring this up. As one of the HPR Janitors, I am just pointing out what the current policy is. \r\n\r\nThe only place that the explicit tag is signalled is in the RSS feed itself, it is up to the podcatcher to do something with it. \r\n\r\nWe could include an icon or some text in the description to show what the host has put for the explicit tag. That would need to be requested on the mail list, but be prepared for some lively discussion on the topic :)\r\n\r\nKen\r\nIn the role of HPR Janitor.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1779,2177,'2016-12-07 19:38:18','Ken Fallon','Site and Feeds updated','I have updated the site and feeds to clearly display if a show is flagged as \"Clean\" or \"Explicit\".\r\n\r\nFuture shows will also have that added to the media tags and in the text to speech.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\ntake it away Mr. Blinkey','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1780,2177,'2016-12-08 15:40:26','Cheeto4493','Add explicit to title?','Is it possible to add explicit to the title? I normally don\'t even look at the Tags.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1781,2177,'2016-12-08 17:16:53','Ken Fallon Janitor ','Technically yes','It is technically possible but you should bring this to the attention of the mailing list.\r\n\r\n\r\nKen as HPR Janitor ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1782,2177,'2016-12-08 17:31:46','Ken Fallon Host 30','I object ','Hi All,\r\n\r\nSpeaking as a HPR community member I strongly and most emphatically object to this suggestion. \r\n\r\nThis is the post I made the last time this was discussed and my feelings on the topic have not changed.\r\n\r\nNSFW: WARNING Link contains EXPLICIT material.\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2013-January/008558.html\r\nNSFW: WARNING Link contains EXPLICIT material.\r\n\r\nI lost that battle then, as we now have the explicit tag, but I feel the janitors have already implemented the requirements as to the explicit tag.\r\n\r\nFurther discussion now requires it to be carried out on the mail list so the entire community can participate. \r\n\r\nRegards,\r\n\r\nKen as a normal host and community member.','2022-02-14 13:17:52'),
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(1783,2178,'2017-03-05 02:51:00','FiftyOneFifty','','The term \"tin horn\" gambler refers to a tin and leather dice mixer carried by gentlemen gamers in the old west. You are a really good salesman, klaatu. Even though I neither tabletop game or participate in dice based games of chance, based of your description, I sorta want one of these now.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1784,2178,'2017-04-04 08:05:09','Klaatu','Tin Horn','I\'d never heard of that one, 5150, I like it. As for me being a good salesperson - I think no one has ever accused me of THAT before. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1785,2179,'2016-12-14 02:03:49','dodddummy','','I\'ve only just started this ep but wanted to stop and comment. So many of my prototypes are running in production as we speak. Many of them still with original known bugs no body ever got around to fixing. I\'ve learned not to be embarrassed over this. After all, they put them in production and didn\'t bother to fix the bugs for years and years.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1786,2179,'2016-12-15 09:51:45','clacke','Re: protos in production','You have a point, maybe my suggestion to make sure the prototype cannot possibly be taken into production is too extreme.\r\n\r\nI agree with you that one shouldn\'t be embarrassed over it when it happens. Bad code that solves the problem and doesn\'t eat more maintenance resources than it\'s worth is good code.\r\n\r\n\r\nI think it\'s one of those pieces of advice that, like all (?) good advice, has a dynamic to it should not be taken to far in either direction.\r\n\r\n\"Your prototype will be put in production\" as a warning is counteracted by \"... but perfect is the enemy of good\". If your proof of concept actually solves the problem, maybe it *should* be put in production.\r\n\r\nI think the nuanced lesson to take home from this aphorism is this: The hacker should be aware that their code may be put into production at any time, so that they can make the right balance of decisions on what quality it should be when presenting it.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1787,2181,'2016-11-19 22:59:17','sigflup','openbsd!!','Nice to see people running openbsd!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1788,2182,'2016-12-13 02:46:44','mackrackit','Family Friendly ','Hey, I thought HPR was supposed to be family friendly? \r\n\r\nThis guy needs to be screened!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1789,2182,'2016-12-13 03:58:08','Clinton Roy','','Now I just feel like I\'m being trolled.\r\n\r\nI counted 34 effs in eight minutes of content, so four per minute, let alone the C bomb at the end. It\'s not just the language that\'s turning me off though, it\'s the whole tone, it\'s very aggressive and counter productive.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1790,2182,'2016-12-13 07:38:08','0xf10e','Three minutes of obscenities necessary?','Do you have some bet running how many \"fuck\"s you can fit into one episode of HPR??\r\nSeriously, you should have just left the first 3 minutes out.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1791,2182,'2016-12-13 11:35:40','Ken Fallon','HPR is not family frendly but ....','Hi mackrackit,\r\n\r\nNo HPR is not family friendly, in fact the stated goals in founding Twatech/HPR was to provide a forum where the rules applied by the FCC were not applied.\r\n\r\nWe offer feeds of shows that the hosts mark as clean if you wish to subscribe to that.\r\n\r\nHowever, we also are dedicated to sharing knowledge and having so many people upset is also not the goal of the community. Forcing everyone to the clean feed will remove many other shows that only occasional use more colourful language.\r\n\r\nI am not sure that spaceman has seen these comments, so I have sent him a message via social media allowing him to respond. \r\n\r\nCould you all please make sure you are subscribed to the mail list.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\n\r\nKen. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1792,2182,'2016-12-13 13:30:38','Ken Fallon','He will reply later','spaceman contacted me to say he will reply tonight.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1793,2182,'2016-12-13 16:53:25','pd','Waste of Time','That was the worst fuc!@#$ thing I ever heard.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1794,2182,'2016-12-13 19:32:23','gmail blocking','','I had to set a rule to get gmail to stop sending messages to the mailing list to spam.\r\n\r\nMatches: list:()\r\nDo this: Skip Inbox, Apply label \"lugs\", Never send it to Spam','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1795,2182,'2016-12-13 23:18:58','spaceman','reply from spaceman','Dear HPR listeners;\r\n\r\nI am sorry I offended you. Actually no I am not sorry!\r\nthis is my show, my podcast, on a platform free of censorship.\r\nI don\'t have to justify anything to anyone; however, I will be making\r\na special episode, doing a full analysis of everyone\'s responses I got\r\non HPR and gnusocial. The episode will be %100 clean !! no swearing I promise.\r\n\r\nif you hate my content, simply don\'t listen to it next time you see \"spaceman\".\r\n\r\nSomething has been said that actually made me mad, and it\'s none of your comments. \r\nI sincerely couldn\'t care less if you are so easily offended.\r\n\r\nI am quite pleased to be the most discussed post at the moment, and I know people who \r\ncan look beyond words are already doing personal research about food growing, creating\r\nbotnets for their businesses or ease their work load, or simply looking at my content on \r\nmy hidden websites on the onion network.\r\n\r\nthe nail has been nailed; I know you don\'t like hearing the F, C or whatever word. there\'s\r\nno need to keep on writing those comments, because I KNOW.\r\n\r\nIf you want to keep crying about it, i\'d politely ask you to go sodomize yourself with a \r\nretractable baton. See? I\'m already getting better from your comments I asked politely. \r\n\r\nfor questions, suggestions or insults: you can find me on loadaverage.org/spaceman1\r\n\r\nhappy hacking.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1796,2182,'2016-12-14 18:12:02','davidWHITMAN','Spaceman!','I quickly downloaded and listened to this show after seeing the furor on the mail list. I assumed the profanity was being used to describe one Donald Trump. I was wrong. Joke\'s on me I guess. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1797,2182,'2016-12-14 19:15:01','Frank','Just Rude for the Sake of Rude','No, my good sir, it is not *your* podcast. \r\n\r\nIf it were, you\'d be hosting it on your own server. It\'s a contribution to the HPR community, and a darned poor one at that. Surely electrons can be put to better use.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1798,2182,'2016-12-15 01:09:07','David L. Willson','hilarious','spaceman: I for one enjoyed your eccentric and passionate performance. Your choice of colorful language literally made me LOL. Thanks for getting the hive buzzing.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1799,2182,'2016-12-15 07:46:32','Ken Fallon','Reposting from fragdev','Hi @spaceman1 \r\n\r\nFar be it from me to tell anyone what to do, apart from my Children of course. I have no problem with them using \"bad\" language when appropriate, in fact I encourage it. I do however punish them for been deliberately disrespectful even if they are using \"polite\" language.\r\n\r\nYou have to ask your self, whether your use of FUCK is adding anything to the episodes, or if it\'s just pissing people off. I was not personally offended by that, but … [some of] .. your expression did gall me a little.\r\n\r\nHow you act now is of course your call. How HPR acts after that will be decided by the community as a whole. \r\n\r\nI am on the record for supporting the use of explicit language https://hackerpublicradio.org/pipermail/hpr_hackerpublicradio.org/2013-January/008558.html however a lot more were against. \r\n\r\nKeep that in mind if you wish to force the issue.','2022-02-14 13:17:52'),
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(1800,2182,'2016-12-17 03:09:34','spaceman','RE: Just Rude for the Sake of Rude','lolololololol.\r\n\r\nyes, it\'s *my podcast*, I do have it accessible on my mediagoblin account, otherwise I would use my hidden server to do so. you can\'t erase me from the internets. fucking sue me! ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1801,2182,'2016-12-17 20:21:19','Ken Fallon','HPR About page','Hi All,\r\n\r\nThis ongoing discussion shows me that some of you are new to our community and are not up to speed with what HPR is all about. That\'s absolutely fine as we are all busy, so I have recorded a show hpr2195 where we read the about page https://hobbypublicradio.org/about.php and the \"stuff you need to know\" page https://hobbypublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php\r\n\r\nI would consider it a personal favour if everyone would take a timeout for a while, and focus on recording shows that \"are of interest to hackers\".\r\n\r\nThanks,\r\n\r\nKen.','2022-02-14 13:17:52'),
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(1802,2182,'2016-12-19 01:19:36','spaceman','re:re:','\"I definitely sounded like a dick because my previous comment got truncated, so it just looks like a provocation, I apologize for that. wait until my next podcasts to judge me... my intend was to shock and it worked. it would actually be nice to talk about the whole FOSS/FLOSS Linux thing... like I said, the nail has been nailed... \"','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1803,2182,'2017-01-11 20:32:27','FSA','Some language is more offensive than others','Hey Spaceman,\r\n\r\nI thought that for the most part your episode was an entertaining take on the subject, and I think that I mostly agree with you on the philosophical points behind it.\r\n\r\nI also am strongly opposed to censorship of any kind, and the \"fucks\", etc. don\'t bother me.\r\n\r\nBUT, I would just ask you to reconsider the use of \"retard\" or \"retarded\" as an insult.\r\n\r\nAgain, I\'m completely against censorship, so I\'m not saying you should be forced to do so nor prevented from releasing episodes that use them in that way. But I do think it\'s a different sort of offense than generic words like \"fuck\" that some people just happen to not like.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1804,2183,'2016-12-16 00:50:28','b-yeezi','I have to disagree','Hey there Bill,\r\n\r\nGreat episode. I think you make some good points, but I have to disagree with you on a few things. I don\'t want to spend too much time going into it, but in general, I don\'t agree with the notion that just because the you can\'t expect to have total privacy on the internet, and that so many companies ask for so much of your information, that we as consumers should just throw our hands up in mercy and say \"take it all\".\r\n\r\nWe should be able to make informed decisions about exactly what and with whom information is shared. Many people, myself included, don\'t necessarily disagree with sharing some of this data, but huge EULA\'s and Privacy Agreements that Google and the like create make the transaction of information for services almost impossible to understand. Also, the closed source nature of their products do not allow users or experts the ability to validate the claims made in the aforementioned agreements. \r\n\r\nIn summary, I do not object to Google or any other company making the consumer the product. I just wish they were more forthcoming with their business practices, and therefore am selective on which services I choose to use.\r\n\r\nIt does make a thought-provoking conversation, so thanks for that!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1805,2184,'2016-12-15 01:00:28','Clinton Roy','','Lots of useful info, great notes as well :)\r\n\r\nThere were a few times where the plosive Ps made it hard to listen to. What recording setup are you using?','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1806,2184,'2016-12-16 00:15:54','b-yeezi',':re Lots of useful info','Yes I know. I don\'t always use that Plantronics USB headset because of that reason, but it does the best at reducing background noise. I have to remember to position it correctly and do some tests before recording.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1807,2187,'2016-12-21 17:02:43','Steve','Windows 98 Updates','Nice show. Retro computing is cool and the Libretto sounds like an interesting piece of hardware.\r\n\r\nAs an aside, do you (or anyone else) know of a good repository of all of the service packs and updates that were released for Win 98 or other old Windows flavors?\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1808,2187,'2016-12-27 19:00:08','m1rr0r5h4d35','','There are actually a slew of updates and fixes for Windows 98 and 98 SE that have been released over the years. Some are official, and others are not. Below are a few links to maybe help you out. Also, I\'ll provide a link to WinWorld, which is a valuable resource for old OS\'s that can be a pain to find sometimes.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.mdgx.com/web.htm#SP1\r\n\r\nhttps://www.mdgx.com/upd98me.php\r\n\r\nhttps://www.htasoft.com/u98sesp/\r\n\r\nhttps://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/unofficial_windows98_se_service_pack.html\r\n\r\nhttps://winworldpc.com/\r\n\r\nHope this helps!','2022-02-14 13:17:53'),
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(1809,2187,'2016-12-28 16:08:14','Steve','','It does indeed help. Thanks for posting these.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1810,2187,'2017-06-07 20:59:18','Bob Jonkman','Fixing dead pixels','A Quick\'n\'Dirty way to sometimes fix dead pixels is to press on the LCD screen (as you described), but apply the pressure when you power on. I\'m not sure what happens, but something seems to fuse in place, and the pixel works again. Don\'t know if it\'ll work on an entire column of pixels...\r\n\r\n--Bob.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1811,2189,'2016-12-24 20:09:16','spaceman','i love your kid','\"mad respect for your son for just thinking about satellites.\r\n\r\nI grew up with no intellectual interest for anything, just playing world of warcraft. It\'s kind of sad! thank you for all your documentation!!!\"\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1812,2189,'2017-01-02 16:27:53','Michael','Additional links','Hello Christopher and listeners,\r\n\r\ncool show. Now I want to pick up my own attempts again...\r\n\r\nSome comments / answers:\r\n\r\nAMSAT is the INTERNATIONAL organisation. AMSAT-NA is the North American branch. There are many others. You already mentioned AMSAT-UK.\r\n\r\nThe OSCAR name is still present. Here is a link that explains the rules for use: https://www.amsat.org/?page_id=2478 In short, in the AO-XX, FO-XX CO-XX satellite names, O stands for the OSCAR. The first letter is usually linked to the organisation or group that built the satellite.\r\n\r\nThe problem of getting mislead by dead satellites can be mitigated by consulting the satellite status page https://www.amsat.org/status/ first. There you can see if others very recently have heard / worked a particular satellite.\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael (Mirwi)','2022-02-14 13:17:53'),
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(1813,2190,'2017-01-09 21:08:24','Victor O','','I love bots but I find it disrespectful when a bot impersonates a human being. I think bots should identify themselves as bots. I don\'t think anybody appreciates being deceived.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1814,2190,'2017-01-09 21:14:44','Victor O','','On a side note I think you should share your findings. I kinda would like to see open databases of stuff out-there that you can download. I know you can google everything and Internet is easily acceptable. But I would like to own a couple of Terabytes of a database that is search index of the internet. Its nice I can download the DMOZ database. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1815,2191,'2016-12-26 22:53:52','spaceman','free software','\"why would you make your software available on a proprietary platform?\"','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1816,2191,'2016-12-31 05:18:58','droops','Best Tool','Because this is an awesome way to get people (especially my kids) into programming. Can you offer an alternative?\r\n\r\nFor the record, they are using Debian while doing all of this.\r\n\r\nI hope you know of something better! ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1817,2191,'2017-03-29 00:24:41','Windigo','Fantastic','You had me at \"advanced fart app\".','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1818,2192,'2016-12-29 01:47:55','NYbill','Ha!','This seems like something right up my alley. ...have scopes, will tinker. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1819,2192,'2017-01-02 08:18:04','clacke','Bubble sort!','Loved that the artist put in a sorting algorithm illustrations in Lines! I\'m pretty sure they\'re all bubble sort, though.\r\n\r\nDid anyone here watch Sorting Out Sorting? It\'s a classic! In 2005 sadly it was no longer a part our algorithms course, but we watched it as a part of student body lore. In original VHS!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1820,2193,'2016-12-28 06:02:30','Ken Fallon','HPR About Page','(This is a repost of the comment I made to the other discussions. As this show was posted before I made those comments it is still valid.\r\n\r\nRight now we have a \"Call for shows\" open.)\r\n\r\n\r\nHi All,\r\n\r\nThis ongoing discussion shows me that some of you are new to our community and are not up to speed with what HPR is all about. That\'s absolutely fine as we are all busy, so I have recorded a show hpr2195 ( See https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2195) where we read the about page https://hobbypublicradio.org/about.php and the \"stuff you need to know\" page https://hobbypublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php\r\n\r\nI would consider it a personal favour if everyone would take a timeout for a while, and focus on recording shows that \"are of interest to hackers\".\r\n\r\nThanks,\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:53'),
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(1821,2193,'2016-12-28 09:58:50','Mike Ray','Points','Nobody commented on your \'good\' or \'clean\' podcast but the swearing resulted in a tidal wave of comment. When was the last time you switched on the TV news and had to listen to the news reader telling you everything that had not happened that day?\r\n\r\nCensorship. It is childish and naive to suggest there should never be any censorship. Would you expect a podcast about how best to kill the greatest number of innocent public going about their legitimate business to be censored? How about a podcast extolling the virtues of the sexual exploitation of minors? Since you mentioned animals and harming them, seemingly in the name of a carnivorous lifestyle, how about a podcast about the best way to kill food animals without having to bother about pain reduction?\r\n\r\nNoise. I would be just as likely to switch off a podcast in which every other word was \'awesome\' as one in which every other word was f***(ing). Nothing you or I can do with Linux is awesome. Black holes are awesome, as are huge storms, supernovae, solar coronal mass ejections, the size of the universe etc., but not Linux. That\'s just noise, like unnecessary expletives.\r\n\r\nToday\'s podcast was good and worth listening to. Congratullations','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1822,2193,'2016-12-28 22:25:16','Matthew Jones','Wtf? ','Does it matter how much this kid says fuck? The podcast was flagged as explicit? \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1823,2193,'2017-01-04 07:31:50','AConcernedListener','Say what ever you want the way you want.','It is complete bullshit that people get offended over /words/ which are a part of the culture we are all occupying. As spaceman said, ACTIONS speak louder. I for one do not back censorship,and am quite concerned that any in this community would bow to the facists who /desire/ censorship. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1824,2193,'2017-01-06 00:04:49','gws','no such thing as knowledge transfer','Sure, there\'s no One True Method for teaching; there\'s no one single style of learning. The point is not that you\'re out of order, it\'s that you\'re going to alienate your audience.\r\n\r\nIf show response is stochastic, then try not to become a statistic!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1825,2194,'2016-12-17 01:18:08','clacke','First repercussions?','China seizes American survey submarine drone right in front of the ship controlling it.\r\n\r\nPeople are speculating that this is a first act of retaliation against the president-elect\'s indication the he will favor Taiwanese independence.\r\n\r\nhttps://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN14526J','2022-02-14 13:17:54'),
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(1826,2194,'2016-12-29 18:30:12','Ken Fallon','Fantastic','Please do more of these shows. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1827,2194,'2016-12-30 01:44:25','Clinton Roy','Outstanding!','Thanks for doing this show. I didn\'t feel it was too long at all. Turn your bloody phone off ;)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1828,2194,'2016-12-30 06:31:06','b-yeezi','Informative history lesson','I truly appreciate this episode. Here in the US, we get a euro-centric view of history in our education system. It is great that you have done this history lesson, and makes some of the things going on in current geo-politics makes more sense.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1829,2194,'2016-12-31 11:55:20','clacke','Wow','Thanks all for your overwhelming feedback! I\'ll be less worried about going too long in the future, and I\'m less worried about what people will think of the veery long Guix episode coming up. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1830,2194,'2017-01-02 14:42:49','Kevin O\'Brien','Excellent show!','As someone with a strong interest in both history and politics, I really enjoyed this program. I\'d love to hear more.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1831,2194,'2017-01-09 20:30:06','Victor O','','lol - I used to watch China Uncensored on youtube. I think China & Russia have an inferiority complex because the rest of the world listens to the US.\r\n They only act to protect their interests. They see the US as an intruder to their sphere of influence. I think mainland China just wants asians to deal with asians affairs. It is convenient for them but thats what they want. Anyways the US (country of freedom) refused to allow the south to secede when they wanted to. And say Trump makes hispanics really angry and regions dominated by hispanics so much they want to secede. The government will use military force to prevent it. I doubt any government today would allow a region to secede peacefully.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1832,2195,'2016-12-30 01:16:53','clacke','Text source','https://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php','2022-02-14 13:17:54'),
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(1833,2195,'2016-12-30 01:42:54','clacke','Correction: Text source','Ah, after posting I realized that the text-to-speech is from several pages. Let\'s see if I got them all:\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/about.php\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/contribute.php\r\n\r\n\"More information\" detours into:\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/recording.php\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/request_a_slot.php\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nHahaa! Love the end note. Quite a suitable form of delivery for these lyrics. :-)','2022-02-14 13:17:54'),
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(1834,2197,'2016-12-29 02:58:28','sapceman','what about freedom?','How do you get the point of \"freedom matters\" across? in that sense open source would be a bug... because seeing the code != Free Software. It is possible to not be free even if you have access to the code. People need to get educated and get to know what is going on with software. I\'m laughing because no matter what topic: free software, free energy, veganism and nutrition. the majority of people just want an iPhone that scratches their balls and watch their drone synchronizing channels. but yeah keep in mind that open source doesn\'t mean you\'re free... so what word do you wanna use? I suggest free/libre or free with an explanation. the reason it\'s still around, is probably because there ain\'t a thousand ways to say freedom.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1835,2197,'2017-01-03 08:40:54','mcnalu','Language has a life of its own','You present a solid, clear argument Ken. Thanks for the show. My understanding of it is that they (RMS & co) didn\'t fully appreciate the bug until people started using the term \'free\', ie it\'s a runtime bug. And once it\'s entered common usage it\'s hard, if not almost impossible, to alter that usage. For myself, I can live with the ambiguity by minding context and saying \"free and open source software\" when there\'s likely to be ambiguity.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1836,2197,'2017-01-04 06:47:56','brian','liberty','when we say freedom, I believe we mean liberty. I have no problem with \"libre\", as it conveys the message without much misunderstanding. I have a problem with open source, as much open source is still proprietary.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1837,2197,'2017-01-04 09:48:40','Ken Fallon','Replies','@spaceman - Yes Freedom matters. Had they named it \"Freedom Software\" then there would have been no disambiguity.\r\n\r\n@mcnalu - I don\'t believe it was a runtime bug as I said there were loads of examples at the time of both paid and gratis software (aside from the levels of Freedom). The term \"Free\" was also known to be the opposite of \"Paid\" at the time.\r\nChanging names has been done many times in the past, PostgreSQL, Inkscape, Wordpress, MariaDB, LibreOffice, Jenkins, etc. it\'s part and parcel of how \"Free\" Software works. RMS himself puts the better name as a reason why \"Open Source\" was so popular.\r\n\r\n@brian - I reported the bug. I leave it up to better minds such as yourself to apply the patch.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1838,2198,'2016-12-31 14:41:45','clacke','Correction: 8Sync 0.3!','The show notes are already out of date. Apparently Chris released 8Sync 0.3 two weeks ago!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1839,2198,'2017-01-04 06:43:07','brian','please more','preferably, basic example of user package management... I installed and really liked it, but as a non-programmer, I was a little overwhelmed with system management.','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1840,2198,'2017-01-05 01:44:16','Jonas','Interesting!','That\'s interesting to know there is a virtualenv type thing for an entire user login as well as a \"distro\". I\'ll definitely have a look. It would be great to hear how your cohost is getting along with using Guix in his current setup a year later. ','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1841,2198,'2017-01-05 16:47:14','clacke','Slides','This is not entirely helpful without narration (it\'s from a presentation I made), but maybe someone can glean some information from it:\r\n\r\nhttps://clacke.neocities.org/slides/guix.html\r\n\r\nEpisode idea: Narrate this. I will do it in February.','2022-02-14 13:17:55'),
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(1842,2198,'2017-01-05 17:01:21','clacke','Everyday package operations','The most common operations I do are:\r\n\r\nguix environment --ad-hoc ncdu, where ncdu is something I heard about and want to try out, or something I only use once a month. It is then “installed” in the spawned sub-shell only. This is an awesome feature. (also, if you haven’t heard about ncdu, look it up)\r\nguix package -i ncdu if it turned out to be something I like and use every day\r\nguix package pull to get the latest definitions for this user\r\nguix package -u to upgrade my permanently installed stuff for this user\r\nguix package -d to erase history of what I had installed before and release thise references for collection\r\nguix gc to reclaim my precious disk space\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1843,2198,'2017-01-13 22:33:53','BiasOpinion','Working Programmer','Like many programmers out there I am stuck in the narrow focus of my job. I found this episode informative and inspiring. Big Thumbs Up!','2017-09-09 07:41:35'),
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(1844,2198,'2017-02-25 12:28:55','clacke','Video','I did record a presentation using those slides in February, so I guess I won\'t record a show. Video here:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.lysator.liu.se/~clacke/video/2017-01-24_HK_Functional_Programming_guix_qscale_5.mp4\r\n\r\nThe latest Community News suggested though that my \"Everyday package operations\" comment deserved an episode, so I may record that.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1845,2199,'2017-01-06 00:06:25','NYbill','When is the new truck?','Eventually, Jon, will do an episode where he replaces the very last piece of the old truck. :P','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1846,2199,'2017-01-06 11:26:38','Ken Fallon','Nooooo...','This truck is worth it\'s weight in shows. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1847,2199,'2017-01-06 18:27:50','Jonathan Kulp','Just getting started','Don\'t worry y\'all, I expect this truck will give me episode topics regularly for a good while. I\'m gonna guess starter motor or ignition coil within the next year. Spark plugs, at least...','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1848,2201,'2017-01-10 18:48:20','droops','Drachenblut','Dude, \r\n\r\nIts hard to listen to this episode thinking about you being gone. Thank you for being there for me and for everyone else too. I wish I had been a better friend to you. \r\n\r\nI did laugh when they mentioned \"long rambling conversations\". I can just hear you saying \"well ..... droops ..... \"\r\n\r\nThis was a great episode and it didn\'t do you enough justice. You were a great guy and we are all lesser without you. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1849,2202,'2017-01-10 07:01:41','m1rr0r5h4d35','Awesome suggestions','I love Jimmy DiResta, and have spent more than a few hours on his channel myself. Looking forward to checking out some of the other channels you posted.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1850,2202,'2017-01-10 20:58:32','Victor O','','*thumbs up* I think making things is healthy. So what if factories make things a better and cheaper. Its not about that. Its about keeping our humanity. As a handyman we don\'t have to be so dependent on whats available. We have options.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1851,2202,'2017-01-12 02:56:46','dodddummy','','Iggy Swann is another I like. I\'m a bit of a Darbin Ovar stalker. Paul Sellers, Diresta, and Primative Technology are like magic to me https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAL3JXZSzSm8AlZyD3nQdBA\r\n\r\nAlready watch most on this list but there are about 5 I hadn\'t heard of. Can\'t wait to check them out.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1852,2202,'2017-02-02 05:27:46','Jim Weda','Treat list....','You definitely put some time in being that you were able to put a great list together.I know when I was doing my search for great builders I could learn from I made sure I watched many of their videos until I felt confident and comfortable about turning to them for ideas and techniques.\r\n\r\nThanks for turning me on to a couple new names I hadn\'t ruñ into yet.can\'t wait to watch some of these since I really agree with the rest of the list.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1853,2206,'2017-01-17 10:41:34','pauleb','Update on Linux Luddites','Hey,\r\nprobably you recorded the podcast before the news were out. Linux Luddites, which really was a great show, ended with the new year. But two of the guys went on and started Late Night Linux as a follow up podcast. So to update the list also visit https://latenightlinux.com .\r\n\r\nAnd since you put them on your list I think I\'ll give TLLTS another go. I couldn\'t really get into them the first time I tried.\r\n\r\nbest wishes and thanks for all the content!\r\n\r\npauleb','2022-02-14 13:17:55'),
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(1854,2206,'2017-01-18 03:18:33','reg a','Linux Luddites Update Info','Thanks pauleb.\r\nI had not listened to the last 2 Luddites podcasts when I submitted my list. \r\n\r\nThanks for the info,\r\n\r\nReg A','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1855,2206,'2017-03-06 17:36:34','Bookewyrmm','thanks and sorry','Reg, \r\n\r\nThanks for the good show(s)! I had been looking for a podcast manager for my android phone and tried Podkicker! I am currently using the free version, and have been using it since about a week after your show aired.I have every intention of supporting the developer and buying the paid version! What a great little app!\r\n\r\nI will also be checking out some of the podcasts you mentioned! \r\n\r\nThe sorry is for my taking so long to reply. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1856,2207,'2017-01-20 18:23:03','Windigo','','What a cool spin on the podcast recommendation topic! I don\'t think I\'ve ever formally been introduced to the NATO phonetic alphabet, and your recommended podcasts sound intriguing as well.\r\n\r\nThanks, and welcome to Hacker Public Radio!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1857,2207,'2017-01-21 22:19:39','Clinton Roy','Thanks!','Thanks very much for this, it was a wonderful little episode. I heard this on a plane with all the noise surrounding me, it was interesting to re-listen to it with my headphone noise cancellation off and work out how good it was at carrying information when there is a lot of background noise :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1858,2207,'2017-01-26 14:03:57','dodddummy','We called it fife, not five','If I\'m not mistaken, they taught us fife for 5 and tree for 3 when I was in the army.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1859,2208,'2017-01-19 14:37:42','Mongo','Camping the right way','I just listened to your excellent podcast on Kayak Camping in Louisiana. You have arrived at the right way of doing it and I enjoyed your story. For me, there is nothing better than waking up in the great outdoors. I tent camped for many years, sometimes from backpack or bicycle, but mostly from the car, and usually with dogs. Cheap gear (mostly), real food, no tech. Thank you for the podcast.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1860,2208,'2017-01-19 17:29:31','droops','Thanks','Thanks for your kind comment Mongo. \r\n\r\nAfter listening to the podcast again I left out something. Cheap gear is not the same as bad gear. You want quality gear but to not pay much for it. If I had a $400 tent and an ember burned a hole in it, I would be much more upset than when my $40 tent gets a hole. I try and test everything in my yard before relying on it (tent under a sprinkler) as to not bring worthless gear with me. \r\n\r\nThis kinda goes along with the more stuff you bring the worse of a time you have. Gear will get dirty and tear and melt and get lost. None of this stuff should be so precious that it ruins your time. Have backups of important things (fire-starting, water filtration, navigation) and just roll with it. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1861,2208,'2017-01-19 17:48:36','Ken Fallon','Another vacation destination','He just invited us to stay !\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1862,2208,'2017-01-19 19:25:01','droops','Vacation Destination?','Ken you know you are always welcome. Though if you overstay I may just leave you in the woods and come visit sometimes (and bring you batteries so you can keep running HPR like a champ). ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1863,2208,'2017-01-20 20:11:49','Jonathan Kulp ','Not a camper','I\'m not a camper but you made it sound like it\'s almost something I might wanna try someday. I definitely want to try kayaking around the waters here in Louisiana but am not sure about the camping bit. BTW I never realized you were in Louisiana. Gimme a holler if you come through Lafayette.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1864,2209,'2017-01-21 14:28:56','dodddummy','','I tried this and it works great. I don\'t remember if it was noted in the show but you need to supply the port number. On my kindle 3g with keyboard, it\'s hard to read the pages. Had to play around with display settings and reload when the pages got garbled. But it did work. I think I\'ll probably plug in the 3gs if possible though because it takes me a while to get to the page.\r\n\r\nWorked much better on the Kindle dx.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1865,2209,'2017-01-21 18:53:28','Jonathan Kulp','Ports','Whoops, yes, must have port number appended to url. Glad it worked!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1866,2209,'2017-01-22 19:23:43','dodddummy','','I just tried it from one of my other 3gs and it was fine. So I compared the two side by side and noticed that the display on one has a display problem. I didn\'t notice it while reading books. With that in mind, I\'ve changed my mind and will use this for the 3gs excluding the one with the display defect.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1867,2210,'2017-01-22 16:17:05','droops','Well Said','Very well said!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1868,2210,'2017-01-23 23:17:34','Bill Miller','Hello','Hey great podcast and I agree with you pretty much 100% I may not even agree with Spaceman but I totally support his right to express his opinion not matter how offensive it is to others. Hope to hear more from you! ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1869,2212,'2017-01-26 13:35:30','Bill Miller','Great show','Listened to your show today and it brought back alot of memories as well. I went through almost the same thing in the timeline of your tech lifetime there and it reminded me of some of the great and not so great tech items we used to get to where we are now. Don\'t tell anyone. I STILL have some of those mini discs lol.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1870,2212,'2017-01-27 22:41:50','Quvmoh','','Hah!, starting to become a bit of disease, picked up a rack Minidisk deck off of craigs list, still have not told the wife :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1871,2212,'2017-02-01 19:50:04','Matt','MiniDisc brought me here...','MiniDisc is still going strong, and it was via the \'MiniDisc\' Facebook group that I discovered this link. As an online group they are approaching nearly 2,000 members, and shows that there still a sub-culture for the format!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1872,2212,'2017-04-08 03:27:54','1F','anti-hacker?','Thanks for the episode. Loved it.\r\n\r\nI consider S* hostile toward hackers, so while some of their innovations are interesting, I\'m done with anything carrying the S* name. I have a ps3 collecting dust, and that was my final straw. When they take hackers and makers to court just for trying to do cool and interesting stuff, they show just how anti-maker they are.\r\n\r\nThey have the track record to prove how poor their treatment of the user community is. Remember Beta vs VHS? Remember Memory Stick? Long history of failed cool stuff.\r\n\r\nSometimes it\'s difficult to put these things down, as they are so cool, but on principle, I put them down now.\r\n\r\n1F','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1873,2213,'2017-02-10 05:24:58','brian','a clarrification','i want to impress the image of the clay particles and their memory, but it caused me to simplify both the formation of clay, and the aging of clay quite a bit... the more important mechanism is a chemical decomposition regarding both... mold, algae, beer, etc. can be very good for the aging process, and the mountain is more decomposed chemically than ground to dust...','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1874,2214,'2017-01-26 19:12:23','Steve','What about the blinkers?','It was pretty funny. As I was sitting there listening to your episode, while you were changing the bulbs, I was thinking to myself, you know, I\'ll bet that an LED bulb would mess up the timing on the turn signal blinkers. And then your addendum... Nicely done. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1875,2214,'2017-01-27 04:05:00','Clinton Roy','','So, if you replace an inefficient bulb with a high efficient LED and a resister of the same load, are you actually saving any power at all?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1876,2214,'2017-01-27 12:24:22','Jonathan Kulp','Probably not ','Nah, probably not saving power on the blinkers, but if you get 10x more life span as they claim and brighter lights, it\'s still worthwhile.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1877,2214,'2017-01-27 12:30:22','Jonathan Kulp','Blinkers','Steve, you\'re way ahead of me. I didn\'t even consider that this could happen to the blinkers until it actually happened and then I had to research to figure out what was going on. I don\'t understand electricity very well. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1878,2214,'2017-01-27 13:34:46','Ken Fallon','Smokin\' hot CANbus LED lamps. (230C in open air.)','https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkPGqM0Sl64\r\n\r\nFrom the \"bigclivedotcom \" channel\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1879,2214,'2017-01-27 18:38:16','Jonathan Kulp','Yikes','Mine are not CANbus so hopefully won\'t have meltdowns!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1880,2216,'2017-02-04 13:57:46','Michael (mirwi), DL4MGM','Doppler shift','Hello Christopher,\r\n\r\nyou were wondering, why the Doppler shift was on the transmit side for the AO-85 satellite. Well, there is always Doppler shift on the uplink and downlink frequencies. Up and down are separated by using different frequency bands of 2m (VHF,145MHz) and 70cm (UHF,435MHz). As Doppler shift scales with frequency, it is obvious that the effect is thrice as severe on the 70cm frequency as opposed to 2m. Amsat Oscar 85 (AO-85) has a U/V transponder, which means the transmit direction towards the satellite is on UHF and thus experiences the greater Doppler shift. Some other satellites have V/U transponders, where the bigger shift effect will be seen on the output of the satellite. \r\n\r\nAnother entry for the list of things to explain, in a separate show or the amateur round table: \"What is this Doppler shift all about?\" The best way to demonstrate it would probably be a recording of the telegraphy telemetry beacon, many of the birds have, where you can easily hear the pitch of the tone changing while the satellite passes.\r\n\r\nBTW, I was not even aware that there was an AO-85... I have to keep more updated on this. :-)\r\n\r\nRegards,\r\nMichael','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1881,2219,'2017-03-27 15:26:07','Regina Trolman','Loved it!','Thanks for all the information and advice. Great content!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1882,2220,'2017-02-07 15:35:35','Alpha32','Oh man...','This was a real nail-biter. I really hope you had a grounding bracelet. Thanks for the look inside a tablet and thorough description.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1883,2221,'2017-02-06 21:33:52','brian','sorry','I will make a point of having better shownotes... I was on the \"audio is better than no audio\"... The show would have been a month out, if ever, if i prepared or researched... I apologize for the inconvenience to those who need them.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1884,2221,'2017-02-08 12:54:31','Ken Fallon','You did that unscripted ?','Hi Brian,\r\n\r\nYou hit me with my own catch phrase - touche \r\n\r\nI did not think for one second that you could do such a detailed show without referring to some form of a document digital or physical.\r\n\r\nGreat show - keep them up. We\'ll happily keep notes if needed.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1885,2221,'2017-03-02 07:46:25','Krayon','OGGBot','There\'s also OGGBot in IRC that can do lookups. From it\'s help:\r\n hpr ep[isode] \r\n hpr ti[tle] [-i] \r\n hpr ho[st] [-i] \r\n hpr la[test]\r\n hpr sl[ot]\r\n\r\nSo to find shows about raspberry topics:\r\n OGGBot: hpr ti -i raspberry\r\n\r\nWhich yields a channel message:\r\n Found 8 matches, PMing you the first 6 (try refining your search)\r\n\r\nAnd a PM containing:\r\n Episode 1721: Cross-compilers Part 2 by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1721 )\r\n Episode 1712: What\'s in my Crate by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1712 )\r\n Episode 1706: Cross-compilers part 1 by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1706 )\r\n Episode 1649: Raspberry Pi Accessibility Breakthrough by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1649 )\r\n Episode 1629: Banana Pi - First Impressions by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1629 )\r\n Episode 1569: Many-to-many data relationship howto by Mike Ray ( mike.nospam@nospam.raspberryvi.org ) ( https://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1569 )\r\n\r\nTwo things to note:\r\n 1. I need to make it not include the host name or email when searching\r\n titles; and\r\n 2. I need to do an episode on OGGBot :/\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:55'),
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(1886,2227,'2017-02-28 14:10:07','b-yeezi','For the whole series','I wanted to leave one comment for the series of FOSDEM interviews. Thank you so much for these episodes. They were a pleasure to listen to. I wish I could have attended. It makes me want to record at least one episode from SCALE, which I will be attending.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1887,2229,'2017-02-16 17:54:12','Guido','Great to hear about the big picture','As someone who is putting on an open source conference in Boston, I find it hard to get a feel for where the community is locally. I really enjoyed this interview and discussion about how to enable organizers with tools for conferences.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1888,2235,'2017-02-28 00:34:23','Kevin O\'Brien','Great Interviews!','I just finished listening to them today, and they are great! I hope you can do more in the future. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1889,2236,'2017-02-21 21:43:36','sigflup','right on','Very good show! ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1890,2236,'2017-02-28 02:46:24','jezra','Wonderful','When you mentioned that the RPis are general computer computers, it really resonated with me that they are also ideal for an \"always on\" computer due to their low power consumption. \r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1891,2236,'2017-03-29 20:48:50','Alpha32','Great!','Great show! But, it seems the hpr robot voice thinks you\'re hoarding raspberry piss:-(','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1892,2236,'2017-04-07 19:55:11','Dave Morriss','Pis or Pi\'s','I\'d have added an apostrophe to the plural of Pi, but it\'s generally thought to be wrong (even though espeak then pronounces it in the non-urinary way). I have seen someone suggest it should be \"Raspberries Pi\" but that seems silly. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1893,2236,'2017-04-08 09:59:31','Mike Ray','Pis or Pi\'s','The apostrophe is definitely wrong, but as a screen-reader user this is a thing I struggle with constantly when writing pages and blog posts. Writing Pis definitely gives a pronunciation that is undesirable. May be it would have been easier if Ebben Upton hadn\'t made the mistake of calling it a Pi instead of a Py. The Pi part was supposed to be short for Python but, hard to believe, he got it wrong','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1894,2239,'2017-02-08 05:52:47','operat0r','YuMMM hacking meat','I just got like 4lbs of deer meat :) teriyaki alton brown','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1895,2239,'2017-03-03 03:02:35','jezra','','That sounds amazing. Do you know if it is a doe or a buck?\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1896,2239,'2017-03-23 01:07:10','@einebiene','Mhhhhh','sounds great!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1897,2240,'2017-03-09 01:08:36','davidWHITMAN','Ham Radio Roundtable','Nice show. I hope there are many more. I would like to ask for a detailed explanation of how the length of a frequency is measured (2 meters?), what frequency is most powerful, and how modulation works. And of course.....is ET trying to contact me? ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1898,2245,'2017-03-10 00:23:00','Mike Ray','Erm...','See show 1569:\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=1569\r\n\r\nHow to do a many-to-many relationship in a database.\r\n\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:55'),
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(1899,2245,'2017-03-10 10:40:05','Dave Morriss','Oops!','Sorry Mike,\r\n\r\nI hadn\'t forgotten your excellent show. It\'s been in my list of references all along. However, since I started by designing a single show which then got split into three, reference to show 1569 got relegated to the last show in the series.\r\n\r\nI didn\'t quite appreciate the effect that would have, since the three shows were still one in my head. As it stands it looks as if I have disregarded your contribution, whereas what I had wanted to do was move slowly towards it, looking at possible alternatives and showing their advantages and disadvantages along the way.\r\n\r\nShow two is in the queue for the 31st March, but show three is still in production. It will be the next show I upload though.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1900,2245,'2017-03-10 16:42:55','Mike Ray','Listen to the entities','Wherever possible all database design should be driven by what the entity relationship is telling you, and Mr Codd should be obeyed.\r\n\r\nIn this case there are just two entities; \'show\' and \'tag\'. And their relationships are:\r\n\r\nShow can have one or more tags\r\n\r\nTag can appear attached to one or more show.\r\n\r\nWhich gives rise to the many-to-many relationship like this:\r\n\r\nshow------tag\r\n\r\nThe show_tag_xref table has a compound unique key comprised of the key column from the two outside tables, show and tag.\r\n\r\nThat\'s the pure analysis of the two entities concerned.\r\n\r\nI can\'t think of any processing constraints, like speed or storage that would compel that relationship to be compromised. As you said in your part 1, this is a small database.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1901,2246,'2017-03-16 17:04:40','Windigo','Good idea','I\'ve run into this with some of the RSS feeds I have subscribed to, and had never thought about creating a secondary re-feeder feed to fix it. Brilliant!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1902,2248,'2017-03-16 00:57:08','Clinton Roy','','Some interesting stuff, but I gave up when the conversation turned to rape on college campuses.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1903,2249,'2017-03-16 02:41:48','Clinton Roy','','Aaaand I gave up on this one about twenty minutes in when birtherism came up. I really like the concept of the new year show, but it feels like it\'s gone completely off the rails.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1904,2249,'2017-03-27 17:33:43','Ken fallon','Fact check Scotland brexit not 100%','Scotland has voted in favour of the UK staying in the EU by 62% to 38% - with all 32 council areas backing Remain.\r\n\r\n.....\r\n\r\nTurnout in Scotland was 67% \r\n\r\n\r\n....\r\nhttps://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-36599102\r\n','2022-02-14 13:17:56'),
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(1905,2249,'2017-04-03 22:37:46','dodddummy','New Episode Title: Conspriacy Gate!','WOW! this show was something else. I didn\'t realize there were so many conspiracy wonks in the group. \r\n\r\nRegarding the !00% figure on Scotland voting to remain, I think he was referring to 100% of the areas, not actual voters. I assume Ken\'s quote \'with all 32 council areas backing Remain.\' confirms that.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1906,2249,'2017-04-14 11:08:21','Frank','Windows on top','Windows actually supports the always-on-top function. It just has no GUI means of activating it. But some programs use it, most prominently media players.\r\n\r\nThere are third-party tools which make it available globally, such as Ac\'tivAid, written by the staff of German computer magazine c\'t. A quick English installation guide is at https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/pimp-windows-autohotkey-scripts-activaid-2/\r\nAc\'tivAid also brings other Linux-Goodies, such as drag a window with Alt+LMB.','2022-02-14 13:17:56'),
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(1907,2249,'2017-05-22 05:22:21','Ethan William','','Thank you','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1908,2252,'2017-03-22 23:52:07','clinton roy','','I nearly made it all the way through this one. There was some interesting content on the lazarus-ide.org project.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1909,2253,'2017-03-22 00:49:22','Clinton Roy','Thank you','This was great! thank you for uploading.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1910,2253,'2017-03-22 22:50:20','Bob Jonkman','Consultant','Hi @EineBiene: Do you have a template file for that Anarchist Carrot image? An .svg or an .xcf or an .odg, or even a .pdf?\r\n\r\nThanx!\r\n-- @BobJonkman@sn.jonkman.ca','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1911,2253,'2017-03-22 23:54:48','einebiene','German Download Page','Hey Bob,\r\n\r\nhere\'s a German Download page for political art stencils, the carrot is among them: https://kreaktivisten.org/downloadbereich/stencils/#umwelt','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1912,2253,'2017-03-23 00:24:35','brian','food not bombs','that is one of the \"Food Not Bombs\" logos','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1913,2253,'2017-03-23 01:23:35','ph','','Sehr gut! Danke!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1914,2253,'2017-03-23 04:03:24','b-yeezi','Welcome new host!','Thanks for the new episode. It was well done and easy to follow. The process you described reminded me of a silk screening class I took long ago. I think I will try this out some time soon. Keep the episodes coming!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1915,2253,'2017-03-24 02:56:06','Bob Jonkman','Consultant','Thanx for the link, @EineBiene! There are a lot of good designs (motifs) on that page!\r\n\r\n--Bob.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1916,2253,'2017-03-30 19:49:55','droops','Very cool','I am doing this with the kids tonight. My wife has a Cricut but its way more fun using knifes!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1917,2253,'2017-04-03 09:30:12','Mikael','Thank you','Nice episode, Biene.\r\nAnd congratulations to your first HPR contribution! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1918,2253,'2017-04-03 22:25:26','@eineBiene','@all','Thank you all for your comments. This is really encouraging. :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1919,2253,'2017-04-23 14:21:42','rtsn','Good show','Just wanted to say I really enjoyed this episode. Will try to make my own someday. Good episode and I hope to hear more from you in the future :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1920,2253,'2017-07-11 18:56:20','admin','congrates','Nice episode, Biene.\r\nAnd congratulations to your first HPR ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1921,2254,'2017-04-01 01:08:47','Christopher M. Hobbs','','Excellent show (and detailed show notes)! This was exactly what I needed. My son has been asking me about model rockets for a long time and I wasn\'t sure where to start looking for information.\r\n\r\nUnfortunately there doesn\'t seem to be a club in my area but I may have some friends who would let me launch on their property. It may be time to look for a kit!\r\n\r\nThanks for the show!\r\ncmh','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1922,2254,'2017-04-19 17:39:16','Roan','ahh the memories','Hi, was thinking about your show last night, and the memories of building model rockets as a kid. \r\n\r\nThere was a hobby shop near my home, and at one point it had a row of model rockets, motors, starter kits etc. One of the most exciting times was building a two stage rocket that used either C or D motors. I remember the thrill of watching the two stages go off and then chasing it across fields as the wind caught the parachute on its return to earth. \r\n\r\nThanks for a great episode.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1923,2254,'2017-04-23 16:32:43','nstr','!','Thanks for a wonderful show on a subject I had no idea could be so interesting. I hope to hear more on this. Keep it up!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1924,2255,'2017-03-01 18:08:56','Tony Hughes','hpr 2255','Hi Dave I enjoyed the show about the history and workings of hpr. I did a slot about HPR at Manchester Barcamp last year and during the talk likened HPR to a BarCamp of the airwaves as just like a BarCamp as long as it\'s legal and you make it clear if familly frendly or not, you can talk on any topic that you have a passion for and you want to share with the listeners. Maybe that could be a new tag line, HPR the BarCamp of the podcast World!!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1925,2255,'2017-03-06 15:08:31','Dave Morriss','Nice idea','Thanks Tony, and thanks for telling Manchester Barcamp about HPR :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1926,2255,'2017-03-25 07:50:37','knightwise','How about a dropbox folder.','One of the things you could do to make the recording process simpler is have something like a dropbox folder that people can send their shows to, straight from their phones when they are done. That way you have a one-button upload without having to develop an app right now. The second thing I would find cool if is there was a Telegram or Voxer channel for HPR listeners / hosts. That way we could talk to each other and (in a pinch) these audio conversations could also be used as a show. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1927,2255,'2017-03-26 06:16:17','M1rr0r5h4d35','Very interesting show.','I really enjoyed the history and statistics, it would be nice to have a page on HPR\'s site that lets you see a bunch of those stats as they change. I also think that a store would be great, depending on the types of gear sold. For example tshirts and hoodies are a must, but it would also be cool to see things like raspberry pi kits, and supplies for building some of the projects that are mentioned on HPR shows for those who are interested in experimenting or duplicating the work of others. Maybe something like Hak5 does with their shop? \r\n\r\nhttps://hakshop.com/\r\n\r\nIt\'s just an example, but that kind of stuff would be cool as well. I also think an app for IOS and Android really needs to happen. It would be great if it let you stream episodes as well as contribute them. Perhaps incorporate some of the data from the website into it as well, such as the calendar and show notes for the episodes. I don\'t know, just spitballing, but those are some of the things I would love to see happen. Thanks for the show!\r\n\r\n- M1rr0r5h4d35','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1928,2255,'2017-03-29 16:10:59','droops','New Hosts','I do not listen to all of the episodes or keep up as much as I should but am very interested in the new hosts. \r\n\r\nWe should have a page (or a tag, or email) that just indicates when a brand new hosts released their first episode. This would enable me (and others) to keep track of when someone new posts and then I can send them encouragement/thank you/feedback. \r\n\r\nThank you for this episode, it was very cool hearing the stats (I remember that day we didn\'t have an episode). Very good ideas all around. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1929,2255,'2017-03-30 21:53:20','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the comments','@knightwise: interesting ideas, thanks. How to control access to Dropbox though? Wouldn\'t it fill up with spam and other junk? \r\n\r\n@M1rr0r5h4d35: thanks. Some good thoughts to ponder there.\r\n\r\n@droops: yes, the new host alert idea is a good one - needs some thought.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1930,2255,'2017-04-03 22:31:13','dodddummy','This should be a sticky show','I\'m thinking this episode should be something like the sticky posts that forums keep at the top for reference.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1931,2258,'2017-03-29 12:21:39','Clinton Roy','','I had to do a bit of googling, but a Keilbasa is some sort of Polish sausage, which apparently can be of any sort of meat?\r\n\r\nFrom a non American perspective:\r\nAnd when you say jelly, I *think* I\'m meant to think of something similar to jam, except take all the fruit out.\r\n\r\n:)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1932,2258,'2017-03-30 21:23:23','Xoke','Little Smokies','A family recipe we use is the little smokies sausages (cocktail sausages for my English brethren), and a jar of grape jelly (grape jam) and a bottle of bbq sauce.\r\n\r\nSomething like this:\r\nhttps://allrecipes.com/recipe/213073/slow-cooker-cocktail-smokies/','2022-02-14 13:17:56'),
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(1933,2259,'2017-03-30 19:39:43','droops','Minidisc','The more I hear about these things, the more I think I missed out. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1934,2259,'2017-03-30 20:47:28','Dave Morriss','Interesting','That was a cool device you had, and some interesting stories.\r\n\r\nMy son owned a Sony Minidisk Walkman which still exists. I was prompted to look for it today, and having found it discovered it\'s still working. He doesn\'t want it, so I must see what it can be used for.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1935,2259,'2017-03-31 16:30:13','Jonathan Kulp','Minidisk Walkman','Thanks for the comments, guys. Sorry I\'ve been so silent with shows and comments lately, just really busy at work. \r\n\r\nI think the Sony Walkman minidisc had a much Slimmer profiled than my Sharp MD702, so it might work pretty well as an actual Walkman where you\'re carrying it with you while you walk around. You could also record a show on it. Have fun! :-) ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1936,2259,'2017-04-05 01:25:03','Quvmoh','minidisc','Jon great episode, perhaps we can get the powers to be link these as a series to entice others to produce more. As a failed light wheel mechanic I love the truck episodes!!!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1937,2261,'2017-04-03 18:25:23','Jwp','One button submit','How do you upload the voice memo of an iPhone to HPR? I am fan of one button upload','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1938,2261,'2017-04-04 08:30:06','Dave Morriss','Radio, electromagnetic radiation and so forth','During the show, when we spoke of the Amateur Radio Round Table, I wanted to mention a podcast episode I heard recently. I forgot to do so.\r\n\r\nThe episode is from a podcast called \"Exposing PseudoAstronomy\" and it deals with the subject of \"Radiation\". To my mind the host did an excellent job of explaining this subject. The episode is at https://podcast.sjrdesign.net/shownotes_153.php and the podcast feed is https://podcast.sjrdesign.net/pseudoastropodcast.rss','2022-02-14 13:17:57'),
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(1939,2261,'2017-04-04 10:27:12','Ken Fallon','One Button will not fix the steady supply problem','Hi JWP\r\n\r\nYes it would be nice if we could have a one button record function but it will only benefit the seasoned contributors like yourself. \r\n\r\nMost people struggle with having the perfect show and procrastinate about the umms and awwws. The last people to use a one button/dial in option are the exact people we are trying to target.\r\n\r\nThis will not fix the steady supply of shows issue.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1940,2263,'2017-04-10 19:32:13','Beeza','Brilliant Show','I rarely listen to an HPR episode which I don\'t find interesting to some extent. However, this one excelled in that just about everything was new to me.\r\n\r\nThe perspective of a visually impaired person of how the world \"looks\" was both rare and fascinating.\r\n\r\nIt would do all of us good to be reminded that the world is not perceived by everyone the same way.\r\n\r\nI do hope that you produce some more shows soon.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1941,2263,'2017-05-20 14:26:38','rtsn','Great episode','Thanks for a really interesting and enjoyable episode. I think it\'s healthy and important to question and consider concepts we, to some extent, take for granted, like how visual perception shapes our world view. \r\n\r\nLooking forward to hearing more from you two.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1942,2264,'2017-04-06 01:09:57','Clinton Roy','Podnutz','Podnutz podcast referenced: https://podnutz.com/category/mrp-tech-podcast/','2022-02-14 13:17:57'),
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(1943,2264,'2017-04-06 01:13:38','Clinton Roy','Great Idea','I should definitely do this my library :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1944,2264,'2017-04-10 15:18:49','Windigo','Similar experience','While living on the North coast of California, the library was more than just a repository for paper books; it was essentially a community center.\r\n\r\nMy partner and I attended talks and classes, spent time in-between appointments reading and using their wi-fi, and borrowed plenty of movies and books from our branch.\r\n\r\nLibraries are a fantastic resource, and seem to be helping the least fortunate in our communities. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1945,2266,'2017-04-11 18:50:15','Les Orchard','','Man, I loved these books back in Jr. High in the 80s. I would usually read/play these in class after I got classwork done. I could sneakily drop a pencil on the random number table and not get in trouble like I did a few times for rolling dice. Because I was one of those kids who rolled dice in class :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1946,2266,'2017-05-07 11:12:23','Shane Shennan','Intriguing! ','Thank you very the great show and the link to the free books.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1947,2267,'2017-05-20 14:28:34','rtsn','!','Good episode! Wonderful to see more art related episodes in HPR.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1948,2269,'2017-04-15 19:06:43','JWP','Great','Hi I really liked your talk about Plan 7. The keyboard I love the loud clicks to. And of course I also love Choc milk. So 3 gold stars for you :) - @ Ken this is the Uber geek stuff that Rocks me to the Core.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1949,2269,'2017-04-24 00:17:30','doddummy','I liked the show but...','I enjoyed the show. But, I\'m curious if this counts as a syndicated show not created for HPR.\r\n\r\nI repeat. I liked the show. In fact I\'ve added to my list.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1950,2269,'2017-04-24 14:51:33','Ken Fallon','It is a syndicated show','As per the summary \"A sample show of the nixers podcast.\"\r\n\r\nSubmitted under the guideline: \r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php#syndication\r\n\r\n\"We do not syndicate non HPR Shows.\r\n\r\nHPR is founded on the principle of Hackers sharing knowledge. For this reason we are only releasing material created exclusively for HPR. We will continue to promote new podcasts and other creative commons material, but if you wish to have your show aggregated, then please contact our sister site Hacker Media.\r\n\r\nThat said, if there is a piece of creative commons content that you would like to promote, then feel free to record a regular show. There you can introduce the content and explain why it is important, providing links to where we can get more information etc., and then include one example episode. \"\r\n\r\nI\'ve contacted stank to see if we can help out with Hacker Media as well, so that there is a place to put syndicated content.','2022-02-14 13:17:57'),
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(1951,2269,'2017-05-06 19:53:54','dodddummy','Got it','Makes sense.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1952,2270,'2017-04-19 14:42:13','Steve','Make it so','As someone who is also not formally trained in database administration but nonetheless does quite a bit of database administration and development, what you have said and the conclusions you have drawn sound exactly right to me. I say, make it so.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1953,2270,'2017-04-19 15:49:44','Dave Morriss','Thanks Steve','I appreciate the comment.\r\n\r\nI\'m currently looking into how we can incorporate such features into the database - and modify all of the code around it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1954,2270,'2017-04-19 22:03:58','gws','series','A series is the same thing as a tag, if you need to distinguish them put another column on the Tag table. The join across Episode Tag is the same.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1955,2270,'2017-04-19 22:28:40','Dave Morriss','Series same as Tag?','I think you have a point - except that the Series idea was originally designed to have two other significant attributes: a description and a public/private flag.\r\n\r\nThe description is an arbitrarily long text field, used to store HTML which is displayed in the web page for shows that are part of the series.\r\n\r\nThe public/private flag denotes whether the series is open to more contributors or not. Most modern series are public but some historical ones are private.\r\n\r\nChanging the Tag table to include these attributes, to be used for \"series\" tags, is not impossible of course. It needs some thought.\r\n\r\nThanks for the suggestion.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1956,2270,'2017-04-21 01:40:09','gws','tag vs. series','Variable-length columns like VARCHAR or CLOB should not balloon the size of your Tag table just by adding them; assuming even a moderately sane dbms those large and sparse objects would be stored in separate data structure (thing \'string pool\') so you pay for what you use.\r\n\r\nBTW my earlier comment was meant to say \"Episode (left arrow) EpTag (right arrow) Tag\" but I used angle brackets and the middle bit got swallowed by HTML.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1957,2270,'2017-04-23 22:37:23','Brenda J. Butler','','I\'m new to HPR, sorry if I make comments that show ignorance of how you do things. Please point me to resources, I\'ll be happy to read up.\r\n\r\nI\'m not a big DB expert either, but like you have used some DBs and have a little experience. Also a bit of experience making a couple of database-backed web sites.\r\n\r\nI like the idea of the third design of tags.\r\n\r\nI would also change the HPR episode intake process to make any new tags in the new format - have a cutover date/time after which all the new entries in the database use the new tagging scheme (populate the new tags tables and not the old tags fields. In fact, even remove the old tags fields to avoid confusion about which set of tags is the \"right\" set). That way you only have to do that \"populate the new tag fields from the old tag fields\" step once, at cutover time. You could keep a copy of the old site (and update it) for a while until confident the new site works properly.\r\n\r\nI don\'t know how the HPR web site is served, I got the impression from your series that it is static pages generated from a DB. Perhaps you generate a new set of pages when a new episode is added to the DB. I think you cannot go this way if you want to use that query you developed, \"what other shows have at least one of the tags that this show has\". Or at least, it will be difficult to implement.\r\n\r\nCan I read somewhere about the way the web site is served, the tech stack, etc? Is there a public repo for the code (read-only acceptable)?\r\n\r\nThanks for all your great, extensive show notes! Really appreciated.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1958,2270,'2017-04-24 22:00:52','Dave Morriss','Tags and Series','Thanks gws. It wasn\'t so much the storage issue I was referring to, more the logic of the suggested change. I do like what you\'re proposing though.\r\n\r\nSorry you got bitten by this crappy comment system.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1959,2270,'2017-04-24 22:22:00','Dave Morriss','Thanks Brenda','Thanks for your comments.\r\n\r\nThere is a GitLab instance with a repository which holds some of the public code:\r\nhttps://gitlab.anhonesthost.com/HPR/HPR_Public_Code\r\n\r\nYour suggestion for the transition from the old to a new tag system is pretty much what I had in mind, but we haven\'t yet discussed all the issues amongst the Admins.\r\n\r\nThe site is not static, though there have been discussions about making it so. I take your point that there\'s a conflict between having a static site and offering tag query features though. ','2022-02-14 13:17:58'),
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(1960,2271,'2017-04-23 00:00:40','droops','Very Cool','I am really excited to finally get my hands on one of these little ones. My kids and I have built several projects with my full sized ones and I want to teach a class next year using Raspi\'s.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1961,2271,'2017-05-09 11:24:27','Tony Hughes','Pi Zero W','Hi droops, you\'ll be lucky to be able to use the pi zeroW to teach a class as at the moment you can still only order them one at a time :-(','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1962,2271,'2017-07-11 18:57:13','admin','thanks for info','interesting info','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1963,2272,'2017-04-18 06:37:13','Steve','Been there','Entertaining episode. I have so been in situations similar to what you faced. Thanks for sharing.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1964,2272,'2017-05-13 17:56:13','Mirwi','Entertaining','I\'m sure you know, but you have such a great voice. You can read out the phone book to us and I will enjoy listening!\r\n\r\nThanks for the show.\r\n\r\nMichael','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1965,2273,'2017-04-19 02:55:18','droops','Fountain Pens?','Awesome!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1966,2273,'2017-04-19 19:02:07','Dave Morriss','Great show. We need more on this subject','I enjoyed this show a lot. Thanks for talking about pens, ink and paper. I think we need more shows on these subjects. \r\n\r\nMaybe there are more enthusiasts in the HPR community who\'d like to contribute :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1967,2274,'2017-04-28 23:31:54','Windigo','Very interesting possibility','I didn\'t realize that installing any kind of Linux on a Surface was a possibility; a whole new category of hardware to re-purpose!\r\n\r\nThanks for another great episode. :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1968,2277,'2017-04-25 16:34:12','Lowtek Morgellon ','Outernet User','Hi, enjoyed your episode. I have had an Outernet receiver up and running for a few months now. It\'s definitely a neat project. \r\nMy biggest issue is with the $9 CHiP. It\'s always locking up or powering off. I\'m planning to switch back to the old OS and a rpi for stability. \r\nThe $9 CHiPs are now impossible to find, so the Outernet guys are working on their own dedicated hardware that includes the processor and sdr all on one board. It\'s currently code named Dreamcatcher. \r\nI\'ll try to sit down tonight when I get home and record a companion to your episode and give a full review of my experience with the Outernet. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1969,2277,'2017-04-25 22:06:43','M1rr0r5h4d35','Sounds Awesome!','When I recorded this, I was hoping someone out there who had more experience with any of these could shed some more light on them for the rest of us. I have been considering getting one of the kits, but I have to much going on right now. Looking forward to your episode!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1970,2278,'2017-04-28 21:56:56','unverified','You Rock','I\'ve been meaning to comment somewhere on the site about how great a resource the site is but if were nothing but \"Dave Morris Reads The Manpages\" I\'d gladly listen.\r\nYour attention to detail and calm mannerism is very pleasant and that it happens you cover the good stuff any nix user needs to get a handle on is just perfect.\r\n\r\nWhen there is a lull I\'ll go through them all again.....and again.\r\n\r\nThanks for holding up far more than your end of the podcast.\r\n\r\nIll try to break past the public speaking phobias and help.\r\nAnd help with tags too.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1971,2278,'2017-04-29 11:16:32','Dave Morriss','Thanks','Well, that\'s a great comment! Thank you.\r\n\r\nMy principle is to find stuff I don\'t understand (or didn\'t in the past) and share what I have learnt to help anyone who wants to grasp whatever it is.\r\n\r\nI have just uploaded part 2 of this two-parter, so there\'s more to come :-)\r\n\r\nI hope you manage to make episodes of your own. For my first one I wrote notes for HPR, but also made myself a list of the points I wanted to cover, and rehearsed the episode before the final recording. Whatever gives you enough confidence to do it!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1972,2278,'2017-06-15 08:14:35','clacke','How people record','It would be interesting to have an overview of how various people choose to prepare and record their episodes, for newcomers to get some idea of what might suit them.\r\n\r\nThe way I have done it recently is to write the show notes and while I do so, basically play in my head what I will say about them, and then come up with side tracks I ought to provide references to, etc.\r\n\r\nI don\'t rehearse, and lately I haven\'t cut anything out either.\r\n\r\nEarlier, I\'ve cut my episodes a bit, because I had gone off track or there was too much ambient noise when I\'ve been out walking, but now I\'m aiming for as little threshold as possible before I publish. I had that one episode that I procrastinated for a year because I wanted to edit it down for length. Finally I just published it.\r\n\r\nWorse is better. For me, anyway.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1973,2278,'2017-06-15 08:24:45','clacke','On using echo','The tip about using echo is great, and I\'ve used it many times. Lately though, I\'ve started using printf because it can help me see some weird filenames, and also helps with long filenames.\r\n\r\nOne could use `ls` too, or rather `ls -d` to not expand any directories listed, and it might be the instinctive thing to do but in the case of a lot of files, actually just printing the parameters is faster, because regardless whether you just want to see the file names, `ls` also inspects each and every one of the files to figure out how to e.g. color it.\r\n\r\nNow, here\'s what I do with printf:\r\n\r\n# Show all the names with single quotes around them.\r\n\r\n$ printf \"\'%s\' \" /some/directory/and/wild*card; echo\r\n\r\n# Show all the names on separate lines.\r\n\r\n$ printf \"%s\\n\" /gnu/store/*-theprogram-2.0*\r\n\r\nThe latter one is what I literally do when looking for things in my Guix or Nix store, because those file names are all so long, and it\'s helpful to get one per line.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1974,2278,'2017-06-15 09:10:30','Dave Morriss','On recording','I also like to prepare notes first, and as soon as possible after they are done, record. That way the ideas are all fresh in my mind. I use the notes as a structure but mostly ad-lib the audio. Reading the notes is a big mistake as far as I am concerned. Since the first HPR show I did I do not rehearse.\r\n\r\nYears ago (late 1970\'s) I used to teach evening classes in an Adult Education centre (Pascal, BASIC). I evolved a similar style there, and constructed notes which became hand-outs for the students. Amusingly they were printed on a line-printer, and I\'d written my own text-processor to generate them (think early but less convenient Markdown).\r\n\r\nAs to audio editing, I do edit. I hesitate and \'um\' and \'er\' a lot and I deal with these by (light) silence truncation and removal of a proportion of \'um/er\' patterns. I can edit a lot faster now than when I started, but it\'s just a personal foible. Without editing I find my audio irritating to listen to and assume others will too!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1975,2278,'2017-06-15 10:03:32','Dave Morriss','Using echo, printf and ls','Hi clacke,\r\n\r\nYour comment made me think about the way I have been using echo in this series. I may have said this at some point, but maybe not: I was primarily using it to demonstrate how expansion was working. I don\'t use it in that way to view directory contents and so forth.\r\n\r\nExpansions like the ones here are used in many contexts, as you know. Back in my early days of using Unix (we had Sun, HP, DEC, Silicon Graphics and Apollo systems around at various times at the university I worked at), with a variety of shells. I think As an aside, I hated csh and tcsh the most!\r\n\r\nThere were time when I\'d type something like:\r\n\r\nrm *.msg\r\n\r\nand get back an error like \"too many files\". That was because the expansion of \'*.msg\' resulted in \'rm\' getting maybe thousands of file names, which it couldn\'t cope with. I got in the habit of doing stuff like:\r\n\r\necho *.msg | wc -w\r\n\r\nto warn me of such potential problems. Maybe even \'echo\' would fail sometimes with \"too many files\" (or similar), but I don\'t remember now. Maybe \'ls\' would have been a better choice back then. However, for this series I felt it \"got in the way\" a bit more, as it were :-)\r\n\r\nYour points about printf are well taken. I did mention it earlier in this series, and showed its use in various contexts. However, it probably deserves a show all of its own!\r\n\r\nYes, I had discovered:\r\n\r\n$ printf \"%s\\n\" *.msg\r\n\r\na while back and was surprised it printed out its arguments one per line. Some other \'printf\' implementations reject such things because there are more arguments than format specifiers. The Bash \'printf\' behaviour is better in my opinion.\r\n\r\nBetter stop - Ken will accuse me of wasting another show opportunity!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1976,2278,'2017-06-16 06:45:30','Ken Fallon','Comment limit','What a waste of shows !\r\n\r\nI think we should limit comments to - \"Please see my show ${new_show}\" :)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1977,2278,'2017-06-16 13:48:04','clacke','printf episode','printf added to https://social.heldscal.la/clacke/tag/hprep .','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1978,2278,'2017-08-06 02:59:23','clacke','A new `ls` alternative','On the topic of `ls`, there\'s a new player and people say it\'s both faster (I\'m assuming it\'s stat\'ing less eagerly than coreutils ls does) and more featureful (more coloring, info on git things, some tree visualization). Haven\'t tried it myself yet.\r\n\r\nhttps://the.exa.website\r\n\r\nAlso it\'s written in Rust, but that\'s least interesting property of it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1979,2278,'2017-08-06 19:55:42','Jonathan Kulp','Awkward!','That `exa` command does look pretty cool and powerful but it is WAY too awkward to type. i would have to make an alias for it, maybe even link `ls` to it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1980,2278,'2017-08-06 20:33:16','Dave Morriss','Not sure about \'exa\'','Perhaps it\'s still too new, but \'exa\' doesn\'t seem quite the tool for me.\r\n\r\nFirstly I couldn\'t find out what the colours and underlines actually mean. Secondly I find that I need to change the screen background colour and font to be able to read the coloured text. Admittedly, this might be my eyes, but if a filename is basically a blur I don\'t get a lot from the feature! (I have similar problems with other commands that generate coloured output, so I don\'t blame \'exa\'.)\r\n\r\nPotentially the Git interface is useful, though I don\'t know what the symbols mean. The whole thing needs documentation - ideally in the form of a well-structured manpage. Also I was puzzled to find that:\r\n\r\nexa -l --git db_*\r\n\r\ndidn\'t show the Git details for the matching files. These are only shown when there\'s no file argument.\r\n\r\nMy final nit-pick is that my favourite \'ls -ltr\' can\'t be written so simply in \'exa\'. The equivalent seems to be:\r\n\r\nexa -ls modified\r\n\r\nI\'d like to see a way of setting defaults (like sort by modification time), through an environment variable or a configuration file. As Jon says, using aliases would also be a solution.\r\n\r\nI shall be intrigued to see how \'exa\' develops. It does have promise. Thanks for alerting me to it @clacke.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1981,2280,'2017-03-09 21:17:28','Tony Hughes','hpr 2280','Hi Just an update, I needed a replacement NON OEM battery for one of the X61s I have with a totally dead battery (that is something you have to factor in to buying stuff from auction) Cost me £17 inc delivery on eBay and its a 77Wh one. This is currently showing 5hours remaining and I\'ve been using the laptop for about an 1 1/2 hours. So don\'t be afraid to pick up one with a duff battery if cheaper as a replacement is not expensive and with the SSD give a working days life to the PC. So even with New SSD and Battery the X61s only set me back £93. If your lucky you may find one really cheap on eBay, Happy shopping!!! ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1982,2281,'2017-05-06 21:23:25','dodddummy','dodddummy','dodddummy is a play on the mainframe equivalent of /dev/null\r\n\r\nIn proper syntax of the DD, data description JCL statement. Comes from my \'friends\' trying to describe my prowess.\r\n \r\n//DO DD DUMMY\r\n\r\nMost like pronounced \r\nD-O D-D DUMMY\r\n\r\nOr perhaps \r\nDO D-D DUMMY \r\n\r\nby people who work with JCL(Job Control Language).','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1983,2281,'2017-05-16 11:55:57','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the explanation','Thanks, that helps to explain things.\r\n\r\nJust as an aside, in my day JCL was a more generic term used on many of the mainframes I used - ICL, CDC, Burroughs.\r\n\r\nAt the university I worked at we were wooed by IBM in the mid-1980s, who tried to sell us a machine to run VM/CMS I think. I forget what it was, but they failed. So I have no experience of IBM\'s JCL happily!\r\n','2019-10-13 05:28:41'),
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(1984,2283,'2017-05-03 23:26:39','Quvmoh','Smooth show','Dave! Back from the dead Like hearing from a long lost friend.. Great show I use a little bottle of shave secret https://www.shavesecret.com/ just a couple drops rubbed in and you can do a full shave. Have a great week.','2022-02-14 13:17:58'),
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(1985,2283,'2017-05-04 23:12:27','dodddummy','Dave! The whole time i was wondering','Glad to see you again, Dave. You made it just in time. I don\'t think I could have kept it between the ditches much longer. \r\n\r\nThe whole time I was wondering, \"How did he get the rest of his family to switch?\"\r\n\r\nI haven\'t shaved in two years but Clarke Howard claims he reuses double blade razors for months without nicking himself. \r\n\r\nhttps://clark.com/news/clark-howard/clarks-bargains/clark-reaches-12-month-mark-using-single-disposabl/ncxf/','2022-02-14 13:17:58'),
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(1986,2283,'2017-05-08 19:12:04','Roan','Mechanical saftey razors','Great episode. Made the switch to a double blade safety razor myself about two years ago. Found a set in my local pharmacy for twenty US dollars. Came with the handle/razor holder and about twenty blades. Two months ago was the first time I had to purchase replacement blades. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1987,2283,'2017-05-22 20:17:16','Frank','','Welcome back to the podosphere, Dave.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1988,2283,'2017-05-29 07:56:04','Jonas','Welcome back!','Great to hear you on the audio waves again Dave!\r\nWhile listening, I was wondering if you were going to say you got the rest of the family to switch. Sorry to hear, no such luck. At least you\'re saving a third or fourth of the previous total.\r\n\r\nPersonally I trim rather than shave, so haven\'t spend money on a razor in forever. \r\nI might start again after this show though. I like the idea of the soap stick. I have not heard of that before. Sounds like it\'s worth a shot. I remember my Grandfather had a double ended safety razor. I\'m not sure what happened to it. I\'m sure his son picked it up after he passed away. \r\n\r\nSaving money on everyday things goes a long way on the yearly totals. Great show. Good to hear you back again. I\'m looking forward to hearing more, techie nor not. \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1989,2283,'2017-06-03 17:57:26','jwp','Hi Dave','Dave good to here you again on the air waves great content','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1990,2284,'2017-05-05 06:50:26','Krayon','Good job!','Good job mirwi, if only all hardware was so easy to get into and repair :/','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1991,2284,'2017-05-05 19:50:42','Jonathan Kulp','well done','I loved hearing this! I really like the real-time fixing a broken object part of it, but I would also like to hear more explanation of some of the stuff you were talking about with respect to measurements using the multimeter and analysis using the oscilloscope. Great show!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1992,2284,'2017-06-03 17:58:18','jwp','great show','wow hard ware really can last forever','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1993,2286,'2017-05-09 00:39:43','Clinton Roy','Fatigue','Thank you for this Tony.\r\n\r\nForgive me if I missed it, but do you expect to eventually get over the post stroke fatigue?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1994,2286,'2017-05-09 11:16:13','Tony Hughes','Fatigue','Hi Clinton, yes the fatigue does gradually go away. It\'s different for everyone, with me it\'s mainly gone now but if I over do it a couple of days in a row I do feel it. I was warned it could last for up to 12 months, but thankfully that has largely not been the case and I\'m fitter now than I was before the stroke, having lost 22lb and started regular exercise by walking. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1995,2286,'2017-05-29 08:02:28','Jonas','Great Info. ','I appreciate you sharing your story. More people need to talk about the human side of hackers. I\'ll put you in the same group as sigflup regarding personal stories. This is really appreciated.\r\n\r\nThe more we talk about strokes, brain injury, schizophrenia, depression, and many others, I think the better we all will be. I think it\'s important to know we are not alone when we have difficulties along the way. Thanks again. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1996,2287,'2017-05-10 12:38:02','Brenda J. Butler','','I was glad to hear your podcast about being a more conscientious free software user. I was very impressed to hear you started out alone, without peers to talk to and help.\r\n\r\nHave you heard of vrms? It\'s a debian package (maybe available on other platforms) - \"virtual RMS\" - it checks what you have installed on your machine and sends you a monthly email with a list of non-free software. So it could help with your goal of moving more towards the free software ideal.\r\n\r\nI\'m not all they way there myself, but I\'m always trying to be more free.\r\n\r\nRe: the tracking/EULA/DMA stuff, for your Android software you can use the fdroid repo instead of google play. It is all open source packages, and the installer will let you see the required permissions before you install. So even though it is all \"open source\" it is not all desirable and you do want to check the required permissions before you install.\r\n\r\nI find I am limited in what I can install on my phone, but like you, I have a bit of patience.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1997,2287,'2017-05-14 18:08:15','dodddummy','Thatnks for the tip','It was rough going for me in the early years without forums and chat rooms but the hardest part was me being an idiot.\r\n\r\nI hadn\'t heard of virtural rms. Will give it a go. I\'m just now installing some FSF approved distros. I think I\'ll give each a week and chose one.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1998,2287,'2017-06-15 14:57:26','rtsn','','Good episode! I\'m looking forward to hearing more from you on this interesting project. \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(1999,2288,'2017-05-11 15:57:28','droops','Great episode','Very technical and cool, please keep them coming!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2000,2288,'2017-05-16 18:19:14','BiasOpinion','More Python Help Please','Long time programmer, trying to learn Python on my spare time. \r\n Very helpful. Just what I needed!\r\n\r\nLike that you convey the information without an ego getting in the way!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2001,2288,'2017-05-31 19:42:56','Windigo','Excellent advice','Virtualenv was something I didn\'t get into until later into my learning, and it made things much nicer to work with. Thanks for bringing attention to it!\r\n\r\nDon\'t tell Ken or Dave, but I\'ll look into doing some Django shows.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2002,2289,'2017-05-11 00:35:33','Jo','Hacker','Just of calling out that some email clients allow you to block HTML emails to go out and fetch resources like images unless you explicitly allow downloads from that specific email address or domain.\r\nIt\'s a great security feature.\r\nPeople who use it will be able to read your email without you knowing unless they mark you as trusted and allow the client to download resources.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2003,2290,'2017-05-29 14:40:14','jwp','True Love','Its pure love. \r\nYou have no minions for that process? \r\nAnd his subjects gathered around him like the leafs on a tree?\r\n:)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2004,2291,'2017-06-05 03:22:49','Hannah, of Terra, of Sol','A repo, maybe?','https://github.com/AFineDayFor/celes','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2005,2291,'2017-06-16 18:58:09','rtsn','good episode','Good interesting episode, you have a great voice for podcasting for sure, looking forward hearing more episodes from you in the future!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2006,2292,'2017-05-18 12:07:45','Dave Morriss','Strange urge to make a show...','I had a terrible urge to make another HPR show after listening to this. See episode 2302 :-)\r\n\r\nGreat show by the way. I feel I might have an inkling about what amateur radio is all about after listening to this series.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2007,2292,'2017-05-31 19:48:29','MrX','Re. Strange urge to make a show...','Hi Dave Sorry for the long delay in replying to this I\'m terrible at checking for comments, many thanks for the kind words glad you enjoyed it. \r\n\r\nMrX','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2008,2293,'2017-05-21 16:42:38','Jonathan Kulp','What about with SCP?','Hi Dave, \r\n\r\nThis was a really excellent show! Just the kind of stuff that I wish I had known for about the last 10 years. I tried something after listening to this that worked wonderfully as long I was long as I was just doing a list command, but when I tried the same thing using secure copy to get the same list of arguments, it didn\'t work. \r\n\r\nWhat I wanted to do was to push all MP3 and OGG files in a given directory over to my server in a single command, excluding the HTML and markdown files in the same directory. \r\n\r\nThe following command worked perfectly to **list** all of the MP3s and OGGs: \"ls *(*.mp3|*.ogg)\", but when I tried the same arguments with SCP it failed. Have you tried doing these kinds of expansions with secure copy?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2009,2293,'2017-05-21 18:08:45','Dave Morriss','SCP is a bit weird','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nGlad you enjoyed the show.\r\n\r\nTo look into this I did the usual thing of creating a directory \'scptest\' and making files in it:\r\n\r\n$ touch scptest/{a,b}{00..10}{a..z}.{dat,txt}\r\n\r\nI could copy selected files TO a remote directory:\r\n\r\n$ scp scptest/*(???y.txt|???y.dat) dave@rpi5:test/\r\n\r\nHowever, on rpi5 I couldn\'t copy FROM the other machine.\r\n\r\nI did find a solution, but it\'s quite long for a comment, and I\'m not 100% sure I understand it. I tried it and it did copy the files I specified.\r\n\r\nKen would suggest a show on the subject, but perhaps if I pointed you to the link I found it might do the job :-)\r\n\r\nhttps://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/103058/exclude-characters-for-scp-filepattern\r\n\r\nSee what you think.\r\n\r\nActually, I shunt files around a lot between systems, but I often tend to use \'rsync\'. However, that\'s a whole other subject.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2010,2293,'2017-05-22 08:44:32','Dave Morriss','SCP without extended globs','It didn\'t occur to me at the time to try this (on rpi5, pulling files off a remote machine):\r\n\r\n$ scp dave@desktop:\'scptest/a??w.{txt,dat}\' .\r\ndave@desktop\'s password: ...\r\n\r\nThis works. The quotes prevent there being two scp invocations with associated password prompts.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2011,2293,'2017-05-22 11:12:48','Jonathan Kulp','Details, details...','Aha! As always the devil is in the details. This last comment you left gave me the hint I needed. I was putting the asterisk in the wrong place and also using parentheses instead of curly braces. The following command works just like I want: \r\n\r\nscp *.{mp3,ogg} \r\njonserver:~/destination/dir/\r\n\r\nThanks, Dave!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2012,2293,'2017-05-22 11:29:36','Dave Morriss','TMTOWTDI','\"There\'s more than one way to do it\" - Larry Wall (actually he was talking about Perl, but it works here)\r\n\r\nI\'m glad I helped you to get where you wanted to be (even though I realise I wasn\'t quite answering your original question).\r\n\r\nHaving researched this and thought about it a bit I started putting together a brief(ish) HPR show about it.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2013,2293,'2017-05-22 12:26:21','Jonathan Kulp','Ken is smiling','Dave, somehow I suspected when I asked whether this worked with secure copy that it would end up becoming another show from you. You\'re the best!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2014,2293,'2017-05-24 04:52:46','clacke','scp brace expansion??!','Dave, I had no idea scp would do brace expansion on the server side. That\'s quite unexpected, and quite the discovery!\r\n\r\nI tried it with rsync, and rsync *also* supports it. That made me suspicious.\r\n\r\nAs I feared, it seems to mean it runs the server side of rsync (and of scp) through the shell. Testing confirms it. If I want to (explicitly) copy files with spaces in the names, the quoting nightmare starts. :-(\r\n\r\nSo what started out as a happy discovery just turned into another disappointment in how broken our software is.\r\n\r\nAll this time, I had assumed that rsync started a server with no specific arguments, and then communicated over the rsync protocol which files to get. I guess I\'ve been lucky all these years and avoided explicitly naming weird file names.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2015,2293,'2017-05-24 10:09:52','Dave Morriss','scp is a bit of a hack!!','Hi clacke.\r\n\r\nI had been messing with scp using the -v option which generates a lot of information. You can see it connecting via ssh then, if the original command was:\r\n\r\nscp -v dave@rpi4:\'scptest/*.{mp3,ogg}\' .\r\n\r\nit sends across:\r\n\r\nscp -v -f scptest/*.{mp3,ogg}\r\n\r\nwhere the quotes prevent local expansion and the (undocumented) -f option in the command marks it as running on the remote end.\r\n\r\nI don\'t know how this mechanism deals with names with spaces and so forth, but I imagine it\'s nasty. It needs some experiments. My ideas for a \"brief\" show about this subject look doomed to be \"l o n g\" :-)\r\n\r\nI think rsync will talk to a remote server (never used it) but I\'d expect it would need to exist before the transfer.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2016,2294,'2017-05-19 21:56:14','Windigo','Timely','I\'ve got a daughter on the way, so advice from those \"in the trenches\" is always appreciated.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2017,2294,'2017-05-20 01:19:33','dodddummy','Nice show','For what it\'s worth, I smiled through most of this show.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2018,2294,'2017-05-20 14:21:01','David Morriss','This was great','I loved this. It brought back such memories.\r\n\r\nFor what it\'s worth, we collected loads of \"craftable\" stuff when my two kids were small. I found a large box full of it in the attic when tidying last year. Stuff like egg cartons, cardboard tubes, cardboard boxes (flattened), washed food trays, lollipop sticks and similar, straws... You get the idea.\r\n\r\nPlay was with all of these and PVA glue/sticky tape, and sometimes paint. You can bet that all manner of fantastic structures were built.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2019,2294,'2017-05-21 16:45:45','Jonathan Kulp','Ride the Bus','What an excellent show! What I liked best was that I could hear you smiling when you talked about doing certain things with your daughter. This is great. \r\n\r\nOne thing I used to like to do with my kids when they were that age was to take them riding on the city bus, which is something we don\'t do for our normal travel. There\'s a bus route that picks up at the end of our street and ends up walking distance from Barnes & Noble bookstore. Having a destination that they liked and getting to ride on the bus was great fun for them at that age.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2020,2294,'2017-05-22 07:35:43','clacke','Tickling','Beautiful episode. The love is clearly audible all across the microphone, the internet and my speaker. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2021,2295,'2017-05-29 14:35:15','jwp','Nice litle Distro Review','Wow you always seem to find soemthing new to review. I think maybe This had to with the old Memphis project at some point?\r\n\r\nKind Regrads\r\n\r\nJWP','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2022,2295,'2017-08-26 12:18:51','Tony Hughes','Nice litle Distro Review','Thanks JWP, yes MX is an AntiX and Memphis community re-spin, I tried AntiX and its very lean even compared with MX.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2023,2297,'2017-05-29 07:49:21','Jonas','Great listen.','Thanks so much for the alternate music pics from Magnatune. I always thought it was more for classical music since that was the origin. I definitely appreciate hearing thought on different music. I like most of the genre in the show. \r\n\r\nP.S. I nearly fell out of my chair when I was listening and the TTS said the show had Dave and then that it had an explicit tag. \r\n\r\nNow I have more for my playlist. ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2024,2297,'2017-05-29 08:22:58','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the feedback','Glad you liked the show. We had fun making it since we were in the same room and actually listened to the tracks in real time.\r\n\r\nI mark all my shows explicit since it means \"stated clearly and in detail, leaving no room for confusion or doubt\", and that\'s what I aim for. They aren\'t meant to be offensive though (unless you hate detail).\r\n\r\n:-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2025,2297,'2017-06-21 16:13:59','Dave Lee','CC licenses and subscription model','Still listening to the show actually, only started this afternoon... :-)\r\n\r\nCC licenses are irrevocable.\r\nhttps://creativecommons.org/faq/#what-if-i-change-my-mind-about-using-a-cc-license\r\n\r\nAlso, you mentioned Amie Magnatune changing their subscription model, is this why you can\'t sign up monthly anymore?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2026,2297,'2017-06-22 13:03:44','Dave Morriss','Re: CC licenses and subscription model','Thanks Dave,\r\n\r\nYour comment on the licensing issue is useful. I was confused by the fact that Magnatune offer commercial licenses by subscription (see https://magnatune.com/info/licensing) but the license for non-commercial use is Creative Commons by-nc-sa, which I now understand is perpetual.\r\n\r\nThe subscription model has changed. In the very earliest days there were several, and you could buy individual albums, including on CD (I have a few). I think a monthly \"all you can eat\" subscription followed that: I was a monthly subscriber for many years. Finally, about 5 years ago they changed to only offering a lifetime subscription. I imagine this significantly reduced their overheads.\r\n\r\nThere\'s a blog where their business model has been discussed, for example: https://blogs.magnatune.com/buckman/2010/03/new-business-model-for-magnatune.html','2022-02-14 13:17:59'),
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(2027,2298,'2017-05-27 15:54:59','brian','oops','Those show notes have a pretty good typo... It should read milliamps, not millivolts... Sorry.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2028,2298,'2017-05-29 07:46:01','Jonas','I did not know that. ','Great info. I didn\'t realize you could troubleshoot using such a small measurement. My truck is getting older and may need this info eventually. Thanks for the show!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2029,2300,'2017-05-29 14:32:46','jwp','Sound Quality','Hi I listened to my own I will try to make the sound quality better','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2030,2302,'2017-05-31 01:20:49','clacke','Thanks!','I have written a few scripts in my day that do something like first putting a glob in parenthesis, then double-checking whether the array is longer than one, and if it\'s just length one, check that that thing is a thing and not just the wildcard.\r\n\r\nShould have used nullglob. Next time I will!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2031,2302,'2017-05-31 07:38:40','Dave Morriss','Glad you found it useful','Yes, I\'m going to use nullglob in scripts now for sure.\r\n\r\nThere may be side-effects in other parts of a script - I\'m not sure - so I\'ll turn it off once I\'ve finished with it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2032,2304,'2017-06-01 20:30:48','b-yeezi','xfdashboard','Great show. I currently use Gnome and XFCE on different computers. If you like the dashboard from gnome, you should check out xfdashboard for XFCE. If provides a Gnome-like dashboard experience. You just need to change the keyboard call xfdashboard instead of the normal XFCE launcher.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2033,2305,'2017-06-07 19:27:54','Steve','Excellent tutorial','This was an excellent tutorial on how to get dual deployment working. If I ever need to do this or know someone that does, I will send them here.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2034,2305,'2017-06-08 13:54:42','Mongo','','Steve, thanks for the comment. There seems to be a perception that Windows 10 is harder to deal with than previous versions, and it really isn\'t. I hope the show helps someone get started on a useful project.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2035,2308,'2017-05-25 09:34:10','Ken Fallon','I check this one while processing','Very funny clacke. I\'m adding that to the list for others to use.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2036,2308,'2017-05-30 05:53:23','clacke','Theme song','Cool!\r\n\r\nI can see that it\'s linked at https://hackerpublicradio.org/media/theme-music/ but the linked resource isn\'t live yet.','2022-02-14 13:17:59'),
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(2037,2308,'2017-06-05 06:18:54','clacke','Theme song is up','It\'s there now. Great, thanks!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2038,2308,'2017-06-07 14:28:22','b-yeezi','GNU Stow please','I would love an episode on GNU Stow. I\'ve heard good things about it, but haven\'t tried it yet. I would love to hear you\'re you use it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2039,2308,'2017-06-15 08:00:06','clacke','GNU Stow in the pipeline','A GNU Stow show is in the pipeline! Pipeline visible as https://social.heldscal.la/clacke/tag/hprep .\r\n\r\nNo promises on ETA or in what order I decide to tackle these subjects! The one I\'m working on now is the history of video envelope formats.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2040,2309,'2017-06-11 20:31:20','Dave Morriss','Interesting project; interesting word','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nA most interesting project with an ingenious solution!\r\n\r\nI like \'bloviate\' too. In investigating its etymology I found an article on \"World Wide Words\", where I often go for information on unusual words. I found this, which you might like: https://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-blo1.htm','2022-02-14 13:17:59'),
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(2041,2309,'2017-06-11 21:36:07','Jonathan Kulp','absquatulate','Great page! I like the reference to the following words as well: sockdolager, hornswoggle and absquatulate. Gotta start using those...','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2042,2310,'2017-08-02 22:57:30','Geddes','','Thanks to everyone (particularly the HPR community news hosts) for the complementary comments. I enjoyed everything involved with narrating and producing the series, learnt a hell of a lot in the process, discovering as I went along that I was entering the world of the voice over artist. Your comments Ken on creative commons last month I felt were spot on and I’m happy to have made a contribution to CC community via HPR.\r\n\r\nGeddes \r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2043,2313,'2017-06-15 06:25:26','folky','More ;-)','Thank you for a good show once. I would really like to test NILFS myself. Could you write down your examples, please?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2044,2314,'2017-06-18 10:36:12','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this','Very interesting show (as always)!\r\n\r\nThe issue of the type of solder used on motherboards like this is something I have never heard about before. That means my recently bought Chinese Hakko clone soldering station will not handle it I guess. Time for a cheap hot air gun perhaps.\r\n\r\nAlso, my knowledge of capacitors is at 1960\'s school Physics level, so hearing more about what\'s out there now was fascinating.\r\n\r\nMore shows like this would be most welcome!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2045,2314,'2017-06-18 19:29:15','NYbill','','Hey Dave, I grew up in the 70\'s! I\'m not sure you can tell me to get off your lawn. ;)\r\n\r\nOk, maybe you can. But, I\'ll defiantly stand at the edge shaking a fist!\r\n\r\nJoking aside, a lot of solder these days is going lead free. The stuff being used these days has a higher melting point. This can be an issue on something like a motherboard. Its densely packed and has multiple layers. All of those layers are trying to dissipate the heat you\'re trying to apply to one component. Sit there too long and you can start damaging things next to the component you\'re trying to replace. \r\n\r\nYou need to get in, heat something up quick, and get out. The hot air station did the trick.\r\n\r\nHowever, this was an edge case for me. I get by with just my soldering pen 99% of the time.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2046,2314,'2017-06-19 10:19:16','Jonathan Kulp','The suspense is killing me ','Come ON, man! Don\'t leave us hanging. Did it WORK?! ','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2047,2314,'2017-06-19 17:55:36','Ken Fallon','Do not reply in the comments','Hey NYBill,\r\n\r\nThe reply to that needs to be a show in itself !','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2048,2314,'2017-06-19 22:19:24','Jonathan Kulp','I\'ll do a show next time','In that case maybe next time I should do a 30-second episode where I ask Bill whether it worked or not. How does that sound, Ken?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2049,2314,'2017-06-19 22:39:31','NYbill','','Heh Jon, I had the motherboard in my back pack (fixed) for two months! (This episode\'s recording started quite a while ago.)\r\n\r\nI planned to give the thing back to Marcus when I saw him. Turns out, he has quit his job here in NY and gone back to Florida! Oo\r\n\r\nI talked with him in IRC, he told be to use it or give it to someone else in the LUG. I would have to pull apart one of my two desktops to test it. We\'ll see...','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2050,2314,'2017-06-19 22:43:14','NYbill','\"Do not reply in the comments\"','WHAT! Task master...\r\n\r\nKen cracks the HPR whip. :P','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2051,2314,'2017-06-20 12:09:23','Ken Fallon','Great more shows','Great Idea - That would be two shows. :)\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2052,2317,'2017-06-28 20:13:31','Jonathan Kulp','Clarity!','Well, sort of. Many thanks for this follow-up episode, Dave. I think I understand it better now but I might not. Just one of those things, you know?','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2053,2317,'2017-06-29 13:20:16','Dave Morriss','Clear as mud? :-)','Hi Jon,\r\n\r\nI hope it helped, if only a little. I got quite carried away by the investigation, and perhaps shouldn\'t have brain-dumped it all into an episode! It was quite fun though.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2054,2320,'2017-06-23 21:03:08','Dave Morriss','AWK series/ DEC hardware','Hi JWP,\r\n\r\nMost interesting show. I\'d love to visit that museum!\r\n\r\nThanks for the mention of the AWK series here on HPR. I should point out that it\'s a joint series being produced by b-yeezi and myself. The next episode is in early July.\r\n\r\nI was delighted to hear you talk about Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). I spent a good bit of my work life managing a DEC VAXcluster, running OpenVMS. This was the system used by students and staff at the university where I worked. We also had two AlphaServers there later, one running OpenVMS and the other Digital Unix. I thought DEC stuff was great!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2055,2322,'2017-06-27 16:46:42','b-yeezi','Great Show. My follow-up to com','Thanks for the excellent show. I learned a lot about the underpinnings behind python virtual environments and how programs like virturalenvwrapper exploits them. You have inspired me to create a follow-up episode about how I to create a virtualenvwrapper-like experience for the Fish shell.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2056,2322,'2017-07-29 18:42:36','MrX','Great first show','Sorry for taking so long to comment but I’m always running many shows behind and just listened to yours last night, I felt I had to comment.\r\n\r\nJust wanted to say many thanks for a great first show, enjoyed it so much that I listened to it twice, very concise and clear covering a confusing topic. I never until now fully understood the difference between .bas_profile and .bashrc. Your show notes also put mine to shame.\r\n\r\nLook forward to hearing another one whenever you get a chance. I know for myself finding the time can be difficult.\r\n\r\nBest regards MrX','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2057,2325,'2017-06-15 07:55:41','clacke','Great show','Thanks for this overview of the underlying issues!\r\n\r\nAs a point of reference, Sweden used to have full government funding and government provision of services, except for dental care where we had private providers.\r\n\r\nThese days, all types of services follow the dental care model: The patient can choose where to go, and the government \"insurance\" pays for the services. It\'s called an insurance, but is paid through the employment tax and the premium is determined entirely by the salary.\r\n\r\nYou can also add a private health care insurance, and get access to further clinics and services, shorter queues, etc.\r\n\r\nCounties license providers, so while in some sense anybody qualified to provide services can do so, each county may uphold e.g. a certain quota of private vs public providers.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2058,2326,'2017-08-06 13:49:41','clacke','hprep tag','You said it half-jokingly, but my idea is that every post in https://social.heldscal.la/clacke/tag/hprep is a full and earnest public commitment to making that episode real, any year now!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2059,2326,'2017-08-07 16:49:27','Dave Morriss','#hprep','It\'s a while ago now and my memory is not what it was, but I think we were marvelling at your preparedness to go public with your plans. I for one am looking forward to hearing these episodes - no joke!','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2060,2327,'2017-07-05 17:26:37','jezra','Not native born: natural born','The requirement isn\'t to be native born; the requirement is to be a \"natural born\" citizen. This means that one needs to be a citizen at time of birth. \r\n\r\nA newborn is considered a \"natural born\" citizen of the US if the child has at least one parent with US citizenship. The children of any US citizen are natural born US citizens, regardless of location of birth. \r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2061,2327,'2017-07-06 01:20:16','Kevin O\'Brien','Jezra is correct','That is why John McCain (born in Panama) was eligible to run for President.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2062,2327,'2017-07-08 19:58:44','Canadianbob','','A completely silly rule if you ask me. It\'s especially true in a country populated by immigrants.\r\n\r\nWe have no such rule for Heads of State or Head of Government here in Canada.\r\n\r\nThe country didn\'t come to an end.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2063,2329,'2017-07-06 18:49:32','Dave Lee','Just bought one','I\'ve just bought one of these because of this episode. £4.27.\r\n\r\nDepending on timings, I might bring it to Podcrawl so you can inspect my work! ;-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2064,2329,'2017-07-06 19:10:28','Dave Morriss','Hmm, Glasgow Podsoldering anyone?','Hi Dave,\r\n\r\nI hope you have fun with the build.\r\n\r\nI\'m imagining a bit of last-minute soldering at the back of a bar in Glasgow :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2065,2333,'2017-07-17 21:50:27','klaatu','homebrew virtual envs','I\'m not a fan of fish, but I love your homemade virtual env. I did something somewhat similar in bash at my old job, and it worked pretty well. When I stumbled across virtualenv, I just used that.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2066,2334,'2017-07-13 22:30:35','Kevin','','Right with you on this. I was born in 1966. Very interesting to go over origin of games and where they are now. Would love to hear more like this.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2067,2334,'2017-07-14 12:42:38','ClaudioM','','Thanks, Kevin. I hope to actually give Frotz a try with the Zork code that is available online so that I can do an episode on it.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2068,2334,'2017-07-16 19:54:50','Dave Morriss','Nostalgia','This was great!\r\n\r\nAt my first job at the University of Lancaster around 1977/78 there was a copy of Adventure installed on the ICL 1900 mainframe which many of us played during lunch breaks. We had the FORTRAN source and were not above peeking at it to try and work out some of the puzzles! It was quite addictive, I remember.\r\n\r\nThanks for the show.','2017-09-09 07:41:36'),
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(2069,2334,'2017-07-18 13:18:54','ClaudioM','Re: Nostalgia','Glad you enjoyed it, Dave! I\'ll be downloading Open Adventure on my Fedora laptop to see if it will compile there since it wouldn\'t work in Termux. I did get Zork to work using Frotz in Termux (it\'s available in the repo for Termux and the Zork game files are downloadable online), so I\'ll surely be doing an episode on that soon as a sequel to this one.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2070,2337,'2017-07-27 18:47:03','lostnbronx','Great Overview','I have a Kobo Aura, and I really love it. I also have a 2nd gen Kindle, which is a very nice device, but the Kobo definitely beats it.\r\n\r\nThis was an excellent look at an excellent product. I\'ve owned mine for a while now, yet you still taught me a few new tricks. Great job!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2071,2337,'2017-07-28 01:25:59','Jonathan Kulp','Kobo anagrams to Book','Thanks for leaving your comment, lostnbronx. Glad to hear you enjoyed the episode. One thing I neglected to mention and I might not even have realized when I recorded the episode is that the name of the device is an anagram of the word \"book.\" I\'m definitely loving my Kobo. I should probably load it up with your latest book haha! ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2072,2338,'2017-07-19 00:48:27','Clinton Roy','','Wow, that started off really creepy. I couldn\'t tell they were sounds from the podcast and thought it was happening in my office!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2073,2338,'2017-07-23 23:27:23','Windigo','','I\'ve been listening to HPR episodes I\'ve missed, and just recently caught your previous episode about how you create these recordings. Thanks for the follow-up!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2074,2340,'2017-05-25 08:55:18','Ken Fallon','You don\'t need to scrape','Hi MrX,\r\n\r\nHaven\'t listened to the show yet but you don\'t need to scrape hpr. This is your network and if you want a statistics we can give it to you. There is this page https://hackerpublicradio.org/calendar.php but if there is an easier format to get the information, we can make it.\r\n\r\nKen,','2022-02-14 13:17:59'),
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(2075,2340,'2017-05-31 19:09:37','MrX','Re you don\'t need to scrape','Hi Ken sorry for the delay in replying as I\'ve been on holiday. \r\n\r\nThanks for the comment, very good to know, never thought about asking for a special page generally when you visit a site you get what you see and I would never normally think about asking for something tailored for my own very specific needs.\r\n\r\nMy script was hacked together and I just wanted the job done I\'m sure there are better ways to do it, it was a good learning experience.\r\n\r\nAs it stands the script downloads the calender page and grabs the numeric value of the number of shows in the queue. It only gets run once a day and shouldn\'t put much of a strain on the HPR servers even in the unlikely event that many people find it useful. \r\n\r\nBasically I need to capture the number of shows left in the HPR queue. I would imagine the simplest way would be to serve a page giving a numeric value of the number of shows in the HPR queue. If you can arrange for that or think of a better solution that would be great. \r\n\r\nI\'ll then have a think about how to modify my script and perhaps if I get time will do a quick follow up show\r\n\r\nCheers MrX','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2076,2340,'2017-06-01 08:49:33','Dave Morriss','See show 1986','Hi Mr X,\r\n\r\nI haven\'t listened yet, but judging from the notes this looks like a great topic, and an interesting show.\r\n\r\nYou might find it useful to look at my show 1986, one of the sed series. In it, in example 2, I showed how to parse the current queue level out of the stats file you can look at on the HPR site. The link to the example is:\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps/hpr1986/full_shownotes.html#example-2\r\n\r\nThe link to the stats you\'d need is in the Links section of that show, and I also mention it in show 2255.\r\n\r\nYou might prefer the challenge of scraping HTML, but this is a pretty easy route to the information you want\r\n\r\nDave\r\n','2022-02-14 13:18:00'),
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(2077,2340,'2017-06-01 16:35:15','MrX','re: See show 1986','Hi Dave thanks for getting back to me, yes this would be a more eloquent solution, I remember listening to the show and really enjoying it though I was unable to give it the full attention it deserved, these days free time is in short supply.\r\n\r\nThe stats page is exactly what I\'m looking for and it should be very easy for me to grab the required info from it. I seem to remember you and Ken mentioning the stats page on more that one occasion, if only I\'d taken the time to look at it, oh well it was a good learning experience.\r\n\r\nAt some point I\'ll redo my script and post an updated show time permitting\r\n\r\nbest regards\r\n\r\nMrX ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2078,2342,'2017-08-04 13:47:28','operat0r','safety first!','I ignored some of these safety precautions when I adjusted the tension on my screen it was scary as hell lol from what I was reading basically it needs to start to pull itself up after about the halfway mark mine was struggling a little bit too much so I had to add some tension','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2079,2342,'2017-08-22 18:51:11','Windigo','Phew!','I kept expecting a message on the end of this episode stating that it was uploaded posthumously. Glad to hear things went okay!\r\n\r\nI thoroughly enjoyed listening - even if the problem wasn\'t solved. I had never given my garage door any thought, and I\'m glad to know more about how it works.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2080,2343,'2017-07-26 17:10:05','b-yeezi','Unexpectedly interesting','I am really surprised how much I enjoyed this episode. It seems like a good system. Can you do the U.S.\'s system next?','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2081,2343,'2017-07-27 00:04:32','Kevin O\'Brien','On the way','b-yeezi, I already recorded several shows on the U.S. system and they will be coming out over the next weeks.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2082,2349,'2017-08-04 12:15:27','x1101','prompt for other users','Windigo - \r\n Loved the episode. Very well articulated! I had one thought. When you want to run your prompt as another user (or, have other-user specific prompts), you don\'t need to do any symlinking, especially on a multi-user system. \r\n\r\nFor example, on servers I helped manage, I had .rootbashrc in my home directory, and after I did a sudo su - to get a root shell, I would then source /home/x1101/.rootbashrc to get _my_ root specific rc file.\r\n\r\nJust some food for thought. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2083,2349,'2017-08-05 03:15:45','Windigo','','Quick follow up: Xoke was kind enough to remind me that I hadn\'t posted a link anywhere to my configurations. Here\'s the git repository:\r\n\r\nhttps://gitlab.com/windigo-configs/bash.git\r\n\r\nx1101: That makes a lot more sense, especially on multi-user systems, since you wouldn\'t want to steamroll other users\' rc files with your own. Thanks for the tip, man! :)','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2084,2349,'2017-08-12 16:43:00','Dave Morriss','Great show - most enjoyable','Thanks for doing this show. I enjoyed it a lot (even though I\'m rather late listening to it).\r\n\r\nI have done stuff to my prompts in the past, on Unix systems and on Linux, but have just not bothered in later years. I like the ideas you talk about here and may well be inspired to experiment some more.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2085,2350,'2017-08-13 17:07:43','Canadianbob','Health Insurance Market','As a Canadian, most of my fellow citizens find the idea of healthcare being a \"marketplace\" a little bit weird.\r\n\r\nUniversal medicare became a reality in the province of Saskatchewan in 1962. By 1971, piece by piece it had become a national program.\r\n\r\nNow, the move is towards expanding into universal pharmacare, one of the missing pieces of our universal medicare system.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2086,2350,'2017-08-14 01:09:31','Kevin O\'Brien','That\'s why I recorded this','I know that the American system does not make sense to a most people outside the U.S., or frankly to most people inside the U.S. So I thought it was worth a little of my time to lay it out.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2087,2351,'2017-08-08 20:33:20','Mad Sweeney','Sean Nós Free Software Song made me happy','That\'s a fleadh cheoil winner right there.\r\n\r\nThanks\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2088,2351,'2017-08-29 15:57:27','Krayon','AMAZING Free Software song!','Ken! Damn! That\'s the BEST rendition of the Free Software I have EVER heard! Loved it! :-D','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2089,2353,'2017-08-11 03:02:01','b--yeezi','On my to-do list','Thanks for this entertaining and informative episode. I\'ve been meaning to test out temperature monitoring on a Raspberry pi for some time. Do you know if the process you described will work for one-wire temperature probes like the one shown here https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B01N6GAR11/ref=mp_s_a_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1502420419&sr=8-7&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=one+wire+temperature+probes&dpPl=1&dpID=416dSXz3BUL&ref=plSrch','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2090,2353,'2017-08-11 12:03:49','ClaudioM','Another Great Episode','Even with all those dry \"robotic\" commands and regex, you always find a way to make such things interesting and entertaining to listen to. Thanks again for another great episode and welcome back!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2091,2353,'2017-08-12 16:54:39','Ivan \"Epicanis\" Privaci (pseud.)','Glad to be back!','@b--yeezi That looks like exactly the sort of submersible temperature sensor that should work! It\'s exactly the same core component as far as the RaspberryPi is concerned, they\'ve just stuck it to a heat-conducting piece of stainless steel and sealed it up so that it can be submerged into whatever liquid (or potentially-wet weather, etc) you might want to monitor. From what I read, you\'ll need a 4.7kOhm resistor between two of those leads (the \"module\" I\'m using[1] has that built onto the board already) but otherwise you should be able to plug it right in and use it exactly as described.\r\n\r\n@ClaudioM thanks for the encouraging feedback! I swear I really am trying to produce _much_ more often than I have been. Probably more short episodes coming Real Soon Now!...\r\n\r\n[1] https://www.amazon.com/dp/B013GB27HS','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2092,2354,'2017-08-14 16:44:31','Dave Morriss','Some impressive ambient sounds','Thanks Jon. A great idea for a show. I\'d love to know more about what was making those sounds - cicadas, as you said, but what else I wonder?\r\n\r\nI haven\'t personally encountered anything quite like those night sounds. Here in not very rural Scotland you\'d hear owls or foxes but not a lot else in my experience!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2093,2354,'2017-08-16 09:49:33','Tony Hughes','hpr2354 :: Night Sounds in Rural Tennessee','Wow that is really loud, but fascinating. I recorded some wild life (bird song) while at a study centre in Birmingham in the UK last April its quite long at over 10 minutes but very relaxing maybe another show there.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2094,2354,'2017-08-17 17:41:01','Frank','','This reminded me of the night sounds at Pine View Farm when I was growing up.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2095,2354,'2017-08-17 23:59:55','Jonathan Kulp','Mystery bugs','Thanks for the comments, everyone. Dave, I have no idea what else is out there making all of this noise. A biologist specializing in insects can probably make some sense of it, but to me it\'s just a bunch of wonderful noise.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2096,2354,'2017-08-23 22:05:18','Windigo','More nostalgia','I agree with Frank; noises like this were a common occurrence while I was growing up. This episode brought back lots of warm memories.\r\n\r\nThanks a bunch, Jon!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2097,2356,'2017-08-15 16:54:04','Klaatu','good coffee','That sounded like some good coffee. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2098,2360,'2017-08-19 11:42:51','Ken Fallon','A better starting point','A better starting point may be to agree that everyone has a right to health care, and work from there.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2099,2360,'2017-09-03 17:51:15','Kevin O\'Brien','Still have tradeoffs','While that would be an improvement, there would still be other tradeoffs to deal with.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2100,2361,'2017-08-21 16:38:30','Ken Fallon','Citation needed','I would just like to comment on the perception I picked up in the show that exercise leads to weight loss. The facts do not seem to support this. For the best video I was able to find on this topic, please see this VOX video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXTiiz99p9o\r\n\r\n\"after studding 60 papers exercise is pretty useless when it comes to weight loss\" \r\n\r\nDr. kevin Hall says \"We need to re-brand exercise. Exercise isn\'t a weight loss tool per se, it\'s excellent for health and is probably the best single thing that you can do other than stopping smoking to improve your health. But don\'t look at it as a weight loss tool\".\r\n\r\nIn many cases exercise indirectly leads to eating more and thus more weight gain.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2101,2361,'2017-08-23 14:00:37','ClaudioM','Fantastic!','What a fantastic episode! I found myself nodding my head so many times during this episode on what was said about exercise and weight loss. I started my journey into fitness after so many years of not exercising and failing to keep it up after attempting to do so. Initially, you have to start with a change in your state of mind. I began to look at fitness as a long-term process of milestones, not as a means to an end or a \"goal\" in a determined period of time. Once I did this, making it a routine was a lot easier for me to keep up. I started with \"baby steps,\" doing 20-30 minutes of simple calisthenics. After some time where I felt comfortable performing those exercises, I would push myself a little more each time, eventually increasing my workouts and the intensity. While I didn\'t focus too much on the scale, I gradually noticed I was losing weight when I did weigh myself. If I didn\'t lose weight that day, I wasn\'t disheartened because I had already set my mind that this was a long-term process and that I would lose it eventually, and I did.\r\n\r\nYou also need to think that you are doing this for _you_ and not for anyone else or any particular reason that isn\'t for you. A better, healthier _you_ needs to be your motivation. Once I started thinking this way as well, it gave me the enthusiasm to keep on going.\r\n\r\nI also changed my eating habits over time. I found some information online stating that one should focus on eating foods with \"simple\" ingredients, meaning that it should be as unprocessed as possible. The less ingredients shown, the quicker the body can process it and use it. The more ingredients listed, the longer it takes and, depending on your intake, can end up being stored as fat. Using this as a guideline, I moved away from a lot of the processed stuff to more natural foods, especially vegetables which I already loved but wasn\'t eating enough of. If it had to come in a box, I made sure that it had as little ingredients listed as possible. Sometimes, I\'ll eat wheat bran flakes or Honey Bunches of Oats, the former having less ingredients than the latter. While both have less ingredients than other popular cereals on the market, I always choose simple oatmeal with some cinnamon and honey. I also have eggs with spinach for breakfast, and sometimes even for dinner (this is my favorite plate thus far). As far as sweets, I am taking in less sugar now than I used to. I still have my coffee with cream and sugar at times (and very little at that), but I\'m also drinking it black more than before. All of these changes along with my exercise routine have worked together to aid in my weight loss.\r\n\r\nI have been taking vitamin supplements but really it\'s just a simple multivitamin daily that you can get at any store. It has helped boost my immune system and given my body the nutrients needed that I may not be getting naturally with my food intake. I have added a couple of others that aren\'t included in the multivitamin supplement but only because I don\'t get enough of them from the foods I eat. Remember, as the name implies, they are to _supplement_ what nutrients you are taking in daily (in other words, what you\'re not getting because of allergies/reactions to certain foods or availability of those foods). It\'s also important to talk to your doctor and get informed on what you can and can\'t (or shouldn\'t) take when it comes to supplements. In certain instances, certain vitamins/minerals can actually be harmful in large quantities.\r\n\r\nhttps://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/bodybuilding-mom-dies-from-too-much-protein-and-urea-cycle-disorder\r\nhttps://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/supplements-that-work-and-ones-you-should-skip\r\nhttps://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/best-foods-for-natural-health\r\n\r\nRegarding Ken\'s comment about weight gain and eating more, this is true but it needs to be taken in context. As you continue training and working out, you are building muscle mass as you burn fat even though it\'s not visually noticeable. This will affect what you see on the scale depending on your progress. If you are weight-training or doing any high-intensity workout, you will notice that your appetite increases over time (this happened to me as well) and you may find yourself hungry after a workout even if you\'ve eaten prior. This is normal because your body needs to replenish itself accordingly during the recovery process after such workouts. The key here is to eat foods that are as healthy as they can be with as little processing as possible. Carbs and protein provide energy before and after intense workouts, but they have to be healthy carbs and protein. Fats are also good, but they must be \"healthy\" fats (unsalted roasted peanuts, avocados, etc.) and _in_moderation_. While the video covers this near the end, it does so poorly in my opinion in ways that can be easily refuted as mentioned above and some of the examples given leave a lot to be desired. Then again, 5 minutes can\'t cover everything.\r\n\r\nUltimately, this is what has worked for me and it was an \"evolutionary\" process in my fitness journey. Everyone\'s different and every strategy will be different, but the core mentality and process is pretty much the same.','2022-02-14 13:18:00'),
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(2102,2361,'2017-08-25 01:22:33','deepgeek','Cost Correction','My dip stand actually had a cost of $75 dollars. --- DG','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2103,2362,'2017-08-26 00:07:11','Beeza','Raspbian X86 On Atom-powered Netbook','Hi Tony\r\n\r\nAfter listening to your episode I was inspired to try Raspbian X86 on an old Acer netbook which I use mainly as a media player. The Acer ran OK with Mint Xfce but was a bit slow to respond when opening and closing programs.\r\n\r\nAfter a clean install of Raspbian X86 the netbook definitely runs a bit faster than with Mint. I\'ve stripped out all the applications I don\'t need (i.e the programming, games and office components). Wi-fi worked out of the box and, unlike on your Lenovo, so did the audio.\r\n\r\nPixel will never win any prizes for sophistication but if you play around with the colours you can improve the default appearance somewhat. It certainly gets the job done.\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2104,2362,'2017-08-26 12:13:27','Tony Hughes','Raspbian X86 On Atom-powered Netbook','Thanks Beeza, My next show in this short series which I\'ve not recorded yet will be the Acer One, 8Gig SSD. You could also record your experience for the listeners as we will be looking at different usage needs. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2105,2363,'2017-08-24 03:38:50','Frank','','This makes commercials look good.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2106,2363,'2017-08-24 16:05:47','Dave Morriss','I see your point, but...','Hi Frank,\r\n\r\nI see where you are coming from, but although dealing with bureaucracy like this today seems like a scene from Terry Gilliam\'s film \"Brazil\" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil_(1985_film)), the tyranny of modern advertising seems to me to be completely horrific.\r\n\r\nAs a boy I read the science fiction story \"The Tunnel under the World\" by Frederik Pohl. In it the protagonist finds himself in a world filled with \"loud all-pervasive advertising jingles\" (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tunnel_under_the_World). \r\n\r\nThat image has stuck with me all of my life, and has motivated me to avoid the dreadfulness of advertising in all of its forms - on TV, in cinemas, on the Internet and everywhere else I can.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2107,2363,'2017-08-25 16:07:20','Beeza','TV Detectors','The almost mythical TV detector vans did once exist (not that many people ever saw one). They could detect the interference sent out by the electromagnets on a CRT but, contrary to the propaganda, they could never tell what channel you were watching. If you lived in a block of flats they were all but useless at working out who did and did not have a TV.\r\n\r\nWhen home computers became commonplace, each with a big CRT monitor, the TV detectors were scuppered as they couldn\'t tell the difference between a TV and a PC.\r\n\r\nNow that we all have LED or LCD screens for our TVs and computers the concept of a reliable detector device, able to distinguish between the two is outdated. The UK TV licensing authorities rely on cross referencing addresses with license registrations to detect possible miscreants.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2108,2363,'2017-08-26 13:07:09','Tony Hughes','Cancelling my TV licence','Hi Dave\r\n\r\nThanks for the show, makes me think I should do one about a situation I\'m arguing with Virgin Media at the moment, I totally get your frustration potentially boiling over to anger sometimes particularly after you have had to wait 4-5 minutes to get through the auto menu to speak with a \'human\' only to be asked all the same questions again. And they wonder why we hate customer service desks so much, more like customer wind up desks I think.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2109,2363,'2017-08-26 22:05:36','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the input','Hi Beeza,\r\n\r\nI\'d enjoy seeing a TV detector van, but, as you say, they belong to an earlier time. Funnily enough the old TV I threw away was potential detector fodder, being a CRT. Your analysis of the situation clarifies it very well; talk of detectors was mainly propaganda.\r\n\r\nHi Tony,\r\n\r\nGood luck with Virgin Media. It seems that the vast majority of companies have implemented such revolting front-end systems these days.\r\n\r\nAs an aside, I long ago decided not to have anything to do with Virgin Media after they were revealed as being involved with a company called Phorm to perform deep inspection of Internet traffic so they could inject targeted advertisements. Other UK ISPs were also involved, such as BT and TalkTalk. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phorm for details.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2110,2364,'2017-08-26 12:58:03','Tony Hughes','Managing Your Android with AirDroid','Hi Frank\r\n\r\nThanks for reminding me about this application, I\'ve used it in the past to transfer and manage data on my mobile but as it\'s something I need to do regularly I had forgotten about it. Definitely something that is useful if sometimes a little fiddly to get going initially. \r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2111,2364,'2017-08-26 20:56:11','Frank','','You are most welcome.\r\n\r\nThe main irritant I\'ve encountered is that, after a reboot, it reverts to the default \"copy to\" directly, whereas I want to put my podcasts in the Music directory so the player application sees them easily. Once I got into the habit of double-checking the \"copy to\" directory setting, I kept it whipped into shape.\r\n\r\nI must say, the maintainers have improved it over the several years I\'ve been using it.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2112,2365,'2017-08-26 12:53:18','Tony Hughes','Rolling out a radio-based internet service in rural England','Hi Beeza\r\n\r\nThis was a great show, I\'m glad you decided to come back and record again. You made some interesting comments about the way we have a Free market (after many years of a monopoly) in telecoms here in the UK which provides good value for the majority but works against those that do not make a profitable market fort the suppliers of Internet services. \r\n\r\nJust a thought but did you investigate satellite Internet, I looked this up and it is expensive and seems to have quite strict data caps, but could be another way of getting a service if other options are not possible. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2113,2365,'2017-08-26 17:59:42','Frank','','This sounds very like the type of connection my brother has; he lives in a sparsely populated part of northeastern Virginia, USA. He tells me that it is vulnerable to the vagaries of the weather, as he has lost his connection several times due to thunderstorms.\r\n\r\nhttps://signawave.com/wifi.asp','2022-02-14 13:18:00'),
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(2114,2365,'2017-08-29 14:53:09','Beeza','Thanks for the comments','Hi Tony\r\n\r\nBefore my initial chance encounter with the radio based system I did look at satellite services, but they were seriously expensive even before setting a download limit I can live with. That was around 2014. I believe they have got a little bit cheaper since then but they remain a \"last resort\" option for all but the deepest pockets.\r\n\r\nHi Frank\r\n\r\nI can only speak from my own experience. Since the system was installed we\'ve had winds of > 70 mph, thick fogs, thunder and no shortage of heavy rain, but the connection has been unaffected as far as I can determine. \r\n\r\nThe network nodes all transmit with a multiple of the minimum power theoretically required to provide the service. That enables the signal to \"blast through\" bad weather. \r\n\r\nPerhaps where your brother lives there is a greater distance between the nodes which weakens the received signal.\r\n\r\nI\'ve just returned from Spain where I noted large numbers of internet service transceivers mounted on houses and apartments. I\'ve since discovered that outside urban areas it is pretty much the default delivery method.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2115,2366,'2017-08-19 20:04:00','Tony Hughes','hpr2366 Making Bramble Jelly','Hi\r\n\r\nSorry, I meant to say If you have a Jam Thermometer you can use that to find the jam/jelly point, but I use visual clues such as the rolling boil with small bubbles. Also it stands to reason that if sterilising the Jug in the oven it needs to be a heat proof one, otherwise use boiling water just before using. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2116,2366,'2017-08-19 21:18:21','Dave Morriss','I adjusted your text','Hi Tony. I adjusted your original text regarding temperature in line with your comment, and left an \"Editor\'s Note\". You can also contact admin at hackerpublicradio.org if you need errors fixed.\r\nDave','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2117,2369,'2017-08-31 00:41:21','Mike Ray','Noooo...don\'t stop buying and reviewing meters','Great show. I love the sounds of the bench...Bill ripping open little bags of probes, clicking battery compartments, slapping in the batteries, dropping the meter, the sounds of NY in the background. An audio feast. Please don\'t stop buying meters :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2118,2369,'2017-08-31 20:21:08','Dave Lee','Excellent show','Really enjoyed this. I\'d love to know more about the oscilloscope in the photo!\r\n\r\nMore miniature geekery!\r\n\r\nOh, and I\'m likely to buy the 8008!','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2119,2369,'2017-09-01 10:36:02','NYbill','Ambient Noise','Thanks Mike, \r\n\r\nYou know, I didn\'t notice any of the outside noises while I was recording. Only after did I notice them in Audacity. \r\n\r\nI just wish I remembered to plug in the mic with the wind screen. I don\'t like hearing the mic clip in the wind. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2120,2369,'2017-09-01 10:38:33','NYbill','8008','Thanks Dave,\r\n\r\nYea, it seems like a capable little meter for the price. Its been with my regular (small set) of tools in the laptop bag since the show. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2121,2369,'2017-09-01 18:20:45','Mike Ray','Ambient noise and ASMR','Don\'t worry about the ambient noise, it was not intrusive. I think near the end there is the usual burst of a distant police/ambulance siren, which any city dweller can tune out. But that was not loud.\r\n\r\nThe day after this podcast and drooling over the sounds of beeps, clicks, tools, battery manipulations etc. which let me visualise the workbench so vividly, I heard mention of something called ASMR (automatic sensory meridian response), for which a lot of stuff is appearing on Youtube nowadays. It\'s sounds that generate a response that feels like a pleasurable tingling of the scalp, down the spine etc. The stuff on Youtube is all typified by women whispering, turning the pages of a book, drumming fingernails and stuff like that. But the workshop sounds and tthe infectious enthusiasm in your podcasts qualifies.\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'m more subject to this kind of stuff because I\'m blind, no idea, but the sound effects were great','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2122,2369,'2017-09-01 22:07:27','NYbill','','I meant to reply to the scope comment, Dave. But, I was typing the above replies first thing in the morning, when I should have been driving to work. ;)\r\n\r\nYea, I don\'t think I\'ve mentioned that scope in past episodes. I\'ve had it for a couple of years now. It could warrant a little review. (You\'ve a bit of Ken in you trying to pull another show out of people!) he he...\r\n\r\nMike, the sounds you heard outside my window (Which I hear as I type) are Upstate New York. I\'m not in NYC. but, I am in the suburbs of a city a little more north. ;) \r\n\r\n ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2123,2369,'2017-09-06 16:25:15','Not Verified','1','I had to laugh out loud when you went remote raiding for batteries. I\'m sure weve all done that more than once.\r\n\r\nHave you checked out any of the ATMega328 based ESR component testers?\r\nI gave this one a try \r\nhttps://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OOQC2E8/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1\r\nbased on the price and reviews. I got the one with th IC in socket cause I tend to trash things.\r\nNifty unit.\r\nI know,,,,,do a show.?','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2124,2369,'2017-09-06 22:28:00','NYbill','ESR tester kits.','Yes I have. I\'ve built two of them. The first I sold to a friend at our LUG for the cost of the kit. (They are worth the money and I was happy to solder up another.)\r\n\r\nhttps://media.gunmonkeynet.net/u/nybill/m/esr-tester/\r\n\r\nI even started recording an HPR on the unit. But, life got in the way. So yep, get one, build it up, and give us a review! ;)','2022-02-14 13:18:01'),
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(2125,2371,'2017-09-05 02:54:20','Frank','','I have a very selfish idea for a show--a tutorial based on moving HPR from http to https. \r\n\r\nSelfish because I need to do the same thing to stop Firefox\'s incessant and--given the nature of my site, quite silly-nagging (it\'s not like I manage any personal information, after all, other than my own logon I mean really). \r\n\r\nI have nothing but praise for my hosting provider\'s tech support--they have proven themselves to be real troopers--and generally find their help files actually helpful, but I must admit that, since I now have a VPS and I\'m all on my ownsome for managing something like implementing SSL, I am quite confused and unsure to what I must do.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2126,2374,'2017-09-07 20:05:07','jezra','splendid!','Thank you for the inspiration. Cabbage is now on my shopping list, and I will be making a batch this weekend. ','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2127,2374,'2017-09-07 21:54:24','Tony Hughes','Splendid','Jezra, your welcome, it was other people freely sharing via You Tube and blogs that got me started so I thought I would share with the HPR community. As well as it tasting really good, it has health benefits as well. Win, Win in my book. \r\n\r\nBy the way after making your first batch, try adding a couple or 10 ;-) cloves of garlic in a future batch, the flavor is fantastic and you can eat the fermented garlic or use in other recipes.','2017-09-09 07:41:37'),
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(2128,2388,'2017-09-02 05:05:39','Ken Fallon','Wasting shows again','Well if you must insist on wasting shows, then you get a series !\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/series.php?id=98\r\n\r\nAlso are you going to go back and rename the other shows ?\r\n\r\nhpr2115 :: Apt Spelunking 3: nodm, cmus, and parecord\r\nhpr1906 :: Apt Spelunking 2: tvtime, phatch, and xstarfish\r\nhpr1813 :: Apt Spelunking: surf, lightyears, and fbterm','2022-02-14 13:18:01'),
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(2129,2371,'2017-09-10 15:47:11','Ken Fallon','We have gone live with the new comment system','Hi All,\r\n\r\nWe have gone live with the new comment system. \r\n\r\nKeep us posted if you notice anything weird on the site.\r\n\r\nKen.','2017-09-10 15:53:28'),
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(2130,2356,'2017-09-10 20:37:41','sesamemucho','Thanks for pulling this together','This is just what I needed! I made some changes (raspberrypi.org is now using SHA-256 checksums, and I use losetup to avoid all that calculation). This script is on GitHub at: https://github.com/sesamemucho/pi-sdcard-setup\r\n\r\nThanks again.','2017-09-10 20:41:41'),
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(2131,2371,'2017-09-12 05:13:18','dodddummy','In the US jelly is also clear and jam isn\'t.','Jelly is the clear/shaky stuff. Jam is not clear and less shaky. Jam and preserves are a bit harder to differentiate. I\'ve lived all over the US and this difference between jam and jelly seems pervasive.','2017-09-12 07:18:05'),
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(2132,2371,'2017-09-12 08:08:23','Dave Morriss','Jam versus jelly','Hi dodddummy,\r\n\r\nI had never heard the term \'Jam\' used in US English, though my experience is not broad.\r\n\r\nResearching, I found this:\r\n\r\n\" I bought a jar of raspberry jam. She made us jelly sandwiches.\"\r\n\r\nWhich implies the words jam and jelly are a little interchangeable!\r\n\r\nI have also believed that where UK English uses \'jelly\' which can refer to a jam with all the bits taken out (based on pectin) and a dessert made with flavoured gelatin, whereas US English uses \'jello\' for the latter.\r\n\r\nI may be wrong! Language is a moving target anyway!\r\n\r\nThanks for clarifying things.','2017-09-12 08:10:14'),
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(2133,2376,'2017-09-12 17:10:57','A Porkchop','Communities','While all the specialized media makes it more difficult to find commonalities, the internet and forums like Reddit also make it easier to find other people that share interests.','2017-09-12 17:17:23'),
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(2134,2378,'2017-09-13 02:36:01','Mike Ray','kramdown','I completely agree that it is impossible to write anything complex in markdown without resorting to HTML tags.\r\n\r\nFor me it\'s putting anchor tags around headings to provide in-page links.\r\n\r\nBut you should take a look at kramdown. Debian install:\r\n\r\napt-get install ruby-kramdown\r\n\r\nHas stuff that markdown doesn\'t, like tables, stuff like id and class attribs for css etc.\r\n\r\nAnd auto-generation of tables-of-contents','2017-09-13 07:34:40'),
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(2135,2378,'2017-09-13 08:17:05','Florian','whats so hard about code in a list?','7 spaces makes sense, it\'s 3 for everything belonging to the same point on you list plus 4 for the code, see experiments on\r\nhttps://gist.github.com/0xf10e/91f021b82a2bc4586b235e8f56c31f92\r\n(Yeah, \"github-flavored\" markdown, but it\'s a common dialect these days)\r\n\r\nI still prefer three backticks, but I come from trac-wiki syntax via ReStructuredText to markdown and using single backticks for inline monospace but\r\n{{{\r\nCode here\r\n}}}\r\nin track still annoys me.\r\n\r\nI understand the additional value semantic markup has but in many cases it\'s nice but not necessary. \r\n\r\n-- sysadmin who never broke out into HTML in rst or markdown …','2017-09-13 08:31:55'),
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(2136,2377,'2017-09-15 03:23:53','dodddummy','I know you said you didn\'t need this, but...','I was going to comment on your last show where you said you didn\'t think any processing was necessary.\r\n\r\nWhile I agree content is king, you might find this tip handy. When I record in noisy environments, I record a few seconds without speaking to pick up the background noise.\r\n\r\nThe reason for this is so that you can use those seconds as a model for noise reduction in audacity. Only takes a few seconds to process in audacity so it\'s not much more work. \r\n\r\nSince this is a common practice, did you try this?','2017-09-15 07:10:30'),
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(2137,2380,'2017-09-15 03:15:31','dodddummy','Glad you posted','For some reason I hadn\'t considered this for older hardware. Thanks for the post and idea.','2017-09-15 07:10:30'),
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(2138,2378,'2017-09-15 10:33:15','Klaatu','Kramdown','Had not heard of kramdown. I\'ll take a look at it, for kicks, because it sounds pretty good.','2017-09-15 11:02:30'),
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(2139,2378,'2017-09-15 10:42:29','Klaatu','github markdown','I have found that Guthub markdown is a heck of a lot better than markdown. In fact, it\'s so significantly better that I don\'t see why it\'s not merged into markdown yet, except that as far as I can tell markdown proper is unmaintained. \r\n\r\nThe existance of Github-markdown reinforces my point: markdown needed fixing.\r\n\r\nBut I agree; sometimes docbook is overkill and [github] markdown is a better choice. If I didn\'t say that in this or my previous episode, I did mean to, but maybe I was blinded by docbook passion.','2017-09-15 11:02:30'),
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(2140,2377,'2017-09-15 23:25:01','thelovebug','Great concept for a show... so I pinched it!','I managed to get the gist of what you were trying to say... although I don\'t believe that any level of processing would have been able to tidy up what was ultimately recorded. I find that in noisy environments, a low gain recorder with the microphone nice and close to your mouth tends to make you heard much better.\r\n\r\nI\'ve just uploaded (what will be) episode 2400, where I basically pinch your idea, and drive the 28 miles into my work, and spend most of the time talking about the 14 cars I\'ve had! :-)\r\n\r\nWhen I recorded this show, the only thing I did was push the file through Auphonic to level it out, there was no noise reduction applied... and I do have a fairly noisy car.\r\n\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/eps.php?id=2400\r\n\r\nI would definitely like to hear another attempt from you at this! :-)','2022-02-14 13:18:01'),
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(2141,2379,'2017-09-16 17:50:54','jezra','feedback!','I\'m not sure this episode is \"explicit\". Sometimes I forget if I swear or not. \r\n\r\nAnyway, the coop isn\'t always opening and closing properly, so today I am in the process of updating the code that controls the coop door. Testing has resulted in a massive amount of texts and emails.\r\n\r\nOh yea, and thank you Ken for the show notes. :)','2017-09-16 18:10:35'),
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(2142,2379,'2017-09-18 08:40:44','Ken Fallon','We do what you ask :)','Hi jezra\r\n\r\nWe process the shows as per the instructions given to us by the hosts. In this case you marked your show as explicit on upload.\r\nhttps://hackerpublicradio.org/request_a_slot.php#Explicit\r\n\r\nWe never contact people who have marked their shows as Explicit as there is a large body of hosts that deliberately mark all shows as Explicit as a precaution or protest. https://hackerpublicradio.org/stuff_you_need_to_know.php#explicit\r\n\r\nWe have on occasion contacted hosts who have marked their shows as \'clean\' where we feel the show may not \"be considered inoffensive in every region of the world\". If it ever occurs and the host disagrees, we will put the case to the HPR Community Mailing List. hpr2210 :: On Freedom of Speech and Censorship describes the agreed approach to this topic.\r\n\r\nKen','2022-02-14 13:18:02'),
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(2143,2380,'2017-09-18 07:53:56','Kleer Kut','Raspbian x86','I did the same thing with a very similar P4 computer. It does eat some electricity, but it is substantially faster and has more inputs and outputs than an original Model B Raspberry Pi. This could make for a more enjoyable experience learning to use a Pi since it can use USB persistence and be utilized on nearly any PC.\r\n\r\nSince most of the software is the same it could be a great way to make up for a a lack of funds to fill a classroom with Raspberry Pi machines. Nearly any donated PC that still runs could be made to work even cheaper than buying any of the Pi computers. People could rotate so if they want to experiment with the GPIO pins or other Pi specific components they can have a chance, while other won\'t have to sit around and wait for a Pi to become available.\r\n\r\nThe new version of Raspbian x86 Stretch should be coming out very soon.','2017-09-18 09:03:31'),
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(2144,2381,'2017-09-19 00:43:51','gurdonark','good episode','The closest I come to gaming on the table-top is chess, and my on-line gaming life is more about casual FOSS games than PC gaming. But even as a non-gamer, I really enjoyed this episode. \r\n\r\nIt spoke to me because it reminded me how much I like science fiction novels better than science fiction on film. Like the tabletop games in your story, the power of imagination in a sci-fi story trumps, for me, even the most well-done special effects in a science fiction movie.\r\n\r\nYou make at least 7 good points here, in a show I found a good listen.','2017-09-19 07:06:27'),
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(2145,2356,'2017-09-19 17:15:12','Ken Fallon','Fantastic','Brilliant cleanup job !.','2017-09-19 20:25:12'),
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(2146,2379,'2017-09-20 22:01:31','jezra','force of habit?','It was probably \'force of habit\' that caused me to mark the show as \'explicit\' :)','2017-09-20 22:33:24'),
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(2147,2364,'2017-09-21 03:18:17','Brenda J Butler','Run naked through the googleplex - haha','Loved that comment at 15 mins 7 secs, both because it is funny and because it is brings the point home.','2017-09-21 09:11:33'),
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(2148,2384,'2017-09-21 11:40:22','sunzofman1','Still Thriving','Good to see HPR showing Slackware love ;-)','2017-09-21 12:03:44'),
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(2149,2381,'2017-09-21 23:51:48','Shane Shennan','I like how you put that!','I enjoyed your comment about a GM being a person that has too much imagination for one person. Well put!','2017-09-22 07:20:13'),
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(2150,2386,'2017-09-22 06:05:08','clacke','More */Tk','There\'s also a Ruby/Tk, and there used to be a Guile Tk (best frenemies!), but Guile Tk was deprecated and replaced with Guile GTK, which was then replaced with Guile Gnome.\r\n\r\nIt\'s pretty funny that although Python has to a large degree replaced Tcl out there, any system that includes a full Python also includes Tcl/Tk, because tkinter depends on Tcl/Tk and is part of Python stdlib.\r\n\r\nEven funnier, the proudest project of the Guile world, Guix, depends on Python (via graphviz via glib) and therefore Tcl.','2017-09-22 07:20:13'),
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(2151,2358,'2017-09-25 19:07:38','Josh Huber KF6ZZD','Doppler shift of RF at terrestrial speeds','I liked the explanation of the Doppler effect\'s effect on radio freqeuencies. At 33:30, it was mentioned that at the speeds that satellites travel, the Doppler effect is noticeable, so much that you may have to adjust your RX frequency. And at the speed of car travel, which is very slow compared to RF propagation that the Doppler shift wouldn\'t play a role.\r\n\r\nI just have one nitpick, which that at car speeds, a measurable Doppler shift of RF signals indeed happens, even at GHz frequencies, and this is exactly how police radar works (commonly using RADAR way up in the 10 GHz or 24 GHz bands). This is totally a nitpick, since we\'re probably not talking about a shift of more than a few kHz, and very few if any radios can tune in less than 10 kHz increments in UHF anyway.\r\n\r\nEnjoyed the show. Cheers.','2017-09-25 20:16:27'),
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(2152,2376,'2017-09-27 02:09:08','Kevin O\'Brien','Great discussion','I loved this show. The only problem I had is that I wanted to be a part of the discussion! Well done!','2017-09-27 07:26:23'),
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(2153,2388,'2017-09-27 18:24:52','jezra','hahah','You said \"Unicorn\" :)','2017-09-27 19:06:36'),
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(2154,2386,'2017-09-28 12:19:52','Mad Sweeney','Tk is not accessible','rms started a flamefest when he posted to comp.lang.tcl in 1994;\r\nWhy you should not use Tcl:\r\nhttps://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/comp.lang.tcl/7JXGt-Uxqag/3JBTj5I43yAJ\r\n\r\nI don\'t like Tcl for its stringly typed nature but Tk seems like a nice light-weight GUI toolkit; but, unfortunately, it doesn\'t work with screen readers on any platform so you should avoid using it unless you\'re just developing something for your own use.','2017-09-28 13:19:10'),
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(2155,2386,'2017-09-28 14:45:20','clacke','rms flamefest','The flamefest you are referring to is the Tcl War linked in the show notes.\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment on the accessibility. That\'s good to know if you\'re building a serious UI. I guess it\'s another example of how Tcl/Tk hasn\'t quite left the 80s.','2017-09-28 14:48:03'),
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(2156,2386,'2017-09-28 15:28:09','Mad Sweeney','Flamefest','Hi clacke,\r\nAh, I missed that. That\'ll teach me to listen at 4x speed.','2017-09-28 15:37:13'),
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(2157,2385,'2017-09-28 18:07:32','b-yeezi','Impressive','Thank you for this episode. Once again, I am impressed by your knowledge of the healthcare system in the US, and love to hear your apolitical description.','2017-09-28 18:23:41'),
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(2158,2385,'2017-09-29 10:18:12','Bob','More information','I am hope you can address some of the points brought up in \"Adam Ruins Everything - The Real Reason Hospitals Are So Expensive\" in a future episode. The video seems to challenge your arguments related to why health care is so expensive in the US. Their video and sources are here.\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeDOQpfaUc8\r\nhttps://www.trutv.com/shows/adam-ruins-everything/blog/adams-sources/adam-ruins-the-hospital.html\r\n\r\nI would also argue that it is possible to decrease the individual cost of equipment by increasing it\'s utilization. For example it common practice in European hospitals to run expensive equipment like MRI machines 24/7 to reduce the overall cost. \r\n\r\nIt is also possible to increase human utilization by concentrating skills in facilities dedicated to a given specialism. This is been done to great efficiency in India and there are facilities dedicated to, for example eye surgery, or heart treatments. This has proven to be extremely useful in attracting the best specialists from all over the world, because they are guaranteed to have a high throughput of patients in their dedicated field. This allows the facilities to train up many more specialists as there is a constant utilization of their skills.','2022-02-14 13:18:02'),
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(2159,2381,'2017-10-02 05:18:45','klaatu','Thanks for the comments','Thanks gurdonark and Shane, glad you enjoyed the episode! The comparison between books and movies is such a great, meaty topic. Somebody ought to do a series on the subject.','2017-10-02 06:12:00'),
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(2160,2384,'2017-10-02 05:50:47','klaatu','Slackware everywhere!!!','Could we start a series in which a Slackware user from each named nationstate (doesn\'t have to be acknowledged by the UN or any agency) checks in? Let\'s hear about Slack where ever it may occur!','2017-10-02 06:12:00'),
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(2161,2302,'2017-10-06 05:38:34','clacke','nullglob in the wild','Happy to note that I have now used `shopt -s nullglob` professionally!\r\n\r\nNever do it in interactive shell though, and never `set -u` either. I did so by mistake, while trouble-shooting and making a careless copy and paste.\r\n\r\nAll kinds of prompt-rendering and tab-completion will fail loudly and hilariously.','2017-10-06 06:33:33'),
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(2162,2378,'2017-10-06 06:22:55','clacke','Markdown','Markdown the specification and Markdown the Perl script came out in March 2004 [0] and were last updated in December [1] the same year. I think it\'s fair to assume that John Gruber considers it perfected for the use case he had in mind.\r\n\r\nAny further evolution of the language is now up to anyone who cares to implement a processor. There is nobody maintaining the language itself.\r\n\r\nI absolutely agree that it is pretty useless for anything bigger than a small README without resorting to HTML, but I don\'t think that\'s a big problem, and I don\'t think it makes Markdown meaningless. I used to write documentation in HTML, and I think replacing 95% of the HTML with Markdown makes it much nicer to work with.\r\n\r\nI wouldn\'t write a book in HTML, but there are those that have, using CSS3 print styling!\r\n\r\nBefore hearing your argument, If I were hypothetically to ever write a book, I would likely not even consider anything but LaTeX. But thanks to your episode, and you simply reminding me that DocBook is still out there, I might spare DocBook a look first. It was a good episode and your points are all valid. Thanks!\r\n\r\n[0] https://daringfireball.net/2004/03/introducing_markdown\r\n\r\n[1] https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/','2017-10-06 06:33:33'),
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(2163,2378,'2017-10-06 06:08:18','clacke','SGML','You seemed unclear on what SGML is, so here\'s a quick summary:\r\n\r\nSGML, to tell a simplifying lie, is the idea of using tag names enclosed in less-than and greater-than characters to mark up text. The original DocBook is one application, HTML is another.\r\n\r\nXML is a further evolution of SGML, which both constrains and extends SGML to enable new ways of defining and working with applications of the format.\r\n\r\nThe counterpart of XML Schema in SGML is the DTD, the Document Type Definition, and the counterpart of XSL is DSSSL, which is a form of Scheme (yay!).','2017-10-06 06:33:33'),
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(2164,2385,'2017-10-05 23:59:49','Kevin O\'Brien','Reply to b-yeezi','Thank you for the kind comment. I happen to have very strong opinions on what should be done, but in this series my primary goal was to be objective, and you are relieving me that I may have succeeded.','2017-10-06 06:33:33'),
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(2165,2385,'2017-10-06 00:06:09','Kevin O\'Brien','Reply to Bob','Adam Ruins Everything is very entertaining, but not exactly complete in its analysis. So this comes across to me like cherry-picking the data. hospitals do indeed have chargemasters, and the prices therein are largely made up. But it is also true that margins at most hospitals are rather thin, so I think it is not accurate to imply that hospitals are simply being greedy and waving around large bags of money. So I think Adam is essentially confusing cause and effect here.','2017-10-06 06:33:33'),
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(2166,2302,'2017-10-07 15:57:09','Dave Morriss','A wild nullglob appears','@clacke\r\n\r\nDelighted you\'ve found a use for nullglob. I too have been surprised by its side-effects - presumably because stuff like Bash completion makes use of it AND doesn\'t enable/disable it in the way I waffled about in this episode.\r\n\r\nThere\'s always a slight air of \"incompleteness\" about Bash I feel, though it\'s a hell of a lot more polished than it was. I was forced to use csh and tcsh at one point in my Unix life, and boy does Bash make those shells look terrible!','2017-10-07 16:01:25'),
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(2167,2384,'2017-10-07 23:16:19','cobra2','MMMMM slackware!','I loved this show! I\'d also like to take this time to mention sport (I read it as \"slack ports\") as an alternative tool to sbopkg. It offers no new features, it just doesn\'t have the ncurses interface and is written in python. \r\n\r\nMMMM KDE. \r\n\r\n\r\nhttps://gitlab.com/slackport/sport\r\n\r\nP.S. klaatu, this is a non-verbal check in of a slackware abuser.','2017-10-08 06:28:19'),
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(2168,2394,'2017-10-09 18:00:50','NYbill','New Version','FYI: Seems there is a new version of these kits for 2017. There are multiple options of ordering just the kit, just the parts, or fully assembled boards. I might pick up the $16 kit with the plexiglass case just for fun.\r\n\r\nSearch: \r\n\r\n\"2017 English DIY Mega328 Transistor Tester LCR Diode Capacitance ESR meter PWM Square wave Frequency Signal Generator\"\r\n\r\nOn Aliexpress. \r\n\r\nI still plan to try and flash this 2016 kit I have. Then I can do a followup to this episode.','2017-10-09 18:07:46'),
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(2169,2394,'2017-10-11 06:36:54','Ken Fallon','\"Then I can do a followup to this episode.\"','*cough* You owe me a show *cough*','2017-10-11 08:04:48'),
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(2170,2396,'2017-10-11 04:34:54','TheDUDE','The struggle is real','Finding your audience is really hard, especially with not only do you have to compete with your contemporaries, corporate or independent, but you also have to deal with everything in the past as well. If not there\'s a lot more noise, but you do have a lot more control on what to do with your art.','2017-10-11 08:04:48'),
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(2171,2394,'2017-10-11 23:10:24','NYbill','Oi!','Task Master! :P\r\n\r\n(I\'m on it buddy. I\'m waiting for an electronics shipment that should let me program the thing.)\r\n\r\n...an episode is inbound in... 3... 2...','2017-10-12 06:49:05'),
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(2172,2399,'2017-10-12 14:56:23','jan','hpr2399','hi and thanks for your efford.\r\n\r\nyou have been working on a Mainframe? please consider podcasting on how things are done in the world of mainframes.\r\n\r\nthx jan (germay)','2017-10-12 15:13:39'),
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(2173,2378,'2017-10-17 07:13:04','Bob Jonkman','Referenced your podcast in our NonProfit SysAdmin meeting','I conveniently listened to your podcast just before going to the KWNPSA (Kitchener Waterloo NonProfit SysAdmin) meeting on \"Markup Languages and Note Taking\", where I took notes for the meeting. I added the podcast as one of the resources.\r\n\r\nThanx for telling us about DocBook and some other markup languages! \r\n\r\n--Bob.','2017-10-17 07:27:00'),
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(2174,2378,'2017-10-17 07:17:24','Bob Jonkman','Should have provided a link to the KWNPSA meeting','I should have provided a link to the meeting notes for our KWNPSA meeting on Markup Languages and Note Taking:\r\n\r\nhttps://sobac.com/wiki/Markup_Languages_and_Note_Taking/Meeting_Notes_2017-10-16\r\n\r\nMaybe the HPR comment daemons can just append that link to my previous comment...\r\n\r\n--Bob.','2017-10-17 07:27:00'),
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(2175,2399,'2017-10-17 08:11:02','dodddummy','Shows on the mainframe','I\'ve considered doing some shows on the mainframe. So far I haven\'t because I\'m leery of using work assets for non work reasons. I would need to do that.\r\n\r\nHowever, I do have a show in the works on my favorite editor, The Hybrid Editor, XE which works like the standard mainframe(ISPF) editor.\r\n\r\nMight also do a show on the mainframe emulator, Hercules.\r\n\r\nThere are related topics I could do without using work resources, \r\nthough. Rexx and COBOL come to mind.\r\n\r\nBut it\'s not likely I\'ll do a show on my day to day work on the mainframe.','2017-10-17 08:25:54'),
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(2176,2377,'2017-10-18 17:01:30','MrX','Reply to Comment 1','Hi dodddummy, many thanks for leaving a comment and sorry for taking so long in replying. Yes that\'s a good tip in noisy environments which I knew about and I did give it a go but the quality was so poor that I didn\'t think it really helped. I think it may be Ok up to a point but past that point, it just makes things worse. Thanks for the tip much appreciated :)\r\nRegards MrX','2017-10-18 10:14:37'),
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(2177,2377,'2017-10-18 17:05:59','MrX','Answer to comment 2','Hi Dave many thanks for the comment, I think you\'ve hit it on the. The internal Dictaphone microphone is reasonably sensitive but the external clip-on one supplied which I used is even more so. It\'s clear that the audio was badly clipping when looking at the recording in Audacity. I think I\'ll be investing one of those excellent microphones recommended by Jon Kulp.\r\n\r\nMany thanks for the useful advice and really looking forward to hearing your episode and yes I\'ll hope to have another go if I get a chance.\r\n\r\nBest regards\r\n\r\nMrX','2017-10-18 17:07:35'),
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(2178,2402,'2017-10-18 22:00:42','mcnalu','Intriguing','I\'ve really enjoyed your tabletop gaming series and this show fascinated me. I think I\'m going to have to listen to it again because I didn\'t really follow how the gameplay worked. That\'s not necessarily your fault though as while listening a fair amount of my brain power was taken up with making dinner which got complicated as the recipe required improvisation around ingredients I lacked. Anyway, I digress, I love the idea of the game and will giver serious consideration to the Kickstarter. Any chance of a summary or audio or even video of an actual game?','2017-10-18 22:11:38'),
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(2179,2397,'2017-10-21 19:23:51','Kevin O\'Brien','Enjoyed this show','I\'m a long time science and space geek, and I quite enjoyed this. If you like this you might to check out The Astronomy Cast (https://www.astronomycast.com/) and Planetary Radio (https://www.planetary.org/multimedia/planetary-radio/). They are both on my podcatcher.','2022-02-14 13:18:02'),
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(2180,2397,'2017-10-21 19:53:04','Dave Morriss','Thanks Kevin','I listen to Astronomy Cast myself and recommend it too. I actually get the \"raw\" version before they edit it (https://www.astronomycast.com/feed/fullraw/) since it\'s amusing to hear what goes on behind the scenes!\r\n\r\nI also greatly enjoy The Weekly Space Hangout (https://www.universetoday.com/feed/wshaudio/), and of course, Awesome Astronomy (https://awesomeastronomy.libsyn.com/rss).\r\n\r\nI shall check Planetary Radio, which I haven\'t ever listened to. Thanks for the pointer.','2022-02-14 13:18:03'),
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(2181,2404,'2017-10-22 23:16:11','TheDUDE','More Links','Link to Server 105 \r\nhttps://www.meridiannext.com/\r\n\r\nLink to German server\r\nhttps://www.meridian59.de/\r\n\r\nAs said in the podcast, both have the ogre client.','2022-02-14 13:18:03'),
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(2182,2407,'2017-10-24 01:54:38','Mike Ray','avrdude, fuses, clone programmers etc.','Cracking episode! Brilliantly timed for me as I am just starting down the path of AVR programming.\r\n\r\nI\'ve bought several programmers, usbtiny, libusb, usbavr, avrisp2. A lot of them seem to be less than perfect clones of known designs and they spit out what look like error messages that you can suppress with the -F flag and then carry on working.\r\n\r\nFuses are confusing but there is an online fuse calculator, I\'ll look it up and post the link if you haven\'t found it.\r\n\r\nI didn\'t know about avrdudes and I will look at it. But a lot of GUI programs are written with inaccessible toolkits like Qt.\r\n\r\nArduino IDE is itself inaccessible, so I stick to the command-line. Take a look at arduinino.mk, which is a Makefile system you can use with programmers to avoid the Arduino IDE\r\nMy first project is an audible logic probe. Had a logic probe with LEDs for years but that\'s useless to me now of course.\r\n\r\nI\'m jealous of all the little gizmos now appearing with cheap and colourful displays, like your transistor tester.','2017-10-24 07:39:51'),
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(2183,2407,'2017-10-24 05:56:49','Ken Fallon','Ordered','My first real solder project. I hope the thing is programmed.','2017-10-24 07:39:51'),
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(2184,2398,'2017-10-24 14:40:22','Windigo','Legalese','I love that their notice is trying to sound sinister and official, and failing at both. After all, any lawyer worth their weight starts their correspondence with \"Dear [so and so]\".\r\n\r\nI really enjoyed your episode! I find automation in games to be a natural reaction to developers introducing more \"grind\" and busywork into their games, and I think it\'s fantastic that you\'re overcoming it with intelligence instead of brute force.','2017-10-24 14:43:28'),
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(2185,2405,'2017-10-24 23:30:27','Quvmoh','Great show','That is a great price for a well powered phone! added to amazon wish list..','2017-10-25 08:17:21'),
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(2186,2407,'2017-10-25 10:40:12','NYbill','Thanks, Mike.','Yea, I can tell I\'m just scratching the surface with this AVR programing stuff. I\'m sure I\'ll be messing with it more in the future. I\'m not sure Avrdudess is necessary. It just helped me find out quickly there was a verify option. I\'m sure the GUI is just setting some flag for AVRdude I don\'t know about.','2017-10-25 10:45:50'),
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(2187,2407,'2017-10-25 10:40:59','NYbill','Nice ken.','You ordered one, nice. Its a fun project to solder up. And the best part is when you\'re done you\'ll have a useful piece of test equipment.','2017-10-25 10:45:50'),
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(2188,2407,'2017-10-26 21:08:28','NYbill','...We will expect a show about the build, Ken.',':P','2017-10-26 21:11:57'),
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(2189,2150,'2017-10-29 09:01:26','Ken Fallon','The Apollo Saturn V Launch Vehicle Digital Computer (LVDC) Circuit Board','Going through some of Fran Blanche old videos and she has another type of board also from the apollo missions\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Apollo+Saturn+V+LVDC+Circuit+Board','2017-10-29 11:05:11'),
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(2190,2376,'2017-10-29 23:16:22','blindape','Me Too','I got really behind on my podcast playlist while on vacation this winter (I\'ve just heard this at the end of October) so Kevin bet me to say that I wished I was part of the discussion.\r\n\r\nI could not find any evidence to support this, but some of Seth Frightening\'s songs have a very \'Kiwi\' sound to them. This sound/style was common among bands on New Zealand\'s Flying Nun record label from roughly the mid 80\'s to mid 90\'s. \r\n\r\nI was going to add more to this comment but there is just so much to say from my own experiences and also from watching how my children consume media that I really need to record a proper response to this.','2017-10-29 23:19:54'),
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(2191,2399,'2017-10-30 18:54:12','Shane Shennan','Great Episode!','Thanks for this idea! I often work with people who are learning to touch type, but who do not have much feeling in their fingertips. I\'ll be suggesting your hack to them so that they can feel the F and J keys more easily.','2017-10-30 19:16:54'),
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(2192,2399,'2017-11-01 04:19:25','dodddummy','Accessibility','@Shane Shennan. I hadn\'t considered the accessibility use. I\'ll keep it in mind. For what it\'s worth, the landmarks I added are still holding up.','2017-11-01 07:31:51'),
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(2193,2413,'2017-11-02 14:02:01','norrist','Fear and Cold Turkey','It took me a few tries to quit smoking. I was only able to quit after I convinced myself I would get cancer if I continued smoking. Fear and cold turkey work. \r\nGreat episode. Can we here more about life on the road?','2017-11-02 14:04:10'),
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(2194,2415,'2017-11-03 03:36:13','croy','You big tease!','I\'m very curious about your android integration! :)\r\n\r\nI\'ve previously published a show about using org mode to create presentation pdfs.','2017-11-03 08:16:18'),
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(2195,2412,'2017-11-03 17:02:08','FrankBell','Lovecraft','This is hardly the best Lovecraft story. My two personal favorites are At the Mountains of Madness and The Dreamquest of Unknown Katath.\r\n\r\nRemember, Lovecraft was a hack writer. He was a brilliant hack, but a hack nonetheless. Many of his works were the same story over and over, but, when he got it right, he was a genius.\r\n\r\nIf you want more Lovecraft, check out Dagonbytes: https://www.dagonbytes.com/thelibrary/lovecraft/','2022-02-14 13:18:03'),
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(2196,2412,'2017-11-04 02:41:32','Kevin O\'Brien','Agreeing with Frank','Mountains of Madness is a great story.','2017-11-04 10:22:22'),
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(2197,2411,'2017-11-04 05:39:18','Windigo','Fascinating','This is the first time I\'ve ever heard of the concept of a server cooperative. What a superb idea! A very pragmatic compromise between self-hosting and going with a corporate service.\r\n\r\nI would listen to an entire week of shows discussing different aspects of this arrangement. Well done!','2017-11-04 10:22:22'),
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(2198,2411,'2017-11-04 20:35:27','Shane Shennan','Well done!','This was a fun episode because of the enthusiasm of the presenters. Some intriguing ideas.','2017-11-04 20:52:47'),
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(2199,2413,'2017-11-04 20:48:49','Shane Shennan','All the best!','The episode was very engaging. Thank you for sharing. Would you let us know in a month or two how it is going?','2017-11-04 20:52:47'),
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(2200,2399,'2017-11-06 10:36:24','dodddummy','Replying to comments from community episode','I agree that I might be able to get permission to use work resources on my own time assuming there is information I\'m legally bound not to reveal and doesn\'t contain proprietary information. \r\n\r\nBut asking for that permission is more effort that I want to make.\r\n\r\nI\'ll see what I can muster without work resources.','2017-11-06 10:41:14'),
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(2201,2393,'2017-11-06 16:14:22','Aaron','Haystack password','What do you think about Haystack passwords?\r\n\r\nhttps://www.grc.com/haystack.htm','2017-11-06 16:27:01'),
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(2202,2378,'2017-11-07 05:32:42','Klaatu','KWNPSA','I took a look at the page, Bob. Good stuff! One addition - there\'s a missing entry in your text editors section: GNU Emacs.\r\n\r\nProbably just an oversight.','2017-11-07 08:19:32'),
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(2203,2412,'2017-11-07 06:49:29','dodddummy','Is there a link to the audio you listened to?','Is there a link to the audiobook in the show notes for this ep? If so I didn\'t see it. But I miss a lot. I found it by looking at the last book club episode.\r\n\r\nIf it\'s not here, might be worth having it for the next one for ease of use.','2017-11-07 08:19:32'),
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(2204,2376,'2017-11-07 08:51:26','Klaatu','re: Me Too','Hey blindape.\r\n\r\nSeth Frightening having the Flying Nun sound is probably accurate; I found the album in a random Kiwi op shop. \r\n\r\nShortly before moving to NZ, I found a Chris Knox CD on the street (literally, it was lying in a gutter) and absolutely FELL IN LOVE with not only Chris\'s music but also that general sound and feel. I\'ve been really enjoying discovering Kiwi music and Kiwiana in general.','2017-11-07 09:06:37'),
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(2205,2411,'2017-11-07 14:04:38','bjb','indie hosting','Would you be willing to provide dns secondary or backup email services? I run my own dns server and email server, but it is a challenge to find the secondaries to make my services a bit more robust. I don\'t really want close friends to do this, I\'d like it to be cast a little wider. It is even hard to convince the isps to do it, sadly. But it is hard to find like-minded people ... you guys sound about right : -) And if you like, I can secondary for you as well.','2017-11-07 14:06:46'),
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(2206,2395,'2017-11-07 14:07:32','bjb','thanks','Thanks for your economic series, I find it very interesting.','2017-11-07 14:08:43'),
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(2207,2387,'2017-11-07 14:12:47','bjb','5BX and 10BX, memory lane','When I was a pre-teen, my Mom bought a 5BX booklet and 3 10BX booklets, one for each member of the family. I was never good at being a regular exerciser, but my Mom has done her 10BX routine her whole life. She eventually lost her book, but she still does her routine three times a week. She is not tapering off though, still stuck at the highest level she got to. She is not growing old willingly : -)\r\n\r\nWhat a memory! thanks for the show.','2017-11-07 14:43:19'),
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(2208,2411,'2017-11-07 16:24:01','Ken Fallon','Tell me how','Do a show on how to set it up on something like a raspberry pi and I\'m happy to join a pool.','2017-11-07 16:35:54'),
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(2209,2412,'2017-11-08 16:32:33','el Mussol','file unavailable','+1 for dodddummy\'s comment above. However:\r\n\r\nme@box:~/pods$ wget -c https://hppodcraft.com/podcasts/TheCallofCthulhu-hppodcraft.mp3\r\n--2017-11-08 17:30:14-- https://hppodcraft.com/podcasts/TheCallofCthulhu-hppodcraft.mp3\r\nResolving hppodcraft.com (hppodcraft.com)... 107.161.176.74\r\nConnecting to hppodcraft.com (hppodcraft.com)|107.161.176.74|:80... connected.\r\nHTTP request sent, awaiting response... 403 Forbidden\r\n2017-11-08 17:30:14 ERROR 403: Forbidden.','2022-02-14 13:18:03'),
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(2210,2415,'2017-11-08 20:52:08','Klaatu','org-mode','This is really cool. My girlfriend does some bullet journal stuff, but I never understood what it was all about. Hearing about it in this context is elucidating, though. \r\n\r\nAlso, I\'m really really happy to hear that my Emacs episodes helped you learn to love Emacs! \r\n\r\nI am, like croy (previous comment), eager to hear about your Android integration.','2017-11-08 21:06:19'),
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(2211,2417,'2017-11-08 20:56:15','Klaatu','First I\'ve ever heard of this','Thank you for this episode. I thought I was pretty cool for embracing RISC (at least, to the degree that I have; since my iBook G4 finally died, I\'ve been mostly RISC-less lately, ARM notwithstanding) but this Transmeta thing sounds really clever - and very obscure. Thanks for the history lesson!','2017-11-08 21:06:19'),
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(2212,2416,'2017-11-09 17:33:23','Windigo','Straight through cable','Just a quick bit of clarification; When Shane said he used a straight through cable, he was referring to the order of the wires inside the connector.\r\n\r\nA straight through (also called a patch) cable is used to connect a device to a piece of networking equipment, like a PC to a switch. For connecting two PCs, you can switch the transmit and receive pairs and create a crossover cable.','2017-11-09 17:38:39'),
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(2213,2416,'2017-11-09 18:10:52','Dave Morriss','Re: Straight through cable','Thanks Windigo!\r\n\r\nI did actually know that, but my brain refused to come up with anything useful on the spur of the moment.\r\n\r\nI spent time over many years during my mainframe days making serial cables (RS232, RS423) where this was pretty much the same. The varieties of \"Null Modem\" cables with crossovers *was* something I knew quite well, but have largely forgotten now :-)\r\n\r\nI don\'t think I have ever used a crossover CAT5 or CAT6 cable though, come to think of it.\r\n\r\nMaybe we need more shows on the details of connecting devices together?','2017-11-09 18:12:32'),
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(2214,2417,'2017-11-09 23:14:06','drrty','wow','Thanks for this JWP. Upon further inspection it was surprising to see that the Transmeta Crusoe powered both the OQO Model 01 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OQO#OQO_Model_01), which I distinctly remember salivating over in 2004.','2017-11-10 07:58:29'),
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(2215,2420,'2017-11-10 06:17:38','dodddummy','Would love to hear you on librivox','Good episode. Like to hear about keeping things alive.\r\n\r\nBy the way, have you considered reading for librivox?','2017-11-10 07:58:29'),
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(2216,2416,'2017-11-10 16:56:25','Ken Fallon','Did a correction show','hpr2433 :: You were right, I was wrong','2017-11-10 16:58:25'),
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(2217,2399,'2017-11-14 01:13:28','dodddummy','ctrl vs fn keys','In the #oggcasplanet IRC channel in freenode, Klaatu mentioned a use for this that more people might have. I had it myself and didn\'t consider using this.\r\n\r\nThat use is to distinguish between the left ctrl and fn keys on laptops. For example ctrl is usually in the bottom left most position on HP laptops, whereas those two keys are reversed on Lenovos.\r\n\r\nI\'ve used this method to mark the ctrl on both. For what it\'s worth, I decided to use 3 dots of super glue in a horizontal line on the key because sometimes my finger hits that key in different places.\r\n\r\nChose to mark the ctrl instead of the fn key because the ctrl is the one i need to use most often and the ctrl key is not in the same position relative to the fn key on different keyboards.','2017-11-14 08:08:33'),
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(2218,2423,'2017-11-15 18:12:29','Klaatu','cool discoveries','After a while, one begins to think one has heard of all the open source games out there, but obviously that\'s silly. Still, one runs out of places to look for new games -- until someone like you bring them to light. So thanks!','2017-11-15 18:24:28'),
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(2219,2421,'2017-11-15 18:24:33','Klaatu','attention','There are two types of people in the world: those who are attention-getters, and those who are not.\r\n\r\nThe right combination of an obnoxious, over-excited, supremely-networked attention-getter plus [any given project] results in *zeitgeist*. Whether that zeitgeist is justified does not enter the equation.\r\n\r\nZeitgeist procreates; the more people stricken with it, the more it builds in volume and size. The more it grows, the more people get stricken by it.\r\n\r\nWhat I\'m saying is that you need a Popular Kid to champion your cause. \r\n\r\nThe problem is, you hate popular kids, and popular kids probably don\'t know you exist.\r\n\r\n(And by \"you\", I mean \"me\")','2017-11-15 18:26:44'),
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(2220,2419,'2017-11-15 18:33:55','Klaatu','shows like these','It\'s episodes like this one that make me want to quit podcasting, because I\'ll never reach this level of greatness. It\'s so disjointed and natural that you think it couldn\'t possibly have been planned, but it\'s so coherent and persistent that there\'s no way it couldn\'t have been scripted. \r\n\r\nThe characters in it have mysterious backstories (\"you saved my life, Casper\"), they cut to empty commercial breaks, they come up with the name for the series in the episode itself, they talk about how they\'ll talk about movies but then barely talk about movies, they talk about video games but can\'t decide on how to categorize them, the hosts barely even know one another\'s handles. AND YET THEY PULL THROUGH. It\'s gripping and triumphant.\r\n\r\nThis is some amazing avant garde audio. Well done, Alien Brothers. Well done.','2017-11-15 18:43:36'),
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(2221,2418,'2017-11-15 18:35:00','Klaatu','great infos','This is exactly the kind of nuts-and-bolts information I\'ve been looking for in a HAM-related episode. Thanks!','2017-11-15 18:43:36'),
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(2222,2421,'2017-11-16 07:50:29','lostnbronx','Popular Kids','Merit will always be secondary to charisma when it comes to the success of projects and individuals. Routinely, people in professional environments that have no business being where they are, and who can\'t even do their jobs correctly, continue to move upward.\r\n\r\nIt\'s the nature of attraction. The cult of personality, when the media is involved -- and media is involved in everyone\'s lives now, to some extent.\r\n\r\nI don\'t think there\'s a solution, except to seduce or blackmail the popular kids over to your side.','2017-11-16 08:21:51'),
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(2223,2424,'2017-11-16 13:38:00','ClaudioM','Wonderful Intro to RPGs!','Loved listening to this episode! My sons and I want to start playing a tabletop RPG like D&D but we weren\'t sure of how the game play would be like (my eldest and I have our characters created already which was fun to develop so that gives us a head start). Since I\'ve never played anything like this but have always had an interest, I had no idea how it would play on. Even though the type of RPG was different in this episode (yet enjoyable enough for me to want to try Interface Zero as well), it made everything much clearer. This felt almost like playing a text adventure game on the computer (even though it *is* exactly that minus the computer). Lots of fun to listen to as a spectator as well! Thanks for the episode and I look forward to more like this.','2017-11-16 13:58:14'),
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(2224,2425,'2017-11-19 22:49:47','Dave Morriss','This was really interesting','I enjoyed this a lot. It was very clearly explained and the example was helpful.\r\n\r\nI tried to understand XSL back in 2012 when writing Bash scripts to let me download music from Magnatune. They held their catalogue in XML at that time (now it\'s in a SQLite database) and I used xsltproc and XSL to extract stuff. I didn\'t find any very clear explanations of what could be done in XSL at that time, though I winged it by copying examples and using trial and error.\r\n\r\nYour links seem to fill in many of the gaps in my understanding, so thanks for them too.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-11-19 22:52:37'),
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(2225,2423,'2017-11-20 18:29:08','lostnbronx','It Must Be Me','I must only be running junkers. I\'ve never owned a machine that could play games like this. I\'d like to try it someday, when I join the 21st Century gaming world.','2017-11-20 18:33:53'),
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(2226,2425,'2017-11-21 07:37:38','Klaatu','Re: This was really interesting','Glad you enjoyed in! I just can\'t wait for your LaTeX episode!','2017-11-21 07:41:40'),
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(2227,2427,'2017-11-22 15:34:38','Shane Shennan','Thanks! I made a connection!','This is so silly, but I had not recently realized the aptness of the terms server and client. You explained so clearly that a server computer serves a _client_ computer. Thank you!','2017-11-22 15:38:48'),
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(2228,2427,'2017-11-23 09:09:44','0xf10e','Solaris?','Nice start, Klaatu! I\'ll make sure to point \r\njunior sysadmins to this series!\r\n\r\nSo was the third option, which isn\'t really around anymore, Solaris? ^^\r\nBecause the OpenSolaris fork illumos is in fact, 6 years after Bryan Cantrill\'s \"Fork Yeah! The Rise and Development of illumos\" USENIX talk[0], still around. It\'s the base for distributions like Joyent\'s SmartOS and the database appliance Delphix ;)\r\nAnd upstream for OpenZFS, too!\r\n\r\n[0]: https://youtu.be/-zRN7XLCRhc','2017-11-23 09:48:40'),
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(2229,2427,'2017-11-24 22:53:25','Zen_Floater2','OpenBSD user','I\'ve been running servers since before you were born,,, 1975.\r\nAnd I am enjoying this series. It\'s good to have a series on these taboo things you know...','2017-11-25 10:39:24'),
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(2230,406,'2017-11-25 13:57:49','cobra2','shownotes','the reference to unixporn[dot]com needs to be updated to unixporn[dot]pro. \r\n\r\nWe have lost the original domain and it now links to NSFW content.','2017-11-25 14:05:36'),
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(2231,2411,'2017-11-27 00:27:53','silver','Alternate web server.','Nginx is a great alternative to apache web server.','2017-11-27 08:02:30'),
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(2232,2434,'2017-11-30 11:22:38','dodddummy','Link so you don\'t have to find the previous ep','https://cybrosis.podiobooks.libsynpro.com/rss\r\n\r\nI\'m enjoying the first Chapter.','2022-02-14 13:18:04'),
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(2233,2432,'2017-11-30 16:12:31','Dave Morriss','Cheers Tony','Thanks for the clarification. I\'m also on giffgaff but wasn\'t aware of the 4G issue and the OnePlus 1. I scarcely use my phone and am currently using a fraction of the data I pay for each month, so I don\'t see this being a problem!','2017-11-30 16:17:59'),
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(2234,2433,'2017-11-30 18:42:52','Frank','Best title ever!','See above','2017-11-30 19:05:35'),
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(2235,2432,'2017-11-30 19:01:35','RWA','Nokia 6 Update','I was wondering how the Snapdragon 430 processor it is doing with the apps you run. The Nokia 6 interested me when it first appeared but I had concerns about the 430 processor. Everything else was a major plus for me - screen size, fingerprint scanner, NFC & metal build. \r\n\r\nAny comments, especially compared to other mid-tier phones like the Moto G5S Plus.','2017-11-30 19:05:35'),
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(2236,2432,'2017-12-01 08:23:49','Tony Hughes','Reply to RWA re App performance','I\'ve been using the phone now for over 2 months and the performance is better than the old Oneplus1 all the apps I use are snappy and responsive with no lag that I can detect. I can\'t compare to any other phone as I\'ve not used anything else during this time, and I am not a mobile gamer (or any type off, for fact) so can not say what game performance is like on the phone but I think it stands up to most mid range devices well. If it hadn\'t been for the 4G issue I would probably have stuck with the Oneplus1 and just flashed it and saved myself the £200m but I\'m happy and my wife will get an upgrade to her Nexus 4 at some stage.','2017-12-01 08:36:22'),
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(2237,2431,'2017-12-02 02:21:33','Zen_Floater2','Benevolent Dictator of the Magical Forrest','I was amused at the Debian comment about not being transparent.\r\nI will accept that. I don\'t use Debian anymore since Crunch Bang has ended but,,,,\r\nDebian is a community run distro. So is FreeBSD. So is NetBSD.\r\nSo is Gentoo. So is Void Linux and Arch Linux. \r\nBut of the non-transparent distributions such as OpenBSD which is run by a Benevolent Dictator known as Theo,,, OR Slackware which is run by the Benevolent Dictator known as Patrick,,,,, they too make really solid distro\'s which a great many people love.\r\nBut as an aged old man, it does make me smile at the comments of our FOSS Youth who, complain they simply don\'t like non-transparent governments yet, they stand by their monarch derived OS\'s. Not that I\'m complaining that your human....','2017-12-02 09:48:38'),
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(2238,2420,'2017-12-03 04:09:44','Gumnos','Netbooks and lightweight OSes','I\'ve got a couple netbooks and have found that the BSDs (particularly OpenBSD, but also FreeBSD & NetBSD) run quite nicely on them. I also run Debian Stable on one and it\'s a pretty uneventful experience.','2017-12-03 10:02:09'),
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(2239,2403,'2017-12-04 13:34:22','Ken Fallon','Visualisation of waves','I found this page which shows how waves propagate.\r\n\r\nhttps://freaklabs.org/wireless-foundations-part-1-what-are-these-wave-thingies-anyhow/','2017-12-04 14:09:22'),
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(2240,2437,'2017-12-05 08:02:05','Ken Fallon','Noooooooo','What the bananas ???\r\n\r\nNot again with the \'let\'s stop there\'\r\n\r\nThis is hpr \"there is no limit on how long a show can be ...\"','2017-12-05 09:31:50'),
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(2241,2437,'2017-12-05 08:02:35','Ken Fallon','Ignore him','Keep sending in loads of shows !','2017-12-05 09:34:22'),
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(2242,2435,'2017-12-05 08:49:41','0xf10e','yum whatprovides?','Hi Klaatu,\r\n\r\nwhat\'s more bothersome about `sudo yum whatprovides *bin/semanage` than searching for all the SELinux packages and installing them to maybe get the right tool installed?\r\nThat\'s a feature a _really_ like about yum. And no need to jump through hoops like installing `apt-file` and updating its database necessary.','2017-12-05 09:35:48'),
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(2243,2437,'2017-12-05 22:42:25','jrullo','Is there a link for the free guide you mentioned.','I was listening to the show and you talked about a free guide. I was expecting a link in the notes. Where would I find that, it sounds useful.','2017-12-05 22:58:55'),
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(2244,2437,'2017-12-08 22:26:54','Klaatu','Free guide','Jrullo, I\'m not sure which free guide we were talking about, but there are two that come to mind:\r\n\r\n1. A voucher for a free copy of Pathfinder rules, which I was offering as a special HPR promotion. As of this writing, I\'ve given them all out, so the giveaway is over! All is not lost, however...\r\n\r\n2. Pathfinder is published under the Open Gaming License, so the rules are online for free. The official reference document for Pathfinder is here:\r\n\r\nhttps://paizo.com/pathfinderRPG/prd/\r\n\r\nThere\'s another one, which has a different interface and integrates more third party stuff, here:\r\n\r\nhttps://www.d20pfsrd.com/\r\n\r\nNote:\r\nIf anyone reading this comment is brand new to RPG, though, I do highly recommend a Beginner set for either D&D or Pathfinder, because the beginner sets make character creation really easy, and they use a reduced set of rules, and just generally help you ease in. You should be able to find a beginner box at your local game store or at an online book seller. It\'s worth it, I promise.','2022-02-14 13:18:04'),
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(2245,2163,'2017-12-09 17:17:19','Ron Strelecki','GNU AWK, part four','Love the episode, and the series.\r\n\r\nI think that in your hello world example that demonstrates the FS built-in variable, the character used should not be a comma, but rather something distinct like a pipe (or some other character that does not have a different context in language). I understand that typically FS will be switched to a comma, if anything, but as the print statement uses a comma for a different function, it can be confusing.\r\n\r\n$ awk -F \",\" \'BEGIN{print \"FS is\",FS}\'\r\nFS is ,\r\n\r\n$ awk -F \"|\" \'BEGIN{print \"FS is\",FS}\'\r\nFS is |','2017-12-09 17:24:07'),
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(2246,2163,'2017-12-10 12:52:13','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ron','Thanks for the comment.\r\n\r\nWhen I wrote this example it never occurred to me that it could be confusing, but now you point it out, yes it is. I think I was keen to show that -F on the command line is the variable FS in the script, and having just shown an example of -F \",\" just continued to use it!\r\n\r\nI was also keen to make it clear that the comma in a print statement is where Awk puts the contents of OFS, so I guess I lost sight of the example a little in my enthusiasm :-)\r\n\r\nI will consider modifying these notes in the light of your suggestion.','2017-12-10 12:54:55'),
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(2247,2440,'2017-12-11 02:28:01','Klaatu','coffee','I have to admit, most coffee I come across here in NZ is so amazingly good that there\'s a part of me that misses the really bad coffee of me youth: drip coffee that\'s been sitting on the burner for 2 hours, or the percolated coffee that\'s steeped in itself for 45 minutes, the bad petrol station coffee that you have to dump all kinds of flavour into so you can manage to drink it.\r\n\r\nThe plunger does make a big difference, though. I\r\n\r\nFor the record, I do *not* use a plastic plunger. I found a nice all-metal one, and it\'s super durable and really good.\r\n\r\nOff to go make some coffee.','2017-12-11 07:37:58'),
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(2248,2440,'2017-12-11 08:39:41','cobra2','coffee','Enjoy that cup! I, myself, am steeping some coffee as I write this on a tiny screen mere feet away from a real keyboard... \r\n\r\nI\'ve found over the years that once you move to a French press, its really hard to go back to a drip coffee maker. I never had the stomach for \'diner\' coffee. And in all fairness, I never appreciated coffee until leaving the deep south for the great white north. Mostly due to EVERYTHING being bad coffee.','2017-12-11 08:41:59'),
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(2249,2184,'2017-12-11 10:43:02','ZZ','GNU Awk part 5','PLEASE do something about your sound quality. It is just painful to listen to constant pops, clicks, squeaks, booms... etc...','2017-12-11 12:31:17'),
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(2250,2441,'2017-12-11 13:11:47','x1101','Moving follow up to comments','Klaatu, I\'m moving my comments to the comment thread, so other people can see/respond as well. \r\n\r\nThank you for your continued efforts in demystifying our mystic arts. I feel like this set will be a good resource for on boarding folks interested in going from \"I use Linux\" to \"I manage Linux Servers\".','2017-12-11 13:16:59'),
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(2251,2184,'2017-12-11 15:49:16','Ken Fallon','Re: Audio','Hi ZZ,\r\n\r\nI had a listen to this show again, and the content came through loud and clear. Sure there were some artifacts in this show, but if you listen to other shows from b-yeezi, you\'ll see that this is not typical of his setup.\r\n\r\nWe all have a \"bad audio day\" but I would prefer to get shows that are imperfect, over not getting perfect shows. \"Our golden rule is Any audio is better than no audio.\"\r\n\r\nThanks for listening, and taking the time to comment. We are always interested in hearing from our listeners. Perhaps you could do a show and tell us your tech story, or any other story you like \"as long as it\'s of interest to hackers\". \r\n\r\nKen.','2017-12-11 15:52:50'),
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(2252,2314,'2017-12-12 20:40:59','NYbill','Its alive!','Well, its been a long time. But, I thought I\'d just pop in here to give a little closure. The motherboard sat on a shelf here for months. I realized I probably would never use it. \r\n\r\nSo, I brought the motherboard/CPU to our LUG and gave it to a buddy, Rusty1.\r\n\r\nToday I get this message:\r\n\r\nhttps://imgur.com/PXHmClW\r\n\r\nSo there you go, the cap repair worked! Jon can stop staying up nights wondering. ;)','2017-12-12 20:56:35'),
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(2253,2443,'2017-12-13 16:09:29','b-yeezi','Need to give this a try','Great show, as always. I have a few command line access and programs I\'ve written using yad that would be great to group together in a menu. I\'ll check out pdmenu for this. Thanks.','2017-12-13 16:12:12'),
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(2254,2445,'2017-12-15 20:31:35','Frank','Well Done','A fascinating and timely discussion.','2017-12-15 20:35:08'),
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(2255,2314,'2017-12-15 22:58:43','Jon KUlp','Insomnia','Whew, thanks, Bill! I still have trouble sleeping but at least it\'s not b/c of that motherboard. ;)','2017-12-16 10:32:54'),
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(2256,2297,'2017-12-17 20:58:25','rtsn','good stuff','Just wanted to say thanks for this, I really enjoyed the episode and some of the music. I find it kind of hard to find new music so this was pretty great!','2017-12-17 21:09:12'),
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(2257,2163,'2017-12-18 15:21:42','Ron Strelecki','GNU Awk, part four','I think if you put what you suggested in the notes (that inside a print statement, Awk interprets a comma as OFS) that would be perfect! When learning any language, context variation is a consistent bugaboo. Wait, why does a semi-colon mean one thing here, and something else entirely there? So doing it deliberately, and then pointing it out is definitely beneficial, and points out the internal workings of the language.','2017-12-18 15:40:41'),
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(2258,2452,'2017-12-19 20:52:05','Ken Fallon','retriever dog training','Seriously ?\r\n\r\n\"I don\'t think anyone on HPR would be interested in retriever dog training - I guess we won\'t be doing a show about that ?\"\r\n\r\nWords fail me.\r\n\r\nKen.\r\n\r\nHappy Birthday !!','2017-12-19 21:20:15'),
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(2259,2455,'2017-12-20 08:35:38','Ken Fallon','Wasting shows','You could have split this into two shows !','2017-12-20 08:47:17'),
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(2260,2448,'2017-12-20 14:34:37','STLShawn','Fascinating','I have worked with DOS and windows for twenty five years now. My only nix experience was with phone systems and hotel systems with which I administered through step by step procedures. I am now starting to learn a bit more command line Linux as I have started playing with raspberry pi computers and switched a couple of laptops to Xubuntu and Mint XFCE. \r\nAs you probably guessed, a lot of the show went over my head, but it is fascinating to hear the possibilities for automation that are available if I could learn more of Bash commands. This series has been very helpful to me in developing a desire to learn more and find things that I could try to automate. \r\nThank you very much for your hard work. \r\nShawn','2017-12-20 14:43:51'),
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(2261,2452,'2017-12-20 14:43:22','STLShawn','Would love dog training','I would love a show on retriever training! That would be so interesting. I think diversity is needed a bit. I mean, people are submitting great and wonderful tech, gaming, and discussion shows, but some rather odd the wall stuff would be wonderful.','2017-12-20 14:45:53'),
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(2262,2442,'2017-12-20 14:50:47','STLShawn','Peaceful','I ha e a habit of studying in a back room of my house with only the hum of a fan or some music in the background. I enjoyed putting this on and looping it while trying to trudge through a very dry book on learning Linux. \r\n\r\nThat reminds me, I should do an episode on more mature adults seeking their first degree. Maybe. I don’t know. I’ve never done anything like an audio recording,,,, but I had never attended a community college before last year either.','2017-12-20 15:00:42'),
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(2263,2448,'2017-12-20 17:12:26','Dave Morriss','Thanks Shawn','I\'m glad you found it interesting, and hope this series proves to be useful to you. I plan to do more shows on Bash functions and Bash features in general in the future.\r\n\r\nDave','2017-12-20 17:17:43'),
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(2264,2394,'2017-12-20 18:52:52','Ken Fallon','All set but ....','Got the kit but it has surface mount components - PANIC.','2017-12-20 18:57:37'),
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(2265,2442,'2017-12-21 12:52:43','Tony Hughes','Reply to Shawn','Thanks for the comment, I\'m glad you found it helpful in your studying. Linux Books can be quite dry and daunting with all the unfamiliar language when your first starting but worth persevering with. \r\n\r\nYou don’t need any special skills to record a show, just a digital audio recorder or PC, Phone, Tablet etc, and the ability to send that audio file to HPR via the net. All the rest can be taken care of by the wonderful team of volunteers who do such a great job with little recognition.\r\n\r\nAs Ken and Dave often say, you now owe us a show, LoL.','2017-12-21 16:04:13'),
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(2266,2448,'2017-12-21 12:55:18','Mike Ray','Bash shows','Keep it coming Dave.\r\n\r\nI do a lot of bash programming, mostly because I work on the assumption that if I need to type the same complex command-line more than twice it should be a script, to cut down on typing, trying to remember stuff, and to cut down on errors.\r\n\r\nI don\'t enjoy bash programming very much. Mostly because I hate not being able to use normal language constructs like:\r\n\r\nresult = function(argumments)\r\n\r\nSo the more tips and ideas from anybody else who faces the same questions the better','2017-12-21 16:04:13'),
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(2267,2448,'2017-12-21 19:04:13','Dave Morriss','Thanks Mike','Glad these are turning out to be useful.\r\n\r\nI have always been fascinated by what I guess can be called \'command languages\'. I have worked with the GEORGE operating system that had a fairly basic one, and VMS, which which had DCL (Digital Command Language), which grew to be fairly sophisticated during my time using it. However, in comparison, I find Bash to be considerably more sophisticated. Still not a true language with features like those you describe, but nevertheless worth working with I think.\r\n\r\nIt\'s this that motivates me to describe what can be done with Bash, and I amuse myself trying to do things that stretch my imagination a bit :-)\r\n\r\nDave','2017-12-21 19:06:18'),
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(2268,2447,'2017-12-21 19:32:53','Ken Fallon','Details','Do you have links or other notes ?','2017-12-21 19:37:53'),
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(2269,2438,'2017-12-23 03:39:52','Ron Strelecki','AWK part 8','It is strange what people pick up on in a tutorial. For instance, I\'d never run a program using: echo nn | ./program.awk ... It\'s a very handy little construction. I even popped the divisor program into my bin and named it \"isprime\" so I can just ask \"echo 913 | isprime\"? and get an answer.\r\n\r\nIt\'s often the little off the cuff details that catch attention. Thanks!','2017-12-23 07:17:00'),
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(2270,2438,'2017-12-24 23:10:52','Dave Morriss','Thanks Ron','I\'m glad you found something of interest in the episode.\r\n\r\nThis is really a Unix thing. The echo command writes to STDOUT by default, and Awk reads from STDIN unless you tell it otherwise, so joining the two like that in a pipeline (as it\'s called) achieves a useful result very simply.','2017-12-24 23:14:46'),
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(2271,2447,'2017-12-27 21:56:08','Klaatu','shownotes','I do intend to write some notes on this topic. I have no useful links; this episode exists because I can\'t find a howto online that\'s any good; they all presume the reader is familiar with how a certificate infrastructure works, or they assume the reader knows all about network routing, and so on. So for now, the audio version of the shownotes are embedded in the ogg file. Eventually, I\'ll write something up. Ideally, I\'ll write down the entire server series!','2017-12-27 22:33:37'),
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(2272,2454,'2017-12-28 20:15:53','Trucker Rich','Delivery and Content','The two of you came across as arrogant and I feel like you tried to hijack the HPR audience. I am not \"your listener\". I am a regular listener of HPR and it is pretty apparent that neither of you have listened for any length of time. If you had then you would have heard klaatu a hundred times or more. You would understand what is meant by \"open source\" and \"free software\" for this community. You would have realized that most of the hosts are just as \"f****** smart\" or smarter than you claim to be.\r\nThat being said, I did appreciate some of the topics that you touched upon. You could do a whole show on the Bally Astrocade instead of a just a brief diversion. The Huawei background and info could be another show. \r\nAnyway, thanks for contributing.','2017-12-28 20:25:39'),
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(2273,2455,'2017-12-29 00:42:01','Klaatu','Forgot a link','I failed to include the link to the source of the story:\r\nhttps://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/229831/Job-inSecurity','2022-02-14 13:18:04'),
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(2274,2448,'2017-12-29 16:03:41','Mike Ray','BASH_REMATCH','How about some shows about the various built-in variables? I have made use of BASH_REMATCH (dollar sign excluded because I assume it might break something), but I assume there are more I have missed.','2017-12-29 16:10:13'),
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(2275,2448,'2017-12-29 16:39:39','Dave Morriss','Re: BASH_REMATCH','Great suggestion.\r\n\r\nOn my list of future Bash topics I have Regular Expressions, quite near the top. That episode would include BASH_REMATCH of course.\r\n\r\nI have mentioned one or two of the other Bash variables in passing such as FUNCNAME , but there are many more.\r\n\r\nThanks for the feedback.\r\n\r\nBy the way, with our new comment system we strip HTML but take measures to try to ensure all other ASCII characters pass through unhindered. So dollar signs ($) shouldn\'t be a problem.','2017-12-29 16:41:25'),
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(2276,2422,'2017-12-29 23:00:07','busybusy','Kickstarter Revisited','I noticed that you mentioned that you are not a sales man and described a person you knew that was great a creating hype about a produce which may go against your personality. But I would say that to get best results from other people\'s stories about any Kickstarter like service, is to to have a prototype ready to go. It shows that you have something besides an idea and some direction which is why you need the money to bring it into production. I don\'t like selling either but if you believe in the game idea, had a prototype (rules, card layouts, etc.), then the IDEA will sell itself. People will see value in the what you are trying to achieve thus you are not selling anything but creating something people WANT to bring to fruition because it intrigues them as much as you. \r\n\r\nI just wanted bring another perspective. \r\n\"Ideas sell themselves because people see value in it.\"','2017-12-30 08:03:12'),
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(2277,2417,'2017-12-29 23:23:16','busybusy','A Different Time','You brought back a lot of old memories when you mentioned Transmeta. I thought it was a unique potential game changer in the CPU market but it no push to be able to really break into the monolithic market forces of the time. Bummer!\r\n\r\nThanks for sharing your find, the story, and that it still works!! ;)','2017-12-30 08:03:12'),
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(2278,2455,'2017-12-30 15:00:45','Dave Morriss','Added forgotten link','Hi Klaatu,\r\n\r\nI forgot to tell you that I added the link you mentioned to the notes. I also updated the show notes on archive.org to include them.\r\n\r\nFor future reference you can let us know about any changes you need to be made to the notes by email to admin at hackerpublicradio.org. Since we don\'t propagate comments to archive.org (well, not yet anyway) changing the notes and propagating those gets any changes to the wider audience.','2017-12-30 15:02:49'),
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(2279,2456,'2018-01-01 08:23:26','Mike Ray','Work load','I sort of drifted off a bit during the talk about how to embed show notes and other stuff in video, so I may be a bit off track here.\r\n\r\nBut I caught sentences that included talk of oscilloscope traces of the frequency distribution of the host and other stuff, like the HPR logo etc.\r\n\r\nThis made me think of a mantra I have always used in my professional life, and that is, don\'t promise to, or start to, provide something periodically on a regular basis that you are likely to regret.\r\n\r\nI don\'t know about how other people consume HPR, but I typically do it in bed with my iPhone. Typically, if the show contains stuff I need to look at, like Dave\'s shows about bash, I will go to the site the next day and copy and paste stuff from Dave\'s notes into a markdown file which I then file away on my RAID system.\r\n\r\nSome shows I delete just given the subject without even listening, typically anything which looks like a \'how I make coffee\' or \'how I make a glass of water\'. Other shows I listen to right through without any hesitation because of the reputation, in my own mind, of the quality of the hosts past shows.\r\n\r\nBut, on to my point...I would not recommend you make a rod for your own back by promising stuff like video embedded show notes, oscilloscope traces or any other stuff that is incresing your work load further than before.\r\n\r\nMaybe I\'m biased here by the fact that video is pointless for me because I can\'t see. And I have to admit to being scared that the next step will be to ONLY have the show notes embedded in a video, and then I\'m sorry but I will have to shoot you.','2018-01-01 08:26:47'),
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(2280,2456,'2018-01-01 08:29:50','Mike Ray','Soldering Iron','My ears pricked up when Ken was extolling the virtues of a 25 dollar temperature controlled soldering iron. Somehow I have missed that recommendation, if it was ever aired.\r\n\r\nWhat is the make and model of the iron?\r\n\r\nI hear a loud cry of \'why does a blind man want a soldering iron?\' from the land of clogs and windmills...\r\n\r\nI do solder occasionally, especially things like PL259 coax plugs, and even components into vero board. But more recently I have decided my fingertips are too valuable to me for me to risk them, and anyway the plastic surgery bills were eroding my beer fund.\r\n\r\nBut, I regularly take stuff to the local Linux User Group, where my good friend Tony Wood, AKA \'soldering slave\' solders stuff for me under my guidance.\r\n\r\nUnfortunately Tony\'s soldering iron is only one step short of being a big lump of copper on the end of a steel rod which he plunges into hot coals before bringing it to bear on the legs of a surface mount AVR micro-controller.\r\n\r\nI have been thinking of getting a temp controlled iron I can stuff in my rucksack and lug to the LUG (see what I did there?)','2018-01-01 08:32:07'),
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(2281,2456,'2018-01-01 11:38:15','Dave Morriss','Soldering Iron','Hi Mike,\r\n\r\nI bought myself the solder station Ken was mentioning having seen it on Big Clive\'s YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtM5z2gkrGRuWd0JQMx76qA). I recommended it to Ken and he also bought one.\r\n\r\nThe link I sent him was: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Digital-Electronic-Soldering-Station-Temperature/dp/B00KBPN1ZU\r\n\r\nI also bought a few extra handles and a load of spare tips, which I found on eBay. I can send you eBay links by email if you want, but they may not be current any more.\r\n\r\nThinking of the big lump of copper on the end of a rod, that\'s what I learnt to solder with at school. We used a gas heating unit, so we\'d advanced a bit from the hot coals :-)','2018-01-01 11:40:40'),
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(2282,2456,'2018-01-01 12:48:06','Mike Ray','Soldering','I also learned to solder at school with the thing we\'re talking about thrust into the heap of clinkers heated with a gas torch.\r\n\r\nThe first thing the metal work teacher got us to make was a tin-plate tray. This involved cutting a V out of each corner of a square of tin-plate, folding it up slightly and running solder into the mating of the edges to make the tray.\r\n\r\nUnfortunately, I never managed to cut the Vs accurately, and ended up trying to solder across a gap after bemnding the cut outs back and forth to break them.\r\n\r\nAfter about six months the other kids were making hasps and staples, or paint scrapers, milling stuff on the milling machine, and I was still trying to get solder to bridge a one millimetre gap :-)','2018-01-01 12:50:41'),
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(2283,2456,'2018-01-01 18:08:55','Frank','U. S. College Course Numbering','Regarding \"101,\" 102,\" etc.\r\n\r\nIt is common, but by no means universal that U. S. colleges use this means of numbering courses. Generally, 100 refers to Freshman (first year) courses; 200 to Sophomore (second-year) level courses, up to 400 and above for advanced or graduate-level courses. Generally, the more advanced the course, the more narrow and in-depth its focus.\r\n\r\n\"101\" is usually a basic intro course, \"102\" the next intro course, and so on. A first semester U. S. History course would be History 101 (say, colonization to Civil War); the following second semester course would be History 102 (say, Civil War to Present). (As an aside, judging by what\'s happening domestically in my country, I have concluded that those courses are no longer taught, but that\'s another matter). History 412, just to pick a random topic, might be an exhaustive dive into the Early Federal period (roughly 1790-1832).\r\n\r\nAgain, this is not a universal system, jut a very common, perhaps the most common system.\r\n\r\nI do not know the origins of this system.\r\n\r\nHere\'s a more detailed article from Cal State--Northridge: https://catalog.csun.edu/policies/course-numbering-system/','2018-01-01 18:11:54'),
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(2284,2399,'2018-01-02 07:13:46','dodddummy','One more use case and a generalization','At about the same time I created this episode, I got a monitor from AOC. You can access the settings menu via 3 physical buttons on the from of the right bezel. The problem is they are those buttons you can\'t really feel. There are labels on them but those labels are hard to feel, too.\r\n\r\nThis resulted in numerous failed attempts to make needed adjustments. Frustrated me enough I\'ve used one monitor for the past couple of weeks.\r\n\r\nToday I finally got around to solve this problem. At first I put the monitor on it\'s back so I could get a good look see. With good lighting I was able to see the buttons clearly and make the necessary adjustments and have dual monitors again. Hooray!\r\n\r\nIn on of the most epic DUH! moments, I thought ot this episode and added landmarks to those buttons. So far so good.\r\n\r\nGeneralization:\r\nIf you have something that would benefit from tactile landmarks, superglue might be the answer.','2018-01-02 07:25:57'),
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(2285,2435,'2018-01-02 17:34:03','Frank','SSH','This is the best description of ssh public/private keys that I have encountered.','2018-01-02 17:36:07'),
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(2286,2454,'2018-01-03 00:02:43','Casper','Delivery and Content','Thank you for the feedback. \r\n\r\nWe are committed to doing better work in the years ahead. We do not want to hijack the community, only provide content and contribute to the community to keep it moving along.\r\n\r\nWe are working to cross-collaborate with other members of the HPR community to better tune our delivery.','2018-01-03 07:54:40'),
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(2287,2455,'2018-01-03 14:31:50','ClaudioM','Fantastic \"Audio Drama\" version of i0!','A wonderful conclusion to this excellent series of RPG episodes! Looking forward to more of these. Kudos to all involved, including those who contributed the sound effects provided by Klaatu.\r\n\r\nKlaatu: the moral of this story is that you can never please Ken Fallon. :-p','2018-01-03 14:35:38'),
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(2288,2456,'2018-01-03 22:07:42','Dave Morriss','Learning to solder at school','I just realised I still have a little metal scoop I made at school. It was made from what I think is tin plated sheet steel bent in a box bender with tabs that had to be soldered. Getting those tabs properly aligned and soldered was a challenge and there are some *wide* gaps where the solder just didn\'t bridge them.\r\n\r\nIt wasn\'t a show-stopper, because I remember learning to braze some tools for the fireplace later and making tyre levers at the forge. Fun times :-)','2018-01-03 22:11:34'),
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(2289,2459,'2018-01-04 15:31:47','dodddummy','My new favorite episode','If this episode doesn\'t warm your heart, you don\'t have one.','2018-01-04 15:35:38'),
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(2290,2459,'2018-01-04 17:20:53','Dave Morriss','Thanks for this Joey','I was surprised and very happy that my episode about pdmenu resulted in you becoming an HPR contributor. I hope you feel motivated to contribute more!\r\n\r\nIt was a great episode. Also, as a Perl enthusiast I\'m delighted to hear that\'s where pdmenu originated :-)','2018-01-04 17:59:13'),
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(2291,2458,'2018-01-04 22:20:58','Xoke','You missed uMatrix','https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/umatrix/ogfcmafjalglgifnmanfmnieipoejdcf?hl=en\r\n\r\nNoScript, but done by the guy who did ublock so they play well together\r\n\r\nThere is a learning curve so I don\'t recommend it for my family, but does work great for techies.','2018-01-04 22:22:36'),
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(2292,2460,'2018-01-06 22:17:59','Brian in Ohio','alien brothers podcast','Ok I gave it a try and listened to the complete 3rd episode of alien brothers and I think this series of podcasts is terrible. If these guys are trying to be funny, they aren\'t. If they are trying to be smart, they are not. If this is a kick starter like attempt to gage the market for a podcast i think that\'s a poor use of hacker public radio. Please put these shows in the emergency queue so when we start hearing them we\'ll know the end is near.','2018-01-06 22:20:44'),
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(2293,2460,'2018-01-08 12:55:08','Ken Fallon','HPR has no length restriction','From the about page \"There is no restriction on how long the show can be..\"\r\n\r\nWe have had 71 shows longer than one with the longest running 02:36:58.','2018-01-08 12:56:49'),
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(2294,2460,'2018-01-08 20:21:55','Rutiger of the Alien Brothers Podcast','Hi Brian from Ohio','-r\r\n\r\nHi Brian - \r\n\r\nThanks for your feedback! \r\n\r\nAs far as I know, we’re not being or striving to be anything funnier or smarter or longer or Kickstarter-supported than being the Alien Brothers Podcast hosted on Hacker Public Radio, at their consider help, support and bandwidth/space largess. \r\n\r\nOur over-used phrased is this is the Alien Brothers Podcast, and not some other one. \r\n\r\nIf we’re “terrible”, we invite a lucid critique because, I mean, we already know we’re terrible. It’s the Alien Brothers Podcast. I can only assume by your use of that single word you mean “tremendous” as in “Oz the Great and Terrible”. \r\n\r\nCasper and I have had conversations acknowledging our segments are too long. \r\n\r\nKeep coming back! -r\r\n[1] although I believe length is important is certain contexts, but I know Casper and I are conscious of the fact our submissions are almost certainly too long','2018-01-08 20:25:28'),
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(2295,2435,'2018-01-08 21:45:54','Klaatu','Re: yum whatprovides?','I somehow missed this comment until the monthly show read it aloud.\r\n\r\nAgreed, Frank. yum (and dnf, now) really is a great interface to packages. I have found zypper in openSUSE to be pretty neat, too.','2018-01-08 21:54:15'),
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(2296,2449,'2018-01-10 14:56:40','folky','Orgzly','I also had problems with MobileOrg, but found another solution. I have an owncloud instance where my orgmode directory is mirrored. On the android device I have installed the owncloud client-app and orgzly. Orgzly is syncing to the local owncloud org directory and the owncloud client is then syncing with the server. It sound harder than it is in RL.','2018-01-10 14:59:00'),
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(2297,2461,'2018-01-11 16:03:28','jimzat','gitolite and HPR2446','Thank you for these two episodes (2446 & 2461)!\r\n\r\nI have been using git at work for over 5-1/2 years on two desktops and one laptop (1 Windows XP and 2 Linux) using ssh keys that I have manually put in place on the various machines.\r\n\r\nI currently have over 60 unique repositories of which some are customer configuration specific and some are globally common.\r\n\r\nAt this point in time, I need to allow access for other developers to \"my\" repos. It took me around a day to implement the method explained in episode 2446 and less than a couple of hours to replace that with using gitolite! Managing the keys and wildcard repos within gitolite is so much easier than the manual requirements of the method from episode 2446.','2018-01-11 16:07:48'),
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(2298,2460,'2018-01-12 05:54:41','Klaatu','Another brilliant episode.','The last time I heard an audio performance this good was at the Yes concert in Denver. Sadly, the band couldn\'t make it but the opening act was pretty great.','2018-01-12 08:06:04'),
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(2299,2461,'2018-01-13 02:49:36','Klaatu','@jimzat','Qapla\'!','2018-01-13 09:25:11'),
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(2300,2422,'2018-01-13 03:00:27','Klaatu','@busybusy','Yes, maybe I should have provided an easy-to-download temporary version of the game, plus the full rules. Thanks for the idea. If I try again, maybe that\'s something I\'ll try.','2018-01-13 09:25:11'),
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(2301,2462,'2018-01-13 23:11:11','Ahuka','At long last!','I am a fanatic about the Lensman series. In fact, my e-mail address comes from that series.','2018-01-13 23:13:42'),
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(2302,2466,'2018-01-16 09:41:51','Sundar','Useful tool for streamlining screencapture','This sounds like one those long-tail tools that you never knew how much you needed, until you came across them. I have a few like that (and that\'s one of the topics I have in my \'one day when I make a HPR recording\' ideas), ShareX might go in that list if it works on my potato of a laptop.\r\n\r\n(But making an informative, quality podcast episode doesn\'t excuse your proud mispronunciation of \'gif\', Xoke. Please repent by sharing ten gifs of adorable kittens/puppies online.)','2018-01-16 09:46:11'),
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(2303,2455,'2018-01-22 19:06:20','Draco Metallium','Great show!','Do you plan to continue recording more of these? I hope so!','2018-01-22 20:56:31'),
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(2304,2466,'2018-01-22 23:38:20','Xoke','\'jif\'','jif will always be a micro liquid...\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4im-mENeBmg','2018-01-23 07:42:13'),
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(2305,2455,'2018-01-23 21:41:38','Ron P','Excellent! Encore!','Loved listening to this series. As someone who wishes they had more free time to get into Pathfinder/D&D/etc. (picked up the Pathfinder Beginners Box, but currently it\'s collecting dust bunnies) I hope this idea/series continues!','2018-01-23 21:43:34'),
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(2306,2474,'2018-01-24 04:01:28','dodddummy','They won\'t sell.','How did I miss this from Hasbro Interactive? Cool.\r\n\r\nAs for making a new console which will play the old cartridges, I don\'t think that would be economically feasible and doubt many would buy them. In my experience people who want to play on real hardware, want the actual hardware.\r\n\r\nPerhaps this will change as more and more old systems die out. In the case of the 2600, while I lost countless hours of my youth to it, there are only a handful of 2600 games worth playing.\r\n\r\nI don\'t see any major player creating such a system. Perhaps a small, expensive runs, which would make most people use emulators on machines they already have.','2018-01-24 08:46:36'),
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