216 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
216 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4156
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Title: HPR4156: Badger 2040
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4156/hpr4156.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 20:29:04
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4156 from Monday 8 July 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Badger 2040.
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It is hosted by Kevin and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Kevin discusses his experience with the Badger 2040 from Pi More Eye.
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Hello, hello, this is Kevin from the TuxJump podcast,
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and I'm here to bring you another episode of HPR based around a Pi project.
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I do feel this is a wee bit of a cheat today,
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because rather than using a traditional Pi and building something up around it,
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I actually want to talk about the Badger 2040, which I bought from Pi Moreoni.
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Now, this is an e-ink display essentially,
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and but it's a wee bit more advanced than that.
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This thing is clearly designed as the name suggests, Badger, to be a Badger.
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It's clear to get it on its own, which I decided to go for,
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or you can spend a wee bit more money and it comes with a battery pack and a lanyard
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and a few other wee accessories.
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However, I'm going to say from the outset, I don't think it's worth it.
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Don't bother with the accessories, and I'll tell you why in a minute.
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Just go purely to bind the Badger itself.
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There are two options, there's the Badger 2040,
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and it's all built in, the Pi is all part of it,
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or if you go for the Badger 2040 W, it comes with a Pico attached to it, a Pi Pico.
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It's a wee bit more bulky, but it does come with Wi-Fi if you want it.
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Now, you may think, what in the world does a Badger come with Wi-Fi for?
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Well, this is actually interactive.
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Now, let's get this straight out.
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By default, this is primarily used as a Badger neink display.
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However, they've added some bells and whistles onto it.
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To power it, you need to connect it with a USB-C.
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If you buy the accessory packet, it comes with a double A battery connection, you need two of them.
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Now, that's quite bulky.
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You can use a V, there's various different types of them.
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Oddly enough, Pi Maroni themselves don't seem to sell a lot of them.
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If you actually want, in the UK, certainly, to get the different varieties of batteries,
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then you're going to need to go to the Pi Hut.
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When you load it up, you've got a bar across the top,
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it's Badger OS, and it shows the amount of space that you've used up.
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It appears I've currently using about, I don't know, 25% of the quarter of the space.
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I believe it's actually two meg, the space, so this is not designed to hold an awful lot.
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The first thing you'll get is badge, and then you've got clock, and then you've got e-book.
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Now, you may think, oh, clock, quite handy, wait a minute.
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If you're not going to keep this connected, that clock will not keep time.
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So, if you do really want it as a clock for some unbeknown reason, I mean the clock, click on it.
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It's very nice.
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Now, I do wish to point out this is not a touchscreen interactive.
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It comes with three buttons along the bottom, A, B, and C, and that lets you choose the options.
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You can scroll up and down the screen by two arrow keys over on the right hand side.
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If you select something and you want to go back, you press a combination of A and C together.
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So, badge is primarily whatever you want it to be.
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You can upload it, they've got their own template, and you can just edit it to suit yourself,
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or you can choose a totally different badge.
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That's entirely up to you.
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So, as I said, you've got a clock, and if you're going to click on it, very nice.
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Quite, actually, quite like the font, it's quite different.
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It's a yearly English style of font.
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That does look quite smart.
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It's got an average minute seconds, and it's got the date.
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Now, to come back at it, we have got an e-book reader.
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Yes, you heard me right, an e-book reader, and it actually comes with an e-book.
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And it's the Wind and the Willows.
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And it gives you the whole waffle about this public domain,
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and it's been released, and there's a source, and then you go through everything.
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Any time there's a picture, it just gives you the square brackets with the words illustration.
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I'm going through, I've placed about 16 times on this, and this is still on the contents page.
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That's it, finally, go to the first bits of writing.
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Obviously, you're not going to read it as a whole book appearing.
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Instead, you've got six lines.
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And is it readable?
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Yes, the fonts aren't fantastic.
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It can be a wee bit difficult to decipher, unless you're looking at it very closely,
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like, so between an o and an a, or even an e and an o as well.
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But it is readable.
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It certainly is readable.
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I personally think that's a bit of a gimmick if I'm being entirely honest.
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So if we go down to three rows, and if we go down to the second row, you've got fonts,
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which I have changed several times, but it doesn't change very much of it.
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It seems to only be certain things, it changes.
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Because I was hoping to get a slightly clearer font to try that e-book reader,
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and unfortunately, I wasn't able to.
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There's the image, which you can use, and again, obviously, with this being e-ink,
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it's only monochrome.
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So black and white, but it comes with the tone image of the badger,
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holding, I think, is a pair of skis and willing black glasses.
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And in fact, it's the same image as actually on the back of the 2040.
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There's a help option, which just essentially says,
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up and down, changes page, a, b or c, launch an app, a and c, exit an app.
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And that's it.
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No more.
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So there's your extensive help menu.
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And we go down to the bottom.
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And I get the option of info.
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And this is just a wee bit about, you know, made by Pymarolmi,
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powered by MicroPython, Jewelcore, RP2040.
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I'm not going to read this whole thing.
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There's a whole page of it for more information, visit Pymarolmi.com,
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forward slash badger2040.
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So yeah, go and check that out if you want to find it a bit more.
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There is a QR Gen, which doesn't mean you put, you type in
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what you want and it creates a zone QR code.
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I haven't really played a bout for this from what I see is you,
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you edit the code and it'll generate and show a QR code
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based on what you've entered, the URL you've entered.
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And there's also a to-do list.
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And the to-do list does actually allow you to tick as you go along.
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You press a middle button to tick, you press up and down to move up and down
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and ANC to move left and right.
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This is actually quite smart to right now.
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The default is badger badger badger badger badger mushroom mushroom sneak.
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So make of that what you will.
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That's a handy wee shopping list.
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But I think we have to look at this.
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What is this Pymarolmi?
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This is a badge.
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You know, I don't care what other things they put on it.
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This is a badge.
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And when I'm waiting a badge, I do not want to be attaching a battery onto it.
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So now if you do want to wear a badge, word of warning,
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it's kind of a daft thing that I would do.
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Make sure you load up the badge again before you unplug it
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because whatever you unplug it with, it will remain.
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Now you may think, why in the world did I get this?
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Well, plain simply, I am going to my very first dog camp all been well in October
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because it never works out.
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I'm a teacher to three and it never works out in time for the school holidays.
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It's certainly not the Scottish school holidays.
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So when I saw I could make it this year, I decided I'm going to get this.
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And I thought, I'm not showing up with a sticky label basically stuck on a pin badge with a kevy on it instead.
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I thought, come on now, this is a geeks place.
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Definitely I will not be the only one with any ink display.
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So I looked up and I decided to go for this one purely because it is designed as a badge
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and it's actually got the slot and everything for the lanyard.
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The badge, it's nice and clear.
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You can play about with it if you want, but one thing I would like to point out is
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it won't, you connect this to your PC via USB, it doesn't read anything,
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because essentially it's a separate computer, so it's not like plugging in a thumb drive.
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So to connect with it, you need to install what you call thorny.
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There's loads of different things online telling you how to do this.
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But essentially to change anything on the ink display,
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you pretty much need to install thorny and connect to the badge
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and then edit the code.
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Now, a word of warning, and this took me a week while I was editing the templates
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and putting them on and it was thorny was throwing up an error message.
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Not that it wasn't connecting, not that it wasn't saving,
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but the problem was that it was saying that there was an error in my code.
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It didn't like something I'd written and I was like, oh, how can I get around this?
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And then I realized it's because the part that was looking at was just some text I had typed in
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that was actually the display on the badge and it was trying to read this as code.
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So just be really, it's not that it's an actual error, it's just saying that it's the north code.
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Yeah, so I must admit, I do love this.
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It's a great wee badge. I do think that the W's pointless personally
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because it's really not that usable.
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Plus at the end of the day, most people have phones with them.
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I do have an ebook reader as well.
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I don't like reading ebooks on my phones, I find them too wee.
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This is much smaller.
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So I find this the additional part a bit of a pointless,
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a little bit of an entirely honest.
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Yes, it's quite smart and it's good that you can enter one part,
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you can interact with a Zatalyst, you can check off stuff and you're to-do list.
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But even that, with to-do list, I like to edit them quite quickly.
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I would actually need to bring from its users,
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bring a computer with thorny and a connecting cable.
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Then I'd have to edit the to-do list through thorny using the Python script.
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You know, it's just to be honest.
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We have a far for something that there are so many open-source,
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localized to-do lists available on F-throid for your phone or whichever,
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whatever you like to get your applications.
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So I don't know if I would use any other features.
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Purely though, as an e-ink display, it's nice.
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It's a good size, very light.
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And it seems like it's made from good quality material.
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I don't fear that this is actually going to break any time soon.
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It's going very often up in which you plan your holders.
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If you want to check this out, and as I said,
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go pop along, pymarony.com at the time of recording
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that appears to be both available.
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And this is another episode in the Py series.
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I feel a wee bit about sheet.
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But I've got another few episodes in the series coming up.
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So don't worry, I'm not quite finished yet.
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For those of you who are maybe getting a bit bored of the game,
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and I do have one more retro gaming device that I made up to review.
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And then I'm going to go on with a few more things that are considerably more practical.
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So if you're not actually a fan of the game, then there's only one more to go.
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So please bear with me.
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So thank you for listening, and please, if you have time,
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please think about recording one of these.
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If you're saying you don't know how to,
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it's as simple as getting a sound recording app on your phone,
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recording it, and then sending it in.
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It really that is it.
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You don't have to be a specialist DJ.
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You don't have your professional podcast.
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As you can clearly hear from my voice.
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So this is a community based once, but as the warning always exists,
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when HPR runs out of episodes, that is it finished.
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So please do consider uploading something.
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So yeah, on that note, I will bid you farewell.
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Until next time, bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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At Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive, and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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