351 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
351 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2821
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Title: HPR2821: Interviewing some exhibitors at the 2019 vcfe.org event
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2821/hpr2821.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 17:19:31
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---
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An HonestHose.com.
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And hello everybody and welcome with another podcast by me, Gidrone Beton.
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This time I'm trying something new.
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I bought myself a toy to be precisely a bought myself a Zoom H4 and Pro and I just had an
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old mic laying around as sure as M58 I believe and I thought well can't I just do some interviews?
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I don't know I've never really done any interviews so I thought let's give it a try and since I was
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anyway at the VCFE in Munich this weekend and for those unfamiliar with the event VCFV stands
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for vintage computer festival Europe. I thought well I'm being one of the people exhibiting there.
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I brought my own AS400 and three twin externals, set it up and had myself a blast telling people
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about this completely antiquated and well my system is and completely different computer system
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from well what you're familiar with probably like Linux and Windows and Apple.
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Anyway so I brought my Zoom equipment my mic and I thought well at some point later on a day
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let's just interview a couple of guys and what you're about to hear is the result. Now I'm not
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going to say that's any good because I don't think it is and it's I'm just rambling and they're just
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rambling and well maybe just maybe it's you find it endotainment or interesting or fun or whatever
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sorry just do me this one favor if you think this is by any means interesting or you have a positive
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experience just let me know in the in the comments because I'm pretty curious what you think of
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this well let's say first experiment. So without further ado I'm going to merge in the files that
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I recorded maybe here and there I'll interrupt to clarify stuff but all in all well let's see
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what happens so here goes. Okay so I'm now standing at the VCFE the vintage computer festival
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Europe in Munich Munich and I'm standing next to somebody who calls himself Stechschwein.
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Can you tell me your Stechschwein? Not actually the Stechschwein is something I built or we built
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my buddy and me. My name is Thomas Woynke and that guy kneeling over there in front of his computer
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is Marco Lauker and the Stechschwein is some pretty much a team effort to build a homebrew
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computer that might have existed in the 80s so in the in the heyday of the 8-bit computer era and
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so that was the actual goal back then and since then a bit of feature creep happened and I don't
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think this would be possible back in the 80s we have a couple of newer components but yeah okay so
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and what processor did you choose? It's a 6.5 CO2 so we are both Commodore buffs so we are pretty much
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into 6.5 or 2 assembler so the 6.5 or 2 was the logical choice for us also it was the only
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processor we are really fluent in in assembler fluent ish I might say so yeah why not
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and when you say feature creep what kind of features so you I guess you start with a processor board
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but what happens next? We started off with a with a with a breadboard put the 6.5 CO2 on there and
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a bit of wiring we we wired the the database to a knob instruction and just watch what happens
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and we went from there so we added ROM and added some let it execute some some simple code and
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they added RAM and it executed and not that much simple code and so on we added a serial interface
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so we could upload code from our from from our laptops and be able to run actual programs then
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and yeah and then stuff just started to to happen ideas we just started to exist we added an SD card
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as as as mass storage and other things we added a video chip that was something where Marco
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came in basically we started off with a TMS 9929 and we upgraded since then to the V9958
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which is the successor of the successor and is much more capable than we have a sound chip
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and these are chips which are already from mid to late 80s so this is slightly slightly after
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the 8-bit heyday so I think we have a some some overshoot here on our goal but yeah it's
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happens to be a pretty awesome 8-bit computer if I may say so and it's a lot of fun
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since then fun is important of course do you know maybe of this this initiative that I saw
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on Facebook with a guy that wants to rebuild the Commodore in a way and tries to design
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new hardware have you heard about it I'm not sure since I don't have Facebook so
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yeah it's a hidden group on Facebook and you need to know about it no no idea so okay
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a lot of people doing stuff is come with Commodore hardware so I don't know about this
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particular one oh okay well thanks a lot for answering this questions you for asking me stuff
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you like to talk about or stuff it's your normal days at home don't are not full of opportunity
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of this so thanks yeah time is always a short factor and people who listen to you
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actually well try it on a heck of public radio people tend to listen yeah okay maybe I will yeah
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okay so the next stop that I'm making is with this other kind of equipment and it's called an
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NSC MCS CPM system I have no idea what I'm looking at who are you yes my name is Fritz Dodger
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and this let us NSC means national semi-conductors so this is the system a CBM system from the year
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80 80 bond 80 81 now 81 81 81 81 yes not not 89 81 90 81 80 81 yes a machine with
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a Z80 a CPU processor system and a floppy disk drive to floppy disk drive eight inch no eight
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sold well yeah yeah you understand okay it's an eight inch floppy drive yes yes you yes here you
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can see but you cannot hear inside this computer unit our three printed circuit boards are working
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on a multi-pass system so the multi-pass maybe you know multi-pass comes from Intel Intel has developed
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multi-pass on on this multi-pass three hardware are installed so the first is the processor part
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on this processor part you have a CPU you have to count you have to timer you have to
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pure parallel boards and two serial controllers and there is no no RAM on this board on this processor
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board only two kilobyte e-prom memory which contains them a minimal bios system for the system
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and and what kind of processor is on that board is a Z80 Z80 Z80 yes oh yeah Z80
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yes the second the second board inside multi-pass board is a 64k byte uh
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RAM memory board yeah it's not a normal RAM is a dynamic RAM must be always refreshed you know
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it's also from this time 81 and the chips you see many many chips in chips in 16k by one bit so you
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need 16 factor four and then by eight four eight 32 32 chips you need for this 64 kilobyte yes
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and looking at a photo it's a lot of chips yes a lot of chips really yes okay and last but not
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least a board a floppy controller board yes on this floppy controller board you can connect
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to two two floppies to a eight sole floppy or to a 3.5 sole floppy disk so three and a half inch floppy
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drives an adding floppy drives you can connect to the floppy controller board okay and and what
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was this system used for was it a hobbyist computer or this I do not know what what I know is this
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system was in use until to the year 88 and in 88 I buy the system on a on a computer market yes
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for hobbyists and my thing with this computer was okay I know on this computer I have a serial
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interface which where I can read in synchron signals not asynchronous you know you have always
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in PC systems but this system supports the synchron signal and I use this for satellites for
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receiving the satellites telemetry data which coming out on therefore amateur function satellites
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amateur radio satellites on the frequency 2 meter in on 145 megahertz there is a bacon on the
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satellite and they're sent down in a 400 port stream by a face modulation and this modulation
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goes through a special hardware and after this special hardware the sound is split it in data
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in the clock signal and these two signals I can bring in in my computer and then I can read
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the information the telemetry data from the from the satellite so this is this was my first
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application for this computer okay so you're except besides being a computer hobbyist you're
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also a radio a hobby a radio amateur yes my my call is Delacol for November Bravo Echo
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okay repeat that please yeah Delacol for November Bravo Echo okay so any radio hobbyist now
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knows your call sign I can look you up yeah yeah you can look but I'm not so active maybe I was
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active 20 years ago now no more yes this was my first application on this machine and second
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application maybe if you if I start the operating system on this machine I can also start a
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duo bus call duo bus call in one of the first versions so the duo bus call version is version
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2.00b this is the one of this version turbo bus call 2.00b that's really really really old yes and I
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can also start M basic M basic from the year from the year 1977 yes really old also yes
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yes and on the disks I buy this system on the disk there is also a gain for for basic
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is called Star Trek oh yes Star Trek yeah yeah I know yeah there's a long time ago only with
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only with letters only and scroll ups always yes simple game simple game yes yeah well thank you
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a lot for thank you very much for this small interview and well good luck with your system
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for the next years I hope maybe I take it in the can I know more excellent we will see yeah we will see
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okay very good okay so now I'm at my third booth and now I'm standing next to what's
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this is a S5 program Milgerete PG 675 and the PG 685 under CPM 86 I have no clue what this is
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so who are you and what am I looking at my name is Klaus Lloyd from Nürnberg Germany and you look
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at Siemens program programming units for old S5 PLCs or SPS is in German and what is a PLC
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PLC is a programmable logic controller for industrial equipment you can put it in an electrical
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cabinet put some wires on it make a program load it into it and then you have a controller for
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your machine okay so and you use a Siemens sort of PC to develop programs to upload to PLC
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device no I do not this I okay I did this before 20 or 25 years now this operating machines are
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historical and they are here on the show so the the people can see it and I can demonstrate how it
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works yes but otherwise this old stuff is useless today it's useless yes it's nearly useless maybe
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somebody has an old machine and then for him maybe it's it can be useful but you can do the same
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also with a with a PC with a modern PC and with an old software this software on this machine
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you can run also on a PC and for the PC you have a converter from the serial a port to the PLC
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and then you can do it on the PC this technique is from the late 80s and in the beginning of the
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90s you can you could use it still but then you move to PCs yeah that's the late 80s sorry
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but this you say early 80s or late 80s late 80s okay late 80s yeah maybe this was 86 this old one
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this peachy 7675 peachy programming unit 675 this is the model number and this one maybe was
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very end of the 90s with hard disk and the other one the old one was put it only from the
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disk head it looks to me like a sort of a transportable computer with an old CRT monitor tube
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and the the the the the lid of the case is also the keyboard with five and a quarter inch floppy
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drives that that's what I see and and very Siemens like keys round keys absolutely absolutely correct
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very beautiful Siemens keyboards okay you think they're beautiful and then maybe other people
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have another opinion on that I won't go into that but yeah and it's colorful
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um clearly so are you develop on these portable PCs and then you upload it to an S5 PLC
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yes this is right this is right for example I have here a very small program only with four lines
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the first line load loads a bite one moment please repeat that question okay okay you can see
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here a very small demonstration program on this S5 95 PLC there is an output bite it's counting
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and in the program you see I load I load the output bite I load a constant number one the constant
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with the value one I make an plus F this means add it and to edit and then transfer it out
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to the output bite and so it counts and cyclically this program runs cyclically simple binary counter
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yes it's a very silly program but for demonstration it's okay on the other programming unit moment
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this was wrong there we should see a program in letter programming language with two conducts
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in Sirius input 0.0 and input 0.1 and then if this boss is on then the output comes also the one I
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can show you here one switch the second switch and the output is one you can make here graphical
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programming you can do this also on the SM machine but I show it here this is letter programming
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then I can switch this language to logic programming block then you can see
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end gate or gate and output substitution or whatever and the third one is this STL structure text
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no no it's just takes language like and you said you have been programming these systems for
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25 years what kind of applications did you build I was in a comedy for aluminum fabrication
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we had it made a modification on the machines we was in the in standard in German repair looking
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for the problems and we used this program in units and then we have made very small automatic
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machines for making aluminum parts okay yeah clear well thank you very much for your time no problem
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I'm here today and tomorrow yeah today and tomorrow so here I am again while I was standing on
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the VCF with my my A's for hundreds and terminals next to me was a stand called Nemesis and I have
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no clue what it is but I'm now standing next to two of the people of the Nemesis project so can
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you introduce yourself and then let's start with what Nemesis is who are you hi my name is Astrid Jacob
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I'm an American living in Munich and I'm actually a fairly late Nemesis wizard but I'm a very
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good friend with the mud gods Nate who's next to me and basically many years ago when it was very
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sick and had a cold I asked him to restart this online multi-user dungeon so snake how about you
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well I'm I'm a native Munich not American this game was actually running three times already
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as in three phases and she yeah she made me started up for the second and for the third time
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so usually it was the first one was at the university and it was running there for three years three
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years four years from 90 to 94 and after that I had it running on the actual in the real hardware
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we have here and this was basically the original hardware where it was also running on the at the
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university which is a deck station okay the company deck is long gone now in the meantime even the
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company bought them is gone and so this is pretty pretty old hardware like 30 years now and the fun
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to run is on the the the the sense of running this on the old hardware is because of the vintage
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computer festival yeah that's but we didn't just want to show the old hardware so we want to run
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it and so this was the idea behind bringing the game here normally the game is running on more
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than computer a really a reachable on the internet what's the URL an MSS.DE very simple
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actually we have our own webpage we have a little web client there but you can still connect
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there over various classic ways like using telnet or tiny fugue other classic mode clients
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almost anything even on your mobile yeah and even on the AS400 but like we have seen
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yes because because what we did is we took we basically hijacked one of your AS400s made you
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configure the twisted pair interface and you connect it to the MSS. Let's talk about a little bit
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about what we have here so so so basically snake who is the actual mud god and one of the original
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admins and programmers of this game he so he set up the server running on a dextation what model
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the first time the first one was a 3000 it's even slower than this one next station 3000 and
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what is it running on now next station 5000 so that's like very very old hardware and what we did
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is that running this local instance here at the vissefe in Munich we set up an ethernet a little
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on the ethernet network and we connected a bunch of vintage computers like an SGI in the like
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a little libretto like like like a like a telecom test computer stuff like that and then then the
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guy set up a serial terminal server and we connected over a serial network a bunch of vintage serial
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consoles which yeah and terminals that which is great fun and all of them are running connections
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to the server and just showing what it was like back in the day in the in the early 90s with people
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sitting at the university maybe in the computer room on some fancy external or on some fancy computer
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or dialing in. We have done it we have done it last year right we connected one of the terminals
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over a modem line like the very old one this is over there on the table with what's it called
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in english the not the modem the the the acoustic coupler thing oh you mean this 300 boss thing
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you put the you put the phone on yeah yeah not not as modern as a mod a modem but even older like
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you put the an old acoustic coupler coupler to to to put a phone line connected to the computer yeah
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and we actually even set up an old cell phone so that still had like like the hands set and
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everything and put the hands set on this acoustic coupler and that was pretty cool and ran a line
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across the vis-a-vis to show how people would dial in and and play over 300 bought it couldn't
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really dial with them but it was a fixed line but it was the original equipment which you
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used for it and so so what we do here is we've we've done we've done tournaments and competitions
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so people could win a nemesis t-shirt from us just to bring a man show them the joy of playing
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the game which we haven't actually described yet so we do we want to describe it well put
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this put it in a nutshell nemesis is a text-based multi-user dungeon no graphics no pictures
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no animations only asked the art in it which is actually very pretty and what you do is you log
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on you create a character a simple character you start walking around the village you might
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pick up some objects maybe you'll kill a monster maybe you'll get into trouble maybe you'll get
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killed yourself so basically what somebody said the other day is that this is the predecessor
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of all these games like World of Warcraft and God knows what just minus the graphics basically
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World of Warcraft without pictures yeah without graphics and also to quote another guy in a
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magazine who once said this is also a kind of the Minecraft of the early 90s because you
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not only get to play this game but if you finish a certain number of quests you can you can
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ask to become a wizard you have to take a test becoming a wizard means to become a programmer
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in this game and then you are permitted to extend the games you write additional areas or rooms
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you write objects pretty little things little quests and so you keep building on it
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it's how it grows so big because it's thousands and thousands of rooms what is currently so big
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that you have is big I don't even know all corners of the game it's ten thousands of rooms
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it's a complete world it's a complete planet with continents and islands which are connected with
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ships and some most of the ships have a timetable where we can look on but there are also ships you
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can steal yourself so it's a really complete planet and then you can imagine how big it is
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and do you have any statistics or numbers on the amount of the users that are playing this?
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well this depends on which time period you're asking because it used to be the biggest one in
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Germany when it was running into university when I had to close it newspapers reported about it
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this was closed down in 1994 by the administration at university with all sorts of excuses like
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using up to a spand with etc distracting the students these days this was snake actually told me
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that the students learned to do object oriented programming on it because the programming language of
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this mode is lpc which is an early version of an object object oriented c dialect named after
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the inventor laris pen sir so that's why it's called lpc and basically we had the support of the
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university of the professor where in which computer it was running and also other responsible
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persons but there was one one institution or what administrator or something which thought it
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using too much bandwidth or something like which is not correct yeah it's a game show it can't be
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serious that's that's what's basically probably his idea but it's not really true many people
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including myself learned how to program object oriented and and these days how many users do you
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see these days is now much fewer so most people prefer the graphics with even if
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well who knows i mean hecka public radio they are and i believe this recording will be heard by
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about five thousand people in a year so nemesis dot de to run a really old original multi-user dungeon
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game yeah exactly okay thank you very much for this interview and good luck to with the exhibition
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yes thank you okay i'm with another booth and this time i'm with punte linien kreisen
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does grafische terminal robo tronka eight nine one seven i have no clue there's a system here
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with robo tron on it so who are you and what is the robo tron my name is terkanat
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i in my in my hobby time i work with robo tron computers and i do some research on this devices
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and i try to to get them to work to restore them and every year i do research on another device
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and this year there is the robo tron k eight nine seventeen and it's a terminal device the
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device boots as a text terminal so that you can type type something on the keyboard and what
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your type on the keyboard is sent to the over the serial line and what is sent over the serial line
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to the terminal it's written on on the screen such as a normal terminal the special on this
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terminal is that you can use a graphics mode there is a special escape sequence on this on this
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terminal that switches to graphics mode graphics mode is when you are in graphics mode the first time
|
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you have the the first thing you have to you you have to do is that you have to change the
|
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configuration of the serial line because the text mode of the terminal the alpha numerical mode
|
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works with seven bits parity and the graphics mode works with eight bits and no parity
|
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when you are in graphics mode you have to search on the on the on the documentation of this device
|
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what protocol you have to run in the documentation is written what what commands are possible
|
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graphical commands and what bytes you have to the bytes you the byte sequence you have to send
|
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just to get the terminal to work in graphics mode the first in graphics mode that you have to do
|
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is to initialize this this this this mode of the terminal and all commands are
|
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the commands that you that you use there are described in a standard that is named
|
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graphical kernel system it's a it's a standard from the western world it was adapted to Eastern
|
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Germany and just just out of curiosity that so okay so you're researching how how to
|
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draw graphics on on this device but what is a robot from sorry perhaps I have to I have to
|
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do another way to describe it robotron is a computer is the major computer manufacturer from
|
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the from the GD from the former GDR from the German Democratic Republic and robotron supplied
|
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every GDR that's that's what other people would call Eastern Germany and Germany yes yes yes
|
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it's it's Eastern Germany and robotron is was the major supplier for devices and in
|
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information technology computers controllers nearly everything that where you have to handle data
|
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is from from from robotron there are some some manufacturers that were united in something
|
||
|
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that was called combinator so you have to you have to have had something like a headquarter that
|
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|
|
is the combinator robotron and this device was produced in Salameles in Turingia that is one
|
||
|
|
and when was it produced it was produced in the second half of the 80s I think I think it's
|
||
|
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1988 I have to look at the bottom of the device I okay so if I if I understand correctly in eastern
|
||
|
|
Germany you had multiple manufacturers of robotron equipment but they were combined in what was
|
||
|
|
called a combinator yes yes yes that's right and and how many of those manufacturers were there
|
||
|
|
approximately and I don't I don't know exactly but I think 10 or 20 something like that something
|
||
|
|
like that you have some manufacturers that have that produce computers and Salameles is the
|
||
|
|
produces produces devices for entering data data of hasung technique so Salameles produced
|
||
|
|
screen terminals they produced something that was called Betriebsdaten terminal so you have
|
||
|
|
and that are some that are such devices that you use when you start your work you have to device mounted
|
||
|
|
on a wall and if employers start to work they register the start of work and register the end of
|
||
|
|
work or you can sort of a time registration system yes something like that that are other kind of
|
||
|
|
terminals that were that were produced in Salameles Salameles was also the supplier for hardest
|
||
|
|
devices in the GDR and a cassette tape devices and and was there a standard on the processor that
|
||
|
|
was in use or something or was it all different things and the most used the mostly used process
|
||
|
|
was clone of Z80 the silox Z80 processor was clone in GDR and was called U880 and that is that is
|
||
|
|
the processor that you have that is that was used in a wide range of devices this device has
|
||
|
|
exactly set three Z80 processors one that drives the terminal itself one that drives the
|
||
|
|
graphics processor and the third one is in the keyboard or the keyboard has its own processor
|
||
|
|
has its own has its own processor yes and that is that is the most mostly used processor when
|
||
|
|
the GDR did a step to 16-bit world first they used first day
|
||
|
|
stayed on the on the silox way they clone the Z8000 processor and and I know three different
|
||
|
|
computer systems in the GDR that uses the set a thousand processor and the later step is
|
||
|
|
to switch to AT86 processor from Intel
|
||
|
|
okay so and what were these systems used for from Robotron everything or in the office or in
|
||
|
|
machines the simple answers everything and this special device was used for construction
|
||
|
|
it was a part of a catcam system you have a central computer you connect the terminal to it to
|
||
|
|
view graphics to do graphics input something like that but the systems in general were used for
|
||
|
|
office processing for data for data management for to control something and nearly everything where
|
||
|
|
AT systems were used for okay and the the operating system was there a standard or chosen or
|
||
|
|
there is a wide range of operating systems the mostly used operating system is a CPM clone
|
||
|
|
called SCP it's a CPM 2.2 that was adapted to the special hardware the 16-bit systems used
|
||
|
|
used DCP that was a clone of the MS-DOS operating system but you have a wide range of special
|
||
|
|
operating systems for for special tasks and there is for instance UDOS that was a clone of
|
||
|
|
silo grio the silo operating system and you have Unix versions and the Unix system was called
|
||
|
|
MUTOS multi multi user time sharing operating system they used the Unix V7
|
||
|
|
sources and adapted their their special hardware to the 16-bit processors to the silo 8000
|
||
|
|
processor and to the 8086 to and so you can say it's nearly the same range of operating systems
|
||
|
|
that is used in in in international and and could everybody buy such a computer in those days
|
||
|
|
and if yes or no what do they cost and this this computer it was nearly impossible to buy it as
|
||
|
|
a private person as a private person it was as well it was possible to buy a home computer
|
||
|
|
like this like like the kc 85 systems and this kc systems are no are not robotron devices
|
||
|
|
you have a robotron robotron kc exactly but there were home computers from the combinat rft
|
||
|
|
that was the combinat that produces tv sets radio something like this
|
||
|
|
okay so you had you had your combination of manufacturers combinat for the robotron computer
|
||
|
|
and you had also a combinat with manufacturers for the kc computers for personal use
|
||
|
|
yes yes and this and the robotron computers there was a special process for companies
|
||
|
|
and that make it possible for companies to buy computers the official way
|
||
|
|
it was called bilansierung so as a company with some
|
||
|
|
as a special company the government says that you you are able to buy this computer
|
||
|
|
it was planned the shift and so that someone from the government it's it's simply said it's
|
||
|
|
more complex but it's simply said someone from the government says you can buy this computer
|
||
|
|
so the company can the company bought this computer and so maybe we use it perhaps yes perhaps
|
||
|
|
no but we can buy it okay so it started with somebody from the government going to a company
|
||
|
|
and said they were allowed to buy a computer um you you simply yet you you can you you can say it so
|
||
|
|
and and was it the same for the the the kc personal computers was that also you had to be allowed
|
||
|
|
to buy some and the first time um was the it was restricted later time you can you can
|
||
|
|
you were able to buy it in the shop because first time at the first priority to supply this
|
||
|
|
computers were where schools so the the government says computers you you need to have computers in
|
||
|
|
schools just for education and if there were much computers in education some computers were
|
||
|
|
when to the shops so that a private person can buy this computer and any idea what the pricing was
|
||
|
|
in those days and the pricing of a of a kc home computer I personally bought this computer for
|
||
|
|
2150 mark of the GDR and and what would be be compared in today's dollars or euros
|
||
|
|
oh that that's difficult because the mark of the GDR was not convertible the the official
|
||
|
|
and official it's it was one to one to the western
|
||
|
|
mark but that that was not real perhaps one to five one west western german mark two five
|
||
|
|
eastern german mark perhaps one to ten okay but let's let's do this another way um if you were
|
||
|
|
living in eastern germany and you wanted to buy this home computer and you had a salary of course
|
||
|
|
would it be half a monthly salary on average or a full month or three months or you know how much
|
||
|
|
pain would it be financially and the price of the computer I think it was um twice or third
|
||
|
|
twice or third of of the salary of a person we're going to do this again
|
||
|
|
let's risk it so what would the price be for a home computer okay let's do this quickly so how
|
||
|
|
how much would it cost in in east germany for somebody to buy this home computer um I think
|
||
|
|
twice or three times of a salary of a monthly salary of a monthly salary of a person
|
||
|
|
that's a lot that that's a lot yes um we used um we call it Jugendweier I don't know the English word
|
||
|
|
the Jugendweier money of my brother read and was enough to buy this computer
|
||
|
|
and another way it would you have to to reserve money for for a long time to get this amount to buy
|
||
|
|
us okay wow um well thank you for this interview and many happy hours with your Robo Tron
|
||
|
|
things that that I was able to did you give me the chance to talk yeah you're very welcome okay
|
||
|
|
so that's a wrap for this um edition and interviews for the vcfe.org the vintage computer festival
|
||
|
|
Europe um I did a couple of interviews I hope you like them um just let me know in the comments
|
||
|
|
I'll put some links to some of those projects in the show notes if you're interested in investigating
|
||
|
|
more uh into these subjects and um well talk to you next time bye bye
|
||
|
|
you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org we are a community podcast
|
||
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows
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||
|
|
was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
|
||
|
|
then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is Hacker Public Radio was
|
||
|
|
founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary
|
||
|
|
revolution at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave
|
||
|
|
a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's
|
||
|
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show is released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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