173 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
173 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2078
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Title: HPR2078: What's in my bag?
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2078/hpr2078.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:02:03
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---
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This is HPR episode 2007 to 8 entitled What's in My Bag.
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And in part of the series What's in My Toolkit,
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it is hosted by Windigo and is about 15 minutes long.
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The summer is a short summer of all the crap Windigo loads back and forth.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello HPR public radio. This is Windigo and I noticed two things recently.
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First of all, I have not done a What's in My Bag episode.
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And I have a bag. It took me a little while to realize this to my shame.
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But I have a bag that I carry with me every single day.
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And it's mostly got the same stuff in it.
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So I figured I should do this episode.
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Also, I realized that HPR was low on shows because
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Ken Fallon sent out a message saying HPR was low on shows.
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So to remedy both of these solutions,
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to remedy both of these situations pardon me,
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I thought I would record that episode.
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This is also my first off the cuff episode.
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And because I'm generally a giant moron, it might sound much worse than when I think
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things through and write it down ahead of time.
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But this is a good test run, I think.
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So anyhow, I have a Targis book bag with three pockets in it,
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three main pockets.
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There's the laptop pocket, a middle-ish pocket, and a front pocket,
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along with a couple side pouches and tinier pockets here and there.
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So that's the bag I carry around each day.
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I bring it to work, I bring it when I'm traveling.
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It just generally follows me around.
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It's nice and handy because it can go on my back and I don't have to worry about keeping my
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hands free.
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So inside this bag, I firstly always put my stainless steel coffee mug.
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NY Bill will appreciate that it is Stewart's store branded.
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It was a gift from my mother, not really a gift.
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She just had a coffee mug and gave it to me because she wasn't using it.
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It's a 16-ounce stainless steel Stewart's branded coffee mug that I bring everywhere because
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I drink a lot of coffee, as you will see.
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Because the second item in my bag is a Stanley stainless steel thermos, which contains extra coffee.
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So if I'm going somewhere, I'll usually fill up the travel mug and then fill up the coffee mug,
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or coffee mug, fill up the thermos with backup coffee.
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So like I said, I drink a lot.
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This is also why I don't drink alcohol because this is just coffee.
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Imagine if this had a serious life-altering problems associated with it.
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But anyways, the third item that I bring with me is a clean canteen wide,
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40-ounce stainless steel water bottle, because if you drink a lot of coffee,
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you're going to dehydrate yourself and it's good to follow that up with water.
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So now we get to the kind of technical stuff.
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So I also usually have a one-and-a-half-foot micro USB cable with me at all times.
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This was procured from a GPS, I think.
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And it's just a very nice small travel size.
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I don't really have anything that uses micro USB because I don't have a cell phone,
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but I found that it's very handy to have this sort of thing if someone else needs it,
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or I need to connect to a device.
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I also keep with me some form of Ethernet cable.
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Now, at the current moment, I have with me a retractable Cat5 Ethernet cable,
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so it winds up in a little ball, essentially, or a reel, I suppose.
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It's got a little spring-loaded reel thing, and it has a crossover adapter,
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so I've got essentially a three-foot-longer-so Ethernet cable slash crossover cable
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for whatever I need.
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And the reason I have this one is because my usual carry, which is a flat,
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maybe four or five-foot-long Ethernet cable is in use because that happens all the time.
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I've gone through several of these. It's always good to have an Ethernet cable on you
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if you are a computer-dark.
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In addition to that, I carry with me a pair of Sony earbuds.
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These go great for, excuse me, these go great with my work computer,
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if I need to listen to some podcasts due to a long-boring day,
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or they fit perfectly with another item that I'll mention a little bit later.
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I also keep with me a miscellaneous handful of SD and USB storage,
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just in case I have lots of little SD cards, a couple eight gigabyte USB drives that are great
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for sending an ISO onto if I need to boot to a specific distro or tool or whatever.
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Primary among these devices is a 64 gigabyte tiny keychain mounted USB drive.
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Let me get it out. It's a 64 gigabyte, which is absolute madness.
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It's almost as small as a standard USB connector, and it has 64 gigabytes on it.
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It's so small, I can even read the name of it.
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USB 3.1 Kingston, it looks like it's printed on the back, but it's the best thing in the world.
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Having 64 gigabytes with you is one of those future prediction things where you could be
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carrying the Library of Congress in your pocket and not even realize it. When I found out that
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they were only 20 or $30, I bought two because it's like spaceship technology. That's crazy talk.
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So I always have that on my keychain. It's a metal adapter. Apparently I'm a big fan of steel
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because I have lots of metal things, but it's a little metal USB drive. I'm currently working on
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getting it to be a USB drive as well as a bootable distro thing, so partitioning it out maybe
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installing grub, but I've had nothing but failures in that arena. So it's a work in progress,
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but then I'd have essentially my own working computer in my pocket just sands all the hardware,
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and that would be amazing. So maybe that'll be a new HPR episode someday if I can ever get it right.
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There are so many failed HPR episodes in my wake. But anyhow, let's see. The next item
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is a mag light double A powered flashlight. So returning to the Windigo loves things made out
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of metal topic. This is a metal flashlight. It used to have a spare bulb in the tail end of it,
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but I've actually used that because it broke. It's a mag light branded because they're a very,
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very good brand, and they're one of the couple things that I buy based on the brand. It's just
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they're an excellent company. They make very, very good equipment. So I'd get a mag light
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over a generic brand anytime. So I keep the batteries inside, but one of them reversed so that there's
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negative contact touching a negative contact and positive are on the other side so that it won't
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train any of the batteries through leakage. But it doesn't get much use. It's just very handy to
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have around when you need it. I don't keep it on my keychain because those kind of things get very
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heavy and I'd kind of like to keep what's in my pocket light and then put everything else in my backpack.
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Added to the things that I keep in my backpack is a standard generic ballpoint pen. This is
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actually a freebie. I got from a local councilman named Bill Loeb. Bill Loeb for their district in
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case you were wondering. He is not even elected anymore. He's no longer running as far as I know,
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but his pen is stupendous. It's still writing for as much as I write and I just keep it along.
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You never know when you're going to have to fill out a customs form on a flight. So it's always
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good to have a pen with you. In addition to those more permanent items, I also carry my lunch with me.
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Usually this is any mason jar or a surprise surprise metal container like a little metal box
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that clips together. It has a top and some compartments and whatever I'm eating at the moment
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usually goes into a jar of box and comes with me until I can heat it up at work. If you happen
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to meet me on a Wednesday and look in my bag, I will have my backup drive or if it's the Thursday
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and I forgot to do backups on Wednesday, you'll see that too. I always bring home my backup drive
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which is just a two terabyte internal 3.5 inch hard drive whatever the big ones are.
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It's nothing fancy. It's just I have a USB hard drive dock attached to my desktop computer,
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so I pop it in like a super Nintendo cartridge, do my backups with our sync and then unpop it and
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bring it back to work with me so that I have super cheap and easy off-site backups.
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So the only dangerous part is if I forget to do backups and it's in my book bag and I'm at home
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and my house burns down and I don't grab my book bag, well that's you know that's tough luck I
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guess, but ordinarily I keep my data on my computer and in this off-site backup drive that I just
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trek around with. If it is a day that I'm working at the tech center, you will usually find a
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reason barracks laptop with an AC adapter in my book bag. This is my, I think it's 15 inch,
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pretty serious laptop. It was meant as a desktop replacement maybe five or six years ago. So it can
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pull its own weight, but you have to pull its own weight too because it's chunky. They're not
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really building for ease of travel. They were building for power when they made this laptop,
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so it's big. I usually don't bring it around all the time, but if I'm going to be stuck at the
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tech center for four hours and want my own machine to do whatever on, I bring that guy.
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ordinarily it's just sitting on my nightstand and it's our movie machine so we watch movies on it.
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And no matter what day it is, the last item you will find in my book bag is a Dell Mini 9
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with its AC adapter. I actually have two thanks to NY Bill and I bring one with me all the time
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and one of them is plugged in permanently somewhere in my house so that I can charge it wherever I am.
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The Mini 9 being the most stupendous computer ever made by man. It's the greatest little machine.
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This is, this is my favorite computer of all time. It's been cannibalized a couple times. There's
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different parts in it. It's actually a composite of two Dell Mini 9s right now.
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But if I am anywhere, I want to have that computer with me. It's performing enough to do most stuff,
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but it's a perfect remote machine. I use it mostly for SSH-ing into bigger and more powerful boxes,
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but it's just, it has a battery that lasts for seven or eight hours and costs $35. The battery did,
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of course, not the computer. I've had it for a very long time. I want to say eight years and it's just
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still trucking very light, perfect battery life. It's just, it's hard to beat. So that is always
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with me. I even stuck a little 32 gigabyte USB drive in the side for bulk storage because it only
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has, I think it's a six or eight gigabyte SSD in it, which is more than enough for Linux.
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As long as you don't want to put anything in your home directory. So I just stashed all of my
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portable movie files and music and anything else on this little external Kingston drive,
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which is another one of those just about as big as the USB connector drives. So it doesn't take
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up any extra space. It's just good to have with you. So I always have my Mini 9 if I need to
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hack on some code when I'm waiting for jury duty or if we need to check off on flight details
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while we're traveling or I even, there was a occasion this Christmas where I was stuck on a plane
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next to a 10-year-old who was on a company and we talked for a while, but children are exhausting.
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So I happened to have finding Nemo on my laptop and put it on and gave him the headphones that I
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keep with him and that occupied him for quite a bit. So that was fantastic. That was a great story
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actually. That might be an HPR episode I need to get into. But if Hitchhiker's Guide had been
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designed around my life, your towel would be a Del Mini 9 because I don't use towels that much,
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but this Mini 9 constantly. So with that concluding note, that's what's in my bag. That's if you bump
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into me at any random time, you can probably ask for these items unless I rotate them out,
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which is pretty unlikely. I even tried to downsize to a laptop bag that some people might remember
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from the first Ogg Gamp comfortably fits a personal pan pizza from Pizza Hut, but does not
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comfortably fit most of this crap that I keep with me all the time. So it was back to the book bag.
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This is about the minimal I can bring with me and still be comfortable and functioning. So
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if you haven't recorded this episode, this what's in my bag episode, you should do it because it's
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really interesting and it makes you kind of criticize what you bring with you all the time.
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It's a nice way to reassess your life a little bit, which I don't know about everybody else,
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but I can use. So this has been Windigo and I look forward to hearing your
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internet. It's HVR Episode.
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You've been listening to HEPA Public Radio at HEPA Public Radio.org. We are a community podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. HEPA Public Radio was found
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by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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