204 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
204 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4248
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Title: HPR4248: Millie Perkins
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4248/hpr4248.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:01:25
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4248 for Wednesday the 13th of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Mealy Perkins.
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It is part of the series interviews.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Ken talks with Mealy Perkins about her home automation talk at OutCamp.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today I managed to trap down another of my victims from OutCamp, who I missed,
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and that is, do you want to introduce yourself, Mealy, am I correct?
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My name is Mealy Perkins.
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Hi, nice to meet you.
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Thank you very much for taking the time to come on and have a chat with us.
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So tell us, you were at OutCamp.
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What did you think of it?
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Yes, it was great. It was my first time.
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So yeah, I really enjoyed it.
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It was really great to get to meet some fellow like my did nerds, I thought.
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Right, yeah.
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Was that what, how did you end up being there?
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How did you hear about it on the podcast or if I was your avenue for offering?
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Yeah, I actually listened to the late Nightlinux podcasts and it was mentioned on the,
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obviously Gary was one of the organizers.
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So yeah, I heard about it on there.
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Sort of early last, early this year, I think, and then basically put it in my diary and
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was checking for tickets and checking for updates.
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Let me regularly.
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Do you go to, have you gone to other events similar to that or was this just the first one?
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No, it's the first one really.
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So I've obviously been to like conferences through work and things like that.
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That's obviously closed software, not open source, related things.
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So it was really good to go to that sort of thing.
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So what's your background?
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I work as a managing consultant in a cybersecurity firm that's focused on
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identity access management and privileged access management.
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So we implement those types of tools in large organizations.
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So that's what I've been doing for nearly 10 years now.
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Okay, cool.
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And you ended up listening to the lads on the late Nightlinux podcast.
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Very good.
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Yeah.
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Have you been to any of them before or was this just...
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No, no, I didn't even know what they looked like.
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Like, really?
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So...
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I did like, boy, I recognized that voice from somewhere.
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Yeah, exactly.
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It's really surreal to see the one actual in real life.
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There's tangible humans.
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Yeah, yeah.
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It's a fantastic experience.
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So you turned off randomly at this event.
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Hello, I'm here and then decided to give a presentation.
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Had you were you on the main track or was it just a side track?
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Have you already heard that?
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It was, and yeah, one of the sidetracks.
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So, when I first heard that it was an on-conference style and you could submit your own talk,
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I sort of thought about doing it at that point.
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But then I noticed that somebody else was on the talk list on the main track
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for doing a home automation talk.
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So that's Charlie's talk, which I went to was really good.
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So on the first day, I was a bit like, oh, I'm not sure if I,
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if people want to listen to another talk about home automation.
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Yes, I have to go into.
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Yes, well, an interesting topic that a lot of people like.
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So after going to her talk, I realised that mine will be quite different.
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So I thought, and with some encouragement as well from some of the volunteers,
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I thought, why not give it a go?
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Super, what was your talk?
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What talk did you give in the long?
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Did you give it for?
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Yeah, it was all around some of my home assistant journey.
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So I think I called it a beginner's parade down the rabbit hole.
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And it was basically an overview of my smart home and my home assistant journey.
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It's been about a year now since I started with home assistant.
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So it's quite timely, I guess.
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And I really just wanted to explain what I've done and how it can be set up
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by someone who's not specifically got a technology background, I guess,
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or got a technical background, like I'm not a developer and I'm not a coder.
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I can hack bits together, but that's about it.
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So it's really a testimony to how much time people in the open source community put into that
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project and how much help you can get and how much documentation is out there.
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The listeners of HVR are sitting there going, how long is it going to be before Ken
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asked her to do submit shows for our ongoing series on home automation?
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So I've been doing a series on home automation just basically reading the home assistant
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Wiki and I'm building the three different types.
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And then the idea is that you can come into the home assistant thing and go,
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if you want to know how to install it, go back to this episode.
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So we have the we have the basis is done.
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So do you have the presentation available online somewhere?
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It's not available online at the moment, but I can make it available,
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but it's not really learning the presentation for HVR.
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Yeah, I could do definitely.
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Almost a many people at the show at the event.
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Yeah, it was used in one of those side rooms.
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Yeah, the room was almost full.
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Yeah, so there's a lot of interest in it.
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I was surprised that there would be so much interest in it.
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You know, it was Sunday morning, late morning.
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Yeah, very good.
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And it's always tough, you know, if you're going up against somebody else,
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as well like some rock star somewhere on the other people are divided,
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do I go to the home automation or not?
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Yeah, exactly.
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Well, I did want to crush anything that I would want to attend.
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So I think there was something really technical that was on at the same time.
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So I guess the people that didn't want to attend that were drawn in by home automation.
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And you have much feedback afterwards or what was the obviously we at the HVR table were like,
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oh, the good talks.
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Yeah, you're on.
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And then there was another one this morning about home automation.
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And yeah, so that's why I tracked you guys down.
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So that's that's good.
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Yeah, I have quite a lot of good feedback.
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People seem to really enjoy it.
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Because I also include some interesting use cases in my presentation just around weird things
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that I've found that people have done with home automation because there's lots of strange
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edge cases out there.
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Because, you know, as you know, you can do a lot with home-resistant practically anything.
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So there's lots of really weird things that people have done.
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Do you want to give people an idea of what you want to give or do you want to save that for your show?
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Yeah, and yeah, of course.
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So I guess one of the funny ones that I liked was that a person had set up an NFC tag on a
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lamp post.
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So it was on their usual dog walking route and around two minutes from where they got through
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the house. They would scum this NFC code on their phone and it would turn their coffee machine on
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at home. Really with an issue's case, but I guess really improves their day-to-day life.
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Well, when I heard it was like the dog post who was taking the dog for a walk, I was thinking
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something else turns on the sprinkler or something. But yeah, there's loads of strange ones out there.
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Yeah, personally, myself, the issue I have is so much that you can do and so much that I want to do.
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I have a whole box of kit that I want to use. It's right there, but getting the time and getting over
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the barrier of actually, I'm struggling now with what's the best computer to put it on, do it
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put it on a Raspberry Pi or do I do the whole duck or container thing or do I have a standalone
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computer for it? Yeah. And then I don't really want that traffic on my own private network,
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so do I build another Wi-Fi network? Yeah, it can work on my monster, I think. Somebody asked a question
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that's somewhat relevant, I guess, where they said, oh, I've tried with home assistant previously,
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but it just felt too difficult for those two to do. And I think that is definitely in a barrier
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to entry, but what I would say is you've really got to tackle it as an iterative process where
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you're sort of accumulating the automation and improving. Yeah, and improving your implementation,
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because home assistant, I started out on the Raspberry Pi, but their backup system is so good
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that moving it over to say proffinance, which is what I'm using now, is really easy.
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And it does not take much, it's not difficult, so I think it's worth starting out in perfect way.
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If you can, I know that everyone likes to work like that, just to get something going,
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and you can always just continuously improve it, you know, I would never say that my home
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is complete on my home assistant journey is finished, it's just always evolving.
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Yeah, do you have a non-technical person in your house who demands that the home assistant
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not be leading? Well, yeah, this is part, I guess, something I was joking about in my presentation,
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because I live on my own, that my partner, Adam, who was also at the conference,
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whilst he is technical, he does joke about not wanting him to have to use these sorts of things.
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And I joke that I just made him his own simple dashboard, and it just has big buttons on it,
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because, yeah, I just want things to work, because I did a live demo as well,
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my home assistant, so. That was very brave, how does it go?
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It went fine, yeah, so just showing people my dashboards, which I seem to appreciate,
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have made them all pink, sorry. Yeah, my daughter would 100% agree with you. Yeah, exactly,
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you've got to add some personality. Yeah, fantastic. And so, you went, you did the
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Archamp experience, and what do you think that was, would you do it again? Yeah, definitely,
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I really enjoyed it, I really liked different talks, and as well the variety of talks as well,
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and so, like the open source embroidery one, I went to, that was really good. Yeah,
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and we're one with the badges, the LED badges, I think it would have been good if there was more
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sort of weird and wonderful things there as well, like a pigeon, a ballroom pigeon,
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isn't that weird and wonderful enough for you? Yeah, well, that's my, that's my partner's pigeon.
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All right, yeah, fantastic. Yeah, so, sort of have a semi-custody of the pigeon,
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so yeah, it would have been good to see more LED things and things like that,
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that I, and I would have brought some, I think, because I'd like to do that sort of thing as well,
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that I guess I didn't realise that was something that people would be interested in.
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Oh yeah, oh yeah, very much. Personally, I'm interested in, my youngest is very interested in
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LEDs and clothes and fabric and stuff that would be nice, I mean, not now, because some issues,
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they're having some issues, but yeah, yeah, I really like wearable things, I made an LED coat
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for a festival earlier this year, so. Did you now? Yeah, it's not the best, it could be improved,
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but it's all right, but yeah, that's my favourite niche of LEDs, I guess. Yeah, LED,
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but even when it goes dark, you know, all sins are forgiven when you've got a LED coat on.
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Yeah, exactly, and it also, it's quite warm.
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So it's two in one as long as you're a catch-fire, but
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right, I've, I've actually come up with about 15 different episodes that you should do for
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HPE, if you're into that sort of thing, it's quite easy. Yeah, if anything I go.
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So you definitely go back again? Yeah, definitely, I think I'm going to like to attend more events
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like that. But there was like a lifetime supply of LEDs, and you go, I was going to challenge
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incentives, whatever. Yeah, did you see the prize, it was not a lifetime? No, it was like barely
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an evening, if I have the polarity incorrect, and my power supply. Yeah, they were missulling those,
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I think. Yeah, yeah, I have to complain to the to her Majesty's, whatever office,
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or his Majesty's, sort of, his Majesty's office. So cool stuff. Was there anything else that you
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wanted to mention or chat about, or? I don't think so, really. I'm just talking about my passion
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for home assistant and automation. I really enjoyed my talk, and I'm glad that people also seem
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to enjoy it. So maybe I'll come back next year and do a longer talk. Yeah, that would be nice.
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It's nice, hopefully by then my home assistant thing will actually be up and running and actually
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working. My wife will be gone, okay, why have you bought all this stuff? How's it going to do?
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Right, okay. There's so much I want to talk about, but this is really only supposed to be a short
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catch-up, but I really do want to thank you for taking the time to turn up after the event,
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and just working around my schedule to get a call going in. Yeah, of course, it was a pleasure.
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No bother. So everybody, tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker.
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Public Radio!
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.org. Today's show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording broadcast,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
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On the satellite status, today's show is released on our creative commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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