115 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
115 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 340
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Title: HPR0340: RTFM
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0340/hpr0340.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 16:42:30
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---
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Please excuse me for a quality of the audio.
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Campus recorded this episode a lot on times, and believe it or not this is the best version.
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Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, my name is Ken Fallon and this is another episode of Hacker
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Public Radio.
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Today's episode is entitled RTFM.
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RTFM stands for Read the Video Manual, and you'll see it on forums, notice boards,
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email this, and it's essentially used where the person applying to you feels that you
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haven't done enough research on the question that you're asking and that by simply looking
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up the manual you would get your answer.
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Well, the origins of this acronym comes from the days when computers were delivered in
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big crates, and along with these big crates came another big crate which contains the
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documentation for your system.
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Now we're not talking a lot of books here, or sounds manuals, or big computer for dummies.
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We're talking about essentially what would be a transcript of an engineer standing beside
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you detailing everything to do with how to get your computer into operation, how to do
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normal everyday tasks, and how to continue using your system.
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So they tend to be very dry and boring.
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The first manual typically was they required hardware, the required environment, the voltage,
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the temperature, the power supplies, how to connect things together, how to screw
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those safety information, all that sort of thing.
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Then the next manual would be on how to load the operating system on your computer, how
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to do backups, how to configure networking, how to configure printing, and so on and so
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forth.
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My first IT job, we had some novel servers, and they were supplied, one box was a box full
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of floppy disks, and then there was another crate which was 15 or so manuals that filled
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out an entire bookshelf, and there again everything was detailed, all the commands on your system
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were detailed, how to do backups, how to configure networking, how to install services,
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how to run commands.
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And it was easy for me as admin to take one of those manuals home, read it during dinner,
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read it nice, and you learned a lot about your system.
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And essentially what I want to convey here is that that's still a valid thing for everybody
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to do.
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I've gone to Google and I've typed in documentation space, red hat, and you get dumped
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into the red hat documentation page, documentation space, open cellars, same thing, documentation
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space, Debian, same thing.
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A lot of these projects still have manuals that are available for you to download, and
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you should download them, and either put them on your pva or other device or print them
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out.
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If you print them out on a booklet printing with four sheets per page, then it's not
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that environmentally unfriendly, and you have a copy if you're ever in a situation where
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you need to configure your system, and you don't have access to the internet, especially
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important.
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If you're in a data center that doesn't allow internet access externally or you're in
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a dead spot where you have no mobile internet, or if you're trying to configure a device
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to allow you to the internet, so your internet browser, for instance.
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It's also a very valuable thing to do to download the manuals for your system, your operating
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system, and for your hardware, because what actually happened was in the intervening
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time between manuals being shipped with systems.
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People had the bright idea, well, they had no choice but to ship the manuals with the
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systems at the time, because there was no internet.
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You had nobody else to ask, so it was either you found the answer in the manual or you picked
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up the phone and you spoke to an engineer, a very expensive consultant, in most cases,
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who would answer your question for you for a fee.
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So as time went on, that's the manuals.
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The printed manuals went out of vogue, because people thought, hey, we can save a lot of
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money and we can put the manuals on to the CDs, and this sold that to us under the heading
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of CD, you would be more current, it was more convenient, it wasn't, and that isn't,
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but it is, yeah, it is what it really is, at least, systems used to be sold with CDs.
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Now systems are not sold with anything, and you're told that the manuals that you're
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required on some website, well, good, go ahead and get the manuals for every system that
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you have now, because I guarantee you, in five years' time, when you're looking to update
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some backplane on that system that you have, you're not going to be able to find the manual
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because it's an archive system, it's no longer sold, or the company that had it was taken
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over and those products are phased out.
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So it's part of your backup and maintenance routine to take a copy of those manuals
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and burn them on to CD and have them with your recovery disks, it's a very useful thing.
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Very useful thing for anybody in engineers as well, wants to get into the field, is to
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download the manuals for an operating system that they probably couldn't afford.
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For example, something like Red Hat Enterprise Linux, you can download the manuals for that
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for free and use the non-copyrighted version released by Santo S, and you essentially
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have all the everything that you need in order to gain a lot of valuable experience about
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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And you notice that as time goes on, when you're reading more and more manuals, that you'll
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find that you're able to skip through a lot of the sections, for instance, the section
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on ping is going to be similar across all systems.
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There may be some differences between the switches on Solaris and FreeBSD to Linux, but
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if you're reading Red Hat manual and then you go on to read the Debian manual, there's
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not going to be a lot of difference, there might be difference of where the configuration
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files are kept, but it essentially means the more manuals to read, the more manuals
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that you read, the less time you have to spend reading new manuals.
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So getting back to this old RTFM thing, it didn't actually be used ever.
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Now there is no excuse for using it because back in the day, when people have manuals,
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you could refer to, if somebody asked about it, well, I have a local system, and I want
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to know how to load the HTTP service, well, you go to the book on the HTTP service,
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and you go to page 37 and you read it, that's what you should do, you paid for the system,
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and you've got a manual for the system.
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Now it doesn't work that way because the manual is often hidden somewhere, and people
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have gotten out of practice of reading manuals, people post questions, and begin an answer
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on the forums.
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I can't remember the last time that when I put a search tone into Google for something
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that I ended up actually on the manual of the customer, usually I end up on the forum
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that links to the manual, and that's, well, I don't know if that's how it should be,
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but that's the way it is.
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So there is absolutely no excuse for somebody writing RTFM, unless, of course, you point
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them to the manual itself, in which case you would say, here is the manual.
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Have a look on page 13, if you have more questions, get back to.
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In that case, you're not being rude to somebody, you're helping them out, but you're also
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giving them the tools that they can educate themselves.
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This has been about the 90th time that I've recorded this show, and I will dedicate this
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show to Zogue, and I hope that that is the last time he encounters RTFM out in the world.
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Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for listening.
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This has been another episode of Hector Public Radio, and as always, tune in tomorrow
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for another possibly more exciting show.
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Thank you.
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Thank you for listening to Hector Public Radio, HBR is sponsored by Carol.net, so head
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on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-T for all of her team.
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Thank you for listening to Hector Public Radio, Hector Public Radio, Hector Public Radio, Hector Public Radio, Hector Public Radio, Hector Public Radio.
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