161 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1604
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Title: HPR1604: How I Got Into Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1604/hpr1604.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:42:53
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---
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It's Thursday, 25th on September 2014.
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This is an HBR episode 1,604 entitled, How I Got Into Linux, and in part on the series,
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How I Found Linux.
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It is posted my first time post go for, and in about 18 minutes long, feedback can be sent
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to doffia.nix at e-mail.com or by leaving a comment on this episode.
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The summary is, I sum up my experience with Linux from 0 to 1.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com, get 15% discount on all shared
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hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15, better web hosting that's honest and
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fair at an honesthost.com.
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Welcome, this will be my first show for Hacker Public Radio, and I would just like to
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contribute to a great community for the great people, so this is how I found Linux.
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Actually, my journey with Linux started in an auto way.
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I fell in Linux because someone decided I had a friend in grade school, and he decided
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to come over to my house one day, and he would come over and it was actually kind of how
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I got into programming as well, so he would come over and we would start making bad scripts,
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different things to admit sounds, open CD drives, you know, the kind of things you get
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up to when you're about 12 or 13 years old, and he was a big unix and Linux lover.
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So every time he'd have to come over and program on a Windows machine, he wouldn't be the
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greatest participant, I would say, because he'd be like, well damn, I have to work, I
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have to work on a Windows machine, and he was die hard, Linux die hard, open source software
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now.
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This was before I knew any of these terms actually, but he definitely was a big influence,
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so he used to come over and then we used to probably hang up four times, four times
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a week, and he'd come over and like I said, we'd write these little programs and different
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things to do different things like that, and one day he brought over a distribution called
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Lubuntu, you know, me being about like I said, 12 or 13, I mean, they're running Lubuntu
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here, and I didn't know what this was, now I have a really old desktop, I mean this,
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the thing we were working on, oh goodness, it was probably eight years ago, probably now,
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yeah, I was about 11, so yeah, eight years ago, and so he,
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eight years ago, he'd come over and he showed me this Lubuntu, and I was a really ambitious
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kind of kid and child or whatever you want to call me teenager, so I said, well share,
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let's install Lubuntu now, because of this crappy old machine, it couldn't run Lubuntu
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worth a damn, so basically we booted it up and I mean, oh this thing, it just wouldn't,
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it just wouldn't run, and so I broke, I technically overclocked the hard drive because it was
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such an old piece of crap, old piece of crap or something, because the hard drive stopped
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working, it was quite the problem with that whole thing, I don't think I overclocked, I think
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that's actually the wrong terminology, I apologize, but yeah, no, we installed it and he partitioned
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it, we lost all the data, yeah, we didn't overclock it, I don't know why I was thinking that,
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but he partitioned it, and so we lost all the data, I didn't really know what I was getting
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into, so it becomes my mother, and she's just an interesting person, and she really liked that
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information on my computer, apparently, because she kind of lost it a little bit, she, well,
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understandably so, because we lost all of her data and everything, and as kids, you know,
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the things you get up to, so that was my first experience with Linux, now she did my mom,
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just a side note is she didn't have to pay to repair that computer, so her version of what Linux
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was was actually a little bit broken compared to what I was, so after that, obviously, I actually,
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being so young, I actually, I couldn't, any computer I got, I got told that I couldn't
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install Linux on it because of what had happened to the desktop, I mean, my parents were very
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I mean, my dad's a PLC programmer, so he kind of knew what he was doing when it came to computers,
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but I don't, he's very a Windows-centric kind of guy, so he wasn't all that, all that interested
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in learning about Linux and learning about things like that, so I mean, there'd been times that I
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would really want to try it, and I mean, I didn't stray too far from the Windows world,
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I'm not going to lie, I didn't stray too far from the Windows world, but I definitely
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I definitely wanted to try a Unix-based system, I thought it was really cool
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the things you could do and different things like that, so I thought that was pretty interesting, but
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as we as we continue down the lineage of how I found Linux, so that was my first experience
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on that old computer, and then as I said, I was struggling, struggling, trying to install it on
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different machines, I don't think my parents were too fond of the idea of me installing it on my
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machines, so what I would do is actually I would any old computers that people were getting rid of,
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I would take, I have a mask quite the collection of old desktops and things, and I had, for the longest
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time, I had a gateway laptop to replace an old desktop that I got in my 2004-2005, it was
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HHP Media Center or something I think, and I just scrapped that like last six months ago probably,
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but I had that old desktop and no one was using it, so I thought, well, what the hell, so I figured
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I might as well put it on there, so I put puppy Linux, that was my first forte into actual
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Linux installation, now here's my quick opinion of puppy Linux, and I really, I mean, it's,
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I don't know much about it, so I can't speak on it, but on that, I mean, I did a lot of research
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right on on Windows machines, I did a lot of research of Linux and whatnot, and so I would try
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to do pseudo app dash get install, but that would not work, and I'd be like, well, this is kind of
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silly, and I didn't, the more research I did into it, it seemed like the only, the only package
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manager puppy had was graphical, so I, I used that for a bit, I got some stuff, I installed it,
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so I really wanted to start up a, start up a web server, so I used the, I think it was called,
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well, I forget what it was called, but it was a graphical package manager for a puppy,
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I think it was the universal puppy package manager, something like that, and so for a long time,
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I used that on that old desktop, and then finally, my computer actually crashed, like my gateway
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laptop, and I couldn't get any of the files off it, and I just, it blew screened on me, and I was
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sick of it all, and it said that there was an error with it, and I went, well, this is,
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this is ridiculous, I don't, I don't need to do this, like my main machine at this point,
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I could make my own decisions, and I was 15 or 16, and I thought, you know what, this is just a
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piece of garbage, I don't really want windows on my machine, so I, I installed a bunch of,
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a bunch of, I think it was 10 point, I don't know, I think it was 11, I think it was 11,
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a bunch of 11, the LTS, 11.04 I think, and so I installed that, and it ran really well,
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and I was surprised, and I started to get more into it, and actually, while I was on windows,
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my, my interest in programming had peaked quite a bit, so I would, I was trying to program in Python,
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I actually, I think the first programming tutorials I ever watched were the, Google,
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I don't know if you can YouTube search it, but the Google programming videos, Python,
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Python programming, so those were pretty interesting, and so I got into it, and I just found
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when I installed this a monkey system that my, that my programming skills increased 10 volt,
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and you know what, I'm not, I'm not going to sit here and say that I'm a huge, I'm a huge,
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I'm a good programmer, I haven't really built much, but I just, I liked Linux, as a whole,
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I liked the fact that I could peek under the hood, you know, and see how things worked,
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and I mean a bunch who's really a candy coated distribution, you don't have to get your hands dirty
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at all, but, yeah, so that's basically how I started, and now at this time, with this
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Ubuntu PC, I still had a Windows PC going, so basically that's what was happening, and
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eventually I thought, well, I don't need a Windows PC anymore, so I had a friend who was
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getting rid of a net book, it's actually the net book that I'm recording this on, and he,
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he was getting rid of it, he said, Windows doesn't run well on it, and whatever, whatever,
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and I thought, you know what, this is my, this is my chance to fully transition into a Linux-based
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world, and so I did, so I made a negotiation with them, and I said, well, I'll give you 60 bucks
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for an Acer Spy R1, and I did, and you know what, it's, it's really good, and yeah, so I picked
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that up for about 60 bucks, and the next distribution I tried was CrunchBang, now CrunchBang was an
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interesting distribution for me, because that's really where I learned the desktop customization
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and things, and I was really interested in the tweaking aspects, and the fact that you could make
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the distro, however you wanted your desktop environment, so on, and so on, and so on, and so basically,
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what happened was I started with CrunchBang, and I used CrunchBang for about two, maybe a year and a
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half, two years, something like that, and I used it through my final two years at high school,
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and so basically I used CrunchBang, and I would customize OpenBox, I make it really nice, I made it
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kind of tiling with PiTile, and I made it really, just really customizable, and it wasn't at all
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like I started, and that's kind of when I started to get into tiling when those maintenance
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and I just started to learn a lot of the configuration based around how it works, so as I progressed,
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I started to research a little bit more, and my level of tweaking, like I said,
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has really led me to find more things, it really led me to find Arch Linux, and Gen 2, and all
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these different distributions that could really provide you a base to, you know, customize your
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system even more than I had been, so what happened after that was the fact that I was pretty weary
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of Arch, I'm not going to lie, I thought the installation was pretty brutal, but like not when I tried
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it, but I just, I couldn't wrap my head around it because I thought, well, if I screw up my brick,
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and it was really, I really stupid assumption, but I eventually, I moved over to Arch
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because I wanted to try it, and I think that's just basically how I started, and honestly the
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installation process is not, is not that hard at all, I mean if you have the beginner's guide
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in front of you, and that's what I did, I had it on my phone, and I was absolutely fine, so
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to anybody that's looking to try Arch, then feel free to do that, but yeah, so I installed Arch,
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and this was, I installed Arch once, and I couldn't get it to work, and I was really frustrated,
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and this was on the old gateways, I kept it around for a long time, I kept it around as a server-based,
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I just asked the sage into it, and do whatever I had to do, kind of on my crunch bang, but I
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decided to install Arch on it, and that, no, I was just horrible, couldn't get drivers loaded,
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it was really, it was pretty brutal, but as I continued, I thought, you know what, this can't be
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this hard, and I was really over-complicating it because I was, there's a, there's a parent in
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the beginner's guide that says you have to load kernel modules, and it's after you connect to
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the internet, but so when I, when I would install these kernel modules, I thought you had to do it
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for, for your wireless card and everything, and I was really treating it like, it was,
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Linux from scratch, basically, it's pretty brutal, I was like, well, I don't know how I do this,
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I was, I was pretty naive when it came to the whole thing, so I gave it up after that, and went
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back to my crunch bang, and finally, I recently, I just, I just, I, I'm going into college in
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about a week, so I just graduated high school last year, and I, so I had some time on my hands,
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and I said, well, you know what, I'm gonna try Arch again, so I put, I put it on the netbook,
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and the installation process was a breeze, like I said, I mean, I had some issues
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with, like, about the, I just wasn't over complicating it, so previously, I was over complicating
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it, I was trying to do everything at once, but like I said previously, yeah, like I said previously,
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the installation process is not that hard, if you have the beginner's guide right in front of
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you're fine, and that's good, and right now I'm, I'm actually, I'm on the, I'm active on the
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Arch forums, I'm on nixers.net, so I'm, I'm really kind of stepping up my game, I kind of feel, but
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I'm also not one of those archa-ledists, everything, every other distribution sucks, I think,
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Linux and Unix in terms of its core nature, if it works for you, then it works for you, I mean,
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if you're a Windows user, if it works for you, it works for you, but for me, Arch works,
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and that's all I have to say, thank you for your time, and enjoy the resting, whatever you
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are doing, bye.
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You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
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how easy it really is. Hecker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
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infonomicom computer club, and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have
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comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website,
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or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released under
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Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
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