199 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
199 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2027
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Title: HPR2027: Old Engineers and New Engineers
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2027/hpr2027.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 13:29:47
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---
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This is HPR episode 2027 entitled, Old Engineers and New Engineers.
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It is hosted by Gabrielle Evenfire and is about 13 minutes long.
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The summer is, I describe my and my children attempt to solve a puzzle.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair, at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello Hacker Public Radio, this is Gabrielle Evenfire.
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I have another short little podcast for you.
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This is a story of Old Engineers versus New Engineers.
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In this story, it features me and my children, I being the older engineer obviously.
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And it was my birthday and I received from my in-laws a cute little novelty item.
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It's a little wooden puzzle.
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Now this, imagine if you will, a cylinder where it's about three inches in diameter, about
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one inch tall if you lay the circular face on a table.
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So you've got this little hockey puck shaped block of wood.
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Now cut it in half mentally across the middle of the circle.
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Now you have this little wooden half moon about an inch wide and about an inch thick and
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about three inches wide across the circular part and about an inch and a half tall going
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from the rectangular end to the arc end.
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So if you've got this shape in mind, now I'm going to say that the arc end of this, the
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arc face of this little puzzle is the bottom.
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The rectangular face, which is the part that is sort of, you know, where the hockey puck
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was cut in half.
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We'll call that the top, okay?
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So now if you're looking at this little wooden puzzle and you put the bottom, that's the
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arc face.
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On the table and you're looking down from the top, on this rectangular face, you'll see
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that there is another, there's a cavity, a well that has been scooped, a curved well
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that's been scooped out of the middle of this half moon shaped block, okay?
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So it's like a little hockey puck was dug out of the bigger hockey puck.
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So at the very, very bottom of this well, this cavity inside of the puzzle, inside of
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the wood, there's a small little piece of, a little piece of wood at the bottom that
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cuts the well in half, but it doesn't divide it completely that, that little, you know,
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ball, if you will, doesn't come all the way back up to the, the level of the rectangular
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face.
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And inside of the well, there were two little metal balls, about, you know, say a millimeter
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or two, diameter.
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And so the balls could go into either side of the well, they could just hop over the
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wall if you tilt it enough.
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The rectangular face was covered with a surface of clear plastic, so you could see down into
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the well, but the balls wouldn't come up out of it.
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And then at each of the ends of the well, at the, at the ends of the well, there were
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notches cut in about the diameter of the little metal balls.
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And they were cut in far enough so that the two metal balls could comfortably fit in
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either one.
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And these are essentially at, so that they're essentially cut in at the, into the narrow
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end of each end of the well.
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So if you've got this little half moon on the table, you know, you can, and you've, and
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you've got it semi circular side facing you, then you can rock it to the left and the
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right on its curved arc.
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And the balls will roll along the well, and if you tip it far enough, they'll fall into
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the little notch at the end.
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And if you roll it to the right, they'll roll to the other side and fall into the other
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notch.
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And the object of the puzzle is to get one ball in each of those notches at the exact
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same time.
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So I looked at this and was playing around with it tilting it back and forth.
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And I thought, okay, I've done puzzles like this before, sort of, not like this one,
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but, you know, I've done, done mechanical puzzles before, you know, I'm going to be tempted
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to try and just, you know, jiggle the balls and hope they both go into their appropriate
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notches on both sides.
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But that's really not going to work very well.
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I'm going to try and, you know, get them, tilt them all the way to one side, and then
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quickly see if I can snap it over to the other and get one over.
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That's not going to work either.
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I know the answer isn't going to be anything like that.
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So I start pondering, and of course I noticed that the clear plastic face that keeps the
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balls from coming out of the well, that's really the only flat surface in the whole thing.
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So I think, okay, well, what if I do this?
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I'll turn it on its side, I'll get one ball and one notch, and then I'll guide, I'll tilt
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its sideways very slowly so that the other ball rolls to the other notch, and I bet you
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there's just enough friction, I'm sorry, not to the other notch, but to the other side
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of the well along the face of this plastic plate, there should be just enough friction
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in the notch to keep the one ball in there.
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And then if I very, very, very slowly tilt the whole thing upside down, then I'll have
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both balls on a flat surface.
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If I just keep that friction up just enough, I should be able for the ball that's in
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the notch, I should be able to guide the free ball into the opposite notch.
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And sure enough, I'm able with some very, very excruciating patience, able to do this,
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and then very, very, very slowly and carefully turn it back over so that it comes, I'll say
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back into the original orientation with the curved side down and one ball in each notch.
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Yay, for me, I looked at this and I, well, okay, I figured out a method to do it.
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Look, these are little cute puzzles and, you know, the solutions always simpler than
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this.
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It never requires that much finesse and it never requires what I would say relying on things
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like just enough friction from just enough imperfections in the cuts or anything like
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that to hold the little balls in place.
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So I knew I hadn't really figured the puzzle out.
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Well, I had figured out a solution, but it really wasn't a satisfying solution.
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But nevertheless, I was impatient.
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So I go and I open up the directions to see what's the real solution.
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I look at it and, ah, of course, yes, silly me.
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Well, I probably could have thought about it longer, man, but I'll never know now.
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I'll never know if I would have thought of a more elegant solution.
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That's the price of impatience, I suppose.
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So if you don't want to hear the solution to this puzzle, by the way, then you should probably
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stop this right now.
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I'm going to put a picture of this puzzle, of course, in the show notes so you can see
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what I'm talking about and you get a better feel for what's going on here.
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But then to continue with the story, I decided to then give this puzzle to one of my
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children.
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Now, my second daughter is 12.
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She loves all things engineering.
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She likes building things out of electronic kits and out of little robot kits and so forth
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and so on and she says she wants to be an engineer someday.
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So okay, figure this is up her alley and I show it to her.
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And she starts playing with it and she says, oh, dad, it's too hard.
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I don't know.
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I can't figure this out.
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You know how kids are.
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So I said, oh, you can do it.
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You just got to think about it some more.
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I'll leave you alone.
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You figure it out.
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And then, you know, it's like, no, I can't figure it out.
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I come back 10, 15 minutes later.
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She's like, no, this is too hard.
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I can't do it.
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I mean, of course, she wants a hint, right?
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So decide I'll give her a very vague hint and I say, okay, well, here's what you do.
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Okay.
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Look, do you understand what y'all pitch and roll up?
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Okay.
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Well, you know, if you're holding your hand out in front of you, face down, right?
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And you tilt it forward and back.
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That's, you could say, that's y'all.
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And then, if you're twisting it left and right, then that's pitch.
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And if you're turning it so it's face up, face down, face up, you know, that's roll,
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okay?
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And you, my dear daughter, are, you know, you are, you're doing a lot of y'all right
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now, but you're not doing very much pitch or roll.
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So you got to think about the other motions, okay?
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Just think about the other motions.
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Oh, dad, that's not a very good clue.
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Okay, don't just keep thinking about it.
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I leave her alone.
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I'm like, yeah, we'll see if she figures it out.
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I'm not going to give her any more than that.
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And you know, despite all of her protests and hour later, she comes back down and she
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puts it on the table and she gives the solution that was indeed on the card.
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She just puts it on the table and she spins it.
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And sure enough, the balls fly to the edge of the well and into the appropriate notches.
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Yay, good for her.
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She stuck with it long enough to actually figure it out.
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So I was thinking, okay, that's good, good for her.
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And then I bring the puzzle back downstairs.
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And my youngest, my six-year-old, is down in the kitchen.
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And she says, oh, what's that, daddy?
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And I said, oh, it's a little puzzle.
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And I show it to her and I say, here, you've got to get one ball in each end.
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And so she tips it and puts both balls in one notch and I say, no, no, no, you've got
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it in one of each end.
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Oh, she's all here.
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I'll have tipped the other direction.
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No, no, no, it's got to be one ball in each end at the same time.
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And she's like, oh, okay.
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So she's playing with it and she's staring at it and looking at it.
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And I go over to the refrigerator and I'm like, I'll just get a drink and see if she
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ever figures it out.
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And she walks around the other way to the refrigerator around the opposite side of
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the island in our kitchen to the refrigerator and pulls the refrigerator magnet off of
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the refrigerator and proceeds to use it to pick the balls up out of the well, drag them
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to the edge, drop them in the notch, put one in each end and says, look, dad, I figured
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it out.
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And I was completely beside myself because I thought this is the absolute best solution
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yet.
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Talk about completely not taking anything for granted, not making any assumptions.
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And my gosh, the simplest and most elegant of the solutions, I think, anyways.
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So this is just a reminder of me, reminded me immediately.
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See, this is what happens as you become the older engineer.
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You're already thinking about all while I've seen this.
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I'm not going to try this.
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I'm not going to do this.
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It's hard to get that fresh perspective.
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And it's always amazing, then, to see life through the eyes of a child again and realize
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just how unlimited the possibilities are in our world for fixing problems.
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So it was a fun, fun, heartwarming event.
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And I thought that maybe the hackers out there in HPR land would get a kick out of it.
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So with that, this is Gabriel, even fire, signing off until next time.
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Bye-bye.
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You've been listening to HECA Public Radio at HECA Public Radio.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 HPR 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.
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HECA Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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