104 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
104 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 221
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Title: HPR0221: Being Powerless
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0221/hpr0221.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 14:13:17
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---
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You
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Welcome to Huckabuck Radio everyone, my name is Soak. In this episode I'm going to be
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talking about being powerless. Once again I did the script for this and I'm recording
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it later. I'm sitting here writing, guess writing, this today. But first let me explain
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a few things. A few weeks back Mr Soak's company moved. Due to the post allow apartment
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being as bad as reliable as if it's being delivered by a blind snail, we set up power
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bills and similar important mail to be sent to her workplace. Last time in her old building
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when she received her utility bill, she wrote a check and note about the change of address
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on there. Although the mail was going to be forwarded anyway for a little while, the
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reason she writes a check does not have a direct debit set up. Its local power company
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does not allow you to pick when the bill was paid, so you have to make sure the money
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is in the account on the correct day. Anyway, so she moved to the new building and when
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the power bill came she paid it. Unfortunately, they'd not updated her address and the mail
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forwarding had taken about three weeks together. The disconnect notes were also gone out
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to the old address of course, and it's presumably on her way to the new address. Her check
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arrived today, unfortunately it was also today that the power was shut off. So this is why
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I'm sat here writing this with an actual pen. Not that I can't write, I just generally
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don't, I can tie much faster. The wife phone number's toll power will be restored
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today, so that presumably means by 5pm the end of the work there is the power guys presumably
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leave after about 5pm. It's gone for and the power is still off. I found the wife and
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she's contacted the power company again. Now they say it's going to be within 24 hours
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after when she phoned. But anyway, as in the side, the last time we had the power shut
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off, which was what caused her to change the mailing address anyway, I tried to phone
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and pay, however I was told I could not actually pay because it was not my bill and I didn't
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know her social security number. I even said I did not know how much the bill was, which
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they rightly said they could not tell me. But I had a previous bill and I was going
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to pay that plus another 50 bucks which should hopefully cover everything, but they still
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would not let me do that. So suffice it to say I'm not that impressed with the power
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company, but having no other companies around to offer power, we don't really have any
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choice. But having no power reminded me how much we rely on it, no TV, no computer,
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no phone or cordless anyway, no refrigeration, no lights, but we have flashlights and candles
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fortunately. I was tidying up a part of clothes in the corner and figured I would vacuum
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under it, but it wasn't until I brought up the vacuum in and plugged it in and tried to
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turn it on. I realised it, of course, requires power. In some ways, it's quite refreshing
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to be reminded of these things. It's like taking a day off from the internet and realizing
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life does continue without you. Certain things do still work, of course. Water is gravity
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powered, so it taps toilets and showers work. We have hot water from the gas powered boiler,
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but there's no air conditioning or oven, both require electricity. I remember when I
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was a child, Christmas morning, one day we had a power cut. Fortunately, my parents had
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a gas oven, so the turkey was not ruined. But it would have been interesting how we had
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an electric oven. It's quite fun not actually having power. I'm being forced to do other
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things, being forced to pull out that board game and play, being forced to talk to people,
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being forced to do other things. I'm realising how dependent we are now on electricity. Personally
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whilst I do enjoy the internet, I can live without it for a while. A few years back when
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I was doing my travelling, I was in Australia and we were out in the middle of nowhere, absolutely
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nowhere in West Australia, where it was 800 miles to the next town. There was no cell
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phone reception, not with our satellite phone or similar. And yet we survived, we found
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other things to do. The wife on the other hand, I believe, would have a bit more of a
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fit. She was freaking out that she might not be able to check her email and log on and
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play various little games and things she has. But I think sometimes we were a little
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too dependent on the technology and the electricity, to where it is actually detrimental. And some
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people do find a lot of use. There's a guy I used to work with and his wife, after
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giving birth to their children, had gone through the whole depression thing. I can't go
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out of the house because I'm looking after the kids which moved on to the, I don't want
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to go out of the house, which then became, I can't go out of the house, people might see
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me. And she was using the internet as a lifeline to actually talk to people and actually try
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and interact with people and get people to reinforce her thoughts so she might actually
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one day leave the house again. So I understand there are a few things like that. But for most
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of us, we're not going to die if we don't have the internet access for a day. We can go
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outside and do other things. We can talk to people, we can play a board game. We can go
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out for a walk. We can look at the sunsets. There are some beautiful sunsets here in Nevada.
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They're fantastic. And sometimes it's just nice to walk outside and stop and watch. Now
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don't get me wrong. I really do enjoy the internet and I don't think I could live without
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it. But I can't go for a small period of time without it. And I think everyone should,
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it's like the last page of the internet if anyone's seen that. The last page of the
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internet now turn your computer off and go outside. I think everyone should, we should
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go outside every now and then maybe not for a long period of time necessarily, but just
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doing it. So every now and then, I don't log into ISE or I don't check my email. I'm
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trying to move with that. We stop being this whole Pavlovian response of every three
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seconds bouncing around between email, ISE and websites to see if anything's updated.
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Have a good anything new in my artist's feet? Have a good new email? Have a good new
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list? Have a relax. Chill. Take a step away. Forget about it for a bit. Go off, do something
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else for several hours and then come back more aware about it. I think people need to
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actually slow down a little and take the time to smell the roses as the phrase goes.
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I know I think I'm rambling on a bit now and starting getting a bit philosophical and
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possibly even religious here. So, it makes me very odd for a tech podcast for me to say,
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don't use tech, but just as an experiment. For one day, don't check the internet.
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Go out do something. Doesn't have to be something groundbreaking. Go to a bar with a few friends.
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Go play a board game with your parents. Just try something a little different and then
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come back and realise the world just continue without you and it's not so much that everything
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has to be done now, now, now. Things can wait, relax, slow down a little and I think
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you will feel better for it. And that's it for this episode. Yes, I know it was a bit
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of a weird one. I was planning on doing something else actually and as I said, the power
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ended up being cut off and it just made me reevaluate a few things and I only decided
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to do an episode about this. Anyway, I'm still trying to get Mini-Zoke to install Windows
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and Ubuntu. That is still coming, I hope. Assuming I can get in and actually sit down and
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do this. I may end up having to wait for it when he has a day of school or something
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for him to actually do it. I haven't forgotten about that and I do notice the sound of
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this is a bit weird. There's a hum in the background. I'm working on that. Sorry about
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this one. I've tried to tidy it up. I was late on doing this episode, so apologies if
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it sounds a bit more rough than it does normally. Thank you for listening. If you've got any
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questions, you can email me at zokesorryatgmail.com. That's xray osca kilo echo Sierra osca
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Romeo Uniform at gmail.com or you can visit me at zoke.org xray osca kilo echo.osca Romeo
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Golf. Thank you for your time and you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio. HPR is mounted by Carol.net, so head on
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over to cah.org.inc for all of us to meet.
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