115 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
115 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 985
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Title: HPR0985: LFNW: A Short Talk with Thomas Stover
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0985/hpr0985.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 16:58:47
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---
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This date and I'm here with Thomas Stowler from, well, where are you from, Thomas?
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From Birmingham, Alabama.
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Okay.
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What are you doing in Birmingham today?
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I'm doing a talk on the C-development in Linux platform.
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And I actually did a talk yesterday and did some more questions and demonstrations today.
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Okay.
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And how are you liking the Linux tests here in Birmingham?
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I am having a great time.
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I've had a lot of fun talking to people.
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And especially to be able to get rid of the historical book of Alan Turing this morning,
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I talked to him for about an hour after his talk and enjoyed that immensely.
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A lot of new hardware.
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There's the multi-seat Linux setup.
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It's pretty impressive.
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Let's look at that.
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And hopefully we're going to pick up some information from him.
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I love fun just talking to people at the after party.
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It's a good event.
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You know, these are really good things to do this day and meet people and have a good time.
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Now, sort of what Linux tests have you went to?
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I went to the Atlanta Linux test one year before that happened.
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Then to the Texas Linux test two years ago, this happened so far.
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It means that you Southeast Linux tests two out of three years that has happened.
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And hopefully trust in other branches tongue is on.
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Okay.
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Did you present it?
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Any of those?
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I have.
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I presented it at one of the at last year's Southeast Linux tests in Spartanburg, Texas.
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And at the Austin, Texas Linux test last year in the previous year.
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Okay.
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Just curious.
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Since we have another contributor that is from the Southeast Linux test and has been involved in that,
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you met big days.
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The name sounds familiar.
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I don't know if you've had a face face conversation.
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I will tell you that it's a Southern Raw.
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That makes any difference.
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Okay.
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So what's some of the C programming for Linux?
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Well, the only thing that's the most exciting thing that there is in Linux.
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That's the, that's my brother better to sort of speak.
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I think it's the best exciting thing.
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It's the core of where the power that comes from.
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If you didn't have C programming.
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And that's what would be what it is.
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And what it means is that you wouldn't have thinking the abilities that you do is the best development platform this day for.
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Kind of come merit.
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And before it's the tools that you have to use a graduate superior for other platforms.
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And this is the most exciting place to be if you really want to get that level.
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Okay.
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What are some of the projects you've worked on?
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Well, professionally.
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The last, most of the last decade, I've used Linux in C specifically.
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In a state of platform for flood control and flood management and hydro power support.
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And that's been a huge success.
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As opposed to some of the proprietary blockchain technologies that we use.
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And then use Linux and network capacity for extensively far around the structure into that nature.
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And on the side, I was used it for personal computing for over a decade.
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And a couple of course projects that I have are one of them is a library interface with automation.
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You're a POC student Linux.
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I have a build tool that's in the process of these leads that helps you render a bonus from project files.
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A build configuration in general.
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And then the big project that I have it worked on for several years.
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As a core component of the scale system is called sensor process.
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And that is seemingly where it is.
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And that is kind of the overlap between the fields of scale, building automation and network monitoring.
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So that's a very good project.
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Yeah.
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So is building automation and Linux on a big scale has something to do for that?
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That is some people have been doing.
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I've been doing it in a hobbyist capacity for a number of years.
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I think more people would get into it as more things.
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The adrenal graph, for example, does a lot of things with that.
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And there's some interface in their projects that I'd like to pick up on.
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Also, things with an industrial capacity of POCs and also things like the network management and monitoring tools.
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That is one of overlap terms in the world, which can be.
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You can take those things out of that and make some big tools.
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Is there something that you got with all of them?
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Yeah.
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No good, though.
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Well, we're here talking in the hallway.
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The painter is removing the paint asking and now he's coming in from, I guess, out working.
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There he goes.
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So, where do people find out about you online?
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The business is my website, which is Thomstover.com.
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And I have my contact information and this project information comes in.
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I have a few articles on there and some minutes of office.
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I have several there.
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So, do you believe it's not there?
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No good.
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And so, thank you very quickly for having your public radio and, you know,
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put up your own show with your projects and that when you get a chance.
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We're nice to have you here.
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Thank you very much.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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