108 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
108 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3861
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Title: HPR3861: How To find Things on your home Network
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3861/hpr3861.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 06:49:44
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3861 from Monday the 22nd of May 2023.
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Today's show is entitled How to Find Things on Your Home Network.
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It is hosted by JWP and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is How to Find the Lost Raspberry Pi Zero on Your Home Network.
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Good day.
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My name is JWP and I'm a Hacker Public Radio host and it's really nice to talk to you
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today.
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What I wanted to do was I wanted to do a short podcast on how I find things on my network
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at home.
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What's going on there, how we get to them, how we access them, how we do this.
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And so I had to show previously about my devices and so I have an old who I phone that
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marries my work phone and I keep trying to keep the same software.
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But in addition to that, I have a folder called network on there and I'm a Fritzbox guy
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or an AVM guy.
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And so I'm a phone.
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I have my Fritzbox, a phone and a VLAN thing from the hoods.
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And there's another app called Net Analyzer.
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And so I used to run a very large orange PI Raspberry Pi device farm downstairs and it
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just got too much during COVID and for whatever reason, a lot of those things stopped working
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and so I stopped using it and so the network thing on my phone became less useful.
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But let's go ahead and touch that app.
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So you get that app open and you press scan and see, I have the Fritzbox, of course.
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And then I have the phone that I'm using that's listed and there's something called
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i.e. registry authority on 24, the Apple TV is on 25.
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So I think that 24 is probably the Google TV.
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So I have a Google TV and Apple TV, I think 24 is probably the Apple TV, then 29 is the
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over-media server and I'm pretty sure that 34 says Intel corporate.
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So that's my work PC that I'm talking to you from.
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And then I told you before about the fidget to 900 terminal.
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So he's really going good and I guess I don't really know what 24 is because it's saying
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that 51 is the Chromecast.
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The 53 is an Amazon technology and 56 is a Raspberry 0A 78 is a printer and my wife's iPhone
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and iPod touch that we talked about, the Redmi Note 10s is also there and the iPad.
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And for the elsewhere's network, I still use an Archer C2, the boy I sure want to get
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a, another Fritzbox up here, so I can have a mesh, a mesh going there.
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And like I said, I use the OpenMedia server at Christmas time, it was a huge upgrade
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for this and I haven't done much with it except turn it back to what it was, it just serves
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my movies, media, a second place to keep everything, everything going.
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But the Fuji and the is going to really going to try to do a sort of kind of office and
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kind of thing with own cloud or next cloud or something like this, whatever is the easiest
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and whatever is the easiest and I've seen so many really good PR projects and of course
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all of those orange PIs and Raspberry devices, I still have them all nicely stacked, one
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of them is even an 8GB Raspberry 4 and that's probably another thing, how to start using
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them or maybe I can start giving them a way or selling them or something, I don't know,
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I was just proud of them and I most likely will go, but let's try to talk to my, to the
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One Raspberry that has lived for years and years without its SD card going bad or for
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whatever reason.
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So let's open up, I'm on the Windows Work PC and so let's open up a go back and let's
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open up a kitty, so kitty is a terminal terminal and so let's type in the IP address 680.78,
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56 and let's load it up and see if I can get there, so I put the IP address in and
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out for whatever reason, he's not working, not working, so I'm pretty sure I typed it
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in 192, yeah, it's not going, not going, so let's see, let's see if I can ping him from
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the command prompt, could be something from my work, work thing, so let's go back, get
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the backspace, get the console going, okay, so let's ping him from the console, so 1,
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1, number 2, okay, so he, so that was something with the kitty, because ping on the PC works
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fine and let's close that and let's go directly to putty instead of kitty, kitty is more
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for file sharing I think, it's been a while since I tried to copy files over SSH, but
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let's see, so now we go to putty and putty comes up and let's try the same thing, and 50,
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and let's open him up and type in the username and password, type in in the password again,
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okay, so now it's up, and so uptime, and so his uptime is only 13 days, but I logged in two
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weeks ago and I did update and rebooted him, and he was had gone 568 days without fail, okay,
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and so what is it, what do I use this thing for, so I mostly use it to mess around with,
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but I have used it in the past for doing YouTube DL, and if you haven't done YouTube DL,
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it's a, it's truly a wonderful program that works with a P, so what is this YouTube DL, so
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YouTube DL is a command program to download videos from YouTube and other sites, and other sites,
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and so it for sure, for sure I have YouTube DL, I think, on this thing, so let's see, so if I type
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YouTube on this DL, and I wait, it's in a wait, and I wait, and I wait some more, and it's a zero,
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so it's a, so it's a contact YouTube DL, now I need to type YouTube DL, and minus minus how,
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and see if it does anything with that, and again, it's pretty slow, it's pretty slow, but in any case,
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what you do is you open it in a fast connection to your OpenMini server, and then you download,
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you go when you download the thing, and I should probably do another show about that, but that's
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what I primarily use this, this PI4 is, is to use it as a YouTube DL client, and if you get two or
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three of them together, you can download a lot of different YouTube videos at the same time, and
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of course, you know, there's all kinds of browser extensions and anything to do that, but I like doing
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things on the command line, and it's useful to do it from the command line, I think I did a podcast
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with the hacker public radio where I had all my office suite in a console one time, and I do have
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a terminal downstairs that works just fine, just one second, my wife is bothering the hell out of me
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in the moment, so my beautiful wife just bothered me, and my son who got very yesterday is coming,
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coming in, and he is wanting to clean up, and so whenever you have an older child that wants to
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clean up, that's fantastic, it's a joys event that he wants to clean up, so hey, that's really it,
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so that's how you scan your network with your Android phone, open a putty client to your Raspberry,
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do something with your Raspberry, and I'm sorry guys, I haven't posted very often, and now I've
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done two shows in a day, in a day, but I saw the mail from Ken, and he did look a little desperate,
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so I thought I would come in and try to help Ken a little bit, and I still have some
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notes when Ken had me go to the networking thing as a hacker public radio media consultant,
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so I got into the $1,200 a day conference for free, where my hacker public radio media
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press credential thing, and so I might want to think about that as you know that if you know,
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Ken can somehow get you into a Linux event that you would normally pay for, if you would walk around
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and do some interviews in there, and take some notes, and stuff like that, then you would
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help Ken and Dave a lot, and they're pursued to keep everything going just fine, and by the way,
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I really like that Hachuka stuff in his RV, now that Hachuka's retired, that's fantastic,
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just keep that whole thing going from me, it makes my whole day when I hear about your
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retiree adventure. All right guys, take care, be safe, you need to reach me now, I'm JWP5 at
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hotmail.com, enjoy the rest of your day. You have been listening to Hachuka Public Radio,
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at Hachuka Public Radio, does work. Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself,
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if you ever thought of recording a podcast, and click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive, and our sync.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released
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on our creative commons, attribution 4.0 international license.
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