302 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
302 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1450
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Title: HPR1450: My Mobile digital life
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1450/hpr1450.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:10:22
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---
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Hello Hacker Public Radio, this is Nywise from nywise.com calling in with a car
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cast. Yep, like the great ones Dave Yates have also hooked up on my
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microphone in my car and decided to record this little audio skin as I'm
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driving to work. It's actually quite fitting because the topic that I want to
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mention today is how to have a geeky lifestyle when you are overly mobile. Now
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overly mobile for me means that I spend about three hours in the car every day to
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work and drug work. I live at about a hundred kilometers from where I am in
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point. It's because I work in the tech industry and I live in a quite rural area
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so I have to drive about an hour and a half to work an hour and a half from work.
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This takes up quite a bit of my day. I also work quite long hours and that means
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I don't have a lot of time left to tinker and geek out when I get home. One of
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the things that I do want to do of course is you know enjoy technology and
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enjoy information. I mean I still want to know what is featured on that how to
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geek article in my RSS feed but I don't have the time to read it. I would like
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to learn about stuff regarding Linux or how to mount SMB files or SMB
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shares from the command line. You know all of the geeky stuff that we do when
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we sit at home behind our computers but because I'm in the car three hours a
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day I had to adjust my lifestyle. Now I've been doing this for quite a while. I
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have been doing long commutes for about five to seven years now so I've gotten
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used to it. One of the things that I want to talk about today is what my
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routine actually looks like and I'll take you I'll take you through my morning and
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evening routine and show you how I devote my time during my you know morning
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and evenings when I'm going to work coming from work and how I have actually
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tried to weave the information age into that while still staying safe. Let's
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face it when you are behind the wheel of the car there is no way that you're
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going to be able to read something that's online or watch a video. You can
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try but you will probably end up crashing and I think that although smartphones
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and tablets give us the ability to have connectivity wherever we go and are
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easily interacted with in the car it's quite easily to watch a video in the car
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if you really want to. You can send a text message or an email or a tweet but I
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have promised myself that I won't do such things. I will not only endanger myself
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and you know if something happens to me the people who I love will be left
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behind but I am also responsible for the safety of other drivers. If I swore
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off the road and hit a cyclist who's on the bicycle lane because I want to
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tweet out this greatest new article that I've found I'll never be able to live
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with myself. It's just not done. It is our duty as geeks to make sure that we
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use technology wisely in the car to it safely but still be able to you know use
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technology to our leisure. So just give you my morning routine. Now when I get
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up which is about at 5.30 I try to exercise because I sit at my desk a lot I
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try to keep fit and one of the things that we have at home is a stairmaster. What
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I do is I get up and I hop on the stairmaster. I have an iPad and I take that
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with me on the stairmaster and I put my headphones on and I take the 20 minutes
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that I'm on the stairmaster in the morning to make sure that I've watched some
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interesting content. Now this is one of the moments in time where I actually have
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my you know my eyes free as so to speak. So I watch some video podcasts like
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for example short ones like CNET today or 90 seconds on the verge just to get
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a quick news update about what's going on. Sometimes I watch some longer
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podcasts like for example Hack 5 and sometimes I just like to say informed and
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watch a TED talk because I love the TED app on my iPad. That way I can quite
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easily select whatever talk I want to listen to and what I find interesting and
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because TED talks are about 10 to 18 minutes that kind of fits in perfectly with
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my time on the stairmaster. It makes the time go swiftly and before you know it
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you've exercised for 20 minutes and your brain has been occupied and if you
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take a look at TED talk or stuff like that you would have actually learned
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something. So that's actually the first piece of information that I consume
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during the day. Then I do my push-ups, then my sit-ups and I go downstairs. I have a
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shower and I eat breakfast. On the breakfast table I have my Android tablet
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with me because I have an Nexus 7. It's quite small and I carry it around
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mostly everywhere and what I have on there is feedlead to read my RSS feeds and
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all decode which is an app that I use to read books. I've been reading
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electronic books for let's say five years now and I haven't read a paper
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book since I always enjoy having something to read on my tablet so while I'm
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having breakfast most of the time the tablet or in this case the Nexus is
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popped up right in front of me and I can read whatever book that I'm actually
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reading at that moment. So it's time to go to work so I put my tablet down, I walk
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over to the counter and I disconnect my smartphone. My smartphone is a Galaxy
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Note 2 with 32 gigabytes of onboard storage and 64 gigabytes of extra SD
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storage which is ridiculous but I got the 64 gigabyte SD card for free so that
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is actually a main source of all of my content because when I'm at the
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breakfast table and I'm not reading my book I'm reading through my feeds, my RSS
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feeds. I cannot of course read every article so what I do is tag the articles
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that I find really interesting and add them to pocket. Now it's time to go I pick
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up my Galaxy Note 2 and on there are several applications that I use every
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single day to keep me informed and entertained during my commute. So I snap on my
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smartphone, take my headphones with me and I'm off to the car. In my car I have
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a mount, I have one of those suction caps that is mounted to the windshield at
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the front so I can easily reach my phone to do controls like you know up and
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down the volume and skip tracks when I'm listening to music. I put my phone
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into its mount because when it's in its mount I cannot hold it and like for
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example use the keyboard to type tweets and messages and stuff. It kind of keeps
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it kind of out of arms away from arm's length and I think that that is
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something that helps me be or have some discipline in the car so I won't play
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with my phone. Once in the car one of the first applications that I launch is
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a pocket because of the fact that my phone is wired to the Bluetooth
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speakers in my car the audio from my phone is played through the car
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stereo. Pocket is automatically synced all the articles that I just
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start that are just safe to pocket at the breakfast table and I love using
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pocket because it helps you get through a selection of content that you made
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earlier and if you're bored or if you have to do whatever and you're waiting for
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something you don't surf around aimlessly on your phone or check Facebook for
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the thousandth time. If you're craving for some information or for example if
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you're offline which happens regularly for me because I am a broad almost 50
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percent of my day I work in the Netherlands I live in Belgium and I don't have
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a container connection in the Netherlands because roaming charges in Europe are
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ridiculously high so whenever I find myself online I use pocket to browse through
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the articles that I've actually marked as interesting or have tagged as this is
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something I want to read through. Now why do I use pocket in the car? Well not to
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read the articles then as I said I would run into lampposts and cyclists and
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other vehicles but pocket does have an interesting feature that is called
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text-to-speech you can actually have the pocket articles read through to you. So
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as I'm driving away I have already selected one or two articles that I really
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want to listen to that I just start at the breakfast table. That way I am
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actually using my ears in the car and have my eyes on the road. Pocket is one
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application that I use and then there is of course the need to communicate. Yes
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there are plenty of geeks out there and if you if you are like me and you live in
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Belgium you are in a different time zone than a lot of the geeks and friends
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that I know online. These are in the US and in Canada and in Australia but my
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morning commute is actually quite ideal because then I catch the guys on the
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US side in their evening of the previous day and I catch one Aussie friends in
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the evening of the current day while I am in the crack of dawn of the current
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day. It's kind of like being a time lord but it's really nice. Now how do you
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communicate with them? Yes there is Twitter there is Facebook there is Google
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Pause there is chat no not a good idea in the car as I said eyes on the road
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and hands on the steering wheel but there is a great about there called Voxer. Voxer
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lets you talk to people as if it were like a walkie-talkie you can send a
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voice message there is a voice message coming back. It isn't a real-time
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conversation because you cannot talk both at the same time but it's actually
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very convenient to do it that way because I tried using Skype but when you're
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in the car and you're driving around you are going from cell tower to cell tower
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and Skype has a very hard time keeping the connection alive but with Voxer
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because it's an asynchronous transmission of audio files it's actually quite
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possible to have a very good conversation in the car with multiple people. Voxer
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is easily easily operated by just tapping a button a big button at the bottom
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of the application and start talking and tapping that button again when you're
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done that is something I can just do in the car without endangering me or
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anybody else. So Voxer has become a lifeline to do some communications voice
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communications with all of the geeks and the nerds that are out there
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and because sometimes they're asleep when I'm awake and the other way around
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it doesn't matter if we are awake or online at the same time the messages get
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delivered and I think that Voxer could be called the ICQ of voice
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communication. The mobile client is available for Android for iOS and I
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and actually for Windows Phone and I really really love it. I
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incidentally also use Voxer to talk to my beloved wife because when I am
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in the car on the way back and I'm running late sending her a text message in
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the car breaks the card and will rule hands on the steering wheel
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eyes on the road and I can just send her a Voxer message honey I'm running
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half an hour late or baby I really really love you like sunshine or stuff like
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that. I know it's cheating but hey and so Voxer is also a very important app.
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Then of course comes the most important part I need to be entertained in the
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car. I like to listen to music from time to time but
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mostly I am I've been listening to podcasts in the car
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for the last seven years I think or even more yeah seven or eight years.
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I started out in the very very very beginning when
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when you know the daily source code a show of which some of you will not even
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remember that it ever existed was still in double digits so that's when I
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started listening to podcasts on a variety of topics mostly
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technology. For me podcasts have always
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been a source of information and I must say that over the last
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couple of years I have learned so much from podcasts.
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If there is something that if there is one thing that you want to do to change
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your life and to better yourself is stop listening to stupid morning radio
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and start listening to podcasts on a variety of topics.
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I listen to podcasts on topics from technology to history to politics to
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paranormal things to people who are going to hunt or on a ghost hunt
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all kinds of stuff and I have not only because I'm a podcast for myself
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found it invaluable to listen to podcasts but I've also learned
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so much when I get when I get to work I have colleagues who are just you know
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barely barely coming from the breakfast tables they have no idea
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what's going on in the world I arrive at work I touch down at work I am
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completely up to speed about what's happening in the technology world because
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I've listened to some kind of technology news show like
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technology today or 90 seconds on the verge and I immediately know what's
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going on and they go like if you heard the thing about
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blackberry and and I go like yeah it's this and that and that and they look at
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me and they go like how do you know this thing
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and that is because I use those 90 minutes in the car to
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learn stuff and to be entertained now please have a balance don't
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listen to one super heavy podcast after the other
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because your brain will explode so I've got some music on there as well I've
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subscribed to some music podcasts as well and I kind of like to shake things up
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I also listen to things like escape pod that give you a story
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so and some comedy central stuff just you know to keep myself entertained but
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also to take the time that I'm in the car to learn something
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the application that I use for that is dog catcher
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I have said it to automatically update and download my podcasts at home
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before I leave so every morning when I grab my smart phone
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everything is already set up and I'm good to go
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now podcasts are one thing but I found that there is
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I also can use this time to do something else to listen to something else than
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just podcasts I don't have the time to read
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and I love to read so there are so many books out there that I would like to
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read but I can have the steering wheel eyes on the road
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but I can listen so I regularly download audio books on a variety of topics
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and I've made a deal with myself to listen to one
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audiobook about fiction and one audiobook that lets me learn something
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and audiobooks are the things I listen to when I drive back home
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so currently I am reading the biography of Steve Jobs
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I've just finished Blink by Malcolm Gladwell
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I've also listened to Rama from Arthur C. Clarke
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and you don't have to have an audible account to get interesting books
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I mean there are a lot of books out there that you can download for free
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and listen to just go to podiobooks.com
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and you can download all of the audiobooks to your leisure
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the great thing with listening to a book that has a real story and it is that you get
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really you know you listen to the story and part of your mind is imagining
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what's going on while you're going through traffic
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but still you are entertained and it makes time go so much faster
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I used to dread commutes but sometimes when I'm in the middle of a very
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exciting chapter in a book and there's a traffic gem
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I go like oh yeah great wow I can actually finish off this book which is
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really nice and podiobook is a great source there are some
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classics out there if you haven't and your hacker
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your hacker public radio listener you probably know what I'm talking about
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please take a moment to listen to some of the books
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by Scott Sigler which who writes fantastic sci-fi horror novels
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like infection and contagion I got when I got into podcasting these were one
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of the first audiobooks I listened to I still
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love them JC Hutchins and seventh son a fantastic book to start you
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out in the magic of listening to an audiobook in the car
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Jake Bible and dad mech is also a fantastic sci-fi book there are so many
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books out there in the podiobook collection that you can just
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download for free now I also use dog catcher to listen to audiobooks and the
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way you can do that in dog catcher is by creating a virtual feed
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pointed towards the folder where the files are in of your audiobook
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and you can just browse or play through them just as if they were a podcast
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that way I have all of my audio content in
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one single application I really you know like using it
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now I know if you say oh nightwise I've got an iPhone don't worry
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downcast is also a very good standalone podcast
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player slash client on your iOS device which will give you the same
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functionality if you're strapped for time
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and you've been doing this for quite some while
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quite a while you can use the functionality on your favorite audio
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slash podcast player whether that's downcast or
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dog catcher to up the speed of some podcasts and some audiobooks I am
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currently with some podcasts I listen to them on double speed
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and on some pod and some audiobooks I listen to them on one point five
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times of the speed this is like really pumping data into your brain and
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you have to kind of train yourself it's very very
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fatiguing if you keep it up for long amounts of time
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but over the years I've trained myself to
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to actually be able to do that it's kind of like
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I always compare myself to being neo in the chair on the nebuchadnezzar
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that and more fuses just pumping information into my brain
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and it sometimes feels like that when I listen to podcasts on double speed
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but you know that's that so podcasts and audiobooks
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very very important part of my day now there is also the option of
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creating content well I'm not enjoyed I'm using an application called
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easy audio recorder let me just double check because the app is open
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right now it's called easy voice recorder and I use that one to
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actually record audio in the car the audio that you're listening right now
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is recorded on the galaxy note too with a pair of apple ear buds
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who come with a speaker now they're they're about 30 bucks
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but they're absolutely worth it great quality but what is more importantly
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they have a great um
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lanyard microphone that is dangling from the wire of your headphones
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and you can record audio just like I'm doing right now
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I use easy voice recorder to record quick pieces of audio
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which I then save to drop box those get automatically
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synced to my drop box folder and when I get home
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they're waiting for me to post produce into whatever I want to record
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so those are just a couple of the examples of what I do
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in the car every day and how I tune information and technology into a very
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mobile lifestyle if you have any tips and tricks that you want to share with me
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and that I would like to also share with other people from
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hpr and the people on the nightwise.com blog please don't forget to
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go over to www.nightwise.com and send me some feedback
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or you can also subscribe to the nightwise.com podcast which is not recorded in
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the car all the time but we also talk about
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tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks until then if you are craving
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technology information and communications in your
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mobile lifestyle remember the golden rule
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eyes on the road and hands on the steering wheel you are responsible for your own
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safety you are also responsible for the safety of other drivers
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you might be very safe but you always have to watch out for that one truck
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fearing off the road and if you are on a bike
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and you see the car fearing off the road towards you and you see the driver is
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sending out a text message or a tweet that's something you don't want to see
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as a geek and a technology enthusiast you are responsible for your own
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safety but you are also responsible for the safety of
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other people on the road so remember the golden rule
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eyes on the road hands on the steering wheel
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and your mind can be wherever it wants to be as long as you drive safely
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i am nightwise and this was my little view on technology and the mobile lifestyle
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for Hacker Public Radio
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you've been listening to nightwise you can find more articles and the nightwise.com
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podcast at www.nightwise.com that's kn-i-g-h-t-w-i-s-e.com
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the podcast with hacks tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks
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nightwise.com
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tired of choosing between NAS, Linux and OSX
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listen to the nightwise.com podcast and learn how to decide from operating system to
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operating system using our hacks tips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks
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to tack into your way of life and let technology work for you instead of the other way around
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www.kni-g-h-t-w-i-s-e.com
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Hacker Public Radio does
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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 a HBR listener like yourself
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if you ever consider recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy it really is
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical computer club
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HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com
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all binref projects are proudly sponsored by lunar pages
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from shared hosting to custom private clouds go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs
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unless otherwise stasis today's show is released under a creative commons
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attribution share a like free does our license
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