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Episode: 1357
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Title: HPR1357: Whats in my bag, and other stories
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1357/hpr1357.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:09:35
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---
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.
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Hello, my name is James Michael Dupont. This is my submission for the hacker public radio
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on the topic of what's in my bag. The short answer is, I don't have a bag and if I have
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a bag, I carry as little as possible with me in the bag. So let me explain myself. First of all, I
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carry my bag not in the car, but on my person, I walk to work or ride my bicycle or take the bus,
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and because of that, I carry as little as possible with me. I lived in Europe for a long time,
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and I learned to live without a car, and therefore I reduced the amount of things that I carry with
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me to a minimum or what I won't be afraid to lose. So let me go over some tips on how to travel
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bag-less or with as little as possible. Well, first of all, you might ask yourself, well, how do I
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go without a laptop? I am an old-school type person, so you might ask, how can I live without
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being constantly online? Well, the first thing is, is that there's a wonderful invention called
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newspapers, and I like to read newspapers. So I'll carry a newspaper in my hand, actually, and walk
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around with a newspaper in my hand, or under my arm, and okay, maybe I'll have a little bag
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to carry a newspaper or a couple of papers with me in a plastic bag or something I've picked up
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at a shop. So for those are just disposable bags, as opposed to my backpack or laptop bag.
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Otherwise, I might have a book with me that I'm reading, and I'll read that book while I'm
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traveling, and I like to read while I travel, because it's a nice, quiet time to focus on a book,
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and I don't have to worry about network signal strength, or Wi-Fi passwords, or constantly
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writing status updates, or obsessively taking pictures of etc., and posting that to websites.
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So some other things that I do is I'll print out a map, or my itinerary, I'll print out important
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information, and what I've done is I've created mobile accounts. I mean, I do have a mobile phone,
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now I finally broken down, and we have a smartphone, which I generally don't carry around with me,
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but on my smartphone I'll have a separate account for my email, and all my other accounts that I
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only use from the smartphone, so if the smartphone is compromised, or lost, I'm not afraid of losing
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my main account authentication. So basically, what I'm trying to say is that you want to use a separate
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account with an easy password, basically a disposable account, and on that disposable account,
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you only put information that you don't mind losing, or having someone else read, especially if
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you're mobile. So you don't need to carry passwords with you, you can carry the password to your
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mobile account in your head. I don't suggest using passwords that you can remember for your
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accounts. I use generated passwords. I use the program APG, or automatic password generator to
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generate passwords, and I use unique passwords for all my different online accounts. Now you might
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say, well, where do you store those passwords? Well, there's different tools for storing passwords.
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I won't recommend any right now because I don't have the optimal solution for it, but basically,
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even if you were to store them in a encrypted file on your hard drive, or use a different password
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management tool, I don't suggest that you carry those passwords around with you on a laptop in case
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you lose them or keep your files. This is where we're going, that the idea is minimal amount of
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information being transferred, and minimal amount of information being traveled around with,
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and minimal travel. Personally, I try and travel as little as possible, and also to reduce my fuel
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costs, and I think twice before traveling, not having a car is also great for that because,
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especially in America, not having a car is a real interesting challenge, and I'd like to talk
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about that some more if you have time. So this is going from what's in my bag. I already told to
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us in my bag, nothing, and now we're going to just explain why I have nothing, and the whole
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philosophy behind nothing. So basically, when I go to work, I do not carry my laptop from home to work,
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so what I do is I VPN, or even SSH into a server at work. Luckily, I'm working for a company that is
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enlightened enough to allow me to do that. Other companies required me to carry a laptop home with me
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in order to even log onto their corporate site, so I opted when possible not to carry that laptop,
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and not to work from home just for that reason. So I would work at home on just other things,
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and stay in the office later, which was unfortunate, but I'm no longer at that company, and I hope to
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continue working at this company. So really, you have a choice in choosing your employer, and your
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employer also has a choice in choosing you in terms of what's compatible and what's not. Some
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employers are enlightened enough to allow people to work without carrying laptops and devices around
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with them at all times. Also, I don't carry around a company mobile phone, or even a mobile phone,
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because I don't like to have a mobile phone on me at all times. It is a necessary radiation.
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We're getting enough radiation anyway, and it's also a necessary invasion of my privacy,
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and we all know that our privacy is really one of the few things that we even have left,
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and it's becoming smaller and smaller every day, so why should we feel the need to give in
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to privacy invasions for no reason? So I've covered the idea of not traveling and not caring,
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and basically reducing your footprint, your travel footprint. So here's some other tips that I've
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learned for security and privacy. First of all, don't read your private emails from your work
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network. You shouldn't be logging on to any of your private accounts from your work, because the
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system administrators will be able to key log or capture your passwords from the work network
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and theory, and also read your emails in theory. So basically, you don't want to be logging into
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anything private from your work accounts. So what I do is I create my own work-related accounts on
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different various servers, and I use them only from work, and that prevents unnecessary invasion of
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my privacy again, and it also enables me at the end. I can turn over the passwords to the administrators
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or whatever one I leave the company, they could audit them, and I don't care, because all of that
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is only work-related. If I have to send a message to my wife or my family, I can do that from my
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work-related email accounts, but only those messages that I send from work are then readable,
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and I have no fear of people getting at my main accounts. So let's continue with some more ideas
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on privacy and not exposing yourself too much. You don't necessarily need to, for example,
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carry your private SSH keys around, you can create secondary SSH keys, and for example,
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email them to you, or just you can make a disposable SSH key, and email that to your disposable
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email, and then you can use that only on the places where you need to have SSH into, and then you
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can remove those accounts later if you don't need them. So again, temporary passwords, of course,
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emailing them around makes them vulnerable, but in the case that they're compromised, at least you
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can identify easily what SSH key needs to be disabled, and you can track when it's being used,
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so I think that is at least a better idea than carrying around your main SSH key, and then having
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that compromised. Of course, you could go into these huge issues of, oh well, I encrypt my hard drive,
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et cetera, but it's better not to have the data on your hard drives, and not to carry the hard drive
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around and to carry it around encrypted. So yeah, well, I lived in Frankfurt for a long time,
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and I lived right next to the train station, so basically I would be able to walk out the door,
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and go down the street, and within two minutes I was at the main travel hub, the train,
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the Frankfurt train station, which I could reach all destinations from, and all destinations
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stopped at, so I was really in a luxurious state of being able to travel anywhere in Europe,
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and also then take the train to the airport. Can you imagine that in Germany, you can take the
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train to the airport, and you can get on to the train from a whole slew of local buses, local
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trams, et cetera, that will then take you to the train station, and then from the train station,
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you can take a high-speed train to the airport, and then get from the airport, you can go anywhere
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in the world, so basically I was completely mobile. Now I'm living in Lawrence, Kansas, there is no
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train to the airport, there is an expensive shuttle bus, and the airport is relatively far away.
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I lived in Topeka, where the bus was almost unusable, at least where we were living, and the bus
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would not be northbound, southbound, but only, let's say, southbound, and if you wanted to go to
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the shop, and then come back home, you would have to go to the shop, and then go downtown, and then
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take the bus all the way back to your house, so it was very, very bad to even do that. In addition,
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the bus has only ran until 5pm, so even if you wanted to go shopping after work, you could not,
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and even worse than that, you could not even walk to the shop, because there were no sidewalks
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on the side of the street, there was only a narrow road on the 29th street, for example, we need
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to go, and there is no way to actually even walk or bicycle. For some reason, and I can go into
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these reasons, I might as well, because if you're listening to this then, I mean, you could stop
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at any time, and I'll just keep on going, so basically the sidewalks are the responsibility of the
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homeowners, and the homeowners decided not to implement a sidewalk, so they have huge sections of
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the town which have no sidewalks, and then you'll have sidewalks on one house, and then they'll stop
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on the next house, even worse than that, this is my pet peeve, the sidewalks are just connected
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for many shops, so you can't get from the street to the sidewalk, you can't get from the sidewalk
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to the shop, they just put it in the sidewalk, maybe to say they have a sidewalker to fill some
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regulations, I mean, there might be some regulations saying you need to have a sidewalk in some places,
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but the sidewalk is completely useless for people using wheelchairs or people on bicycles,
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now on this topic, you're not allowed to ride your bicycle on the sidewalk in many places,
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but I have been studying the police data, for example in Lawrence, and it seems that many,
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many more accidents happen on the road and on intersections than on the sidewalk, so you're
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much safer to be on the sidewalk away from the cars than to be on the road, by especially here in
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Kansas where they have no vulnerable road users' laws, and if someone runs you over then the
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punishment is not that great, so they kind of treat it like having a car accident, just running
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people over, so and it happens all the time here in Kansas and no one seems to care, in general,
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I want to make this point about Kansas that they are very car dependent and many sections of the
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town are dependent on having cars available to you at all times, as I said, there's no sidewalks,
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there's no bike lanes, the bus system is horrible, there's no other way to get around, if you want
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to take the taxi, you have to wait for half an hour for a gelapidated, this is not to peak up,
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you have to wait for a gelapidated taxi which has exhaust coming into it, and it's horrible,
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takes forever, and it's not that cheap either, so really if you don't have your own car then your
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your life pleasure is reduced, now I never had a driver's license and I'm not even planning on
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getting one at this, I could easily get one, but it really goes against my idea of sustainable
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living, so basically this is where I want to get to, that my philosophy is that we should
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choose our places of living and choose our work and choose where we live so that we do not need
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to have cars, that's why I chose to live at Lawrence and we're so happy that we found a house
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that is near a shopping center and we can walk to shops, we can bicycle downtown on sidewalks
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or on bike lanes, I choose personally to ride on the sidewalk like many other people do, technically
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it is illegal but not enforced and I also ride on side streets where there is little or no traffic,
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that main traffic is on the couple streets and those are the streets with the most accidents,
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if you stay off of those streets then your chances of having an accident are reduced,
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basically the number of cars driving around and many of these people are not paying attention,
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they have children and they're screaming at the children while fumbling with their mobile devices
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and they are not used to looking out for pedestrians or for bicyclists because first of all it
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doesn't seem to matter if you run them over and second of all only people, well at least in
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Topeka only people who are poor actually walk or ride bicycles, in Lawrence you have a lot of
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international students and many of those international students are walking or taking the bus riding bicycles,
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so basically if we imagine that the cost of fuel is going to go up and up, if we look at
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some of the post oil peaked theories then we should really focus on organizing our lives around
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not using fuel and not having to travel great distances in order to get things, that's why I like
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living in Lawrence, there's a vibrant farmer's market here, even though the farmers are basically
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fuel dependent many of them and they need to use fuel to get to town or even get to the market,
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there are a large amount of them around here and if the price of fuel were to go up I'm sure
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there would be great impacts on the people at least for the short term would be protected, for
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the long term of course we can't really predict what's going to happen, at least I would say that
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if the situation in our country would change dramatically that at least I would have a short
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buffer period where I don't need to have a car, let's say the price of oil would go up to $6
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a gallon or $7 a gallon then I would not be directly affected like many other people would,
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so I'm kind of directly affected through the cost of other goods that I need and of course
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the only way to protect yourself against that would be through different off-the-grid living type
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situations which we all know about, I can tell you about my experiences in Kosovo where the people
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there are already living off the grid for the most part they don't have running water in the mornings
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and the power gets turned off for many hours a day so I could tell you about that, they have big
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tubs of water in the bathroom and they fill that up when the water is running and when the water
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is turned off they can use that in the morning to wash themselves and a lot of them have generators
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or battery backups and you know gas cookers work very nicely and you can really live without
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power for a couple of hours, small refrigerators help instead of having huge refrigerators
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using many of them have to keep food not even in the refrigerator they put it in the oven,
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so when they cook the food they'll put the food that's finished in the oven to keep it away from
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the flies and they'll just eat whatever's in the oven after that when somebody comes home they'll
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look in the oven for something to eat and I'll eat that and they have pantries with food in it
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that's not so perishable et cetera many of the things are dried sausages the cheese also doesn't
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need to be refrigerated it can go into a brine solution if you use salt and oil and sugar
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anything can be preserved so we'll learn that many people are worried about the changes in our
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economy but you have to remember that human survived for thousands of years before we had
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electricity it's only been a hundred and some years since we have widespread electricity and of
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course we all are now used to it independent on it but many parts of the world live without all
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these wonderful things and it is possible we did it before and I'm sure we could go back to doing
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again so yeah and in terms of a maker or movement we used to call that tinkering and inventing
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my grandfather's all or tinkers my father as well and many people I know are now rediscovering the
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maker movement I won't go too much into that but basically I think that if you come out here to
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Kansas you'll find many people who could still repair tractors and take apart motvers and fix
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their own things they don't call themselves makers and they just call themselves farmers and
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many of them are pretty self-sufficient once you go away from the main towns then you have to
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become more and more self-sufficient and plan your life so properly so I hope you enjoyed listen
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to me this was my first recording for the Hector Public Radio it was a long rambling chat
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and yeah I would appreciate your feedback to some projects that I'm working on well basically
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by guarding a project to create a Linux install Fest and that's going to be on the 20th of
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October you can check it out install Fest Lawrence minus EORG dot eventbrite dot com that's
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install Fest Lawrence minus EORG dot eventbrite dot com that's the project that I'm working on I've
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got other things linked from there and you can send me an email to James Mike Depont at gmail.com
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that's my main email if I'm at home I'll read it otherwise I've got a much of other emails but
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you can just wait until I get home I've got a Twitter which is Hacker Mike H4CK3RM1K3 on Twitter and
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that Hacker Mike name is used all over the place so I'd appreciate any feedback at all I'm planning
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on organizing a yearly conference here in Lawrence I would like to organize a free
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Libra open source open knowledge open hardware conference ideally at the university if we can get
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that done otherwise in some other place but I would like to establish that as a yearly festival like
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the Linux Fest in Ohio and there are very many interesting people here in Kansas and the area
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who I would like to invite as long as well as the international and national speakers I'm sure
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that Lawrence is a great place to visit it's got a wonderful downtown that you'll walk around and
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it's also very safe in comparison to Topeka and Kansas City so well so I want to say I want to say
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thank you to the people from the Hacker Public Radio for setting this up I really enjoy listening
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to your talks and I hope you enjoy listening to mine thank you over and out Mike
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our
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