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Episode: 1658
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Title: HPR1658: Cool Stuff Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1658/hpr1658.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:29:07
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---
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It's Wednesday 10th of December 2014.
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This is HPR Episode 1658 entitled Cool Stuff Part 2.
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It is hosted by Curtis Edkins Kuprompt and is about 20 minutes long.
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Feedback can be sent to Kurt Edkins at mail.com or by leaving a comment on this episode.
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The summary is, Kuprompt talks about some more cool stuff that he has discovered.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hey everyone, this is CPrompt North Carolina.
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I just wanted to pop back in and do a quick episode on some more cool stuff that I found.
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The first is a website and it is called Today I Found Out.com.
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This is something that I just love, these little tidbits, information and stuff.
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How things came about, why we do certain things, where this topic came up.
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This website is just nothing but that.
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A couple of little examples, just on their featured listing that they have on their front page right now.
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They have a lot of people start smoking tobacco, might be interested in that, don't know.
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Mailboxes and Postmaster General, kind of a little history about that kind of thing.
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How were Kamikaze Palace chosen, who was Humpty Dumpty, and that was actually kind of interesting, who was Humpty Dumpty?
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Why don't birds, legs freeze?
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I think about ping-ones getting their feet pretty chilly out there, walking around on that snow.
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So the website is nothing but little tidbits that.
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It's a one page article for that topic.
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Very interesting, lots of links.
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And follow up some of that kind of little tidbits of information.
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And following up with that, the second thing would be the podcast companion to that website.
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They put out a weekly podcast.
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It's about maybe 15 minutes long.
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Sometimes maybe a little less, a little bit more, but it's on a topic just like that.
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For the Thanksgiving in the US, we celebrate Thanksgiving, so there was an episode.
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The mini-miss surrounding the pilgrims and Thanksgiving.
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Very interesting, some things that I didn't know about.
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That we often think of the pilgrims and what happened during Thanksgiving didn't really happen.
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A couple of more episodes that just popped up.
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The police officers and the color blue.
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Police officers mostly wear blue.
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Kind of a little podcast on how that came about and why that is.
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That kind of thing.
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Another episode that just came out that was really interesting.
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The moon on the horizon.
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Very interesting.
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So it was a lot of nice science kind of history on how we thought the moon was a show to be a different size.
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However, it was on the horizon that it would be at nighttime.
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During night, it looks like it's a little bit smaller.
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It's higher up in the cloud.
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It looks smaller.
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When it's down the horizon, it looks like a big, huge moon.
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People always look at the big moon coming to find out.
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They're actually the same size.
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So our brain is just praying a little trick on us.
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A little spoiler there, but whatever.
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If you listen to it anyway, it's awesome.
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So those are two great things.
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It's a lightness, a nice companion.
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They get a website with lots of different tidbits, information, and kind of, and the podcast that goes along with it.
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Narrator has a great voice.
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It's very well produced and everything.
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It's not real long, 15 minutes.
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So it's nice to, you know, on my drive to work.
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It's the first thing I pop into the playlist on the pod catcher.
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It's the first thing I listen to in the mornings.
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And it's great.
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It makes a great conversation.
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You never know when this little tidbits are going to pop up that you need to say, hey, you know what?
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Something about that.
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The moon isn't necessarily a further way at night time than it is during the daytime because of this.
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And you can sound all intellectuals and smart and stuff.
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The third thing is I got a few little command line tips that I found out.
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And this, this first one was it with huge time saver.
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And I really wish I would have known this long time ago.
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Maybe I should have, but, you know, whatever.
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It's, you know, when you learn, you learn, right?
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So let's just say that you're in the command line as most people in running Linux would be in.
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So you're in the command line, you're typing out a long command.
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Maybe you're a CD and into a directory.
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Maybe you're running a Python command.
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I don't know.
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You're typing out a long command of some sort.
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Maybe you're your grip and something out.
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Maybe you're awking or whatever you might want to do.
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And you need to make an adjustment to it.
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And you need to make an adjustment way at the beginning of the command.
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Instead of backspacing through all of it and retyping it or hitting the arrow button
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and going through each single character,
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you can actually hold down the control button and then hit the arrows.
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And it will go through each word by word instead of moving through each letter.
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And it just makes the adjustment of making the, you know, adjustment to the command
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that you may have typed in incorrectly or just maybe need to make an adjustment to it for some reason.
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It makes that so much quicker.
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I could have used that a long time ago.
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And I'm glad I found out about it now.
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There you go.
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So control, then arrow makes going through the command a whole lot easier if you need to make adjustments to it.
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Another command line tip is the CD space and then the dash or hyphen or whatever you want to call it,
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the little hyphen.
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That will take you back to the previous directory that you were just in.
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So let's say that I CD into var slash log to look at something log or something,
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sometimes system log or something, and I need to go back to,
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and then I CD into my home directory to find a text file or something.
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And then I want to quickly go back to the var slash log file or the var log directory.
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All I had to do is CD space hyphen, and I actually changed directories back into the previous directory that I was in the first time.
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Does that make sense?
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So if you're kind of bumping around back and forth between directories and you want to go back and forth between the directories quickly,
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a CD space dash goes a long way.
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So you don't have to type in CD slash home slash user slash then tab button or whatever you need to do the auto population.
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Don't have to worry about that.
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CD space dash right back into it.
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The third command line tip, this is actually a script that I found.
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A lot of people have two or maybe even more monitors that they use for the daily use.
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And I like to move windows around and I hate using them else.
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So I needed to find a script or some way keyboard shortcut that would move the current window that had to focus,
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you know, the current window that I had that I was working with, that I could click on that and then quickly move it to the other window or the other monitor right there.
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I'm sorry, we have the monitor.
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And I found the script and I want to link in the show notes for the script.
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It is for XFCE and it uses the XD tool library to move the window from one monitor to the next.
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And it keeps the windows ratio.
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So if you don't have it full sized or you're maxed out or whatever, if you just have it small like maybe a terminal window or what not,
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take that and it moves it over to the other monitor, the same XY coordinates and aspect ratio and everything as it was on the first monitor.
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So if I have a little terminal window and I need to move it over to the next window, next monitor back and forth, then all I had to do is it runs this script.
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And I'll take a little caveat when you go to this link.
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It actually shows you the installation, you install XD tools, then you get this script.
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It's this bash script and pop it into a directory, chmoded to make it executable.
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And I actually put all these into a script folder that I use to put all my little scripts in to do little bits and bobs.
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And I associated a key stroke with that script.
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And a little note to this.
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I read all this article and it's real short. It's just a few lines here and there.
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So I was reading through this and I was like, great, this sounds exactly what I want.
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But where is it?
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But if you scroll down toward the bottom of the page, there's a little button that has a paper clip and it says move dash to dash next dash monitor.
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Click that. That will download the bash file.
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Took me probably 10 minutes to figure that out. Maybe that's just me, but whatever.
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So we don't have to go hunting for it. So download the script, take a look at it, see what it does.
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It's pretty simple and there's not really too many lines to it.
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Like I said, it's great to just, I use it all the time.
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And I really miss it when I have to go to work and I had to use my Windows computer.
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I'm keeping it and I got associated with F9.
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So when I hit F9, it moved my current focused window back and forth.
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And I'm at work and I found myself, you know, hitting F9 on my laptop and nothing's happening.
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So, but so check it out.
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And it's actually a great time saver. At least it was for me.
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The last little thing that I look whole thing that I found was a game controller.
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I wanted to play some old video games like Super Nintendo and Atari, old Atari, the old old school pixel art games.
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So you can get the emulator and you can try to use a keyboard, but it just doesn't work very well.
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It's really meant to be played with a controller.
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And I fought around trying to figure out how to get this and that and get my old PS2 game controller working with my USB into whatever.
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So I went looking for an old game controller that was already USB.
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And I found this one. It is a Hyperkin Hyperkin Hyperkin.
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I don't know how to pronounce that properly, but the link will be in the show notes.
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I purchased this controller, not actually from the website, from the manufacturer's website, although you can, and I'll put that link in the show notes.
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You can purchase it from the manufacturer website, but there's actually a retro game.
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Shop, not far from the office where I work.
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So I just drove down there and purchased it. It was the same price. It was $20 USD.
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But it works fantastic. I plugged it up to my computer, USB.
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And fired up the Super Nintendo emulator, started the game, and I didn't have to do anything.
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It just recognized all of it.
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Recognized the controllers, the A, B, Y, X, all the start, stop, pause, whatever.
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It recognized all of it. So that was fantastic.
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And actually I started using it with my Raspberry Pi.
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I installed Retro Pi on a spare SD card the other day, and plugged it up to the Raspberry Pi running Retro Pi for games.
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And it works like a champ on that as well.
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Had to do a little bit of configuration and stuff to get that to work, but it does work very well for that.
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And speaking of the Retro Pi, the Retro game emulator for the Raspberry Pi, I'll do a show on that in the future.
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As soon as I get time to break away from all of the crazy stuff during the day life.
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So there you got it.
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A few little things, check out website today I found out.com.
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The Daily Knowledge Podcast.
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The Podcast is the companion to the today I found out website.
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A few command line tips. Check out the moving window to the monitor script.
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If you run an XFCE, it works great. It's such a huge time saver.
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And if you're into retro gaming, check out the Hyperkin Pixel Art Controller.
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It works great. And it's not too expensive.
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So there you have it. Hope all is well.
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And thank you for listening thus far.
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And take care and talk to you soon. Bye-bye.
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You've been listening to heckaPublicRadio at heckaPublicRadio.org.
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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 an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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HeckaPublicRadio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer club.
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And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
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Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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