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Episode: 1883
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Title: HPR1883: Don't Get Locked In
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1883/hpr1883.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:46:34
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---
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This in HPR episode 1883 entitled Don't Get Locked in, it is hosted by ITWI and in about
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18 minutes long.
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The summary is, ITWI discusses how he uses tools from several major software platforms
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to get his work done.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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On the edge of real and cyberspace, there's one place you can go.
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Welcome to NightWives.com.
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I'm tired of choosing between Max, Linux and OSX, listen to the NightWives.com podcast,
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and learn how to decide from operating system to operating system using our hack tips and
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tweaks for cross-platformheeks.
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To detect into your way of life and let technology work for you instead of the other way around.
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Hey Hacker, public radio, this is NightWives from NightWives.com calling.
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I haven't done an HPR show in a while.
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Hell, I haven't even done my own podcast in a while.
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But I had some time to spare today, and I also had some gear that I wanted to try out.
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So I just wanted to share a little story with you guys that happened to me a couple of weeks
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ago.
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As you know, I do the podcast NightWives.com, which is a podcast with hack tips and tweaks
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for cross-platformheeks.
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So I kind of focus on being cross-platform using multiple operating systems and letting
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that technology work for you.
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So I'm not OS biased in any way.
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And since a year and a half ago, I started my own company as a freelance IT architect.
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One of the things I do on occasion is visit small or medium-sized businesses and take
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a look at what they have IT-wise, take a look at how they work, and then help them to optimize
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that environment.
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And recently one of my clients asked me if I could come down and take a look at their
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network and do a complete survey of what they had and redesign their network for them.
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I'm not going to get into the content of that, right into the nitty-gritty details of
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the network itself.
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That's, of course, confidential between me and the client.
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But what I did do was bring my gear along.
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I'm an IT architect that don't have a big tool bag.
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But when I go out, I mostly have my gear with me to do what I need to do, so kind of
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make state of what's around, scan the network, make notes, write reports, do presentation.
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And on that particular day, I had an interesting set of tools in my tool bag.
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Now, on hyper-public radio, I know that the leniency, that the, you know, the average
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mood of the HPR listener contributor is ProLinux anti-windows and Mac is evil.
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And I kind of like all three of them.
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And at this specific mission, I took not one, not two, but three devices with me, with
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three different operating systems on them.
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So what was in my bag was my Dell XPS 13 developer notebook edition.
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That's the HD screen edition, it's a beautiful laptop.
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It's kind of like an 11-inch form factor, but it has a 13-inch screen.
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I have the full HD edition, there's also a QHD edition with a touch screen and an insane
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resolution.
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I didn't go for that.
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But I've got that with me running Ubuntu 14.04 with that Nome 2.
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The second device I had with me was a Surface Pro 3, running Windows 10 and MacBook Pro
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15-inch running OS X.
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Now, I know what you guys are going to say, like, why the, why the crack do you need all
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three?
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Well, I'll explain.
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Sorry for the cars.
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I'm on my lunch break and I'm on a walk.
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So the Dell XPS 13 has Linux on it and it hosts, it hosts most of my networking tools.
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Like for example, ZenMap, which is the graphical front end for NMAP, and you know, some other
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network discovery tools.
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And I needed that to plug it into the network and kind of get a general feel of what was
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going on, which hosts were connected, what kind of machines were on there.
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And with the end map and ZenMap, you can do quite a bit when it comes to that.
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So all the network-y stuff, the really technical stuff I did on the XPS 13 running Linux.
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The second machine I had with me was the Surface Pro 3 running Windows 10.
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And whenever I go to a client, I have this device with me.
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And why a, it's a nice tablet laptop combination.
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I have the lightest version of the Surface Pro 3, the i3 with 64 gigabytes of storage,
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but still it's a very nice device.
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So what I do on it is take notes, because I really suck at taking notes on paper.
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I tend to lose paper all the time, either I lose it while I'm still using it or I lose
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it shortly afterwards.
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And second, I don't believe in paper anymore.
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When I go to visit clients, I have the Surface Pro 3 with me to do the general thing,
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but also to take notes on.
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So what I was doing is using the Dell XPS 13 to walk around the entire site, plug it
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in, do all the end maps, save all the screenshots, do all the exports.
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And in the meantime, I was taking notes on the Surface Pro 3 with the stylus and the
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one note application.
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Because I had two systems with me, I didn't have to switch screens all the time, or even
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sit down.
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I could just walk around with the Surface Pro 3, take pictures when I wanted to, and kind
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of write down the notes that I needed to have, and especially when you're kind of discovering
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a small home, a small business network, it's kind of a complicated situation, because
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nobody knows how stuff is set up.
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And you have to ask people how does this work and how does that work.
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You quickly have to jot down notes, and that's why I use the Surface Pro 3.
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Third reason, a lot of traffic today, third reason I use the Surface Pro 3 is because it
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impresses people when you just casually set it down and start writing without using pen
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and paper, especially the small to medium businesses, that's impressive.
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One note's great application to work with, the stylus and stuff works great.
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You can make screenshots, you can make pictures, you can all put them inside one document,
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and you can write using the stylus, take annotations, draw on the pictures or the screenshots
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that you take, and that for me is very handy, and it puts it one level above ever enough.
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And after I did the whole network discovery thing, whole technical thing, and I had taken
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on all of my notes, I kind of exported everything into a Dropbox folder.
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I sent the one note notations to Dropbox, I sent the screenshots and exports from Zen
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Map into Dropbox, and then I took out my MacBook Pro.
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Because at the end of the day, you have to kind of display your findings, and for that
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I kind of like working on a big computer, having a medium to big size screen, the MacBook
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Pro is kind of my desktop-y thing, I do take it along with me to do presentations and
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stuff.
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And especially if you have to present your results, I love using the MacBook Pro, it's
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really reliable, it has keynote, which I probably use the most for my presentations, because
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I love to rely on it, and I think it's a great tool.
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And you can really take those technical information that you gathered, and those notes that
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you're written down, and put them all together, and bring them into one presentation, and you
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have a large keyboard, big screen, you can kind of mush it all together, and make a great
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final presentation.
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So what I did is I wrote up the report right there, right then and there, and I also made
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a small presentation to give to the owners of the company to show them what I had done
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that day and what I had found out.
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I completed doing the entire network report, the paperwork as it is on the MacBook Pro,
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sent them everything out, and closed up the project.
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Now I know that some of you are going to say, hey, nightwise, you could have done that
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with one machine.
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And you would probably be right, I could have done it all on the MacBook Pro, I could
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have done it all on the surface, and I could have done it all on the XPS, but it was a little
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bit more convenient, especially with the XPS and the Surface Pro 3, to work side by side
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to have one computer in one hand, and another machine in the other hand, especially when
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it comes to taking down notes.
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Well, the MacBook Pro, well, you have to present it in an elegant way.
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I'm not saying that you can't do that on a Linux machine or you can't do that on a Windows
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machine, but they're not their core strengths, at least for what I feel when it comes
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out to doing presentations.
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The moral of the story is you use the tool you need for the job you have to do, and you
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take the best tool.
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I am not somebody who says that it has to be A, or it has to be B, it has to be Linux,
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or it has to be Windows, I just use what works, and especially in the business environment,
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I don't have the luxury to say, I will only use this, or I will only use that.
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I mean, when it comes to flexibility and hackability, the Mac is perhaps not the best platform
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when it comes to utter reliability and being virus proof when you plug it into a strange
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and possibly hostile network, Windows might not be your friend, and when it comes to putting
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up an elegant presentation that doesn't look like it came from the 90s, Linux might
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not be the ultimate tool to use, but what I did learn is I use the tool that works for
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me, and I use each platform according to the strengths and weaknesses that platform has.
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And I use it in a business setting, that means that it just has to work.
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I don't have the time to tinker, I don't have the time to mess about.
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It has to be right from the first time, and I don't, I get paid by the hour, so doing
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some R and D work on the client's time is not something that I can afford to do, I have
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to give them results.
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So in the conclusion, it's great to be pro one OS, and anti the other OS, it's all pretty
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easy, but when you don't do that, and you don't limit yourself to a certain platform,
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you have the luxury of using whatever works for you and letting it work for you and not
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being held back by things like, you know, what I call semi-religious operating system
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or platform bias, because at some point you have got to admit that one platform is better
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for one thing, and the other platform is better for the other thing.
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And once you kind of admit that to yourself, you open up a whole range of options and
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possibilities into really letting technology work for you.
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So not only as a, sorry for the wind, not only as a cross platform geek, do I hear by
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advocate the use of, you know, multiple operating systems, also as a professional, I can see,
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merit in doing that.
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And it's pretty cool to, you know, work with different operating systems at the same time
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and see how the combination of all of these OSs can really work for you.
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So just a tip, before you kind of lock yourself into one operating system, because here at
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HBR we hate proprietary software, we hate vendor lock-in, and the thing that we must ask
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ourselves from time to time is how much of that lock-in is something that we do to ourselves.
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And how, you know, choosing only Linux and only open source is also locking you in to
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some operating system and some commitment.
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So you know, it's what I always say, let technology work for you instead of the other way
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around and use whatever works best for you.
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I hope you enjoyed the show.
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It's a little short, I'm on my walk during lunch, enjoying what must be the last of the
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summer days.
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I'll probably be airing nightwise.com episode very soon, and getting back on my horse, on
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my podcasting horse, as a night, haha, but yeah, that will come soon.
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So until then, you can find the website at www.netwise.com, that's K-N-I-G-H-C-W-I-S-E.com
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and, you know, subscribe to the podcast and learn more cross-platform ways of getting
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things done.
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Cheers.
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Now, let's talk about cross-platform geeks.
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Tired of choosing between Max, Linux, and OSX, listen to the nightwise.com podcast and learn
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how to decide from operating system to operating system using our hack tips and tweets for cross-platform
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geeks.
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To detect into your way of life and let technology work for you instead of the other way around.
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www.k-n-i-g-h-t-w-i-s-e-dot-com.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Hacker Public Radio, does our.
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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
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dark Pound and the Infonomicom Computer
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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 Lina Pages.
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From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LinaPages.com for all your hosting
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Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution,
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