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- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 2062
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Title: HPR2062: Now The Chips Are Definitely Down
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2062/hpr2062.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 13:53:12
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---
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This in HPR episode 2062 entitled, Outer Chips Are Definitely Mounted, it is hosted by MrX
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and in about 41 minutes long.
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The summer is show about an interesting documentary I recently came across and new piece on hardware.
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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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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio Audience.
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Today I'm going to talk to you about a new piece of equipment that I bought recently.
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Also about a documentary which I thought was very thoughtful of walking, probably explains
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why I bought this piece of equipment in the first place.
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But before I get on to that, I'd like to thank the people at HPR for making this service possible.
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It's very easy to do, just pick up a microphone and hit the record button in a way you go.
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Actually the hardest part I find is filling in the show notes.
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It's a bit kind of a bit of a bother doing.
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At the end of the day, even if you just record something and don't do much of the show notes, that's fine.
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It's just getting something out there.
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Everyone was to contribute one thing a year.
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There may be masses to go around.
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So, why don't you pick up a microphone and give it a go.
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So, this is my 11th HPR podcast.
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I did one back in February 2016.
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This wasn't the one I was planning to do, but we were getting a bit short on the shows.
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You may have noticed.
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So, this episode's going to be a bit off the cuff.
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These days I don't have the same time I used to have.
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So, it's usually just mainly off the cuff.
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I don't really get a chance to write much notes up and really think very carefully about what I'm going to say.
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So, if I've got lots of on-the-stars and all sorts of things like that, I apologise.
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It's just getting issues out of that matter.
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So, anyway, the documentary I saw was called Now The Chips Are Down.
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That was a title and it was a BBC Horizon documentary.
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So, the BBC, I've got an iPlayer app that you can stream content.
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The BBC select archive footage.
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There's an archive section where they select footage that you think the public will be particularly interested in.
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And this one was chosen.
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I think it was originally broadcasted in 1977.
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I think it was something like that. I'm not not sure.
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Anyway, they talk about the growth of the Silicon chip industry and the implications that will have on society.
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They were saying that you may be aware that William Shockley invented the transistor.
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I don't know what the year was.
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So, from what I gather, William Shockley and seven other people set up a business.
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I think it may have been called, again, the software memory, National Semiconductors.
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And National Semiconductors, William Shockley was a very difficult person to work for.
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And, in fact, at one point, some of us had a lot of controversy around them.
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I think I seem to remember hearing at some point that he had very strong views on him.
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He was suggesting that if you weren't clever enough for a light kind of person,
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then you should be sterilised so that only the clever people will inherit the earth, so to speak.
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Of course, I was fairly controversial. But anyway, it was almost impossible to work with.
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And so much so that these seven people that worked with him, one by one, left and started their own company.
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And each one of these companies was hugely successful.
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And this is the basis of how Silicon Valley was cumulative existence.
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But the other fascinating thing about it was we were talking about how chips are made and such like.
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They were, they said in a very small number of years, the number of chips doubled and doubled and doubled again,
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so they would become four tons of stars on a chip.
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So, a tons of stars is just like a solar state device, which can switch signals very fast,
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like a switch, or it can be used as an amplifier. But anyway, if you package enough of these,
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these transistors together, you can make microprocessors and also a complex chips and such like.
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But anyway, they were saying that it went from 4 to 8 to 16, 32.
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And I think at that point they were up to 250 odd thousand transistors on a chip.
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And that was, that was, I see, back in 77.
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But the thing was that the, so what happens is they take a photographic image of the circuit they want and they shrink it down and put it onto a silicon, a slice of silicon.
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And this slice of silicon is a, when you look at it, I don't know, it looked, looked to me like it was, I don't know, I don't know.
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I mean, I don't know, half a meter in diameter, I don't know how many squares were on this slice of silicon.
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But each square was a chip.
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And so, to get to that final process, they had to go through many, many stages.
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It was a very, very difficult process.
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And once they had the, the, the, the, the disks of silicon, the patterns are, you put it on a machine that we would connect context to each chip and run a series of tests to see if the chip was, end up being successful or not.
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And it was, I don't know if it was like, I think it was, we could test two chips a second
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or something like that.
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And so as it was moving along, any time it failed, a wee red blob was printed onto the,
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the squid of silicon to show that it was, that it failed.
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So as it was going along, you know, it was, you know, it was going, you know, chip one,
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two, three, four.
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And so as it was moving along, it was, it was this sort of thing.
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It was like, fail, fail, fail, fail, pass, fail, pass, pass, fail, fail, fail, fail.
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It was like huge proportion of fails.
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And so only a, so the record about 25% were a success.
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And if it was 25%, then they, they thought that was a pretty good yield, you know, pretty, pretty, pretty good.
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I don't know what the current status is, but before, sorry, before they went, they actually made these,
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these chips, they would, they had a, I think, a vast piece of, I don't know, like melniks, a piece of material
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that they would check by hand with an eyeglass, but, even though it was shrunken down dramatically,
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it was still a vast, vast sheet.
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So it shows you the complexity and the difficulty of making these things back in 77.
|
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And it's so much so that they had extremely clean room conditions, you know, a single bit of dirt or something,
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we just destroyed the whole process.
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And there was cases where factories would start to produce nothing but fails.
|
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And for, you know, I were after I were day after day, fail, fail, fail, fail.
|
||||
And then the company would go bankrupt.
|
||||
So one way around that was to split the process into smaller chunks.
|
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So the only part of the process would fail, not the whole thing.
|
||||
But the whole thing was unbelievably elaborate and very difficult.
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||||
And the thing is that most people today just take technology for granted.
|
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Even the simplest to go off, calculate as a cost of 50 pounds, and I show up or something like that,
|
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is immensely complex.
|
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And people never give it a second thought.
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So if you think the complexity seems unbelievable back in 1977,
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what sort of complexity do modern chips have?
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I don't know what the transistor count is for a modern type chip, but it must be vast, vast.
|
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Now the whole premise of the documentary was saying that, you know, these chips are coming
|
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and they would have massive implications for society.
|
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They were talking about the fact that the Swiss clock industry, they laughed when, you
|
||||
know, the digital watch, it came into existence.
|
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And how it would never replace a, you know, a properly precision manufacturer, the time
|
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piece.
|
||||
But of course, they, you know, few years later they were, you know, a shadow of their own
|
||||
former self, so many employees lost their job.
|
||||
And I think I remember hearing somewhere that, I think, I think I saw on the secret life
|
||||
of machines, they showed that the most advanced mechanical watch in the world, they had it
|
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on show and they were showing that typically it's 10 times less reliable, it's a 10 times
|
||||
less accurate, I should say, than, you know, a cheap digital watch, because they showed
|
||||
that, they compared it using a meter to, to compare the accuracies, that's, of course,
|
||||
it's, you're talking, you know, 50 pains for the watch, something like that.
|
||||
So it's quite astonishing, really.
|
||||
And then they're talking about, you know, the cash register, say, the cash register,
|
||||
and just see that was massive and I went down the pan, they're talking about automated
|
||||
warehouses, and they showed the, a fully automated warehouse loading, it was actually
|
||||
a personal, personal washing powder, and, among other things, into this, this automated
|
||||
warehouse, I think, if I'm most warehouses are stocked that way nowadays, I don't know
|
||||
for definite, but I imagine it is, what would happen if, if, let's say, satellites were
|
||||
knocked out through an electromagnetic storm, or something, something took to, to, to
|
||||
have internet by must, you know, something happened, how would you unload these things
|
||||
from the warehouse, it just, people wouldn't know when anything is, how to do anything
|
||||
if, if, if the computer infrastructure collapsed or whatever, you know, and they're talking
|
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about, um, Tills, they were, they're showing a tell that, that, that, it didn't just, it
|
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wasn't just a standard tell, it could actually transfer money from your bank account to the,
|
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the company's bank account, and, uh, they, they showed them using a card, but it, it
|
||||
was so early, they didn't have a card, it was such, you put the card, and I think the,
|
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the operator punched in the, in the numbers, um, but it started, it contacted the banks
|
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and transferred the money, which, of course, back then, must have seemed like, seemed
|
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like magic, and, uh, but the scene had a, a, a, a more sinister side, because, all the
|
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tell operators, it recorded how fast they worked, and on top of that, how many mistakes
|
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they made, um, sure that, say, should all these tell us, do that sort of thing now, uh,
|
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they're also talking about automated self-driving tractors, uh, would they plow the field, uh,
|
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automatically, now I don't know if these things actually came into existence, but I do
|
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know a farmer friend of mine, uh, told me that, um, after his tractors used GPS, uh, locating
|
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and they know, uh, in the field, where the crops haven't done so well, so the tractor
|
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puts down more feed, and likewise, where the crops are really good, it puts down less
|
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feed, so, uh, all kind of computer controlled, uh, with a minimal input from the operator,
|
||||
and I think a few years back, no, that long ago, there was hundreds of people working
|
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in the fields, uh, but nowadays, you know, you only wanted to farm, one or two farm workers
|
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and they can work the whole plot, um, they also showed, um, an expert system where they
|
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had a senior doctor who had spent a number of years, um, trying to, um, capture these,
|
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his expert expertise knowledge, him and I see some other experts capturing their expertise
|
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so that junior doctors could do the rounds and had all the expertise of the, um, senior
|
||||
doctor and in fact, could come up with a more accurate, um, prognosis and, uh, quicker
|
||||
than in fact, the, the, the, the senior doctor could in fact, so it was actually a better
|
||||
service.
|
||||
I don't know how routinely that's, that's used just now.
|
||||
Remember all this was a production in 1977, um, they also mentioned about a new device
|
||||
called the World Processor and, uh, in the marvel that how sexist of a document could
|
||||
be called up, uh, click on a button, um, and that how sections, uh, you know, so I suppose
|
||||
if you had like legal documents, you could, um, you could pull them together very quickly,
|
||||
uh, with, with template to paragraphs and such like, uh, and they said that the biggest
|
||||
delay in creating documents, typing was fixing errors, um, and the reckon that a World
|
||||
Processor could replace seven typists, uh, when's the last thing we saw typists these
|
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days, um, and at the end of the, the, the program, they had a panel of three experts and
|
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they were asking implications about what they thought it would hold for society, um, will
|
||||
that, you know, asking questions such as, will there be good unemployment, uh, will we
|
||||
have a divided hold out society, uh, between the elites and everyone else with no middle
|
||||
class? A man on the panel suggested that Britain was already used behind, um, and stated
|
||||
that America and Germany, for example, helped their companies transition to the new digital
|
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age. They gave examples of, uh, like mechanical cash register, uh, companies, um, and, and
|
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they gave them money to, to, to become digital, you know, I guess ultimately that still,
|
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um, I'm sure some of these companies were still affected and hard to some extent, and,
|
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and America and Germany, but, um, we just had to all go, of course, um, but the reason I'm,
|
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I just thought it was, it was fascinating because so, so much of what they predicted, um,
|
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seemed, seems to have come true, you know, and, uh, and I keep saying that, you know, we
|
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shouldn't worry about technology, we should embrace it. It seems to me that, um, that, uh,
|
||||
that you end up with more and more people, with fewer and fewer people working hard on harder
|
||||
to, uh, to serve, uh, the, the elites at the top, um, it seems to, to, to, to me that the, um,
|
||||
the, the difference between the, um, the rich and the poor is, is, is massively greater than
|
||||
any other time, and getting worse, uh, you know, as we progress. But, um, just to, to say where that,
|
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this is going to lead to is, is, is, uh, related to the, the item, which I just purchased recently.
|
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Now, the reason I bought this new piece of equipment is because, as a title of the documentary,
|
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it was called, the chips are down, down in price. All will be revealed shortly.
|
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I am, uh, a, a, an amateur radio, uh, operator, uh, and my call sign is, uh, GM for MRX. No,
|
||||
I'm only joking. Uh, it's not GM for MRX. I'm not going to tell you what my call sign is,
|
||||
because I'm Mr X. But I am a, an amateur radio operator, um, and, um, one of the amateur bands
|
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I can transmit on is a two meter band. And that's, you know, I think it's a hundred, it's 144 megahertz
|
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to 146 megahertz. And, um, I, I had a, a handset, uh, a portable handset, a standard handset, um,
|
||||
which I'll just go and get hold of a second. I forgot to bring it through.
|
||||
You're right. Okay. Okay. It's, um, okay. Sorry about that noise. Uh,
|
||||
so it's a standard, uh, C510A, amateur handset, uh, dual band. And, um, I don't know how old it is,
|
||||
it's, it's quite a few years old. But, um, at the time, it was a, a real bargain. And, uh, it was,
|
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a friend of mine bought one and you know what, you've got to get one of these standard handsets,
|
||||
are fantastic, great value and credible. Anyway, amateur, uh, equipment tends to be very expensive
|
||||
or used to be, um, it's allowed to, to some extent. And so he, he got a standard C510E, which is the
|
||||
European version. Uh, this is an American version. Uh, the difference being that the, uh, repeater
|
||||
offsets are different. So on 70 centimeters. So I've got, uh, that's, that's the 430 megahertz band.
|
||||
And, uh, so these have to be said manually, a bit more, a bit more, a bit more fairly big can still be
|
||||
done. Um, but it was all that was available at the time, because I was a bit slow at getting, uh,
|
||||
bang the radio when I got all the other European wins were gone. Um, but I've still got the
|
||||
standard, uh, C510E handset. And it, I think it cost 120 pounds, something like that.
|
||||
So 120 pounds, maybe see 10 years ago, I don't, I don't know how to find about this thing.
|
||||
But, uh, 120 pounds, and I thought that was a bargain. I really thought that's a great deal.
|
||||
Now, I've, in recent years, I haven't used, uh, malmatch radio equipment very much, uh, but, um,
|
||||
I don't have so much time as I used to have these days. Uh, and I'm not on the, uh, the computer
|
||||
very much sees these either. Um, so, so of course, there's an excuse, if I can manage to squeeze
|
||||
time into the cortisol, so can you, but anyway, uh, I digress. So, um, that was that. And I thought
|
||||
to myself, oh, it would be quite nice when I'm out about, if I took my handset with me, I could
|
||||
use it, but I thought, ah, it's such a nice wee handset. I really like it. I don't want it to get
|
||||
damaged. Uh, and it kind of put me off. And I thought, I wonder how much handsets cost these days.
|
||||
So, how do we look on, uh, eBay? I think it was eBay. And I was absolutely flabbergasted
|
||||
to see that there was a radio, um, now, uh, both, both, I might, oh, when I pronounce this wrong,
|
||||
and I do apologise, um, to the, the, but it's, it's, I think it's B-A, it's called, it's spelled B-A-O-F-E-N-G-F-E-N-G.
|
||||
As it, both thing, I don't know. Anyway, it's a both thing U-V-5-R. And this radio was, was
|
||||
unbelievably 20 pounds, 20 UK pounds. I don't know what that is in, in dollars, but pretty damn cheap.
|
||||
So, from 120 pounds, um, 10 years or so ago, to 20 pounds today. And, uh, when I first looked
|
||||
sort of thought, that's that, that bit of rubbish, you know. And in fact, I was talking to a
|
||||
amateur, using my hands, it, and, um, and, and mentioned the both thing thing. And I saw, yeah, I saw
|
||||
those, but I thought they were awfully cheap. You couldn't, it can't have been much good. And,
|
||||
of course, the amateur was saying, oh, yeah, well, actually, that's what I've got. It's, like,
|
||||
I said, rather dignity, and it's great. Uh, nothing wrong with it. Oh, right. Sorry.
|
||||
So, I looked at some of the reviews and found it. They got pretty good reviews, really. So, um,
|
||||
I, uh, went ahead and purchased one. And it's, it's, it's, it's qualities. Unbelievable. It's,
|
||||
it's really solid. Um, it, I mean, it, it's a little bit more basic and some respects compared to
|
||||
the standard. My standards got quite complex, quite, quite advanced, um, memory channel, uh, options
|
||||
and such like, uh, which the both thing doesn't have. But, uh, and the both thing really is design
|
||||
for, um, uh, commercial use. It's kind of pressed into amateur use. It can be so used by taxi
|
||||
firms, I guess, and marine, uh, you know, for marine use, you know, ship, ship to shore or whatever.
|
||||
Um, but because of the, the band of frequencies it can receive in transmittal, it can also be used
|
||||
on amateur, both on two meter band, which is, I've told you before, it's one four four, two
|
||||
one four six. And seventy centimeters are in 430 megahertz. And, uh, so it's not, it's not
|
||||
fully duplex. It's just, same with duplex. So you can only transmit and receive one, one
|
||||
frequency at a time. But, uh, but my standard one is, that's the same, of course. But it's just,
|
||||
just absolutely, I can't, I can't get my head on 20 pounds. Unbelievable. It comes with, uh,
|
||||
it comes with a, it's a lithium ion battery, and it can be dropped into a charge, a docking charger,
|
||||
like a, like a proper, professional handset. Likewise, you can have a battery charging on its own
|
||||
while you're using the radio, if you've got a spare battery. And it came with a
|
||||
covert microphone and earpiece, which is great. Um, and, uh, all this for 20 pounds, just, just
|
||||
mind blowing, they could make it for, for a total money. Um, you're looking at the complexity,
|
||||
it's just astonishing. So, um, and of course, the best thing of all is when you turn it on,
|
||||
it speaks to you, channel mode, that's it. If you couldn't understand it,
|
||||
frequency mode, yeah, frequency mode, fantastic. Really, really good, unbelievable. So, um,
|
||||
let's see, when you look at the, uh, let's see what, what do the menus have, is it's got,
|
||||
it's got 40, 40 menus on it on the thing. So, you can adjust a squelch level, you can adjust the,
|
||||
the steps between each frequency when you're changing the channel, just the transmit power,
|
||||
uh, you've got battery save function, which I just, what happens is the, the receiver goes into
|
||||
sleep mode every so many seconds, uh, if it's just sitting monitoring a frequency, and by that
|
||||
way, it saves battery power, so it'll, it'll, and by the way, the battery, the battery, um, performance
|
||||
is just unbelievable. It goes for hours and hours and hours, way way longer than the standard
|
||||
time set. I've got, um, vox, voice up into control, so if you turn that on, you can, you can just
|
||||
hold the microphone up your mouse, mouse, and when it senses above a certain volume, it keys
|
||||
to transmitter, and then when you stop after so many seconds, it releases the transmitter. So,
|
||||
you don't have to push any buttons. Uh, you've got a wide band and narrow band setting,
|
||||
which changes, uh, how wide the FM deviation is when you, when you speak into the, um,
|
||||
into the, uh, handset, um, display illumination time, so that's, that's how long the
|
||||
display stays on, um, when you, you know, when you play with the radio, um, dual watch allows you
|
||||
to monitor two frequency simultaneously, so it starts switching between two, um, two frequencies,
|
||||
um, key beep, uh, so whether it beeps and you hit a key or not, or transmit timeout, so that's,
|
||||
that allows you to, to, um, if you hope, if you transmit too long, it'll, it'll timeout,
|
||||
it saves the batteries. If you're going through amateur repeater station, uh, then if you transmit
|
||||
for too long, then the repeater, other end might drop your signal because you're spending too long,
|
||||
on the one channel, and then other people can't get a chance to use the repeater.
|
||||
So, uh, plus also, I think if you're on high power on this thing, it turns to get very hot,
|
||||
and we also protects the, the, um, the, the output transistors on the radio, uh, DCS,
|
||||
a digital code squelch, that's, uh, a kind of filtering system, um, CTCSS,
|
||||
it kind of, kind of continues tone carrier signals out of standard camera, but it's, it's
|
||||
another filtering system, uh, DCS transmit, that's, that sets a code that you transmit for the
|
||||
filtering system, uh, CTCSS, CTCSS transmit, and I can, that's for your filtering.
|
||||
A voice prompt, um, I don't know what, like, I guess, I think you have got off on English in
|
||||
Chinese or something like that, 15 automated numbering ID, I don't know what that is, 16DTMF
|
||||
tones when you transmit, 17S code, signal code code, you know what the hell that is, 18 scanner
|
||||
resume method, so you've got different ways of, when you're, when you're scanning, when you're
|
||||
radio is scanning, and I'll let you hear scanning, scanning begin, scanning begin, I'll just stop
|
||||
that, scanning, oh, scanning stop, so when it's scanning, when you're scanning the frequencies,
|
||||
you can set it so that when it comes across a signal, it pauses for so long and then continues,
|
||||
that's one to type of, uh, one option, the other option is carrier, so it stops and it comes up
|
||||
to a signal, uh, but when the signal stops, it resumes scanning again, and there's a third
|
||||
option, which is called the CERT option, and so when it finds a signal, uh, the scanning stops,
|
||||
it stays on that frequency, so that's three options, very handy. I don't know if my standards got all
|
||||
these options for this, for, for scanning resume, um, oh, I went to send PTTID, uh, beginning
|
||||
ender both, uh, that's 1920s, signal code, ending delay, um, 21 is channel mode A display,
|
||||
to channel mode B display, it's got two, two dual displays, although, and it makes it look like
|
||||
it's a radio that can receive two frequencies simultaneously or transmit, but as I said before,
|
||||
it can't. I guess it's just a convenient way of switching between two set frequencies,
|
||||
uh, quickly, you know, bids you channel lockout, so what that does is if, if the radio is receiving
|
||||
a signal, it won't allow you to transmit quite handy subject transmitting over the top of someday,
|
||||
whatever the key part lock, very handy, uh, frequency to shift direction, uh, say,
|
||||
that's so the frequency changes when you, when you key the, the transmitter,
|
||||
and that's generally used for working through repeater stations, uh, that's the frequency shift you
|
||||
want to, uh, shift when you transmit, so for example here in the UK when you, uh, when you go
|
||||
through a two meter repeater station, it drops transmit frequency by, um, 600 kilohertz,
|
||||
so for example if you're transmitting on, say, 145, 600, so if you're listening on 145, 600,
|
||||
when you push the transmit button, it drops to 145, 000, um, and then the, so the repeater listens
|
||||
on 145, 000, and the retracement is back out on 145, 600, so other stations can hear your
|
||||
broadcast, that's essentially how a repeater works, and of course that'll be off behind the
|
||||
hill, so it's got a, you know, a large range, um, and obviously more, uh, more power on the handset
|
||||
we'd have, 27, still in memory channel, 28, delete in memory channel that's stuff evident, um, 29
|
||||
display backlight standby, 30 display backlight receive, 31, uh, display backlight transmit,
|
||||
and you've got three colors, but it's, it's, um, is it kind of purpley, bluey, green,
|
||||
something like that, I can't remember, but it's, it's quite funky, the way it switches between all
|
||||
the different colors, um, alarm mode, then there's a red button, an orange button on the side, and
|
||||
if you hold it, it does something to send some sort of signal on a preset frequency, so I guess
|
||||
ideas if you were a security guard, and you were being attacked, you could hit this orange button,
|
||||
and it would, it would send off a signal to who was listening, being that I'm an amateur,
|
||||
there's not much point in that, another curious thing is got, is, um, is got a light on the top of it,
|
||||
so if you touch a button, that is, this LED comes on, and I guess you're wondering right now,
|
||||
I'm a building site or something that was dark, you could pop light on for to see if we were going,
|
||||
or it's actually very, very handy, um, and it's also got a, a built-in, uh, radio,
|
||||
so if you're a board security guard, you hit this button, and it jumps to the, to a radio,
|
||||
let's turn that on the now, just, right, so if I hit this, what button is it now, is it on that one?
|
||||
No, it's just one.
|
||||
So that's the radio, and if I signal, if I signal appears on the, on the, on, on the, on the,
|
||||
on the say two meters or whatever, it'll jump off the radio, and then once that goes away,
|
||||
it'll jump back to the radio again, so you don't miss any, um, any, a broadcast,
|
||||
so I mean, for a board security guard, that would be fantastic, I'd imagine,
|
||||
it's quite handy as well too, even for an amateur, um,
|
||||
and I've got band selection, so that, it's got two bands, a VHF band, and a UHF band,
|
||||
so the B, the, um, VHF band, I think it's something like a hundred and thirty-six megahertz,
|
||||
a hundred and seventy odd, something like that, and, uh, the UHF, um, I'm not sure,
|
||||
what, well that is, I don't have the manual to hand, but,
|
||||
thirty-four, transmit selection, dual watch mode, not sure what that is,
|
||||
thirty-five, squelch, tail, elimination, and these ones are to do with, um,
|
||||
working through a repeater, and to time minimize noises as, as you're switching through the,
|
||||
the repeater basically, like, uh, hissing and crackling when you release the button,
|
||||
um, squelch, tail, elimination, squelch, tail, elimination through repeater, delay,
|
||||
the squelch, tail, off, repeater, um, so these are thirty-five, thirty-six, thirty-seven,
|
||||
general, I just turn all the, all these off, power on message, so I've got mine such that
|
||||
when I turn it on, it, it displays my call sign, so, my radio was found, uh, somebody,
|
||||
with a, uh, somebody who could return it to me, if they should, so chose to do so,
|
||||
um, thirty-nine, Roger Beep, so that's a bit, kind of, I've found a point in an amateur world,
|
||||
but, uh, if you wanted to do that, particularly who, I suppose if you're a security guy or whatever,
|
||||
could be handy, and forty, reset to defaults, and I just reset things, so loads and loads of options
|
||||
on the thing as you can see, and when I was, um, looking at the radio, I came across, I was looking
|
||||
at the manufacturer's manual, and, uh, you know, it's obviously, um, a Chinese manual, so,
|
||||
it's not perfect, but it really isn't bad, um, it's, it's, it's quite understandable and quite
|
||||
straightforward, but, um, I was looking through, uh, the manual, and I looked at it again later on,
|
||||
and when I was looking at it, I, um, I was reading this piece, and it was, it was, I can't
|
||||
remember what it was, it was something like, oh, I, the radio might say it's, uh, it's got, um,
|
||||
a seven-character display, but you can actually only do, uh, six, and there's, there's,
|
||||
there's, there's, there's icons on the display that don't seem to be, um, active on this, you
|
||||
don't, I'm thinking, that's a strange phrase for the manufacturers to say, and I'll talk to you
|
||||
further at it, I discovered I hadn't opened the same file as I did before, this one wasn't the
|
||||
manufacturer's manual, this was, uh, a completely different manual, it was part of the, the Chinese
|
||||
radio documentation project, and the fact, the reason I was, I mean, the quality is just superb,
|
||||
there's lots of extra information that the, the original manufacturer didn't put in, but the
|
||||
reason I got, they didn't realise was, there's got the, you know, elaborate line drawings that
|
||||
shown great detail, um, the layout of the radio and all its buttons and switches and knobs and
|
||||
such like, but it was, uh, such great detail that I never thought for a minute that it was, um,
|
||||
anything other than the manufacturer, and it turns out that, uh, the, uh, pictures were drawn
|
||||
on inkscape, of all things, and so this, this, uh, the Chinese radio documentation project,
|
||||
it's an open source project, um, and that this manual was written by, now, I, I'm going to murder
|
||||
this, uh, name, Leonard Lidberg, L-E-N-N-A-R-T, uh, L-I-D-B-E-R-G, so, uh, well done,
|
||||
Leonard, I was, uh, very, very good manual, very impressed, so, just incredible, so, um,
|
||||
another nice thing about this video is that you can hook up to, uh, to a computer and this,
|
||||
you know, set, send settings and memory check, many, memories and whatnot from your computer
|
||||
into the radio, and you can also clone one handset on to another handset, so, uh, that's quite
|
||||
nice, and, of course, it came with a wee disk, uh, no, it didn't come with a disk, but the interface
|
||||
cable separately, and it came with a wee disk, and, uh, of course, all the software runs on windows,
|
||||
and I came across this, uh, um, program called CHURP, CH-I-R-P, and, uh, CHURP is also an open
|
||||
source, uh, project, uh, and CHURP allows you to upload and download sittings, frequencies,
|
||||
and memory channels to white selection of radios, um, CHURP is available for, I think Linux,
|
||||
Windows, and, well, it's different Linux, Windows, and I think Apple, CHURP's a very active project,
|
||||
uh, with constant updates to support more radios and bug fixes, uh, are repositories available,
|
||||
for Ubuntu users, uh, the site warns that users may experience difficulty getting cheap Chinese
|
||||
data cables to work, uh, and the counterfeit chips are detected in Windows, um, I don't know
|
||||
about Apple, and, uh, and so the, the generally don't work, um, Linux, however, ignores this,
|
||||
and she'd work, no problem, uh, and they say that, if this is all too much hassle for people,
|
||||
uh, they've also got a live distro set up, just ready to go, uh, for users who can't be bothered,
|
||||
um, so it's just, just incredible, so I installed the, I put the, uh, ripple,
|
||||
added to my Ubuntu, uh, computer, and, uh, installed CHURP, and, uh, which give, I think,
|
||||
daily updates to the software, and the chances are that the, the, the CHURP will actually be
|
||||
better than the software that comes with the radio, for a number of reasons, I didn't try the,
|
||||
the, the Windows software, so some of the benefits are that, uh, it allows you to transfer memories,
|
||||
uh, from one minute of manufacturer radio to another, this would almost certainly not be available,
|
||||
uh, from the manufacturer software, uh, on my particular radio allowed me to set settings
|
||||
outside the range given on the radio's main menu, so for example, I could set the, the backlight
|
||||
timer to 25 seconds, I think that the highest you could set it in the map, and the menu was,
|
||||
was 10 seconds, and I thought to play around with the Squelch range to, to make a bit, a bit,
|
||||
a bit heavier Squelch than, uh, the, the, the defaults that were there, um, so just a fantastic
|
||||
piece of, uh, software, it also, um, allows you to, um, the sources where you can pull in frequencies,
|
||||
a lot of stuff for America, and one of two things for the UK, so you just, you just pick the menu
|
||||
option, and these frequencies all appear, which you can then just drop in, onto your, um,
|
||||
screening, and then upload it to your radio, so it's just a lovely bit software, very, very good,
|
||||
and, uh, I never had any problems getting the, interface cable to work, uh, you do have to make
|
||||
sure you push it all the way in, and it can be wee bit, stuff sometimes going in, but, um, no,
|
||||
on the whole, really, really good, and just unbelievably over the moon with it, you know, it's a 20 pound
|
||||
radio, it, it, it, it feels like a hundred pound radio plus, we're just going to end in another,
|
||||
another ten years, will these radios cost a, a five, I don't know, or a pound, I don't know,
|
||||
but, uh, anyway, I hope I haven't, uh, bored you too much, I thought, um, I don't know how many of
|
||||
your, uh, amateur radio operators out there, um, but I thought even for people who, um, who,
|
||||
I've got a little interest in, and radio, might like to, to hear this, uh, episode, um, and I hope I
|
||||
haven't, uh, started in, um, the Nord too much, and I see it was all off the cuff, um, so,
|
||||
so I think that's about it for this episode, and I hope you enjoyed it, and I keep, oh, so before
|
||||
I go, just, to let you know, I could be contacted at MrX, as MRX, at, that's AT, HPR,
|
||||
the at symbol, googlemail.com MrX, at HPR, at googlemail.com, so until next time, thank you,
|
||||
and goodbye.
|
||||
You've been listening to HECRAPOPLEGRADIO.org. We are a community podcast network that
|
||||
releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was
|
||||
contributed by an HPR listener, like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
||||
and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
HECCA Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicom Computer Club
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly,
|
||||
leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
|
||||
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|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user