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Episode: 2388
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Title: HPR2388: Apt Spelunking 4: Planet of the Apts
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2388/hpr2388.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:08:05
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2,388 Entitled, apt pelunking for Planet of the Rapt.
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It is hosted by Windigo and is about 9 minutes long and can remain an explicit flag.
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The summary is another couple of interesting packages from the Vemian repo.
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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.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello everybody, it is Windigo again.
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I'm here with the 4th installment in my apps pelunking series, not because it has been
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requested, not because it has been heralded as a groundbreaking series, but because we
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need more shows and I can crank one of these out.
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So I'm gonna.
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Also, I have decided to make the titles movie puns, which may keep me going for far longer
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than the original concept did.
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I mean, there's so many good options, winners like Shinler's Sources.list, apt to the
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future, dawn of the Deb.
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So as long as I can keep coming up with ridiculous titles like that, I think I can convince myself
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to keep popping out series episodes.
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But anyways, for anyone who's catching this for the first time, apps pelunking is going
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through it.
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Your package repositories doesn't have to be apt-based, it can be RPM or whatever arch
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uses their Pac-Man repositories.
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Even something cool like Geeks.
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If you find a cool package in there, make a series and tell us about it.
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The first package that I've found recently is called DUNST, d-u-n-s-t, phonetics, phonetics,
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phonetics, delta, unicorn, november, sausages, tango.
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It is a lightweight notification daemon and very customizable.
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So if you've ever used Ubuntu or an operating system like that and you get a wireless
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signal notification or you change the volume and you get that bar that shows what your volume
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is set, it's like that, but only text and much, much smaller.
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I don't mean physically size smaller.
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I mean the application is very light, it doesn't take a lot of memory.
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It displays passive notifications like Ubuntu's Notify OSD, so you don't click on the
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notifications to do actions, but you can click on them to go away.
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It has customizable keystrokes so that you can cycle through notifications you've received.
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You can go back in time and see what's popped up in the past or you can configure how long
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notifications pop up for so you don't miss them.
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Although they've got something figured out where if you're not at your computer or
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not doing anything, your notifications don't run away.
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So that might not be terribly necessary, but I was working on an XMPP notification daemon
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and I had the XMPP part, I just didn't have a notification daemon to send notices to.
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So since I run a very lightweight wind of manager coming up next actually, I searched
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around and didn't really like anything else that I found, but a dumps really did the
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trick.
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It's perfect for what I was looking for.
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If you use i3 in particular, if it's in very well.
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And speaking of fitting in very well, that segway works because the next package I'm talking
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about is i3.
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i3 is a window manager, so it controls all of the windows you have on your screen and figures
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out how to display them.
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It is a very, very lightweight window manager.
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I don't have a terminal, and because I have a baby in my arm, but I think it's somewhere
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along the lines of 500 kilobytes for the executable itself or the binary.
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So extremely lightweight, very fast, and it's a tiling window manager, so all your windows
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start up maximized, and they each get a slice of the screen.
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If you start up a second window, well, let's start at one.
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First of all, you just have your desktop.
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No windows.
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i3 does come with a status bar, usually oriented at the bottom.
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That gives you some information, and it's also very customizable, but that's another
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package.
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So you're looking at your desktop and you start a window, and i3 sets it to take up the
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entirety of the screen, so it's completely maximized if you want.
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When you start up a second window, it will be half of whatever that first window was,
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so it takes up half of the screen, and the second, the first window gets resized to half
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of what it was.
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You can orient them next to each other, vertically, you can do horizontally, you can split
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windows up into subwindows, it's very, very configurable, and very easy to manipulate
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to do what you want.
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I really enjoy it.
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It's very customizable, color-wise, I'm using a base 16 theme for right now, and if it's
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right into whatever background I have, I can customize the colors for that, and it's
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just, it really has started to fit my workflow very well.
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I have dual monitors, and i3 supports that beautifully.
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I have different desktops fixed to different monitors, so all the odd numbers are on my
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right-hand side, and all the evens are on my left, or vice versa, whichever way you
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want to do it.
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So it seems like whenever I set up my computer, I always reach for i3.
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I do like other desktops, Montes is very nice, OpenBox was my choice for a long time
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in the CrunchBang days, but i3, there's just something really nice about it, so that's
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usually what I reach for if I'm ever setting up a desktop.
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So the third package on the docket for today is uqm, and that stands for per-quan masters,
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and I don't actually know if I'm pronouncing that right, because there's no vocals in
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this game, and it is a game.
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This is a game derived from a game called Star Control 2.
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It looks to be about the Super Nintendo era, and it's just a super entertaining fun game.
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You are separated from the population of the earth, and the earth is enslaved, and you
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happen upon the skeleton of an ancient alien ship of some sort, and you go cavorting
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around the galaxy, trying to figure out how to get Earth 3, and it's just super fun.
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It reminds me a lot of the Mass Effect series, in the way you travel, and the way you end
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up mining planets for resources, but it's lots of fun.
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Very dialogue heavy, everything's text, but you just run around from star system, star
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system gathering resources, interacting with aliens.
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It's deceptively entertaining.
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I installed it on a whim.
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I found it in the package repositories, like this series is supposed to be, and just
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installed it to check out.
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It gave it a whirl, thought, I guess this is entertaining, and then realized five or six
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hours had gone by.
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It is very addictive.
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So if you have lots to do, if you have responsibilities that don't involve driving a spaceship, you should
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probably avoid this game until you have some extra time.
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So those are the three packages I've been encountering most lately.
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If again, if you have your own package repository, or your own packages that you've discovered
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that you think other people should know about, make one of these shows.
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It doesn't even have to be apps belonging, make it whatever you want.
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I might consider movie pun titles mandatory, but you know, I'm not in control of HDR, you
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can do what you want.
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So anyhow, this has been when to go.
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If you need to contact me, comments or host page, they're usually pretty good.
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Thank you very much.
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We'll look forward to hearing your episode.
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You've been listening to Hecopovic Radio at HecopovicRadio.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 HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it really is.
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Hecopovic Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club,
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and it's part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the create of comments, attribution,
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share a like, 3.0 license.
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