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Episode: 2673
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Title: HPR2673: Urandom - Ohio Linux Fest 2-18 Podcaster Roundtable
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2673/hpr2673.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 07:20:47
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---
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This is HBR Episode 2673 entitled Your Random Ohio Linux Fest 2-Shading Podcast Around Table.
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It is hosted by Ajara and in about 34 minutes long and Karima next visit flag.
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The summary is The Your Random Crew Danes the Podcast and at Ohio Linux Fest for a chat.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
|
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Welcome to another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio. I'm Lyle. I have with me Taj.
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What's good everybody? And we are bringing you a special multi podcast round up we did this year
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at Ohio Linux Fest 2018 in Columbus Ohio. We had folks from the Sunday Morning Linux Review,
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Linux Logcast, U-Random and Hacker Public Radio. Obviously. There were laughs, tears,
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awkward silences which you probably won't hear and a damn good time. So I would encourage you all
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to give it a listen and check out everybody's podcasts. I know everybody works hard to
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put out their shows, come to cons like this, meet people, have stuff to say and generally have a good
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time. Check for links for everybody's shows and the show notes. Yes, links and show notes.
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It is recording. Thanks for the warning.
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Now we have two streams of evidence. Well, just just just don't cross those streams. Yeah.
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Well, it's like, you know, something happens to me. Tony's my dead man's wedge. He's got the
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evidence. You random special episode 29.5 for October 15th 2018. What do I do with my hands?
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Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to a special Ohio Linux Fest 2018 episode of U Random. We have
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quite the cast of characters with us tonight, including Taj. What's good, everybody? We have
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Ahuka. Hello. Tony. Is this Tony? We've got 5150.
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Howdy folks. Welcome to the Sunday morning Hacker.
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You know, you random. All the people are here. We've got a podcaster round table without the
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table. And it's more like a triangle, really, but yeah, but we couldn't have had all the audio
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set up. That's true. That would have been more difficult to set up. Taj may have brought
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half a studio with him. No, that's just not happening. This is enough. No, no, no, no. I was
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implying that this was half your studio, but that's not accurate. Not even close.
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I have lots and lots of audio equipment. Well, our past lives do follow us around. Yes.
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So how's everyone enjoying the weekend so far?
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Great. Yeah, wonderful.
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Yeah, it is. Yeah, you guys could get a little closer, but I can turn it up. It's not that big of you.
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Yeah, should people did not come? Poke should have come. We're having a head talk.
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Poke doesn't fly. Unfortunately, that's like his, his thing. So he's, he's not allowed to be here.
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Yeah. We kept up the tradition going to beat us.
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Very not. Beaties. Yeah, the Mongolian place. Yeah, for sure.
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That was an experience I'd never had Mongolian barbecue. It's delicious.
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I mean, it's just a bunch of things I already liked cooked on a round cast iron grill. So,
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I mean, it was delicious. It was just a style of cooking that I'd never seen with swords.
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You forgot the with swords. You're right with swords, which makes everything cooler.
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Yes. And tastes better. I don't know about that. The cooler part, definitely.
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So did anybody learn anything like super cool yet? I know, I know we did from a production
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standpoint. We've been picking brains on, like, improve the workflow for the show.
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Talked to a gentleman by the name of, I believe it was Josh Plum. Jason, Jason Plum. Thank you.
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From GitLab on, I forget how the conversation came up, but he heard us talking about our current
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deployment process. And he's like, you can do all of that with GitHub workflows or GitLab workflows
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much more easily. So guess what I'm going to be working on at some point, along with, like,
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other projects we have going on. We also learned that hotel Wi-Fi is a pain in the ass.
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Well, hotel Wi-Fi is a pain in the ass if you're trying to spend, like,
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VMs and run servers on hotel Wi-Fi. Let's keep it in perspective.
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Okay, you're not wrong. Rarely, I might ever.
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All I want is a T1. Is that too much to ask?
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Well, what was the talk we were in where they were talking about, like, they have T,
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they run the railroad runs data transmissions through the rail lines at T1 speed.
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And I'm like, yeah, I'm like, how do I hack that? Where do I have to tap into the rail line to get
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that? Must have been the only talk you went to without me because I don't remember.
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It was the home brew, I think. No, because I was in the home brew one.
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Maybe it was the Raspberry Pi. It must have been the Raspberry Pi one because I was busy in a
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Vem talk. Yeah. That I really wanted to crash. But then I found out that rail lines have T1 speed.
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So I guess it was worth it. So the trains move at T1 speeds or that would not happen.
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Well, it was cool because he was talking about, like, they can actually track the impedance
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of the track to figure out where it's severed. Like, by just checking that, I was like,
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that's so simple and so brilliant that most good ideas are the trains themselves communicate
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through the wheels through the trail, the rails all the way back to the station. And then that's how
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they know, you know, where the trains are at any time. They go throughout, you know, and changing the
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rail lines and whatnot. Are we getting Tony? Yeah. Okay. I'm like, we're going to the side of the
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mic here. They're dynamic mics. They don't work very well over here. But that's okay. Well,
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sorry about that. Talk into the mic, Tony. Talk into the mic.
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Yeah, you can move it. That's fine. There we go. Well, at that point, you kind of all are
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almost into the cone. Yeah. So it should pick you guys up pretty well. All right.
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If not, I'll just boost you like two insane levels and it'll work. I will fix it in post this
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time. I promise. I think that this is a special enough case that there's going to be some post
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to fix. Yeah, live recordings are always a little trickier to manage. It's not as simple as
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because the beginning off got the end off. Call it good. Find a good joke. Compress it. And yeah,
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find a good joke. Put it at the beginning. It's done. Yeah. For sure. With the three of us over here,
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I have a sudden urge to do harmony and dance. That's going to say we look like a really strange 70s
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bluegrass band. I think this is a you random exclusive.
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I'm kind of scared of what that sounds like, but I'm still vaguely curious. That's what you don't
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know. Just like you said, people don't want to see your face. Nobody wants to hear me sing.
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No, they probably don't want to hear me sing either. So you're not alone in that count.
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So yeah, that's that's cool stuff I learned so far. I went to a couple talks that were
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interesting. We went to the lazy siss admin talk, which was awesome because the guy didn't even show
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up. He was like teleconferencing in. And I'm like, this is exactly what it says on the 10 line.
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This guy didn't even show up. It's amazing. So that was fun. That was fun. Then we did the
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get one today, which was kind of like how to how to get how to set up get lab. Yeah. And I guess
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I already knew it all, but well, it was super funny because the guy from get lab was not the one
|
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giving that talk. He was answering all the questions. All of the guy giving the talk didn't actually
|
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know. I mean, he did a good job doing the talk. Yeah, I mean, it was the thing he was there to talk
|
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about. He did a good job. But someone had a question of how do I do this? And he would kind of
|
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you do this and this and this. And he finally towards the end. He's like, oh, you actually work
|
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for get lab. That's why that's why you know all the answers to this. So I want to halfway through
|
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that presentation. Was he actually showing like a self hosted? Yes. Yeah. I think he set it up
|
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in one of the cloud hosting services, but he had already done the install prior to
|
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and just did a what did he call it? Ask his cinema? Yeah, which was kind of cool. I'd never seen
|
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that before. I want that. I'm going to be using that for something. It's like a YouTube where you
|
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can do command line things, but in the video, you can reach up and like copy and paste lines
|
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from the video. So it's like, I don't know how they're doing it, but it's kind of interesting.
|
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So like if somebody runs a command, you know, what was it? It was like curl this and then
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pseudo bash it and like everybody face bombed in the room. You should totally do that. So you
|
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could just do that from the video, which is kind of cool. He was just being helpful. Yeah. Yeah,
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for sure. I had one. I think it was last year of the year before. Some guy just thought he knew
|
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more than the speaker and kept interrupting. And I finally turned around and said shut up.
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At a Linux conference, somebody thinks they know something more than somebody else. Surely not.
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That's not a thing that happens. No, no, that smart. Go do your own talk.
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Yeah, obviously social graces might not be there. Strong suit.
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Speaking of which, there wasn't a Kevin O'Brien security talk this year.
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I'm kind of back and away from a lot of that because I'm getting older and I'm getting tired
|
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of doing stuff. Fair enough. Fair enough. Yeah. I don't get out to the Linux users groups as much.
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Only gets to a couple of the like Ohio Linux Fest and Panquicon
|
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or about the two things that I get to every year.
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And then record stuff for Hacker Public Radio. And it seems like that's enough.
|
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Speaking of which, your recent like health Hacker Public Radio things have been like 100 percent
|
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awesome. Cool. Yeah. It's been actually going somewhere. Well, that's good.
|
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The next one is going to be how I'm actually not dying.
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Okay, not dying is good. I am not dying. That's that's a positive.
|
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Yeah. And I just want to say that your episode on diabetes, I have a family history of it,
|
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but and that wasn't enough to kick me in the ass to get things going. But your episode was.
|
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So thank you very much. Cool. Great. I'm glad to hear it.
|
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Three generations of family history. Not enough to get me to move.
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Hacker Public Radio enough to get me to do something. You know, it whatever it takes. Yeah.
|
||||
So I think we need to tell Ken. He needs to have like bumper stickers made like Hacker Public
|
||||
Radio safe lives. It's just it's official. You know, he might.
|
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You're not wrong. Or else he'd tell Dave to do it. Yeah. David write a script to do it.
|
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Yeah, for sure. So yeah, I've got about four more that are uploaded. Oh, wow.
|
||||
But I space them out. Yeah. You're much better at producing Hacker Public Radio some of
|
||||
we are. We have tons of ideas. We just execution. Yeah, execution is a broad. Yeah. Well,
|
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outside of the conference, I got to see my first green green scooters this this week. I've
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yet to see one set on fire. So maybe we saw one in two pieces that was laying on the sidewalk
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that I guess somebody just like Hulk smashed. It was just laying there. So you say green scooters,
|
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but they're actually white, right? Is that the ones you're talking about? No. Yeah. Well,
|
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black with green accents, I think is what I've been seeing. I think they're called birds or
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something bird related. Well, they're the bird one because we've got the bird ones in Louisville.
|
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They look different though. They're not the same miss the ones here. I don't know what the
|
||||
brand name is, but it's the same idea I think. Oh, I've never seen them. Are they like you rent
|
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them and you ride around with them or and then you leave them literally anywhere. Yeah,
|
||||
you just drop it wherever you stop. It's kind of a it's it's not thought out process. It is it is
|
||||
super convenient, which is the thing that they're selling it on. But I have the feeling that it
|
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leads people to be less than socially responsible with them. Yeah. Well, when you've you've
|
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already got us like secondary market of people finding them and bringing them back to get paid.
|
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Well, not even a secondary market. That's part of their business plan is they don't you know,
|
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have employees to gather them. They just like ad hoc pay people like a dollar a piece to go find them.
|
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And then I read in a whole article about this. It was you know, they start out as not very much
|
||||
and then the longer a scooter is missing and hasn't checked in, the more you get paid to return it.
|
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Why would I not just go out and collect them and keep them for three months and then take them back.
|
||||
That seems like the easiest hack ever. Yes, it does. I'm pretty sure that the person who wrote the
|
||||
article made that point. Good. It's a point that should have been made. It is a fairly obvious one.
|
||||
And as far as social responsibility, I was out walking on the sidewalk last night in the
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in the rain and you see like three headlights coming at you down the sidewalk. But no, they
|
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haven't really had any near misses or whatever, but I can I can see why that may be a concern for
|
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Yeah, some people some municipalities, but
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Well, especially if you're not super mobile like if you're you know trying to get down the sidewalk and
|
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these, you know, these kids are running towards you with these scooters like that may be a problem.
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I am sorry, Taj, I will stay off your lawn. Yes, this is a thing that happens occasionally,
|
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as an occasionally like all the time. What people stay off your lawn? Well, I yell at them,
|
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stay. Actually, there's nobody in on my lawn ever except for horses, which are dumb.
|
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We've had this conversation. Absolutely covered your feeling about your horses. Yes, they're dumb.
|
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I told you last night what the solution is. I don't think that's going to go over well. I mean,
|
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I would pretend that I care, but I think other people might actually care.
|
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It answers the French have a really good solution for what to do with excess horses.
|
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Yep, since Taj is going one in his house of these meat, he would be eating horse for
|
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like the next eight, like 12 years. But then I would at least have an excuse. Like they're
|
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I'm no, I have to eat it. It's going to go bad. Yeah, exactly. I bought a freezer just for this horse.
|
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That would not go over well.
|
||||
I'm pretty sure that that sound I hear is your wife rolling her eyes all the way back
|
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and then again, you're. Yes, and she hasn't even heard you say that she just knows that you said
|
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something. She'll never know because like she's never listening to this. That's probably for
|
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the best. Yeah, well, definitely. And we're just here to get you guys angry letters.
|
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Well, we haven't really ever gotten an angry. I can't think of anything. I think the
|
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angriest we got was lost in Bronx is like, why aren't you posting Google Plus? And I kind of wish
|
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I had gotten that about three weeks later because then I would have had a good reason. Yeah,
|
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it's like, well, because there is no Google. Well, we're like our fights about cannon with him,
|
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but that's, you know, a thing. And then he just like passively aggressively doesn't mention us in
|
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his audio diaries, but that's probably about us anyway. That's okay. I still love you lost in
|
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work. Yeah, you're still my homie. Yeah. I've been reading his excerpts from the new book.
|
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Yeah, they're so good. Yes. And it's like a first draft. And I'm like, it's a first draft that he
|
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has been like, it's just a first draft. I don't even really like it that much. And then I read it
|
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and I'm like, you don't, you don't like this. This is exactly the story that I want more of.
|
||||
Here, take my dollars. Yeah, make this book. I mean, he's already getting my dollars,
|
||||
but yeah, I would like to give it more. The first time I got one of those excerpts, I'm like,
|
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I'm not giving you enough dollars and turn the dial on. Nice. I think that's the point. Like,
|
||||
that's why you should do that. But yeah, the whole Patreon thing, that's, that's an interesting
|
||||
like, like share, subscribe. Yeah. Smash that subscribe. Because that's what it works just
|
||||
fine. If you just press it, you don't have to smash it. I don't know why it's a thing.
|
||||
That's kind of how any weird gets started. Yeah, right. It's doing pretty well. Yeah, you're not,
|
||||
that's a thing. But I mean, it's, it's kind of funny, like, especially since I went to music school,
|
||||
and it's, you learned about like the old patronage model and how that worked and, you know,
|
||||
how it did work and how it didn't work. And it's like, we've, we've slowly come back around to it.
|
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It's like, I'm not sure that's for the best, but it's a thing. Like, at least people are getting paid.
|
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Mm-hmm. I'm trying to think about what to talk about besides food. Why? I don't know.
|
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We had yak burgers today. That was awesome. I was today years old when I learned that yak is
|
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delicious. Today is all. Yeah, I was, I was like, that's a thing I've never eaten. Put the animal on
|
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a burger. Let me have it. Where do you find yak burgers? At North Market, actually. What was the
|
||||
place called? It was, it was right across from the Vietnamese place. Like yard streaked something.
|
||||
I want to say, but yeah, they, they had a couple like game meat things, but they had a yak burger
|
||||
on special. And I was like, well, there was a bison burger on the menu. And I was a little
|
||||
iffy about whether I wanted to go with bison or look for something a little more interesting.
|
||||
And then Taj Mentson mentions the yak burger. And I'm like, yak burger? I am having a yak burger.
|
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Yeah. And it was a good decision. But because I've never been any, no, no, it tastes like, yeah,
|
||||
come on. I've never been anywhere that even offered me yak. Like I've been places where I could
|
||||
get bison. I think I can get bison in the grocery store. But I've never been somewhere that's like
|
||||
yak as a thing that I could eat. And so I had to, I had to do that. It was, it was worth the
|
||||
experimentation. It was a good deal. It really was. Yeah. I mean, it's like beef, but
|
||||
it's kind of pungent is the word. Well, it's kind of like where bison doesn't have a lot of fat in
|
||||
it. So it kind of like lacks a little bit there. This felt like it was almost a little more fatty
|
||||
as far as the meat was. So it was pretty good. Probably not good for me at all. Like in any way,
|
||||
but it was delicious. Well, lunch we were discussing whether Tony ate cat in China. Yes, he
|
||||
actually does, didn't, but not as told it was not the barbecue place one to was not chicken.
|
||||
There was not cat. But if I get further out into the city, then it probably would be. Yeah,
|
||||
I mean, here's if you hear him in the kitchen saying, mal, mal, because it's cat, then
|
||||
which is always, it's like one of my favorite Mandarin words is mal, because it's like, it sounds
|
||||
like that. Here's a hint, Tony, they lied. That's totally changed your perspective. If you were
|
||||
Chinese, you'd wonder, why is it these crazy Westerners make pets out of meat? They're wasting
|
||||
a perfectly good revenue stream. You know, that, I mean, that it helps deal with the pet over
|
||||
population problem. It deals with food shortages all in one go. It's like a very like the
|
||||
what's the gulliver's travels guys? Jonathan Swift, the modest proposal. It's like, we should
|
||||
just eat the babies. That's oh, really? Well, I am a virus. Yeah, that's who he was right.
|
||||
I always thought that was like class A trolling. Oh, yeah. I have, you know, I've heard other
|
||||
stories. Of course, it's too far back for any written record, but I had heard the theory. That's
|
||||
how humans originally domesticated wolves is because they just throw the scraps, you know,
|
||||
and the dogs, dogs would fall around and then, you know, when when food ran out, they'd
|
||||
club the dog. Well, that's unfortunate, but it's kind of like early fishing for dogs.
|
||||
Like, you call it, I don't know, like, is it dogging them? I don't know what you call that.
|
||||
Or for something more recent, take a look at the Antarctic expeditions.
|
||||
I'm confused. Oh, they would start with animals pulling everything and then as they started
|
||||
you've been good, but I actually still do it that way. I mean, that's that's not something that's
|
||||
no longer a thing because your sled would get lighter as you, you know, consumed your, uh,
|
||||
your supplies and then you didn't need the dogs as many dogs and you would eat the sickly ones.
|
||||
Well, I mean, it's just a waste to carry them back. So we might as well, but you know, you take two
|
||||
wagons full of things. By the time you finish all the food in the first wagon, you burn the wagon,
|
||||
eat the cow pulling it, and then you're down to one wagon. I mean, the logic is sound at least.
|
||||
This is this is going to be the one where people years from now will come back to you.
|
||||
Remember the one where you talked about eating all your, that one random like point episode,
|
||||
like the point five episode where you just talked about food the whole thing.
|
||||
I mean, that is a huge part of like the, oh, it's like hallway track and where are we going to
|
||||
launch? Yeah. And the answer for lunch is always North market. Yeah. So like, if you've never
|
||||
been to OLF and you come, like you're going to all my track and North market. Yeah. For sure.
|
||||
Also, Momo is delicious. I'd never had Momo. Momo is always legit. So now I have to ask,
|
||||
did you get your burger without the bun? No. We were talking about that on the way there that, uh,
|
||||
there's, there's a moratorium on Lyle's diet this weekend and then he goes back Monday.
|
||||
And it's back to salad and water on Monday. No, I really like my salads.
|
||||
It chicken season chicken season salad. It's like probably 40% of my diet at this point.
|
||||
Yeah. I went down to subway and go to salad.
|
||||
For me, the reason I've been as successful as I have been and hope to continue to be at losing weight
|
||||
and feeling better is, you know, eating well most of the time and then occasionally giving
|
||||
myself permission to not because it's all of the food I grew up eating. I'm not just going to say,
|
||||
okay, I can never have that again because I would just fall off of that wagon so fast.
|
||||
But by saying, okay, here's the thing that you used to have all of the time and now you just
|
||||
need to not have it all of the time and just have it a little bit of it occasionally. I can do that
|
||||
and salad being delicious doesn't hurt. Right. As long as you're one of those people that, like,
|
||||
says, I like salad because I just like to drown in salad dressing. I'm working on it. I'm
|
||||
I'm backing off the amount of Caesar dressing I put on my salad. It's it's a it's a process.
|
||||
At least it's not rich. I know a half pint. No. Like you're one of those people. It's either the
|
||||
dressing or the cheese, you know, too much of one or the other makes it good. What do you mean or?
|
||||
That is the wrong conditional.
|
||||
I believe this is only an ant situation.
|
||||
Feta cheese. Feta cheese. That's where it's at. Feta cheese is delicious. It really is.
|
||||
On weird things too. Like things you wouldn't think about putting cheese on. Like I'm thinking
|
||||
about I'm trying to think of something I wouldn't think of putting cheese on. Fair enough.
|
||||
Like my mom makes this asparagus with Feta cheese. And I would have never thought
|
||||
about Feta cheese on asparagus, but it's legit. It's super. It was parmesan, but I can see Feta working
|
||||
there. Yeah, it's really good. Actually, the best Feta my wife and I ever had was in a restaurant
|
||||
in Amsterdam. It's right on the Amstel River. We've been trying to find something like that ever since.
|
||||
Yeah, just like not. Yeah. Trying to think we, uh, we're we're already kind of trying to plan
|
||||
next year. Yeah. If we were like, what will we do better? I feel like I'm damaged because
|
||||
that's always how my brain works. I'm like, I'm having so much fun. How do I make sure the next
|
||||
time is even better before I'm even done having fun? First of all, make sure your, uh, your ex-server
|
||||
will pipe out to play board. That would be I mean, I could have started working that before Wednesday
|
||||
night, but I didn't. Yeah. Well, things. We made some headway. We got some of the doctor stuff.
|
||||
At least running. Of course, we had to install a desktop environment to do it, but whatever.
|
||||
It doesn't matter. Well, all the configs will carry over and then I'll just burn that VM to the ground.
|
||||
Yeah, as it should be. So yeah, I think next year, we're talking about doing something we did a
|
||||
couple of years ago where we try to get a podcast table. Um, that way it kind of gives us a central
|
||||
place to hang out and promote stuff because there's so much of us like Linuxy podcasts.
|
||||
That, well, we're Linuxy, but a lot of others are just Linux like Tony, for example, it's in
|
||||
the name. We are, we are very much Linux adjacent. Yeah, Linux plus is what I'm going to call it.
|
||||
That's fair. 50 didn't you have one like two years ago? Yeah. Uh, it was two or three.
|
||||
It was two. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, we, uh, we started bouncing around where their
|
||||
tilts was going to have a table and wasn't going to be enough. People from tilts think
|
||||
Joel. And, uh, uh, pod nuts guy started, you know, uh, there's last time I think that
|
||||
door was able to make it, but, you know, they were about truth. Well, there's three or four pod nuts
|
||||
people. We thought, you know, the old days, everybody had a separate table back before my time,
|
||||
but, you know, we thought that they said, you know, wouldn't be enough. Trouble fat is,
|
||||
somebody wants to go do something. There's not enough people to, you know, have somebody on the
|
||||
table and then we brainstorm, well, let's just, I think that may have been my idea, but let's just
|
||||
do one table for all the podcasts. And the thing we learned is that nobody who comes here knows
|
||||
any, any podcasts outside Jupiter, networking or yeah, for sure. Or if they do, it's, it's very,
|
||||
it's us. Like it's people, it's everybody who knows each other that knows, uh, sort of like the
|
||||
HPR branched off things. Um, the HPR family tree. Yeah, for sure. But yeah, the table helps
|
||||
organize that things a lot. I feel like we were there and it's, it sucks the door can bring
|
||||
his people or him and his people, but, uh, you know, we can still do it without him. I mean,
|
||||
I still from two years ago have the HPR like booth kit in my basement. Sorry again.
|
||||
Because I know you'll listen to this, but it's in my basement. And, you know, you random only
|
||||
exists because, you know, I went and hung out with Pokey at the HPR table at the last Northeast
|
||||
Linux Fest. It's our Genesis. Yeah. I blame on my bill. Well, that's just in general. You
|
||||
should just do that for everything. Yes, but he's the one who, he's the one who, you know,
|
||||
introduced me to Pokey and yeah, and then HPR audio book club and just and now you're all stuck
|
||||
with this. Yeah, we're not going away. Uh, you can, you can once again blame Pokey because we
|
||||
got to the point where he's the only one with the coffee now. So as soon as he gives me the next
|
||||
one, then we're good from there on out I think. Is it just one more that we're blocked on?
|
||||
There's two, but the, the other one that we, that he has the only copy is the very last one that
|
||||
recorded. It was the, uh, the sigler, uh, galactic football. Was that the last one we recorded?
|
||||
That's the last one we recorded. We, we picked one and I think I listened to it and it wasn't
|
||||
very good. Yeah, that's for the next one that we never picked one and we all hated it. We were
|
||||
like, this is not, and then, and then other stuff changed and it kind of all fell through.
|
||||
So Pokey is book blocking HPR. Yes. Yes. That I want, I'm, I'm, I'm turning or I'm taking that phrase
|
||||
now. That's my taking it back book blocking. Such a book blocker, Pokey. This is what you get
|
||||
for not coming. You can't defend yourself. It's okay. We're not saying anything we wouldn't say
|
||||
if he was standing right here. That is 100% true. I remember when, you know, it was announced that
|
||||
you're going to do triplanetary. We were talking about this before the podcast started on huge
|
||||
Doc Smith fan. And I thought, Oh, great. I'm really looking forward to this and the years go by.
|
||||
Well, that was a great idea. Here's a preview. We really liked it.
|
||||
Has it, has that one even aired? I don't think so. I thought we finally got past that one.
|
||||
Like, I don't think this is how far back we are. The Nathan Lowell episode that we did of like
|
||||
the actual Trader's Tales. Yeah. We haven't got to that yet. Oh my gosh. That's astounding.
|
||||
Because I know, right? I heard Nathan Lowell. Yeah. Well, that was like my introduction.
|
||||
And I mainlined all of its books in like a week and a half. It was crazy. Yes. You and me both.
|
||||
Yeah. And now I've got him followed on Amazon. Like, I get a notification that says Nathan Lowell
|
||||
has a new book and it's just the button should just stay shut up and take my money.
|
||||
And they will. They will gladly take your money. And I will gladly give it to them if it is
|
||||
some of it goes to him and I can continue to get. Yeah. The only, the only bad thing. Solar Clipper
|
||||
books. Yeah. The only bad thing about that deal is the lack of them letting him do the audio books.
|
||||
Yeah. Like, I'm not interested in anybody else reading those books. Thankfully, I can just read
|
||||
the book myself. Yes. That's okay. That'll, that'll work. It's fine. So what else? What else
|
||||
do we want to talk about? Are we good? Like, this is, this is our check-in. So everybody knows
|
||||
that we came and we're alive. Anybody want to plug their stuff while we're here? Please do.
|
||||
Yeah. Tony, that's your cue. All right. So in case you guys, you random listeners, you don't know me.
|
||||
I'm Tony from the morning, my next review. And I'm one of four, almost five hosts now.
|
||||
And everybody else couldn't come. Almost five hosts. Yeah. We got one guy starting to come,
|
||||
a normal guy. His name's Jay LaCory. He wrote the mastering, you, the Ubuntu server.
|
||||
Okay. Oh. So he's got some credit. Yeah. Nice. And then, I don't know. So check us out at smlr.us.
|
||||
And then actually one of our listeners, Goran is here. So he's sitting back looking or watching
|
||||
listening at taking pictures. Yeah, taking pictures of the production of the show. We'll have
|
||||
to confiscate his phone before he leaves. This is top secret. Charging us for the negative
|
||||
slater. Yeah. Once again, this is like that dead man switch. Okay. 5150, you can hear me most
|
||||
regularly on twice a month on LinuxLugcast.com. And that's, that's an open podcast. If anybody wants
|
||||
to set up mumble, can jump in the room and record at 9 p.m. on the first and third
|
||||
Fridays of every month. So, you know, please, please do. I mean, we have, we have regular people,
|
||||
but we would really like to have other opinions and people jump in. Oh, you want opinions. I have
|
||||
those. And abundance. And I will say just as in this aside, if you're in the same situation as
|
||||
me, which I don't know, you may be, their aug feed is currently broken. And we were looking at
|
||||
that this weekend. I think they're going to try to get it fixed. But if you stopped at episode 100,
|
||||
you are now officially 11 episodes behind like I am. So that just gives you something to listen
|
||||
to when you drive home, Tosh. Yeah, I already hit things. But more things is not a bad situation
|
||||
to find yourself in. So, uh, yeah, just switch the MP3 feed for now. And then you, you will get
|
||||
those. So public service announcement. Anybody else want to plug anything? Well, I'm going to use
|
||||
my usual tag line. This is a hookah signing off from Hacker Public Radio reminding everyone to
|
||||
support free software. Indeed. So, um, is this the end? I think that was okay.
|
||||
What do I do with my hands? What do you do with your hands normally? I have them on a keyboard.
|
||||
Never mind. I don't want to know. Stop. Do not go forward.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. 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,
|
||||
then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
|
||||
founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club. And it's part of the binary
|
||||
revolution at binrev.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 status,
|
||||
today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLife, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user