Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- 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>
This commit is contained in:
690
hpr_transcripts/hpr3172.txt
Normal file
690
hpr_transcripts/hpr3172.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,690 @@
|
||||
Episode: 3172
|
||||
Title: HPR3172: A ramble with the Pentland Squires (part 2)
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3172/hpr3172.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-24 18:14:14
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3172 for Tuesday 29 September 2020. Today's show is entitled
|
||||
A Rumble with the Pentland Squires. Part 2
|
||||
It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 50 minutes long
|
||||
and carries an explicit flag. The summary is
|
||||
second half of the chat between MRX and Dave Morris.
|
||||
This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code
|
||||
HPR15 that's HPR15.
|
||||
Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Hello everyone. This is Dave Morris.
|
||||
Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
This is the second half of a conversation that I had with MrX on 23 August.
|
||||
It turned out to be fairly long so we decided to cut it into two sections.
|
||||
So here we go with the second bit and I hope you find it entertaining.
|
||||
Do you want to mention any other scripts or anything you've been dealing with those?
|
||||
Just that one or?
|
||||
Well it's sort of never ending conveyor belt as far as I'm concerned but
|
||||
I was actually in your latest show you were talking about
|
||||
the whole business of knowing where you are in the podcast and going back to that
|
||||
and tracking stuff and that sort of thing.
|
||||
Now I wanted to maybe do a response.
|
||||
I see we have one responding to your show in the queue just now, Daniel.
|
||||
I think it's got something maybe next week and haven't got it in front of me right now.
|
||||
But I was thinking I could maybe do something like that.
|
||||
But I managed my podcast in a very, very weird way that I'm going to have the interesting
|
||||
it would be.
|
||||
And I actually get used to it.
|
||||
The base to hold all my podcast info.
|
||||
I think we've been interesting.
|
||||
I mean, I'd definitely like to hear it because it's going to be a thing that
|
||||
everybody listens to podcasts.
|
||||
It's each class and then it's going to have us the own way of dealing with it.
|
||||
So yeah, but very interesting.
|
||||
I think a lot of people use various apps on their phones and there's some excellent ones.
|
||||
I do use an Android app on the case because it's useful just to be able to do something
|
||||
and do what you do and have the podcast in a portable form.
|
||||
So I walk around with the phone in my pocket and the Bluetooth headphones on to listen to certain podcasts
|
||||
and it's useful from that point of view.
|
||||
And the app just deals with what's new and what's next.
|
||||
And let you resume what you left off and then delete stuff automatically when you finish.
|
||||
And tenipod is on the one I use.
|
||||
Oh, yes, and tenipod.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||||
Talking about that.
|
||||
So I'm going to go and sit off my tangent.
|
||||
But it's related to what you were saying there.
|
||||
It's quite a lot of what that before that.
|
||||
Yeah, I'm finding right in the moment that I'm falling really quite far behind.
|
||||
Listening to HPR.
|
||||
In fact, listen to any podcast because what seems to have happened is I've been my whole.
|
||||
And what with working from home and and just everything will be different now.
|
||||
I've not only had the opportunity as much opportunity to listen to HPR.
|
||||
And as I've been in the past.
|
||||
And also because of all this COVID stuff going on.
|
||||
I've been certainly in the past and catching up with all that nice and news.
|
||||
I'm feeling now that I'm getting to the stage now where I can maybe ease back on that.
|
||||
And trying to get myself back into listening to more HPR stuff.
|
||||
I think I'm a bit sexy.
|
||||
I chose behind now, which is.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You know, I think I think a lot of people are doing similar things.
|
||||
I certainly have been and I've been as you say, that's why I do the phone setup.
|
||||
Because I listen to particular podcasts for this week in biology.
|
||||
And they do show every other day pretty much what they're talking about.
|
||||
You know, things been discovered about this particular virus.
|
||||
And all of all the related things.
|
||||
They had Tony Fauci on talking to them in one of the recent shows.
|
||||
So I listen to.
|
||||
They get high priority in my thing.
|
||||
So sorry, go on.
|
||||
No, no.
|
||||
I was going to say that.
|
||||
That was one that you recommended.
|
||||
I did want to listen to that.
|
||||
So I tend to listen up until recently.
|
||||
I tend to listen to podcasts on my chorus headphones.
|
||||
A wireless chorus headphones.
|
||||
And it comes.
|
||||
It's pumped from our last big pie, which I'm all about.
|
||||
But then there was other podcast that I tend to listen to.
|
||||
I don't know what they at work.
|
||||
Maybe at lunch times or whatever.
|
||||
And that one of it.
|
||||
The older one would have been ideal for that, you know.
|
||||
So my plan was to listen to it there.
|
||||
So I feel that my my trusty Santa Clip with that.
|
||||
But yeah.
|
||||
But yeah, that, that, that obviously is.
|
||||
I have.
|
||||
I don't know if I can take any of them.
|
||||
Yeah, I really should.
|
||||
So that's a very good.
|
||||
Well, yeah, I tend to.
|
||||
Yeah, I've got several Santa Clips.
|
||||
I did a show on this years ago now where we've got a collection of.
|
||||
I don't know how many I've got.
|
||||
I was buying them all off eBay at one point.
|
||||
The second hand ones and stuff.
|
||||
I've got one or two new ones.
|
||||
But they've all vanished.
|
||||
But the ones I've got still still going strong.
|
||||
So Santa Clips clip zip and various others.
|
||||
And they take Rockbox, which is the best way to.
|
||||
To manage podcasts on these on.
|
||||
I'm a three player, I think.
|
||||
Because it's very, very sophisticated compared to the manufacturer software in the majority of cases.
|
||||
So yeah, I tend to have my headphones in and a.
|
||||
A Santa device or something similar in my pocket.
|
||||
A lot of the time.
|
||||
But even so, I'm way, way behind.
|
||||
I haven't got a count of the number I haven't yet to listen to.
|
||||
But probably forget it.
|
||||
But in turn, I've got a thing that computes the.
|
||||
The size on total sizes of them all.
|
||||
And also something that gives me the number of hours of listening that I've got.
|
||||
And that the quantity in terms of file sizes is 11 gigabytes at the moment.
|
||||
There's no, there's no way I'm.
|
||||
I'm going to catch up with that.
|
||||
Wow.
|
||||
Goodness.
|
||||
Goodness.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I mean, the.
|
||||
I don't know these.
|
||||
I'm always because I looked at the on my on mock piano music.
|
||||
What I'm just going to come online player.
|
||||
That's the only Linux player thing I use.
|
||||
And it had showed you a certain line.
|
||||
It's shown as the.
|
||||
Well, I'm actually.
|
||||
I'm actually imagine now we listen to.
|
||||
Some late night.
|
||||
Linux.
|
||||
But.
|
||||
I can see that I'm getting so far behind on.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I'm going to bunch them all together.
|
||||
I think it's.
|
||||
I'm going to.
|
||||
Well, that is actually what I do.
|
||||
I am.
|
||||
I grew.
|
||||
As I had added podcasts to the database.
|
||||
The point I came up with the idea that it would be nice if they were grouped.
|
||||
You know, they would have classified in some way.
|
||||
So I came up with my own classification.
|
||||
Things like signs or technology or.
|
||||
News or whatever.
|
||||
Comedy, etc.
|
||||
And I classify them.
|
||||
And then I just ID and load them onto players.
|
||||
So I've got a player that's got.
|
||||
Signs on.
|
||||
Or another one that's got technology on.
|
||||
So I can.
|
||||
When the battery runs down on the one I can swap to the other one.
|
||||
And listen.
|
||||
So.
|
||||
Play it.
|
||||
Play it.
|
||||
Each category.
|
||||
So.
|
||||
Did you.
|
||||
Well, there's only four.
|
||||
There's only.
|
||||
There's only four to sat there on my disk at the moment.
|
||||
That's another.
|
||||
That's another task is to make a little.
|
||||
Do dad that I can keep them in.
|
||||
Available on the.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
We have like a charging.
|
||||
Charging pod with all these.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
That would be the thing yet.
|
||||
So I could do it.
|
||||
Drop them into the thing.
|
||||
And then.
|
||||
Quote the.
|
||||
Charging.
|
||||
Thing in the back.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Wow.
|
||||
Back up one which.
|
||||
Well, I.
|
||||
And then.
|
||||
I broke my.
|
||||
My.
|
||||
My.
|
||||
My old.
|
||||
Santa quit.
|
||||
I.
|
||||
Been in a bit of a hurry.
|
||||
Sort of being a bit rushed.
|
||||
And.
|
||||
I broke it while I was trying to repair it.
|
||||
So.
|
||||
But I had a backup one which is brand you never, never used.
|
||||
Which I've been using now for the last six months or a year or something.
|
||||
So it's obviously pretty good in this.
|
||||
I.
|
||||
But yeah, yeah.
|
||||
It's.
|
||||
It's a shame.
|
||||
That.
|
||||
We don't make them anymore.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I don't understand.
|
||||
And.
|
||||
Why not?
|
||||
I guess the demand must have diminished.
|
||||
But.
|
||||
Churching by the number of people who were.
|
||||
Calling out for these things and saying when is anybody going to make something to.
|
||||
To do the same stuff as the.
|
||||
The Santa arranged it.
|
||||
And so on and so forth.
|
||||
You think there would be there would be worth the while of a company like that to.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
It's been.
|
||||
It's certainly not there.
|
||||
You know,
|
||||
You can really put your back pocket.
|
||||
That's not quite the same at all.
|
||||
No, no, no.
|
||||
This is.
|
||||
I've got.
|
||||
I tend to wear like sort of cargo pants.
|
||||
I've got a big, big pocket on the leg.
|
||||
So I can put a phone in there and use Bluetooth.
|
||||
And that works out.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
No, that's not too bad.
|
||||
But.
|
||||
But any.
|
||||
The thing about the.
|
||||
The clips and the clips and the clips and stuff.
|
||||
I was putting it.
|
||||
Pop into a shirt pocket.
|
||||
No, no difficulty at all.
|
||||
You know, much prefer that it's great funny that I was.
|
||||
I was in.
|
||||
I was coming back from it from.
|
||||
I do it occasionally visit the factory as a forward cut.
|
||||
Just to come back to.
|
||||
I was just giving a colleague an update sort of thing.
|
||||
I sent my message that's me first.
|
||||
But.
|
||||
I thought.
|
||||
I can do what they do.
|
||||
So you don't usually get this thing I've painted to the end of.
|
||||
in the message, sent from my iPhone, such and such and such, I said,
|
||||
sent from my Nokia, I give you ten.
|
||||
Ah, that's good, I like the sound of that.
|
||||
What was one to have on the lures?
|
||||
Yeah, it's an excellent bombproof, really.
|
||||
It just never goes wrong.
|
||||
I think the other thing is going to fail as a battery, really.
|
||||
And I think you still get batteries for them.
|
||||
So I think it worked.
|
||||
A number of times people would be leaving phones on the desk.
|
||||
Because it was too big to carry on a bucket, you know?
|
||||
It's a mobile, it's the clue's in the name, but it's too big to carry.
|
||||
Yeah, I know, I know.
|
||||
It's, I don't see to make a lot of sense as I am.
|
||||
I'm not really keen on phones in general.
|
||||
But you have to, you know, I can't, I can't survive without one.
|
||||
No, yeah, I understand that.
|
||||
I'm very tempted to try a pine phone.
|
||||
See, that could work as a, as a player of some words.
|
||||
I think it probably could, but I don't run off about them.
|
||||
Yeah, about 150 to 200 pounds or something.
|
||||
Well, finally, I thought it was just less than two.
|
||||
Was it, was it that, was that the Linux, the Linux, was it?
|
||||
Maybe we were talking about, surely we were talking about the pine phone.
|
||||
And if so, there's less thing to do.
|
||||
So yeah, I've had a few people talking about it, but I don't really know very much about it.
|
||||
Other, obviously it's, that's, that's sort of going to be, you know, more open than,
|
||||
than the standard phone file on chalk.
|
||||
Yeah, I mean, I had got some, I think they're saying they've got some blobs in it.
|
||||
So I think, but it's basically can do something all the way.
|
||||
Yeah, it seems quite, today, quite desirable.
|
||||
From the point of view of, of, of not being interfearable with, by, by the big companies and stuff,
|
||||
the ones that stick all manner of junk software on them or prevent you from installing what
|
||||
you want yourself and so on. It's, it's a, yeah, desirable pattern.
|
||||
Well, I had a very similar situation, a related situation to that, because I had some notes
|
||||
which I foolishly put, I guess, as for convenience, I put it on my, I have a,
|
||||
it's a Samsung tablet I've got, and those, they sound some notes.
|
||||
And I've got a warning to know, there's an update for this.
|
||||
You want to do it? I'll find out.
|
||||
And, of course, it was coming from the Samsung store.
|
||||
So it seems like, I think this is a, maybe the first time I've ever seen this or, maybe the
|
||||
second pair, I'm not sure, but it seems like the tablet's got, they've obviously got the Google
|
||||
store, but you've obviously got the Samsung store. And when it pops up, it stores, and I saw
|
||||
it, it's just glittery, spangly things. It's like, it's like, you could imagine a belonging to a,
|
||||
a 13-year-old, a teenager or something like that. It's just spangly, spangly things, twinkling
|
||||
all over the place. It's just horrible. But anyway, so, it's an update, so I offered it,
|
||||
waiting update a bit, and all my notes were there, and that's fine. And I went to click, click the
|
||||
note, particularly to see my note there, that's fine. And they say, in order to view this note,
|
||||
you need to install an add-on, if you want to install the add-on, I'll hop, I'll okay, I'll install
|
||||
the add-on, click Doki, and it said, in order to install this add-on, do you want to give a
|
||||
commercial to do this? I'm in fact, we've seen, oh, that add-on itself was an untrusted source,
|
||||
and what the heck, it's all about, you know, it's, ah, heck.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, you're, you become a victim very, very quickly in these things, don't you? It's so
|
||||
easy to be trapped by all this nonsense. Yeah, indeed, indeed, so I should not, I shouldn't have
|
||||
put it in the note in that in the first place. So you just kept it, kept it somewhere,
|
||||
well, I would, I would tend, I would like to think that it's not, it's a somewhere sort of thing,
|
||||
but perhaps more trustworthy, I would like to think is, you know, Google Docs sort of thing,
|
||||
not that there was any, and in any way, it's not, it's not, it's part of the Android,
|
||||
equals fear and whatnot, so it's, but yeah, I mean, this is, there's no privacy anymore,
|
||||
that's, that's for the work, well, I don't do any issues.
|
||||
No, but it, it's so tempting, isn't it? It really is. I, to my, I'm not shopping for myself,
|
||||
just at the moment, because I, yeah, I'm regarding myself as, you know, somebody who needs to,
|
||||
needs to keep well clear, the world for the moment, and my kids help me out. I've got my daughter,
|
||||
and I go, go out, I drive and I wait in the car park while she gets the things,
|
||||
but my son and his girlfriend often go to Lidl, which is a German, quite low price supermarket,
|
||||
if you're not from Britain. And it's all real. I love it. It's a great place. But,
|
||||
I made them a shopping list, and I thought, oh, they said, can you do something on the phone?
|
||||
And I said, okay, so I made a Google spreadsheet thing, and I put, you know, a great list of things
|
||||
that I, on the case and buy from Lidl, and then I had a column that said, do I want it now or not?
|
||||
So if it's this yes or no. So if it's yes, then it changes color, and then, and then I wrote a
|
||||
little macro to sort it, such as that, you know, it puts, it's sort of got a category against it,
|
||||
so they know where to look for it in case they don't know, you know, I've asked for something,
|
||||
and they went, what the hell do you find that in the shop? So I wrote this thing, and it sorts
|
||||
for them and stuff like that, and then there's a column that they can tick to say they go it or not.
|
||||
So they go to the shops. They went, they went just a day or two ago, and they say, oh, we're going,
|
||||
little, get you a few things, so I put, I go and say, yes, it's it's done by a spreadsheet,
|
||||
and then I look at it a bit later on, and I can see the ticks being added to it, as they go in
|
||||
around the shop, and because they've got a copy of it, it's shared with Google, Google Docs,
|
||||
whatever you call it, and so they're, they're updating it in real time. I mean, that is,
|
||||
that is such a beautiful thing, yet it's being run by the evil empire of Google,
|
||||
yeah. How do you, how do you stop yourself from using these sorts of features?
|
||||
Evily convenient. That's incredible. Actually, I'm just thinking, that would be handy for me too,
|
||||
I can copy of that. Yeah, absolutely, yeah, it's just, it's just a spreadsheet, I just added,
|
||||
just I actually made it like a data base kind of thing, so it's got a table behind the front
|
||||
table, which has got a list of all the categories, and I just put a number into the, into the spreadsheet,
|
||||
like you're doing a relational database. That's one of the kind of buildings. Yeah, that was such fun.
|
||||
So, yeah, yeah. I had a simple spreadsheet, with a Google spreadsheet thing that we used,
|
||||
and it was, it was, do we go to, we do a clicking click, that's called clicking click,
|
||||
Facebook, which is another super market in the UK, and we used to go little, but we thought
|
||||
that the clicking click would be a little bit safer, so that's how, how we do that, because I did
|
||||
just to go with the shopping for all family members, I did feel quite uncomfortable, and it was
|
||||
huge big shopping that I had to do for myself, and myself, my wife, mother, mother, father,
|
||||
and I've got a huge big shop, got quite complicated and quite stressful and whatnot, actually,
|
||||
in the shop, trying to avoid it as well, so that's from another group of peak, of course, and then,
|
||||
so we started using the clicking click, and so you just do it online, and you pick up at the
|
||||
store, you just dive into a bay, and they load it up into the backyard cars, that this is really good.
|
||||
But yeah, I had a spreadsheet for that, and so my wife started using it, but I think, luckily,
|
||||
it's just, just too much hassle, but I'll just do it in paper, so I can do that now.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, I do that with my daughter, because she says, I don't want to be using my phone when I'm
|
||||
in the tube mode, she takes it after a father, I think, so I won't be fiddling around with that,
|
||||
but it sounds very much into it, so yeah, yeah, it's a surprise how easy it was to do it.
|
||||
Yeah, it's funny, too many about the whole computer thing, because I can remember when I was
|
||||
starting to work at Queen Wake, where computers get on a British desk, I'm sure this is before,
|
||||
and I don't really understand what shouldn't have them, but it's funny how some of the older
|
||||
documentation that's in paper form, they can still find that much of the newer stuff won't be lost,
|
||||
Well, that's true, yeah, yeah, so I must admit, the document we shared, the Google document that we
|
||||
shared with our thoughts about what we were chatting about, I printed it out because I was pretty
|
||||
much certain, but I would either not be able to find it on the laptop, which I can, actually,
|
||||
or I would get lost between jumping between windows to look at it and back to mumble to look at
|
||||
that and stuff, so I printed it out because I just feel more comfortable learning a bit of paint
|
||||
shows my age. No, well, it's funny, all my colleagues have worked at a certain age, they've
|
||||
been receiving the old one bits of people, and I like to have a bit of people and you can mark
|
||||
on it and put a ruler across it and what not, but for this, it's actually okay, I'm managing
|
||||
quite fair, I've got two tabs that work, okay, I've got my own list, which you've got one, two,
|
||||
two weeks in it, and then I've got your list, so it's actually quite easy, but I don't know what's
|
||||
going to say, well, memory like I said, it's coming with age, isn't it? It was at the table,
|
||||
memory, there was always a note, ah, I've gotten a bit of people walking, not can't think,
|
||||
all the other, I mean, it could have been important. I have to say that I drown in paper work,
|
||||
paper, though, because I've got a lot of stuff that I've been terrible with things like
|
||||
invoices and bills over the years, because when I left home, I can remember being told,
|
||||
oh, you want to hang on to invoices, because you never know, you might need to do something
|
||||
rather, I'm not quite sure what that, something really hard to say, but I used to,
|
||||
make sure I filed everything away, I used to keep stuff filed by date and all this sort of stuff,
|
||||
and in recent years, it's taken me a lot of effort to go through all this,
|
||||
file that junk going back, you know, like 10, 15 years, because that habit got ingrained,
|
||||
and I kept, you know, bank statements from that long ago, I've got a nice big shredder,
|
||||
and they've all gone down the shredder, but, you know, it can be curse, as well, I suppose.
|
||||
It's about management, really, but, yeah, I'm quite bad, I'm quite bad that way myself,
|
||||
actually, well, I've, I'm quite as even as organised as that, but I tend to, not with the
|
||||
close things away, likely, Mrs X is a little bit better than me at that, so that's what you need,
|
||||
that's what you need, yeah, yeah, yeah. Keep your organise, you know.
|
||||
That's what I was going to say to you about, so I've been, when I was working from home,
|
||||
I've now got this swanky company laptop, a really fancy thing, which I'm sick of,
|
||||
truthfully, that's beside the point, and it runs Windows 10, and up until then, I've had no
|
||||
experience at Windows 10 at all, and I still, other than running some office applications,
|
||||
which I have to do, I don't really have any other dealings with the office, but I did notice
|
||||
that I had multiple desktops, you see, they're, oh, in the PepsiFU1X, well, that's a good idea,
|
||||
so, and I, at first I thought, this is really good, I've got a really nice implementation,
|
||||
in fact, at first I thought it was even better than I've been to, but there seems to be a
|
||||
good problem with it, and it's, I don't know whether it's Windows itself or whether it's
|
||||
applications, could be more do with applications themselves, but, so let's say you've got
|
||||
your word processing package on, on desktop one, it's always, so like, Microsoft Word, for example,
|
||||
you know, that's what we're talking about, and you see, so, you see, like, okay, I've got a whole
|
||||
pile of, I could have 10 or 20 Windows open on, on that first desktop, so I suddenly, I got a call
|
||||
where I went to work on a different task, what to segregate all that off, pre-hove to desktop to
|
||||
and start another pile of stuff, and that's fine, so you go to open Microsoft, and another
|
||||
Word document, and yeah, it opens, but what you find is you've been sweet off to a desktop one,
|
||||
again, because, because you've got Word open on desktop one, it brings the next, the next,
|
||||
the next instance of Word in a desktop one, so it keeps all the ones together on that, I don't
|
||||
want all the ones together, I only get the whole point of having different desktop, you know,
|
||||
yes, yes, yeah, somebody, that smacks if somebody who's never actually really used
|
||||
mobile desktop having designed it, that kind of sounds really well. I had, I had to be look on
|
||||
the online, the Google set, as you do, and people were like, oh, it's just terrible, they're
|
||||
the same problem, and there's hundreds of people saying the same thing, why do they do this,
|
||||
this is completely nuts and stuff, so it doesn't look like this, and I'm tough to, well, I think you
|
||||
can maybe get add-ons or something, they can sort of forget to do that sort of thing, I mean,
|
||||
obviously, I kind of stole that sort of thing on a company laptop, but yeah, I just need to do
|
||||
that with it, basically, what I do is I'm really, I try to be really sick of myself, so I'll say
|
||||
that okay, I'll have my email, my communications programme, like, see, I look at whatever,
|
||||
on one desktop, and then my other applications are trying to stick to my second desktop,
|
||||
but I'm really, really on the third desktop, and I'm all over the place basically at that point.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, when I did use Windows, I didn't particularly need to use it until
|
||||
later on when, when Outlook Mail became the main thing, I used to just use it as a remote desktop,
|
||||
I had a, they gave me a Windows PC, which I just put in the corner with no monitor on it or anything,
|
||||
and I yes, used remote desktop from my Linux, which seemed to connect to it and stuff, and
|
||||
do the odds and ends that I really, really needed to do, because Outlook is the my old client,
|
||||
so business, absolutely a business, especially having come from unixie things where you could,
|
||||
you could, you could write extremely complicated rules to say, if I get a message from this person,
|
||||
and it's, and I've got this number of messages already from that person, and then put it in
|
||||
the folder and delete some of the old ones, so all those sorts of things you could do,
|
||||
no way you could do that without, yeah, rubbish, very frustrating, yes, I, this is it,
|
||||
it's, yeah, I've, I've made it frustrating myself as well, but you're, you're just forced to use
|
||||
it, so it's, it's, it's for it as a guess, you know, yeah, it was, it was like that,
|
||||
that fine work, it was, how dare you go against the corporate policy and that sort of stuff,
|
||||
that sort of thing, so there, of course, that's good stuff, I don't know how we're doing time-wise,
|
||||
Dave, you know, we're, we're a bit over an hour, according to the mumble or recording thing,
|
||||
shall I briefly tell you about 3D printing, I've been doing, oh yes, we've been doing
|
||||
yeah, fun enough, a local amateur, he's got a number of 2D printers, I've never actually seen
|
||||
any operation, and I know we've got some in the company, again, which I've never seen in the
|
||||
operation, but I have seen the examples of printouts, prints that have been done, but it does sound
|
||||
like a fascinating, but yeah, very complex, yeah, yeah, it is, it is that, yes, I am so far I've just
|
||||
been downloading things and printing them, well, I've made one thing, it wasn't for me, it was
|
||||
my son's girlfriend, she wanted a little plastic dish to do some stuff with, she's very much
|
||||
into modeling, handmade models and things, so I managed to design and make that using a
|
||||
program called OpenSK, it looks like it's open scan, whatever, which is quite, quite neat actually,
|
||||
as you start to understand it, but the whole business of printing has been a little bit of a
|
||||
black box, as far as I'm concerned, what happened was I bought a printer and my kids jumped on it,
|
||||
I like a thirsty man to water, and they said, what can we do this, can we borrow, can we use it,
|
||||
so I hardly got a look in, I'm not complaining, and I said, I'm going to print
|
||||
a thing, fancy printing this, and I said, tell you what, we'll do it for you, so it's very kind
|
||||
of them all, but I never got to really experiment with it and do much with it myself, and I
|
||||
have the habit of it, so things that you know other people can do quite well, and you can't do
|
||||
yourself, there's a reluctance to get into things, so I've been forcing myself to learn my way around
|
||||
my own print, so I've been fiddling around with slices, and, yeah, I remember them, top with
|
||||
slices, so what's a slice in the card? You make a 3D model, so you're making the thing that's got,
|
||||
actually it's quite neat, because you can make a two-dimensional image in something like Inkscape,
|
||||
and then you can put that into open SCAD and say, right, take this as your starting point,
|
||||
now extend it in the third dimension, and then do some other things to it, so I've got one that
|
||||
somebody did, where they made it just a basic structure or using something like Inkscape, and then
|
||||
it's been extended into the third dimension, and then it's had holes punched into it,
|
||||
put the screws in, and so you can do things like that, but once you've got that thing that defines
|
||||
the three dimensions, you then need to turn it into the actual path that the printer will follow,
|
||||
so you need to give it precise details of, you know, move the head over there, extrude,
|
||||
plastic, move there, et cetera, et cetera, and the way that this sort of additive 3D printing is
|
||||
done is done like, you know, icing a cake where you just keep piling the icing on top of itself over
|
||||
and over and over again, so the slice there is a thing that turns it into the printer path,
|
||||
produces a textual thing called G-code, which defines all sorts of parameters of the printing,
|
||||
you know, the temperature of the extruder, the temperature of the bed, if you have such a thing,
|
||||
and where to start what sort of material you're using, and then, you know, and then all sorts of
|
||||
factors like that. It's tons of things. Yeah, that's kind of what I was hearing from this chat,
|
||||
because I'm sure they were saying that there's so many parameters to fiddle with, and you know,
|
||||
it's a bit of an art form, I think, really, you know, and you might find it as you're using it,
|
||||
as I think heats up more, and as you do more, and there's things wave, and you've got to
|
||||
alter the parameters, and the temperature outside, and there's so many things, I think.
|
||||
Yeah, things get out of alignment after a time, and you've got to watch out for that, and so forth.
|
||||
Yeah, so I've been printing bits, so I can mount my Raspberry Pi's on a din round. I did a
|
||||
LHB episode on the din round, so I've been printing some more, and I've had some disasters
|
||||
just recently, where, and then I suddenly realized what I've done wrong, the temperature was wrong,
|
||||
so the plastic's getting put down and more put on top, and the stuff underneath is melting,
|
||||
and it sort of squidges. So getting all that right. So I've printed stuff on one thing yesterday,
|
||||
it came out really nice. It's not perfect, but very, very nice, and so I'm getting quite
|
||||
enthusiastic about it, so. What was the item you printed? It's another one, it's a mount for a
|
||||
Raspberry Pi, so I've just recently bought a Raspberry Pi 4, and I want to put it alongside my other
|
||||
Raspberry Pi's on the rail, and I have a shelf here, so that's the plan. But yeah, there's a whole load
|
||||
of things that one, an infinite number of things one could print, fancy doing things like a head
|
||||
phone, hang out, so I'm going to keep my headphones, and yeah, there's lots of things, lots of
|
||||
things. Sounds like an ideal continuation episode from your last day. I know, I know, I did put a note
|
||||
to myself that I should do a sort of follow-up thing, maybe I will do that soon. Yeah, excellent stuff,
|
||||
very excellent stuff. Yeah, so that I just just thought there might be interesting to end.
|
||||
Well, I mean, it's also very popular topics, I think, because I've got 3D printing and all that.
|
||||
I've never had no experience at all myself, but yeah, I think it's another show, and that's so
|
||||
that I'm very good, you know. I know there's quite a lot of people who either listen to or
|
||||
contribute to it, who are into 3D printing, but not many people have put shows in about it,
|
||||
you could definitely do it more personally, I'll be passionate to hear that, but yeah,
|
||||
yeah, maybe that'll happen. Good point, good point, good point, yeah. So, shall we
|
||||
one things up then? Have you got anything else that you wanted to, any burning issues you wanted to
|
||||
to deal with before we... I mean, I have other things on my last, but I think, you know,
|
||||
what would be here? It could be a bit too long, I guess. Yeah, yeah. We should, like you said,
|
||||
last time we should maybe come back and have another shot with this at some point, because we sort of
|
||||
tentatively considered doing get-together and chats on a purely basis when we were doing this in
|
||||
the real world, as opposed to production, and now the same argument is there. And the real
|
||||
real shame, because we've been very nice to meet up at the at the hell end. That was so cool,
|
||||
it was really good, yeah. Well, hopefully next year sometime we'll be able to do it.
|
||||
But we're planning on going, well, we're contemplating going to, if it's quite, and this will be
|
||||
the first chop that I visited, there'll be Ikea, you know, so we're not going to visit Ikea,
|
||||
because we're off the next fortnight sort of thing, so. But yes, we'll see how that goes,
|
||||
I mean, really, the only places I've been to, I've been to my work that, two, three times,
|
||||
something like that, but that's obviously when you have to go, you have to go sort of thing.
|
||||
And we've got one of the systems, and you know, they've got hand sanitizers everywhere,
|
||||
footprints in the floor, and all this stuff. So they're quite, quite careful.
|
||||
Yes, well, I think it's possible to do these these types of things very safely, if you,
|
||||
if you think them through, yeah, the only systems, and that sort of thing will work, but well,
|
||||
but I was saying to go into the zoo, you know, when you go into the building to check in and stuff,
|
||||
they're very, very fuzzy about people keeping their distance and giving up very well-spaced part,
|
||||
and that sort of thing, everybody's masked inside the buildings, et cetera, et cetera.
|
||||
So that, you know, that feels, that feels great, actually, because we've really well-managed.
|
||||
It is, it's funny, I've got this, I view, I think that's the one that I view, Facebook.
|
||||
That's how it works. I've put off for a long long time having anything to do with Facebook,
|
||||
but I have, I am actually on Facebook. Well, I have, yeah, I'm on Facebook, but I've never
|
||||
reposted, I've never had a like with this, like anything, just a time limit, you know, but there
|
||||
was a, I sort of post came up on the, on the, on the fee basically, and it was, it was from a relative,
|
||||
and the, the level was basically, I don't know, one of the American states, I can't
|
||||
remember which one it was actually, and so they had, I think, I think, the movie, like,
|
||||
a headdress or something like that, you know, and this was kind of at the height of things,
|
||||
really, and they had a picture that said something like, you're back, I think, was, was, was, was,
|
||||
was the thing, the quote, along with the, the, the picture basically, and it was all the employees,
|
||||
of the, and the, the salon, and they were all, all, all lying, hugging each other, all had
|
||||
this and something like a good idea to me. Oh, no. Yeah, yeah, it's, it's a very, very difficult thing,
|
||||
because it just, it's, it's like, we're very poor as a species, but estimating sizes of things,
|
||||
magnitudes of things, you know, and, and I think this is one of those things that, that, unless
|
||||
you've got a lot of experience of what epidemics mean and what, what infections mean, you tend not
|
||||
to, not to fully comprehend the, the details of it, you know, so people have become really
|
||||
dismissive of it, and also bored of it, and thoroughly bored of the whole, the whole thing that's
|
||||
solved, but, but that is not the fact, because the, you know, the enemy is still out there waiting for you,
|
||||
you know, indeed, I've had arguments saying, oh, she just, but, you know, there's more people
|
||||
dying from, from the financial implications and, and blah, blah, blah, blah, and, but, but, I'm sure
|
||||
I heard that, they reckon that if, if the statistics were that, I don't know what the current
|
||||
running total is, but I'm sure they said that it had we not had a lockdown in the UK,
|
||||
we, it was estimated that we'd have had, I think it was 500,000 deaths, that's, that's on the
|
||||
premise that the NHS would cope, which, of course, they wouldn't, so it'd be even higher than that,
|
||||
so it's insane, you know, suggestion, you could do nothing, it's, it's not, there was a,
|
||||
there was a, because there was, there was actually on the, on the video, there was a typical of a,
|
||||
so that was a, which I, accountant, I think, it was a, what you were saying was, no, it doesn't,
|
||||
it doesn't, otherwise, obviously, you know, it never, you know, people, having a lockdown, it,
|
||||
it never saves anybody, it just, it just delays death, but it doesn't, because if, if the health
|
||||
service, it's overrun, many more people die, so it, it, it, it definitely saves deaths, it's
|
||||
absolutely, without, without a shadow of a doubt, and yet, it was suggesting, you know, a lot of
|
||||
people don't save deaths, they just delay it, you know, nonsense, absolutely. Yeah, yeah, well,
|
||||
I mean, if you can delay people my age and sort of level of health, we're all practically
|
||||
delaying until such times, there, there's a vaccine, and if a vaccine turns up then, and we get
|
||||
immunity from it, and it looks like, but it's pretty likely that that will happen, then, then,
|
||||
we're, we're home and dry, you know, we're not going to want to walk out there and I've
|
||||
said, catch the damn thing just because, so it's inevitable. Yeah, it doesn't make any sense.
|
||||
No, I watch our, I think I'm very, I may have mentioned this, I've made, made
|
||||
mentions about it, I haven't repeated myself, but it was a Christmas lecture, because I've shown
|
||||
you, I'll make it very, very brief, that I heard immunity works, and if, you know, if you've
|
||||
got enough people to learn about you, and you would have if you had the vaccine, then it's,
|
||||
it's been just stops, it gets stopped in this chat, basically, so even though everyone isn't immunized,
|
||||
if enough people are, then it's much much safer. So, you know, it's, it's, yeah, it's, it's, it's
|
||||
crazy, it's crazy. Yeah, yeah, and the other thing, I listened to this week's
|
||||
virology, as I've said, and one of the things they do, they have a clinician who's some
|
||||
new, based in New York, who's actually down the front line, and he, he was talking, and the
|
||||
latest time he came into to talk about his experiences, so far, saying that the, the, the death is,
|
||||
is one thing, you know, it's, it's a terrible thing, but it's a lot of people who have it and
|
||||
recover, but you end up with consequences, which are absolutely devastating. The number of times
|
||||
people have, people have had the lungs scarred to such an extent that their ability to breathe
|
||||
is, is diminished to point that they're, they're effectively, you know, likely got silly
|
||||
coses, or one of those sorts of things, you know, have to be on oxygen all the time, or in some,
|
||||
he said he, he come across some patients who had to have lung transplant as a consequence,
|
||||
and there are things like, there's a heart damage that this thing causes, and, you know,
|
||||
and there's also neurological damage that it causes, and, you know, there's a, there's a,
|
||||
there's a list of things that this damn thing does, you know, and it's not, it's not a trivial thing
|
||||
you catch at you, yet at the same time, and there are people who have it, they, they show no symptoms,
|
||||
they come out the other end of it, sh- having shed the virus, maybe, they come out the other
|
||||
end of it, with immunity, and they never knew they have it, you're going to tell by doing an
|
||||
antibody check on them, so, you know, there's, there's such a range of responses to this damn thing,
|
||||
yeah, like, if you're the lucky, one of the lucky ones who's, who's immune system can view with it,
|
||||
then fine, but if you're not, then you know, no, you have no means of telling, no, sorry, and, and,
|
||||
and that, yeah, can fix every organ in the body, sort of thing, this is that, I, I remember
|
||||
hearing that as well, and, and the fix it was having on, on people's brains, it's just, just, just, just,
|
||||
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, the same, all sorts of consequences, so, yeah, yeah, it's,
|
||||
it's no means a trivial matter, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's tough, it's a, well, I think, okay, a bit of it,
|
||||
wow, wow, I'm actually not, on that very theory though, yeah, yeah, but it is, it's a topical, it is,
|
||||
it's a topical matter, yeah, it's, it's funny, you know, I, I, I feel a real, um, loyalty to HPR,
|
||||
but at the same time, I'm having, to be honest, I'm having much less time for HPR, and just in recent
|
||||
times, you saw what's going on, and I do need to try and, I mean, I've posted the odd show, you'll,
|
||||
you'll notice, but, it's, you know, it's, um, yeah, but it's it's, it's, it's, um, it's, it's,
|
||||
it's, yeah, I've done myself, of course, um, but it's finding the time and, and getting organized,
|
||||
and it's, um, there's just other things going on, which I'm just, of course, I'm at everybody,
|
||||
because to me, I was looking, I think the show Que was, was getting a bit on the phone side,
|
||||
so if you're all listening out of the area, you know, but, uh, yeah, it's, it's difficult,
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's I think everybody's affected by I certainly found myself the rate at which I could produce stuff falling away and you know
|
||||
It's like motivation has dropped off. I heard listening to podcasts just just earlier on today
|
||||
They were saying I just don't seem to have the drive and the motivation to do stuff at the moment
|
||||
It's you know being in the in the same environment all the time and yeah
|
||||
It's it's message you have no sort of ways
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's funny. Yeah, my my my wife has has links with
|
||||
with
|
||||
American people and
|
||||
They were saying that yeah, it's going to be obviously the one the winter's going to be the real concern and putting aside the fact that you know
|
||||
The implications for the virus coming back in the winter and the health service coping and all I put in that to say just
|
||||
That being dark and miserable and just working from home, you know, isolation
|
||||
Yeah, and of course keeping warm and oh, it's I'm not I can't say I'm looking forward to one this one. That's for sure
|
||||
No, no, no, it's true. It's true. It's getting that gap motivation going and keeping it up. It's going to be going to be hard, I think
|
||||
Yeah, and of course my car
|
||||
Yeah, but got a little bit to behold it in one in one corner
|
||||
Where the the metal workers change from metal to bust so
|
||||
And it's it's it's due an MOT in in the near future
|
||||
And it is getting very long in the tooth so they can serve and as I was just saying to EC's X what happens if I take it to the garage and say
|
||||
No, no, no, sorry it fails
|
||||
But then what do you know that's like that means cash shopping and that's not going to be another interesting experience
|
||||
Oh, I know that I know that feeling so well. Yeah, yeah, my my uncle
|
||||
Is what used to be a bodywork, especially as he had his own his own garage and in Norwich and he used to you know
|
||||
People bring in cars and that sort of state and he would be
|
||||
removing the rust and patching them up and welding them and whatever to do all this
|
||||
I used to help them out on the case and so
|
||||
Munch of cars
|
||||
Back in the day tended to be very poor as far as
|
||||
Corrosion and that sort of thing it's concerned, but you know, they're made of made of steel iron or whatever
|
||||
Corrosion is an issue
|
||||
So it's well what what happened to my case is it I think I had that
|
||||
Screen was better looking for many years. I wasn't aware of the thing
|
||||
It's going to water very very quickly sort of thing
|
||||
But it has headlight washers so I just assumed it was that but it was obviously jumping into the cello
|
||||
All the time and they you know, but it I mean it is a was a 14 year old car
|
||||
So I can't really complain too much as it is an old car
|
||||
So and it's still with the label on all that so it would just see what happens
|
||||
Probably not a big thing if you if it even if it is something that is that doesn't pass the mo2's for you not a massive piece of work
|
||||
Yeah, hopefully hopefully
|
||||
I mean I'd actually do a quick like a I like the idea of an electric car with him
|
||||
Getting the electrical outlet
|
||||
Petite and other things, you know, you're just
|
||||
I did contact a company, but it's all you get to get a changed dog for the cabling and you've got a post and so on
|
||||
Can you not do that? You know, just you're all no one other than that just be puning and I'll be you know
|
||||
But you didn't spend just nothing. I thought well, so I'm getting very complicated
|
||||
No, I don't think I don't think it changes my fucking garden
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a consideration. Do you know, he's a little story before we go
|
||||
I had a guy knocking at my door at about quarter to 11 or something the other night and
|
||||
Oh
|
||||
How's that this time and I looked outside and it was a guy
|
||||
You know with the the boiler suit on and stuff and that there was his his van just outside from the the local
|
||||
Power company and he was saying
|
||||
Your neighbor's not got any power. Is there any chance I could come in your house and run a cable off you're here in coming
|
||||
He was gonna take a take a tap off the off the
|
||||
Yeah, the cables that came to the meter and they said I'll just run it through the little box and that and it will be
|
||||
Just round the corner and into the neighbor. I said, yeah, okay
|
||||
It seems to think it would be safe, but you didn't have enough cable
|
||||
Yeah, I've never had that before
|
||||
That was a little bit of surprise. I wasn't quite sure what to say, you know
|
||||
I'm quite friendly with the neighbors seem seemed a bit mean to say no go away. Yeah
|
||||
Yeah, it's just a bit awkward that isn't it?
|
||||
I'm gonna go to love with these people
|
||||
But but why didn't he actually went the way and came up with the generator for them and
|
||||
That they've been damaged onto the cables that came in in the street and the recent weather had presumably
|
||||
Was to further thing, but yeah, so it's a pretty unusual
|
||||
I think I'm just thinking that maybe maybe maybe I'll get
|
||||
Can we please of course one of his you're very split in the two best figures is getting so long
|
||||
Well, I'll them I'll check it out. I don't mind doing me the editing and stuff
|
||||
So I'll have a look and see after I've done some silence truncation and that sort of thing
|
||||
But they will be a huge lot of wonderful
|
||||
I won't try to buy a vast man. So yeah, because you could almost you could almost have him the first bit as a
|
||||
You know going through the list and then later on we sort of just started talking general stuff
|
||||
Maybe because I mean I have to say I'll probably say whatever you think, but that's the email. I got two shores over me
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, there's not to be said for that too and and yeah
|
||||
Save people from those enough
|
||||
Yeah
|
||||
That's good. It's a big catch up. Well, I really yeah, yeah, it's a lot of fun
|
||||
It's real I do enjoy doing this. I actually enjoy listening to these things as well
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's been brilliant. So thanks very much
|
||||
We'll call it call it a day at that point
|
||||
So how is it?
|
||||
Well, we can do the hacker public radio
|
||||
Bye bye
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker public radio at Hacker public radio dot org
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that release the shows every weekday Monday through Friday
|
||||
Today's show like all our shows was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is
|
||||
Hacker public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon 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 on the creative comments
|
||||
Attribution share a life three dot horizons
|
||||
You
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user