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Episode: 3256
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Title: HPR3256: Update, MS Teams, Covid 19, Raspberry PI 400 Raspberry PI 4 8GB Centos
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3256/hpr3256.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:46:19
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3256 for Monday the 25th of January 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, Update MS Teams, COVID-19, Raspberry Pi 400, Raspberry Pi 480 GB CentOS.
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It is hosted by JWP and is about 9 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
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The summer is, hey guys just a short update, what's going with CentOS?
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Raspberry Pi 400 goodbye.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Thank you very much.
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Good day.
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My name is JWP.
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I hope that you're having a great day and I wanted to talk to you about some recent purchases
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and how my life is going and all these things.
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First, I live in Southern Germany so I'm adversely affected by the COVID-19 virus.
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They've locked down everything and as a Texan of course,
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while I do agree that masks and social distancing are important,
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anytime you take my freedom from me without me having done something wrong,
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I get a little perturbed about this.
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I'm in the middle of this and it doesn't look like it's going away anytime soon.
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It's been going on since March of last year and the German government continues just to
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take my freedoms from me at a record pay.
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And with work, it's been really interesting since COVID started in March.
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So we moved as a company completely to Microsoft teams and with all of the file sharing
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and stuff like this happened and it really amped up my amount of work and
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the work gives me a phone and it has this team's app on it and so if somebody's changing a file
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at two o'clock in the morning, it lets you know.
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So eventually I had to just turn off the phone after, say, 10-30.
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I have to physically, the Android had a feature where it would automatically turn off at 10-30
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and automatically turn on at 5-30 and so that we worked that out but because of Microsoft teams,
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we had a really good year. I probably had the best year selling things that I've ever had in
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the IT industry. So what has been going on, well you know I have my little embedded
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farm downstairs and I have my sent OS server farm at work and these have been very interesting
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and there's been, I got two changes that happened to my little embedded farm and things.
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This thing called a Raspberry PI 400 came and I live in Germany so I ordered the UK model.
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Now the UK model comes with a UK plug but then it has a UK keyboard which is really convenient
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for me because I'm an English speaker but it didn't come with a German plug so I had to order
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an extra German plug. So I took it out of the box and it came with a kit, it had a book,
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the first thing that I saw that was that it had the dual monitor plugs and I set it up in a dual
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monitor configuration and it worked well and I was able to, it was smooth. I could open up
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open office file pretty quickly and I installed Microsoft teams and it took two gigabytes of space
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and it worked very well as well. Also and then I uninstalled Microsoft teams, I just wanted to see
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how it would work. So I would say that the 4GB PI 400 is very close to a, if you're looking for
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a light office kind of machine that's definitely it. And so then I liked the 4GB PI 4 so much
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that I went ahead and bought an 8GB and I had previously bought an Alnon case and it's a really
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nice case with a power button and now they offer the same case with an M2 option
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for option and it hasn't a fan and everything and so I ordered it from Banggood and it came
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and I put it together and put the 8GB in and I have to say that that 8GB is probably the
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most useful Raspberry or embedded thing that I've ever had and I would say that if it had a hard
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drive, if it would boot like my nook, like my, I have a 5 or 6 year old nook now that's got a
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Celeron in it and 8GB of RAM and I would say that the performance is pretty much on par.
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Now granted with the, with the Celeron, I'm doing a full Ubuntu focal on there.
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But I would say that it's really good, a really good performer so I mean for 100 bucks,
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for 100 bucks you could very easily have a, you know, a pack, a cigarette pack size, a desktop
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thing that you could for sure do all of your office work and run Microsoft Teams and do all that
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stuff on with relatively little problem. I mean the only thing would be that the hard drive,
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the hard drive and you can even make that pretty high available if you had an extra SD card
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on K6, the SD card went bad. But so it's a great hardware, I would highly recommend both the
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PI 400 and the Raspberry PI 4 and the 8GB variant. So with the, with the Sennel S, it's very
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interesting that the Red Hat and IBM changed the Sennel S model and I was looking around and I
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haven't been able to find any, any real alternatives so I don't really know what's going on with this.
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I didn't really understand the, the Senn OS dream thing that it doesn't seem like the
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stream is going to be the, you know, same plain vanilla Red Hat experience that I've been having
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sent all these years and the developer version of my, of the Red Hat that I was working for some
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unknown reason every time it went through like a change like a number change, an incremental change,
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not a major shift change that I would have to go in, see that my license was updated and then
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download the ISO again and reinstall on. So that, even though I really liked the Red Hat workstation
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version, I, you know, the free one, it still seemed that it was a pain. So I didn't really
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in the market now, the only alternative is to do the free Oracle Linux, which is the Red Hat clone and
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they offer, you know, free for hobbyist licenses if you really need a Red Hat thing to play with,
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that's probably the only way to go. I didn't, I read somewhere that scientific Linux has been
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and also read in the press that there's going to be two or three more Red Hat clones, pure Red Hat
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clones. And, and so it's a shame that CentOS changed that they did this. I'm sure that there's
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reason, but in my professional life too, I have, I have customers that the CentOS was so much like
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the Red Hat OS that it, it ran, you know, Red Hat application servers with SAP no problem in the test
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environment and they didn't have to pay for the licenses. So I can understand why Red Hat did it,
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it just seemed to be that it would cost them the money probably. Yeah, so guys, like I said,
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I've been really busy with work and so I haven't had very many shows. I've been listening to some
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of the shows, especially like the gentleman from Louisiana. He has some very interesting topics
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about music and things like this. And of course, Ahuka is doing his, all of his very high quality
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shows. And so I try to listen as much as I, as much as I can. I'm hoping that this works well,
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that I can upload it and not have to send it today, more to get uploaded to the thing.
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Somehow, the HPR thing doesn't like my Microsoft account very much. All right, hey, be safe,
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be well. If you need to get in touch, it's JWP5 at hotmail.com. Take care, be safe.
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You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio. We are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our
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shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hecker Public Radio was
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founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club. And it's part of the binary
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revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly,
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leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status,
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today's show is released on the creative comments, attribution, share a light, 3.0 license.
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