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Episode: 3374
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Title: HPR3374: Why I love the MacBook Mid 2010
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3374/hpr3374.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:19:58
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3374 for Thursday,
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the 8th of July 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, Why I Love the MacBook Mid 2010.
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It is hosted by Swift 110 and is about 24 minutes long
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and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, I talk about the upgrades I made to the machine
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and how it's benefited me since I got it.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge
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by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello, this is Swift 110.
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And this evening, I decided to talk about my MacBook.
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I got this MacBook sometime in the fall of 2020
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and I've grown rather fond of it since then.
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This MacBook is from 2010, was given to me for free
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and I'm very grateful to have it.
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Thank you for giving me this wonderful machine.
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Why do I like this machine so much?
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What excites me about it? Well, I mentioned it's a MacBook from the year 2010
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and I know I know you may be in your mind thinking, oh my god, this thing is 11 years old.
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It's a dog on dinosaur. It can't be very useful.
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But let me assure you that it is. It's very, very useful.
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You see, I was able to make some very good upgrades to this particular machine
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that brought it from the Stone Age to the age of technology
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to the modern day era.
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The Stone Age to the modern day era, I think, would be a better way to put that.
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You see, this particular machine
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initially came with either two or four gigs of RAM.
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I can't find out thanks to every Mac.com
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that this particular machine can take up to 16 gigs of RAM.
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Now think about that for a minute.
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I went from four gigs of RAM to 16 gigs of RAM.
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It's pretty dog or nice, right?
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Now, when you think in terms of my X201,
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I actually have two of them. But the X201 machine made by Lenovo
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is one of the ThinkPads X series obviously.
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That particular laptop can take a maximum of eight gigs of RAM.
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And it came out a year after this particular MacBook did.
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Now you may be asking yourself, hold up, something doesn't sound right.
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You mean you are able to upgrade an older Apple product
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more than a slightly newer Lenovo product?
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Doesn't that seem backwards?
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Well, yeah, it could be a little confusing.
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You would think that I'd be able to upgrade the X201
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to 16 and maybe the MacBook Day.
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After all, Apple has the reputation, especially now,
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of making their products more disposable than other.
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That's the reputation they've gained.
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Now, I've happened to know, I've happened to have owned
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multiple Apple products over the years.
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The iPad 3 that I had since April of 2012,
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I kept that device for about nine years
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before it finally died completely.
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The reason they died was it fell pretty bad, messed up the software,
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it will take a lot of money to diagnose the issue
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and bring it back to normal, which I'm not investing hundreds of dollars
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into a device that is nine years old.
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It doesn't make sense, especially when
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that wouldn't necessarily guarantee that I solved the problem
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and I have a device that's fully functional.
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It would still be in iPad 3, it would still have the limitations of the iPad 3
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and the limited use in 2021 of an iPad 3.
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Something to think about.
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But I probably will be able to rebuild my
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iPod classic with a 160-gay car drive.
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I might be able to rebuild that device.
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We'll see what I do with that later, perhaps.
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But my point, at that grasp, of course,
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the device that is the start of the show for this evening is this MacBook 2010.
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Went up to 16 gigs of RAM, DDR3, thank God.
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Because if it was DDR2, my God, that would have been some garbage.
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As I have expensive DDR2 RAM is, DDR3 is fine, DDR4 would have been fine.
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But DDR4 wasn't around when this came out, so DDR3 would have been here.
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So basically having this much RAM and this older machine
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is really, really nice. Now let's talk about the CPU,
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the so-called part of the brains of the bunch,
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part of it. Because it resides on the motherboard,
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which is the actual as-you-guess-mother-board.
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You know, the headed operation as a term goes.
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The CPU, which is a component on the motherboard,
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in this case, soldered to it, not modular,
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like some of the thingpads.
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So it's kind of funny how the RAM is upgradable,
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but not the CPU, whereas with my X201,
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I can upgrade the CPU from an i5 to an i7.
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Get the point. I can supercharge the CPU, but not the RAM.
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All right, I digress again.
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This MacBook Pro, not MacBook Pro. It's MacBook. So please, let's
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not confuse this MacBook with a MacBook Pro.
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The MacBook is white, made of polycarbonate plastic,
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whereas the MacBook Pro has that aluminum build.
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Okay, there's differences between the two,
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and I don't feel like getting into that right now.
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So, okay, we talk about the CPU. This has a Core 2 Duo CPU.
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All right, I can dig it.
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It was 16GB RAM.
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Something else that I upgraded in this particular machine
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was the hard drive.
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Ooh, I went from a traditional spinning disk
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to a solid state drive. Now, when you add a solid state drive to
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any machine, it gives it an extra charge as the term goes.
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It makes it faster because there are no moving parts in an SSD.
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It's less friction, therefore less heat,
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one less component in this machine.
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That's going to really contribute to the heat.
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Something else about an SSD is that they're lighter in weight
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than a hard drive, is they're way faster.
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So it's pretty much going to just turbocharge the machine.
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The other upgrade I did was more on a software side of things,
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and that I went from LKAPY10
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that was on here before, up, up, up, up, and away to Catalina.
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Thanks to DOSDube.
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There was a picture available for this particular operating system.
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I was able to install it.
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It took forever because my internet at the time was extremely slow,
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but I got it. My godly gosh, I got it.
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It was worth the effort because after many hours
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and wondering if the thing was going to work at the end of it all,
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I had a fully running MacBook running Catalina
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fully upgrading to the best of its ability,
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if done all that I could do.
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And so I really appreciated upgrading this particular machine.
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Now, since I've gotten this machine, I've gotten more acquainted to using macOS.
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I've gotten more acquainted to it.
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You know, you know me, I come from the back there
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using Linux 90-something percent of the time.
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You know, so using macOS X is some learning to do.
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I have to get used to doing things just a little different.
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Now, the good thing about this still being a unique system is that
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there are similarities to Linux.
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For example, there's a terminal and terminal.
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I can run certain commands so I can do Linux.
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I can even install some very familiar programs
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that I normally have in Linux.
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But you know what I use this machine for,
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most importantly, at this point.
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I use it for Zoom.
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Yes, you heard me right, I use it for Zoom.
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And I love it.
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Absolutely love it.
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The experience is just what I want.
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Now, I'd be lying if I said that I'd be able to do
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those crazy special effects and whatnot, no.
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But I'm on Zoom a lot.
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Virtually every day, I'm on Zoom.
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That's how I communicate with family and friends.
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And I really appreciate it.
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It's proven to be quite the lifeline with this whole foolishness
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that's been going on around us for over a year now.
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This machine because of running Zoom on it has helped me to cope
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with living in a time of a pandemic.
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I'm grateful for it.
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Getting it for free makes it even sweeter
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because I only spent money on RAM.
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I spent money on a new SSD.
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Did I pay for the OS? No.
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I spent on a RAM.
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And I paid for the SSD.
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That's it.
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Unless you want to be tacky and
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say that I needed to buy a adapter, display port HDMI,
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so I could plug it to my TV.
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But you get the picture.
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It's a very nice device.
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Despite its age.
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Right now, I'm actually looking at the screen.
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I have steam up.
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And I've actually played some games on here.
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50. Not bad, right?
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Now I understand it's not the fastest CPU in the world.
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It does have some extra help by having the SSD
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and having all that RAM in there.
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So now the CPU is a bottleneck here.
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But you know what? It does everything I need to do, just fine.
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I actually like this machine so much. I've gotten
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comfortable using Mac OS X to the point where
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I'm considering getting another machine made by Apple.
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Very likely, well, I can guarantee it'll be a used device
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that I don't intend on paying more than a few hundred dollars for.
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But I have confidence it would be a very nice device.
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And the year that I get it will be a very good year.
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But you know, when it comes to 2020,
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already I can say it was a very good year.
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Why? Because that's when I got this laptop.
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So I'm grateful. It definitely is, it's definitely, definitely being used
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all the time. I use this machine a lot
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and loving it. I'm actually looking into upgrading
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the Wi-Fi card that's present in it. And that's something else I like about this
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machine. The Wi-Fi card on my network,
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the Wi-Fi is twice as fast on this Mac
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book. Then it is on my T420. But that's because the T420 has a Wi-Fi card
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in it that is garbage. And much like certain
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certain characters in the show and living color from the early 90s,
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hated it. Yeah, that's right, hated it.
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So I'm going to process of upgrading that. But that will be the subject of yet
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another audio recording that I will be making on here.
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Well, that about does it. I have rambled long enough
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about why I love this machine so much.
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And it's ironic that I'm speaking so highly
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of this machine because it's made by Apple. And if you know anything about me,
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if you know anything about my blog,
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you know, there's times that I have written article post about it.
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Sad but true. You know, I haven't always had nice things to say about
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the Apple company. And frankly, I still have some issues with the company.
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It's self. But I can't deny it.
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But I can't deny it.
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They make some good stuff. When they put their heads to it,
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they get it done. And I got a respect for it. I got to respect that.
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You know, so I spoke about my blog. The link
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is going to be made available.
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But you can go to Swift 110
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at wordpress.com. Let it get. Don't take my word for it. Let me go ahead and look it up.
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Yeah. So Swift 110.wordpress.com.
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Swift like the bird or like you run fast.
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You are Swift. There's a bird called the Swift SWFT.
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And the number after that is 110. You have a dot wordpress.com.
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Put that in. Tap that under button.
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And you have articles written by me. Lots and lots of stuff that I've written
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since August of 2011. Yeah. It's been almost 10 years. I've been at this blogging thing.
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And I'm so glad I did. I don't blog so much
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anymore these days in text form. I'm active on telegram quite a bit.
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I'm active on IRC. And so I think what I used to
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probably write in my blog post is now written
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on either IRC telegram or both. So if you want to reach
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speaking of telegram. If you want to reach my telegram group
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it's called for the nerds. So check us out for the nerds
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on telegram. And when you stop by let me know that you came from this
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audio post on Hacker Public Radio. That'd be kind of cool. I'm curious to see
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how many people this can bring to our little community there.
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The goal there is I guess you can say is somewhere where
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individuals who left technology can come together share ideas
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and just relax. It's a safe space as you will where there's no profanity.
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We're not discussing politics. The goal is to keep it positive.
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There's a mutual interest there. We talk about science and technology
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primarily. And there's other banter that goes on. That's cool.
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But all in all very nice. So please come see us.
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If you want to come see me on IRC. Well for now I have a presence on
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free note for the nerds with two two of those
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pound signs and then for the nerds on free note.
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But you're better off going to a server known as LaBera.
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There's been this controversy to whole free note issue and
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I'm kind of done with it. Let's call the whole thing off at this point
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because I don't have time for drama. I have built a positive community over the past
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seven going away eight years and I'm not willing to
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have some fighting among other folks and politics
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messed that up. So LaBera is going to be where it's at.
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I do also have a discord. So feel free to hit me up and
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if you want to connect any of those means and
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any comments you may have feel free to share them.
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All right well that's about all I have for this evening.
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I hope you all have a fantastic night. Stay healthy, safe,
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all in all I wish you the best. Until next time it's been Swift 110.
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Take it easy.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday
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Monday through Friday. Today's show like OR shows was contributed by an HBR
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listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon
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Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated today's show is released under a creative comments
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