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Episode: 3383
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Title: HPR3383: My gEeeky Experiment - Part 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3383/hpr3383.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:27:40
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3383 for Wednesday, the 21st of July 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, My Geeky Experiment, Part 1.
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It is hosted by Claudio Miranda and is about 17 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Claudium Talks about how he revived his lowly SSEDPC 901 network with opens.
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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 by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hey everyone, this is Claudio Miranda, aka Claudio M on the Internets.
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I'm recording this episode of Hacker Public Radio because it's been a while since I've done so, so...
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Ken, here's my submission.
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Anyway, I wanted to record an episode on some of my experience that I've had with my old ASUS EPC 901.
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Now, if you aren't very familiar with the ASUS EPC line of computers, these are a series of netbooks that came around.
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It started around 2007 and kind of continued along for a few years after that.
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Most of them actually had an Intel atom processor, a very low power and in some instances, most instances,
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a low performance processor, but it did the job for what it was meant to be.
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It was supposed to be just a device for basic internet use, but a lot of people started wiping
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the internal operating systems and putting their own Linux distributions or preferred Linux
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distributions on them at the time, and after a while, the distros started including support for the
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all the various components inside of them. I wasn't so much into the BSDs at the time, but I would
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imagine a little after that they probably went ahead and added support for it.
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So, I've had this device for a long time. I've had it for about 10 years more, so maybe at this point.
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And it's been in and out of use as the years have progressed, especially since I've switched.
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That used to be my main, my daily driver for a long time, and then I switched from that to a
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Toshiba Portage M400, which I ran Linux on for a while, before I upgraded to the HP Probook 4540S
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with a Core i3 processor. And I stopped using my ASUS. I had actually LeBoon2,
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was it 14.10. As a matter of fact, I actually have a series of blog posts, which I'm going to turn
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into a series of episodes for Hacker Public Radio. And it's called My Geeky Experiment,
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except Geeky is spelled with three E's as you would see on the EPC name. So, I'll post a link to
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part one of that, which is what I'll be talking about. I'll put that in the show notes. So, yeah,
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so I had this EPC for a long time, the 901. And I went ahead and I pulled it out of storage.
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I said, well, I still have this thing. Let me give it a try. It had, yeah, now I'm looking at the
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post right now. It had LeBoon2, 14.10, which was the last OS I ran on it. But I had stopped using
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it because it was giving me some problems. As a matter of fact, the, I think it would just
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kernel panic or something, something wouldn't load right. I wasn't getting the the login
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screen. So, I just kind of set that aside with the intention of getting back to it and trying to
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troubleshoot what was wrong with it. And then I completely forgot about it. And then just life
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got in a way, whatever. But anyway, I decided to pull it out and see if I could probably get it
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back to life, get it working again. So, I went ahead and I plugged it in and low and behold.
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This was sometime, let me see when was this. This was about last year, sometime around last year.
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Yeah, I'm looking at blog posts. It's January 4th, 2020 when I did this. I decided to give it another
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go. So, yeah, I went ahead and I pulled this device out from, from storage and I want to have
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plugged it in and yeah, it started crashing and it just kind of kernel panic and nothing was
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working. So, I said, let me try something. I went in, opened it up, kind of receded everything,
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receded the RAM, receded the secondary, internal SSD that it has because the one I have actually
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has two SSDs. Or what I thought was actually, I'm getting ahead of myself here. It has a 4GB
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internal and a 16GB removable SSD. Now, just a bit of a spoiler here. I came to find out
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later on that the 4GB internal wasn't soldered. Asus kind of just referred to it as just internal.
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So, I just assumed that it was not replaceable. But apparently you can replace that and I'll get
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into the details on a later episode on this. So, yeah, I went ahead and receded the 16GB
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removable SSD or at least the easily removable SSD from the bottom of the device.
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And I said, well, let me recede all this and then after I went ahead and did that,
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I said, let me turn it back on and see if I can get open BSD. I was already big into the BSDs.
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I played around with free BSD for a while. Then I played around with Open BSD and I fell in love
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with Open BSD as everybody pretty much knows at this point. But if you don't, now you do. And so,
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yeah, I went ahead and I installed, I prepared a Open BSD installation USB disk because there's no
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way to do it from an optical drive on that device. So, I went ahead and I turned it on and right after
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I turned it on, I realized just receding everything got the operating system working and the
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Lubuntu that was on there. So, I was at least happy that was working and I went ahead and just kind
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of logged in to take a look kind of a nostalgic view of it. And it was working fine, you know,
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obviously by 2020 standards. Of course, it's right now the date is July 11th, 2021. So, it's been
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about a year and a half since this experiment was done. And yeah, given what we've all been through
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for the past year and a half, I don't think anybody saw this coming by the time I posted this. But
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anyway, going back to what I was saying. So, I decided to, after I played around with Lubuntu for
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a while, I decided to reboot it and install Open BSD, which at the time was 6.6. So, I went ahead
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and decided to install it and everything surprisingly, surprisingly went through just fine. The
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installation process on Open BSD is very simple. It's very Spartan. The only thing you might get hung
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up on is the partitioning. I think FDISC is the tool used to perform the partitioning. That could
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be wrong. If anybody knows or wants to correct me, you can go ahead and post in the comment section.
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But yeah, that was about it. Once you kind of grasp how that works, it's pretty much a straightforward
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install. It's very simple, very quick. It'll install the base sets depending on which installation
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image you download. I usually get the one that says install and the version number of Open BSD,
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which brings all the sets included. But you can do either one. I think there's a net install
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of some sort. But if you go to OpenBSD.org website, you can pretty much find out from there when
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you go to the downloads page. Anyway, so I went through the install and I booted it up.
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I had a feeling that maybe something wouldn't work on it, but to my surprise,
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everything pretty much worked. The Wi-Fi was working. The disks were detected just without any
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issues. I didn't have any problems with the corruption or whatever. It loaded up. I went ahead and
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logged in because I installed it with the ZenoDM ZenoCara graphics X server. Of course, ZenoDM
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is the login manager that comes by default. Once you log in, you're presented with
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FVWM as the default window manager. It looks pretty nice or ramped pretty nice. I was happy to get
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this machine working again. Once I did that, I actually copied the configuration files over from
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my Toshi by the time, which I've since retired. That one was running OpenBSD for a good while. I've
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switched that one now. I moved the hard drive over to an old, probably a newer, I would say,
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because the M400 Toshiba had a Quartu Duo processor. This machine that it's the hard drive
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is running on now is a latitude E6410 from Dell, which has a, I think, it's a first generation
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Core i5. It's here right now. Give me a sec. I'll look at it later. I believe it is. It's an M520,
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so I don't know if it's an i5 or an i3, regardless. That is now on there. I copied the configuration
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files from the Toshi by the time over to the, to the netbook, to the EPC. And there's a procedure
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for doing that. It has to, you have to use package ad. I don't remember the commands off the top
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of my head, but yeah, I mean, you can, if you go into the OpenBSD handbook and there's a section
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on installing packages. And if you need to install the same set of packages over to another OpenBSD
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machine, there's a procedure there. I'll put them in the show notes. So yeah, I went ahead and
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copied that over. Did the package ad magic. And I was up and running with fluxbox as my default
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desktop. There's no way I was going to run anything else because this is a machine that the EPC is
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a machine that only maxes at two gigs of RAM plus the SSD that it has the 16 gig. Along with the
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internal one, the four gig internal one is super, super slow. But it did the job and it was running
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nicely. And I had fluxbox running with my themes and all my other settings, my other config files,
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and all as well. Now, as far as performance, I have to say, I was pleasantly surprised. I think
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it performed better with OpenBSD in fluxbox than it did with even LeBoon2. But of course, I was
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running Mate desktop on that at the time. So it's, it's, it's a lot more of a demand on the system.
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So I decided to go with something smaller. But it ran pretty well. I'll go ahead and include a
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video also that I did of the of the EPC in action. I had MPV running playing a an internet
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radio stream that I listened to. And I don't remember what else. I'll have to catch the video. But
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yeah, it actually performed quite well. Now, and everything worked right out of the box.
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The only thing that didn't work, of course, is Bluetooth. And the only reason that wasn't
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working is because OpenBSD does not support Bluetooth. Now, there is a supposed work around to
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that. If you use a USB audio dongle that or I'm sorry, a Bluetooth USB dongle, that apparently
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is a workaround to get Bluetooth working on on an OpenBSD machine. So just something to keep in mind.
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But yeah, I was very happy with it. And really, all I'm using it for now is I use Firefox on it.
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At this point, it's running at the time when I installed it, it was OpenBSD 6.6, which I then
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switched over to to follow the current snapshots. But right now, it's running 6.9 current.
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And from what I've been told, Firefox, I still haven't installed, but it hasn't upgraded at all
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because it's been removed from the I-386 OpenBSD tree. From what I was told, it has something to do
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with Rust not compiling, or the new Firefox version not compiling because of some issues with Rust
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on 32-bit. So going forward, it looks like with OpenBSD 7 and with the current snapshots,
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it's just 64-bit for Firefox. Or any Mozilla-based browser. Which means you're stuck with browsers
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like Midori or Links. Some of the webkit browsers are the options you'll have there. But for what I
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use it for, which is SSH to SDF, and just SSH to other machines here so I can get on IRC.
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It's a great little machine. I don't really need it to do much. It just needs to do the basics.
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And that's good for me. So if you have an old netbook lying around and wondering what you want to do
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with it, go ahead and just see about dropping an operating system on there. You can try one of the
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current links this shows, although they might be a little heavy. But I'd highly recommend a BSD.
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There really a lot, I don't want to say a lot easier. But if you're familiar with Linux, I think you
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should, you'll do all right with a BSD. There are a lot of differences with regards to the lower
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level stuff. But once you get used to it and how things work, the user line is pretty much
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all the same for the most part. So yeah, this is going to be my first episode back in a while.
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And hopefully, sometime soon, I'll go ahead and look because I had actually a friend of mine
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sent me an EPC 900A. He asked me if I was interested. I was like, yeah, sure. I'll take it and
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I'll put something else on that. So I got that and I went ahead and I installed high coup on it.
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So that one I'll leave for another episode. That will be part two as a matter of fact. That's part two
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of my geeky experiment. But yeah, for part one, I managed to get this thing back in use. So I take
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it with me every day to work. I use it just as H to certain things. As far as Firefox or at least
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the last Firefox that it runs, I can run it. But I would say, you know, if you're going to do so,
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stick to maybe one or two tabs. And even with that loading, it's going to be pretty slow on
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today's web. But for anything static or even for accessing Gemini capsules, it's a perfect machine.
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So if you don't need the overhead of today's web and you want to stick with less intensive
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technologies like IRC, SSAH, or even text browsing, it's definitely a great machine and you can
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bring some new life into that old netbook if you still have it. Anyway, that's going to be it for
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me. I hope you enjoy it. If you have any comments, be sure to leave it in the comments section of this
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episode once it's posted. As far as I'm concerned, if you want to get in touch with me also,
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you can contact me on mastodon. My mastodon handle is at Claudio M at mastodon.sdf.org. I've
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since moved from the mastodon.xyz. So feel free to hit me up there. Also, you can catch me
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on my email and my email is Claudio at linuxpacement.com. Anyway, thanks again and be sure to record
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some episodes for Hacker Public Radio. Catch you again soon for the next episode in this series. Bye-bye.
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Podcast Network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show,
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like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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