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Episode: 3385
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Title: HPR3385: DIY Cat feeder!
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3385/hpr3385.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:28:53
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3385 for Friday, the 23rd of July 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, Did I Cat Feeder?
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It is hosted by Operator and is about 14 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, I talk about 3D printed cat feeders.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello everyone and welcome to my episode of Hacker Public Radio with your host operator.
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Today I'm going to be talking about cat feeders.
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If you're not interested in DIY, Arduino and 3D printing and cats then it's probably not
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the best for you.
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It's all started when Hacker Cat tended to meow a lot and have lots of vocal things to
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be fed and it would be right at or near 7 o'clock when we feed the cat, sometimes 30 minutes
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before, sometimes an hour before and he would start meowing and driving my wife nuts.
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I thought it was hilarious and I would just keep messing with the cat and we would all
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meow together as a giant family and torment my wife but I thought it would be the best
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to think about some options and I said, you know what, what we could do is set up an automatic
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feeder.
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So I want to go through that whole scenario and kind of give you the story a year or two
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or three later.
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So I started out to think, okay well, I've got access to a 3D printer, I could 3D print
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my own, I could obviously buy one but I thought it would be a nice project because I hadn't
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done any of the Arduino stuff.
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I had done some pie stuff before and I may have done some Arduino stuff before but I can't
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remember.
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But I think that was my first time doing Arduino stuff and then the pie stuff I've worked
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on several pies that weren't mine or whatever and I'm kind of generally familiar with how
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they all work so it's not super interesting to me but I wanted to get a go at the Arduino stuff.
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So this one is on Thingiverse which is a 3D printable and other things that you can 3D print
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and or make, it's not specific to 3D printing, there's other stuff up there.
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It's a DIY and the one I landed on and I'll put it in the show notes, the ID of the thing is 27854.
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Again, that's 27854 and it is a auger based cat feeder by CatLin, KitLin.
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So essentially what it is is some two halves of an auger and then a mounting system for,
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I think it's 1.5 or a 1 inch PVC, 1.5 inch PVC joint, 12 volt adapter, 0.3 amps is not enough.
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So there's some notes in there about his stuff I built it. I didn't have any problems.
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I had to do a lot of a fair amount of sanding on the auger to make it smooth so the auger
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is obviously 3D printed so the steps on the auger are kind of rigid so I tried to do my best
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to sand the edges where it was going to sit the PVC. So I had to do a fair bit of sanding to get
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it all happy and then after gluing it together I did a lot of sanding. I'm not an overabundant
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not a amount that would be frustrating enough to where the project wouldn't be worth it but I
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did do more sanding than I thought I would need to. Again, this is my first project so it basically
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comes, you get a little CV, not a CV but what do they call them? Servos. You get a servo
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pop it in there. Servos can be kind of programmed to rotate either 360 degrees or clockwise or
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kind of clockwise or you can tell it to rotate one direction this way maximum or one direction.
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That way maximum so you can kind of set how you want them. It's the kind of thing you see on
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like RC cars those are those are servos. So anyways the servo and the ingenious part of it is that
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a lot of these feeding mechanisms jam and things like that. This one in particular has it goes
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forward a little bit and then goes back and then goes forward a little bit and then goes back
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to reduce jamming. That way if a piece of food gets stuck in there it will kind of unjam
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itself because of the programming that's in there. So I thought that was interesting and
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one that allowed for error corrections and things like that. Some of the other there's a
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million cat feeders up there. Some of the other ones just didn't look like they would be
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simple enough and or less not prone to issues. So I ended up setting it all up. I used a
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gallon jug with cut out just kind of taped the bottom of it and that's a proof of concept.
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It's been about I want to say maybe four hours building it after three printing the thing. So all
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in all it's probably five hours worth of work. Coding, printing, sanding, proof of concepting
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to proof of concept. I would say it's about five hours. So not a lot of work but more than you
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would think for a little job like this. But it was the first time 3D printing use other than
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fun. Anyways, so I'll get into the technical part. It worked and it was on a timer but you know
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I had the friend that's kind of a electronics guy said you don't want to leave this on. You don't
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want to really leave it plugged in. It's kind of a proof of concept, danger, danger. And
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wife had overheard that and she had purchased a, was like during Christmas time. She had purchased
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an auto feeder from from China or whatever that was on sale somewhere and we ended up using that
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one. You can record stuff. And to this day, three, four years later, it actually still works
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surprisingly. So what I'll say about the auto feeders in general is that there is some kind of
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bonding element that goes along. I didn't do a whole lot of reading into it but our cats seem to
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still exhibit things around the cat feeding time. He would just kind of be odd and
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off putting and come to find out. I think it's kind of a bonding slash ritual thing. So if
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if the food comes out of the cat feeder, they don't room necessarily put two and two together
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either right away or at all because it's kind of like a routine or a bonding thing. So if the
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machine feeds the cat, you kind of lose, which kind of makes sense. You kind of lose some of that
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bonding or whatever you want to call it, expectation or ritual or whatever. And there's some,
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I think from what I was reading, it feels like there's some kind of, you know, if you have a robot
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feeding your cat, it's not as mentally healthy as physically feeding your cat and you know,
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petting it in all that crap. Our cat gets plenty of attention, mind you, by my wife, unfortunately.
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So that's one thing to keep in mind. Another thing is the side of your food, the size of your food.
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Are they small pellets? Are they big pellets? We used it for a while. The cat wouldn't eat.
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He would kind of eat and then he wouldn't eat and then he would kind of eat and the bowl would
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start getting fuller and fuller. They have these, the one I've seen is purple. It's a device in
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which you drop the food in and it's got these little pillars, almost these around soft pillars.
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The food goes down in there and they have to kind of fish it out. So if you have a cat that
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since they eat too much, you can use one of these, they call them like, I don't know what they're
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called, but they're cat anti eating food, cat things, fest things. So this one in particular is
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like purple, it's oval and it's got a raised surface to it and the food goes in there and it falls
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down the raised surface and then distributes the cat food kind of all across the bowl or device
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or whatever so that they can get to the cat food but they don't have to eat it like crazy.
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We even tried that and he seemed to still have issues kind of initiating, eating and eating
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enough in all this food. We were feeding him a normal amount and he wasn't eating that
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like at all for a while. So my wife started getting nervous and mixing in of course wet,
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fancy cat food and now here it is three years later. They were back to the same problem if not
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even worse because the cat demands the the wet cat food or whatever. So anyways, we have fancy
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cat food. It's anti this or whatever supposed to be fancy cat food. It's like almost prescription
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or whatever to help with urine UTIs. If your cat has issues, they rarely exhibit signs because cats
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don't, whatever the term is, cats don't show pain very well. So if your cat's acting odd really
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be careful about especially UTIs because you can kind of rub their belly and tell if there's
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any pressure there. So keep an eye on your cat. You know, feel what your cat's belly feels like
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with a normal tension of the belly and around that area. And then that way if you do have a UTI
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on your hands, your cat's not going to be dead by the time you figure out what's going on because
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things can go bad. Quickly ours was on its back behind the toilet waiting to die because I came in
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and he was just like, I don't know if it's like something's wrong, we have to get the pet.
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And they said that he was pretty much like about to die because he was about to explode.
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So anyways, he had a UTI and we had to keep him elevated. I don't know how you keep a cat elevated.
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But anyways, that's pretty much it. I think I might have mentioned or had a podcast about my old
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cat feeder. This was a dual cat feeder. I'm pretty sure I did an episode about it if not.
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I'm just going to go over it real quickly. It's two cat feeder doors. So there's RFID cat doors
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you can get for about a hundred dollars a piece. I ended up giving them both away
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and losing my butthole on that. And we had two cats and two fancy, one of them had fancy cat food
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because of the UTI. Way since then got rid of the other cat. But we had two at one point in time.
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So I got two of these RFID cat feeders. I put the leashes, the RFID things on their on their neck.
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And it took them quite some time to get used to it. The way I designed it was a,
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if you see the styrofoam coolers, cheap styrofoam coolers, in hindsight, you should use a hot
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knife and leave yourself about half an inch of melting this room. Because if you draw a line
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to cut, it's going to melt away more than you expect. So you want to leave yourself about a
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half an inch on the measurements. But the idea is the hot knife will melt through the styrofoam
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and do a better cutting job as opposed to cutting styrofoam, which makes a flip and mess.
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So if you want to kind of be environmentally friendly, sort of kind of, I mean the fumes are
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awful for you, but you can use the hot like old hot butter knife. So if you can use the old hot
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bread knife, I have an old bread knife that I use for all kinds of crazy stuff. And I'll heat
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the idea as you heat that bread knife up. And then you use that to cut the precise measurements
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of the styrofoam with the meltiness of the bread knife. So anyways, I've got these two cat feeders.
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And then I kind of set up a partition in the middle. And then I put the bowl on one side and a
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bowl on the other. So the hole enclosure was three feet long maybe. And then it was partitioned
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on the middle. And each side had a cat door on it. It did take a while to train them. One of the
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cats actually flipped the styrofoam up, which is relatively light. He flipped it up and just ate
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both cat food. But after a while, they after some thing, because cats don't like things
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touching their ears or head, they want to see what's going on around them and for them to stick
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their head inside of a hole and have a door touching their head and have to eat without being
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able to see what's around them. And hindsight, that's not probably the best idea. You probably
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want to have it big enough or where they can get in there and be safe and physically be inside
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of the device. That might help. But anyways, cats don't want to, well, don't want to have to use
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their heads to open a door. That took quite some time for them to figure out because they put
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their paw in front of the door to try to push the door open and their neck wouldn't be close enough
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to activate the RFID. So they would sit there and struggle to try to get the rope. And then
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finally, that's about a day or two. They all figured out that if there's food, they'll find a way
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to get it if you haven't had a cat go at your food bowl or a food bag while you're at a town or
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whatever. They'll find a way to feed themselves generally. That's pretty much it. You know, be nice
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to your cats, be nice to your pets. You know, get a pet comb and brush your cat, especially if it's
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got lots of hair. Anyways, hope that helps somebody out and y'all have a good one.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is. 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 stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
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attribution, share a life, 3.0 license.
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