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Episode: 3436
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Title: HPR3436: HPR Community News for September 2021
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3436/hpr3436.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 23:27:09
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3436 for Mundi, 4 October 2021.
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Tid's show is entitled, HPR Community News, for September 2021 and is part of the series HPR
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Community News. It is the 180th show of HPR Volunteers and is about 54 minutes long and carries
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an explicit flag. The summary is, HPR Volunteers, talk about shows released in comments,
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posted in September 2021. 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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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today, it's HPR Community News for September 2021. Joining me this evening is...
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Hello, it's Dave Morris. Where's Mr. Exko?
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I thought you'd give him a month off this year this time, yeah.
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Yeah, I'd like to thank both of you for stepping into the breach. The last month, my father passed away,
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so I had to go to Ireland. Actually, the funeral was exactly a month ago on the community news, so
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so thanks very much for that. You did a fantastic job.
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Happy to help. Yeah, sorry to hear about your dad and all that, but yes, we were happy to cover.
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Yeah, no, he was 90 and he was had dementia for the last few years and was in nursing home,
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so he went off quietly in the sleep, so he was like his mother, so it could have been more sick,
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it could have been a lot worse. Indeed, indeed. So yeah, what's this? This isn't...
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This is the HPR Community News. What's HPR? HPR is hacker, public radio, and that is a community of
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podcast people, community of people who do podcasts with the goal of sharing knowledge. Did you know this, Dave?
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I say so, yes, in the back of my mind somewhere, yeah.
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For new listeners, there isn't about pages, it's one worth of read just to go through there,
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how the community works, and essentially, you could... some people compare to like a bar camp
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where people bring a podcast, but a hackerspace might even be a better...
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a better example of virtual hackerspace where we come and talk about stuff.
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And yes, and two of the newest members of the hackerspace are traditionally welcomed by you, Dave.
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So they are indeed. Yes, we have Kogo and Black Colonel this month.
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Excellent. Welcome to you, Chaps. Pull up a chair. Take a beverage of choice from our wide selection of
|
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buffets featuring beverages from all over the world. Sit down, relax, and enjoy the show. The show
|
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is the community news where we, the janitors, put away our brushes, and one day in the month,
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we come and have a quick chat to make sure that every each and every show has been talked about,
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discussed, and you know that at least two people have listened to your show.
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And then we go into a major critique of it. First of all, the first show was 3, 4,
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1, 3, the show, Y Dave, Y. Bash snippets use in the co-proc with SQLite.
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And this was actually, I'm joking, but it is a Y Dave, Y thing, and I think that was the point of
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the show really. Well, yes, it was, I think I said in the show itself, but he was me doing a thing
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and thinking, oh, is there a better way of doing this? And then suddenly remembering co-proc that
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Clackhead talked about a couple of years ago, I'll give that a shot. Oh, that would make a show,
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wouldn't it? So yes, it did. I recommend doing the comments, there are four comments to this,
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two replies by you. So let's do the amount of order, and you can reply to them in your own voice.
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Be easy said, new tool for my toolbox. Thank you, Dave, for this great show. I'll be definitely
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using co-proc in the near future. Now, I would like to hear what BZ turns off, actually uses this
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for, because it seems to me like a bit like Bitcoin, it's a blockchain, it's a solution looking for a
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problem. Oh, very much so, that was that pretty much my conclusion. But yeah, I'm all I'm waiting
|
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with baited breath for somebody to come up with a really good use for it, have to say. So yeah,
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maybe it's be easy, I'll be fascinated to know. Go ahead and re-comment three then,
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Dave, please. Okay, I will reply to BZ was regarding his, his new tool for my toolbox.
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Thanks BZ, glad you enjoyed the show, I hope you find co-proc beautiful thing,
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an HPR show on your experiences would be very welcome, I'm sure.
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Okay, Dave, that's exactly what I was thinking. I don't know, something strange vibes coming
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from the Netherlands. Yeah, but we have a intensive training course here to become a HPR
|
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janitor, which essentially is, ask people to do shows, go to TED,
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line TED, ask people to do shows and then go to TED, that's pretty much our training manual.
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Trade said, excellent detail, thank you for the detailed explanation in this episode,
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I was completely unfamiliar with co-proc before listening, now I have something new to play with
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and I'm learning something new, looking forward to the next BZ episode.
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To which I replied, thanks Trey, glad you found the show useful, I sometimes wonder if I'm over
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doing the detail, but I enjoy getting into the intricacies of stuff, I like to share what I find.
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I'm planning BZ tips episode 22 at the moment, so it should be out before too long,
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I don't know what too long means, hopefully. Yeah, this year.
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If you hear noise in the background, we're getting the house ready for my son turned 16
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and he's having a few friends around this afternoon, and last week we moved back to our house,
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we moved away for four months, this is a little life and times we can't find him.
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Anyway, we moved away for four months and we moved back last week, there's still a week's
|
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worth of building to be done for your children, I will be in Ireland.
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The next show was critical thinking, may make you critical of the COVID crisis,
|
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and there was a lot of discussion about the show, and so we will cover that later,
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and Tray says controversial topic and love it. Hope this will spur some interesting discussions
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and maybe future shows, thanks for sharing. And Drade says,
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great episode, I appreciate this episode, regardless of your view, your critical thinking is key
|
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for COVID and everything else in life. Great information, I hope, will make people think and
|
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possibly do some research of their own. Drade says, great episode, I appreciate this
|
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episode, regardless of your view, critical thinking is key for COVID and everything else in life,
|
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great information and I hope it will make people think and possibly do some research of their own.
|
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Didn't I just do that, or did I do it with a mute on? Oh no, sorry, you did, yes, sorry.
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Barbara Ann Woodgo says, thank you for beneficial information about COVID and the benefits of
|
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vitamin D-13. D-3. Yeah, D-3. And Joel says, excellent analysis, so much about this pandemic,
|
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in quotes, has been very questionable. The scientific method demands observations from various
|
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perspectives. That hasn't happened this time. Anyone deviating from one of the politically
|
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correct narrative was ignored, called names or shouted down, coercion, bribery and threats to
|
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get the jab are suspect, where were directions on prevention and treatments?
|
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Local mention, so to me, indeed, this parallels my findings on prevention. Zinc also turns up
|
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in my research. Big farmer is making big dollars on this event and as mentioned in this episode,
|
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it'll even more nefarious agenda may be happening than mere dollar profit. I heard it said that
|
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America is suffering from a lack of conspiracy theories. This is because most of what was initially
|
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called conspiracy theories has mostly become truth recently. So yes, critical thinking and research
|
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are required in our unusual times. Thank you, Coco. Hacking stories were detected, part three,
|
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operator. And there was one comment, do you want to take that one? Or an ultimate turn, I think.
|
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Oh, yes. And it's a wilderness. Awesome, dude, these stories are fantastic. Please keep them
|
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common while the average listener may not appreciate each and every aspect, along with the technical
|
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details, the read, listen, more like an adventure than a resume. Yes, these shows are amazing.
|
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I'm so confused by reacted, which is the spelling versus redacted, which means to sort of edit
|
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stuff out. And just puzzled. Was that a typo? Because, yeah, these things, these things,
|
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I probably have some mental state that causes me to get caught up in this sort of stuff. But,
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yeah, I'd love for operator to clarify that, to be honest with you, but shouldn't really, shouldn't
|
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really ask. So the following one was the community news. Very, very good job. Kevin O'Brien said,
|
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and you can read that. And Kevin O'Brien says, my former profession, you said something to the
|
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effect of me having a teacher leave manner. I think that was me. And that may be the result of my
|
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20 years teaching at the university level. I love the teaching part, but I hated the paperwork,
|
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and especially disliked the low pay. In the US, at least, teaching is not valued at all. So I left
|
||||
academia to become an IT project manager, which is the main reason I can enjoy my retirement now.
|
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Very good. Yeah. I think his experience is in academia as a matter to mind, and many other
|
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people I know it's not been well-paid, and it's on the road. So it's the same, same in the UK.
|
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And us? But becoming artificially, horrendously expensive also?
|
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Oh, the whole business of student loans and fees and stuff like that is hatefully really is.
|
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It's another case in the UK of copying the ridiculous US
|
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methods of dealing with this type of thing. And yeah, I could go on, but I'll show up.
|
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Yeah, it looks like here as well. We copied that for a few years, and
|
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it's turning out that people can't get on the property ladder now because they're debt
|
||||
or the student debt. So there's a majority in government now to abolish it and go back to
|
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granting grants, which is what's happening to Factor in the US as well. And yeah, hopefully it'll
|
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be free. It's just that, so it should be free for everybody. The UK is getting excited
|
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over the fact that it looks as if the government is going to reduce the threshold at which you
|
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start paying your paying back alone and paying back the student loan that is. So I think it's
|
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something like 27,000 pounds a year is the threshold and there's talk of it dropping.
|
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So I don't do, we don't know to what yet, but speculation is 23,000, which means that you're
|
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in paying off this debt for their fee of life, you know. And possibly changing the threshold at which
|
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you, the debt is waived because it does come a point after 30 years at a moment where it's
|
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forgotten and there might be 40 years who knows. Anyway. Anyway, a following day,
|
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chap Cluster Harbor, and this was Daniel Pearson's with the accompanying videos on YouTube
|
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about it. Yeah. And there was one comment, sorry, go on. Yeah. I know, Seth is it, it's Seth.
|
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Yeah, it's, yeah, it's, it looks pretty cool. And yeah, who's turns it to do the
|
||||
comments that yours? I think so. Michael said, why Seth? Hi, thanks for an interesting
|
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podcast. I actually thought of doing this as well. Can I ask you why you picked Seth instead of
|
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Cluster? I think Cluster has an own port, but I don't know if it works on the Raspberry Pi.
|
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Cool. It's a great response to that. I don't, I'm not quite clear what this is. There have been
|
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various Cluster operating systems around. I can't remember the one we used on our Cluster at work.
|
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We had a 64-note Sun cluster. I can't remember what it was now. Yeah, I assume that this is
|
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another one of the same sort. So yeah, I've got to do the research on this one, unfortunately.
|
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Sounds cool. Very much. The next day, my geeky experiment, Claudio Miranda, speaks about
|
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Haiku on ASOS EPC 900A. And that's the BEOS Plone. Very, very cool.
|
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And if you follow him on Masteredon, you'll regularly see images going past of this.
|
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Yeah, I've looked at Haiku. It was, there was a lot of people getting excited about it, maybe
|
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five or six years ago. And it looks beautiful, but I've not actually tried using it, but
|
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good for Claudio. Yeah, I did back in the day. What's, yeah. We had then the next episode was
|
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Season 1, episode 39 of Linux in laws, tiny kernels. And this one was quite good. It was a
|
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little bit of history of some of the kernels. It's pretty, pretty interesting stuff coming from
|
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these guys, actually. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's obviously something that Chris knows a lot about.
|
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That was his PhD, I think it was in that area. So yeah, there's a lot there that I did not know.
|
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I didn't even mention the digital Vax systems. And I mean, used one for about seven years.
|
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Being manager of it, I should say, for seven years, I didn't know some of the stuff he said that.
|
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It's quite cool. So the GIMP was his part of a series being handled by OUGA. And
|
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Normables, Erase, Merge, and Split were the one. Can you do the first and I will do the
|
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Oh, yes, you'll do. So Ruppesh, Mourubesh Kumar says, can't hear in mobile,
|
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cannot hear in mobile, he says, he says, so yeah, go for it.
|
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And I had a look at the episode and indeed it was, there were clicks in there that prevented
|
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the normalization from from from working, which actually might be more common than we thought.
|
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So I would like somebody to send me a something that will be able to read the source audio file and
|
||||
produce a wave form diagram from that. You know, like when you open up audacity or tenacity,
|
||||
whichever one you happen to be running. And you see the wave form pattern that would be very
|
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useful as part of our automated processing. If that's ready for us, then I could have a look
|
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and visually check to see if there's stuff that I need to work on.
|
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Particularly clicks would be would be a present, I think. Yeah, exactly. You tend to notice it more
|
||||
on the shows with the intro and outro provided that need to go in and fix that stuff, but that
|
||||
will be useful. Was it here in Hitchcock or somebody had a show about being able to run?
|
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I think it was some guy on the internet mentioned it.
|
||||
Audacity from the command line. Okay, doesn't ring a bell with me, but that will be an interesting
|
||||
concept. I tried to do it with the socks and was kind of successful, but getting that wave form
|
||||
or audacity would be absolutely excellent if somebody could help me out with that.
|
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Yeah, yeah. They do it on archive.org.
|
||||
It's pretty as you land on. How's that thing? I wonder how they do it.
|
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Yeah, good point, good point. Black colonel brought us a show and trade commented.
|
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Yes, trade commented. Welcome and thanks for sharing. Welcome and thank you for sharing.
|
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I remember building gates from transistors and then more complex logic circuits from only
|
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nan gates. These exercises help you break complex problems down into more simple steps and are
|
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valuable in any technical career, especially information technology and security. I look forward to
|
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your future posts. I had the same approach to parenting as his parents had and unfortunately his
|
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parents must be a lot better rough explaining or motivating the gates because none of mine
|
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wanted to look at a computer if it doesn't have a game on it. Yeah, yeah. I think I steeped my
|
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poor children in tons of biology because I tend to go on about biology, look more than computers.
|
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But one of them is about a biologist and the other one's a computer scientist, so I don't know
|
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quite what that means. Yeah, GWP centers at the show the next day about updating forms and devices.
|
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G.S. is a Zayomi. Red Mini Note 10X. Yeah, GWP centers. Yeah, amazing things.
|
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There's certainly some strange and wonderful hardware. Yeah, it's a small and a full naturally.
|
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Yeah, it's a small as 4G phone, so yeah, I could see uses for that. Yeah, yeah,
|
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I'd be fascinated to hear more of his stuff. Yeah, very, very cool.
|
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So the next day, some guys speaking of some guy on the internet, this approach to updating
|
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upgrade.sh.com.txt and note.md. So very, very not strange. I mean, this is a good way,
|
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interesting approach to doing an upgrade. It's really nice to see his shows. He's coming from a
|
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completely different way, but there's value to be had in listening to his shows.
|
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Yes, yeah, absolutely. That different viewpoint counts for a lot. It makes you
|
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rethink stuff, doesn't it? Seeing it through somebody else's eyes. Yeah, exactly.
|
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It's some, there is a way in which you can re-log in with your output written to a file.
|
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I can't remember how you do that. I used to do that a lot when I was learning Unix. It was on Unix,
|
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I think, originally, and it's Devonion Linux. I completely forgotten how to, you do end up with
|
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lots of control characters in it, but basically you do see everything that you type and was type
|
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back at you. It's not marked at now. You'd have hell of a job to turn it into anything good,
|
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but it's useful for logging what happened when you were trying to get something to work.
|
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It's very good. I really like the approach and there are quite some, you know,
|
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he claims to be a new user, but he has quite some complicated commands in there as well.
|
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Yeah, absolutely. He's obviously quick on the uptake with these things and he's come up with some
|
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good ideas and stuff based on his learning. It's good to accompany him on this journey.
|
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Very much so, yeah. Very much so. I'm not going to very clever in fact. There's the word
|
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strange I use, but also I actually think I mean clever. Yeah. All right, cool.
|
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Please turn. I've lost track of where we are. Who's turns it to do the comments?
|
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Ah, you can do it, Devonion. I'll do it then.
|
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Tray says, great work. Thank you for sharing episodes like these. Not only is the information
|
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you present valuable, but sharing your thought processes helps provide context as well as
|
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launch points for others to build them. I encourage you to keep it up and start using get to
|
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manage and share your code and comments. PS, I still despise Mark then.
|
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He's, I think Tray is winding himself just a teeny bit there. He's struggled with Mark
|
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down himself. He's probably, I've probably told him stuff and it doesn't quite work. He haven't
|
||||
done that right at least. I hate it. What pain this stuff is.
|
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It's simply, simply. Tray was on himself the following day with the InfoSecurity podcast
|
||||
and he has excellent notes. I'll be them probably complicated and they can see why his markdown would
|
||||
get suffer of the wrath of Dave. Not exactly. It's right, but just so complicated.
|
||||
But yeah, I think this was the last in the series, wasn't it? It was a wrap-up.
|
||||
Yes, I think it was. Yes, you're right. You're right. Unless you can obviously do another one
|
||||
any year or two and Dave, new podcast coming up. Yeah, I was surprised that there was a role
|
||||
called Chief Information Security Officer. I've never heard of that before. Chris, I'm way out
|
||||
of a loop these days, so my surprise shouldn't mean anything at all, but it was fascinating that
|
||||
that was the way the security management was going in organizations.
|
||||
It kind of has to be known because of the fines that you get from the GDPR,
|
||||
so they're proportional to your, you know, if you obviously didn't take any care in your data,
|
||||
you know, it's a serious position and there are serious fines.
|
||||
Anyway, an operator had a part four of this the following day.
|
||||
And then we went on to Rust 101, episode zero, what is tarnishing. And this was by Black
|
||||
Colonel and what is Rust. And I know the Linux in those guys have been doing a lot of interviews
|
||||
with people about Rust, but this was the first explanation of, you know, the
|
||||
programming language and it clarified a lot of points for me. Yes, it was a good introduction.
|
||||
Sorry, I'm interrupted. No, maybe actually interested in it. Trace, thank you. I've been
|
||||
considering learning some Rust, and this has given me the knowledge needed to give it a try,
|
||||
looking forward to your hello world episode, boo, boo.
|
||||
And yes, indeed. Yeah. Hipster says, Rust 101, episode zero, great.
|
||||
Great to hear you talk about languages the way that you do. You have a lot of context
|
||||
without a lot of lingo, looking forward to the next episode. I mean, this site, various languages,
|
||||
lists, everything is a list, Unix, everything has a file, Ruby, everything is an object,
|
||||
Haskell, everything is a function, Rust, everything is an error.
|
||||
That's good. I like that. I like that. And giving Black Colonel his due, he, I think he's a bit
|
||||
of a punster as guy, because he says, episode zero, what in tarnishing, tarnishing being
|
||||
Rust is, it's a pun on the word tarnation, I think, which is one of these American
|
||||
euphemistic words, damnation, which is not allowed to say that. But yes, yeah, I like that.
|
||||
I was looking at that as it was coming through the queue thinking, oh, is that a pun?
|
||||
Is that a pun? Yes, I think it is. Yes, well, I went right over my head.
|
||||
I really see that now. I don't know whether to applaud or groan as with all the best puns.
|
||||
Absolutely. Yes, yes, that's the proper reaction.
|
||||
Ranger for the win in this episode, I go over some typical use cases for Ranger file manager,
|
||||
by be easy. And again, as I think we've had a shorn Ranger before, we have, yes. And at the time,
|
||||
people were going on about to lose best things in sliced bread. And I installed it again after
|
||||
this and I'm still not convinced I don't see it. Sorry, it's not you. It's me. I don't know.
|
||||
I had the similar reaction actually. It must be a difference in, I don't know if it's an age thing.
|
||||
What? I just don't find it. I prefer, I really enjoy like dolphin, for example, with dolphins,
|
||||
tons and tons and tons of stuff in it. But it just is a list of files or two lists of files and
|
||||
you move them here there and everywhere. And you can look inside them in all manner of things.
|
||||
And I don't see why Ranger is better. It's a terminal based thing, though, isn't it, as opposed to
|
||||
the dolphins, which are gooey. But I'm not a great fan of gooey usually, but I do enjoy dolphin a lot.
|
||||
So it's a matter of taste, obviously, but I know it's my problem because I do, I think dolphins
|
||||
actually too bloated. I now use, well, because I'm on, um,
|
||||
Alex QT anyway, I use PC Man FM, which is, you know, the base, just the basics. And that's it.
|
||||
And to be honest, I use, um, XGG dash open for the majority of stuff,
|
||||
and LS, but, uh, I'm kind of wondering why you wouldn't use something like Midnight Commander?
|
||||
Well, yeah, I lived in Midnight Commander for years, um, on Linux in my work because it was,
|
||||
it was just, it was, you know, it's based on the ideas of Norton Commander. I think it was
|
||||
something that helped you survive the horrors of Windows, or it did me anyway. And, uh, yeah,
|
||||
I just took to that. In fact, I used to use it to fill my MP3 players with podcasts. It was
|
||||
the nice, easy thing to do, you know, highlight them and chuck them all over to the thing.
|
||||
Yeah, maybe it depends where you come from, what, what your history is or something, but,
|
||||
hmm, yeah, I'm not sure I would want to use the rules comment. We did not.
|
||||
Oh, of course. I don't know. I'll do it since I'm blabbing already.
|
||||
Vim Lovers says Jerovo. This looks pretty great. I just installed Ranger and love it already.
|
||||
Thanks for calling attention to Ranger, et cetera. I'm still digging in, but so far, so awesome.
|
||||
CB easy. It, it's just us. That's it.
|
||||
I'm sure he's not taking the fence. Let's go. It's, it's just, it's just different people than
|
||||
different. It's, uh, it's all the fumes from the cleaning products here in this closet,
|
||||
which were called HB. Yeah. Yeah. Bad disk rescue tragedy or happy ending,
|
||||
shooting to Andrew College, you'll find out.
|
||||
Okay, sure. I'm surprised a lot of these two answers were still available, but it was a spinning
|
||||
disk, wasn't it? I think so. Yeah. Yeah. That was my impression. I don't remember what you said.
|
||||
Otherwise, I won't spoil it for you guys. Now, Andrew did a great job of this one. It was,
|
||||
it was all laid out in a beautifully logical way. And, uh, yeah, it's, it's, uh,
|
||||
insight into how, how people deal with problems and stuff. It's always good to hear. Yeah,
|
||||
exactly. Give a different viewpoint on these things. Moral of the story, though, is not,
|
||||
not spoiling anything as soon as something reports about disk errors, getting you disguise.
|
||||
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think I have made that mistake myself. Yes.
|
||||
What is that error message? Uh, it's not going to worry about it. It's still working fine. Oh,
|
||||
dear. It seems to vanish totally off the face. Yeah. Uh, season one, episode 39, we want to
|
||||
in the community, uh, the show was brought to you by clinical, etc. This was, uh, uh, uh,
|
||||
Rice Davies, developer advocate from canonical. Oh, yes. Yes, he was. Completely, completely
|
||||
unbiased show here for doable to do as it should be. No, it's good. I enjoyed it very much.
|
||||
There was a comment from Clinton Roy, uh, and he says, just the usual complaint, Martin's volume
|
||||
is again stroke still, still way too low. It's pain in the, uh, to, uh, change the volume when
|
||||
speakers change. And, uh, this is something that we've said on several, several occasions, many
|
||||
others have commented on. So, um, I took the, um, initiative of passing this comment through
|
||||
to Chris, um, pointing it out, like, just to prove the comment. And here's, could you do something
|
||||
about it? Please, Chris. And he said he was working on it at that, at that moment. So, hopefully,
|
||||
we will see an improvement in this regard. And the following day, we had disc operating system,
|
||||
DOS, apparently, and I saw this in Mastodon, that it's not disc operating system. It was, uh,
|
||||
quick and dirty operating system was the original, the person who wrote it, QDOS, and then it became
|
||||
DOS 30 operating system. And then, uh, the nice studies just into disc operating system.
|
||||
And I asked for citations, and there was an interview with the, uh, with the developer.
|
||||
And that, apparently, is true. Very cool. Yeah. To which tree said, trip down memory lane. Thank
|
||||
you, uh, this brought back memories of working with PCs back in the 80s. Thond times, keep up the
|
||||
awesome episodes. Kevin replies, you're most welcome. Glad you enjoyed it. It takes me back to
|
||||
there more to come. Excellent. Good stuff. Black kernel, uh, is DOSing our, uh, RQ, which is
|
||||
excellent. We love it. Uh, shows you some programs you need for living life without XORG.
|
||||
And wow. These are, uh, some of these I've never heard of T-Mox. Yeah, I find CMUS,
|
||||
music library, FIM for pictures, MPV. I love that. Use it every day. And newsboard and pubboat,
|
||||
pub fox, uh, new of him, uh, Gitex, favorite markdown, and FF MPEG. Your friend in, uh, in a
|
||||
links and MOT. Lots of comments. Let's go with operator. Wow, kids, these days. Wow, I don't think
|
||||
people like you read, I didn't think people like you really existed. My props, me four days ago
|
||||
would have asked you about playing music through an SSH tunnel, but I just switched to Plexamp
|
||||
for music because my wife uses subsonic too. I think subsonic is dying. Another thing is I really
|
||||
enjoy the highlighting in my Windows mobile external. I have tried a few times to get my entire
|
||||
terminal set up with syntax highlighting keyword stuff like monitors, but it's app specific. So,
|
||||
for example, VI, I can have nice colors, then I have to leave the terminal and get black on
|
||||
height. What I want is everything everywhere highlighted like warming, message error, info, okay,
|
||||
IP samples. Oh, does this say, is this a, yeah, this is a, so he's copied and pasted in a picture,
|
||||
where, which has got yellow warnings and then normal text and errors are read and everything
|
||||
is okay is green and stuff like that. Anyway, great stuff. Keep fighting, good fight. You do be easy.
|
||||
I don't disagree with the operator, by the way. It's a shame it's not, it's not sort of joined up stuff.
|
||||
Just as a complete site, we were heavily into mainframes at the work, a place I worked at.
|
||||
Nobody cares. Nobody cares. And it was all color and this was in the 1970s, all multicolored.
|
||||
And then we had a Unix machine brought in to play with and it was not, and we hated it.
|
||||
Cos we, we were just like that, you know, we're mainly people who hate this Unix crap. And so, yeah.
|
||||
So anyway, Be Easy Says plus one of C, C Muse. Thank you for this great show. I also use C Muse,
|
||||
CMUS. It's the only program that doesn't choke on my extremely large music library that I have on
|
||||
an NFS mount. I'll be trying out most and I encourage you to try out Ranger.
|
||||
Ranger. Yes, yes. Could be sales work. Yeah, yeah. Be Easy's obviously in the Ranger,
|
||||
getting backhanded deals from Ranger. That's a movie.
|
||||
Sesame Mochol says the text. Thanks for the show. At one point, I used Emacs on the console because
|
||||
it never had enough RAM to run X-Windows and a compiler at the same time. Never sat down with
|
||||
the Linux console to use a good font. These days, I run the I3 window manager. So, I get a lot
|
||||
of terminal windows and the graphic apps as needed. If you're looking for an improved sort of
|
||||
in curses, you could look into the textual framework, figured there would be more comments about the six.
|
||||
And as if I might do some Giza says, very enjoyable. Hi, I love the show. I started on main
|
||||
frames in the 1970s when all there was was the teletype or physical terminal. I use X-Windows now
|
||||
but spend the majority of my time in terminal emulators. Having spent today in the Linux console
|
||||
and my Debian testing system debugging a problem caused by the last update, I'm appreciating
|
||||
me back in KDE. The problem was due to multiple incompatible versions of the Nvidia legacy driver
|
||||
lurking in the system. It turned out I wouldn't want to stay in the console though, even with T-mux.
|
||||
Like you, I'm a fan of encurses and I've written a few simple things in my time. I'm a VIM user
|
||||
and I'm contemplating moving to NeoVim. I've written a few basic extensions in VIM script,
|
||||
but like we'll look at NeoVim's lure interface. Finally, you had me going for a moment calling
|
||||
VI6, Smileyface. Having been an ADNX user in the past on Veritynics for Lavers, I remember that
|
||||
VI was the abbreviated visual command that gave you the screen mode from EX from X, so
|
||||
that was it was a joke wasn't it? It was. Hello from now on. Now on I'll be passing on that
|
||||
story as a fact and we'll be believed because I'm a white guy with a beard.
|
||||
Read the license clacky. Now some people might not like this because it's reading a license,
|
||||
but to me it was extremely enjoyable because I've read it with e-speak before and this was a lot
|
||||
better. Yeah, it was nicely done. It was nicely done and I was feeling very well. I was listening
|
||||
to it and it was, oh that's interesting. That's why they've done it that way and they've thought of
|
||||
that and they've covered this area and it's quite an interesting delve into the thinking behind it,
|
||||
you know, not explicitly, but you get the get lots of clues about the authors and how they
|
||||
have they thought this stuff through, so very good. No comments on that one, so we'll move on.
|
||||
As Squirrels told about RMS and was there a comment? I think there was a comment just come through
|
||||
today about that one, but we'll cover it in the next show. Yes, I don't do the comments too
|
||||
later in the evening, so it's, we'll do that next month I guess, yeah. Yeah, let's cover it then.
|
||||
And the next day was from 0 to k8 in 30 minutes from 0 to Kubernetes in 30 minutes, build a
|
||||
Kubernetes cluster, run a website, root traffic to a website and this had two comments. There's
|
||||
a, yeah, two comments. Be easy says, what an amazing show I was truly impressed with the show.
|
||||
This could have been two or three shows, I agree. I appreciate the hard work that you put into
|
||||
the show notes. I will be using them soon. One note to other listeners, although you can install
|
||||
Kubernetes on the Raspberry Pi 3, it's super slow, so I wouldn't recommend it keep up the great work.
|
||||
And I will button there going, yes, I intend to do exactly the same thing. I intend to get
|
||||
four Raspberry Pi fours and run up Gabe Borg to that, Dave, just as a by the way.
|
||||
Okay, I was just before I read Mike Gray's comment. I was just watching a YouTube thing
|
||||
from earlier this year where a guy was building a k3 cluster, which is a reduced version of Kubernetes.
|
||||
And I must have listened to this show brilliantly done and everything, but I couldn't see why I
|
||||
would want it. But now I'm starting to think that maybe my brain needs extended a bit and get into
|
||||
this. So yeah, it's a place where you can run Docker containers. And yeah, I suppose,
|
||||
yeah, I suppose as a shoulder, as somebody could explain why you would need Kubernetes,
|
||||
we use it and work a lot, and it was a bit suspect about it, but it's actually the whole idea of
|
||||
having an embedded environment that will run. So you can have multiple sites being served from
|
||||
various different clusters. If only cluster goes down, it automatically brings up
|
||||
pod and another cluster. So if your Raspberry Pi goes down, that's detected. And your website is
|
||||
just an effected by moving over to the three other, to the other side. It's a bit like RAID and a
|
||||
RAID RAID for web serving web traffic. I mean, you get into issues where you do write operations,
|
||||
but for read operations, which majority of stuff is, it's a very good way of going about it.
|
||||
Yeah, it's something I'm going to have to have a good look at.
|
||||
And thank you, Klatu, for raising the concept. Anyway, Mike Ray says, great show, great show, Klatu.
|
||||
Fast delivery, accurate, concise, clear, uncluttered, few verbal ticks. Very few people can
|
||||
deliver a show as fast as I can think. One of about half a dozen hosts that have me reaching for
|
||||
the play button instead of the delete button. Of course, Mike will never have heard of that,
|
||||
having the lease of both of our, well, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's in three or two shows,
|
||||
but yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, I know. My name is Ken. Next, did it today?
|
||||
It's Mike. Yep. Yeah, Mike. Opera. That's us. That's us. That's us.
|
||||
That's the end of the month.
|
||||
Tune in next month for another exciting episode of No. Where are we? Yes, what comes next
|
||||
day for I've forgotten? It's been so long. We're going to look at the comments on past shows.
|
||||
Yeah. And we had a, we had a comment from me, plus one, from on next-todd application
|
||||
updating by ToadJet. And I just said I used this today. So that was an excellent comment
|
||||
for those from a show back in September. And you heard it somewhere, founded on, founded on HPR,
|
||||
using your tags thing, opened up the tags page, searched for next cloud, and then found that show,
|
||||
and have a listen. And that fixed me rightly. Very good. We also had a comment from FSA on
|
||||
show 3377 Chromebook Support and more from Zen Flota 2. Sorry, I'm coughing here. Do you want me
|
||||
to do it? No, no, I'm okay. He says sound quality trolling, question mark. I'm not sound quality
|
||||
snob and I'm happy to listen to shows recorded with unintentionally not great audio, as long as
|
||||
the subject matter is interesting to me. But I think it's another matter to intentionally create
|
||||
bad sound quality. Was it a joke? Just trying to make a point or just straight up trolling, which is
|
||||
why I suspect based on some of the other passing comments. Whatever the answer chalk up one more
|
||||
comments to a slash vote against the idea of intentionally creating a bad experience for your
|
||||
littered listeners. Yeah, we did mention, we did talk about this last month in the community news,
|
||||
and both Mr Ex and I said, we hadn't been too bothered by it, but then we discovered a bit later
|
||||
on that we both suffered from tinnitus, which means it partially dead. So it probably doesn't affect
|
||||
tinnitus sufferers as badly as people with brilliantly good hearing. So yeah, take what we said
|
||||
with the pinchest snuff I think. Yeah, when you said that last month show, the thing in your debt,
|
||||
I also suffered from a little bit of that. So it could be why I have the strong opinion that
|
||||
poor audio quality doesn't matter, perhaps to other people, it's downloading super annoying.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, you know, if you've got a cat or a dog in your house and they hear every tiny
|
||||
teeny noise, and which you don't hear yourself necessarily, I don't hear myself, and you know,
|
||||
it must be a bit like that, I would guess. Yeah, we were walking down the train from the past
|
||||
the graveyard there one time with the kids and it was only a year or two ago and they were saying this
|
||||
what was that noise? I don't know, what noise? And my wife was there and everybody heard it except
|
||||
me. It was so weird. And then I had a audio frequency thing on my phone when I took it out.
|
||||
And sure enough, there was a in the frequency range, I could see an audio sound that they were
|
||||
hearing that I couldn't hear. So, that was very just concerning and depressing. Yeah, yeah.
|
||||
Tinnitus is an absolute sort of a thing and that's why you should look after your ears when you're
|
||||
young. Yes, but all those concerts were cool and they were worth it. Just so you know all outside
|
||||
of my house and he's he's kind of bits of breaking stuff and concrete blocks with with with
|
||||
you know grindy wheel thingy and he doesn't wear any ear protection. It's so deaf when you
|
||||
give it older. There you go. That's the way. What can you do? Well, now, did we or did we not
|
||||
picture a three, four, three, nine? I'm seeing no problem. Okay, that's a shouldn't have gone to
|
||||
the mailing list. I broke an upload and midflights that was just an uploading issue.
|
||||
Yep, fine. Then we had a lot of information about the episode three, four, one, four.
|
||||
Suffice to say a lot of people considered this show to be factually incorrect.
|
||||
Um, let's see, um, and, and they, Nico says that he disagreed with us. I understand the
|
||||
usual HPR policy dictates those episodes are not be edited removed after the, well,
|
||||
but in the case of this episode, I think it's a responsible track of public radio to leave it up,
|
||||
especially in the mid of a global health crisis. Are there any plans to deal with this episode's
|
||||
potentially harmful content? Um, so let us go to a lot of comments about, uh, from Mike Ray,
|
||||
Yurune, um, Nigroverti Latu, um, you know, basically lots of, lots of people even stankdog
|
||||
came in. Some people I've never heard of before either, who have not contributed to show, um,
|
||||
commented, uh, but a lot of, a lot of opinion and it's, when I heard the show coming in,
|
||||
it was from a new host and they also had trouble uploading, um, not, but that's nothing too strange.
|
||||
And I listened to the show and I determined that the show was of interest to hackers.
|
||||
And therefore I posted the show and let us go to DOSMAN's comment, uh, particularly one paragraph
|
||||
in DOSMAN's comment. The system of HPR works fine as is it doesn't need special rules for special
|
||||
topics. If you dislike what another author is saying that's fine, please feel free to submit your
|
||||
own episode making encounter argument that you asked why not engage with the author of the
|
||||
episode that got your attention. Maybe you can do an episode together. HPR is not a large
|
||||
fastest argument corporation, so resorting to the same methods as one seems like a poor choice.
|
||||
The hard thing in all of this is that it's easy to take your own natural side.
|
||||
What we often miss is that usually both sides can be right and wrong at the same time.
|
||||
If you can't go into the conversation, what, uh, with that in mind, then it won't work well though.
|
||||
It's amazing what you can learn when you really try to wear the opinions of someone you oppose
|
||||
for a while. DOSMAN. And if you want to read the rest of that discussion, you can.
|
||||
RPG is synchronous play. This one's from PLATU. High RPG role-playing game players are the
|
||||
or open game curious. If you're interested in no-school role-playing games like the ones
|
||||
used to play back in the 80s, so, uh, more details are in the show notes and also on the mailing
|
||||
list. So if you're interested in that, um, links basically they're putting on a game.
|
||||
Is that how I read it? I think so, yeah. Yes. I'm moving on to the last one. HCR US bootkits.
|
||||
Does anyone know where the HCR US bootkits is? I'm sending over some stuff to, uh, Poggy and some
|
||||
other people. So, uh, if there's stuff for the US bootkits, I'd like to update some stickers and
|
||||
the like, that I have, but I don't know who has it. So if anyone knows where it is, that will
|
||||
be great. Dave, what do we do now? Just on the bootkits, I think the last person I know of
|
||||
having was Poggy, but he doesn't have it. He doesn't have it, okay. No. And I don't know.
|
||||
There was lots of work, uh, I also heard that you can go into the events and stuff, but there's
|
||||
a link there in the show and lots of driver looking for us, uh, the LWN community counter.
|
||||
And do you want to run through the, um, shows on the archive and tags and stuff?
|
||||
Yeah. Any other questions?
|
||||
We only managed to do five uploads in the past month because we were waiting to get the sequence
|
||||
of shows, um, with the tags and then there are so many gaps. It's not worth the code is,
|
||||
the code likes to work on ranges. So it's quite difficult to work around the gaps.
|
||||
Anyway, we'll get there soon. And so, yes, the really, the really important bit is the tags and
|
||||
summaries are to 72 and grown, both been working very hard to, uh, continue adding tags and summaries.
|
||||
And there were 76 shows which were updated in the past month. Now there are only 38 shows left
|
||||
that need summaries and tags. So, um, congratulations to the two of them for, for the massive
|
||||
amount of work that they've done between them. Um, it's hugely appreciated. It's amazing, amazing stuff.
|
||||
Yeah. We'll have, we'll have plenty for them to do after that.
|
||||
Yes, we did have a little discussion about what next. And yeah, uh, going through the shows and
|
||||
finding all the, all the problems with them and stuff, the gaps, the missing links and all that
|
||||
sort of stuff is one thought. But let's, uh, let's just have a rest probably after the tags and summaries.
|
||||
Um, I was thinking of going through mastodon, seeing if there was anything, anything that came
|
||||
through there. Um, but I haven't done any preparation for that. So, uh, there we go. We'll continue on.
|
||||
Okay. Um, that was it, Dave. What do we do now? Uh, we, we go off and do our things, I guess.
|
||||
I will edit the show and send it to you. And uh, I'm moving the data center from one shed,
|
||||
the old shed to the new shed, Dave. Oh, I can expect some downtime. Actually, you needed to post
|
||||
the show first. I do. I do. Yes. Once the show is ready, I can do it. I'll let you know and then
|
||||
pull whatever plugs you need. Yes, it's got a, uh, uninterruptible power supply,
|
||||
fiber, internet and, uh, fire suppression systems. And it's actually on the wall.
|
||||
It should be said to all the fire extinguishers.
|
||||
Still. Yeah, still. Sounded, sounded better before we're in the other,
|
||||
explanation. Yes, still impressive.
|
||||
Oh, still mad at Dave. Moving is doing my head at, uh, yes. Yes. So you have a sympathy.
|
||||
Uh, tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker, public radio.
|
||||
Indeed, that radio thing. Yes. We tried doing that last month. We didn't quite come out the way
|
||||
it was intended. The spirit was there that we were in our intentions were good.
|
||||
All right. See you later. Okay, cheers. Bye.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker, public radio at Hacker, public radio dot org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every week, Dave, 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, then 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 stated. Today's show is released under Creative Commons,
|
||||
Extribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user