Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 3936
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Title: HPR3936: HPR Community News for August 2023
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3936/hpr3936.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:40:18
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3936 from Monday the 4th of September 2023.
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Today's show is entitled HPR Community News for August 2023.
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It is part of the series HPR Community News.
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It is hosted by HPR Volunteers and is about 57 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in August 2023.
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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 Community News for August 2023.
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And joining me this evening is...
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Hello Dave Morris here.
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Hi Dave, how are you doing?
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I'm doing fine. Thank you. Yes, yes, it's good.
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It's quite mild and warm and pleasant in Edinburgh for a change.
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No more rain at the moment.
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I must say I'm not feeling very well today so I would like to keep this short if possible.
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So for those of you who don't know Hacker Public Radio is a community podcast
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where the shows are contributed by people like you go to the about page for more information on HPR.
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And this is Community News Show where we go over all the shows that have been posted in the last month.
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So you can basically get an idea of what's been happening,
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shows that you might have missed.
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And we also discuss anything that's happening in the community.
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So Dave, can you introduce the new hosts please?
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Yes, we have one new host this month and it's Fred Black who we heard from
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being talked to by his father. I think he was foxy last month.
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So yeah, welcome, welcome on board. Very, very good.
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So what we'll do now is go through the shows that have been aired.
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And the first show we want to discuss is episode 3912 which was an emergency show
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built on an Arroybus and this was Shane Shannon given us a taste of South Africa
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with some local tea and jerky.
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Very good. Yes, yes.
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Roy Bus was all the rage in these parts at one point because
|
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McCall Smith, the guy who wrote the
|
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ladies number one detective agency from from Botswana
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kept talking about it. So a lot of people in Edinburgh.
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I think that was really over the world.
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Reddy's books drink drank it. It's quite nice.
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It's nice. I drink it exclusively now as my tea of choice
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and because it doesn't contain any caffeine so it's a nice warm refreshing drink
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and you can go to bed afterwards.
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Yes, it's got quite a nice sort of fruity, fruity taste.
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So it's very much alike.
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So the following day we had lurking prions Q&A and this again was from the reserve queue
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and basically I, you know, some background to lurking prion and I didn't know what an
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M.M. was until I listened to the show.
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Yeah.
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Should we give them a spoiler, Dave?
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When it does say in the notes.
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It's not a penis. That's not a tropical or a penis.
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That's for sure.
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Well, there's a nice interesting background into
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his start off in the Navy, etc.
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That's a bit of a bit of a hint for anyone who didn't get it.
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Yep.
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It was most entertaining.
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I was a bit surprised to hear his history.
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It was good to know.
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And again, we had another reserve show.
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How to deal with blisters.
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And this was a technique by D&T.
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And oddly enough, I heard of this one many times before and I've used it once or twice
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myself. So it does actually work.
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I never heard this.
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My mom was a nurse before I was born during the Second World War.
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And her technique was to learn blister with a sterilized needle.
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Just put it in a flame to sterilize it.
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And then let the blister leak out and then put a plaster or bandage or whatever,
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whatever the technology was at the time to just to keep the thing.
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I mean, being a nurse, she was quite
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infection,
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conscious and concerned.
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Conscious. That's the word.
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Thank you.
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So yeah, yeah.
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But and I've used that technique.
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I never heard of this one quite like this.
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But certainly deflating them helps a lot.
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I'm not taking the skin away also.
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Yes.
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Oh, yes.
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No, don't do that.
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And then the reason we've had so many emergency shows of late is that
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what we've been doing is slight change of policy.
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We're up until this point when there have been free slots available in the in the queue.
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Some of our long-term hosts have been rushing to fill the slots.
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So what we've decided to do now is rather than do that,
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we're releasing shows from the reserve.
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Well, what was the emergency queue into the reserve queue?
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And there actually was a question about that.
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And I completely forgot to forward it onto the mail list.
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But I'll do that hopefully next week.
|
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Before you hear this, hopefully.
|
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So back to the point about the reserve queue.
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The emergency queue now is called the reserve queue.
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So when you upload your show, you have the option of scheduling a slot
|
||||
or put it into the reserve queue.
|
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When you put it into the reserve queue, Dave and I decide when to put it into the schedule.
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So it could very well be that we tend to work from a first-come first-serve show,
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but quite often some hosts will upload four or five episodes to the reserve queue.
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And therefore, we like to spread it out if there's four slots like this.
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Behind each other, we'll take the first show from one host,
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then we'll skip over to the next first show from the next host, etc.
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But basically, when you put it into the reserve queue,
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we decide and you don't complain about it.
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If you want to schedule us, if you do want to decide,
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if you don't want us deciding for you, sorry, a bit fuzzy today,
|
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if you don't want us deciding for you, then you schedule the show yourself.
|
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We don't care.
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Then you schedule the show yourself.
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And if you follow the scheduling guidelines, that's absolutely fine as well.
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Did I miss anything there, Dave?
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I don't think so.
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No, no, I think you've covered it.
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And yeah, I think that's quite a nice workable way of achieving it.
|
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As long as people are fully aware of what the reserve queue is for,
|
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and how we're going to use it, which you just explained.
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So that's great.
|
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Yeah, exactly.
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And I think this is kind of working already.
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I've seen some people submit shows because we have
|
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dipped into the emergency queue.
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So we've had a few hosts coming back to us,
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and we've had a few first-time hosts as well.
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So I think it's making the issue more visible to people.
|
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And added to that, we've also, I don't know if it's in the annual
|
||||
of the business, Dave, but we also had a slight delay
|
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on uploading one of the shows to the Internet Archive.
|
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No, it isn't in the AOB.
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I can be really forgot.
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Okay, yeah.
|
||||
So they are quite often under attack,
|
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under DDoS attack now, and sometimes it's busier than others.
|
||||
So we're leaving at least five episodes,
|
||||
five to seven episodes in the future.
|
||||
If there are slots in the upcoming week, we're filling them.
|
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That's kind of our policy now, so that we have enough time to be able to deal
|
||||
with shows not being posted.
|
||||
We are currently totally reliant on the Internet Archive
|
||||
for our media hosting.
|
||||
We will be working on that in the future as well.
|
||||
Indeed.
|
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Okay, and Mr. X had a reserve show called Why the Hell is My Audio Clipping.
|
||||
And Waffle It Maybe, but it was interesting to see how he was able
|
||||
the different types of attenuation.
|
||||
I personally couldn't tell the difference.
|
||||
Were you able to?
|
||||
No, no, I couldn't either.
|
||||
And I think to be fair, Mr. X himself mentioned in an email I had with him.
|
||||
Because we're meeting up soon to record a show that he couldn't tell himself.
|
||||
Although when it was on his PC, it was quite clear,
|
||||
but something happened along the way to make it less so.
|
||||
Yeah, I think it goes through the HVOR conversion process.
|
||||
So we convert everything out to the role PCM file and then put it back together again.
|
||||
So yeah, Lyle is obviously baited and is heading us though all at this point.
|
||||
Or is it into a sound expert?
|
||||
So anyway, moving on.
|
||||
Following day, we had the community news and there was one comment on that.
|
||||
And that was from DNT, who commented a grandfather clock,
|
||||
had a great laugh, a Ken's description of the popper environment,
|
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which to enjoy one of Spoon's shows.
|
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I think it's something about sitting in an armchair,
|
||||
smoking a pipe in front of a ticking grandfather clock or something to that effect anyway.
|
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Yeah, exactly, exactly.
|
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Needing to think about the shows was the idea.
|
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Yeah, pondering in a show like Holmesian Way, perhaps.
|
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And speak of the dull, one of Spoon's had a response to permission tickets,
|
||||
which was the next show, hopefully a useful provocation in response to the recent
|
||||
intriguing show by another HPR host.
|
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And yeah, this is DNT show.
|
||||
Sorry, DNT show.
|
||||
You've been saying that's one of Spoon's stories.
|
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In response to a lot of Spoon practice, thank you.
|
||||
Do you want to do the comments?
|
||||
Yes, and there gives a comment to the show.
|
||||
He says, breaking the spell.
|
||||
I look forward to including responses to some of the points you made into future episodes.
|
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Taxation can compel efforts to satisfy state orders by exceeding to employment,
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||||
but the extent to which a private citizen can refuse legal tender is a measure of their freedom.
|
||||
A lot of trigger words in there, of course, to avoid collapsing back into money talk for a while,
|
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though, I aim to report on some accessible tools.
|
||||
And DNT replied to that comment looking forward to it.
|
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In the interim, I shall procure a grandfather clock.
|
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Yes, yes, I need to do a show on it with it ticking.
|
||||
And DNT had another show today.
|
||||
EMAX Configuration Part 3, which is his last and his episodes of Let's Go
|
||||
through every single package installed in his EMAX Confederation.
|
||||
Over low comments on that one.
|
||||
So no, I find it fascinating, not that I read the details of it,
|
||||
but just hearing how it's all put together is rather intriguing.
|
||||
So yeah, it's good to know how these things are made.
|
||||
I found it most interesting.
|
||||
Yeah, EMAX is a mystery to me, I must say.
|
||||
Yeah, I've never delved that deeply.
|
||||
I only got so many brains else, so I couldn't devote them to that one as well, as to Vib.
|
||||
So the following day, 39-1-9, how I hacked my voice to Cauturator,
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||||
talks about what she's doing to change her voice.
|
||||
And there's been quite a few comments on that.
|
||||
First one was by One of Spoons.
|
||||
Morphic Resonance is a title.
|
||||
Some years ago, I met someone who had been smoothing the staccato out of their voice.
|
||||
This is where you correct my pronunciation of that, Dave.
|
||||
Staccato, is it?
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
Staccato, out of their voice.
|
||||
I noticed how some people yank their emphasis around,
|
||||
while others map layers of littering, meaning almost musical, but without singing.
|
||||
I also noticed how speaking a different language presents an opportunity to shake out some vocal habits.
|
||||
That's a very interesting comment, actually, I like that.
|
||||
One thing I did notice when I moved to the Netherlands originally was
|
||||
when talking to the school teachers in my kid's schools,
|
||||
they would switch to English at the time I couldn't speak Dutch, so they'd switch to English.
|
||||
And it was funny, you could go straight into an Australian accent, just like that,
|
||||
or you could tell, oh yes, I was in Cambridge for 14 years learning my vocabulary.
|
||||
I went back into their local Dutch accent, it was quite funny.
|
||||
And now it's amazing.
|
||||
And now all the kids just speak with the Californian accent.
|
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Oh my god, oh yes, oh yes, that's a very common across the world, I would imagine,
|
||||
in the English speaking areas.
|
||||
YouTube has a lot to answer for, horror tiktok.
|
||||
Anyway, you do take a tour of it all, yes.
|
||||
Tiktoto's response, lilting.
|
||||
That's a good advice, lilting voice.
|
||||
A lilting comma, a voice that raises and falls, is often perceived more feminine and a steady one.
|
||||
It doesn't change pitch that much.
|
||||
Other slightly related terms is uptalk, where pitch raises slightly towards the end of a sentence,
|
||||
making a statement sound more like a question.
|
||||
Uptalk is often perceived feminine, although it's not exclusively feminine trait.
|
||||
I know a lot of Australians do that, but every sentence has got that uptalk thing at the end.
|
||||
Yeah, there's people on YouTube who do it.
|
||||
I think they've probably been told, maybe you should stop doing that a little bit.
|
||||
Because it's quite odd because there's no meaning in that raised part of the sentence,
|
||||
it's just a habit, I think.
|
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In your frame of reference, Steve.
|
||||
In my frame of reference, exactly.
|
||||
Oh, yes, because it does have meaning in the way some Europeans speak or English speakers speak,
|
||||
don't they?
|
||||
D&T Roof says, hacking your voice.
|
||||
This was an amazing and completely unknown to me.
|
||||
Also, thanks for sharing that YouTube channel.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
And Tiktoto says, you're welcome.
|
||||
You're welcome, D&T.
|
||||
I'm glad you found this episode interesting.
|
||||
That YouTube channel goes much deeper in the details.
|
||||
There's a cool video where she's playing back voice samples from the past.
|
||||
So yeah, cool.
|
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And from hacking your voice to mosing around an RV trip in recreational vehicle trip in the
|
||||
southeast USA, this of course is a hookah.
|
||||
It's part of the travel series.
|
||||
And this is where the toward the southwest,
|
||||
southwest, US and visited some NASA facilities quite a long time ago that this was
|
||||
paulsted.
|
||||
Yep, yep.
|
||||
The, um, this is in planning for that point in the history of it.
|
||||
They'd know actually taking the trip yet.
|
||||
But yeah, the planning to be interesting is there's a lot to think about.
|
||||
Huge lot to think about.
|
||||
So when you're you're towing a large vehicle like like that,
|
||||
you know, some people, some healty can't climb, some bridges, you can't go under those types of things.
|
||||
Yeah, that's fascinating stuff to think about, yeah.
|
||||
That sounds like a song.
|
||||
Some bridges, you can climb, some rivers, you can crawl.
|
||||
Absolutely.
|
||||
Oh, right.
|
||||
Enough of this.
|
||||
Follow me.
|
||||
That's a hookah's theme song, obviously.
|
||||
A hookah, the musical.
|
||||
Uh, John Carter of Mars, which was the book and, and also was kind of cool.
|
||||
They had the, uh, author or not the author, but the narrator from LibraVox on.
|
||||
And that added a fantastic element to this whole thing.
|
||||
It did, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
Very, very interesting.
|
||||
I wouldn't have expected the show to have turned out the way it did.
|
||||
I found it quite riveting.
|
||||
I have read maybe all of those books, you know, one in books.
|
||||
I'm not a great audio book listener.
|
||||
But, um, yeah, yeah, the analysis of them and the comments.
|
||||
And also, Marx didn't get his last name.
|
||||
Did he, Mark?
|
||||
Mark the, the, the, the narrator.
|
||||
We, his, his insights were very, very interesting indeed.
|
||||
So, Kevin O'Brien comments, hearing 5150.
|
||||
He was a pleasant surprise to hear 5150 again.
|
||||
He was a good friend, even though I only saw him at conferences.
|
||||
I miss him.
|
||||
And did he say he had invited Tracy Holtz to join the book club?
|
||||
Tracy is a good guy too.
|
||||
I thought I had a reference to it.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
It was obvious.
|
||||
Oh, yes.
|
||||
Oh, 50.
|
||||
Oh, he's audio, so his, his, his, his, his network was so, uh,
|
||||
that that was so, uh, brings back memories.
|
||||
Oh, yeah.
|
||||
The number of times he was, you know, suddenly cut off in mid-sentence and stuff.
|
||||
All the things I listened to,
|
||||
is to listen to him on, on several, uh, several podcasts.
|
||||
And, uh, yeah, it was such, such a, such a shame for him.
|
||||
And the following day, we had, uh,
|
||||
episode 3922 by Trey,
|
||||
and it was Silent Key.
|
||||
And that's a brief history of the term Silent Key has applied to amateur radio.
|
||||
Do you ever come across this one before, Dave?
|
||||
I had never come across this before.
|
||||
No, no, I do, do know a number of people who are into amateur radio,
|
||||
but I've never, never heard, heard it.
|
||||
Um, does he mention his, he's lost, recently lost his friend and mentor?
|
||||
I think that's his, uh, his handle at the end, is it?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
KV4ID, and that, and that's, and that's what we should really understand.
|
||||
It was seven threes is, uh, is a greeting.
|
||||
And VA is, I don't know what that abbreviation is,
|
||||
and then EE means over and over.
|
||||
Hmm, yeah.
|
||||
Very sad, very sad.
|
||||
It's, uh, yeah, it's a term that means the, uh,
|
||||
the key is Silent, i.e. Morse code key, because the,
|
||||
the person, uh, associated with it is past,
|
||||
which is, which is very, very sad.
|
||||
It's, um, within, as amateur radio has been going around for more than a hundred years,
|
||||
it has more than any other community had to deal with this, uh, basically this issue,
|
||||
uh, the inevitable death that awaits us all.
|
||||
Um, and I, when I came into amateur radio first, I could not understand, you know,
|
||||
he's turned ESK, SK, and, uh, in, in all of the magazines,
|
||||
but the, the, the Dutch and the English ones, you have that, you know,
|
||||
section of, uh, people who turned Silent key in the last month or so.
|
||||
Oh, that's interesting.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
That's, that's really, that's quite, uh, quite charming in, in, in its way.
|
||||
You know, it's, it's, uh, sad, but it's also good that there's,
|
||||
there's that sort of process of, uh, uh, yeah, in memory of, of people like that.
|
||||
And quite often you'll have, uh, the widow of, you know,
|
||||
handle who recently turned Silent key is selling off or selling off the equipment
|
||||
to raise money for some hospice or other.
|
||||
That's quite often.
|
||||
You'll see that sort of thing going past.
|
||||
And Tukator says, my condolences, I'm sorry for your loss.
|
||||
Also interested in learning about Silent key.
|
||||
I wasn't aware of that before.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
And, uh, um, lovebug, uh, who is, uh, also an amateur radio, um,
|
||||
enthusiastic.
|
||||
My condolences.
|
||||
He says, I'm sorry to hear of Michael KV for why D is passing.
|
||||
Everyone in the amateur radio community mourns his passing.
|
||||
It's never nice to hear of new Silent keys.
|
||||
Thank you for looking after the administration of his records.
|
||||
7-3-DE-DEV-N7-TLB, which is James Hadel.
|
||||
Okay, let's follow us with, uh, some guy in the internet,
|
||||
chatting to Bumblebee about meal preparation.
|
||||
And this was, you know, we're getting, we're getting the essence of HBR here,
|
||||
changing the voice, meal preparation, Silent key, you know, this is,
|
||||
this is HBR right here this month, I think.
|
||||
Oh, yeah, a lot of these are very good tips.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
This is great.
|
||||
I enjoyed this a lot.
|
||||
This was, uh, the, the, the, the episodes of, I think we've said before many times,
|
||||
episodes where people are discussing stuff and chatting to one another, um,
|
||||
uh, some of the best.
|
||||
And this, this was very good.
|
||||
It was a very, very dynamic and interesting.
|
||||
Lots of good tips and, uh, um, organizational advice and so forth.
|
||||
So yeah, very, very good.
|
||||
I enjoyed it a lot.
|
||||
And as it happens, uh, we have decided to do something similar to this,
|
||||
not a lot of the tips that Bumblebee has given we have already implemented over the years.
|
||||
So, um, when we're trying out meal preparations just at the weekend and then
|
||||
having them ready for the week for the entire family because we have, uh, days where we're
|
||||
working from work and working from home and, uh, we should know there's no one on the trends.
|
||||
So she's going to, uh, uh,
|
||||
intermittent schedule.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||||
And having all that sort of stuff prepared ahead of time and, uh, just waiting to be, uh,
|
||||
deprosted and, and heating up and stuff is, is, it's great.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Pop it into your bag and bring it into work and it's, uh, pulled out by the time you were ready to use it.
|
||||
Yep, I've certainly done stuff like that, but, uh, I don't do that anymore because,
|
||||
yeah, whatever reason.
|
||||
Good, good, good.
|
||||
Operator had a mass quick tips for August 2023.
|
||||
Uh, he obviously wants to get through his huge database.
|
||||
I might do something like this myself.
|
||||
Uh, lots of great little tips in here.
|
||||
Uh, some of which I've never heard of before and some I use a lot
|
||||
already.
|
||||
Yeah, it was a lot to come back to and, uh, and ponder.
|
||||
But, uh, yeah, there was some, there was some, there was some real gems in there.
|
||||
I haven't dug back in again, uh, but, uh, but I, I will because there's, there's things there
|
||||
that I need following up as far as I'm concerned.
|
||||
Now, some of them I would never, uh, I do, uh, he is written, uh,
|
||||
streamed to text with keyboards.
|
||||
I, some of them I had not seen before and the Yek text, uh, keyword extraction.
|
||||
I think he already did a show on that.
|
||||
So I've solved the same issue, but doing it a different way.
|
||||
It's kind of what I'm trying to say.
|
||||
Yeah, anyway, let's move on.
|
||||
There were no comments on that as yet.
|
||||
Uh, then we had Daniel Pearson's with uncommon tools and social media.
|
||||
Uh, uh, Vmix to record his videos and then Premiere and then, uh, moved over to Ubuntu.
|
||||
Yeah, largely about, uh, video editing and stuff.
|
||||
He was talking and a bit about social media.
|
||||
He's been off Facebook.
|
||||
He said, but he's, uh, going to go back again.
|
||||
He thinks because, uh, he's losing touch with friends by not being there, which, yeah,
|
||||
you know, he's just sympathized with, yeah.
|
||||
That sort of effect.
|
||||
There you go.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
Yep, indeed.
|
||||
Now the next day we had Karate do by HyperNike.
|
||||
And there were two comments.
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
Is it your turn or mine?
|
||||
Uh, I'll do this one, I'd be like, um, yeah, coming from Trey.
|
||||
He says, thank you for sharing.
|
||||
A long time ago, as a young adult, I studied, I studied Takewondo, TKD for many years.
|
||||
Eventually earning my brown belt taught me discipline and forced me to develop a level
|
||||
of physical precision.
|
||||
I'd been lacking.
|
||||
Sadly, life events intervened and I discontinued my training.
|
||||
A couple of decades later, I tried Ishinuro Karate, but I struggled to unlearn
|
||||
stances and techniques, which were ingrained in my muscle memory.
|
||||
For fun, I tried to work through, tried to work through some of the TKD
|
||||
forms or the equivalent of Kata, and I remember several of them.
|
||||
Time to get those old bones moving again.
|
||||
Thank you for sharing.
|
||||
And HyperNike says, you're welcome.
|
||||
Again.
|
||||
So from the Reserve Q, we had an audacity update for 230702.
|
||||
And this is one, actually, if I had spotted it, I would have recommended that
|
||||
a hooker put it into the main Q because Reserve Q, we should be just for shows that
|
||||
are not time-dependent.
|
||||
So this is about the state of play and audacity from the July 2023, which wasn't too long ago,
|
||||
but even so.
|
||||
Yeah, interesting to hear it.
|
||||
I wasn't aware of that.
|
||||
I don't keep up to date with audacity that much.
|
||||
I just use it when I need it.
|
||||
So, yeah, I think it's been going through some funny times, isn't it?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
In fact, I found a YouTube video where a guy was trying to analyse the situation of audacity,
|
||||
in relation to what's the other one called.
|
||||
The clone of it was names escaped at the moment, which I will recommend at some point.
|
||||
Because it seemed to cover, it filled in gaps for me anyway.
|
||||
Maybe it would be the same for others.
|
||||
Okay, following day, some guy in the internet confuses everyone with some bash nonsense.
|
||||
This was a fantastic episode just of some of his functions.
|
||||
The way he approaches problems are becoming a lot less strange now that he has done so
|
||||
much more shows.
|
||||
Yeah, he's got some interesting approaches to things.
|
||||
I just find it most interesting to see how different people solve problems.
|
||||
If you go to solve things yourself, you're fixed in a rut of habit,
|
||||
or something, previous experience.
|
||||
See somebody else attack from an entirely different, maybe set them habits,
|
||||
or just different mode of thought.
|
||||
It's fascinating because it opens doors for you.
|
||||
I certainly thought this show did that.
|
||||
Yeah, fantastic.
|
||||
Do you want to do Trae's comment?
|
||||
Yep, Trae says, Good Heavens.
|
||||
That must be copyright.
|
||||
Thanks for sharing this awesome show.
|
||||
Always good to see how different people approach similar tasks.
|
||||
D&T goes, Good Heavens, lots of exclamation marks.
|
||||
Several laugh out loud moments there with some guy on the internet here.
|
||||
The one I would clip and attach to my friend, Fridge's,
|
||||
see in open source we provide you with the tools that,
|
||||
if you do not specifically say, do not download the entire internet, you will then download
|
||||
the entire internet.
|
||||
Thanks for setting up the automatic transcription challenge list.
|
||||
You're welcome.
|
||||
Yeah, classic episodes.
|
||||
Absolutely, absolutely.
|
||||
And it's true, isn't it?
|
||||
It's true.
|
||||
You know, it's, it's all about, it's like the old joke that I constantly try out,
|
||||
you know, the, is it Laurel and Hardy?
|
||||
When I nod my head, you hit it.
|
||||
And if you say that to a computer, then you're definitely going to get clouted on the head.
|
||||
Yeah, you know, because it will, it will go for the simplest analysis of that situation.
|
||||
So yeah, it's, it's part, it's that type of thing, isn't it?
|
||||
So the following day, we had some experiences with different
|
||||
nought apps, and there's about apps to store and mark down by Lee.
|
||||
And Lee was the one who submitted the show about the local talking newspapers back in
|
||||
back in April 2022.
|
||||
Yes, yes, I knew I encountered the name before in the HTML context, and I also looked it up.
|
||||
Yeah, that was a very interesting show.
|
||||
And this one, I was amazed how many note applications he found.
|
||||
I really got to go and look at some of those.
|
||||
But yeah, it's, it could be, it could be very useful in preparing HPR shows and that type of thing.
|
||||
I thought also the reason for moving off them and to continuing on with them was also
|
||||
quite interesting. It's just, yeah, very good synopsis of somebody's trail of thought journey.
|
||||
Yep. Yep. Good show. Next one.
|
||||
So the next day, we had a hooker playing civilization to test of time.
|
||||
And yeah, going through the game.
|
||||
Did, did you get odd audio on this show?
|
||||
Because my, I didn't, my phone running, whatever it is, you run around, phone.
|
||||
So I can't remember names today. I'm having problems recalling
|
||||
and tenipod and tenipod. I wanted to call it audacity.
|
||||
It would only play this audio when the screen was was on.
|
||||
Oh, as soon as it timed out, it went into or dialic mode.
|
||||
I wonder if somebody said there was some issue with the show with shows.
|
||||
I'm maybe the copy I have was downloaded very soon after. It was uploaded.
|
||||
I've got the futures futures feed on my phone. So I'm assuming that is the problem.
|
||||
I'm actually trying to read down loading it to see what effect it has.
|
||||
Does that ring bell to you?
|
||||
Yes, we had an issue with audio and we fixed it by removing socks from the chain
|
||||
and relying entirely on NFFM pick.
|
||||
Okay. And a hooker show would have been one of the, you know, they're all posted
|
||||
when advanced. So they may not have got that change as yet.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah. So I should go and read down loading anything from that sort of era
|
||||
and in terms of a hooker stuff, perhaps.
|
||||
Yeah. Okay. Good. Okay. The next day was what instrument was played in HPR 3905.
|
||||
And I was very glad to find out the answer to that question.
|
||||
I answered the quiz that out to 72 posed on Matrix.
|
||||
And I did, I did know it was a nickel harpa.
|
||||
And like because I can't remember where I found out about it.
|
||||
It might have been a Swedish person I'd been chatting to about musical instruments or something
|
||||
you'd said, oh, yeah, our national instrument is this.
|
||||
And it's related to the Hurley Goody, which is an instrument I particularly enjoy.
|
||||
So yeah, yeah. But that was great. It's a weird, weird instrument.
|
||||
And it's, yeah, it's good to hear somebody talking about it and playing it. It's excellent.
|
||||
And I thought this was taking the, taking the Wikipedia article, which has been
|
||||
creditors and reading it out, was a good way because it was supplemented.
|
||||
As he was reading the article, he was supplementing it with his own knowledge
|
||||
as somebody who wasn't playing it. So it was nice.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was fascinated by the fact that he was obviously holding his instrument there.
|
||||
And occasionally you just heard sand finger against string.
|
||||
And, you know, it's made it very, very real.
|
||||
Yeah. So you don't get from Wikipedia.
|
||||
Under C.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a pretty amazing instrument.
|
||||
Yeah, there's a YouTube channel I follow, a German lady who called herself Patti Goody,
|
||||
who was trying to get back into using Goody Goody's for a sort of folk style or folk rock type
|
||||
of type of music. She had one built and went, told us all about how it was made and now it worked
|
||||
and everything. I found it absolutely fascinating. Not that everyone to play one, it looks really
|
||||
quite challenging. It's a, yeah, a fascinating instrument. I should point to the YouTube video
|
||||
at some point or other. I've just gone to the page now, right there. It seems very much up my street.
|
||||
And the next day, Falky, give us a show on INXI, which is a command line system information too,
|
||||
where he chastised us, Dave, our lack of knowledge. He called us noobs for not knowing about it.
|
||||
You're so new. He did. I don't know why I did this show, really. I don't know.
|
||||
I know. It's the end of your bonus, Dave.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, I felt well, well slapped about there and I told him to go and stand in the corner
|
||||
and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. No, having maybe seen the show come up, I thought, well,
|
||||
just in check there and install it. It's actually really nice. I like it a lot. It's not as pretty
|
||||
as the one I used to use, but it's, it's packed with information. So yeah, definitely recommend it.
|
||||
I don't know what I was doing the ironing and nearly burnt my shirts. Thank you very much, Falky.
|
||||
Because it's a DNF install INXI away. So it's not installed by default, which is probably
|
||||
why it's not coming up on the Fedora forums as such, as much. I don't know if it's installed
|
||||
on Debian but default, but it was really nice just to be able to, I used it this afternoon to check
|
||||
the status of my battery from the console. It's a very, very good. It's good to be added to my Ansible
|
||||
install script. Yeah, yeah. It's definitely one that you'd want to use frequently. I would suggest.
|
||||
So yeah, it's fascinating to see stuff telling you about. In a different way from other
|
||||
other tools, but in a different level of detail too. Yeah. No, it's kind of cool. I've normally used
|
||||
LSHW, this hardware, and another tool that isn't installed by default, but it produces a text file,
|
||||
and then I just refer to the text file when I need to. But that's more static what my system is.
|
||||
This is more tell me what my system is now. Very, very good. I should be using it a lot.
|
||||
Indeed. Following day was planning for a planner. Some guy in the internet,
|
||||
and Bumblebee discuss disbound planners, agendas, pens and more. And for those of you,
|
||||
and I must say I was one of them thinking, well, I don't think I'm going to get a lot out of this show.
|
||||
And at the end, I was going, what? You're cutting this in two. I need to wait for the next part.
|
||||
To download the second part and listen to that straight away. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I suspected that I
|
||||
would be rooted, and I was. It was really good. The disk band planners, nothing I've ever come across.
|
||||
I'm not sure. I don't go looking at stationary sites as much as I used to. I don't go at
|
||||
stationary shops as much as I used to. But yeah, I've never seen theme though. It's what I haven't
|
||||
looked for, in particular. But it looks like a really nice design for a ring binding system,
|
||||
a binding system, shall we say. And yeah, you can take the pages in and out quite easily,
|
||||
and that type of thing. I see them before, but I didn't see them referred to as that.
|
||||
No, no. The shape of the ring is such that it fits into a T-shaped slot on the paper,
|
||||
which fascinates me. I don't know how many times you can move the paper in and out before
|
||||
it gets a bit raggedy around the slot, but still, it's pretty good. So shall I do the coming up
|
||||
from Trey? Thank you for sharing, says Trey. I love the way people like you all stay so organised.
|
||||
I've struggled with organisation all my life, tried everything from cheap planners to Franklin
|
||||
brackets expensive, with little success. I eventually converted my Franklin planner to keep
|
||||
flight notes and check this from my general aviation days. The best I can do now is using Google
|
||||
Calendar, Google Keep. Please keep the plane to the minimum, and good old stenopads for note-taking,
|
||||
which I transcribe the important bits later. Thank you for sharing so much excellent advice. You both
|
||||
rock. And my King's secret. I think so, yeah, so I take.
|
||||
Interesting topic. I enjoyed this like Trey. I have not taken down at work, but realise again,
|
||||
with this episode like Trey that note and planning for my personal life is lacking. I like the idea
|
||||
of using a planner for both the planning and note-taking and mid-try that. There you go, Dave.
|
||||
Yeah, it's great. I like this. It's, yeah, I could also learn stuff. I've certainly done this type
|
||||
of thing at work. I think I designed my own sort of logbook page and then put it in a ring binder.
|
||||
So, you know, you could put the date and the time and and priority level for things that you wrote
|
||||
down about and stuff. But do we just bits of paper that's got stuck on a shelf and never got used?
|
||||
But it felt like I was doing something useful. Yeah, but I've never done that sort of thing at home.
|
||||
You've done that. When I first started working, I used to get from the stationery cupboard,
|
||||
these banned notebooks, you know, like a four-size notebooks. And then every day I would write down
|
||||
stuff about today, I installed Blar on here and today I screwed up totally and had to go and fix
|
||||
what I had broken and stuff like that. So I forgot them. There's a pile about, I don't know, half a
|
||||
meter tall of these books and this. I don't know quite why I did it. It just felt like a way of
|
||||
concentrating my thoughts at the time. And maybe I learned something. I don't remember going back
|
||||
to look at them very often. In case it was a mess, it was a case of, what did you do last Monday?
|
||||
Yeah, and I could answer it, but yeah, it's a sort of write things down and get it in your
|
||||
head type of thing, I think, for me. But yeah, fascinating.
|
||||
So the following day, last show of the month, we had Crusader Kings 2, about a strategy game,
|
||||
which Austin Old about Crusaders is about other empires that existed as well. And how basically
|
||||
the work into the gameplay and how it works. Very interesting. That's about it. That's all I have
|
||||
to say about that. Yeah. Yes, it's hard to understand in detail with, you know, you can't see it
|
||||
and you can't experience it, but it sounded quite a challenging and complicated and they're
|
||||
for entertaining thing. Yeah, my daughter's been telling me I should consider getting a games
|
||||
machine, steam deck, nothing like that. I don't think I'd be playing Crusader Kings 2,
|
||||
even if it's available, but something to do other than sit in a computer all day,
|
||||
sit somewhere else with a computer, something like that. But I don't know, is there,
|
||||
is there, maybe I should be my late stage of my life getting into games a bit more again,
|
||||
to see if that can sort of take me away from reality for a little while.
|
||||
She doesn't want you working on it, pure. It's a simple thing. She wants to give her the amount of
|
||||
work that you do for it, pure. It's probably a good idea to get another hobby to be.
|
||||
She was making me a list of, we should try this game in this game in this game. So not sure
|
||||
that this type of game would actually be on the list, but there'd be a whole bunch of other ones.
|
||||
I quite like the sci-fi ones if I can get into them. Yeah, it might do, might not, but I might do.
|
||||
Okay, let's go through those all the shows with five comments from previous shows,
|
||||
and this comment was on a hookah show playing the original civilization, and Tukutorot,
|
||||
or says this was bringing back memories. I used to play civilization a lot, and was still,
|
||||
and is still a very awesome game in my very first game. Things went horribly wrong,
|
||||
and when I finally got around to having chariots, my neighbours just demolished them with their
|
||||
tanks. I clearly have been focusing on the wrong things at the time. I'm thinking that we should
|
||||
get our daughter to give it a try to an experience that one more turn behavior.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's good to think of your progeny getting into these things,
|
||||
so if they have a happy enthusiasm to do so, fantastic. So the next comment was on
|
||||
Claudio Miranda's show, which is that SSH or Open SSH escape sequences, and it's from Windigo,
|
||||
who says, thanks for the episode. It feels like SSH escape sequences are secret commands,
|
||||
and I feel cooler for knowing about them. Very much so, yes. And on paintings toy soldiers by
|
||||
that too, where he started painting miniatures for war games, Tukutorotos says it's a great show.
|
||||
I love listening to you explaining about painting toy soldiers. I wanted to add that if time
|
||||
needed to paint a 28 millimeter figurine is too long, one can always try switching to a different
|
||||
scale. I enjoyed the 10 millimeter engines because they're faster to paint and look quite nice
|
||||
from arm's length, not from can. I don't think my eyesight would be able to handle any of that
|
||||
without a microscope. Yeah, yeah, you'd need to get one of those sort of jewelers.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, it's the same here, really, same here. So we have a comment on Andrew Conway's show,
|
||||
The Braux of Glenel. It sounds great. Yeah, it sounds like an incantation you say in the cellar,
|
||||
somewhere other. By the Braux of Glenel, and it's from Windigo again, intriguing show topic,
|
||||
he says, not only did I enjoy your episode, but I think the concept behind it is worth exploring.
|
||||
We have HBR hosts across the globe, and surely each of us lives near something worth an episode,
|
||||
which is a brilliant point. I do and do like that point. Yes, indeed.
|
||||
Hello? Yep. Okay, cool. So let's do the male list discussions. The male list, by the way, is a
|
||||
where the HBR community discusses forum and policy agenda, that sort of thing, or general inquiries
|
||||
to the community. So can you do a microphone please? Yes, we have an email from Mike Ray,
|
||||
who asks any Gaelic speakers on the list or Gallic, however you like to pronounce it. Hello,
|
||||
public radio hackers. I sent this before, but I think to the wrong address. Are there any
|
||||
Scottish Gallic speakers on the list? The word Scottish is redundant in that sentence, and is only
|
||||
there, because some people think Irish can also be called Gaelic or Gallic. I've just started to
|
||||
learn Gallic on Duolingo, and it has me addicted. We'd like to have the occasional chat with anybody
|
||||
who speaks both English and Gallic online. There was one teacher chat from Lewis, I didn't spell it
|
||||
right, but never mind, but I cannot remember his name. That would be heavy, of course. I started this
|
||||
because of my love for Scotland, and there's a better use of my downtime than listening to endless
|
||||
books on audible. And I reply, I'm interested to know why you would say Irish is not Gaelic, are
|
||||
you perhaps thinking that Irish people speaking English language is the Irish language? And just
|
||||
a side note here, that happens quite a lot in the Netherlands. And I give some links to the Irish
|
||||
language Wikipedia website and the National Broadcasters programs in Gaelic, so you can listen to Irish,
|
||||
the Irish language. To answer your question, I was fluent in Gaelic having first level in a
|
||||
Gaelic school, which is the Irish language school. There we learned everything, including English
|
||||
using the Irish language. That said, it's been decades since I used it, although I can still follow
|
||||
Monster Irish, but Galway and Donegal Irish is tough. I've been able to get the gist of some BBC
|
||||
Alba programs. Can you do Andrews? Yes, yes, yes, sorry, it takes me a moment to change.
|
||||
No, bro, find the thing to click on and move. In Scotland, this is from Andrew Conway.
|
||||
Scottish Gaelic is usually just called Gaelic, pronounced Gaelic, I see, is it phonemically,
|
||||
an Irish Gaelic is pronounced Gaelic, but often prefixed with the word Irish. I understand in Ireland
|
||||
it's not referred to as Gaelic amongst speakers of the language, but only the most erudite would
|
||||
know that outside Ireland. In fact, my uncle who's mother with Irish calls it Irish Gaelic.
|
||||
Yeah, that makes sense. Hi, Andrew, as I said to Ken, I don't pretend to know. I'm just repeating
|
||||
what some grumpy cat told me on Facebook, not, and he also goes on to say, if I'm honest,
|
||||
I'm only a regurgitation with somebody told me on Facebook, I don't pretend to know. I asked
|
||||
some questions in local form and started a spat between the scat who told us she only remembered
|
||||
enough Gaelic to fill in forms to get out of their direct calls. The other lady who, I guess,
|
||||
was either Irish or just typical Facebook lurking morning mini. Interesting. I know a guy who came
|
||||
to work as a contractor in a company in Ireland and specifically learned to speak Gaelic before,
|
||||
Irish Gaelic before coming and then was shocked that nobody was able to speak it with him.
|
||||
Yes, yes. They have a good ad on the TV, you know, Angie Racism ad where they have a guy
|
||||
and on Irish Gaelic went into the pub and he's speaking Irish with the barman and some biggest
|
||||
tells him to fuck off back to his own country. Sorry there. And then, you know, they're talking
|
||||
I didn't get it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I could, that could be real, it could not be, be a real situation.
|
||||
Okay, in the last topic in case of emergency, this is the discussion we had. I think it would
|
||||
make us, we had Kingsay, Kings Hazy, Kingsay, Kingsay, Kingsay. Can you please do a show telling us
|
||||
how to pronounce your handle? Thank you. I think you would make sense to share some other way of
|
||||
contacting the individual, for example, by phone. This could be done informally among a couple
|
||||
of people who somehow trust each other and it seems like a reasonable precaution to me.
|
||||
Unfortunately, my understanding is the missing in action individual that helped bring up this
|
||||
question already had their full number. So it's not foolproof. Correct.
|
||||
Yep. So Dave, what else do we do? Well, we have a few jottings under any other business.
|
||||
Go for it. So yeah, I just made some notes about how we're getting on with the site migration
|
||||
process. So we've moved, obviously, moved the issue aside to the new location and we've been
|
||||
implementing all of the features there during, during August and a little bit before.
|
||||
And we've been updating links on documentation pages, which were, which were wrong. I think
|
||||
there still are a few that need work, but I've not checked. Moving, we've moved our SSVs from
|
||||
the dynamic part of the site to the static site. I think there's still some that haven't been moved,
|
||||
but I'm not. No, we're absolutely sure. You've generated today. I've made them for you,
|
||||
but yeah, they've not been, they've not been. Okay, I should have asked you first.
|
||||
We've made the comment forms work the same as before. So you get different form depending on how old
|
||||
or ahead of the current date the show is. When you go to the comment form, we've made tags, tags
|
||||
clickable. But there's more work to be done there. There've been unique code problems.
|
||||
If you've been mentioned before, and there were still some issues, which I think we've solved,
|
||||
but seeing any evidence that they're not solved. Anyway, we've fixed small bugs like
|
||||
got the calculation or the software got the calculation wrong as to when to put up the call for
|
||||
shows message. So yeah, we've done that. There are a number of problems that are yet to be tackled,
|
||||
and probably the most high priority one is making links to pictures and other supplementary files
|
||||
work on shows that have them. And less important, perhaps, is making links in comments clickable.
|
||||
We've had a number of helpful problem reports, but they've been mainly through the HBO channel on
|
||||
Matrix, and just to say that you can raise issues on the GITI side, but you need to have a username
|
||||
to authenticate first before you can do that. That's something that was implemented by Josh,
|
||||
so quite reasonably. So yeah, anything you have to point out that's problematic, let us know,
|
||||
and we'll add it to the queue and process it. Yeah, and to give you some idea of the time
|
||||
where the update and the documentation links is, while you've been doing all the cool stuff,
|
||||
fixing Unigode and all that, I've been doing the immensely boring task of checking all
|
||||
old links, fixing them, converting them HGTBS, removing redundant page, consolidating everything
|
||||
into the above page, and still not finished. So it's so destroying work. I'm getting through it.
|
||||
So yeah, the links are been fixed as just taking a long time to do it.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, we did get a comment saying, oh, they're all wrong on this page, but I think it was
|
||||
one of the pages that had been factually made redundant by consolidating everything into one page,
|
||||
so if the page gets lost, there won't be anything to do. So yeah, so it's going to be a while
|
||||
before those are fixed, hopefully before the next community news show. And what else on that?
|
||||
Yeah, there's, even though I'm just currently taking the loose independent pages that we had
|
||||
and putting them into one big about page with anchor references in it. So I still need to go through
|
||||
that and fix up to date everything once I've done all that. So it's basically take the old site
|
||||
and run, I put them into individual pages like we had them on the old site, but now we're consolidated
|
||||
them into the above page and then I'll push that up first to fix all the links and then I'll go back
|
||||
and at least the above page we can edit the text because all the documentation will be more
|
||||
less than one page. Yeah, yeah, I'll make that a lot easier. Yeah, yeah, that'd be good,
|
||||
be good. And north to everybody else, we will probably go and change the RSS links this month.
|
||||
Keep an eye out for that. If you haven't received your HBO shows, then tell us about it.
|
||||
And don't assume that we don't know about it, that would be great.
|
||||
Problem reports would always be great. Thank you. Yep, absolutely.
|
||||
Anything else, Dave? Nope, there's nothing else.
|
||||
Okay, I'll sign off and ask you to chime in tune in tomorrow, don't know what chime in is,
|
||||
but tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker. Public Radio.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HBO listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
|
||||
broadcast, then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive,
|
||||
and our synced.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released on our creative comments,
|
||||
attribution 4.0 International License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user