Episode: 2111 Title: HPR2111: HPR Community News for August 2016 Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2111/hpr2111.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:30:27 --- This is HBR episode 2,111 entitled HBR Community News for August 2016 and is part of the series HBR Community News. It is hosted by HBR volunteers and is about 92 minutes long. The summary is made and can discuss the last month why we need shows and the correct way to hand toilet paper. This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com. Hi everybody my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to HBR Community News for August 2016. HBR is a community podcast network or what was that you said in your thingy crowd sourced podcast. I like that. I like that a lot. Joining me tonight is Dave Morris. Hi Dave. Hello everybody. Hi there. Can you welcome the new host please Dave? Yes indeed. Just hold on a second. Failing to switch tabs appropriately. Oh yes. We have one you host and it is Matt King USA. Indeed it is. So HBR Community News is your chance to have a look at the video quick review of all the shows that have been posted in the last month. Any comments there have been on the mailing list and we talk about the comments left on the previous shows. That's pretty much it. Anything else that is new and exciting will bring up as well. How have you been since last month Dave? Oh busy as always but yeah doing things for Hacker Public Radio or on and off as well you know it's a few things. Things happen. It's important. It's important especially producing shows folks because we had a bit of a scare this month again. The upload we have a feast and famine thing going on here at HBR and over the last month we've had a few times where we've needed to ask people to help out. Now that usually happens over the summer in the Northern Hemisphere but I would really love it if people would contribute shows especially if you happen to ever contribute to the show. Please do so. It's crowdsourced. So imagine you're the only person that a log that hasn't contributed with new feel silly if you didn't submit a show. What do you reckon Dave? I think that's absolutely right. Couldn't argue with it. Excellent. So and if you have been contributed in 2016 now will be an ideal time to do it. Winter clothes and in or if you're in the Southern Hemisphere hot days forcing you to stay in your nice air conditioned rooms where you can record podcasts. So anybody can record a show and it's really easy to do. Just go to the give shows section on the website and all the information you could possibly ever want is right there for you. So one of the things about HBR's we produce quite a lot of shows and I was thinking Dave of seeing as this show is open to all the community at any time to contribute and to join. It usually happens to be myself yourself or John or Kevin but it's open to pretty much anyone who wishes to record. Then I would suggest that if you wanted to subscribe to just a short summary feed that this would be the that you didn't want to or you've been overwhelmed by the number of shows coming into the queue that you could subscribe to the HBR community news feed and then use that as your source of what to download what might be of interest to you. What do you think about that? Well that's not a bad idea actually not a bad idea and the the show notes that we produce for this show you could use as a sort of launching point to go and listen to them on the website. That looks interesting or I've heard what they said about it. I'll click on that one and listen. I'm not so sure about doing it in a feed but that's all our theories Dave come by default with a feed indeed they do. So it would be I think I might suggest that on the mailing list to update the feed page talking about the community news as a jump off point to what we do here on HBR and hopefully then people will go and subscribe to the main feed because looking the reason everything this hop is looking at the downloads we get probably about 50% of the downloads are drive by downloads are you know people watching the feed and then download and they shows after the fact you're playing them directly on the website. Right okay that's interesting. I'd like to sort of assume most people just connected a pod catcher to it and did did thing that we do. Do I hear a car when you're a living room dude? That's my daughter who is who knows I'm recording and has gone to another room because she's suffering from hay fever but unfortunately Clara you're very loud. No that's fine. She's uh yeah yeah she's she's a good girl. Yeah we do the whole HBR audience heard that Clara yeah. Don't worry about it Clara we've already heard you on HBR so we're we're glad to hear more of it. She's off back off to university tomorrow so we're driving up to St. Andrews take it back so turn starts next week so hopefully no more interruptions. No worries I sent mine off to bed so uh there you go. Anyway let's dive into this HBR community news was episode 2686 sorry I'm reading in Dutch back to front and we had one comment on that episode and that was um Tony Hughes what's in my bag hi guys just a comment on your comment on my show 2065 the laptop I talked about were all brought at the local computer option that I've been going to for about nine years and were most of my PC where most of my PC tech comes from so not donated but bought at a very reasonable cost the Lenovo X61 cost me 35 pounds each and made brilliant little netbooks and if they ever get broken you can move on and I've not lost a fortune that is very good to know I have no idea what a computer auction is but I'm presuming it's a computer auction do you know what they're? I don't know I've never encountered one but I assume that just like you can go to a car auction and bid on a on a car I guess must be similar things that do this for the computers but I don't think they have any around this part of the world but Tony's lucky to be somewhere where they do I have never heard of them either in fact I was down at the local recycling center during the week and I saw a lovely IBM thinkpad in the computer waste recycling thing and I thought to myself you know I'll have that so I walked out and the guy goes no no no no you can't have that because the computer I was just oh why not because it's you know you're not allowed I said well you know I can wipe the hard disk and I can take the hard disk out and he goes no no no I said but you do realize this is like a very solid after laptop you go are you gonna you could at least give it to the recycling center and he goes no this is what we do with laptops took it smashed it against the side of the container and threw it in the back I was lost forwards yeah absolutely lost forwards yeah yeah it's just probably just what his job description says so that's what he does it's sad very sad I remember that there was a whole goal of the in the company I used to work for there was all go sun spark servers being decommissioned you know there were top of the line at the time and there were only two years old but there was a platform switch on the cards so the sold all the hard disks yeah but then somebody in finance said no we have to destroy the computers because we don't want any sensitive data been leaked and even though we sent them a the my manager his manager and the VP of all the entire technical division tried to explain to them that that the like the data wasn't stored on the computers that were stored on the chips not it still had to be destroyed yeah yeah the place I worked for had a very easy going attitude to to so this really um they did they did uh clear the the disks but but many of the machines just got sort of given away for a lot of the time you know when when a lab was being emptied of student PCs then we just handed out to whoever wanted them people would come along and and grab them I've got several still in my house yeah this was exactly what happened um in this this division had got taken over by a mother company um by you know uh officially sucked into the the parent company and there was the parent companies rules that started getting applied so a lot of cheesed off uh engineers who were used to getting top of the line server you know only two years old and whatever yeah wow anyway speaking of Tony the following day we had Tony uh doing magazines I read vegetarian times feel good food starbucks magazine and sfx magazine no none of these I knew about no me neither me neither Tony's got an interesting collection of uh of magazines is he's reading yeah we're we're following up I think from myself anyway and you know we heard Tony say that he has no suggestions of shows to do really yeah Tony can you uh I was listing them off the other day all the shows that I uh that I could do first of all how he had a career move right in the middle of his life I'd love to hear about that uh technology the use oh yes I just had a list but I can't possibly think of it now but there's uh we know that Tony I know anyway that Tony's a a keen photographer and uh right there he mentions it in his magazine list I'd love to hear more about what he what he does and uh and you know the kid he has in that type of thing there would be a lot of photography interest I would imagine on an HBR absolutely the basics and I never even I don't even get the fundamentals of photography the whole technical you know the ISO things all that stuff the people talk about I would love to hear more about that absolutely yeah yeah an introduction to to photography especially today where it's got a lot more complicated than it used to be um yeah exactly and what your workflow is how do you go about you know and do a do a um outdoor one just clap a sounds clip to your uh to your head and uh off you go describing describing stuff as you go yes there's there's a there's enough potential shows there to last for untowel years I would think and all of you Tony all of you figure even more from our part yes indeed bless me Dave for I have sinned I have mentioned that we don't have the ideas for sure anyways move on the next day how my wife's grandma got me into Linux um the night wise how he got into Linux uh post very nice episode I thought yeah yeah yeah absolutely it's quite an interesting tale of uh what happened um which I won't I won't mention because you should listen to it to get the full benefit but it was it was really it was really quite a a personal and interesting story I thought again I've said it before and I'll say it again always uh these journeys are interesting where people how different people come to uh you know come to Linux basically Tony commented hit your 2066 high night was really love the show your experiences with Linux goes a bit further back the mind I only took the plunge winner Ubuntu came on the scene I started to use it to free cycle all kit here in the UK I was so impressed with the reaction of these uh receiving the freely given PCs that I started to use Linux on my own box and have been using Linux since 19 uh 2009 first with Ubuntu and then Mint I just upgraded to minteting and so far looks quite stable and Steve says uh great story and well told uh night wise replies hey Steve very happy to hear you found my show entertaining I hope you have a lot of fun using Linux I think even more fun if you have the hardware that other people have discarded gives you Greek cred and the other Steve commented uh wish I could grasp this stuff I hated computers and computing and growing up didn't understand the importance of oncoming onslaught of the computer age presently 10 to 15 years hunting and pecking tried to learn but also have low IQ so I'm pretty much locked out of any hope they're ever learning on my own any who that's my problem this thing is I'm typing and the girlfriend and prof dad's story is very cool thank you now the other Steve I'll be having none of that we uh you've met or to hate we are and we will uh make sure that we uh get you up to speed as quickly as possible absolutely so the next day was yourself Dave solving my bling stick python problem no no no it wasn't me that was mr x oh mr oh yes of course another Scottish person for a real Scott this time we all say all you Scottish sound people sound the same yes no it was um yeah mr x who had um listened to your show about the bling stick yeah yes he gave me some compliments which I'm very very happy to receive thank you very much I've said it before and I'll say it again I'm thinking of uh of getting a bling stick and also mr x's soldering episode which I really listened to today and now but I had space for a soldering station here in the backroom which we're now calling the lab three raspberry pies set up on the desk with a soldering station in between a oscilloscope and the function generator on one side hot moody one that sounds nice oh yes image you must do a show about that Ken actually I may have to because we're run on very low fogs um what I will do and you're back to solving the brink's bling stick problem it was a python 3 issue other yes yes it was python 3 issue it makes up between python versions that cost him his problems yeah yeah and you replied Dave there was a yes I commented saying hi mr x an interesting show good to know you're having fun with the bling stick I'm looking to forward to hearing about your python project in due course so he was talking about what you was doing with python to uh to drive the bling stick so sure that will be interesting yep I think it is kind of cool a docker dialogue uh don't do this on Dave sorry yes uh yeah docker dialogue was um taj with liel who is x 1 1 0 1 talking about docker where liel has the the expertise on docker and taj was coming along as the sort of acolyte to hear hear the wisdom which which I thought was was very interesting actually it was it's good to hear somebody who works with with such technology on a regular basis talking about their uh their experiences and explaining it yeah very much docker is very hot of the note i have white i didn't quite absorb i'm maybe being stupid but i didn't quite get why i would want to use it yet but that's because presumably because i'm just me and i and i need to be looking at it maybe more with a with a sort of um administrative you know multi multi service type of type of i point you know b point do you ever use change route before say what do you use um bsd jails or no change route or stuff like that well i have you see it through on occasion yeah yeah docker is similar to that um it's funny actually this whole docker thing because i was using um uh virtuoso way back in the day and uh at the time it was christian side you know we as a company were being criticized for using this uh containerization when um you know uh zen was the way to go at the time and uh now things turn around and everything's a docker i'm it's amazing how many how many solutions now you're hearing are being dockerized and uh yeah it's it's the solution to everything is docker yeah yeah when when before i finished um working i uh my team was particularly involved in using vm where everywhere so we wanted to we had lots of servers with um uh vm's hopping around between them and uh you know being able to go to backup servers other side of the campus all this sort of stuff and uh it uh it built tremendous amount of resilience into what we had where um it's not clear to me how docker would step into that sort of scenario but that's probably just due to ignorance on my part well it's more from the fact you have um you standardize the um the the components so that you can run a minimalistic operating system um which is supplied by the kernel on the on the main machine and it's kind of plug and play you you can just run the minimumistic machine on there and then migrate it to somewhere else and it's more part of uh the concept of microservices where you're spinning up multiple of them at the same time so how fast you can create them and throw them away and create them and throw them away but I know more shows on docker would be I this could definitely be a series as far as I'm concerned oh absolutely I'd love to know more personally yeah okay the next day we had every day there were a couple of comments on this one and the first one was from BEZ who said more interviews I really enjoyed this show I don't need it make docker seem more approachable to me but I liked hearing the different perspectives of beginner and experienced docker users I also enjoyed the interview format and wanted to hear more of them I may have to try and make one myself good idea times for blind tanks groovy tanks don't worry there are going to be more like this one in the future for sure is that somebody pulling me a show Dave I think lots of people are you sure but yes yes definitely partly the only only show if they say they're going to do a show Dave so okay okay now the next day BEZ who had just replied there every day Linux tools for data processing give some examples of common tools for data processing detox oh my god that is awesome that is the most awesome tool oh my god I have changed so many scripts I have tidied up so many disks that is absolutely going on every server I ever build in my life so you like it then I can hold on it is brilliant oh man you have no idea I have to admit that I have since I've been using Unix and fell down the whole of you know a file name is the thing that the parser in your shell can't necessarily deal with so if you say you know do this thing and here are the arguments and the first one is that file and the file's got weird stuff in it in its name like a space and like a space and of course space being the delimitator etc etc all falls to pieces so you know I just taught myself to always quote stuff in those in those sort of contexts yes I do as well all my scripts from the most part well for the last few years I've been doing that because I've fallen down that world so many times but still it is still appearing in the us it's it's true it's true the I have a bin plug-in who's name I can't remember but it calls various syntax checkers on whatever I'm currently editing and there's one for bash and it's called shell check and it nags you like hell every time you save a file where you haven't covered yourself from the the dreaded spaces info names it says no no no this one won't work so change it quote the thing yeah yeah so but yeah you know I get files sent to me from people all over wherever and you know different oss and different countries even and all sorts of weird characters like we we wasted a day trying to debug an issue where there was there's a a character in one of the Eastern European languages that's got a tiny microscopic dot next to one of the eyes and we were beating ourselves on the head why this why you know grep awesome work and we weren't able to find it in the file we could see it there look it's right here and then eventually we opened up a hex editor and did a hex stomp on both files and then what code is this so yes yes yes oh yes it's a tool sir yeah yes some lovely things there I was quite excited with with act I thought act what might it yes yeah yeah that's it's it's it's it's a pretty pretty cool but it's a good list excellent list unique some classics there Unix to dust to Unix curl wget said of course you've done the series on that PDF to text I use that a awful lot so yeah awesome awesome stuff might also want to look into a PDF grep which is actually a nice little too for greping inside the PDF files not as powerful as grep itself but it's pretty good Jonathan Colp who also agreed act exclamation mark thanks for this genius tool never heard of it before and you said I love detox as you already said detox minus VR that's risk why what an excellent tool yes and Dave Morris thanks for mentioning act wow I've never encountered act before it's amazing I've written a bunch of scripts to work with Postgres database is yes I know it's like wearing a hair shirt self-mortification I found I could do things like act that a shell that's page or equals more p sql space dot there's no other easy way to do this that I know of thanks very much for pointing this out and either said interesting I always love vim tips so I got pulled in looking at the buffer search then I noticed the other tools mentioned most of them I know about news all that are relevant to me very frequently so now I'm going to subscribe hi boor welcome to the team oh my show oh my show but they don't oh my show unless they say they're going to do a show but excellent excellent excellent tools well done my new love swift 110 has a new laptop yes I was just trying to remember what it was yes I've forgotten what it was it got it seemed to have quite a bargain anyway yeah exactly a t420 and you went to lots of upgrades and stuff new ram and stuff so excellent nice nice when you you know something works out yeah it should get a really good deal as well yeah it sounded excellent unlike my roof Dave oh dear yes yes sad tale happy tale a new health this is one of yours is this the same time I mess very briefly as a fostering that I indeed so yes yes so pity I didn't have more time to be social I thought it'd have been nice he keeps telling me he's going to do a show at some point but on his own but he's a busy guy so I don't have to give him but he's got lots of fascinating things he could tell us about if I can ever get him to do it yeah keep yeah keep shoving the microphone in front of him brilliant show notes as always Dave thanks yeah thank you that was partly the contributions from Tom and you and went into that yeah you should also mention you and did a nice job there on that wow looks looks pretty sexy that that whole Raspberry Pi setup yeah yeah yeah it's it's it's really quick but it's not a cluster as such it's just you know pilot machines that it's proximity deal yes yeah tower of pi it's still a brilliant brilliant setup so hopefully yeah I'll get an update from him about his project and I next see wow maybe we can do it follow through or something like that I don't know somebody should pause this on to um on to what do you got net hacker or something yeah if you want to hack a day somebody should pause that oh yeah yeah yeah it's uh it's an interesting thing I think uh you and was hoping you could use the show as part of his CV because he has his degree and gone off looking for jobs that's absolutely good luck to you yeah you're listening you and good luck yeah it was one comment and it was from Clinton Roy who said very interesting and important thanks for the interview and he's right it is important stuff it is it is indeed you know yeah it takes it I used to work in a medical device company and it was very fulfilling even though my part was kind of minimalistic yeah I know how that it has a tremendous amount of potential for improving you know the way that the medical setups are run all over the world you know if it can be accepted so let's hope that happens cool stuff cool stuff the following day helping to save the world Jonathan Culpa with an accessibility series on costume keystrokes for desk time navigation on norm oh I leave it bring me a cup of tea okay thank you yes yes like a you like a you indeed I am in more ways than one I can tell you that for nothing and to make my own tea you poor poor thing get your get your daughter in she's packing for university yeah always an excuse what do I do to start wrapping her sandwiches in the in the map in the atlas anyway costume keystrokes this is always interesting every time I see this WMCTRL thing I keep thinking I can I can do stuff for that yeah yeah you're right I feel the same thing but yeah but do you know the way it is actually Dave at the minute our house is such a mess we've spent the last week going from top to bottom because it's this brilliant open scene in Malcolm in the middle one of them where he comes in and he flicks the lights which I've told you about this before and the bulb doesn't go on and then he goes to get a bulb and the drawer falls off and continues off and then he ends up you know under the car and the wife comes to tell him hey the light bulbs gone in the kitchen and he replies what do you think I'm to fix it that's the way my house has been every job that I have had to do I can't do it because there's something else in the way and I can't do that because the gearages are the shedges fall and the shedges fall I need to empty the shed so I spent the whole week myself and my wife spent the whole week just clearing the house down we're warning everything's in the front room and now the old back room is sorted so hopefully plans to are short I might be able to get to some of this stuff in the fullness of time yes yes I know this is always a painful process you end up living in in a corner of your house in order to improve another part of it yeah exactly fun yeah so you replied do you want to read your I am yes I okay yeah I come into seeing the part of Dave Morris just did Morris it's hard it's hard job but I'll try um using Grep in a script I said one thing I learned more Scottish accent using Grep in a script Jimmy um one thing I have learned while writing bass scripts was that did that convince you though yeah I think in the 1950s Hollywood movie of Scotland Erichort right up there oh sure we got it you have to do these things right anyway I said one thing I've learned while writing bass scripts for the hell of it sometimes is that Grep minus Q is useful for direct use in if expressions so you could do if WMCTRL minus L like to Grep minus Q Libre Office 70 colon then and I won't read the rest of that but you could you could replace quite a lot of what John was doing there I just the one if it can reduce script complexity a fair bit John culper plays good tip ah very nice tip could it could serve us having to read direct stuff to Debonal wouldn't as a question mark to which you replied Grep minus Q yes Grep minus Q simply returns a zero which means true result if a match is found and writes nothing on standard output I didn't know about this until relatively recently the original Unix Grep I and Canada didn't have this and you'd have to do the things the the way you did in your script could do Grep was enhanced with many features which I think was a good thing personally others prefer the old clean way I like that's Grep-Q thing because I've ended up I've ended up doing the piping dash C piping to word count dash L when I want to do this exact thing because you can't know if if Grep returned value or not so what most of my scripts do which involves using Grep I Grep dash C and if it's got no entries it'll be zero so pipe to word count dash L and then if that's escaped thing equals zero then which is very round what way of doing it I will be replacing it with this tip so nice tip tip oh thanks yep so yes it's nice it's all about sharing things you find isn't it is it is indeed it is and sharing things that you've attended SSL certificate's how they work never get tired of hearing this man speak I wish I had a log that I could go to it will be cool but there you go yeah yeah it's um I have I have one there's one in Edinburgh I've never been to I've commented on the mailing list on occasion yeah okay but I'm talking more all you need to do is say guys I don't have a beard because I've got this skin condition I'm probably old enough yeah anyway I replied it's not allowed in the excellent episode as always I'm not a lawyer but in the EU at least it's not permissible to intercept all communications local SSL serve even if there is a policy in place about not non-personal use of computers Google Chrome has also implemented checks that will alert if the site of non-serts for example google.com turns out to be not using the ones for google.com and he mentions that in part two yes yes I haven't heard of the google thing the crumb thing I mean it's just detecting man in the middle stop is not yeah it's baked into the browser itself and it will verify with google certain well-known websites like Gmail and Microsoft and places like that that's how a lot of those have been found actually a lot of those exploits but Kevin mentioned that in the next episode he him Kevin replies to you saying different in the EU well I'm not a lawyer either but it looks like EU and US different in this regard I can say that in US the courts have ruled that it's legal since the company owns the computers yep but wouldn't be for if you brought your own personal phone or something like that yeah yeah okay useful bash functions bar two this time for the development of bash functions that may be of use in your script see how I'm cheering up Dave this is your bash scripting other useful functions can you go back to the yes null function did you get a slagging over this did the well somebody said to me oh that's not very good because it if you gave it a default it offered it to you on the command line so yeah so that you had to then delete it before you could talk the other things that you wanted to type and somebody pointed out that that was that was horrible and I think it might have been somebody quite close by now it was me you sure yeah whatever when maybe it was just me me telling myself I didn't like it but I thought I'd just rework it so I could get get a shot at that I thought I had a question did I post it on the comment you did I had a question here's me with the questions any particular significance of the percent s I did not know this about the function name array no nor did I know about the bash line number array nor about the default two power power thing why do you do this prompt the prompt dollar prompt yn and not simply prompt yn with a within the comments it's it's it's quite a long answer um so so the I said the percent s is to be used in the prompt and then gave an example I do want to continue percent s yes but could it be percent cow for instance a present banana does not because because it's a substitution point for print f and so it's saying here I want to put the thing that you compute for me the brackets yes no with the capitalization appropriate to my default I want it here so you could not not have it at all if you wished it's like the percent d when you're doing the percent s yes okay put the string here so substitute a string of arbitrary length as I said in the reply such a budget yeah and the use of print f to write the prompt string allows format to be defined when you call the function and it's and that's that's all that stuff about print minus v prompt the minus v prompt saves the result in a variable called prompt and it rewrites the the existing variable prompt and the dollar prompt variable was the thing with the percent in it so it just rewrites it without the percent s but with the the yn business in it yeah I would probably have don't command substitution in there yeah it needs it needs the print f in order to do the substitution yeah substituting a string into a string yeah yeah you could have done it through through putting the string you're going to substitute in into a variable and then dropping that into the the string yeah you could do that but I thought this this was more elegant no print f print f I've avoided for some strange reason don't know why I felt too see to me oh yeah it's why I was also used to parole as well oh absolutely yeah all over the place it's yeah it's and in a walk and all and all many things do you know somebody should do a sure about print f yeah yeah well it's probably a good idea yes yes this kind of you speak to that somebody yeah exactly this community use thing just ends up being how many shores I can get you signed up for in the many shores you can get me signed up to do oh yeah it's a there's a certain yeah yeah there's certain balance in that as well isn't there anyway so I think it might be best to be point people to read this comment if they're interested enough rather than me yeah exactly going through to the bit of end although I do think there is a print f is oft not understood command at least by myself so would be no harm to have that as a is issue yeah yeah yeah well it will come up under the awk heading I can guarantee that but it's of relevance in in that context and it's also come up in bash as well as we so we've just seen so there you go cool new toys my story for my PC hardware journey in the last 20 years and it is amazing it is absolutely amazing how much we've come on intel to its sixes I remember them very well remember trying to get them to work and I was like as in in college and then trying to get IBM PCs to work and work and right now we have like the power of raspberry pies just it's amazing what those raspberry pie threes can get up to yeah true true get to have things have moved in very interesting directions Tony left a comment on his own to say that he made a mistake the price of the new shower during the show mixing mixing it up with the dell laptop I also bought the same option the total price he paid was 184 pounds 80 p which given then go on eBay for 260 plus not including delivery I thought it was a bargain I would agree with him Tony's definitely the man for the bargain at the auction so it's somebody to follow that right there there's the show Tony Tony put on a sunset clip on your head on your baseball cap and go round to the auctions feel like give us a atmospheric show you still need a good name for those type of shows community anyone think of a good name for those type of shows that would encompass swimming in France in her walk stone rainy lanes coal and shows from psychiatric wards and that sort of thing that would be nice Frank there was some Frank shall I do yeah please Frank Frank's a nice short comment Frank says I remember slide rules dot dot dot yes he because Tony mentions that there were slide rules around when he was in in college I think it was I when I did engineering we were the first year that didn't have to use slide rules I always felt cheated about that so if Frank would love Frank of anybody else would like to do a slide rule show that would be awesome I'd really like to know how those work I did actually where we can get them and whatever they'd be hard to get these days aren't they yeah oh Dave the betcha I guarantee you somebody is producing slide rules right now probably cheap crappy plastic ones yeah maybe so maybe so that would be interesting probably something for your reboot civilization reboot civilization box you know yeah yeah I am I did offer to do a slide rule show way back when I mentioned them on one of my shows and I never did it still on on my list and I keep looking and I'm thinking oh I'm not sure I want to do this first is anybody else that wants to be Dave to the course please please do so yeah yeah right I did have to use it and did use them fair bit and I was a schoolboy but yeah I never really was very good at cold and well I didn't have a very good one that's what it was it was the rule wasn't me of course yeah yeah yeah I've got a more expensive one it would have been much better yes yes I know the feeling um following day minimal realistic music site Mac King discusses the availability of an open source multimedia focused website very very simple source for just on that for such p forward slash minimal dash music dash site that's it very responsive website for uploading content originally designed primarily from musicians needing an easy interface to share content upload files in the admin page automatically saves files in a directory and lists the contents with it so be interesting to see how secure that is but I have often needed to do such a thing and also on sites that wasn't that important how you know there were internal so it doesn't really matter yeah it was it was an interesting thing I was wasn't quite sure what to expect when I saw the the title yeah exactly it was an interesting first show I thought yeah the musak show was the next lyle and Taj talk about making music on Linux x101 submitted the show tools LMMS Adora Q tractor fluid synth hydrogen loop guitar racks and rack rack all of which can be shows in themselves yeah yeah well I hope that lyle tells us about progress as he as he goes into trying to make music with Linux tools like this these are yeah I'm cutting off of course no it's he's trying to learn the ways of making making computer based music using only Linux which is an interesting approach I think that's what he wants to do anyway so you know it's it's going to be going to be quite an interesting thing to listen into and Taj being a musician yeah as a you know if they do more of these interviewee type chat shows that would be very interesting absolutely and also don't be afraid of the i fail shows and I was planning on doing some this week because I've been trying to get a satellite usb thing working on one hand and a usb digital audio converter thing working and I've tried you know did you ever do a project where you tried stuff and then you tried more stuff and then you hit another roadblock and another roadblock and another roadblock and eventually get the final goal and there is um you know you get the error message and then you paste the error message in and it's on the website oh that's version that hardware is not supported and will never work and blah blah blah go buy something else and you go if I don't you know that I would have saved myself three weeks of my life is that an interesting short or not oh I think it's interesting yes yes but absolutely what does approve because you know the whole process have gone through it they've the how you well it shows that people do find themselves in nasty holes like this and it can take a long time to find that they are in a hole and maybe the person listening will will avoid that hole in the future is certainly one one possibility um maybe push people to doing better analysis in the first instance do you think yeah don't buy cheaper actually that that probably should be the end of it you know as a series it will be a good good series um you know fails they you started a project and it failed and um how you approached you know taken from another angle might be nor her I mean I learned lots of stuff in the process but okay I'll think about it it's it's like science isn't it there's all this talk about a lot of journals won't take the failure failures of scientific experiments and stuff they want people want to write up I did this and didn't work and they say oh no we don't want that we only want the successes so you never the lesson is not necessarily learned by the the next generation of people trying to do the same thing you know that model yeah that's yeah I just saw YouTube video on you know breaking down how dangerous that is that they there's now a move to try and get studies funded beforehand and have them guaranteed to be published regardless of the results yeah well that's that's a great thing that's a great thing okay maybe we should try that that that would definitely be a fail seriously re-enable copy and paste in the browsers how to bypass the roadblocks implemented by JavaScript oh yes what a waste of time that is it's it was an interesting um revelation I'd been caught out by this and been intensely frustrating and I couldn't use my um keep our sex to paste stuff in and so on I have tried to poke around with the you know drop down into developer um thingy on the web browser and try and see what I could turn off succeeded I probably once or twice I can't remember that me too um but uh yeah and it was quite satisfying saying well stuff you whoever created this stupid thing and uh because I got around it but but having plug-ins to it is far far better so yeah but it's really good again as I say it's completely waste of time the people who are anyway technically competent can get rounded on the other people you're just frustrated it's it's part of that mindset that is just following a rule because somebody wrote it down and you dare not argue with them because my because of your job or some nonsense like that I've used to fight the stupid thing about 90-day password changes at work and I succeeded for many years to to stop that but as I when I left like the the auditors who who stipulate these things I think managed to to institute it across the bat and um disclaimers in emails it's a student sending a message to his supervisors saying I'm a bit stuck and it has a disclaimer at the bottom of it what an incredibly stupid thing bloody auditors again and this uh please don't print this email attaching a gif of a tree with or whatever I mean just think yeah and then there's a two and four email and all of a sudden 25 megabytes of disc space has been used up by this guy and the disc space is taking up space and energy and the amount of packets that this thing needs to be sent around you it's going you kill and trees mate delete your tree for bureaucracy it's for people who use a large font stave oh yes we'll get this well put right soon don't you we'll we'll we'll we'll we'll how are you on the tab versus space thing uh apparently it's then you will be them versus e-mix where they use tab or spaces in text files oh right I've I've I've got um expand tab switched on in in my them so if I type a tab it turns into spaces and when you load a file it says oh these tabs in around just change them to spaces unless you say I want them kept like you need to make files and stuff yeah so yeah it just makes life so much easier I find okay your your views on that if anyone wants to record a show on why one way or the other would be what we've done very tempted to do a show on toilet paper the correct way to hang it up as all might just write that here on the board uh yeah fold the ends probably and I into interesting little airplanes and stuff like that that's what you should be doing yes yes yes they uh go they with their rolls round to the front where you can easily grab it or you can put it at the back where all the gunky stuff can gather on the wall uh guess which one I will be recommending I can't I know sorry I can't do it I know what's on my pod catcher tone use who apparently can't think of anything to submit um hbr of course going Linux Linux voice Linux action show Linux uh unplugged uh mint cast Sunday morning links review the pod podcasts which unfortunately it's just stopped we want to podcast the BBC kitchen cabinet and from Bungie cave this life science more amaze and in our time good shows did not get a chance to put them into an OPML file yet so on the list though Dave yeah yeah yeah that should be I've got a pal script that can do that I think somewhere are you are you are you taking over feel free what have I said don't don't let me busy father with young family you retire gentleman all the little children fleeing the nest nothing but plenty of time long winter evenings no pressure Dave you almost encouraged me that again oh lordy anyway 2021 Ron had angular GS ng repeat and browsers that shall not be named been named a method for optimizing and rendering items user angular JS ng repeat directive did this go over my head yes but he was able to explain it very very well so much so that I I realize this is the essence of hpr you you've got a lovely hack and it is a it is a very ugly hack but it's working and you need somebody to tell about it somebody who would appreciate it and yes this was awesome yes I agree I agree and the fact that it went also went over my head because I'm not really a web web web web person I don't don't get it don't really want to get it that you know there's got nothing to do with it it's it was I was still well able to follow this like the refreshing the pages he gave enough explanations so that the layperson could follow it absolutely awesome well done and why you would use it and amazing that you can do this sort of stuff amazing stuff the whole web world is it's got enormously complicated it has it has we have with java script and and all of that good stuff it's it's become really amazing so yeah there's also dangers of it like going back to you know I simply can turn off all this java script stuff in my browser and then it won't work because it's you just got a bit cold running on my computer yes yes yes I I not go to many sites where I just got a blank page nothing there go right switch java script on I yes there we don't miss and that was it's no script plugin that allows you to select which one and then you turn on one website and there are 10 websites hmm which are these are advertising ones let me just try this one okay that did work image dot site okay I'll turn that one on and then you just go anyway it is good show though more more of that type of thing the following day was DIY book binding and I saw on the IRC that plateau was going to do a show on book binding which I strongly suspect will be or for higher color better than mine well I thought it was an interesting approach actually it's that it was um I don't know I don't know whether I would have taken a jigsaw to it but I'm not sure well so I would have done but because my experience with jigsaw is that they're horrible messy devices that you hard to cut straight line with and yep the orchestra that that that's that blade bends like hell and it's also tends not to be very fine I suppose you can get finer finer tooth ones and I do it to a better chopper still yep it's also an interesting interesting approach and a fact that it you actually managed to get something bound that way I thought was most intriguing I have another one ready to rock here I need to do tomorrow it's um it's very much a thing in the maker world to do book binding yes there's a guy I follow called Jimmy Duresto does stuff for make there's some other things who's who's done some superb notebook things you know he binds them and then puts them in a leather cover and stuff like this and it's it's it's a fascinating thing to watch I don't know Clara and I did a she did most of the work but she made herself a bound book using the sewing technique yeah it's lovely the thing you mentioned mentioned the sewing stuff hi Clara did you hear it Clara why don't you do a show on the book binding thing I did a show I'm tying a knot in the nearby to come on it's got to be better than that I have to give her some headphones to get all that yes yes no she's done the one no how many shows have you done now Clara one wasn't it you did one with me you came back from your Indonesian trip what oh yeah yeah she'd forgotten but yes yes we'll have to get her into making that make a new recording for her I could probably read you anyway absolutely anyways the following day we had calf reverb by nature Jordy I thought he wasn't doing any more of these shows but it's good to see that he's got still a few more in there wasn't aware of what a calf reverb was until I tell the show basically yeah I yeah I couldn't have told you I know reverb is but I don't know what this particular thing was but yeah interesting he knows his way around this stuff it's quite quite interesting to get get more info about it I like the the fact that you can pick the size of your room and very clear the the explanation and also seems very clear they controlled if you go to the website that's linked nice so I haven't followed it through I just got a cat dumped on me for for daring to bring my daughter into the yeah so retribution was sorry yes there's an insight into the domestic arrangements you very nice to hear Dave anyways SSL problems this is the second part of a hookah show where he addressed the that the Google thing was on also very good links to lots of stuff here in the show notes and did you know what I was I actually got offered a job for them really really loud I didn't take that job in the end it would have been my head at the time embarrassing as Drex sorry go on it's Mr X we're going to say yeah my podcast client podcast client he is using each potter never heard about that yeah well I yeah I commented on this and to the effect that I had used it way back in 2006 I found around about the time this this it came out around about then at the same time as everybody was using juice I think it was windows and I tried it and I for some reason I stopped using it is actually very good when you look at the details of it it's it's but maybe it wasn't so good then it certainly developed quite a quite a bit over the time it's really very clever it doesn't seem to be updated anymore a little bit of a problem no I think he's giving up on it perhaps yeah which is a 2010 but then again maybe it's finished well indeed still seems to work as far as I can see so what's written in Haskell you're good that's where the heat comes from yeah yeah it's gonna be unless you're a Haskellite then you're gonna be struggling to look after that I think yeah my pal Tom writes Haskell so I'll get him to do just after he does all our shows yeah yeah after the canoe healthy after saving the world medically then he can record some of his first shows and then take over ownership of that yeah I think you should do a tutorial on Haskellite he's very very keen at being a computer scientist he's very keen on the concept of Haskell which I find very difficult to to absorb myself but yeah anyway shall I shall I read out my comment because I've said okay so I said I'd forgotten H Potter it's an interesting show your description of H Potter made it sound well worth looking at then I realized I'd heard the name before and looking my home directory found I'd used it back in 2006 I even found the twiddleslash.h Potter directory and the old SQL SQL lite database which interestingly contained lots of TLLTS pointers so 200 and whatever but so obviously I was listening to them those days and I said yes my home doer contains all the collected crud of many years of tinkering yeah I just I just up and move it to the new new machine you know yeah so I know the feeling I have no idea why I stopped using H Potter I eventually had together a system I own around bash Potter so maybe that's why prior to that I think I was using juice on the family windows system and at some point G Potter anyway it was nice to hear about H Potter again good shows good shows again with a yeah whether what's the best to use I was thinking of writing my own eventually but hmm I don't know we will see you we will see make files for everyday use was submitted by jungle where he talks about make files in my lini pond and html projects I had never considered that you would write a make file to do this type of automation but it actually makes an awful lot of sense yes indeed once you get into the concept of using make file so that type of thing there's there's many many applications to use it though understanding it understanding make is quite a challenge I find anyway yeah so I have heard people say over the years so there was some comments on that said this himself John and John said that his his knowledge was was sort of put together from looking at other people's make files to a large extent which is you know fair enough yes comment shall I do the first one was from fweeb who entitled it dot phony I did a quick info make and scanned through it a bit he says the dot phony target is a kind of safety net see normally targets and make files share the name of the exact file being made however in the case of something like clean there's usually no file with that name being produced just a series of deletions however if there is a file name clean in the same directory as your make file this can cause some confusion for the make command so by using dot phony clean you're telling make to disregard a file name clean if it happens to sit I'm less sure about dot suffixes section on that in the manual is long and it starts with the phrase old fashioned so perhaps in something it's not entirely necessary for your make file at this point Jonathan Culperpire is not real thanks for the info it's funny I guess I could read info man pages myself but normally I just look at other people's make files for examples and never really understand what you're doing once it all works I'm happy bit of trial and error and more bit of trial and more error dot dot dot I felt the urge to comment and you did copy and paste programming I don't know I should stop this anyway we've said copy and paste programming we've all been there I believe the practice is called copy and paste programming nowadays where you you know copy paste from other people's stuff I've certainly written make files by this method I've tried to learn more about the subject by reading good new make manual but it's hard going I'd say it's certainly a subject for a series of HBR shows well done well done see what you did there folks see what you did there so yes what we need now somebody to step up to somebody knows make files gone yeah I know what that means yeah and that's you it's you changing the oil of my wife's car Jonathan Culper submitted many shows this month and the reason was we didn't have enough and why do we need to have shows every day Dave do you know that I think it might be because if we didn't have a show on a day we wouldn't have a show on that day and but this is a podcast tape why would it matter because there would be four other shows that week why would it matter yes but the principle of heck of public radio is that there's a show every week day yes there wasn't a show that there wasn't a show on a given weekday then it would have been cheating exactly it would be letting down your audience and if you look at Annie and all of the how to keep and grow and maintain your audience on even YouTube or NPR local radio stations cable networks and stuff they say post regularly and keep to a schedule that is every single one of them post regularly and keep to a schedule HBR schedule is five days a week Monday through Friday and we haven't deviated from that for many years now and we have always said we have said as part of me coming on board the deal what the deal was that I will continue to post the shows help people out until somebody else steps up to the player to do it or we run out of shows of which time we will continue to post shows every single day we will use up the emergency shows and once those are gone then the HBR is a project will stop and that will be that and that's fine if that happens and eventually you know when the day before entropy occurs we will be shutting down HBR going there you go absolute four billion blah blah blah blah and thank you very much that was the last HBR show hopefully we will do that but more than likely we'll stop prior to that but I would like HBR to go out with the posting all the shows and then just stopping on the day so if you want HBR to continue then you need to submit yours it's a crowd-funded thing that's it's crowdsourced so send in your podcast doesn't have to be rocket science but it can be that's all I have to say about that I thought often it would be nice if we had a few shows from people about how they thought about being HBR hosts when they were listening to it or no no no I could never do that and then they made the plunge and became host and and found that it wasn't such a big problem after all and it changed their lives somewhat in feeling that they got beyond a barrier they thought was insurmountable and found that it wasn't and it'd be nice to hear some personal stories about that that type of thing it would but also nice to hear from people who thought I'd like to post a show to HBR but I never did and here's why I didn't because that would be really useful information for all Steve because the key to you know this project keeping this project going is not as I've said to you it's not increasing the listenership it's increasing the number of people who are contributing shows with that we will increase listenership by definition of the by virtue of the fact it would get more people in and they're producing shows so if you're a HBR contributor and you have submitted shows you also should be going around asking other people to contribute I don't even know what the ratio of a number of people I've asked to contribute to show and who have it's like 1% of the people that I've asked but in order to get 1% you at least have to ask 200 people so how you do that you go to festivals you go to places you hand out they HBR business cards we really need to get more people submitting shows it's not that hard yeah you need to do that leaflet that we had before perhaps again yeah and we need to start going back to festivals and we need to any leave brochures in public libraries and talk to any hobbyists leave brochures in hobby shops and stuff like that and we need people to make those brochures for us that sort of thing think outside of the box guys anything where people gather together where you know the local forge would be an ideal place to leave some leaflets very good yes okay anyway how we change the oil on his wife's Honda CR-V are these falling into a garage series or not sounds like yeah yeah it's very close to it and John's garage and get your oil changed and that neighbor has been on so often now I think he deserves his own his own host number should have him submit a show oh yeah yeah bad and you're listening to these sorts of things it's lovely it's like so bearing to somebody else's life exactly it's pretty awesome do you know one of the things that always puzzles me listening to sounds of things and John's driveway and whatever yes how many vehicles that go past his house that sounds like they're agricultural you know they sound like tractors and and you know combine harvesters or something like that going past I just wonder what they are there's been a lot of bells recently as well did you hear the bells the bells yes yes there were distant bells aren't they yeah yeah listening to the birds I don't know maybe he just lives in like a in a phone booth somewhere and is just using sounds from from the internet archive just to pat out the to make us all believe that he lives in a in this nice rural area or free sounds that are okay that's what I'm thinking of yeah you could have heard that very much how can my inner irritative you gone gone to get a shutdown for pushing miracle cures for BPPV I was just thinking to listen into this thinking that's one more thing now I have to look forward to in my in my upcoming years why why yeah yeah like I said in the thing there was a there was a point where I wanted to go into medicine and so I'm as well as being a biology geek now and pouring everybody to tears with biological crap I also get to quite interested in medical things and do the same I'm afraid no I was fascinating also that the fact that it never struck me before and it's obvious that these are channels in your skull that you can't just pop it out as a unit it was do you know I never realized that no neither did I and and it was actually researching this that made me suddenly realize that that was the case because all the while since being at school I mean shown you know as I suppose everybody is you you talked about the structure of your inner ear then we show it as a as a structure that you know totally enclosed sort of tubular structure that you could hold in your hand but you'd have to do some some chipping and hacking away into that form you know I don't really understand presumably somebody once took a skull and poured wax into the space to see what shape it was and took took it out and stuck it together and whatever and said there you go that's the shape and everybody's gone with that ever since we didn't know actually that's from this month so we've broken our own rule Dave anyway we have yeah I normally look out for these things so we'll say the delights of next next month yeah yeah that's it's just yeah somebody to look forward to next month we had oh thank you very much for updating the comment system that's let's do that Dave has broken up the comment system so that he has eight comments from four previous shows and there are 24 comments on 12 of this month's shows so that's excellent we've already covered the other comments so we'll go back and have a look at the comment about Gabriel even fires old engineers and new engineers which alpha 32 commented it was an excellent show the show was great magnet of things that was hilarious and obviously he had his kids solve a puzzle and it seems kids always come up with sorry the comment is the magnetic thing was hilarious it seems a kid always come up with those incredibly simple solutions very reaffirming and entertaining thanks for sharing great shows I agree couldn't agree more next one the next one sorry I'm just coordinating myself in I can do the other Roger HP out now I've got it 2006 was community news for June and alpha 32 made the comment world oat domination Dave we should start a pinhead stroke steel cut oat racket I'll ship them from the US you sell them in the UK I'm guessing their rarity in the UK because she'd been importing them from Europe pinhead oat industry an unforeseen casualty of Brexit very nice comment I like that mid do you want to read your own comment or made in Scotland I said in reply alpha 32 nice idea but pinhead oat meal is produced in Scotland by hamlins of bans Aberdeenshire I see my picture at and there's a flicker picture I pointed I took took a picture of a tin of pinhead oat meal for for other other people to prove that it really existed and and probably others to no doubt other than hamlin I suspect that not much goes south of the border of this wonderful stuff and as to Brexit in my nightmares I see is heading back the days my childhood where garlic was even evil foreign substance and olive oil was putting on burns and kept in the medicine cabinet wow oh dear dear dear Anyway fixing my daughter's laptop alpha 32 replied brilliant well done Mr Morris I'm constantly breaking things so this was one was getting bookmarked so I said in reply I hope it never happens to you thanks for the comments one thing I don't think I said was I ensured the drill bit protruding from the drama was far enough to only far enough to get about two millimetres from the base of the hole I visions of wrecking the laptop have accidentally drilled into some other component if I had to do this again I drilled as far as I could then I might try gluing a cocktail stick or thin nail into the into the hole in the plug we had to sign I could relate to a super glue I'd use the gel toots it didn't dribble over the place to make the problem worse though I'm not sure I would actually do that come to think of it that seems a bit so cool yeah you'd have to be very very steady in yeah Jonathan Colp says I'm in the same boat the exact same thing happened to my daughter's laptop about two months ago I have still not revived the tiny bit of the headphone jack from the laptop our solution was the $10 USB adapter I had lying around for just education when audio goes belly up on one of our computers she's using that now and seems happy enough you replied replied to John saying thanks for the hint John I daughter had actually survived perfectly well with the adapter on the sort you recommended to me during the semester thanks for alerting me to these devices by the way I wanted to fix the audio jack problem because I thought the USB device was mechanically vulnerable since it sticks out the moderate amount my son destroyed a dual port on his laptop many years ago in an accident involving a large USB stick so I've always regarded laptop USB ports as fragile yeah I'm inclined to agree because once you've smashed the the structure of the USB port then it can be very hard pressed to get it repaired or you know you and you they don't have that many and you you live lost important access to your to your laptop yeah exactly I'm and that's a bigger problem that but it did take a certain element of bravery in order to do what you did Dave though and especially on your daughter's laptop make sure she was out of the eyes yeah exactly does she even know you did this oh yeah she does yeah yeah she was quite at least with the outcome yes yeah it's good to know that you took backups before and has I recall you didn't but yes that's it does also brave it's nothing important the my laptop she says anyway so we have one more comment on 282 which is shown by natural jordy basically go to production equalization and it was from Jonas who said new perspective thanks for the show I always tend to change the EQ settings when listening to music etc I never really thought about it from the audio engineer's point of view specifically the idea of tuning different frequencies out of a recording to change the feel of the recording seems like what noise cancelling headphones do more manual imprecise EQ after the recording is done feels kind of blunt and pointless after hearing what it's really for I guess that's why they have all those sliders when you see studios on TV and movies I've much more respect for audio production engineers now maybe on your next show you could talk about different ways you could record in a noisy multi-person room as compared to a smaller room with just one or two people hmm good idea yeah I don't like the inherent request for shows yes yes the the whole audio thing is not as obvious as you might all think is it it's it's there's a lot of magic in there and you need to understand stuff that it does is no and not intuitively obvious I find anyway absolutely when I was recording that thing about GNU Health I took a mic you know recording device a zoom and I stood in the middle of a round table and the three of a sat round the table and I thought I thought it would give us and I set it in a mode where it did a sort of round card cardioid shape type pickup but the result was I was very clear but but my interviewee's Tom and you and were not anywhere near as clear you and as a bit clearer than Tom he's got a slightly louder voice I suspect but so and I spoken to an engineer after that a friend who does quite a lot of audio work and he said oh no that's not what you do it at all and I'd set it in the wrong mode apparently so who who would have known or not me obviously yeah I've I've had that with the with the zoom here interviews so I just tend to have a front facing very narrow with these zooms you have just for people who don't have them they there's several different modes that you can set them up where it's at the back microphones is too pointing to the back and they've got a 120 degree angle and then there's a front one that's 90 degrees so when I'm doing interviews at FOSTEM I set the front one to 90 degrees and then pointed directly at the person's face so you pick up very little background noise for you know given the people that are there yeah I think so you need to know your case basically is what you're saying yeah yeah yeah you you need to understand what setting should have different environments did you see didn't did you plug in when you were recording that interview did you plug in headphones into the zoom to hear the output no no I didn't always do that I should have done that yeah well not that your audio was your audio was fine I I went I had to go through it and boost other two or everything they said got boosted manually so it was a very long process yeah three microphones would have been better of course for them yeah I mean yeah you make do with what you have CHPR not the BBC yeah on the August 2016 archive mailing list we had a notification of a new podcast the you random podcast.info with links to the website mb3n.org feed as well as the email address and x1101 who is live replied eventually we found out what his name was Dave the mystery it's good to know yeah it's good to know and thanking us for that so please have a listen to that it's a really good show and Kevin asked for mono to stereo thing and I don't know why he just doesn't do that himself in post processing you know I don't necessarily agree with stereo podcast for audio anyway I don't think it adds a lot but because I sometimes need to listen in with one ear I always switch everything to mono in my post processing I've downloaded yeah yeah I use audacity to convert everything to mono before it makes it easier to edit too it doesn't it's pretty straightforward thing to do as well as truncate silence and I've already done a show on my audio workflow you sent in a email about the end of gmail mailing list yes yes I don't think the situation's improved I've must have been I've not followed it up much I've seen people pointing to the fact that gmail is closing down on social media so I don't I don't think it's improved particularly but thanks quite a lot of comments on it yeah yeah yeah really sorry to see them go if they do and it's absolutely very much for the excellent work that they've done in the past I always think news news as a protocol has a lot to offer that people are not looking at it's just the thing yeah it's very much gone out of favor now isn't it seemingly hello a lot of people read their mail through used to read them out through using it news on on G-Main, which is something that surprised me when I was reading about it to be honest, but Yeah, I can understand why you don't want to do that. Yeah, and then we have the inevitable call for shows that goes out every few months Which makes me sad. Boss, there you go So people please submit shows. Thank you very much. Don't be Trying to do a masterpiece. It's a podcast Just record it, send it in, just matter how long it is, just matter what the topic's about so long as there's of interest hackers, and it will be Yep, do that. Thank you. Bye Yep, yep, hopefully we will we did get a get a response from that which is which is quite good, but You know, and things quite and down again, and it's gonna have to be another plea in a couple of weeks Yeah, unfortunately the response was mostly from you know, they old regular show hosts Which is big concern. Yeah, yeah, that's true. It's true. They weren't I wanted to You know, like Tony has now the old regular I guess was a yeah, you know, yeah, yeah, Mr X Norris Beasy, Windigo, Dave, the Lovebug, John Culp, you know, the game that's it's the same old people Coming up with the shows So yeah, yeah Okay, Dave anything else to add to this very depressing end to today's show I was just searching for something positive to say but I couldn't find it. So nothing I'm afraid no, no Let's just Winnie moshaws it's not it's not that there are people who want to make shows It's just that realize it getting people to realize guys record them send them in. It's quite simple Yeah, either that are you gonna be listening to six months of shows that I produce which I don't particularly think would be that interesting for people So we call them send them in. It's as simple as that once you're a year. That's all we need all righty Any other news Dave? I don't think so I don't want to choose more tweaks to things. Oh, yeah, I just I found that the The way in which episodes are displayed on HPR site meant that the The things that let you jump from show to show say first previous next latest the one at the top of the page was inserting leading zeros in a in a number less than For digits Whereas the bottom one wasn't and I only discovered this because I was working in the range 900 to 999 while I was uploading some of them to To archive dog yeah, and and I was finding hang on Where have I got to know why is the zero dropped off the front because you need the zero one for the comment system to work and Which is another thing of course, but oh, yeah, so I yeah, I corrected the The PHP that's basically all it was so and that's now in place and seems to be working fine And I need to put in on the front page that more next thing for five pages, you know for the next five previous five. That's what I think Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that would be nice. That would be nice myself more reactive toward that I would actually think in of putting a first previous next world maybe not First and last, but previous and next on the archive dog versions actually. I'd be quite nice Yeah, by the way you'll say the archive dog ones are looking very good. It's It's really professional now over there. Yes, it's it's down to To the archive dog guys of course there, but yeah, I'm formatting the HTML to look nice within their framework Yeah, they seem to be working a bit of a black art from what I understand, but yeah, good Potential show about the subject, but it's it's very technical, so I don't not sure. Oh, yeah, please do when Yeah, I know a lot of other podcasters are struggling with archive dog uploads So yeah, anything that you could do to help that out our goal here is to spread the joy of podcasting don't you know Well, that's certainly on the list and and is Is looming so I'll get to it for too long, I think Yeah, and I fixed one of your bugs Dave on the CC clock episode. I let the domains expire in my in my Cleaning up domains and I put them on my own website and then that was all Saga just having to edit out your else and stuff So there you go and then the next one I went to the next one on my list and then got distracted by having to tidy this house Which I'm still not finished So much for my week off Yes, yes, yes, this is the way of the world I'm afraid All right. Yeah Incidentally, I don't know if it's worth mentioning about archive dog that We're looking at the moment we don't necessarily upload all of the The other components of shows to archive at all. So if you've got pictures Which you have sent to hbr and they're on the website They're not not not being uploaded to the internet archive We're simply pointing back to the hbr So really the file should be on the on the archive. So that's gonna that's a future development of the software Yeah, exactly. I'm going to Archive and such a fascinating problem really It is it is it's it's once you get the your teeth into this sort of stuff you really want to Now keep on and make it better. I find that I understand people become quite obsessed So just control us up, but you know, it's it's you know You're trying to do a thing for the the world at large. That's the way I feel about it anyway So it's it's it's an important thing good reactive good work All right, she folks You heard the show is it community news hbr So if you actually want to join this show and not be as depressed as I the reason I'm so depressed is We found out our house that we renovated 14 years ago has Got a roof that needs replacing thank you very much dodgy builders or us And that's going to set us back a wedge of cash so no trips to To foster or anything else for me for the next coming time. Thank you Thank you very much builders who have gone bankrupt since then so yeah, no recourse Alas, yeah, really stinks really really stinks and very sorry for you. Yeah, that's fine. Well, I mean it's it is what it is we We yeah, we had the money put aside for your renovating the bathroom, but that's going to have to wait for another few years and then blah So anyway, you know, there's worse we could be on a freaking boat Um, the Mediterranean trying to get to a better life. Yeah, so first of all problems really Okay, Dave. Okay, join us now and share the software Join us That's quite ecclesiastical free Oh, yes, Dave Remember don't delete the show until it's posted Children's War for another exciting episode of hacker public radio You've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday 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 and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is Hecka public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club And it's part of the binary revolution at binwreff.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 on the creative comments Attribution share a light 3.0 license