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77 KiB
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2078 lines
77 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 403
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Title: HPR0403: TIT Radio ep 4
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0403/hpr0403.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 19:57:44
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---
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parental guidance is suggested.
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Choose, Peter is lying on the bed in his rent stockings, waiting to pleasure you.
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It's July 11th, 2009, and once again, it's time for a tit radio.
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The only show in Hacker Public Radio with super catapults.
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Right after this.
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What?
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What do you mean, get along?
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Why are you young whippersnapper?
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All you young people think that Lena's two evolves invented the concepts of Lennox.
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Why are I was programming shell scripts before you were born?
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Before your father was born?
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You should listen to Doug McElroy, he's the one who invented pipes and filters.
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He hired the programmers at invented Unix, and all you people could listen to him if you
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went to the Ohio Linux Fest in Columbus, Ohio, was September the 22th and 26th.
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You should also listen to Peter Solis, he'll be there too, talking about many of the other
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innovations that the Unix people contributed, TCPIP, security enhancements, and many more.
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Oh, don't worry, it won't just be a bunch of old farts like me sitting around.
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Elizabeth's Barbie will be there, talking about how her school system tried to make her
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use paper saws, creating walls to her learning, then she learned about free software in a world
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without walls, who needs windows.
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What?
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You say you're ill?
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Well, I'm not so feeling so good myself, oh, you are ill.
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I think it's something simple like www.hierolinix.org.
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B-D-A-R-B-Square, as we always used to say, well, I'm going to go back to sleep, I need
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my rest for the big festivities.
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Hello and welcome to Tip Radio Episode 4, I'm Monster B, and with me at the round table
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is 330.
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Hello.
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Peter's 64 with a J.
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Hey, howdy.
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Clot 2.
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Hello.
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J. Lindsey.
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Hello.
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Asmith.
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Howdy, howdy.
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Hey, Gwall.
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Hello.
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And Art V61.
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Howdy, howdy.
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All right.
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We're live.
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Okay, should we spend the will to you the sheriff is?
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I think we better.
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Yeah, because it's going to get out of control.
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Let me film you here.
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I'm not going to say we're going to need one.
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I can tell.
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Here we go.
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May need two.
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Debt duty.
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Peter 64.
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Haha.
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Anyway, exactly needy.
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Wait, inside.
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He's my mom and dad still in town.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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You're in trouble.
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Haha.
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Haha.
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Haha.
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Take a drink of water, Art.
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For art.
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For art.
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For art.
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All right.
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You know what I forgot.
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We have some feedback.
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Let me get this out of the way.
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From Seeker X.
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Ooh.
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It's a pretty cool name.
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He wants to know if there are any good open source music making programs like fruity
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loops for Lennox.
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Oh crap.
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I forget what it is.
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Good timing.
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Good tell us surely.
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I do.
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And FTWT.
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What the hell is that?
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That's for the win or something.
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And with something or other.
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Good timing says.
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And good timing wouldn't know.
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Why?
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Why?
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No.
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My God, that was painful.
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Good timing.
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Thanks.
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You're good.
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Haha.
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Okay.
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So wired.
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And as that wired.sourceforget.net, still an active project.
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And in our door.
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And as that, our door.org.
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There's another one called Trev.
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What's it called?
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Trev.
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Burso.
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Clot 2, you would know.
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I don't know the one you're talking about.
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What's it called?
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Trev.
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Burso.
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Never heard of that one.
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I just looked it up.
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It just did a Google search on it.
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It says Trev.
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Great.
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Trev.
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Burso D8.
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It's a digital IDO workstation.
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It looks similar to audacity.
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Yeah.
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Wired.
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It looks pretty cool.
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I haven't used it.
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But if the tarman has and says it's cool, I'm sure he's right.
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The only problem is I've never used fruity loops.
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But re-noise too.
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And that's for max TC and Linux.
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So isn't a hydrogen a drum synthesizer thing?
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Yeah.
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But see, fruity loops is just loop-based as far as I know.
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So you don't really, as far as I know, there's not really much midi sequencing and stuff
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like that.
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You just stick in a whole bunch of loops after each other and, you know, you can affect
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them and make them do different things.
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It's all other people's loops, which, you know, I mean, I've said before, I mean, you
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could go to any good music magazine.
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A lot of times they'll come with a DVD.
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If you get them off the shelf, they'll come with a DVD full of loops.
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And, you know, if you're in the music scene and you collect enough of those, you've got
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your own loop library right there.
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And you just throw it into, you know, any good music software, our door, Q-track, or even
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audacity, although that doesn't have some of the nicer interfaces for looping.
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I mean, you could do it anywhere and achieve basically the same thing as you do with
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3D loops.
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And they could also look at a jacosher.
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They wanted something that was, you know, kind of working sometimes, not really, and heavily
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influenced by John O. and that horrible beard.
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Right.
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I haven't looked at jacosher any time recently, has anyone else?
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I used it a while back.
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It was all right.
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I mean, I've heard it has gotten better, but I just, yeah, I haven't really used it since
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a very initial version, but yeah, that's not something that I would recommend yet personally.
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Well, another couple of distros to trail to, 64 studio and Ubuntu studio.
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You could check those two distros out and they have a bunch of tools in there, too.
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Yeah, but you know what, one thing, I mean, really, a lot of people who are asking that
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kind of question, what they're really asking is, is there a disk that they can pop into
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their computer that'll have all the little sample libraries and all the loops and all the
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stuff that they need, they can kind of start plugging in things into a sequence and making
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music.
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And I don't think that there's a package like that for Linux that I'm aware of.
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You really kind of have to have a map like the sound patches and the loops on your own.
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And from there, you can construct what you're trying to construct.
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Because a lot of the people who used free loops from what I can recall aren't the people
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who have their own synths or, you know, aren't going to be twiddling knobs on a drum machine.
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Or just people who want to use stuff that, you know, some DJs recorded for, you know,
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royalty-free and put it out there.
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So that kind of stuff on Linux, get it yourself, just go to the store, get some sample CDs
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and start using them.
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You just have to build it up yourself a little bit more than you do on like a PC or a Mac.
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So there's also the, I think it's called the Open Sound Project, where there's all kinds
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of loops there.
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Yeah.
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FreeSound.org.
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That's what I was talking about.
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Yeah, yeah.
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That one.
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But I mean, that one is, at least the exploration on that site that I've done, I haven't really
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been able to like kind of just do a search.
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Okay, I need, you know, a funky drum loop, you know, that is eight bars or whatever.
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You know, it's hard to find exactly what you're looking for.
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Whereas if you go out and get like sample CDs, you will find the stuff organized exactly
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like that.
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You know, it'll tell you exactly what each loop is, where to find it on the disk.
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And then you just, you know, you dump it onto a hard drive and you just have this big,
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big library full of, of different loops that you can just plug in and start mixing.
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But the FreeSound Project is cool too.
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That's very cool.
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All right.
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Anything else on this one?
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I have one more feedback.
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This is from Matthew.
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He says, I really like to show, but I don't see any difference between tip radio and the
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Linux cranks.
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Why not just do Linux cranks each week?
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Hmm.
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I actually thought that would look different.
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I mean, too.
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Totally.
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You obviously haven't listened to him.
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What do you do?
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I'm like, well, no sheriff on the cranks.
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Exactly.
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That's a big, long, great set.
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Well, and artistic.
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And what's the difference anyway, what it's called?
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If he's listening to it right out here, he can pretend it's winning strength, so if
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it makes him feel better.
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True.
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Anyway, it's good that he enjoys it.
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But now I've what a thought does.
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I don't even want to think listener.
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Look, cranks, no one has, we're talking about news, don't we?
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Yes.
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I would try and be a little bit more interesting and have a few different topics.
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I would have thought.
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But anyway, at least no one's ever said, hey, your show makes him want to cut myself.
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Except that you now emailed him.
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You're in the bin.
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Put him in the bin.
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Oh, oh.
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There's no cutting on this shirt.
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Oh, wow.
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We know.
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We went to big boys now.
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Three minutes.
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Three minutes.
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Oh, wow.
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Oh, the sheriff is out of control.
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Yeah.
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Well, Sheriff, you want to kick it off with your topics?
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Come on.
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Come on, big guy.
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I think now on we should call him Kim Jong-Peter.
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I guess my head, what can I say?
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I think that it feels.
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Yeah.
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I was just going to talk about a little known program.
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Well, in general, I thought maybe talk about home automation of Linux.
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And I know if you go back through the Hacker Public Radio episode, you're going to find
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a way.
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I can never remember the bloke's name.
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Interviewed the bloke from Windows Media Center, which is a really good interview.
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And Linux Media Center has a lot of home automation stuff built into it.
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Also, then there was that other one where a bloke talked about home automation on Linux,
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but sort of very expensive.
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And the fact, as a matter of fact, not all of us have a lot of money to spend on this
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sort of stuff.
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But if you've got a few bucks to spare, especially in America, where the X-Ten stuff, and that's
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the stuff that Hay-U deals with or can control, is extremely cheap.
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Now, Hay-U is just a command line, a console based application.
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You can get web interfaces for it, but personally, I've never bothered.
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All you have to do is buy what's called a CM12, which is the computer interface module.
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It also can control another thing called a firecracker, which is radio frequency transmitter.
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And the way X-Ten works is you have a receiver plugged into a wall socket.
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It gets the radio frequencies signal from either a remote control or this firecracker or whatever,
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and then is broadcast across the power lines to all the other modules in your house.
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Now, it's a brilliant little program.
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I mean, like I said, it's just command base.
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That's all you need.
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And it's as simple as typing.
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Now, first of all, this was written by a fellow called Charles W. Sullivan and Daniel B. Sothers.
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I'll give them once to be the web thing to put in the show notes.
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It's certainly what I've been using for the last five, three or four years to do my home automation.
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Typically, you can just use your basic commands like each of your light switches
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or your appliance modules or lighting, lamp modules, etc.
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You're given a dress too.
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Now, they use the Avenue Merit system where you've got...
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You can use A through P and then one through 16.
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So, that gives you roughly 256 combinations that, you know,
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of modules you can have in your house, which is more than adequate for anyone.
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And it's simply a matter of on the command line typing,
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how you on and then there might be a one if the lights are on your brand record.
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A one or you can use Aliases.
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You can set up Aliases and say, Veranda,
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simply a matter of typing, how you on Veranda.
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You know, you can do all depending on the actual module that's controlling the lights.
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You might like the dimmer, no, that sort of stuff.
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It's extremely configurable.
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You can use all different scripts.
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What you can do is it sits there waiting,
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then you might set up a script.
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So, when you send, say, the house code A16,
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then how you listen for that,
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and that will trigger some form of scripts.
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And the script can be like...
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I've wrote a few back scripts that just perform numerous functions all in a row.
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The other thing it can do is launch anything on the command line as well.
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And often instead of like in the afternoon,
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instead of going through and closing all the curtains and the blinds
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and turning on all the lights in the house and maybe dimming them,
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I just have a simple script in there that often goes.
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And as soon as I hit the A16,
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then it starts to run the script.
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It also plays users' festival to play text files
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that have also put on the computer,
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which is more or less just for a bit of fun,
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something to the effect of.
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Good evening, Mr.
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and Mrs. Cross,
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for your convenience,
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I am about to initiate collecting sequence,
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close the blinds and curtains.
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I do so.
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Hope you enjoy your evening.
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So, when we have people,
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I have a people really get a giggle out of that,
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sort of stuff,
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and I often just change it to say their name,
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and et cetera, like that.
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Now, the other thing you can do is,
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you can set up scenes.
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And once again, it's pretty similar.
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You might want to say,
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when we're about to watch TV,
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I just set up a scene called Rammance.
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And as soon as I type how you Rammance,
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then off it goes,
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which you will then close up all the curtains
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and blinds,
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or turns all the moodlights on,
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it will turn the lounge room lights on
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and dim them to 50%,
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and it will launch the myth box.
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So, you know, it really is a versatile stuff.
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Two people is lying on the bench,
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and there's rent stockings,
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one thing through pleasure, you know.
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Oh, shit.
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Get that one.
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What's up?
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What's up?
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What's up?
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Stupid machine.
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Come on, can you cut that out, please?
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Anyway, so this all integrated really well
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with the X10 stuff.
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And X10 is cheap.
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It's certainly,
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when you start looking at stuff like this.
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Hey, Mayor,
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I think you oughta go in and have a bend for that.
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That wasn't me.
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That was that rotten computer.
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I'll be having the word to you later.
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But anyway,
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once you get into, like,
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obviously, the C-Wave and C-Bus,
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you start to spend thousands of dollars on your house.
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With Linux and X10,
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you can really set up your house
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for a few hundred dollars,
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especially lights.
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If all you want to do is lights,
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which is typically what most people
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are going to want to do,
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then it's not going to cost a lot of money.
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Once you start getting into doing curtains and blinds
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and stuff,
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it does tend to get a little bit more expensive
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because of the controllers and the motors involved in that.
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Now, X10,
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yeah, sure it's cheap,
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and it has its drawbacks.
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Specifically,
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the worst one is it's only one way communication.
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So, if I go to turn on, say,
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the pump outside to transfer water,
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then when the transmitter sends the signal
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to the module on that particular PowerPoint,
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that module doesn't send feedback to say,
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yes, I received a signal I have turned on.
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When you get into the very expensive stuff like C bus,
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it's too late.
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So, it sends the signal,
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it then waits for a reply from that module saying,
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yes, I've turned on.
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X10 doesn't do that.
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Now, to fix some of the problems,
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they came out with X10 too.
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And what that does is they introduce the things.
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Firstly, it's got soft start on and off.
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So, when you turn your lights on,
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they come on full bright.
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They come on very slowly
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and increase in ambience up into whatever the preset was.
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And that is just push for starters.
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It looks good when your lights turn on and off like that.
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Also, they have built-in signal filters
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and can receive the X10 signal down to about 25 millivolts.
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Previously, it was about 100 millivolts and stuff like that.
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So, I would have said once upon a time,
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it's probably only about 80 percent efficient,
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you could turn on something and maybe pending on,
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if you got the microwave on or something,
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the other thing wouldn't come on.
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Now, with the latest ones,
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with what they've put into like this noise filter and et cetera,
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you know, it's very rare that something doesn't come on.
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Anyway, if you're in the market,
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it's certainly worth having a look at you anyway.
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And like I said, it's affordable for most people.
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Peter, wasn't there a guy working for IBM?
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I think in Europe that was working on the same type of program
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that he had centers with his doors and windows
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and could tell if the window was left open
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or things like that he could turn the heat down.
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Oh, yeah, certainly.
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This is like, I can go to Mum and Dad's house
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and SSH into my machine at home
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and turn the exterior lights on, turn the air conditioner on,
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as we lay there so the house has lit up
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and that when I get home.
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And this is, I'm not sure what system he would have used,
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but I guarantee it certainly wouldn't be any cheaper
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than what you could do with the X-10G.
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Well, they were designing this system,
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the article I had read,
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this guy and numerous guys that work for the company
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were designing all kinds of little gizmos and stuff
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to put into the system.
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Yeah, well, there's quite a few in the market.
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A month ago, you even had to play with this area
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and turn more lights on all the way from America.
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Yeah, that's pretty neat.
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And really, it didn't take that long from the Tonya.
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I think you used to web,
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we set up that one of the web interfaces for it, didn't we?
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Just to give it a try.
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I didn't think there was lag because as soon as I hit the switch
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I could see your lake come on in the camera.
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Yeah, well, that's right.
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On the same system, I've got that Zane Monde set up.
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Yeah, that's right.
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So it really is a very impressive little application.
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What's the base of the score speeder?
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Would you say it was a box that you put in a wall?
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Well, to start off with,
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it's a computer interface module.
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In Australia, that's called a CM12 cost around $80.
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In America, you're probably going to look at about $20.
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So that's called a CM11.
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There is a cheaper thing you can get,
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which is called a firecracker,
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which is plugged into the USB port.
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And then it actually sends the RF signal out to a receiver,
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whereas the computer interface module plugs into the power point
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and it directly inputs the signal into your power lines.
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But the modules, just to give you an example,
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I bought a eight controller mini switch
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for the put on the wall the other day.
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That cost me about $90.
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In America, I was just having a look at X10 over there last night,
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and the same thing is $12.
|
|
So that's a 12 port controller that we said?
|
|
Well, it's called a eight switch mini controller.
|
|
I think that is actually what it's called.
|
|
But what that does is it goes on the wall,
|
|
and also when you're dealing with infrared,
|
|
like your harmony remote,
|
|
that's going to control all your home entertainment system,
|
|
you need to make to turn that infrared signal into a signal
|
|
to put into the power lines.
|
|
And there's a few things available.
|
|
One of them is this control module,
|
|
which is just a switch port that goes on the wall,
|
|
and it can control with the buttons on 16 modules,
|
|
but it can receive the signal from your harmony remote
|
|
for the whole 256.
|
|
And you need a PC with this, right?
|
|
Well, well, the X10 can be operated without the PC, right?
|
|
You can simply have a remote control, a receiver module,
|
|
and then just send module art commands off,
|
|
to each individual module,
|
|
just to turn it on and off and dim it.
|
|
Right, but you want to do it.
|
|
Yeah, automatically, exactly.
|
|
That's when, first of all, you can program the CM12.
|
|
Now, my CM12 is programmed so the exterior lights
|
|
come on at half an hour past dusk,
|
|
and we'll run for two hours.
|
|
And of course, because you're using dusk and dawn,
|
|
and you're putting in your GPS coordinates,
|
|
and then it knows we are in the world,
|
|
and that's what time, dusk, and dawn is at that particular time,
|
|
so it's changing on the time.
|
|
You don't just say, come on at six o'clock,
|
|
because obviously in summer, at six o'clock,
|
|
it's still very bright.
|
|
You say half an hour past dusk.
|
|
So you can program the CM12 via HAU,
|
|
and there's an X10 schedule,
|
|
which is a simple text file that you go and write out
|
|
in a specific way,
|
|
and then you use HAU to upload that to your CM12 into the E-Prom,
|
|
and then that'll sit there.
|
|
You can disconnect your computer,
|
|
but that will run through those sequences that you programmed.
|
|
Maybe open and close your blinds in the morning
|
|
and in the afternoon as well.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
But Peter, give me a mental image of like,
|
|
where's everything plugged in?
|
|
How does it control all this?
|
|
Okay, yeah.
|
|
There's several ways to try to do it.
|
|
You can buy just a module,
|
|
which is very similar to a double adapter.
|
|
So for any lamps or appliances,
|
|
the unplugged from the wall,
|
|
you put in this module.
|
|
It looks exactly like a double adapter.
|
|
You know what a double adapter is?
|
|
Like a grounding adapter.
|
|
Like a little box between the plug and the wall socket.
|
|
So you might just put that for your lamps, etc.
|
|
But then I've actually gone and replaced all my lights,
|
|
which is in the house with light switches
|
|
that have built-in control modules.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Now, if you don't want to do that,
|
|
you can then go and remove the
|
|
your current existing light switches.
|
|
You can buy a little mini digital controls
|
|
that fit between your lights and the switch.
|
|
And that goes in the wall cavity.
|
|
So, you know,
|
|
and all the new ones are just tiny.
|
|
They're all micro devices.
|
|
I've just put a link.
|
|
I buy a lot of my stuff from this mod here,
|
|
because they're really cheap.
|
|
But this will give you a sort of idea of the lights,
|
|
which is in the modules I'm talking about.
|
|
But if you get it, I think it's just called x10.com.
|
|
In America, you'll see more or less what I'm talking about.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I was wondering how this work with that Shiva plug, Peter.
|
|
You know, that little thing that plugs in the wall
|
|
that's a computer.
|
|
Yeah. When we first talked about that,
|
|
that was one of the things I mentioned.
|
|
It could purely run HA-U,
|
|
and just be...
|
|
Well, certainly my Mythbox runs HA-U,
|
|
because the Mythbox is on most of the time anyway.
|
|
Yeah, but certainly I'd love to get a Shiva
|
|
and make that a dedicated HA-U box.
|
|
And I totally love it.
|
|
I've seen it down to self,
|
|
and this thing is cool.
|
|
I mean, it looks like a...
|
|
It looks like a...
|
|
I'm trying to think...
|
|
You ever see them adapters,
|
|
you plug into your wall,
|
|
it turns two outlets into six.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It looks just like that,
|
|
except, I mean, it's approximately that same size.
|
|
And the guy told me that...
|
|
I was talking to that Brian down there,
|
|
and he said the thing's got 512 mega RAM in it,
|
|
and it runs a one gigahertz processor
|
|
in this little thing,
|
|
and it is slick.
|
|
Yeah, we talked about...
|
|
talked about them on cranks of wall back,
|
|
and yeah, it certainly
|
|
have the horsepower to be out to run HA-U,
|
|
that's for sure.
|
|
Yeah, and it's got a USB,
|
|
you know, it's got USB,
|
|
where you can put an external hard drive on it,
|
|
if you wanted to.
|
|
It has the, you know,
|
|
the network connection on it,
|
|
and you could even run that,
|
|
you know, right out of your wall,
|
|
and just pop it right into thing.
|
|
It's slick.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I'm just posted in there,
|
|
a couple of things you can have a look at the actual modules,
|
|
and that must have been...
|
|
This post, this is like what you'll see when you're operate.
|
|
HA-U has a monitor thing,
|
|
as well, that you can have running,
|
|
and it just tells you everything that's been addressed in the house,
|
|
and what's going on.
|
|
I'll just post that there,
|
|
so you can have a look at it.
|
|
How many is it there?
|
|
How much look at...
|
|
Is that a GUI program,
|
|
or is it just a command line program?
|
|
No, it's a HA-U.
|
|
You can get the web in this,
|
|
about four, I think, listed on the HA-U side,
|
|
but like I said,
|
|
there's no use for them.
|
|
And that's just what you'll be looking at when you're actually using it.
|
|
Well, I have to...
|
|
Hold on, I have to make a note here.
|
|
I have to put a piece of paper in the packet upon a wall,
|
|
so I remember HA-U, so, you know.
|
|
Sorry, Bill.
|
|
For some reason.
|
|
For some reason.
|
|
To get started with this,
|
|
just say for one outlet,
|
|
okay, you need the one controller to plug in.
|
|
Now, what plug's into your computer?
|
|
I can't...
|
|
The bad minimum you get on the page,
|
|
you get on the page,
|
|
you're talking to get started with the computer.
|
|
Yeah?
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Well, the firecracker is the cheapest way.
|
|
Now, what the firecracker does,
|
|
it's exactly the same.
|
|
I'd imagine when you hold a remote in your hand,
|
|
the Marmotek remote is a RF remote.
|
|
Right?
|
|
So, it uses radio frequency instead of infrared.
|
|
The firecracker on the back of the computer is the same thing.
|
|
And then you need the one receiver.
|
|
And that's an RF receiver plugged into a wall somewhere.
|
|
And then you just go and buy your module.
|
|
Whatever module.
|
|
So, it might be the one leantre module that does your lights.
|
|
So, three things.
|
|
And there are start-up packs of, you know, that you can buy.
|
|
That has a couple of bayonet lighting modules
|
|
and remote control and the receiver.
|
|
But really, for any geek,
|
|
you're going to want to buy the CM-11 or CM-12,
|
|
which is the computer module that is wired through the USB port.
|
|
A programmable PC interface module.
|
|
That's what it's called.
|
|
Well, what's different between that and a firecracker then?
|
|
Well, the firecracker is only 10 and out infrared signals.
|
|
The radio frequency signals to the receiver.
|
|
The actual PC interface has onboard e-prompt that you can program.
|
|
It also directly sends the signal straight
|
|
because it's plugged into the wall.
|
|
It's sending a straight into the wall socket.
|
|
You wouldn't need a receiver.
|
|
RF receiver module over each unit.
|
|
You mean for each thing that you want to plug in?
|
|
No, no, you only need one.
|
|
One receiver module.
|
|
You need some way of getting the signal into the power lights.
|
|
Whether it be through the PC module.
|
|
An RF receiver module or that eight mini eight controller
|
|
that I said I've got on the wall.
|
|
As long as you can get the signal in from a remote or something once,
|
|
then it travels through your power lines to every single module on your house.
|
|
Right, but you have to put each module on, correct?
|
|
Yeah, that's right.
|
|
At each power point or whatever, yeah.
|
|
You put a module.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, sorry.
|
|
I thought you were talking about each module had to,
|
|
each outlet had to have a receiver module.
|
|
But it's only one receiver to get from your remote or whatever.
|
|
Right, but each device that you want to control has to have a module.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
And how much are they?
|
|
Well, it depends on the type you're going to use.
|
|
You know, a bayonet socket I think you can buy for $20.
|
|
These lights switches I've got on my walls are about $110 each.
|
|
So it depends on which way you want to go about doing it.
|
|
Yeah, because that's a lot, $110 each, holy crap.
|
|
Yeah, but you can get out, you can go the other way.
|
|
I got them because they've got, they do a lot more than just turning your light on and off.
|
|
Yeah, they'll dim it.
|
|
It's like a dimmer, right?
|
|
It's a programmable dimmer, basically.
|
|
Yeah, that's right.
|
|
That can be controlled differently.
|
|
They also, they glow finely at night and they handle a lot more power.
|
|
I think they'll handle up to 600 watts.
|
|
Question for you, though, do they work on fluorescence?
|
|
Okay, fluorescence, you actually have to go not for a lighting module.
|
|
You have to go to the motor module, right?
|
|
Control module.
|
|
No, I will not the motor module, but the power module.
|
|
Like the same module you use for a juggle or something,
|
|
which are rated to about 1,200 watts.
|
|
Yeah, because see, they make special dimmers here for fluorescence because of that problem.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay, so you can't see that.
|
|
It's going to screw up, see in this country, nobody will do it because
|
|
everybody's putting his comeback for essence and you know, God, you know,
|
|
you're going to spend more money on these dimmers and oh, my God.
|
|
Yeah, people are crazy.
|
|
People don't want to dim.
|
|
People don't want to dim them anyway.
|
|
People don't want to dim for fluorescent lights.
|
|
And these days, people are going away from fluorescent lights.
|
|
Or am I sure you're lighting now and a lot of my interior lighting,
|
|
I've moved over to LED.
|
|
Any light inside the house that I don't want to dim,
|
|
I've moved over to LED.
|
|
Surface Mount LEDs.
|
|
All the exterior lights.
|
|
Surface Mount LEDs on my flood lights outside.
|
|
Before where I had 150 watt flood light,
|
|
I have replaced now with Surface Mount LEDs that are drawing,
|
|
I think, about six watts.
|
|
So before when the kangaroos set off a couple of, you know,
|
|
my flood lights where it's stuck in 500 watts,
|
|
I used to get a bit worried that these things were burning all night
|
|
because the kangaroos are feeding on the front lawn.
|
|
Now it doesn't matter what the LED is.
|
|
They can run all night.
|
|
Who cares?
|
|
It's only drawing a couple of cents worth of electricity.
|
|
Yeah, but how's the light output compared to a fluorescent?
|
|
I mean, the lumens is going to be different.
|
|
Yeah, it's not as good, clearly.
|
|
But to light up the house outside when you're just, you know,
|
|
what are you doing?
|
|
You want to walk from the car to the brand,
|
|
do you want to sit out on the brand of an evening,
|
|
have a cup of coffee?
|
|
It's falling.
|
|
Yeah, see here, yeah, here, LEDs,
|
|
and Jesse James is organising the thing.
|
|
Here, LEDs are very expensive here.
|
|
I mean, it's not, and you definitely don't get,
|
|
see, you know, here, we're looking at something like,
|
|
could you use on a fire truck that's going to, you know,
|
|
when it lights up your yard,
|
|
if you're looking at a burner,
|
|
retina's out, you know?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, it's crazy here, people.
|
|
Yeah, the bay at one.
|
|
Yeah, that's what I was going to say, 330.
|
|
Like, yeah, sure, I think,
|
|
to replace a downlight that cost me, you know,
|
|
a, well, a 35 watt halogen downlight,
|
|
because $2.50, I think,
|
|
I'm paying about $40.
|
|
But, like 330 said,
|
|
I put that in there,
|
|
I'll never have to worry again,
|
|
that will outlast me.
|
|
So, let's see, the outdoor compact fluorescence,
|
|
the company I used to work for,
|
|
they did a big conversion on all these buildings and stuff,
|
|
and they put a lot of the exterior compact fluorescence in,
|
|
and I mean, I worked for, like,
|
|
four years for this company,
|
|
and I don't think I ever changed an outdoor bulb
|
|
unless it got broke,
|
|
because they worked great.
|
|
Yeah, well, I think the advantage of LHD,
|
|
so you don't have that mercury and stuff in them.
|
|
Aren't they standard discover now that fluorescent tubes
|
|
aren't very good for the environment,
|
|
and are probably worse than incandescent lights to begin with?
|
|
Oh, yeah, but, you know,
|
|
that doesn't, they don't care about that, you know.
|
|
But, you know, you got in this country,
|
|
they don't, they,
|
|
that's, you know, you worry about that 50 years from now.
|
|
Yeah, but anyway, that's another subject,
|
|
but anyway, that's, that's your thing.
|
|
Bill, Mr. Beak.
|
|
You keep saying my real name.
|
|
People are going to find out.
|
|
Yeah, I'm, I'm sorry.
|
|
Once that, the bill, please.
|
|
All right, that was pretty cool, Peter.
|
|
Yeah, sorry.
|
|
Real quick, one question.
|
|
Okay, you don't need a computer for this,
|
|
so if you're, you can turn your computers off,
|
|
or do you have to leave a computer on?
|
|
No, that's right.
|
|
With, with the, um,
|
|
the same 12-inch programable,
|
|
so now the computer is,
|
|
once you program it,
|
|
then the computers can get off.
|
|
Okay, that's neat.
|
|
But you do need a computer to program it,
|
|
in the beginning.
|
|
Yeah, definitely.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Wonderful story, wonderful story.
|
|
Any more questions?
|
|
Or we move on?
|
|
All right.
|
|
All right, Pigwall.
|
|
All righty.
|
|
Well, I was actually looking for a topic to discuss.
|
|
I ran across this article,
|
|
and I thought it was so awesome that I,
|
|
I should, um,
|
|
people at MIT,
|
|
they created a camera out of cloth.
|
|
I was talking with Peter 64 about this one earlier,
|
|
and he said it's absolutely amazing
|
|
what they can do these days.
|
|
Uh, the article starts out.
|
|
The ultimate spy camera
|
|
would allow someone to walk into a room
|
|
recording everything they see,
|
|
and no one would ever know a camera
|
|
was present on their body.
|
|
Not even after a search was conducted.
|
|
A new fiber created by researchers at MIT
|
|
could provide such a solution.
|
|
MIT researchers have managed to create a fiber
|
|
that can be woven into a cloth capable of detecting light,
|
|
and so doing it may be possible in future
|
|
to record images with the fabric connected to a computer,
|
|
meaning a suit made from this stuff
|
|
could record information in all directions around the wearer.
|
|
Professor Yoey Fink,
|
|
lead researcher in the project,
|
|
has already demonstrated such a fabric,
|
|
capturing the image of a smiley face,
|
|
commenting on the new material he said,
|
|
this is the first time that anybody has demonstrated,
|
|
such a, or that, I can't read,
|
|
that a single plane of fibers or fabric
|
|
can collect images just like a camera,
|
|
but with that a lens.
|
|
This work constitutes a new approach to vision and imaging.
|
|
A mixture of semiconductor material,
|
|
metal electrodes,
|
|
and a polymer insulator help to make up the fiber
|
|
which is created in a furnace that most them together.
|
|
The fibers are then formed into a mesh,
|
|
which can measure light intensity
|
|
and turns it into an electrical signal.
|
|
These signals are read by a computer
|
|
and formed into an image.
|
|
At the moment, that image is black and white.
|
|
The research will continue and is back
|
|
by the armor research office,
|
|
meaning soldiers wearing suits that record surroundings,
|
|
maybe one of the first applications.
|
|
Of course.
|
|
I will paste that into the chat.
|
|
I will put in the IRC.
|
|
There you go.
|
|
When they speak, well,
|
|
and then what we talked about,
|
|
that's printable batteries the other day.
|
|
See, it's just kind of wonder where it's all going to stop.
|
|
It's not going to stop.
|
|
We live an exciting time, don't we?
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
Fast.
|
|
You know, the problem is though,
|
|
you go back to the basics.
|
|
They still can't make a battery that's going to last,
|
|
and they can't make a battery that's going to
|
|
hold the charge for a long period of time.
|
|
I mean, that's something that's been for a long time.
|
|
I mean, with all these new technologies,
|
|
there's still having problems with basics.
|
|
Yeah, that's a good point.
|
|
Seems like they ought to spend a little bit of time
|
|
on some of these basic things,
|
|
like developing batteries that actually
|
|
can hold the charge and getting, you know,
|
|
optical media so that it doesn't fail
|
|
every other burn or just whatever, you know.
|
|
Well, certainly laptops and mobile phones
|
|
are going to help a long way to make
|
|
and battery technology take off.
|
|
Yeah, they're...
|
|
I mean, look, we've gone from what nickel cadenium,
|
|
any of you, years ago, to lithium polymer,
|
|
or lithium ion.
|
|
Yeah, whatever the next one's going to be, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, but you see that lithium ion
|
|
has been out for a long time,
|
|
and they still haven't...
|
|
they still haven't perfected it.
|
|
That's the problem they're having with these cars,
|
|
is batteries.
|
|
Did there was a thing on security now?
|
|
Steve Gibson was talking about
|
|
they have a capacitive recharge system
|
|
that they're working on
|
|
that's going to do away with batteries.
|
|
I mean, this is basically restructuring
|
|
the whole concept of a capacitor.
|
|
Personally, I think it'd be really cool, though,
|
|
to actually have some of this fabric
|
|
and have it working.
|
|
Could you imagine how small you can make security cameras?
|
|
Did you imagine what you could do with them?
|
|
So, I would life cast with it.
|
|
I was thinking more about...
|
|
Oh, and I've been on sale.
|
|
In a bit.
|
|
You know, it'll be nice for police
|
|
and security situations, I think, really.
|
|
Now we have to do a spare out how to block them.
|
|
Pulse generators.
|
|
Or infrared LEDs, that might work still.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Well, I'm sure it's got to send out a signal of some sort
|
|
and it's got to be like a microwave signal or something.
|
|
So, what happens if you put your shirt on backwards?
|
|
Then everybody gets to see your boogie.
|
|
Ooh, he said a bad word.
|
|
It's okay as long as you don't put your pants on backwards.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Ah, the cloth camera.
|
|
Finally, and truly eliminating the crisscross style.
|
|
Well, so far it's just like literally like a proof of concept on the list.
|
|
Yeah, it's a prototype right now.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
But they are using it.
|
|
They are using it in the field.
|
|
No, they're not using it.
|
|
Testing it.
|
|
I mean, they're not testing it.
|
|
But this is all laboratory then.
|
|
Yeah, because they said one guy recorded the image of a happy face.
|
|
That's as far as they've gotten so far.
|
|
Would it tell you you find a happy face anymore?
|
|
Yeah, I don't know.
|
|
That screen shot from a computer that was printed out.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
Maybe he was talking about his own face being happy that they worked.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
See, I do believe it said it was just a regular smiley face.
|
|
It could be because of the bright color.
|
|
That could be why it picked it up so well.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it's just regular smiley face.
|
|
Of course, it was probably 10 feet in diameter, you know.
|
|
That's okay as long as they continue doing something.
|
|
You know, and it's not one of these projects that, you know, 10 years from now, you hear.
|
|
Oh, yeah, they're working on this fabric that takes pictures, you know.
|
|
200 years ago, we had the smallpox blanket sent to, you know, people's biological warfare.
|
|
200 and some years in the future, we'll have the camera blanket.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
So then we can tape the people that we give smallpox to?
|
|
Not any of that, but you can see how they're suffering with it.
|
|
Yeah, and make it a pay-per-view event.
|
|
There you go.
|
|
That's how we'll get the economy back online.
|
|
All right.
|
|
I guess it's really all I have on that one.
|
|
All righty, 330, you're up.
|
|
All right, well, I'm going to talk about something that is a little more usable
|
|
currently than the fabric camera.
|
|
I've been playing with the HTML5 video markup stuff that made it into Firefox 3.5
|
|
and a couple of other browsers.
|
|
What this basically does is makes flash completely not necessary.
|
|
You have to ask you how you're making out with that.
|
|
It's actually running really well.
|
|
If you go to numberedhumanindustries.com slash video and you're running Firefox 3.5,
|
|
you'll see Dan Washco from last Ohio Linux best.
|
|
I have more we can talk about that, but there's some cool things you can do too.
|
|
If you wanted to have a viewer video, then the tag you'd use is video space
|
|
src evil and purchase.
|
|
This is the sake of argument.
|
|
We'll call it ambience.org in quotes.
|
|
Space controls.
|
|
And then you just close the screen.
|
|
And you'll just aid.
|
|
So we know with who's like this.
|
|
Is it me or is he skipping?
|
|
He's skipping.
|
|
He's probably watching the video.
|
|
Yeah, I thought it was me.
|
|
Your battery's not going dead, is it?
|
|
No, it's not.
|
|
You're still there?
|
|
Yeah, I'm trying to kill several things to help.
|
|
Will you think you're in your cell phone?
|
|
No, I'm on the N800.
|
|
Am I sounding better yet?
|
|
Oh, yeah, yeah.
|
|
It's kind of fine.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
But what you do is it looks like standard HTML.
|
|
You've got the greater than and less than brackets.
|
|
But if you're unlike me and you want everyone to be able to see your video,
|
|
because not everyone is going to have the theoretical codecs,
|
|
unless something magical happens,
|
|
and they actually get this thing passed in the HTML5 spec,
|
|
what you can do is have it degrade gracefully to either MP4
|
|
or all the way down to a flash video.
|
|
And let's stick this in the IRC.
|
|
There's a little hacks story on how to do it.
|
|
And it actually really is cool.
|
|
If you go to a number of human industries.com,
|
|
slash video,
|
|
and something that, like if you use Firefox 3, just 3.0,
|
|
the only video you'd see is the video of me explaining,
|
|
hey, if you don't have Firefox 3.5,
|
|
you can't see anything but this video,
|
|
because it downgrades itself to a flash video that's hosted on YouTube.
|
|
And if you do have Firefox 3.5,
|
|
you get to see everything that I've posted to YouTube
|
|
like the last year and a half,
|
|
because I folded all down and converted it.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So the idea this is to get Firefox 3.5?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
There are some other browsers that are doing it.
|
|
There's a version of Opera that does it.
|
|
What I found on the web is that Opera 9.52 will do it.
|
|
And one of the versions of Chrome will do it.
|
|
And in three years, Internet Explorer will do it.
|
|
I figured that IE and everybody else will do it
|
|
as soon as this is all ratified.
|
|
There's some in-fighting right now.
|
|
All the browser makers are arguing whether it should be
|
|
CORN, Vorbis, or H.264.
|
|
But Mozilla for Firefox 3.5 went ahead and just put both of them in.
|
|
Well, and that's the good thing about this.
|
|
I mean, because actually, last I heard they had removed the codec requirements
|
|
from the spec.
|
|
Like they said, okay, you know, you can put in brackets, video or audio or whatever,
|
|
but in terms of saying, okay, in order to be a spec browser,
|
|
you have to have these codecs available.
|
|
They've removed that from the HTML 5 spec.
|
|
That's from InfoWorld on July 2nd, so I don't know, maybe something new has happened.
|
|
But the cool thing is, anyway, that the browser can still utilize it and say, yeah,
|
|
we're going to support this, you know, like Firefox 3.5 is doing.
|
|
So cool browsers will enable this no matter what.
|
|
I said, one of the things, this is actually really easy to do.
|
|
I know pretty much next to nothing about programming for the web,
|
|
and I was able to do it.
|
|
I mean, my website is all flat files.
|
|
Yeah, I'm looking at it right now in Firefox 3.5, and works perfect.
|
|
I like the interface.
|
|
Yeah, and one cool thing is, if you have scripting disabled,
|
|
like if you're running no script or something,
|
|
you can actually just allow the one, you know, just the video section.
|
|
Yeah, if you right-click on it, and it won't show you the controls,
|
|
but you can right-click, and the controls are all in your right-click menu.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Yeah, that's cool, because you can have saved video as,
|
|
or you can send videos to someone by email.
|
|
Yeah, because it's just the streaming the or a file.
|
|
Yeah, this would be cool.
|
|
You should replace this flash someday.
|
|
You should have stream a video of your cat singing in the kitchen.
|
|
If I can catch him doing it, I will.
|
|
We just heard him.
|
|
Yeah, I got to catch him on video, though.
|
|
Any more questions on this one?
|
|
Come on out there, so I wanted to sway.
|
|
You're just on standby?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Why?
|
|
How about you, Claught?
|
|
Do you have anything for us?
|
|
Yeah, I don't know if you guys have heard about the Hadoppi router.
|
|
Has anyone heard of that yet?
|
|
No.
|
|
All right, so this is not really a hardware router.
|
|
It's just firmware for the OpenWRT.
|
|
But it was written up about in the Monde in France.
|
|
And apparently some group, I think it's like,
|
|
I forget the name of this little group that's putting this out.
|
|
But it is a firmware for your OpenWRT.
|
|
And its sole purpose is to look at local wireless routers in your area,
|
|
in your apartment building, in your neighborhood, whatever.
|
|
And just automatically crack the passwords of all the routers
|
|
that it can see.
|
|
And then it will utilize different routers for things like torrenting
|
|
and I guess whatever else you want to do.
|
|
And the purpose of it is, of course, too.
|
|
I guess not anonymize what you're doing,
|
|
but spreading the wealth of what you're doing around
|
|
or the blame of what you're doing around.
|
|
And apparently the instigator of this firmware was that,
|
|
well, you know, the whole torrenting debate, I guess,
|
|
in the fact that some people are being persecuted, I guess,
|
|
for torrenting copyright and material, such like that.
|
|
As far as I know, the firmware isn't available yet for download,
|
|
but it is something that's being developed, I guess.
|
|
And it's pretty much ready to go from what they're saying.
|
|
And this opened WRT firmware, so it's called Hadapi H-A-D-O-P-I.
|
|
And it's supposed to be out there.
|
|
And I like it because it's just like, you know,
|
|
the more they try to clamp down on stupid stuff like torrenting
|
|
and copyright and intellectual property, you know,
|
|
the more the hacker community finds ways around it.
|
|
And that's really, really important, I think.
|
|
What routers does it work on?
|
|
Well, I guess the open WRT is what?
|
|
Like, it's a couple of different routers, right?
|
|
There's a couple of the different...
|
|
Linksys routers, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, so I don't know which...
|
|
That's a DDWRT, right?
|
|
That firmware?
|
|
Yeah, but yeah, yeah, exactly.
|
|
Yeah, that works on quite a few of them, I think.
|
|
Yeah, I'm pretty sure.
|
|
Okay, so this is firmware all by itself,
|
|
or do I still need this to add to...
|
|
You guys keep saying DDWRT and open WRT.
|
|
Those are firmwares, too.
|
|
So you would need that firmware to use this?
|
|
I'm not sure.
|
|
I believe so, yes.
|
|
I believe that is correct.
|
|
Or maybe it's just based on open WRT.
|
|
I'm not really sure.
|
|
You might be able to use it anywhere where that will work,
|
|
that DDWRT will be open.
|
|
Yeah, that could be it as well.
|
|
Yeah, it may work under the same principle, you know.
|
|
I mean, I'm sure it's...
|
|
Well, I'm sure it's...
|
|
They probably just took an open WRT and added some stuff to it.
|
|
You know, I would imagine.
|
|
I mean, I don't see why they would have to reinvent everything from the ground up.
|
|
Oh, no, you know they didn't do that.
|
|
They just probably ripped up part of the code and added a few more little tricks to it.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, it's just a good way, I think, to confound, you know,
|
|
people who are trying to really monitor people and, you know, say,
|
|
oh, you can't do this on them and that you can't do that.
|
|
You can't use this.
|
|
You know, it's just...
|
|
Well, that's what it helped.
|
|
This would have helped that mother, right?
|
|
It's getting good for the 26 songs.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
But the proverbial, you know, small town midwestern people
|
|
who are getting sued for accidentally downloading latest, you know, whatever song.
|
|
Yeah, this is exactly that kind of thing.
|
|
And like Jesse Jans and the chatroom just pointed out.
|
|
Yeah, it would kind of be...
|
|
It would kind of suck to be the neighbor, you know,
|
|
who got the password cracked and is now torrenting, you know,
|
|
random stuff without your knowledge.
|
|
But at the same time, you know, it's really...
|
|
I don't know, it's almost...
|
|
I mean, it's really people standing together
|
|
whether they know it or not, you know,
|
|
to really just say, no authorities,
|
|
you're not going to be able to track us all down.
|
|
You know?
|
|
Now granted, that's not like a big community agreeing on standing together and saying,
|
|
yeah, let's open up our network and share all the bandwidth
|
|
and just totally, you know, we're all, you know,
|
|
do, you know, everything that's illegal
|
|
and they can't take us all down.
|
|
Well, it's just like with the radar detectors
|
|
and the, you know, the speed guns, I mean, it's the same thing.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
|
|
You know, one one gets this and then another one makes the thing to detect that
|
|
and they make a better speed gun and the Audi Audi Audi.
|
|
We're saying the process, they do come up with some good stuff sometimes
|
|
so it's got to really is beneficial.
|
|
And what's cool about this is...
|
|
Yeah, your, you know, your neighbor will get a cease and desist
|
|
and, you know, CFBI will kick in their door and everything.
|
|
But nothing should happen to them because there will be absolutely no evidence
|
|
that anything happened.
|
|
And they're not going to have the files.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
Yeah, it's...
|
|
So really all you're doing is costing the government and the collusion squad
|
|
or whatever you want to call them.
|
|
Yeah, the APAA, RIA, other things ending in AA.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it's going to cost them money.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's just...
|
|
No, it's going to cost us money.
|
|
Oh, because they're not government agencies.
|
|
Yeah, but yeah, they're...
|
|
But yes, it would technically trigger down if it was costing like the FBI money
|
|
to come and bust people's doors down.
|
|
Although I question how often that happens anyway, number one.
|
|
And number two, you know, I mean, it's going to cost us all the fight, you know, the government.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I think.
|
|
So who cares?
|
|
Let it cost a little bit of extra.
|
|
We're going to pay taxes no matter what.
|
|
It doesn't matter.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And the more of this kind of crap happens, the less likely it is that they're actually going to go kick people's doors.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
How many doors you kick down with innocent people sitting in there before you go, you know what?
|
|
Let's not kick doors down.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
I think most of the time they're getting all their information through the net anyway.
|
|
I don't think they're, you know, they're just putting either through the internet service provider or whatever.
|
|
They're just...
|
|
They're just playing man in the middle getting your information.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And wouldn't you be going, hey, wow, my net traffic is really slow today.
|
|
Well, yeah.
|
|
But a lot of people aren't even going to...
|
|
You're not even going to...
|
|
Well, a lot of people aren't even going to know.
|
|
I mean, they know that the internet is slow.
|
|
They don't even know how to call the...
|
|
They're not going to call their provider and ask about it or anything, you know.
|
|
Right.
|
|
And most people wouldn't even do a speed check on their system.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
See, I love to yell at Comcast though.
|
|
So I totally would.
|
|
Well, so would I.
|
|
Yeah, because Comcast, I hate, but...
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
That's us.
|
|
We're not the ones...
|
|
We're not the ones...
|
|
You know, we're going to be the ones running the system right out the ones...
|
|
No, they're really being hacked via it all the time.
|
|
We're the ones that should have the boss enough password for this not to happen.
|
|
Yeah, like password and the max filtering and the...
|
|
Everything else that you can think of.
|
|
So is there a road map on when this is going to be released?
|
|
Not that I can find.
|
|
I didn't...
|
|
I haven't really looked around all that much because I don't have a compatible router anyway.
|
|
But apparently, it'll be soon.
|
|
That's all I've got for you.
|
|
Hey, look here if you go to...
|
|
I'm just going to stick this in the IRC so that they can end up in the show notes.
|
|
Because I'm not even going to try to pronounce that.
|
|
But it's basically Hadoppi router in France, in French.
|
|
But supposedly you can buy one for 50 euros.
|
|
Well, there you go.
|
|
And it's red.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I'm a little meat.
|
|
Ferrari red.
|
|
Yeah, dangerous.
|
|
Pretty shiny.
|
|
Well, for shiny, that means I need it.
|
|
You were just hacked.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Here's another one on hackerspace.dat called the Hostel WRT.
|
|
Looks like somebody talked about it at...
|
|
...a French hackerspace festival on June 26th.
|
|
Somebody did a talk about it.
|
|
Yeah, I guess it's happening...
|
|
I mean, obviously it's happening in France because some French do get it.
|
|
But I guess part of the thing is that over in France, there's a limitation as to how quickly these kinds of charges can be brought against people or something.
|
|
And it's...
|
|
I guess it takes a lot of legal...
|
|
You have to really have a lot of evidence that they...
|
|
Like, 330 was saying that they actually downloaded the file and have it on their system.
|
|
And if the judges can't see that that's the case within a certain amount of time and they can't do...
|
|
...they can't pass a judgment against the person, so it's just kind of like...
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I guess it takes advantage of some kind of heavy, costly bureaucratic system, you know, that's inefficient as usual.
|
|
But I figured it would be just as useful over here.
|
|
Oh, absolutely.
|
|
You guys remember that router project that was kind of starting up maybe a year ago, I think?
|
|
And it was like some feel where you got this free router and like, you know, quote-unquote have...
|
|
Yeah, an era.
|
|
What is it called?
|
|
Funera.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Whatever happened to that, is that still...
|
|
It's still running around.
|
|
They'll give you a free router as long as you're willing to share the connection with everyone.
|
|
Yeah, I mean what?
|
|
What?
|
|
Share the network connection?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Basically, the idea is you leave it open and they... they give you a router.
|
|
Well, good is that.
|
|
If your neighbor is bit-door and if you're...
|
|
You have to be a member.
|
|
You can set it up.
|
|
You can set it up so that they have to be...
|
|
It really depends.
|
|
Oh, you have to configure all the settings and who's allowed and who's not.
|
|
No, I think it's a WPA login.
|
|
And if your neighbor bought into it, he can share yours.
|
|
Or some of these in the area, I thought.
|
|
Right.
|
|
No, that's one of the options that you have, yes.
|
|
You can also charge people for it and try to make money off of it.
|
|
Or you can just set it up and say, okay, it's open.
|
|
And I believe you get like...
|
|
I believe you have some kind of virtual...
|
|
Maybe a virtual network that people aren't allowed on to or something like that.
|
|
But some way of configuring it so that your signal's kind of split into two.
|
|
I guess ESS ID is or something like that.
|
|
Not really.
|
|
I'm not sure.
|
|
And I'm kind of working off of memory anyway.
|
|
But yes.
|
|
You're getting two different IP addresses then?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I could be wrong about that.
|
|
But yeah, I do remember that there were like three different configurations that you could choose from.
|
|
Like one where it was open for everyone.
|
|
One where it was open for anyone who is also a member of this scenario thing.
|
|
And then one where you can actually make money by setting up sort of a...
|
|
I guess like one of those hotspots, you know,
|
|
where they can actually sign up and pay, I don't know...
|
|
I'm not coming ISD then, basically.
|
|
No, you've become an access point.
|
|
I mean like a T-Mobile hotspot or something like that at a Starbucks or something.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Or at the...
|
|
Well, a Wi-Fi like McDonald's.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
You know, where you pay $2.99?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, man.
|
|
Yeah, I didn't know if it was still around, but I guess it is.
|
|
I guess it is.
|
|
I guess it is.
|
|
I'm trying to do a Google search on it.
|
|
I can't get to spelling right.
|
|
Was it Benara that we said?
|
|
I hear it.
|
|
F-O-N dot com.
|
|
Just go to F-O-N dot com.
|
|
And yeah, it looks like it's on Benara 2.0.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
These phone users get two secure signals.
|
|
One for personal, one for public use.
|
|
Or you can make an average of three euros a month.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
Three euros a month for selling Wi-Fi access.
|
|
Yeah, this is different than what I was thinking of.
|
|
Because one I was thinking of.
|
|
I can't think of the name.
|
|
Were you bought the router and you set it up to share with people?
|
|
No, I think that's...
|
|
I think that's this as well.
|
|
I think that's the third option on here.
|
|
I'm pretty sure.
|
|
Because I'm pretty sure I remember that as well.
|
|
Where if you're all a member of Fonera and you can go and you get the password for...
|
|
I don't know, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, if you had a community though, it says there's three different ways to do it.
|
|
Yeah, it also gives you a list of different Fonera hotspots.
|
|
That's cool.
|
|
Oh, people that already have one up and running, you mean?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I would be interested to know what the little ESFID shows up as for those Fonera ones.
|
|
Because I know that even from like Cupertino to Pittsburgh, to New York, to Maryland, I've seen...
|
|
I keep seeing like the same...
|
|
Some of the same ESFIDs.
|
|
And I know a lot of them are like the default links to names and stuff like that.
|
|
But there are a couple that I don't really...
|
|
I don't associate with any brand.
|
|
And I just wonder if they could possibly be Fonera or something similar or just some no name brand of router that I had never seen before.
|
|
What do you mean the IP addresses?
|
|
No, like there's the names of the network, so the name of the broadcast, you know, signal.
|
|
So we're all over the United States, I'm looking at the map.
|
|
There's a lot of them.
|
|
Somebody has to join this thing, just to play around with it.
|
|
Ooh, you're gonna be a hotspot, eh?
|
|
No, why not?
|
|
But if you're useful, you get to use the rest of the network when you're out and about.
|
|
Right, if you have fun taking.
|
|
Wow, there's a lot in Chicago.
|
|
They're everywhere.
|
|
Ah, did you just say hotspot?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Two minutes.
|
|
Feen.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
We don't have any that dirty talker in here.
|
|
Somebody needs to cut so he doesn't pick on people.
|
|
Somebody who volunteer.
|
|
Well, I think Piggwell's just gone for a family.
|
|
Humanindustries.com slash video and watch Dan's ass.
|
|
That's where it's the track.
|
|
It didn't work.
|
|
Any more questions about that router, funera thing before we move on?
|
|
Nothing?
|
|
All right.
|
|
Do you lens you still awake?
|
|
Yes, sir.
|
|
Do you have a story or a topic?
|
|
Yeah, I was gonna comment quickly on a set of links.
|
|
There's been some talk recently in the RRC about learning programming.
|
|
And I'm not sure if everybody's aware, but a lot of the big universities,
|
|
they put their content up on the web for free.
|
|
Like MIT, UC Berkeley, Stanford, some of them have audio video.
|
|
And even if they don't, you know, you can get a lot out of reading their notes,
|
|
the slides, the exams.
|
|
But the video really does help in learning process when you can see somebody actually doing it on the board.
|
|
You know, I think it was Harvard that is actually doing a lot of their stuff in AUG.
|
|
See what I know.
|
|
A lot of their classes, although I don't have a link for it.
|
|
Yeah, there are a lot of them that are going creative commons with their material, too.
|
|
That's cool.
|
|
Wow, this is really cool.
|
|
I mean, MIT, that touch it seems.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
That's the end even Berkeley.
|
|
I mean, those are two pretty big...
|
|
That was Stanford that was going AUG with a lot of their stuff, actually.
|
|
Know what I see?
|
|
That written out there.
|
|
Remember it's Stanford.
|
|
For them to save those links.
|
|
That piece then, you put it in how long will they remain in this piece then?
|
|
That one's set for a month.
|
|
Okay, cool.
|
|
Because that way it might take me a couple days before I get to show up.
|
|
So are there audio clips, too?
|
|
Or is it all video?
|
|
Yeah, some of them are audio.
|
|
You really have to look through it because it's like a mixture.
|
|
Some of them have video.
|
|
Some of them have audio.
|
|
Wait.
|
|
Anything else?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
That's it.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Sorry, monster.
|
|
But just a second.
|
|
Hey, well, did you just go make sandwiches?
|
|
I did.
|
|
Did you offer everyone else any?
|
|
That's a sandwich violation in the bin, two minutes.
|
|
Did you give your time to eat your sandwich?
|
|
Damn, Sheriff.
|
|
If you're still in the art, you could join them.
|
|
Have a sandwich with you.
|
|
Oh, jeez.
|
|
Well, he was going to go next, but I guess as much.
|
|
You're going to have to go next.
|
|
I was going to save you for last.
|
|
But since art's in the bin.
|
|
Oh, really.
|
|
I was going to save the best for last.
|
|
Oh, well.
|
|
What I've been thinking about this week is just how lucky we are on Linux.
|
|
You can take a computer that somebody else has thrown away.
|
|
Put Linux on it.
|
|
And you have all these games.
|
|
And just about any repo that from any distro you can choose.
|
|
And you can keep a six-year-old busy for years.
|
|
And it costs nothing.
|
|
And what I particularly like is you've got the educational games.
|
|
You've got like child's play and tux paint.
|
|
And Bell Peter and I were talking about one G-Compress.
|
|
These things will, you know, work from age two to age 12.
|
|
As well as it does not take a lot of computer to play many of the Linux games.
|
|
Like I've got my six-year-old grandson on a discarded app on 900.
|
|
That has a ten-year-old 3D graphics card in it.
|
|
That works wonders on games like torques and tux racer, super tux card, super tux, tangus.
|
|
And it's all free.
|
|
How can you beat that?
|
|
It really is just another area that Linux shines.
|
|
It just goes to show that you don't have to spend a lot of money to accomplish a task.
|
|
All those games that you mentioned might daughter, you know, start off playing and still plays.
|
|
And you also mentioned you don't need a particularly fast machine to do them.
|
|
And a lot of my educational and teach the kids what they're having fun, they're learning.
|
|
And that's an important aspect of it all too.
|
|
Well, in a lot of the games you get them started on young and when they wear out the repos,
|
|
they're getting computer savvy enough that they may start wanting to do a little more with a computer.
|
|
And they've already gotten rid of any basic fears of it.
|
|
You know, even when they get to school, you know, they can use a keyboard and a mouse,
|
|
which is probably more than most of the kids in their class can do.
|
|
All right, is this correct? I'm looking at you back to repos.
|
|
And it's showing in the games section 930 packages.
|
|
Yeah, it sounds about right.
|
|
I mean, that's amazing.
|
|
I never really looked in here for games.
|
|
And then is there an educational?
|
|
The thing about those games.
|
|
Yeah, it has an educational section also.
|
|
The educational section is there also.
|
|
It's an amazing collection of programs that do wonders.
|
|
And it's all free.
|
|
And you don't have to spend the fortune on a machine to use it?
|
|
No, you can take somebody's cast off and make a machine that'll play these games great out of it.
|
|
Well, let's name all 930, you ready?
|
|
Okay.
|
|
3D chess.
|
|
I was just kidding.
|
|
So just in terms of running this stuff like on old computers and stuff like that,
|
|
I think that I heard that Ohio Linux spec this year is going to have a free geek kind of deal
|
|
where people will go and take a sort of learn Linux for an afternoon or whatever and build a computer
|
|
and then they get to take home the computers that they built.
|
|
So I don't know what kind of, I mean, I think it is being sponsored by free geek.
|
|
So it's going to be old or hard where I'm sure.
|
|
I mean, that's like a perfect example because yeah, all people are going to learn Linux, build their system,
|
|
walk away with the system that they just built with Linux on it to be pretty cool.
|
|
Yeah, well let's face it, in the Windows world, you know, anything less than two gigahertz, they discard them.
|
|
They don't want them.
|
|
They won't run, you know, if they don't have two gigahertz and at least two megabytes of memory,
|
|
they won't run anything on the Windows world, not in a way they want them to run.
|
|
Yeah, I mean, that was one of the things I remember that kind of turned me off of Mac in the end.
|
|
It's just the realization that the software was being released without the choice, you know,
|
|
not to have all the with-bang effects and stuff like that that my older systems couldn't run.
|
|
And then seeing that Linux, you could have the latest and greatest graphic environment
|
|
or you could have no graphic environment, you know, or anywhere in between.
|
|
I mean, that's just the huge difference because one is just pushing you away from your old hardware
|
|
and the other one is completely making it stay alive and be useful for you.
|
|
Well, it sure makes handy downs convenient for Linux, the way they're doing it in the Windows world,
|
|
and in the Mac world too.
|
|
Yeah, I mean, I've gained more computers, I mean, workable, usable computers,
|
|
since I, you know, really got into Linux, than I ever had with Mac,
|
|
because obviously with Mac you're always throwing out your old one,
|
|
getting your overpriced new one, whereas with Linux, you're like,
|
|
you're taking stuff that people are going to throw out, you know,
|
|
and putting Linux on it and using it for another five years.
|
|
You know, I mean, it's just, it's really cool.
|
|
And as a geek who likes gadgets, I mean, that's sort of a deal.
|
|
Well, the part that I find the handiest is that instead of my grandson harassing his grandma
|
|
to play on her laptop, you know, I've got him on a cast-off computer
|
|
and they're in there and he just tickled a death with it.
|
|
And it runs the Linux games beautifully.
|
|
It's got 256 megabyte of RAM in it.
|
|
That's so cool.
|
|
It's just a shame how much stuff gets thrown away, though.
|
|
I mean, they have, like, over by me in the dump.
|
|
They have, like, once every maybe month and a half or two months.
|
|
They have a disposal thing for home electronics.
|
|
They call it, you know, a TV's.
|
|
And I mean, there's piles and piles of computers there.
|
|
Well, that's cool, in a way, because you can just take everything that you want.
|
|
Really, the real bummer is when people destroy it before they throw it away for no good reason.
|
|
Yeah, but a lot of this is thrown right out of a car.
|
|
And a lot of it is destroyed before you can even get to it.
|
|
Yeah, that's ridiculous. That's a real bummer when they do that.
|
|
Because I mean, that's just, I don't know.
|
|
And like you said, there's probably computers in their four or five years old,
|
|
which, you know, really would run like rockets with Linux.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely.
|
|
I don't care if it has a hard drive in it.
|
|
I mean, you don't even need a hard drive to run a live CD.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
Well, that's why those, like, the free key organizations and stuff like that are important,
|
|
because at least they're doing it to get people to turn in their old stuff and redistribute it.
|
|
That's a good thing.
|
|
Yeah, the sad part is they're like the school that I worked for.
|
|
They must have thrown, you know, 100 computers away.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
They didn't throw away.
|
|
They recycled them.
|
|
So they say, you know, and they were all good stuff.
|
|
I mean, good, anybody would take them.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And they just know what we can't.
|
|
You know, we can't just give them away to people because, you know, they're insurance,
|
|
and this and that, and, you know, kiss mine, and this looks crazy.
|
|
Well, all the green freaks should be embracing Linux.
|
|
Let's face it, it sure saves a lot of heavy metals from the dump peeps.
|
|
Yeah, they absolutely should be.
|
|
I think a lot of people don't know about it.
|
|
You know, they don't realize it's such a big deal, and they don't understand the...
|
|
Choose people that's lying on the bench and has rents talking shit to pleasure you.
|
|
That's it.
|
|
In the bin, five minutes.
|
|
Come on, Mayor.
|
|
Overrides, it's overrides to Sheriff.
|
|
You know what I'm talking about?
|
|
That's twice, twice that damn computer comes up.
|
|
So what?
|
|
You're the Mayor.
|
|
It must be four o'clock.
|
|
That automatically goes off the four o'clock somewhere.
|
|
You know, I'd hate to break into Peter's house.
|
|
They would scare the butt Jesus out of somebody.
|
|
Him on the bed or to hate you?
|
|
I believe in the red stockings.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
What you can do is, like, you use the activite when people come over, or at nighttime, whatever.
|
|
The activite senses people.
|
|
It sends a command to tell your front lights to turn on, because it's just an infrared sensor.
|
|
But how you pick that up and runs a script where it just plays a barking dog way far.
|
|
It's really brilliant.
|
|
It's really used.
|
|
What happens when the dog keeps barking the same sound, you know?
|
|
They're going to be like, hey, something's wrong here.
|
|
Well, you change it.
|
|
You got to get a hammer and it goes and bangs up against the door.
|
|
That's the key to that.
|
|
Oh, shotgun.
|
|
Mike is handling shotguns going on.
|
|
No, like, the dog's jumping up against the door.
|
|
Because that's your topic, Art?
|
|
What's that?
|
|
The dog jumping up against the door?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, absolutely.
|
|
What else you got for us?
|
|
Actually, it was going to be anamontane lanyx, but Dan's not here tonight.
|
|
What a classic.
|
|
That God didn't believe that when I saw that.
|
|
Well, that's, no, actually, I didn't believe it either, but just one quick thing.
|
|
I was reading an article about the United States Postal Services going open source
|
|
with their tracking systems.
|
|
And it's really, I mean, the article, I'll post the article in the chat
|
|
and people can look at it, but it's, you know, it's booming their tracking system.
|
|
I mean, it's really making a big difference for them.
|
|
And you can read the article because we don't have much time.
|
|
It's nice to see that the United States Postal Services going open source.
|
|
Peter, how do I paste and copy here?
|
|
You know, can you tell me?
|
|
Control C?
|
|
Well, you just stick that Postus note right in the middle of your forehead.
|
|
So that's right, the Postus note.
|
|
Oh, I'm out of that.
|
|
And I didn't even use Control C.
|
|
So, kiss mine now.
|
|
But you used your bloody mask.
|
|
You know, someone used menus.
|
|
That's right.
|
|
And it's a wireless mouth.
|
|
And I think it works by our after-signal.
|
|
Peter, Georgia, where is that?
|
|
Right.
|
|
Tell him he's from Georgia.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
Yeah, that's a, it's, it's, many article.
|
|
I went through the article and it's really, it's nice to see that even though the, you know,
|
|
I mean, Peter, I thought you'd enjoy reading this.
|
|
It's, uh, nobody else, but I really want to.
|
|
Yeah, I think it's great.
|
|
Hannah Montana, thing with Dan, but he and he's not here, I can't do that.
|
|
Well, I want to know about this, uh, Hannah Montana distraught.
|
|
What, the distraught?
|
|
Oh, you didn't see about it?
|
|
No.
|
|
Oh, hold on.
|
|
Let me, uh...
|
|
I'm like, Pysor on Twitter.
|
|
I'm like, Pysor there.
|
|
I can't remember your time.
|
|
Yeah, there's a link.
|
|
Here's the link.
|
|
There's the link, buddy.
|
|
Right there.
|
|
My daughter, sir.
|
|
She's my daughter.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Um, according to, uh, see here.
|
|
According to...
|
|
I find out where I had the damn thing up here.
|
|
It gives you, uh, what is in it?
|
|
It's got a new KTM login screen, new splash screen, a new icon.
|
|
It has, uh, new wallpapers.
|
|
Um, a 22nd boot time.
|
|
Mmm, what else is it got?
|
|
It's not the door or something.
|
|
Mmm, no, it's on, uh, I don't know.
|
|
I thought it was Obdabian.
|
|
Yeah, it's based on Kubuntu.
|
|
Yeah, that's right, yeah.
|
|
There'd be unusual based on the bloody distro on Ubuntu.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, really.
|
|
Yeah, it's Ubuntu, yeah.
|
|
Ubuntu.
|
|
It's a remix of Kubuntu.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, using all of it.
|
|
It probably got a henamon 10-up bloody wallpaper.
|
|
Oh, yeah, you can see, uh, if you look at the screen shots.
|
|
Why did that?
|
|
I wonder why they didn't just release this in a series of, like, schemes on, uh, like KDE look or something like that.
|
|
I mean, why bother reading mixing it and stuff?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
You get a song with it too.
|
|
They got a song too, so.
|
|
How good to us.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Peter, your door is going to have this.
|
|
Yeah, love it.
|
|
Five to one thing.
|
|
I'm going to have to sit on Twitter.
|
|
Can you see how far to one six?
|
|
That's worse than your name's, right, silly?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I was, I had that, I had the laugh when I seen it.
|
|
Oh, I mean, it was distinct.
|
|
Is Pegwell in the bin?
|
|
No, no.
|
|
Oh, no.
|
|
He's gone back there after saying that.
|
|
I think Pegwell's downloading Hannah Montana Linux right now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, it's the number one distro for pedophile.
|
|
Get on the bin.
|
|
What do you mean the bin?
|
|
Pegwell was going to get something to drink.
|
|
I already got back from that.
|
|
Then I offered everyone hookers and blow.
|
|
And you know what?
|
|
That's it.
|
|
You're banned for life.
|
|
You're getting me out of here monster boat.
|
|
You bitch.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
I love that.
|
|
I love our hookers.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
It's in Australia.
|
|
We have dogs here, sir.
|
|
Life, life is one week in titland.
|
|
That was rough, but he deserved it.
|
|
And I actually just had a worth it.
|
|
All right, I heard it's more Britney Spears distros or?
|
|
Oh, that pretty well wraps up the game, doesn't it?
|
|
Hey, I got a comment on this.
|
|
Hannah Montana distro as opposed to, you know, putting it in a KDE look or whatever repository.
|
|
Depends on your market audience.
|
|
If you're putting this forth to a bunch of Windows users in a distro, the only way that you're going to get it to them.
|
|
Because they would know how to use a repository.
|
|
And it's also called an x86 basic addition, which really, you know, slims it down.
|
|
I mean, it's not slim.
|
|
It's 681 megs.
|
|
I mean, it's not a small distribution, but of course, it has KDE in it, so.
|
|
It's going to be combined with the blame wallpaper.
|
|
Oh, absolutely.
|
|
What difference is it going to be?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
When you download it, you let us know.
|
|
Yeah, well, I'm going to have to in here.
|
|
You will.
|
|
You got nothing to do.
|
|
What's the point?
|
|
You can do all these distro well.
|
|
Check it out for us.
|
|
Share a visit, or if I go to the bathroom, do I need permission for that?
|
|
No, you're excused.
|
|
Did you have a handout when you asked me?
|
|
Absolutely, both of them.
|
|
Okay, you're excused.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Have another e-book this week.
|
|
It's called Ubuntu Pocket Guide and Reference.
|
|
It's a free download for all the link in IRC.
|
|
I love these free e-books.
|
|
It's about 152 pages, seven chapters.
|
|
You can also buy it too if you want to buy the printed version.
|
|
Hey, that gets put on every machine I put Ubuntu for people.
|
|
That's a good idea.
|
|
That's right on the desktop.
|
|
And do they actually read it?
|
|
Or look at it, refer to it.
|
|
I tell them you read that if you still have questions, we'll call me.
|
|
But read that first.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Must work, they don't call me.
|
|
So, how much is the printed version?
|
|
Probably 14, 15 bucks.
|
|
It's only got what, 300 tips.
|
|
It says it can't be any more than 200, 200 pages.
|
|
It's $12 on Amazon.
|
|
That was a bit.
|
|
Nothing, but that would be handy in a printed version.
|
|
It would be, yeah.
|
|
O'Reilly does have a couple of Pocket Guides that are really good.
|
|
Nothing, I don't think there's anything specific for Ubuntu,
|
|
just like Linux Pocket Guide and things like that.
|
|
It's just the terminology and some more obscure commands
|
|
that you might not remember off the top of your head.
|
|
Those are pretty cool, the printed versions, I mean.
|
|
And I went to Burns and Noble City and seen a Ubuntu user magazine.
|
|
It's a brand new magazine out.
|
|
It's called Ubuntu user.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Really?
|
|
The web address is Ubuntu-user.com.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
That's pretty cool.
|
|
I hope it hangs around.
|
|
Yeah, me too.
|
|
Right, that's neat.
|
|
It was a very nice magazine.
|
|
Some of the editors are writers in it.
|
|
It's John Maddog Hall.
|
|
John O'Bacon.
|
|
And Marcel, he does the cooking with Linux.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I think on Linux Journal.
|
|
Linux Journal, yeah.
|
|
I mean, there's a lot of big names in there.
|
|
Plus, they have a section there for newbies.
|
|
It's called the Discovery Guide.
|
|
The only thing is, with these magazines,
|
|
they seem to be a little bit pricey.
|
|
It's 15 bucks.
|
|
Yeah, but you know they have a...
|
|
It's a homey.
|
|
With them too, you know.
|
|
It is an English magazine.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
No, it's Linux New Media, which does, like, Linux Magazine.
|
|
Right.
|
|
It is Linux Pro.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, they have the discs with them, which is cool,
|
|
because that way you don't have to bother downloading
|
|
and that way you also know that your disc is probably good.
|
|
Yeah, sometimes when you burn it yourself, you know,
|
|
there's something up with it.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
Yeah, I like them.
|
|
I don't mind spending that kind of money on these magazines.
|
|
And it's the same if you get, like,
|
|
I don't know what...
|
|
There's, like, you know, PC format or Mac,
|
|
and then there used to be one for Mac.
|
|
I mean, they were pretty expensive,
|
|
because they, again, they have the disc with them.
|
|
And sometimes they're pretty big magazines, too.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I think a lot of people,
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dear geeks, I think, buy those things.
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Okay, I have the...
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Okay, the price is $15 if you buy it at a newsstand.
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But if you get the year subscription, it's $39.95.
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Right.
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And there's only four issues a year.
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Is that all?
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Yeah.
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That's why it says it comes with an upgrade disc in that.
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I thought if they're bringing it out monthly,
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for surely Ubuntu doesn't upgrade it monthly.
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Yeah, I'm sure they've got, like,
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I'm sure they've got updates,
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and then probably whatever extra packages they're talking about,
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you know, just the dot-deb files for, you know, whatever software
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they happen to review that issue, I would imagine.
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Did, um, there used to be the online PDF
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Ubuntu magazine.
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Yeah.
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I can't remember what...
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Sorry.
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Yeah, full circle.
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Is that still about?
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No, I'm pretty sure it kind of died.
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Oh, you see, that's a pity,
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because that was a pretty good magazine,
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like that tax magazine.
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That was the other one that was available only through PDF, too.
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Oh, I'm sorry.
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Full circle is around, I think.
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Oh, you might be thinking of Tax Magazine then.
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They've packed that in, didn't they?
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Yeah, yeah.
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I think they'd have an easier time if they did it now
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instead of when they did,
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because I think people would be
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okay with buying advertising now,
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but back then it was all still very, very new.
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Yeah, that's true.
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If it looks like a full circle is still around.
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Yeah.
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The latest one was June 28th, I guess.
|
|
Okay.
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It was on the Worcester, right?
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It must have gone away for a little while.
|
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I could have sworn it was gone for a little while.
|
|
Maybe I'm thinking of that other one though.
|
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Yeah, and another magazine, well,
|
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not new, I just found out about it a few weeks ago
|
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with the BSD magazine.
|
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Yeah, BSD magazine.
|
|
I picked up the issue this month,
|
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and it's not new to them?
|
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It looks like January 2008.
|
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It's new.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
It's another one that has four issues a year.
|
|
And their pricing is $15 if you buy it at the newsstand,
|
|
but it's the same price as $39.95 a year for four issues.
|
|
But you can also get the PDF version for 25 a year,
|
|
which they had a freebie on there a few days ago,
|
|
and I downloaded the latest one for free.
|
|
Which one was that?
|
|
The one with the...
|
|
I have month on this thing.
|
|
With free BSD 7.1 in it?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay, yeah.
|
|
That's the one I got.
|
|
And once before that was PCBSD, no?
|
|
Yep.
|
|
I just looked at that one today at Barnes & Noble.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Just browse through it.
|
|
And I think I'm going to go ahead and try PCBSD.
|
|
I'm going to give it a try,
|
|
and maybe tell you about it in a couple weeks.
|
|
Yeah, I'm probably going to try either PCBSD or free BSD.
|
|
I've had some trouble in the past with the BSD
|
|
is trying to get them installed onto my Apple hardware.
|
|
But I might just try PCBSD on my triple EPC,
|
|
just for kicks, see how that runs.
|
|
No, and you're Apple hardware.
|
|
What type of video chips?
|
|
It's just...
|
|
It's an Intel 9...
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I can tell you exactly,
|
|
but you know, it's the Intel one.
|
|
It's a geographic Intel thing.
|
|
So I'm kind of surprised that it wouldn't be working,
|
|
but I've got like...
|
|
I've had nothing but X failures on like...
|
|
I tried PCBSD actually the one that you're the latest one.
|
|
I tried it on a MacBook,
|
|
and it kept...
|
|
It had trouble booting the install installation disk,
|
|
and then I tried to boot it up just after I finally did get it to install,
|
|
and there were some weird X issues,
|
|
and I can't get it to boot without X.
|
|
So I'm going to have to install it on something,
|
|
and I have to go in with a live CD,
|
|
and get rid of whatever kind of initial,
|
|
you know, init script that is causing it to start X
|
|
so that I can at least get into a text console,
|
|
or I'm just going to try it on my triple EPC,
|
|
and see how it works.
|
|
That's cool, maybe we can talk about it in a couple of weeks.
|
|
Yeah, I'll definitely try it on some computer,
|
|
and yeah, we can discuss it.
|
|
Yeah, we don't have to make the whole show about it,
|
|
yeah.
|
|
Yeah, we can just discuss it if anybody else wants to try it out.
|
|
So we're talking PC, BST, right?
|
|
Not the FreeBSD 7.
|
|
Either one's fine.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I tried FreeBSD, I don't know, a month or two ago.
|
|
Now does that come...
|
|
After you install that, does it actually install X?
|
|
Or you have to do that separately?
|
|
Do you have two X?
|
|
But like, that does top environment separately and stuff.
|
|
You have to do everything separately.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So, okay.
|
|
Yeah, just...
|
|
Do you have the manual for FreeBSD?
|
|
It...
|
|
It's also on platypuslinics.org.
|
|
It's the complete...
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
Manual.
|
|
And it's pretty good.
|
|
All right.
|
|
All right, anything else before I wrap it up?
|
|
Nope.
|
|
Nothing?
|
|
And I'm not going to ask Peter what he wants me to play for the song.
|
|
Ian Madagascar.
|
|
Ian Madagascar.
|
|
Ian Madagascar.
|
|
Ian Madagascar.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Tonight's song is by Alan Mays,
|
|
and the title is Night Like This.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Good night.
|
|
Good night.
|
|
Good night, everyone.
|
|
Good night, everyone.
|
|
Good night.
|
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Good night.
|
|
Have a good night.
|
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
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Good night.
|
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Good night.
|
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Good night.
|
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Good night.
|
|
Good night.
|
|
Good night.
|
|
Good night.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Can't you, you hold you all night, they blow up on the roof Open up your heart and let walls close down
|
|
Tonight is the night for love to exist Everybody needs a little night like this
|
|
This night like this for love can't exist Everyone won't smile as only things don't make a love exist
|
|
Everybody needs a little night like this Tonight like this for love can't exist Everyone more won't smile as only things don't make a love
|
|
It just for you
|
|
Thank you for listening to Haftler Public Radio, HPR is sponsored by Carol.net, so head on over
|