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636 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1397
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Title: HPR1397: HPR Community News for November 2013
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1397/hpr1397.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:50:16
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---
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M.
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So, hello everybody. This is Dave Morris for the HBR Community News for November. Now,
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with me tonight I have Ahuka. Hello. And Ken Palin is lurking in the background, but
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I don't think he's going to be making an appearance. He's probably listening to us and we might
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get the odd comment through the chat or something, but other than that, it's just Ahuka myself.
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So we're going to try and run things as per normal, but I'm not Ken Palin, so I don't have
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the gift of the gab to quite the extent that he does, but we'll do our best anyway. So we'll
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start off with the new hosts, welcoming new hosts to HBR. We have, first of all, Kevin
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Wischer, who was surprised to find us a new host. He's been on the horizon for, he's been
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been a mainstay for HBR for quite some time, I think. And also we have Keith Murray, we have
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Underrunner and Andrew Conway. Okay, so let's just head off straight into the show details.
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Okay, so starting with show number 1370, logging with Octopus by Tony Palias, would that be?
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You're not coming through very clearly. Yeah, I think Palias. Yeah, okay. Okay, to me.
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Yeah, yeah, okay. So he was telling us about Octopus, which is a static site generator.
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Not something I've really had direct experience of, how about yourself?
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No, I have a, I use WordPress for my own.
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Mm-hmm. I think he, he was not happy with WordPress, so he was looking for various other
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possibilities. He did a nice summary of what was available there. It looked pretty interesting,
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I thought. Oh, absolutely. It was a good program. I just, for me, WordPress seems to work.
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Yes, yeah. I've looked at these things myself, but have not decided on one yet, but Octopus
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looks interesting. I'm not sure whether you have to learn Ruby to, to use it, but still sounds
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interesting. So the next, next episode was 1371, which is Pokey telling us about the sad tale of
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the last banner of HPR. An epic tale. Yes, it's really sad that people get stuff that's not meant
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for them and don't send it back. It was quite a sad thing. So it seems to have worked out.
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Anyone who's following on the mailing list probably is aware of this.
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And I'm sorry, I don't have all these names at the top of my head, but someone step forward and
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said, well, you know, I work at a place that does this and just tell me what you want. I'll get
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you a new banner. Yeah, yeah, that sounds good. That sounds fantastic. It's the HPR community doing
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what it does, which is fantastic. So yeah, the subject of stickers and business cards and all
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the rest of it was interesting for me anyway, because I'm hoping to go to Fosdem in Belgium
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in February and hoping to have an HPR table there. So we're looking to make sure we've got plenty
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of those things for that. That's kept both Ken and I hopefully assuming Ken's okay by then.
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So that's great. I wish I could go to Fosdem, but I don't really have the budget for that.
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No, it must be a hell of a journey for you. I've never been to anything as big as that.
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It's 5,000 delegates are untold. 5,000 plus, which is absolutely huge, frighteningly huge.
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But interesting to see what it's like. That's quite the largest that I've been to is Ohio Linux
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Fest here in the United States and that's generally 1,000 or 1,200 somewhere around there.
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That's pretty big. Yeah, I have no idea how they organize a thing of 5,000 delegates. That's
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going to be quite impressive to see. Yeah. Anyway, pressing on, Episode 1372. This was
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Hakka Mike, James Michael Dupont, talking about rootstriker.org and Federal Election Commission
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data processing. Now this isn't the thing I didn't know anything at all about.
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Is this a subject you know about? A little bit.
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Federal Election Commission in the United States is in charge of regulating how elections are
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carried out and there's certain data that has to be collected. For instance, if you donate money
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to a political campaign, they have to get your name and name of your employer and what they're
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trying to do is make sure that companies are not making illegal campaign contributions.
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Okay. Okay. So this is a sort of oversight process that's going on here by the community, presumably.
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Yeah, a little note fact. I used to work in politics here. In fact, I'm working on a show right now
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where that comes into it a little bit. It sounds interesting. Yeah. So this, but the technical
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sort of this impressed me from the size of the data manipulation exercise seems huge. Just judging
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by what he was saying there. Yeah, impressive. Indeed. There are those who say one of the big
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factors behind Barack Obama's two electoral victories was mastery of the technology and
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Harper Reid was the fellow who was in charge of his IT operation and is
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gotten rather famous for how he handled all of that. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah. I think it was obvious
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to people, even in the UK, it was obvious that there was something special going on there.
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I don't think our politicians have got quite that far. I'm really apolitical, so I'm not
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not really much of an authority on this, but I don't think we've quite reached that level of
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sophistication, but it won't be far off, I'm sure. Oh, I do believe from what I've seen that the
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UK is picking up all of the stuff that the United States is doing. Bound to be. Yeah. Okay, so
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so next we had your good self starting this was just the first episode of the series on security.
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Well, it's the first one that I did. Yeah. I decided that we could roll in something that
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Clot 2 had done and called that part of the series as well. And you know, Ken may go back and
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find a few others in the archives that could now be packaged up as part of this. But what I was
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trying to do in this particular episode was just sort of lay some groundwork and say, you know,
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this really is possible. You know, GCHQ or in our country, NSA, you know, they can't walk on
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water. They can't do things that violate the laws of mathematics. So if you want to be protected,
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you really can't. Sure, sure. It's a very relevant subject, obviously, and it does need this
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sort of introduction as well, I think, because I think people tend to be a little bit glib about it,
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you know, how does it affect me? And you know, if I'm not doing anything wrong, why should I be
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worried type of attitude? So these issues do need to be addressed. People need to be made aware.
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Yeah, my favorite response to someone who says, you know, I don't have anything to hide is give me
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the URL of the webcam in your bathroom. That's a good answer. Very good. Very good.
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Okay. Well, it's good. I'm looking forward to hearing more and there's more to come
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in the queue, I see. So, 1374 was Richard Hughes, who talked to us about
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building or upgrading a hackintosh, which is something you have experienced of?
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No, I don't personally, but Richard is a friend of mine. He's one of the regulars on the Linux.
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I'm sure, yes, yes, flying Richard, I recognize him. And he and I frequently interact on Google
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Plus, you know, we follow each other in that sort of thing. Okay. I wasn't that interested as I listened
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to it, but I got, you know, there's not really relevant to me. I'm not going to be, I'm not a
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Mac person, but as I listened, I became more into it. And my son is a Mac user and is just
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surprised as a surprise to me is building himself or has been building himself on new machine,
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which he's turning into a hackintosh. So between Richard's episode and what my son's been doing,
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it's suddenly opened up big vistas for me. It's something that sounds pretty good to do,
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actually. Now that Maverick's is free, isn't it? You can, it is no cost in getting a copy of it
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anymore. There's no cost. I'm not sure what the license agreement involves. Apple has never
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initially allowed you to use their software on your own hardware. No, no, no, they don't want
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you to be building hackintoshes, but they're not really able to stop you, I guess. I don't know.
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That can just popped up in the chat.
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Indeed. Hello, yeah. Hello, everybody.
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Hi, hello, sir. I want you to be here for 10 minutes.
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Yeah, I was really interested in the Macintosh operating system at one time.
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And then I found Linux, and now Macintosh doesn't interest me at all when X is my home.
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Yeah, I'm the same, really. I've not really used Macs to any great extent, apart from the ones
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that they had at work, just dallyed with them briefly. But my son's a musician, and he needs to run
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quite a lot of very demanding software on his Mac and his MacBook Pro's been running at Steam.
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So building a nice new machine meant that he can actually carry on with his studies as he
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needs to be doing. So it's quite relevant in that respect.
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Yeah, and I just see here our new host, Kevin Weisher, is in the chatroom and just posted that
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Mavericks is dependent on your current model of Mac.
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Okay, presumably there's a power limitation or something of that. So obviously it has to be a
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be a modern Mac. It's not a one of the old style. It doesn't run on the old style kit.
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I would imagine you'd run into problems with device drivers like that.
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Yeah, okay. So next we have another episode from your good self. Okay. Another
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LibreOffice episode. These nested lists, these list things are very useful to me actually.
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I've been taking your hints on board and I've got one or two templates which I've been building
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sure you're going to get to that some point soon. And I've been taking some of your advice and
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reworking them to build styles into them. So it's been really good. Thank you very much.
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Well, you're quite welcome, but actually templates is where I started the series.
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You did mention templates. You're right. Yes, indeed.
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Yes, I had to do that is that styles have to be stored inside the templates.
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The templates first then moved into styles. Yeah, yeah.
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Will you be covering templates from the point of view of building one from scratch?
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I've got one that I use for recipes. I keep my own recipe log using LibreOffice.
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And you know, I want to be able to, this is again, maybe again a bit too technical,
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but things like the ability to easily move around the elements of it,
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you know, and fill them in appropriately. You can do some quite smart things with that,
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can't you? And templates. Yeah, am I making sense?
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Yeah.
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Looking up what I did right now, because I thought I had done that.
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You're making sense to me, Dave. Okay. That's a rare thing.
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Yeah, that's true, because you're usually operating too high from the unit.
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Yeah, I've got something in there about creating templates. And one of the first things I do
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is creating the default template, but then I talk about creating other templates.
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Mm-hmm. Okay. Anyway, thanks for that, Sue. It is, it is really good. I've been enjoying it a lot.
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Yeah, it seems to be popular.
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So moving on then, and next we had class two talking,
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1376 talking about teaching the art of computing, which was, I thought a very interesting,
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interesting point of view. What I took away from it was the need to teach the skill
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rather than the product. What did, what did, how did you?
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I had exactly the same takeaway from it. I love this. You know, this like should be required
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listening for anyone who is going to teach computer science.
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Yeah, it's certainly been the case in the UK that the move has been away from computing skills,
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and it will earn towards Microsoft products, Excel, or whatever it is. And that's been within
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the last, just I guess, five to 10 years that that's happened. I certainly met kids who were
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learning Pascal, for example, 10 years, maybe a year or so ago. But my kids all went through
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just being told how to use Microsoft stuff, mostly, I think. So I call that educational
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malpractice. Absolutely. Such a bad thing to do. But there is a great ray of sunshine in the UK,
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and it's called the code club. Right, right. What's that exactly? I've not heard of that.
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Oh, this was a couple of women started this thing called code clubs. Sounds like an episode to me.
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Yeah, I've read interviews with them in magazines and things like that.
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And the way it works is that they go into a school, they get some mentors who are usually people
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who are in the industry, and you know, set up these clubs. And the focus really is on learning the
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coding and the technology, rather than how to type in a word processor, which is garbage.
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Sure. Sure. The Raspberry Pi is also doing a lot of that. Yeah. Okay, guys, I've got to go
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over a lot of my 10 minutes that I can be out of bed for this. Back to bed. Yeah. The nurses.
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See you again. Yeah. Anyway, yeah, it's definitely an area that needs a lot of debate.
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But hopefully the message is getting through. I think it's changing significantly in the states.
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Not nearly to the extent that I'm seeing in the UK. There are some people.
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I'm getting involved with a group here in Michigan called Pengwakon, which is a combination
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Linux and science fiction convention. All right. And I'm hoping we're going to get to address some
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of that. So I know a woman who is part of the GNOME project who is also very interested in it
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because she's got kids. Good, good. Yes. Yeah. I guess that hopefully realization is
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dawning and change will happen as time goes on. But it's sad that it's ever got into that state
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in the first place. Oh, absolutely. I remember taking a computer science course in college.
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And for me, I'm talking like 1978. And I had to write some programs in basic.
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And, you know, the really the old Dartmouth basic where, you know, line 10, line 20, line 30.
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But I'll tell you, I think that was the best foundation I could have asked for to start thinking
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about how computers work. Sure. Sure. Absolutely. Oh, there's nothing like it.
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Years and years ago, in the place I used to work, the university I used to work, it was decided
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for some obscure reason that we were going to run some summer, summer camp type courses.
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There's an organization in the UK that runs, you know, young people's summer adventure holiday type
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things. And there was a component which was a computing one. So we were teaching them how to write
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the 6502 assembler programs, you know, kids of teenage kids, school kids, to drive little robots
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and that type of thing. And, you know, they just laughed it up. They were racing ahead.
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They were well ahead of us. We were still, you know, running to keep up with them.
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So, yeah. Robotics clubs are the great
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ray of sunlight here in the United States. There's a lot of those. And, you know, kids are very excited
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by that. Very good. Okay. So, very good. Thank you, Clotu, for that one.
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Next was Frank Bell doing a talk about the Zareason Android tablet. And, I must admit,
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I thought he did a great summary of this particular device. It looked really nice, actually.
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Yeah. And there's two things that come to my mind. The first is Zareason as a company, you know,
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is one of those places that, you know, they build and support machines that use free software.
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And I think it's important to support people like that. So, I'm really glad to see Frank do this.
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And, you know, I know the people there, I've met the CEO and that sort of thing. And they're
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really good people. Yeah. I've heard of them. I've heard that people like Dan on Tiltz has bought
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several of their laptops and things. Has he bought them? Has he bought any of those?
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Some somebody has, anyway, I can't, maybe isn't him. But I've certainly heard people buying their
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kit and saying good things about them. I'm not sure we can get them in the UK, but sometimes
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they're expanding internationally. In fact, they recently opened the New Zealand office.
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All right. Okay. So maybe they're moving in the UK direction. That would be good.
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So we don't have much here that there were one or two companies that sold
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purpose built machines with Linux on. I bought one myself using it now, but that was some
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number of years ago and they've gone out of business since then. But yeah. There's the other
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company that I can think of. Now, I don't know if they're outside the United States at all,
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is a company called System 76. That's what I'm thinking of actually. Yes. Yes.
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Yes. I think you can buy them in the UK, but they do cost a lot in shipping, as I guess you'd
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expect. Oh, yeah. I guess if you have to get international shipping that's added to the expense.
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But you know, they do good stuff too. I like us our reason, but you know, they're both good companies.
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Yeah. That's good to see anyway. Yeah. Okay. So next we had a whole raft of talks from
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Ogkamp 13 and 1378 was a batch of talks from NY Bill, Thoreau and Tim Timmy.
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And I don't know how to say his handle there, but I think that's how he likes to have it
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pronounced. Well, I was at Ogkamp with the guys there as you might have gathered and it was
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really good. They were NY Bill was out there with the microphone, dashing it all over the place.
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Again, there's many interviews as he possibly could. Sometimes you remember to switch it on there,
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here as well. He did have a few problems. That says put it that way, but you know, it can happen
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to the best of us. But no, I thought there were some great interviews there. And Ogkamp was
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the most interesting and exciting event. Well, you know, I'm going to say I am in no position to
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look down on people who forget to turn it on because I did a talk about hacker public radio at
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my Linux users group and I was going to record it. And I got all the way down done with the talk
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and realized I'd never turned on the recording. And it's not, it's an easy trap to fall into
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some of these recorders because you press the button once and you think it's recording. You have
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to press it a second time to record it. The zoom, the very zoom recorders. And I've got one
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that I share with my son that that suffers from the same thing. It's a task ham that, you know,
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it's setting it up. It's making sure all the levels are right. And then the next button press starts
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it recording. But unless you're really on the ball and I'm not always doing these things, it's easy
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to fall into that problem. Yeah, I've got a Sans Eclipse that I was doing that. Those are good too,
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yeah. So yeah, there were three days, in fact, of interviews. The second one was further,
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further interviews. We managed to get Pete Cannon from the Dictorpin Rocho. He would send it
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to a microphone and asked to do an interview, which was very good. Then I did a brief one.
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Unfortunately, somebody started it. Started up a knitting machine right next to it's just a
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zone. Switched every quarter. So hopefully that didn't drown things out too much.
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And yeah, there was some good stuff. NY Bill interviewed, speaking of youngsters who are getting
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into computing. Mini Geek Girl, I think she calls herself who was, had done a talk at one of the
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Raspberry Pi things. I think she's about 13 or 14. Very impressive, young girl. Amazing.
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Yeah, I love hearing stuff like that. Yeah, it was good. And the 1380, the episode on Friday
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was the sound of four guys in a hotel room, ironing t-shirts and making a reasonable job of it,
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but one or two mistakes coming across as well. I don't know if you picked up on those. It was
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quite funny because I knew the voices having met them all and I'd heard the story of the ironing
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disasters. So for me, it was quite amusing to listen to. I don't know how it came across for
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everybody else. Yeah, I don't think that I listened to that one all the way through to be very
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honest. No, I can imagine. I can imagine. It's one of those sort of ambient recordings that
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you maybe wouldn't give it a huge lot of attention. Let's put it that way. I think the consensus
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was, well, just let's just put it out there because I'm sure somebody will find their music.
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Even it was only me. Yeah, I love the fact that Hacker Public Radio is pretty much
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open to anyone who wants to do anything, but the other side of that is every once in a while.
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I'm not saying frequently, but every once in a while I get about five minutes into it
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to decide and this isn't for me. Yeah, yeah, that's what it's all about. Yeah, absolutely.
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These things happen. So that's fair enough. So that was all camping. It was certainly
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interesting. Shame Ken couldn't make it, but there we go. So next, sorry, go ahead.
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Just agree with you. Okay. All right. So the next episode was 1381, which was Kevin Wischer,
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who's in the background here on this mumble channel, but he was talking about how he found Linux.
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He had a had a co-host whose name I missed. I don't have a record of it, and I don't see it on
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who wants it again. Honki Mugou. Thank you very much, Kevin. Honki Mugou. Honki, yes. Yes,
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I remember it now. Remember it. Yeah. Okay. No, it was I loved that episode. It was it was really
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good. I love all these reminiscences of the early days of computing. I don't think we have
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enough of those, to be honest with you, and the history of some of the experiences of Linux versions.
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I enjoyed that very much. Well, I go back before Linux. Yeah, me too. Go ahead. I can start
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talking about mainframes, launch codes. Well, I've been holding back on that one, to be honest with
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you. I started on I started computing in I think about 1970 as a student with punch cards,
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and I don't know whether I want to bore the world with with my reminiscences of this, but I quite
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like listening to other people's. Maybe maybe you and I should do one together at some point,
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comparing notes there, Ahuka. That sounds like we're just about at the same point. I think
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mine was 69 at Bank of Boston. Oh, great. Great stuff. Oh, yeah. Oh,
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maybe we should compare notes sometime. Yeah, we could do that.
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That would be fun. Certainly, because there were some very, very bizarre things that people did
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in those days in terms of the way they prepared stuff and the equipment that they had, and
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there were punch cards of different source. There was paper tape. There was all sorts of other
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weird technology, most of which people have not really have much knowledge of these days,
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unless they're of our age. So I just feel that they would be interesting to do a little bit more
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about that sort of stuff. And then we can segue right into how we used to have to walk the school
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up hill both ways. Absolutely. That's the way it was. It was absolutely no doubt about it.
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These youngsters, they just don't know they're born, these youngsters, they don't know.
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I won't get off my lawn, by the way. Anyway, yeah, yeah, it's not
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too much of that. Anyway, thanks Kevin. That was Kevin Wischer, that is thanks for that episode.
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That was most interesting. That he says that they just recorded part two. Oh,
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right. I'm looking forward to that. Excellent. So next was Dave Hingley being interviewed by his
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brother Mike. I know both of these guys having met them last year at Alcamp and also this year.
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It's a little bit of a sad tale actually. Dave's presentation at Alcamp didn't go right
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because he couldn't get the projector to work with his laptop, his Linux laptop, and then had
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problems when he tried to set things up the next day, finding a room. So it was just a little bit
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unhappy about the way things had panned out and really quite sorry to hear that.
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Well, I know exactly how he feels because that's what happened to me at Ohio Linux first a few
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months ago. I had a really nice presentation that just fell apart completely because I couldn't
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get the projector and my laptop to talk to each other probably. Yeah, yeah, and why it seems
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bizarre that that should be a problem these days, doesn't it? Well, I think it was an older projector
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and you know, I don't usually have that problem, but I certainly did this time.
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Yeah, I think it was an older kit at Liverpool. In fact, he said something like it was a VGA
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device. Very often, because I was one of the organizers at Ohio Linux first this last time around,
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and you know, you're scrambling around, you'd have no budget, you're trying to find, you know,
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does anyone have a projector we can borrow and you know, you get what you get. Yeah, yeah,
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yeah, sad. I hope it hasn't put him put the two brothers off anyway, because it's good to have them
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around it. Oh, come. Anyway, so next was the last community news, which we never comment on
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for fear of infinite recursion, if we keep it up. Yeah, that one. That's a, then we had Keith
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Murray giving us his first show, how I got into Linux and OSS, and he had an interesting journey
|
|
along the way. I thought he'd made various moves towards Linux and hadn't quite got there.
|
|
Yeah, over the years, it's quite an unusual journey. It was interesting to see that sort of point of
|
|
view, I thought. Yeah, yeah, I always like those. No, it's, I think the sort of personal history
|
|
episodes are always fascinating. Sometimes I prefer them to the technical ones, I don't know what
|
|
that says about me, but that's well, I think for me part of it is that hacker public radio is a
|
|
community, and you know, I like getting to know the people exactly. Yes, yes, that's a little bit
|
|
about their background and you know, how did you get here and you know, that just it adds a little
|
|
bit. Yeah, yeah, I think that is, that's definitely it. It's good. So anyway, 1385 was
|
|
another LibreOffice. Is that the, at the end of the nested list? Is that the end of the
|
|
of that particular subject now then? I think that's the end of the, yeah, the nested lists.
|
|
And you know, the next area is getting into the page layout. Right. I think three more shows in
|
|
that and I'm going to try and write one or two more this weekend. Oh, great. Yes. So I've already
|
|
done the stuff on page styles and a general overview of page layout. I've got to get two frame styles.
|
|
And then I think when I finish that, I should have promised the thing on outlining and then I'm
|
|
going to get in the calc. Right. Yes. Yes. You said that. And I think, yeah, I think people are
|
|
jumping at the bit a little bit there because they want to know how to drive their spreadsheets,
|
|
don't they? Well, actually at this point, so am I. I sort of feeling like, you know, I just have
|
|
to slog through, you know, the last little bit of this writer stuff. Yes. You know, my mind is
|
|
already on calc. There enough. I wish you just asked a question in the chatroom. Any plans
|
|
were draw. So let me say that, you know, God willing, if my voice lasts and hacker public
|
|
radio stays up, I'm going to go through all of the aspects of the office. Great stuff. Great stuff.
|
|
Yes. Kevin just said it's a good replacement for Microsoft publisher. I'm going to say,
|
|
the office writer is not a bad. It's actually as much a page layout or, you know, desktop publishing
|
|
program is anyway. Yeah. Yeah. It's impressive stuff. It is indeed. I've been using, I've been using
|
|
it since Star Office time. So seeing it, seeing it develop and it's been growing and improving
|
|
all of that time. It's been really good. Yeah. I actually started with Star Office. In fact,
|
|
I've written, I haven't actually recorded it yet, but I've written an episode that can ask me to do
|
|
in which I'm going to get into sort of the meta background of all of this stuff. You know,
|
|
how did I get into this and how do I put my shows together and things like that? You can't
|
|
ask for it. So I don't know what the heck. Let's do it. Oh, very good. That would be interesting.
|
|
Yeah, good. More history. I'll always like that.
|
|
Okay. So next, we had Bob Tregilus. Tregilus, how does he pronounce that, do you think? Tregilus?
|
|
I would think, yeah, Tregilus or something like that. Yeah. However you pronounce it,
|
|
it looks like this is going to be a series and I love it. This particular one took me back
|
|
to the days of my youth because, you know, they're talking about what's called the underground or
|
|
alternative press here in the United States. Yeah. That's what I grew up with. I was this
|
|
anti-war hippie back in the 60s and 70s. Yeah. Well, I think I'm not sure. I was that much exposed
|
|
to, obviously, I knew about those sort of movements in the states, being of a similar age and stuff,
|
|
but I don't know that much of it came my way anyway. Maybe I just never looked.
|
|
You were subject to being drafted. Of course not. No, no, no, no. But I mean, it was well known
|
|
that nasty things were happening over the pond there. There was a lot of sympathy towards
|
|
the problems, but yeah, I don't mean we had an in-depth understanding of it, at least I didn't.
|
|
So yeah. Yeah. No, it's interesting. It is, as your own Dr. Samuel Johnson once said,
|
|
knowing that you're to be hanged and a fortnight focuses the mind wonderful.
|
|
Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Yeah.
|
|
subject to the draft and the possibility of being sent over to Vietnam does really focus your mind
|
|
on the issue? Absolutely. Absolutely. Well, yeah, I can sympathize with that to
|
|
to certain degree, as a kid, there was, there was still conscription to the army in
|
|
after the Second World War in the UK, which was, I don't know, not quite clear why, but it continued
|
|
on for some number of years after the end of World War II. So it was a subject that as a child,
|
|
you knew that there was a possibility that that would continue when you grew up and you might
|
|
by yourself dragged off to the army. So, you know, so it's always a bit of a fear of
|
|
mind as a young boy. So absolutely. Anyway, that's, we look forward to hearing more about that.
|
|
Next, we had underrunner giving us his first show on his Christmas lights synchronisation set up.
|
|
And wow, this is an impressive project. The notes are really good. I did find that. I was reading
|
|
reading through as I listened. This project seems to have grown and grown. Could have done
|
|
with the picture. That was the only thing. Just a picture of maybe of the finished product would
|
|
have been nice, but still, no complaints. Very good. Or a video on YouTube. Oh, absolutely,
|
|
even better, yes, yes. But it certainly sounded quite a project.
|
|
So next, we had Sigflop boning in an episode which she did just off the top of the head
|
|
on the JavaScript language, which I found really quite fascinating. I've looked at it,
|
|
looked at JavaScript just briefly and thought, oh, yeah, yeah, there's JavaScript. I don't
|
|
want to have anything to do with that, particularly. But can I maybe start rethinking that point of
|
|
you? What did you think? Well, I think almost any time Sigflop does a show, the first thing that comes
|
|
to mind is I wish I was smart enough to follow every single place. Yes, yes.
|
|
And I'm not. And that's, you know, that's simply life. You know, I often listen to it and think,
|
|
boy, if I could just do half of that stuff. Absolutely. Yes.
|
|
But I also, I think her view of what's good in the world of programming languages is certainly
|
|
to be considered. She seems to have a very deep insight into these things that I certainly don't
|
|
have. So I did, after listening to her program and hearing about the ins and outs of JavaScript
|
|
and Node.js, which is the server side aspect of it, I did go off and install it just to have a look
|
|
at it, you know, the Node.js thing, which is a way of writing. You can, it's got a web server capability
|
|
built into it. So you can build your whole application from scratch pretty much with it, I think.
|
|
So it's, it's a fascinating thing, but boys, it blew your mind.
|
|
Her power. Yeah. Yeah. And it's, it's really complicated because of its
|
|
asynchronous capabilities, which is the point that she was making in her second show where she,
|
|
she just came up with some, came back with some corrections to watch it said previously.
|
|
I think to help clarify the synchronous, asynchronous elements of the of the language,
|
|
which I personally find quite helpful because I didn't, I wasn't quite getting what she was
|
|
saying in the first, the first show. So it's glad over that. Yeah. I, I know a little bit of
|
|
JavaScript. I was back when I was on the faculty of a local university. I ended up in charge of
|
|
the website. So, you know, I did a certain amount. I was nowhere near being an expert and it was
|
|
more like find something that does kind of what I need to do and get in and understand the code
|
|
enough with the app. Yeah. Yeah. I've done similar sort of stuff, but it's been largely, in my
|
|
experience, the, the business of taking the HTML structure and doing things with it or bending it
|
|
in some way with JavaScript. You know, if you want some sort of something dynamic to happen on
|
|
the page or something, JavaScript is the way to do it. But what's being what the way that people
|
|
are using it now is to, to, to be a primary language for developing whole applications, which is
|
|
a very different take on the, on the subjects, I think. So definitely, definitely need some, some
|
|
investigation, I think. Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, a good couple of shows from Sigloff.
|
|
Yeah, thanks for that. Very good. So, finally for the, for the month, we had your good self again,
|
|
telling us about the basics of encryption, which I listened to that a couple of times because it's
|
|
pretty, pretty dense, densely packed with info there. It's very good. I enjoyed that.
|
|
Yeah, it's, it's an interesting topic. Yeah. I think it helps to get some of the background stuff
|
|
so that when you get into technically how to do it, you understand what the issues are.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. I like your point about the transfering codes and ciphers, which I'd note it down here,
|
|
that it's, it's, it's easy to, to, to misuse these terms, which I think I've been guilty of in
|
|
the past. So, that's good. That was good. I was glad for that. Heads up. Yeah, I mean, it's,
|
|
it's got even people who are professionals, you know, get sloppy about that. So you refer to NSA
|
|
as codebreakers. And really what they are is ciphers, you know, it's a, it's a, it's maybe a small thing,
|
|
but I like to just be clear on what the distinction is. Yeah, yeah. I think it's, it can be quite an
|
|
important point if you're, if you're digging deeply into this stuff. Yeah, it's, you're either trying
|
|
to hide something or you're not. Absolutely. Yeah. Very good. Okay. So that's, that's all of the,
|
|
the past month's shows. And normally Ken likes to do a review of what's been going on in the
|
|
mailing list. So I've tried to put together some, my summary of things there. So,
|
|
feel free to, to, to correct me and redirect me, yeah, hooker as, as I go through this. But
|
|
first, first item I, that came to mind to, to mention was Hacke Mike, that Mike DuPont's
|
|
work that he's doing in developing a, a publisher tool in Python, which is not so much a tool,
|
|
but a, a set of, a library and a set of, set of capabilities to allow you to,
|
|
um, do everything from the, the, uh, show notes to the, to the publishing of your, your, uh,
|
|
HPR show. Um, I've looked at this briefly, so I'm not sure I've fully grasped all that it's
|
|
capable of doing, but it, it, it, it looks like a great idea. I'm really glad there are people
|
|
working on stuff like this. Uh, I don't understand it at all.
|
|
It's, um, I, because I'm, I'm a bit of an idiot when it comes to doing stuff like this,
|
|
I found that because I, um, I couldn't always remember what I was supposed to be doing to prepare
|
|
a show if I was doing one. I made myself a sort of checklist of, you know, have you
|
|
remember to do this? I remember to do that. Um, and I was thinking of coding it into something,
|
|
just for my own use, potentially for other's use, but, you know, you start with yourself and
|
|
then maybe expand it. Um, I was thinking of doing something along, along these lines,
|
|
but mine was going to go right from the beginning of what's the name of your show, you know,
|
|
and then it would make us a, a directory to store all the show details in named with that name,
|
|
and it would use that store that information to, so it would then know how to construct the
|
|
name of the file that you're going to send to, to the FTP server and that sort of stuff.
|
|
But it looks like Mike is, is already way, way ahead with that stuff. So, uh, so I think I'll just
|
|
sit back and watch. Well, anything that, uh, uh, you know, makes it easier,
|
|
but yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. I'm finding right now that it takes me almost as long to do
|
|
the show notes as it does to record the show. Mm-hmm. Yes. Yes.
|
|
Well, do I think that's a good thing, personally? I'm a great believer in, in good show notes,
|
|
because, because, you know, sometimes you don't always absorb the information completely through,
|
|
through your ears, you know, through listening to it. So it's something to read as well, and
|
|
something to come back to and refer to is, it's quite important. Oh, absolutely.
|
|
So, so there's also been discussion of the infrastructure for the new year show.
|
|
And I know that Kevin Wischer is hoping that he's going to get some, some of the people who are,
|
|
going to be involved in the background elements of this to discuss this soon. He was hoping,
|
|
I think, to get them together this evening after this recording, but I don't know whether he's,
|
|
uh, he's going to, he's going to get anybody tonight. Um, but, uh, there's things seem to be coming
|
|
along, coming, coming together, or certainly certainly works being done to, uh, to get stuff,
|
|
in a better state than it was last year. And for anyone who is listening to this program and
|
|
does not normally follow the mailing list, and I suspect there are a few. What we're talking about
|
|
here is we, we do this, uh, it's actually more than 24 hours, I think, but, uh, you know,
|
|
continuous new year show that, that, you know, takes the beginning of the new year from one
|
|
part of the world all the way around again. And, um, you know, this people dial in for a while,
|
|
and then, you know, go off to do other things. And it's all done on mumble. So what, what Kevin
|
|
is doing is trying to put together a kind of a federated group of mumble servers that can, uh,
|
|
connect everyone in, uh, and if you are up, Kevin wants to talk. Sorry, interrupt, but actually,
|
|
we have, we're going to be using the same mumble server we used last year, the one from
|
|
OpenSpeak, uh, John Newsteader. Uh, it's like, it started out being the Linux basic, uh,
|
|
mumble server, but it's kind of expanded to be just an open server for anybody now.
|
|
Uh, last year we had some issues with the two bot machines that kept dropping out of the room.
|
|
I've personally spoken with John Newsteader and he has found the problem on, on that hosted
|
|
VPS to get that fix. So we won't have that issue this year. But what I'm trying to get coordinated
|
|
is our group of ice cast streaming servers so that we can produce, you know, provide the
|
|
live stream for everybody to listen to. We just need the one mumble server and we just need
|
|
a cook, uh, about four ice cast servers to mirror each other and so that we have plenty of, you know,
|
|
uh, plenty of, uh, we go, well, well, well, I'm actually going to have an MP3 feed and an
|
|
obfee just like we did last year. So it's basically the same setup. We just need to get
|
|
everybody that's providing those for ice cast servers. Uh, Ken gave me access to the
|
|
HPR VPS, which is going to be the main feed that the two bots will be pumping audio to and then
|
|
off that main HPR VPS, the four mirrors that we, uh, need to provide the live stream. So I've,
|
|
I'm providing the MP3 bot that will be pumping out the MP3 feed and then I'm also providing the
|
|
first mirroring server off the main HPR VPS, uh, Cobra 2, I believe.
|
|
Okay, um, so Kevin, uh, you, you were trying to get some ice cast servers, is there anything else
|
|
you need from the community that we should mention here? I know, we just, we just need the four,
|
|
well, actually, I'm pretty sure we've got two already just in line for the MP3 side and then I
|
|
just need to get in contact with crayon, he, he did the aug bot and I'm not, I can't remember who
|
|
provided the two mirrors for the aug stream. So that's what I'm missing right now is to get that
|
|
all figured out. All right, good. Okay, good. Thank you. Also, while we're talking about the new
|
|
year show, uh, you know, well, the technical stuff is going on now to prepare for all of it.
|
|
This is open to anyone in the hacker public radio community, uh, you know, if you can connect
|
|
to mumble, then, you know, please feel free to jump in and spend some time with us new years.
|
|
It's a lot of fun. Everyone involved loves it.
|
|
I agree. Uh, the first year, uh, which was what, uh, the 2011, 2012 new year, they just did a 12
|
|
hour and that turned into the following year, which was last year to be the 24 hour show and
|
|
the first year I wasn't involved with thought we didn't, I don't think we even did a stream.
|
|
I can't remember, but, uh, I helped in that 12 hour period to, you know, get people in a separate
|
|
room to test their audio before they went into the main room. We need people to volunteer to do
|
|
that, you know, to help people with audio issues who are new to mumble. Um, I caught two and I
|
|
that first year hung out in the, uh, sound booth or whatever, just another spare room that
|
|
were the main show wasn't being broadcast from and just help people with their mumble issues,
|
|
got them set up before they moved in there to, to do any speaking.
|
|
And I think Poke helps with that kind of stuff too.
|
|
Yeah, I haven't heard from Poke lately.
|
|
But regardless, it's a 24 hour show, so everybody needs to, uh, you know, we need people to
|
|
volunteer particular various different times. I, I'm sorry, I'm back another 10 minute session.
|
|
And when is the actual official start time? Is it going to be the same as last year?
|
|
Whenever, uh, the first, she'll, whenever the first time zone goes into, uh,
|
|
into the new year, then we do it and we stop after the last time zone goes in.
|
|
So that's for strong, strange reason, there's something like 28, 29 hours instead of 24 hours.
|
|
We're such a, we're such a hit and popular that Leo report is copying us this year. He's having
|
|
a 24 hour podcast this year. Yeah. I heard about that. He's staying up though. I don't, I think
|
|
it was only one or two who stayed up last year. Also, this topic of food is completely banned.
|
|
Yes. How about, um, file managers that only give you one window?
|
|
That is also on the list of stuff that we need to, we need to, we need to designate an official
|
|
person that can kick anybody off when they start talking, talking about dual-paying file managers.
|
|
Absolutely not. No, it's, uh, it's an open forum and I can argue with them while you want.
|
|
Um, I, yeah, I, I would ask people, um, there's no reason why, um, what really worked quite well
|
|
was, um, if people could bring something to the table, like a short technical segment of 15 minutes,
|
|
you know, technical segment, um, you know, uh, as well, think of topics like what was the best
|
|
hack that you did all year? What was the best podcast you did all year? What, you know,
|
|
what are you thankful for for the last year in the field of tech? That sort of stuff so that we
|
|
can keep the conversation going and have those regular regularly throughout the year.
|
|
And what was also pretty cool and I really liked was, um, I think Becky, you can
|
|
start at this once, uh, you know, welcoming a various different time zones as the cross, which
|
|
was kind of nice because it broke up, uh, the conversations that were going over, over and over
|
|
the same topic again. Yeah, now the way the time zones work, that means it, uh, the day starts
|
|
in a little of the Pacific where the international deadline is. No, no, that starts, it starts way,
|
|
the other side, it starts even before that, it starts just left of, um, the US because
|
|
what happened was all those islands where on the other side of the international deadline and
|
|
there's their vacation days where we messed up with people and they were under voices and everything
|
|
they were invoicing two days later and all that so that a whole goal of those islands
|
|
moved to the other side of the international deadline. So even though, so they
|
|
maintained a two hour difference the other side of the international deadline because they're that
|
|
far away, but they're still considered to be part of that same day, weird or what. And vice versa
|
|
works the other side. You learned something new every day at Hacker Public Radio? Yeah, it was a big
|
|
shock to everybody because I, I looked up when it was the first time and then dude, dude, oh, it's
|
|
already New Year's day somewhere, so there you go. So I think in any case, it probably means we have
|
|
to start like 12 or 14 hours before you get to midnight at Greenwich. Yeah, I think it starts
|
|
around 10 o'clock in the morning, 9 or 10 o'clock in the morning, UTC. Well, CET time, so for me,
|
|
in 9 or 10 o'clock in the morning, but we'll put the actual times worldwide onto the website.
|
|
I'm sure Dave Morris has a script for that sort of thing. I'm sure everyone in the locker somewhere
|
|
out there will go and look. Okay, so so the next thing I have on my list was to mention Danny
|
|
Meeks, who was the person who kindly offered to print a replacement banner, as was mentioned earlier on.
|
|
So thank you very much for that. And there was a mumble discussion about the design scheduled.
|
|
I'm not sure whether that actually came to pass or not, but there would, there'd certainly been
|
|
some movement to to finalize the design, I believe. Yeah, I remember there was discussion about
|
|
doing that. I don't know anything more about it at the moment. I'm afraid though.
|
|
Yeah, be either. I think the meeting was planned. I don't know if it's going to end yet. No, no.
|
|
Okay, then Ken pointed out that there was an indie go-go campaign for a new magazine called
|
|
Linux Voice, which was the people from the people who had previously been working for another magazine,
|
|
whose name is just escaped me. I've got a copy of it here. Linux format. I have a copy here on
|
|
the desk beside me, so I should know. Yes, so you're very kindly flagged that up. And I think
|
|
a number of HBR people went over and threw some money in their direction. And it looks
|
|
like that campaign is doing very well. Last thing I saw. I hope they do. I signed up for a
|
|
print subscription, which is like 90 pounds for me, because I'm in the United States. 90 euros
|
|
or 90 something. The thing that I think is the two things that come to mind. Number one is that
|
|
these guys were all at Linux format. I don't know what this means for Linux format,
|
|
but up until now, I've always thought it was the best Linux magazine that I was aware of,
|
|
and they're the ones who made it that good. Absolutely. Yeah. And the other thing is that these guys
|
|
as I put it walking the walk on this, they're talking about all of their content is going to be
|
|
freely available through Creative Commons like nine months after they publish it.
|
|
And they're also saying that 50% of their profits are going to go to support
|
|
free and open source software, and they've already gone to their community to say give us some
|
|
ideas about what we might want to do. Now, the first year, those profits may not be enormous.
|
|
Getting a magazine off the ground is not for the faint of heart, but it really tells me that
|
|
they're going about this in a way that I want to support. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely.
|
|
It's quite interesting to see the publishing movement of this sort coming into being. Don't
|
|
you think that it's because in other parts of the publishing world, things are dying,
|
|
and or they're putting up paywalls, or that type of thing, keep everybody out,
|
|
whereas these guys are trying to walk a line between making money on it and having an element
|
|
of availability through the mechanism you're just describing. Sorry, guys. I need to go again.
|
|
I don't know if I'll be able to do that. Thanks.
|
|
Dirty looks from a wife and not in a good way. I just wanted to say, coming up here is a discussion
|
|
about we need shows. Obviously, we can continue to need shows. We use 260 shows every year.
|
|
We storm through lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of shows, and people have
|
|
been very good about getting them in. What I'd like people to think about is how can we get
|
|
a more guaranteed stream of shows coming in? What is it that we can do, or is there any other
|
|
ways that we can motivate new people to come in, or ways that we can get people to stop
|
|
procrastinating and send in shows? For example, I know of three or four different people who have
|
|
shows recorded and they're not edited and they're not uploaded. We need those shows coming in,
|
|
guys, and we need to continue feeding the queue. How do we feed the beast is a topic that I don't
|
|
expect to be answered here, but it would also be one that we should discuss at length during
|
|
the New Year's show. With that, I'll leave you on. Thank you, guys, for taking the time to do
|
|
this recording tonight. Okay, thanks, Ken. Take care, Ken. Take care of yourself.
|
|
Okay, so I think Ken's probably said all that needs to be said on the more shows issue.
|
|
Obviously, things are getting a little bit difficult at the moment. Got a week's worth
|
|
ahead of us and then very little, but the next month or more. Obviously, things are getting a
|
|
little bit strained, but hopefully that... The thing that I want to emphasize, anyone who's listening
|
|
to this, you don't need to have a fancy studio to do this. Mr. Gadgets, for instance, I think
|
|
just has a portable recorder in his car and just talks into it while he's driving around Kansas City.
|
|
That seems to work fine. It can be pretty simple. We were talking earlier about how I'm so dumb.
|
|
I can't even figure out how to turn on the recorder, but something like a Sansa clip,
|
|
you can just record something into that, just talk into it, and you've got a show in 10, 15, 20
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minutes. You've got something. The main thing is get in, get going, and I think once you get
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your feet wet, you discover it can be a lot of fun. Yeah, I think so. A lot of people I've spoken
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to about this have really enjoyed that process of breaking through the first show barrier,
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and then moving forward from that, because it gives you an ego boost to have actually achieved
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that and gives you the incentive to come up with some other ideas and get on and do more.
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Everybody has something I'm sure that they could tell the world about through the HP
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route. Yeah, and I remember when I got started, it was because of that new year's show,
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the first one. I just, you know, listening to that, I just thought, well, heck,
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that can't be that hard. I should give it a try. My first one was how I got into Linux,
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like so many people, but by the way, even if you don't use Linux, how about a show about
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how awesome Windows is? I mean, there's someone out there who thinks that. We're open to all of that
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stuff. You know, just the only thing that we say is just put something into it that you're
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interested in. You know, what is your passion? I think that's the best way to come up with stuff.
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Absolutely. Yes. Yes. Has anyone done an HP R show describing how many different ways there
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are to do a HP R show? I've written one that I may even try and record this weekend
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that talks about how I'm doing the Libra Office series. That's just one way. I don't know that I've
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heard anyone go through all the different ways. Now, there haven't been, there's been one or two
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that I've heard, but nothing has really given, given a broad overview of the sort you're,
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you're implying that, given. Good idea. I mean, Hockey McGue and I did ours off of a mumble server.
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We just, you know, decided on a time to meet. We discussed, we know kind of what
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others have shown us. We had put together and then we just both hit the record button at the same
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time so that he's recording on his local machine. I'm recording online and that's pretty much it.
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Many throw the file into Audacity. Edit out any stuff you don't want in there. I think probably
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the biggest drawback for people is maybe using Audacity. I don't know. It is quite daunting if
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you haven't used it before. Yeah, yeah, it's true. It's true. It does have lots and lots of
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controls and it's not entirely clear what they will do. That was my impression of it anyways.
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It's taken me quite a while to find out when I need to use what and how to do it and so forth.
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So yeah, that happened one or two shows that have looked at Audacity. I think Nido did something
|
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a few months back on the subject, but this is room for more. I'm sure. There's actually a podcast series
|
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called the Audacity to podcast. Cool. Your point Kevin about doing a mumble
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shows, a show across mumble. That's an interesting point because if there's two of you
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and you can get a conversation going, it's often a lot easier to come up with something than it is
|
|
to sit there on your own with a subject. I've certainly found that the odd occasion where
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I've done a joint show with Ken, in particular, it's been pretty straightforward to make a show
|
|
that way. In fact, we've done one show that wasn't even, I didn't even know it was going to be a show.
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It was just a way of communicating and then we recorded it and it was a show. It's a good
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point. I agree because like me, I'm not a very boisterous person that was when Honky and I
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did it. He kind of prodded me along and I kind of prodded him along and we kind of had some
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moments of silence and it works out real well if you're not real out going. He's just like
|
|
talking to someone on the phone, a long, long friend. Honky and I have never met in person. We just
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were met on IRC. We started, I think, the Linux Basics. We used to have an open
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|
lug mumble meeting on Friday evenings. That's when I first talked with him. So I know it's just
|
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been an online acquaintance that I've met through IRC and such and we just got together and made a
|
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show. It's really nothing to it. Yeah, get mumble installed and have a go, I think, is the message.
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I mean, this server here can be used to record your shows. It's open to the public. Indeed,
|
|
indeed. The hack public radio room is not often in use so get there and use it.
|
|
So good. Okay, so shall we just go to the last item then from the mailing list which was
|
|
the torrent that's being set up for distributing shows. The origins of this go way back, I think.
|
|
It was a suggestion. I think it was made some time ago and was discussed briefly on one of these
|
|
shows which was why can't HBR shows be made available through bit torrent? I think the
|
|
that's evolved. I'm not really completely able to speak with this, I have to say, but I think this
|
|
is evolved a bit into a way of distributing the archive shows because the shows obviously
|
|
go back in time right back to the original show and they're on the HBR server and also on archive.org
|
|
and or we're at least are in the process being put up onto archive.org. So the should anybody wish
|
|
to go back in time and listen to earlier shows then getting them through a torrent would be a great
|
|
idea. And I think some of the discussion was talking about how you would split them up into
|
|
into batches so you could go back to to get to reasonable size chunks. So yeah, and that does seem
|
|
to make sense to do it in that way because we've got 1400 shows roughly on hacker public radio.
|
|
There was 300 preceding it today with a techie and then you know depending on how far back you
|
|
want to go people will talk about predecessors to that. Yeah, it's a lot.
|
|
The other problem that the people have looked at is you need to come up with a new torrent every
|
|
time a new show is it released because that would mean you have to update the torrent every day.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. So there's been a lot of discussion about this and I think deep gig is in the process
|
|
of setting up a demo torrent for a for a speaks. Some shows in speaks format. So it sounded
|
|
something like that. Yeah, yeah, I just have not really dug deeply into this. But it looks like
|
|
there's quite a number of people getting involved with this. So I think it's got its own momentum.
|
|
So that's good to see. Indeed. Okay, so I think that's the end of our agenda there.
|
|
Have you got anything else that you wanted to raise the hooker?
|
|
No, I think we're almost at an hour and 20 minutes at this point. So it's probably a good time
|
|
to wrap it up. I think you're right. Yeah, Kevin, have you got anything you wanted to add before we
|
|
sign off? Nope, I'm good. Okay. Okay, then thanks everybody for joining us and I forget how can
|
|
Enzy's things. I'll leave him to do that next time. Thanks everybody. We'll see you all next month.
|
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See you all next month.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio. Our Hacker Public Radio does our.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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