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929 lines
81 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1871
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Title: HPR1871: HPR Community News for September 2015
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1871/hpr1871.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:37:37
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---
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This is HBR episode 1871 entitled HBR Community News for September 2015 and is part of the series HBR Community News.
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It is hosted by HBR volunteers and is about 92 minutes long.
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The summary is HBR Community News for September 2015.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Okay, bladder is off and we'll free up some, I don't know how much resources bladder
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are used in terms of the things like pulse audio.
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I know it's constantly listening so it must do something anyway.
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I don't want my computer doing wacky things because what happens is I've always got bladder going.
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And as long as I'm by myself everything's good but if somebody walks into my office and starts talking to me,
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my computer sometimes will just start doing crazy things.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, that sounds great.
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I like that.
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The first thing I have to do when somebody comes in to see me is hold up my index finger saying,
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hang on one sec.
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So I stop bladder from going and then we can have our conversation without any important
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files being deleted or messed up or whatever, who knows what bladder is going to do
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because it thinks you're talking to it all the time.
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It doesn't know there's somebody else in the room.
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No, no, that makes perfect sense.
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That's great.
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Right.
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Okay, so we show we head off then.
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Yep.
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One thing just to point out we normally go through the shows, you know how this is done,
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but the bit where we come to the the mail, reviewing the the mail messages,
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what we normally do is I've got lots of links into G main where we have copies of our messages.
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But the thing seems to be broken today.
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I don't think it's up.
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I'm having it difficult to get into it.
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So what I might do is put I found that we have a full record of everything on the mailman list.
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The the archive system used not to work, but now it is working.
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So I'm going to point to that.
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I don't know if you bothered particularly with you going to track that yourself,
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but just just to warn you, you know, that's fine.
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I mean, I I did see at the show notes here a list of the mailing list topics.
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Yeah, but I can I can click through to that.
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I mean, if it seems like we're going to be discussing something for a little while,
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I'll go ahead and click through.
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You might find that you that they don't get you anywhere.
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That's a problem.
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Those those links seem to be the thing the other end seems to be a bit flaky today.
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Well, it opened up a new tab and I don't look like it's taking a moment here.
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Yeah, maybe you're right.
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Maybe it's not going to do anything.
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Well, we'll see how we go anyway.
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No problem.
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Yep, no worries.
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Okay, right.
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Here we go then.
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Hello, everybody.
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This is the HBR community news show for September 2015.
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And my name is Dave Morris and I have with me tonight, John Colp.
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Hi, John.
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Hey, everybody.
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So Ken's not available tonight.
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So I think I'm in the in the hot seat.
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Hope I can remember how to do this and we're going to start off with
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only me messing up my screen because I've got the wrong push to talk button.
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I made control my push to talk and then I try and scroll.
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And of course the screen shrinks.
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I'm like doing this.
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I really got to learn.
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Anyways, new hosts.
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We have one new host this this past month.
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And that is Ged is I think his name is.
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I'm not sure how that would be pronounced.
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I yeah, I think it might be a Welsh name, but I hope he doesn't come back and tell me
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off for saying that, but it's a it's a name you do do come across occasionally in
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an English context, but it might be a handler or I don't know.
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I don't know either.
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I think I remember him saying it in his episode, but I've forgotten now how it was pronounced.
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Anyway, let's launch straight into the last month's shows.
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And the first one, that was that was me just clicking it.
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Hopefully I'll be able to take all the delays out.
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Now I'm talking about because we can't take the delays out, but the first one was
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Sigflop. Welcome return of Sigflop, who did a show entitled client side,
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C, W2, Tf is wrong with you.
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That was a talk about using a rather wonderful bit of software called
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M scripten, which is capable of converting C and C++ into JavaScript, which is something
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I've never considered ever ever wanting to do. What do you think of that, John?
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Well, I don't know. I got to confess, most of her episodes leave me a little bit confused,
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but I think what this was all about was some kind of some kind of thing that allows you to run
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C code like on the fly in a browser. Is that what am I getting that right?
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That was my understanding, yeah. It's pretty astonishing when you consider that you can,
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first of all, that JavaScript can actually do that, can emulate the piece of C,
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and quite fast from what she said. There's a thing that's actually turning this stuff
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in turning C or C++ into this. That's pretty astonishing.
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That is pretty cool. I don't really know what application I personally would have for,
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but I think it's a pretty cool sounding thing. I wonder if there are any security risks
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to doing something like that? Yeah, I have no idea. You could just
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have pretty evil things in C and presumably C++, so quite how that would operate in JavaScript.
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I have no idea, but it's pretty cool. What we'll do as we go through the shows,
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we'll just, if there's comments, we'll just deal with them as we pass through, yeah.
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So there was a comment on this show from Gabriel Evenfire, who says,
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I always look forward to your shows, because I know they'll be something really unusual,
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some really unusual technical material in them. This one's no exception. I've never heard of
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in script and before, but I'm going to have a look at this. It reminds me of a project a
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while back to compile C code using GCC to MIPS assembly that would run on a MIPS interpreter in Java.
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Holy cow. Wow. Someone build it as a way to compile seepering amps that would never buffer overflow.
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Not exactly accurate, but the buffer overflows would never corrupt the interpreters stack.
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So yeah, people have been writing some pretty bizarre things seems over the years.
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Yeah, and these are things that a real programmer understands better than I do.
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I understand a little bit about Bash and Python, and that's about the extent of it, but I'm...
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Yeah, I've not really had, I've been a sort of, what do you call them, a system manager?
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A system admin?
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A system admin, yeah. My job title was systems manager, that's why I can never remember.
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But that was all about, you know, this thing stop working, go and run about and try and make it work.
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It wasn't really doing anything as clever as this.
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Which is just a machine jockey sort of thing, you know.
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About uptime.
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Yeah, yeah, exactly. Right, so let's move on to the next one.
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Should we take turns doing these things?
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If you want to, yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Okay, so the next one, episode 1848, 1848, this was Introduction to W3M,
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a command line web browser, by Frank Bell, who has done a number of interesting episodes.
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Yeah, this sounded pretty good, actually. I didn't think I had an application for a thing like this,
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but having heard what he was talking about, I sort of started to change my mind. What did you think?
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I've used it a little bit before and it's, what I've used W3M for in the past is like testing for
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my HTML code, like sites that I'm building. If I want to test their accessibility in terms of
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making sure that all the images have alternate text and that you can navigate easily around using
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things like skip to main and, you know, stuff like that. But it really is a very good text browser.
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I got to admit, I normally use e-links instead of W3M, but I have used W3M in the past, it's handy.
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Yeah, it's good to know that these things exist. I was listening to a touch gem. I think it was
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when they were talking about a very lightweight GUI browser called Surf. When I'm using that,
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where I need to do really lightweight stuff at the moment. But I can see W3M and things with that
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sort could come in similar, similar place. I've never heard of that. You said it's Surf?
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Surf, yes. Yeah. Okay, I may try that. You should check that out. It's part of the, what's it
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called, Suckless project? Yeah, I think so. If you listen to Floss Weekly on the Twitch network,
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they just interviewed the Suckless guys in that one. That's funny. That's a great idea. That's
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fantastic. I like it. Really is wonderful. Yeah, I might actually check out that the Surf browser.
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I'm looking for a browser to use with Zimbra, which is our mail and calendar application at the
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university. It's a collaboration suite, I guess they call it. Yeah. Right now it works best on Firefox.
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I've been using Firefox almost exclusively for a long time just because of a certain accessibility
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feature, the quick search feature where you can start typing with either a forward slash or a
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single quote and it will start searching the text on the page and allow you to put focus on it
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quickly. I use this all the time with Blather, but I discovered a plug-in for Chromium that
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implements the same functionality. So I've switched over to Chromium because it's so much faster.
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However, Zimbra doesn't work right on Chromium. There's something about it. So I'm keeping Firefox
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open just for that one web application and if I could make if Surf were to work with Zimbra
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correctly, I would probably rather do that because it would use less system resources.
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You should check it out. It's a strange beastie. It's just a simple window that doesn't have any
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buttons or anything. That would be all right. It's a keyboard input. I haven't really got to
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crypts of it totally yet, but it seems to have some potential. That would be perfect for the Zimbra
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web app because the Zimbra web client has all its own buttons inside the window there and it's
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got a very robust set of keystrokes to navigate around to the calendar and to create new appointments
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and new emails and all that. So I don't need it to be very robust. I just need it to display
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correctly. Yeah. Well, what I've tended to do is I've got two monitors now. I acquired
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another one recently and I have one with them in it and the other one I've far up surf into it.
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So if I'm editing Markdown, then I can generate my HTML and view it in the other window through
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Surf and far up out of them. That was the time. Anyway, we're getting off the point here a bit.
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I don't see time to talk about Markdown later. I'm sure there will. Yes.
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Okay. There was one comment to this one from Tom Land. Do you want to do that one, John?
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Oops. Have I been talking all this time without my button pressed here?
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I think you've been you've been in mute. Man, that is funny. I read that whole comment without my
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button pressed. I forgot that it's pushed to talk. I've done that. I've done it so easily done.
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Let me start over again. Okay. Okay. The title of the comment is Automatize login
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from command line. I don't know if that automatize is really a word or not, but I kind of like it.
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I could say automate, but then I'm British. So there you go. Yeah, I don't know. Anyway,
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he says I just discovered this tool W3M and I was wondering if it could be possible to access a
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page that requires a login and password. I need it to be done automatically from the command line.
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i.e. I wouldn't be pressing any keys. It's a headless server. Do you know if that's possible?
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I would need to grab some text, but once logged in, the URL remains the same. Thanks in advance.
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And there is no response to this. I don't really know the answer to this question using W3M,
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but can't you use something like curl to enter a password and username?
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Yeah. I think I would be doing something like that. I wasn't quite clear what he needed to do.
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Log into web browser automatically. Why would you do that? I don't really know. I would need a
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some kind of demonstration or a more detailed description of exactly what he's trying to accomplish
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here, but there's probably a way. But as you say, something like curl might be the answer.
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Yeah, you can do all kinds of stuff with curl. So it seems like that would be the tool I would use.
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If it's a headless and you're not going to be actually reading it with your own eyeballs,
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I don't think you would want to use W3M necessarily. Unless it's got some kind of,
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what's the word? Some kind of detached? I don't know if that's the right word,
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but where you can just send a command and it'll grab some text like e-links, for example,
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I use the e-links dump option quite often to grab the contents of a web page and then scrape it
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for just the part I want. And that will use the e-links program, but without ever actually opening
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up the web page in a way where you can look at it. Yeah, I'm sure there's all sorts of ways
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that you can do that. As you say, we need to know a bit more about what it was trying to do,
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I suspect. Yeah. Right, that's, let's move on. 1849 was Lynette Lustcast. Sorry, you there, John.
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Did you step on my toes there? Is it my turn? Or is it? No, you did the last way. No, you did,
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you read the last show. I think it's a measure of how slowly we're going that I
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forgot. Okay, I'll do this one. Linux logcast episode four outtakes. So this is where Kevin
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Wisher posts some of the stuff that they don't publish on the logcast feed. So yeah, it's good.
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Only nine minutes this time, we've had more significant chunks in the past. So come on, Kevin,
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we need more. We need more. I can't even, I can't really remember whether I listen to this one
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or not. I normally listen every day, but I don't, I don't remember if I heard this one or not.
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I did, because I mean, I usually make notes on these things and so I keep a wiki to keep that sort
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of stuff. And I just said to myself, very nice, but could have done with a bit more.
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All right. So then episode 1850 is Ahuka doing SSH introduction. I'm not sure what the 18.
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Is that a series number? I think it is. I think it's this is part of privacy and security.
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I think that's the 18th of that of that series is the way I read it anyway. That probably is
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correct. So the series privacy and security episode 18, this is SSH introduction. And I love
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the, I mean, I've used SSH quite a lot, but it's just like with any show Ahuka does, he always
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points out something that I haven't heard of before. Yeah, I thought it was a great introduction to
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the subject and a bit of history and everything. I'd forgotten quite how SSH had come to be. It was
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quite nice to have the reference back and go and check that out, actually. Just a moment. So
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yeah, I read a book. I wonder what I seem like I might have, I might have sent that book to
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NY Bill. Wait, for a while there, we were reading books and then sending them along to other people
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in our little community. And then whoever read it next would send it to the next person and so
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forth. And I think one of the books I sent along was one about the history of public key encryption.
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And I don't remember the title of it now, but it talked about a lot of these kinds of things.
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Yeah, yeah, it's, it's an interesting subject. I had not quite remembered that it started up as
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as a sort of fairly open product that tattooed, and I assume you pronounce this name. I don't know.
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In Helsinki. And then it sort of got to turn into a commercial thing, become proprietary,
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and then in the OpenBSD guys that taken, taken away and done an open SSH based on it,
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bulked it effectively, I think. I had forgotten that. It was good to be reminded of that because
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it's good to know the history of these things, as I say. Yeah, yeah. And I think there's going to be
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one more in this SSH series that we'll get to today. Over there are some comments here.
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And comment number one from OXF10E, Oxford. Yeah, it was so trouble with that one.
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He says the title of the comment is portable version of open SSH. Actually, the portable version
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of open SSH is needed on every platform other than OpenBSD, not just Unixoid ones, winky face.
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Right, right. Okay, thank you. And Gabriel even fired said this could be a very fruitful series.
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SSH is one of those Swiss Army knives that most people just use for blade. I'm looking forward
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to seeing where this is going. There's a lot of potential uses to cover. Class II already added
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an episode talking about SSH config, which we're going to get to soon. And there are lots of
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useful shortcuts one can include from that alone. So I hope that more people, including you,
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are who could keep this going. Yeah, I agree with that. You know what also might be interesting is
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for those of us who are not going to talk so much about how open SSH works necessarily is just
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to run down the ways we use it. Yeah, I mean, I could, I have a number of ways that I use it that are
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not necessarily the same as as other people. Yeah, I know there's a lot to it. There's a lot to it.
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I used to work use it quite a lot. And there's a minus capital X option, which lets you reflect back
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X sessions through it to to your local workstation. So it's useful to be able to go to those sort of
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headless service or remote service and get X sessions back. It's slow, but you know, that's
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there's tons like that loads and loads. There's one more comment. And that's from the host Kevin
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O'Brien. He says, thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed this introductory episode. I recorded and
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uploaded several more. And I am not done. Is that a warning? And Clatou has also sent in an SSH
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show. So there is plenty to go around. Very good. Okay. So the next one was the community new. So
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I don't think we want to reflect on that one. Otherwise, we go into one of those infinite circles.
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Yeah. So I forget, did I do the last one or did you date? Are you?
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Yeah, sorry, sorry. Yeah. I'm fighting my control and trying to take my finger off the control key
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when I want to do something on the screen and then forget to put it back on when I want to speak.
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I've got a second. I got you. But I can't remember whose turn it is here.
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No, I can't remember either. How about I go on the next one? Do you want to go on the next one
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because it's my show and that makes sense? Yeah, yeah. So episode 1852, Dave Morris,
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Operation Wallacea. Wallacea? Wallacea? I don't know. I had difficulty knowing how to
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pronounce this. And I'm told that the organization and themselves pronounce it Wallacea.
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That sounds fine. That's good enough for me. This was a terrific episode. I really liked hearing
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about what your daughter was doing over there. And I went to their website and looked and saw
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that they've got projects going all around the world. Yeah, amazing stuff. It's a great, great
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thing to do as a youngster to get involved in something like this. And it's great on your CV too,
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which is what a lot of people are doing it for the experience and for being able to say,
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look, I want to do biology. And here's how much I want to do it. I've actually done this during
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my vacation. Yes, really, really terrific. So is she back in school this semester now? Yes,
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yes, she's she's getting heavily into her biology degree right now.
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She's doing three and behavioral behavioral studies or something about nature. I can't
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remember the title for time. Sounds like something I would not understand.
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Well, she's leaving me standing, I can tell you. My son is only 14 and he's already talking
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about scientific things that I don't remember ever learning in my life.
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No, it's scary when they start to run, run past you in a way. It's a frightening thing.
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It's good though. So it should be. So with her comments on this one? Nothing, nothing on this one,
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no. How could that be? We're commenting on it now, I guess. Yeah, that's that's what this shows all
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about. Okay, episode 1853 then. Yeah, shall I, I'll just read this one. And this is, this is Alpha
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32 and his shows entitled, I Heart Vista. I assume you pronounce it that way.
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So what's this? Somebody's commenting on Vista and on this channel. How I got into Linux,
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it is really. So I believe what he's saying is he loves Vista because it helped him get into Linux
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because it was so bad. Is that what I, that's exactly it. That's exactly what I understood. Yes,
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yes. Yeah, I thought it was a good hook. That was a good hook. That was a good hook. That was
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everything. What? What? Oh, right. Okay. Got it. It was good. It's fun. So yeah, there was a
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comment which made that point. It was where the Aaron B483 says a great name for a podcast. I'm
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sure because of the name of your podcast, you've probably got a lot of interest. Yeah, it's
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an interesting, interesting show too. Some, you know, some personal anecdotes about
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learning the way around when those things and finding that Linux is better, just so it's good
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to hear. Yeah. Speaking of moving from Windows to Linux, the next episode 1854 is me talking about
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how we finally got Linux installed on my son's ASUS TP 500L which came with Windows 8 installed
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and here I talk about how I finally decided to try to get into the secure boot protected BIOS
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and disable that and allow installation of Ubuntu on there. Yeah, it was a good story. It's this
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UEFI business is a worrying thing because you never know when it's going to lock you out
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totally from doing what you want to do. So it's good to hear that you managed to crack that one.
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Yeah, it actually wasn't as hard as I feared it was going to be. I mean, like I said in the podcast,
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I knew when I bought this laptop form that it had this feature, this negative feature of secure boot,
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but he just needed a new laptop and he actually didn't mind Windows 8 that much once he got used to it
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and then he installed Windows 10, which people kept saying have all the security or privacy
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issues and so we thought, well, maybe it's time. And I'll say, we did this maybe a month or six
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weeks ago and he is not a single time booted back into Windows since then. That says a lot,
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that does. Yes, that's fascinating. My daughter's also got Windows 8 machine and she is pretty much
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content with it because the same reason that needs it for things related to study. She hasn't
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yet reached the point where she's gone to Windows 10 and has hated it. So she's moderately content
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at the moment, so continues. My son was, I mean, there are certain things he likes about Windows 8
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just because there's so many things that will run on it that won't run on
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Linux gaming kinds of things. But the kind of compatibility issues that I was talking about where
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he was worried about not being able to work with his classmates at school on projects. That issue
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is going away a little bit because it seems like more and more they are all using Google Drive and
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those online free services, you know, free isn't beer anyway, services. And so he doesn't even necessarily
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need to use this office product. Yeah, that's good. That's good. So he'll probably just stick with
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that. The one thing that's come up repeatedly since installing Ubuntu on there is that every time
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he gets a kernel update, we have to recompile the driver for his Wi-Fi. And that's always kind of a
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startling at first because he'll run the updates and then he'll say, Dad, my Wi-Fi is not working.
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Or remember, oh yeah, we've got to do so. So I finally wrote a script that he can run that will
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recompile the Wi-Fi driver and then install it in the right place. And that's all good after that.
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Yeah, that's good. That's good, but it's a pain that it has to be that way. But there you go. Yeah,
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at least he's got something that's a little bit there, Dave. Oh, right. At least he's got
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something that works well. That's the main thing. You there, John? Your audio is breaking up
|
|
a little bit. Yours is breaking up for me, actually. No, sure. I wonder if it's because my kids are
|
|
watching videos or something. Can you hear me? I can hear you, John, yeah. Okay. Okay, we're good.
|
|
Well, I guess that's the year next. 1855 is a hooker's number 61 in the series on
|
|
Libre Office. Libre Office Impress, Slide Layouts and Auto Layout Textboxes. So this is more on
|
|
the ins and outs of Impress and generating slides and so forth. I always go off and look at a hooker's
|
|
his own website for the details of this and it's always really, really good and very easy to follow
|
|
and stuff. I find this one very useful. I don't actually need it anymore, but I have used this
|
|
in the past and it's good to have this overview. I'm sure anybody who needs to generate slides will
|
|
enjoy it a lot. Okay, so you had just finished introducing the episode 1855 on Libre Office Impress
|
|
and I missed nearly your whole thing and I don't see any comments on it. Yeah, so I guess we could
|
|
just go on because I'm hoping that if we work with the recordings at this end, then we're good,
|
|
we should be good, unless you wanted to discuss it in any degree. Yeah, I mean, only to say what I
|
|
always, I should have this little disclaimer or canned response to all of his episodes about
|
|
Libre Office, which is they're awesome. Absolutely. Yeah, yeah. I have no immediate need for
|
|
them at the moment, but it's really good to be able to look under the hood a bit and see
|
|
how it all works just in case, you know. Yeah, I mean, I usually Libre Office impress
|
|
doing school semesters. I use it almost every day. That's what I use to show slides in my classes
|
|
and stuff like that, but a lot of the stuff he's talking about here, I have not really explored before.
|
|
Now there's some useful stuff we want to generate different slide layouts and formats and stuff,
|
|
that's it's good to know. I don't create all that many new slides anymore. What I'm trying to do now
|
|
is essentially reduce the amount of text on all of my old slides. I have this ideal. One day, I want
|
|
to get down to where each slide just has a single icon and each one will prompt me to speak for
|
|
five or ten minutes about whatever the icon represents. And what I'm curious to see is whether
|
|
my students will actually take any notes at that point. I think they're kind of conditioned only
|
|
to write down what is on a slide. Yes, I know. I know the way that works.
|
|
My daughter says that if the lecturer doesn't give a hand out at a class, you know,
|
|
usually there's slides and usually you get a copy of the slides and sometimes some notes,
|
|
then people don't write anything. You know, they just expect this stuff to be fed to them and then
|
|
they sit there with the mouse open as it will hurt. Yeah, I find that I don't just post the slides
|
|
anymore for students do that or else they just don't do anything in class. I have certain students who
|
|
for like the office of disability has tested them and they say these people need a note-taker
|
|
for class. And so for those students, I will offer them outline versions of my slides, but I don't
|
|
just hand out the slides anymore because I want people to take notes. Well, yeah, the way my daughter
|
|
works is she takes an iPad in and then she's got a note-taking thing on that that she uses it
|
|
with a stylus. And then if there's slides to take away, she then goes and annotates them and makes
|
|
copies notes on top of the slides or around the slides and that. So for her, it's actually quite good,
|
|
but a load of people don't do that. You know, they just say, I don't need to do any work. I can just
|
|
go on. Carry on. She sounds like an ideal student. She's keen. She's keen. Very good. Okay,
|
|
let's get on to 1856. Yeah, I guess that's mine now. SSH config by Klaatu. And that is the entire title.
|
|
And then he gives an example. Oh, yeah, he's talking about the config file. This is something I
|
|
learned about maybe a couple of years ago. And man, what what a difference that file made once I
|
|
learned about it. So you can set up all these like aliases for all your hosts and store the
|
|
login credentials, the port numbers and all of that kind of stuff so that you don't have to type
|
|
these very long complicated commands. And so now I will do something like SSH Pi 2 and that will go
|
|
into my second Raspberry Pi using the right credentials and all that and I love it. Yeah, yeah,
|
|
that's good. You know, I knew this existed, but I'd never actually bothered to delve into what
|
|
it did. And I actually, in many cases, had alias command alias to do it. That's how I used to do it,
|
|
too. Yeah, yeah. So having heard this, I thought, oh, I'm just looking into this. Oh, yeah,
|
|
it's much better and so glad that Klaatu did this. And I've done the config a lot of mine that way
|
|
now. So it's it's it's very very convenient. It's wonderful. Not just for SSHing into things,
|
|
but for secure copying. I mean, you can copy files over to your servers using these aliases. And
|
|
man, it makes everything easier. Yes, I know. I do that. I use SAP and stuff quite a lot. So yeah,
|
|
it makes makes life considerably easier. Very good. Yeah, there is a comment by Oxford One Zuri.
|
|
He says nice intro to home slash dot SSH slash config comma Klaatu. He says the protocol two
|
|
option is the default for quite some time as in more than 10 years. I think the latest version of
|
|
open SSH doesn't even compile with support for version one by default, at least the SSH Damon,
|
|
where they have a server. Shortening host names comes really handy in cases like webfrontin.fancy
|
|
hyphen example hyphen corp.co.uk or you're not kidding there. And there's also patterns matching
|
|
like oh, yeah, he talks about pattern matching for host names. So asterisk dot fancy hyphen example
|
|
hyphen corp dot and so forth. And then he shows how to use a username and identity file. And very
|
|
sometimes it you should go read this comment if it sounds at all interesting. It is too difficult
|
|
to read at all. Yeah, what about you? Okay, the next one was next comment was from Be Easy,
|
|
who says thanks for the show. I immediately added a config file with a couple of accounts that I
|
|
commonly used. The only the only thing I added perhaps you meant I added for securities to charge
|
|
is to change the permissions on the file just to 600 or 644. So yeah, the only change that I added.
|
|
Yeah, I think that's supposed to be worth it. Keep up the great shows. No, I was thrown by the fact
|
|
he missed a word out there. I was trying to fill it in for him and failing miserably. So
|
|
should just shut up and get on with it. Yeah, I think you are forced to change the file the
|
|
file permissions to 600 if you're trying to do SSH logins, but I mean, because I've had situations
|
|
where I had forgotten to do that before. Yeah, maybe it's a key file. It might be the key file that
|
|
you have to do that, but because they won't let you log in unless your permissions are set to
|
|
600. I thought you had to be careful about the config file because that's potentially dangerous.
|
|
I thought you probably I can't I've seen this somewhere, but I might have might be conflating it with
|
|
the the thing you said. I'm not sure. I'm having trouble remembering right now too. It might have been
|
|
one time where I for the first time tried to log in using a new key pair and I'd forgotten to change
|
|
the key files to 600 or something and it it aborted and said you've got your permissions are
|
|
not secure enough. Okay, that's good. So do you want to do that last comment there? Sure. Gabriel
|
|
even fire comments identity file. I'm curious if from your example, you are creating separate
|
|
identity files for each host. I imagine not, but it's a possibility I'd never considered before.
|
|
I suppose it doesn't provide that much more security insofar as if someone can read one of your
|
|
private keys from .ssh slash. They can read all of them, but it does make me think.
|
|
For my part, I have this ruby script to run ssh with shorthands to the different identities
|
|
and accounts in our internal machines. This show is prompting me to do it the right way,
|
|
especially insofar as it will work with secure copy, secure fdp and scripts that use them.
|
|
Thanks for the show. I'm enjoying the people starting to break open the tools other than the blade
|
|
in this ssh Swiss army knife. I had never really thought about creating a separate key pair
|
|
for each server that I use either. Is this something that you do? No, I've never done that.
|
|
Never occurred to me why I would need to do it, to be honest. No, me either. Something to think
|
|
about, I suppose, but I don't really know. Okay, next show then, 1857, Adventures in Coffee
|
|
by C. Prompt Curtis Advkins. Another one in the series, the great series on Coffee. I'm not sure
|
|
we've had enough to make a series yet, but maybe we should. C. Prompt is talking about his
|
|
French press, which is very interesting, and the way he gets his coffee from, I think he uses
|
|
a creamer too, which I was impressed by the links and the various resources he uses. They look
|
|
really good. Yeah, we have a French press, but I haven't used it in quite a while, and in fact,
|
|
I think my wife took it to her office so that she could make French press coffee there. We have
|
|
probably six or seven different ways to make coffee in the house here, and yeah, I like French press,
|
|
you know, as long as you grind it coarse enough so it doesn't get too greedy, and I like the fact
|
|
that he talked about the temperature of the water and how that affected the taste of the coffee too.
|
|
I used to have a travel French press mug where you just drink right out of the thing itself.
|
|
I think it was actually boedum that made that as well, but it was a little travel mug that was a
|
|
French press. That sounds very good. I like the sound of that. Yeah, yeah. There's quite a variety of
|
|
different devices like that. I'm sure it's been in some restaurant where they maybe gave everybody
|
|
an individual French press or something, and a cup or something. I can't remember that. Probably so.
|
|
So Gabriel even fired comments. Nice episode even for non-coffee people. I'm not a coffee person.
|
|
I've tried a concept to acquire the taste. Definitely prefer teas, but it was nevertheless entertaining
|
|
to hear the process you go through. I heard people talk rave actually about French presses before,
|
|
but never had a clue as to why they were useful. Hearing the process, I can start to imagine why.
|
|
Thanks for the show. Very nice. Come at number two posted by Dave Morris. He says,
|
|
says I enjoyed this a lot. I like the relaxed style and the detailed content. Not use my
|
|
French presses or cafeterias as we prefer to call them for a while. I prefer to use my mocha pot
|
|
and brew a large strong coffee every morning. After listening to this, I had a craving for coffee,
|
|
so made some with some Kenya medium ground. I had all but abandoned in the freezer. It was great,
|
|
but that's double my normally daily intake. Got to watch it there, Dave. I know. I know. I
|
|
shall be shaking if I don't know what something is. It's true, though. It's something about listening
|
|
to people talking about coffee. They're like, wow, yeah, I could just drink coffee now. I like to do that
|
|
very thing. I don't use French presses very often. I've got a metal insulated one, which is
|
|
really good. Keeps the coffee warm after you've made it. We used one of those. When we were
|
|
traveling last summer, we stayed at a bed and breakfast place that had one of those metal
|
|
French presses that was insulated. That made really nice coffee. Yes, it was good. It's good.
|
|
A Michael made a comment saying, you've got my European mind. Congrats. You've got me for a long
|
|
moment. I mean, this is an interesting way to say he was deeply puzzled. Water at 200 degrees,
|
|
huh? After it finally dawned, I consulted an online converter to learn that 200 degrees Fahrenheit,
|
|
means 93.3 centigrade, which made a lot more sense to me. That's wonderful. I guess it would.
|
|
Fahrenheit centigrade problems all the time. Otherwise, I second Gabriel above. Thanks for the show.
|
|
That's that. I like that. The problem for me with the water temperature is that it's too difficult
|
|
to get it just right. I would like to have a water heater upper that just goes to the right coffee
|
|
temperature, because we have the electric tea kettle that will it boils it. I suppose you could
|
|
turn it off before it gets to the boiling point, but which is the right point. We've got a thermometer,
|
|
and it just can't be bothered to be doing all that to make sure the water is at the right
|
|
temperature. No, it's a tremendously complicated process, isn't it? I just happened yesterday
|
|
when I was just wanting to relax for a bit. I got the Wikipedia page on coffee up on my tablet.
|
|
I was sitting there reading this. The detail that they go into there about, you know, coffee,
|
|
work up, it comes from and how you make it and all of the complexities of what comes out when
|
|
and what different roasts and stuff. It's amazing. You could write PhDs galore on that, I'm sure.
|
|
You surely could. Somebody probably has, I would think. It's probably happened, yeah, yeah,
|
|
true. Right. So episode 1858, another one of my favorite ones here, multi-meter mods,
|
|
part two by InWideBill. And this one he talks about more modification finishes the mods that he
|
|
started in an earlier episode to his knockoff, well, I think that's putting it in negatively to
|
|
say it's a knockoff multi-meter. He just says that it's a very high quality multi-meter that's
|
|
not quite commercial grade like the one he uses for work. Yeah, I was impressed with his description
|
|
of it because he's also done a review of it, hasn't he? Is that in the past or in the future? I'm not sure.
|
|
I think it's coming up. It's coming up, yeah, yeah, but yeah, it's impressed with it. In fact,
|
|
I quite tempted, you can buy them here as well. I'm quite tempted to get one. So I just have a
|
|
cheap multi-meter moment, which is quite like something of a bit more quality to it, even though
|
|
that is not professional quality, certainly high enough quality for my needs. Yeah, I've got one,
|
|
I don't even know how much mine costs because my dad bought it for me as a birthday present or
|
|
something. I mean, it seems fine for me, but I don't think it has all the features that the
|
|
Bill's talking about this one having. Yeah, yeah, it's tempting, but I was very impressed with what he
|
|
was doing with it. It's quite a, quite a tale he was telling here of, well, a bit of a foe par,
|
|
if you like, going on, they're cutting the hole in the wrong side, which sort of thing you would
|
|
just go, oh, no, you just sort of throw it out the window, perhaps, so he managed not to do that
|
|
and carried on and 3D printed a thing to fill the hole in, which I thought was just amazing. That's
|
|
a brilliant piece of work. I love that. It's one of those examples of messing something up and then
|
|
instead of being angry, thinking, what an opportunity. I can learn some 3D printing and some CAD
|
|
and stuff. I mean, I love this episode. Somebody made the comment that we could do with the show on
|
|
the 3D. I don't know if that's following on later on, but it's, yeah, the fact that he
|
|
taught himself how to do this in blender and then got his friend to print these things out,
|
|
which was just fantastic. I like this very much. Me too. So my comment was the first one, I say,
|
|
another amazing tale of ingenuity, well done, Bill. I loved this episode, especially enjoyed the
|
|
inadvertent detour into CAD and 3D printing. Of course, the process of designing and printing 3D
|
|
model is good for another episode, dot, dot, dot. Very good. Yes, yes. I might grave,
|
|
bothered with the comment, hacking at its best, great stuff, hacking at its best, heard the names
|
|
of some old friends, two, two, and three, nine, oh, four, two, and double, two, etc. These are
|
|
not old friends to me, but I know he's saying. Yeah, I don't know those guys either. In
|
|
why Bill responds, thanks, John. Yeah, that detour into 3D design and printing was interesting.
|
|
A friend from our love, Jason bought a 3D printer about eight months ago. A sphere was interested
|
|
in it and asked lots of questions. He then designed a part for one of his model rockets and asked
|
|
if Jason could print it. Before I knew it, A sphere bought his own 3D printer kit, and while
|
|
designing my parts, I asked A sphere, is this how it all starts? I want my own 3D printer soon.
|
|
Of course, that's how it starts, Bill. Well, why would you not, I mean, yes. And NWB also
|
|
comments back to Mike saying, yep, those old two ends, one of those, if one of those if it ain't
|
|
broke, don't fix it parts. I mean, they still do the same job they've always done and do it
|
|
perfectly fine. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely. I like that these guys are starting to talk code
|
|
to one another here. Like transistor nerds or something? Yeah, yeah, yeah. So there are a couple of more
|
|
comments here. Marui titles his comments splitting here. I agree on old friends for the 2N304 and
|
|
2N222, however, I can't resist to add that these are unlike the 2N7000, not MOSFETs, but NPMBJTs
|
|
by polar junks and transistors. The point being that BJTs need some amount of control current
|
|
at the base in contrast to the virtually zero current at the gate of a MOSFET. Judging from
|
|
the linked pictures, you have compensated for that by using a bigger capacitor to get the desired
|
|
turn on time. In any case, thanks a lot for sharing this journey. Okay, I didn't understand very much
|
|
of that there, but no, no, well, it is, you know, the conusenti are discussing these things that
|
|
us mere mortals have to just sort of stand in the side lines and listen to, I guess.
|
|
NYU Bill replied to Mirui saying transistors. I started with a MOSFET, but what it wasn't doing
|
|
what I wanted. So I experimented with the transistors I had on hand and chose the one that worked
|
|
best for me. However, I can't remember if I went into detail about the part change between
|
|
episode one and two. Thanks for the clarification. You know, an episode on the final points of
|
|
transistors might make a fine HBR. Thanks, and my Bill, that's a good one. We need more of those comments.
|
|
Yep. And finally, Mike Ray makes another comment. Sadly, some of the old friend,
|
|
through whole mounting transistors, are beginning to disappear, or at least to be very hard to find.
|
|
And those that are still there are rising in price, I guess, to reflect the smaller numbers in
|
|
which they're made. It's getting almost impossible to find the good old 2N 3819 MOSFET. I used to
|
|
use to make oscillators and even workhorses like the BC107-slash8-slash9 transistors are getting
|
|
ridiculously expensive over here in the UK. Anybody remember scraping the paint off the body of an
|
|
OCR-45 to make photo transistors? Sorry, no, but I dare say some people do. Very nice.
|
|
Right. So I guess you're up now? Yep. Yep. Sorry, I'm just juggling between pressing the button and
|
|
clicking there. They're clicking to the next page. Too much behind the scenes here, sorry about that.
|
|
So this is 1859. A mouse in a maze on the Raspberry Pi by a Gabriel even fire.
|
|
And this is him talking about more about bare metal programming on the Raspberry Pi
|
|
but it's continuing on from some of these earlier stuff. Very detailed stuff.
|
|
Yeah, I'm interested, but I don't really understand very much of it. I'm sad to say, but I always
|
|
like hearing what people are doing with their Raspberry Pi. I mean, that itself could be a series
|
|
I would think. Yeah, yeah. No, it's interesting stuff. It's hard to get into unless you
|
|
have that sort of background. I mean, if you've done a degree in computer science, you might
|
|
well have covered some of these sorts of things, but I haven't. And so my knowledge in this area is
|
|
more sort of peripheral in many ways. So I did, when I worked at my previous job, it was in
|
|
the era when microprocessors, as they were then called, were appearing. And there was a team in
|
|
our department who was building a mic, there was a competition, I'm not sure if it was just in the
|
|
UK called the Micromouse competition. We had to produce them a mouse-shaped robot that physically
|
|
went through a physical maze to find a piece of cheese. They were doing this on
|
|
using processors like 6502 and that type of stuff. I didn't, I wasn't sufficiently knowledgeable
|
|
about how to do that, but in those days, but it was very deeply interested in what they were doing.
|
|
This reminds me of that. Yeah, it sounds pretty cool, but I can't really follow a lot of
|
|
what he's talking about there. There was one comment by Mike Ray entitled Welcome Return Great
|
|
Episode Gabriel, and great to see you back with more bare-metal programming. Looking forward to
|
|
episodes about sound rendering on the GPU. Wow, yes, yeah, quite interesting to hear that.
|
|
All right, so the next episode, 1860, is that it? Yeah, 5150 interviews Chris Wade of Save
|
|
Wi-Fi. And this is the one where they're talking about new FCC regulations and the potential
|
|
consequences for open source operating systems and for the firmware that many of us like to load
|
|
onto our routers. Yeah, this is a pretty scary prospect, I think, isn't it? The fact that,
|
|
yeah, there's a potential issue with software-defined radios being used to do things that
|
|
that more fixed hardware was being used for in the past is opening doors that weren't opened
|
|
before. And to understand it, this is sort of a bureaucratic response to that, which is to say,
|
|
you know, ban it, control it, stop it, rather than a more controlled response.
|
|
And it's, I think Chris Wade made the next, made some very excellent points about the stupidity
|
|
of this response by the FCC, but it's going to have worldwide ramifications as well, which is very,
|
|
very worrying. Yeah, well, for my own part, I'm not planning on changing the firmware on any of my
|
|
routers, all of which run DDWRT on them until I hear otherwise, I'm just going to keep running them.
|
|
Sure, sure, yeah, yeah, I'm sure that's the case, but it's more that new stuff will be restricted
|
|
in this way. And eventually, if it actually happens, it will spread to all sorts of places,
|
|
because, you know, there's so much stuff that could potentially have this sort of software-defined
|
|
radio equipment in it, including laptops and anything with Wi-Fi on it, I guess.
|
|
Yeah, well, there are no comments for that episode. Okay, so moving on to 1861, this was Curtis
|
|
Adkins, Adkins, sorry, Curtis, C. Prompt, who was doing another in his series of cool stuff,
|
|
this is part four, and he was talking about three main, main topics, C, C, new, CMUS,
|
|
is that what it's called, CMUS? I've never used it, but yeah. And I've not used it, I've used
|
|
NPC and MPD and some of the things that work around that, but not that particular one.
|
|
And recommending a podcast song exploder, musicians take apart their songs.
|
|
That sounds pretty cool, actually. I've not explored that podcast, but I remember thinking
|
|
while he was talking about it, that's a genius idea for a podcast. Yeah, yeah, I'm sure it's
|
|
interesting, I've not followed it up. And the third one was Mr. Robot, which is a TV show, I believe,
|
|
certainly heard of it, not seen it though. I haven't either. Maybe I should try it out though,
|
|
because my wife and I are having a real problem finding any TV series to watch. I mean,
|
|
watch one episode and then just can't be bothered anymore, and we just read our books.
|
|
Well, yeah, it's a funny thing, actually, without digressing too far, when my kids were here,
|
|
before they went off to university and one of the stuff, we reached the point between us that
|
|
we just got so bored with TV. And that was 2013, the TV's not been switched on since,
|
|
nobody wanted to watch it. There's plenty of other places you can read, you can go on the internet,
|
|
there's so much other stuff. We have not watched the television in that time, because the amount of
|
|
stuff that we actually enjoyed amongst what was available was tiny. Why bother? We really would see
|
|
it as the answer. We've found a few series that we like, but then there are the sorts of series
|
|
that are over after, say, six or eight episodes, and then there's no follow-up, and so then we
|
|
are left looking around for more, and I've always got a book going, and I like reading just as much.
|
|
The only thing I always watch on TV is the whatever American football games are on, and I'll watch those,
|
|
but otherwise I'd rather just read my book. I think it's a common response these days. I know loads
|
|
of people who see the world in that sort of way. Another one of the cool stuff episodes where Ken
|
|
might say that you could make three episodes out of the one. That's always true. Are you up next?
|
|
I forgot already. No, I did last one, I think, didn't I? Yes. So 1862, the awesomely epic guy to
|
|
KDE Part 1, and then the next day is Part 2, and in this one, the new host, Geddes. Geddes?
|
|
Geddes, I think it's... Geddes contributes his very first show, and he talks about the KDE
|
|
desktop, and I found it very, very interesting. I've tried KDE two or three times in the years that
|
|
I've been running Linux, and it has never stuck. There are certain things I really like about it,
|
|
like the Kate text editor, I think, is excellent, but overall I just have never found it all
|
|
that interesting. But I like hearing him talk about all the various ways to tweak it, to make it
|
|
make it better. Yeah, I know it's a great idea to do a show on this to be going through an article
|
|
like this. The article was brilliant, of course, but it's a great idea to do this because it's a good
|
|
way to consume that sort of thing, I think. That's right. All right. I'd forgotten. So he did not
|
|
write this article, but he had made the audio recording for Linux Voice, is that correct? That's
|
|
right. That's right. Yes. And he got the permission to put it up on HPR as well. Yeah, I enjoyed that.
|
|
Yeah, I thought it was a brilliant idea. I really enjoyed listening to this. I have been a KDE
|
|
user, actually, for a long time. Yeah, I thought so. I started on Red Hat Linux back in the 90s,
|
|
and then it turned into Fedora, and KDE must have appeared in that sort of era, and I just moved
|
|
that rather than the GNOME, because GNOME seemed very primitive. So I just stuck with it ever since.
|
|
Until now, I'm not on it anymore because Debian testing breaks it all the damn time.
|
|
So I'm currently using an XFCE, which is more basic, but it's more stable.
|
|
Well, I'm on open box with Tint 2, and it's much more basic even in the next XFCE,
|
|
but I like it very much. Yeah, I used to use CrunchBang on one of my machines and
|
|
had open box on that. Yeah, it's good. It does job.
|
|
Yeah, so there's one comment by Ken Fallon. He says, I just enabled a load of these.
|
|
Hi, get us. I just re-enabled a load of these. I didn't bother before as I mostly did
|
|
reinstalls, but then I realized that I could keep my config in my home door, so it would move
|
|
with me. Excellent reading and a great idea. I guess he's referring there to the idea of
|
|
taking this audio from something else and then presenting it as an HDPR episode.
|
|
Yeah, I think it is a good idea. Yeah, and Linux Voice product are always worth hearing again,
|
|
I think. Sure, especially for those of us who found Linux Voice too expensive to subscribe to.
|
|
That's a shame. Yeah, that's a pity. So if we hop across to the next episode, there's not
|
|
much more to say about the content, but there's a comment from John Kalp, who says probably still
|
|
will not switch to KDE, but I really enjoyed both of these episodes about tweaking KDE, although
|
|
I probably still not adopt the desktop myself. This also is a pretty good idea to read old
|
|
magazine articles, but there's still a current interest as HDPR episodes with some intro up front.
|
|
As long as it doesn't run a foul of any licensing, which we know it doesn't. So yeah,
|
|
great idea. Good, good way to join HPR too. Yep. Okay, so who's on it? It's me next. Does it
|
|
shall I do this one? Yeah, you can do your own episode there. Some of these are called Dave
|
|
Morris did a thing, turning an old printer into a network printer. This was me trying to make
|
|
my old printer work. I think somebody commented on all-cast planet. I just saw the comment,
|
|
and I logged in the other day, but old is 10 years? Well, yeah, yeah. It's a way of describing
|
|
it. I do actually have an even older printer, which is from the 1980s, but it's a serial laser
|
|
printer. So I want to get that one in some stage, but wow, I think I might be in for a struggle there.
|
|
It's funny, but remember, when my dad got his first laser printer, I think it was an HP laser
|
|
jet for, and I want to say he paid nearly $3,000 for that thing. Yeah, I can believe that. They
|
|
were very expensive. Yeah, that was about 1990. Well, we bought laser printers for our Vax cluster,
|
|
which we bought in 1987 at the university I was working at, and when it was junked, then the
|
|
laser printers were still working. And they were going to get thrown out, and I said, well, I'll have
|
|
one, but you try lifting it. Wow, it weighs a ton, and it's only a sort of desktop thing.
|
|
That's funny. It's amazingly heavy. It's made of lead, or something. I'm not sure what it is,
|
|
but it's concrete. I have no idea. Maybe it's a security feature,
|
|
if somebody runs off with it. Yeah. Anyway, the point of this show was I was doing this,
|
|
and getting it to work, and I'm a terrible note-taker. I have to write things down,
|
|
otherwise I forget them. So I wrote lots and lots of notes in my Wiki, and I suddenly thought,
|
|
oh, wow, I could write, I could make this a show, so I did. Sure. So you got my notes effectively,
|
|
slightly. Very good. So anyway. Yeah, I liked that episode, and I commented as much,
|
|
saying, whoa, remote scanning. Very cool, Dave. I've got an old printer on the network, too,
|
|
but hooked up to my Goodwill router via USB. The advantage of using a Raspberry Pi is the remote
|
|
scanning. I never even knew that was possible at all. I thought you always had to hook up with the
|
|
USB to scan stuff. Again, then again, I never really thought about it that much. Usually, I walk
|
|
over to the university library to do my scanning, because they have awesome scanners for public use.
|
|
Thanks for another great episode. Thanks, John, and that's what I said in response.
|
|
Thanks, John. I like that. I like that. Rooters can run printers like this. It's a great idea,
|
|
but I suspect the features are limited. I do have a router that can do it when I haven't tried it.
|
|
I have plans to experiment with cups, perhaps configuring other cues for different size
|
|
stationary, for example, just as an aside, we used to run cups at work back in the day. So I have
|
|
a little bit of experience playing around with it. I commented here about my deck LNO3 monochrome
|
|
laser printer. I've done a hard to make a Raspberry Pi talk serial RS-232 to a printer,
|
|
but it would be quite an interesting thing to do. Sure, it must be possible. The scanning capability
|
|
is good to have, and it's been used more than I would have expected. Quality is not particularly
|
|
high, but it's good enough for most purposes. Sounds fine. Man, look at me yawning here at two o'clock
|
|
in the afternoon. We'll get in close to the end, I think, are we? Yeah, next episode is four more
|
|
episodes here. Next one is number 62 in the LibreOffice Impress, or the LibreOffice series. This is
|
|
Impress working with text boxes by Ahuka. Yeah, so this is another, it's a follow-on from the
|
|
the previous one, actually, making your slides with your own text boxes to put them where you want,
|
|
and have as many as you want, and so forth. I'd never actually done this. I didn't even know
|
|
it was possible, but as usual, Ahuka does the great thing of giving us lots of information,
|
|
especially on his own site there, and leading us along the way to the answers to this. So
|
|
very good, thank you. Well, this is, I mean, this episode really helps to explain some confusing
|
|
things about the way Impress behaves. When you think you ought to be applying a text style,
|
|
you really ought to be applying a drawing object style. I mean, it really is counterintuitive
|
|
when you're using the program, and here he kind of breaks it down and tells you which styles you
|
|
really need to be using if you want it to work right. So that's, it's very helpful. Absolutely,
|
|
absolutely. Yes. Yeah, it's a, it's a strain, it is a rather strange beastie this, this thing.
|
|
It's to make it do what you want to do. It's not entirely obvious. I've certainly seen people
|
|
try and use slide presentation systems as if they are typing a document, and only to... Oh, that's
|
|
awful. Yeah, and then it flows from one slide to another and makes a hell of a mess and so on,
|
|
so it's good to understand it better in this way, I think. Yeah, there were no comments
|
|
so on to 1866. So this was Kuvmo, is that Kuvmo? Is that how you say it? Kuvmo, who was talking,
|
|
an awkward talk with two young computer users as his title, and he talks to his children Eric
|
|
and Emily, talking about operating systems school and fun uses of computers. So I love that.
|
|
That was nice. I didn't think it was that awkward. No, no, no, no, absolutely. No, it's the way,
|
|
you know, the way these things go. I think it's just seemed very natural and relaxed. It was
|
|
it was good. And they were certainly the two kids were very, very forthcoming with their thoughts
|
|
and opinions. Yeah, I've enjoyed that because my kids are one year off of their age. My kids are
|
|
14 and 11 and they would have had somewhat similar responses, although I think it sounds like my
|
|
son has a bit more experience in the programming part of it. It sounded like he was trying to
|
|
to get his son to show a little bit more interest in programming, and I wasn't sure he really wanted
|
|
it. Yes, yes, I think he hadn't quite dealt far enough into it yet to understand what was
|
|
entailed, but there you go. This was fine. Fair enough. And Frank, I don't know which Frank,
|
|
this was commented on the show. Was it Frank Belltabs? Probably Frank Bell. I don't know
|
|
how many Franks that listen to us now who comment. And he said, absolutely terrible, which I can't
|
|
but agree with. Yeah, that was great. So the next day was my episode called the Lafayette Public
|
|
Library Maker Space. And this was one that was made over a series of days. I think there are three
|
|
separate segments here. One ending in bitter disappointment and another longer segment where I got
|
|
just awesome help from the librarian on duty in the maker space. And then I finally come back and
|
|
give a little round up and talk about the results of the printing. Basically, what I was doing was
|
|
trying to get in there and make use of the 3D printers and other things that they have
|
|
in the newly renovated downtown public library in Lafayette, Louisiana.
|
|
Yeah, what a place. It sounds really, really good. I was so, so glad you told us about it.
|
|
You're very lucky. I don't know that those places quite of that caliber in the in the UK.
|
|
I don't really know either. This is the only one of the public library branches that's got a
|
|
maker space. Now we do have a new branch of the library. Well, I say new, but it was probably built
|
|
seven or eight years ago. And it has lots of excellent things in it. But I just like how they,
|
|
when they were renovating this downtown library, they thought of so many things like they thought
|
|
of the maker space. And I also liked the fact that it's not just for technology, but also for
|
|
more traditional making arts like knitting and sewing and things like that where you can
|
|
go in there and use these sewing machines or sit around with other people and knit a scar for
|
|
something. It's really very cool. Yeah, somebody with quite a lot of foresight must have
|
|
must have thought this through. How would that have been done? You know, is there some sort of a
|
|
community group that comes up with these ideas? Well, I know that there is a, I don't know if it's
|
|
a board of directors or something like that, but I'm actually friends with one of the people who's
|
|
a sort of official in the Lafayette Public Library. And she may have had something to do with it.
|
|
They also hired a very good architecture firm to handle the design of the interior renovation
|
|
and everything. The exterior of the building didn't change a lot, but it has some additions.
|
|
The interior is almost completely different. And it's really, really well done. It took
|
|
them four or five years to get it done, but man, it's awesome now. Yeah, yeah, it sounds well
|
|
worth the wait from what you described. It's really good. The only thing I wondered about was
|
|
the, maybe they didn't quite get the opening times sorted before. It became available.
|
|
That was the only sort of down, slight downside. I'm sure they will soon get it organized,
|
|
but it seemed a little bit lacking there. Well, yeah, I mean, I talked to the, I cut out the part
|
|
of the podcast where the librarian explained to me why they weren't there on that day when I first
|
|
went and it was, it had to do with personal reasons for her. And so I decided to cut that out.
|
|
It was very valid excuse, but I think they've got it stabilized now. And she told me that they're
|
|
starting to have lots of groups going in scheduling classes and stuff like that. So I think it's
|
|
going to be very well used. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I heard the bit where she said there were
|
|
classes coming in and stuff, which will be fantastic. What a resource. That's really good.
|
|
Yeah, it's like I said, a great public quality of life enhancement for the city.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. Right. So next was me again, all it wasn't really me. I just posted the show
|
|
for the for the group. And this was the 1868 Glasgow Podcraw or Podcraw Glasgow should have been
|
|
whatever. Um, Kevin think puts it the other way around with the first two. Okay. So
|
|
Kevin was the organizer of the the Podcraw really. He and MacNallow, Andrew, Andrew Conway,
|
|
but it was it was a fun time. I thought there might be a few more people, but in fact, we had Andrew
|
|
Gregory from Linux Voice come along to join us as well. It was very good indeed. So that was good.
|
|
Then it was it's a good idea to come back and chat about it. I thought it was fun to get together
|
|
and chat. Yeah, it was really nice hearing Andrew Gregory's voice again. I've not listened to any of
|
|
his podcasts since what was it? Was it the Ubuntu UK podcast? What podcast did he do before Linux
|
|
he did? He was on Linux format and their their podcast was called tux tux radar. I think we'll go
|
|
tux radar. Yeah, listen to both of those. Yeah, yeah. So yeah, they they they have a they have a
|
|
really nice relaxed way of doing their their podcasts. Yeah, it's it's just always quite amusing.
|
|
And so yeah, he's I think partly down to Andrew. I'm sure the others contribute a lot as well,
|
|
but yeah, it was cool. It was fun. Fun hearing you guys sit around talking it reminded me a little
|
|
bit of the duffer cast. Yeah, yeah, there was there was some commonality there, I suspect.
|
|
I'm getting a little bit distracted right now. My daughter is outside singing La Vienne Rose
|
|
in a very loud voice. She and her friend are rehearsing because they're supposed to sing this
|
|
at an upcoming event at her school. I think the French immersion program is doing some kind of
|
|
thing. And so I like I'm hearing you, but I'm also hearing her singing outside my window. It's
|
|
very distracting. That's rather fun. It's not coming through me. Well, I just caught just the edge
|
|
of it that you know, your mic must be quite directional or something. Well, it's a condenser mic,
|
|
but it is outside. So I mean, I'm in the detached office, which is not
|
|
connected to the house, but she was out on the back patio there singing. And it's really funny.
|
|
Very good, very good. Yeah, I sometimes when I do these my daughters here, if she's
|
|
because of vacation and stuff, and she's occasionally forgets and makes noises in the background,
|
|
but not singing. That hasn't happened yet. It's good to get a little atmosphere there.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. All right, so mailing list discussions.
|
|
Yep, and just changing gear quickly. So yeah, what we normally do is to talk about what's
|
|
been happening on the mailing list. And the notes are set up, but what happens if you're not
|
|
the way that is that when stuff gets posted to the HBO mailing list, it also gets copied to the
|
|
G-Main GMA&E service and is available there as well. So what I do is I scan that and link to the
|
|
various things for the notes, but I have a suspicion that G-Main is having a problem today.
|
|
When I tried it earlier on, I wasn't actually able to get through to it. So just hold on a second
|
|
while I check again. I'm actually trying to grab one right now and it's just spinning. It's not
|
|
loading up. Yeah, I'm seeing the same here. It's a great service. It's a free service, but I don't
|
|
know whether he gets attacked. The guy who runs this, whether he gets attacked or whether he's
|
|
maybe just gets overloaded or what exactly happens to it. Well, maybe let's view this as an
|
|
opportunity to have a shorter community news. Yeah, I think that the going into
|
|
minute detail with the email might be excessive. I don't know. We can probably skim through it
|
|
fairly quickly. The time I did this on my own at the show a while back, what I did was I summarized
|
|
the mail for myself and just quickly skim through it and said he was the main topics without
|
|
drilling down because you can always drill down yourself to see the details. And if you're an HPR
|
|
subscriber, then you probably are on the mailing list anyway. And if not, you may be ought to be.
|
|
The other thing I should say is that we are mailing lists have run with the mailman list software.
|
|
And mailman can keep its own archives or messages, which it threads and variously keeps them
|
|
in order. We used to have a problem with this and I think that's why Ken moved over to Gmail.
|
|
But since we've moved across to an honest host, the new mailman installation has fixed all of the
|
|
problems that we had with the archive. So the archive is completely intact now as far as I can see.
|
|
So if you can't get through it to Gmail, you can just click on the link to the mailman
|
|
mailing list site and click on the link to archive and you'll see all of the messages there.
|
|
So there's multiple strings to the bow there. Sounds good. I used to do administer a mailman
|
|
system for the University of Worktats, so it feels like home from home in many respects.
|
|
Anyway, the main topics on the mailing list then briefly are there was some just a question
|
|
about using markdown for show notes. That was one of the earliest subjects that came up with some
|
|
chat about the different versions of markdown that might be available and possibly some other
|
|
markup languages being used. I don't think we've reached too much of a conclusion. I think
|
|
the view that Ken and I hold is that we will take whatever you send us. We'd really, really like it
|
|
if you could send us something which was a no markup format. And if you tell us what it is,
|
|
that would be great. We don't want to have a mechanism for doing that yet, but you can just put
|
|
it in the top of the show notes as a few people have done. It's all included, John.
|
|
Right. And then I'm writing some stuff to help with the processing of this into HTML.
|
|
If you feel that you're able to generate good quality HTML5, then go for it. That's the best option.
|
|
But we'd prefer not to have to debug it, so we'd like it to be good quality, please.
|
|
Yeah. I mean, I tried markdown for the first time on this the latest episode that I uploaded.
|
|
And it seemed like everything worked fine, except for the image links were messed up by whatever
|
|
version of markdown. Are you the one that handled that? I actually processed on one. Ken
|
|
does most of the processing on the back end, though we're trying to work it out that we can
|
|
divide up the load, but we haven't got there yet. So, but in this particular case,
|
|
I ran my test script against your notes and it said, this is markdown. So it went and ran
|
|
pan doc on it. But what I hadn't realized was that it was running pan doc in its pan doc mode,
|
|
which which does slightly different things to standard markdown. So it messed it up, which you
|
|
pointed out and then fixed it. So it's a learning process. It's still discovering things about this.
|
|
Yeah, but you said that there was a flag that you could use on the command line that would tell
|
|
it to run in some kind of a different mode. Yeah, when you run a pan doc, there's umpteen.
|
|
Well, you mean it in the notes themselves? No, you mean on the command line? On pan doc. Yeah,
|
|
there are umpteen options to pan doc. So you can say, I think this is
|
|
plain markdown or it's pan doc enhanced markdown or it's github style markdown and many others.
|
|
Haven't helped us. Yeah, yeah, it's a brilliant bit of software. It seems to have written
|
|
very, very well. As I can see, I haven't found too many problems with it. But the one that worked
|
|
for mine was something like strict mode or something. That's right. Yeah. Yeah. Okay.
|
|
And just switch off the pan doc extensions. Yeah. I mean, I was just going by the documentation
|
|
over at daring fireball as far as how to insert images. Yeah. Yeah. Now that's that's fine.
|
|
That's fine. We're like I say, we're still we're still learning. We're that was my fault. I
|
|
didn't quite appreciate that it was going to do that. Yeah, well, you fixed it. So the another
|
|
comment, another thread that we had was concerning the menus on the website. Mike Ray had pointed out
|
|
that the the menus that we have are not accessible to him because he can't hover over them and get
|
|
you know, the sort of spoken feedback that he needs. And the reason for that is because we're
|
|
using the hover facility, the hover capability to drop down stuff to make it look like a like a menu.
|
|
And so I think Ken commented back on this that he was off to to look to see what what could be
|
|
done to improve it. And he came back saying that it was going to be really, really difficult
|
|
and he could do with some some help on that. So yeah. So it's it's it's that balance between
|
|
HTML and CSS and and how those two things hook into screen readers and all of those types of things,
|
|
I think. What if Mike could, depending on what browser he's using, like if he's using Firefox,
|
|
it's extremely easy to just disable all styling. And that would open up the menus to his screen
|
|
reader. It seemed to me. Yeah, I'm not sure the details of this. I think the way that the the HTML
|
|
underneath has been put together means that it relies on the fact that there are going to be there's
|
|
going to be a CSS that responds in particular ways to drop down this and open up this and stuff.
|
|
So I'm not clear whether that would do the job or whether it would be better just to have
|
|
a different version of the of the main page. I don't know. I don't know. I'm not no expert on this
|
|
tool. So I can't really comment much. It sounds like a good reason to try the page in W3M.
|
|
That's true. That's true. Yeah. Yeah. So it's an ongoing thing, I think. And this help is
|
|
requested from people who might know how to better ways of solving this. So another thing we had
|
|
on the list was we seem to have an issue with the mailing list itself. This is this is a bit
|
|
behind the scenes. But what seemed to be happening was that when Ken was trying to send a message out
|
|
about, which I'll come onto in a minute, about more contributions needed, please, he was sending
|
|
attachments. The attachments, the message went to Mailman. Mailman apparently did the right
|
|
thing and sent it out to everybody. But it looks as if the anti-spam stuff on the server then killed
|
|
it because the reason I said that is because the message in its in its intact form was in the archive
|
|
and in a reduced form was in the digest because I subscribed to the digest just to make sure that
|
|
it works. The digest form of the list, digest always strips out the attachments and points to them
|
|
on the website and that works. So it was just the one with the actual attachments that was being stopped.
|
|
So I think that's been solved, but we were trying to test it. So that was all that was about.
|
|
Okay. Yeah. I'll be honest, I kind of ignored that whole thread.
|
|
Probably, I should have ignored it too really, shouldn't I? So yeah.
|
|
And then the issue of getting contributions was had a lot of discussion.
|
|
The threading in these notes hasn't worked very well because a lot of people did digest
|
|
replies and stuff and broke the threads. Yeah, I see a number of digest things here.
|
|
Yeah, I still try not to nag even though I did do a show on how I'm not to do that. But
|
|
anyway, hold me back, hold me back. But the point of it was that Ken was, I think Ken's
|
|
view was that you owe us a show. He said you owe us a show. If you've ever been a contributor,
|
|
or if you're a listener, even you owe us a show, but it was pointed out by Lost in Bronx in a
|
|
response that I didn't completely absorb when he wrote it, that maybe that wasn't quite the
|
|
approach that we should be taking and thinking about it, I think he was right. It was more that
|
|
it's a community. In order for the show, the whole community structure of HBR to continue,
|
|
we need contributions. But you don't owe us a show, it's just that we desperately needs your help.
|
|
Yeah. So the difference in sort of trying to, I don't think anybody was ever trying to make
|
|
anybody feel guilty about not contributing, but somebody might have been. Yeah, well, it might
|
|
have come across that way. So I think the point is, and Ken responded to this saying, yeah, okay,
|
|
that's not quite the way that we want to, we still need them. We still need the shows, please. But
|
|
it's more that if you want the project to continue, then we need your contribution, please.
|
|
Yeah, well, we did get a new host this month, and we could use a few more. I'm going to say my
|
|
episode contributions are probably going to go down this fall. I've got a number of things
|
|
going on, and so it'd be great if some other people could step in there and upload some more shows.
|
|
Absolutely. Absolutely. Yeah. So there were, there were one or two comments about, you don't
|
|
need to worry about the quality and don't think you sound stupid because it's just you who
|
|
thinks that not the rest of the world and so on and so forth. I would say, I think people should
|
|
worry at least a little bit about the sound quality. Just, I want to be able to listen without
|
|
hearing distortion. That's my main thing. Yes. Yes. Do your best. Do your best. But don't,
|
|
don't be, don't be frightened, but it's, that it's terrible. Unless it really is terrible.
|
|
Well, it's not, not mostly, mostly. There have been a couple of episodes where I had to turn it
|
|
off because there was so much distortion. But as far as worrying about the way your own voice sounds,
|
|
don't worry about that at all. I would say I don't, I just want to hear people talk.
|
|
I know, but there is a, there is a terrible embarrassment that first time you ever record your
|
|
voice. Sure. The voice you've heard all your life come in through your head to your ears and
|
|
all of a sudden you hear it coming from the outside world to your ears and it's totally different
|
|
and it sounds awful and you think, I know. But everybody else has heard it that way all the time.
|
|
So what are you worrying about? So it's, but I sympathise with that viewpoint. Yep.
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Get over it. It's not so too big deal. What we want to know is, it's the interesting stuff
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that you have to tell us and that you, if you listen to any of HBR, you get some idea of the
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sort of things that we get to, to listen to and it's all fantastic. So just add your bit to that,
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please. Yep. Okay, let's call a hold to the, the mail business. And I think we've pretty much
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covered the comments. What we, we changed the way that we do the comments a wee bit because we
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used to wait till the end of everything at this point and then go through all the comments.
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In some case it was going back to shows we'd already looked at and doing the comments. What we're
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doing now is we're just going through all the comments as we, as we go along. The only bit that we
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don't cover by that means is where somebody in the month of September has made a comment to an
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older show. And so we need to maybe just check if there are any of those before we call,
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before we get to the end of that particular. And there was one, there was one, 5150 made a
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comment to Lost in Bronx for his get of the Imagination Part 7 show where he was talking about
|
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the zoom H1 I think it was and a, and a Tazcan. And I think 5150 was, was happy that
|
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like Harrison being done because he went out and bought himself a, a zoom. Yep. And then the
|
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a guy named Rob Blaine made a comment on my HPR 1750, which was where I talked about ex-clip,
|
|
XDO tool and XVKBD and how I use them in conjunction with Bladder. And I was really glad to hear
|
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that he is using Bladder, although I'm sad to hear that it's because he also has a medical
|
|
issue and said he's got a dystonia or something. So it's, I hate hearing about anybody suffering
|
|
from those things, but I'm really glad that Blathers helping him out. Indeed, indeed. We had,
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these are not easy to follow, or is it just me? We had a comment on 1831 back in August,
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which was a shadowy figures show. No, we covered these last, last, last time, I didn't we?
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I think we did. See, here's, it gets a little confusing because what we did was we, we, we reviewed
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that particular show, 1831 last month. And the comment had already, no, it kind of already been
|
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made because it was made in the following month. Well, it says it's September 7th. Yeah, yeah.
|
|
So it was a further comment. It was comment number five to 1831, which is shadowy figures show
|
|
on speed listening. And this was Foki, who came back and was commenting on the speeds of
|
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German speaking podcasts and Swedish speaking podcasts and English and the different speeds.
|
|
I like that. It hadn't really occurred to me that you would have different speeds for
|
|
different languages, but it totally makes sense. I suppose, depending on your fluency in the
|
|
different languages. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I find I can't speed English up very much these days.
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It's probably because my brain's slowing down or something. So old age catch on. But anyway,
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but it's an interesting thing. It's an interesting subject, but good for people who can do it,
|
|
I certainly can't. That it might be about it. Yeah, yeah. There's some things on
|
|
NY Bill's HPR 1846. Did we? That was in August. That was the, oh, that was the review. Remember,
|
|
we had wondered about the review of that multimeter? That was his review show. That was last.
|
|
That was the, it was August. Yeah, yeah. Because the last community news was actually in September,
|
|
wasn't it? Because just the way these things panned out. So we were, some of the,
|
|
some of these comments had already come in. I think the David Whitman's comment hadn't maybe at
|
|
that particular time. Okay. David Whitman said, takes me a minute to open these things up.
|
|
Hold on a second. Damn you. He says, these good buys that NY Bill keeps bringing up,
|
|
causing me to spend dollars to the X61s and love them. And now this actually needed the ability
|
|
to test capacitors. This can save a bundle just asking, just ask Flying Rich who lost a bundle.
|
|
Okay. That's, yes. I'm not sure everybody will get that comment. I'm not sure I do.
|
|
Well, I guess what he's saying is all these bargains get pretty expensive. Yes. Yes. Well,
|
|
Flying Rich reference was, I think that the Bitcoin, you know, I have a Bitcoin problem.
|
|
I don't know anything about Flying Rich. I don't know who that is. So one of the TLLTS
|
|
presenters who is into Bitcoin at one time. So I think that's it. Because now at 1847 we've
|
|
already covered. So that's it. We need, we need to actually make it easier to keep a record of
|
|
what we have covered in the way of comments and what not. I need to do a bit of job with this.
|
|
I thought I'd got this one down, but obviously not. I think it worked okay. Yeah, with,
|
|
because it's better than it was. Right. I think we've nearly finished. I've just got
|
|
one, one, maybe two more things to say. One is that we put out a request for help with the tags,
|
|
the missing tags and summaries on older shows. And over the past month, we had one helper
|
|
to who came along and helped out with these. This is Guy whose hand is Colin 6128. I don't think
|
|
he's a host yet. Hope maybe he will think of doing a show for us, but he certainly was extremely
|
|
helpful in doing 40 or more tag and summary additions to the various shows in the database.
|
|
So just want to make it, make it, make it make a public vote of thanks for the Colin 6128 and his
|
|
help in this regard. So yeah, super, super, super, very pleased that we got that. The only other
|
|
thing was that we can and I've been, we've had, we've been putting HPR shows up on our kind of.org
|
|
for a while now. So from episode 1300 forward, we, most of them have gone up. And then before that,
|
|
we had problems because we didn't, it wasn't easy to get hold of the high quality versions of the
|
|
shows. Well, we discovered that they're probably never going to get the high quality. So we're just
|
|
going to go with what quality we have. So we're just starting the process of uploading the numbers
|
|
backwards from 1300. So the range 1200 to 1299, I'm working on it. So just in case you've got
|
|
shows in those ranges and you're interested in them being on archive.org, we're actually in the
|
|
process of doing that for posterity. So I should have from my own shows anyway. I think I've still
|
|
got the high quality for all of them. So for mine, I'd be happy to supply that. And by the, I want
|
|
to thank you publicly also for working on that and also for handling the pictures on my episodes
|
|
that have gone missing since one of my servers crashed. So thanks for taking care of that.
|
|
Hey, you're very welcome. We need to get a better method of ensuring that we don't lose links and
|
|
pictures and that's that type of thing. Sometimes links are just not going to ever be there again.
|
|
We're all the shows. But we very least need to be looking to see if there are copies on the
|
|
way back machine. There's things and linking them, bringing them on to the edge of the other side
|
|
and those sort of things. We're putting a disclaimer in saying, sorry, this links now dead. So
|
|
too bad. Yeah, yeah, that's life. But yeah, I could, I could be busy for, you know,
|
|
I lived to about 90. Then I probably got a job for that for that time.
|
|
So anyway, have a great success. Right. Thanks, John. That's super. We haven't gone too long. You
|
|
haven't, we haven't overdone this for you. Pushing, pushing two hours here. So
|
|
it's probably time to call a prince. If anybody's still listening, thank you.
|
|
Okay. Thanks very much for your help, John. Yep, you bet. Talk to you later. See you later. Bye.
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