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2143 lines
178 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2578
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Title: HPR2578: LinuxLUGcast 102 the lost episode
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2578/hpr2578.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:12:12
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2578 entitled Linux LG Cast 102 The Lost Episode.
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It is hosted by Honki Magu and is about 233 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Linux Log Step Episode 102 The Lost Episode.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hi, I'm Honki Magu.
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So today what I have for you is Episode 102 with Linux Log Cast, which will probably
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be here being known as the Lost Episode of the Linux Log Cast.
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So we are an open podcast slash log that meets the first and third Friday of every month,
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which sometimes leaves it open to basically anybody enjoying, which is exactly what we wanted.
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And in the case of Episode 102, it kind of, well, it wasn't bad.
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It was just that we try to keep, you know, the language to kind of a minimum and try to
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save, we try to keep our episodes kind of safe for work.
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And this person came on and it was kind of turned into a little less than safe for work
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language wise.
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I think the content was still there, but I really didn't want to take the time and effort
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to kind of go through and censor it.
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To be fair, I probably should have let the person know ahead of time that we try to keep
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things a little low key language wise, but I didn't.
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And I still think it was a good episode, but I do not want, I do not think it should
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be published on the regular podcast post that I've, we're kind of going through a transition
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when it comes to the website and whatnot.
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So I still wanted to get Episode 102 out to the community for people to listen to.
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And also kind of try to bring some people back to the Linux logcast because the big thing
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is with the changing of the website, the org feed has changed.
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The MP3 feed is still the same, but if people are subscribed to the org feed, they're going
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to have to go to the website and re-subscribe to the new org feed.
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I was able to get the MP3 migrated over to the new website, but the org did not, at least
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I haven't been able to get it yet and I think I'm just going to commit using a new org
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feed.
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So yeah, just be prepared that this is a not necessarily safe for work episode, but I
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still think it is an interesting episode of Linux logcasts.
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And like I said, we're an open podcast log and we do invite anybody and everybody to join
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us every 1st and 3rd Friday of the month because really 5150 net minor and myself sometimes
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run out of things to talk about and it's nice to have fresh blood around to talk about
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things.
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Anyways, I'm done rambling, so without further ado, episode 102 of the Linux logcasts.
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Yeah, yeah, LLC stream 1 stream will be live in a few MNutes, MNutes, huh?
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Still have text to talk turned on, I better look at that.
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I'm just really curious as what salary range they're looking at.
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Are you taking your kid with you if you go?
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Oh, you fucking know it.
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That's what the rage fest was about earlier.
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She was back home telling people that I pretty much blocked her access to her kid and
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shit when she hasn't even tried contact with him since January 27th.
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Yeah, she don't want to go down that fucking road with me, I promise you that, bro.
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So how do you like on the server?
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Like in what?
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The server.
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Oh, yeah, I like it.
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It's pretty freaking badass.
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Need to do, I need to get that somba thing figured out.
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I think it could make it a little bit easier for transferring some files, but it's working
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pretty slick.
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Yeah, I just end up using SCP anymore.
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I haven't set up a somba in a while.
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I really didn't think it was that much work to mount a drive, but I suppose it is when
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you're trying to mount a Linux drive in Windows.
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Well, somba, if I remember correctly, originated from Windows.
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Right on.
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Speaking of Windows, did you listen to that podcast I sent you the other day about Microsoft
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and Linux?
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No, yeah, but I have been watching the news on that.
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That's kind of fucked up, to be honest with you.
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What was it?
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Well, they've been buying.
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Glad, Joe.
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Well, I didn't say shit.
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No, he asked you what the article was.
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I don't remember the name.
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I'm not sure.
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I look good.
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No, what was it about?
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That's pretty much how Microsoft is buying influence into Linux.
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They've actually got themselves a seat on the board of the directors, so it's kind of
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fucked up, you know.
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What the kernel?
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What's that?
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Well, there's no, besides basically the thing that would be considered Linux, I guess,
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would be the Linux kernel.
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So they have a seat at the table of the kernel, which I'm not sure you can.
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I know they're contributors to the kernel, both financially, and I think they contribute
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back with their Azure stuff, they think they've started contributing back to the kernel.
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Yeah, they're platinum members, which being a platinum member allows you, I guess, access
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or a possible seat on the board.
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And of course, that's what they got is a nice seat.
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I think they ended up having to pay a minimum of like $500,000 just to get on the board.
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Right, but you know, it's still like, the Linux kernel from my understanding is just basically
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the thing that controls everything.
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So having a seat at the board of that isn't like, I don't know, I don't think of it the
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same as if you had a seat at the table of Microsoft versus having a seat at the table of the
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Linux kernel.
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A little in the fact that as far as I know, everything still goes through Linux and unless
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something happens to him, there's, you know, not anything really suspicious going to happen.
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Or people worried that Microsoft being platinum members of the Linux kernel was going to change
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the Linux kernel or change the way Linux is.
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From what this sounds of it is, the guy was just making a comment that, you know, by
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them being on the board, that it gives them, I guess, a little extra power and, you know,
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can use it as manipulation.
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And then they were saying something about what the hell was it can be just me and I'm
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trying to go back to it.
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And it's here so I don't know if I like this push to talk.
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It keeps kicking me out of my app.
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What are you using plubble?
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Yeah, but I have this stupid thing set up on my phone for payments.
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And when you swipe from the bottom, it comes up.
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Well, every time I hit the push to talk, it like pops up this payment thing and kicks my plumble off.
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So I think there are other settings in plumble where you can map the push to talk to other
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buttons.
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I believe that's true.
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It's been a while since I've played around with the settings.
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I never wanted to actually do that.
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So I think you can map things like the volume button to control that or other buttons.
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Ha ha.
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I figured it out.
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Did you find that the section be able to map push to talk to key?
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Yep, got it mapped to the volume down now.
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Right.
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I was hoping to do it to the Bixby button, but they wouldn't accept it.
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Even in that manner.
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Good evening.
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Good news.
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Full house tonight.
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Yeah, I don't think 5150 is coming tonight.
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I think there might be a penguin come.
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Boy, the bag's made it come on and then sits there and has this audio off.
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What a dick.
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So Joe, what do you do?
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I'm a field technician from my own company here in Iowa.
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What type of things are you talking about?
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Sorry, wait, what's that?
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Sorry, wait.
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Go ahead.
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Oh, I was just saying I'm actually in the middle of the job offer from this company on
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a California.
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They've been kind of begging me to come out there.
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So kind of mulling that one over and trying to work out a good, a good pay rate.
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What type of things are they looking for you to do?
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They mainly do video conferencing.
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I've done, I've done a little bit of video conferencing, but mainly I just do a little
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networking, breakfix, work on how these kiosk for the jails, I do all kinds of crap.
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Any work with any Linux systems or run any Linux test hubs?
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Just learning Linux a little bit, Joe actually helped set up a server I got, actually scored
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pretty big.
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I did a site decommission and scored massively big server, pretty good size at least.
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What is it you're planning to do with this server?
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Right now I am just pretty much using it as a multimedia host or a server and then trying
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to learn Linux with it, learn server admin with it, just kind of playing, I guess.
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I have this saying I don't really want to, I mean, I want to sell it at first, but the
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price of this thing new versus what I can sell it for, it's just like, man, am I ever
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going to own a server of this value again?
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Yeah, but the one thing with those is, I mean, is it like a big old rack like blade server?
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I'm not, it's like a desktop on steroids pretty much, but I believe you can actually mount
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this in a rack, although boy, that'd be pretty strong rack to mount this thing.
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What are the specs on it?
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Oh, I know it's got, I believe 48 gigs of RAM, it can have two CPUs and it only one
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right now and it's a six core with hyper threading, it's a pro line at ML350, GEN9 server.
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Damn.
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Yeah, it's got eight, yeah, eight, 900 gigabyte hard drives in it.
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You need to find something really, really, really cool to do with that because, I mean,
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you could use, you could use a single board computer just for some regular, you know, media
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server type things, but a giant ass honking machine like that, you got to find some good,
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good thing to do with that.
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Any suggestions?
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Off-hands?
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No, because running it in the house, I mean, as a learning machine for all sorts of heavy
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duty type things, I'm sure you could, you know, spin up, you know, duty regular lampstacks
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and, I don't know, other type of web server type stuff, that matter, you got a suggestion?
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Yes, I have a suggestion that he, look at YouTube motions.
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That machine could run a lot of emulators and systems in network, anything from a back
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so on up.
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I could run a lot of emulators, virtual machines, on top of virtual machines, all at the
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same time, and not break a sweat, electricity applied via through the roof, but the machine
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itself won't break a sweat.
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Yeah, he's got to set up for thin clients to connect to it, spin off almost as many
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desktops as he wants.
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I'm sure.
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It's a fun little toy for free.
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Yeah, and you were talking about Samba earlier.
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So the older version of Samba, I was able to set up, and the biggest pain in the butt
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about Samba is setting up the configuration file, because they want the configuration
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file to be very secure.
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So by default, everything on there is very, very secure, the different permissions for
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different clients and stuff like that.
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So when I set up my Samba drive, I pretty much set it up as basically just wide open, because
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the only person who is going to be accessing this, that Samba drive is me, like nobody
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else in my house is probably ever going to touch that Samba drive until they're probably
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much older.
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My wife probably never will, and my kids maybe when they're older, we'll figure out how
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to use it, or I'll show them how to use it.
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I'm the only one using it, and I don't want to sit there and struggle with permissions
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on things every time I want to try to access it.
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So I just set it as full open permissions, and I pretty much set that thing up.
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Like I tried setting up the old way, it didn't work, I had to fight to figure out exactly
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what the hell I did wrong, and then I finally got it working right, and I pretty much just
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left it.
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So I don't remember how I did it.
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I can probably go on to the server.
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I have a little, I think it's B, Raspberry Pi B Plus, as my Samba server, it does, right
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now it's doing just Samba and MediaTomb, and that's it, and it works fine, but I could
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probably, I could probably go on there and try to figure out the config file, if you want
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me to.
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No, I used to have the same idea about Samba just leaving it wide open, anybody could connect,
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and then my kids started getting older, I got a 14 and 15 year old, so I'm going to
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set access restrictions.
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Yeah, if you want to go back, well, probably won't want to go back, but in our previous
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episodes, I did an episode on Samba about how I actually got this thing set up and set
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it up as it's completely open, and I think I shared that config file, I don't know, I'd
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have to search.
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So, Kay Wischer set his up with permissions for, his kids were, we're still at home and
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they were older, they were like high school age, so he set up permissions for himself and
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his kids for accessing it, and there was all different types of permission levels, and
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he had a decent config file.
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Wonder how well that thing would work for mining coin.
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Some of the coins that you can't mine with graphics cards or the ASICs, it would probably
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do really well, the ones that require RAM and processor, so it should do well with, I
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think, what Monero is set up that way.
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That should be a fun little test.
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Well, I can probably set it up later for you and we can see.
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You might want to look around for that second CPU if you're going to make it a CPU server.
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And if you set the settings really high for mining, you might as well just get used to
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having a jet engine in your living room.
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Oh yeah.
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Wow, I'm not used to that at all.
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It's actually quite nice because it really doesn't fire off very often unless, you know,
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I mean, whatever OS it had on it before, it seemed like it fired off really hard with
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that, but yeah, it just seems to be pretty quiet most of the time.
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I can definitely tell when, you know, someone starts logging in on it or whatever.
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Real speed up real quick, but then it just levels out and it's pretty quiet.
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Which OS are you running on it?
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Ubuntu server.
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Ubuntu server made setting up X to go kind of fun.
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How is X to go?
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I love X to go.
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I use it almost every day.
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I mean, between my server, Joe's server, my main desktop, I have it set up on my laptop,
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but I don't think I've ever actually logged into it from there or to there.
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A really great way to spin off another desktop.
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I mean, it's not like what desktop sharing or anything like that.
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So I can't see what anybody else is doing, but if I want to spin off a desktop of my
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own and act like I'm using my home computer or my server, then I can.
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Okay.
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So it's not really like a VNC, it's logging in as like a separate client onto the machine.
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Yeah.
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It's kind of like then just having a thin client anytime you want, just spin off another
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desktop.
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Yeah.
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It sounds like a great thing to use on.
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I have a couple of machines that have lots of nice big screens and then I have some
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that don't have that much screenage and being able to use the big screen desktops as display
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machines while everything else is just handled by the server side.
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Sounds like a win to me.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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It's a great way to do it.
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It's also a great way to access the pies if I don't want to just use, well, it used
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to be.
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I've had trouble setting it up on the most recent ones, um, X to go.
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It used to be a great way to access the Raspberry Pi and still have the graphical interface
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and not have to worry about SSH.
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I would like to find a nice Android version of it.
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There isn't one I've been looking for years.
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There you go.
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Get the right in that program.
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The shame about the Raspberry Pi because if anyone needs a remote desktop solution, it's
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the pie.
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Right.
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Especially with the, um, Gen three pluses, uh, getting POE support any day now.
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They still don't have that hat out yet.
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Well, I don't know.
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I've seen hats, but I don't know whether they're, whether they're blessed or not.
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I don't know.
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I can't picture a single board computer as anything besides say a small single purpose
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server.
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Well, yeah, I work about every day on package lockers.
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What's package locker?
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You'll see them in these really fancy apartment buildings.
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It's pretty much so the mailman will come there, drop a package into the locker they
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actually go on.
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They can request either a small medium or large locker, a door will pop open.
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You know, it doesn't have a package in it.
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They delivered into there than the, uh, the, the, the renter gets a message either on
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their email or a text message that they have a package waiting for them.
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And it's got a little code in there.
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They go down to the locker.
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They enter the code.
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The locker pops open, take their package and go on about their business.
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Are you saying you set up, uh, you've set up these before?
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I set them up like probably weekly.
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I am either repairing them or installing them.
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That's pretty cool.
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Amazon is also using something like that in a lot of places.
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I mean, I got a 711 here who's got an Amazon, uh, drop box arrangement like that.
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Yeah, I haven't seen any of those yet.
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I've done both, uh, parcel pending and, uh, Luxor lockers, parcel pendings built a little
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different.
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I'm not sure what they use for a controller, but, um, with, uh, with Luxor, it's a Raspberry
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Pie.
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And then they have a, uh, kind of an adapter board on it to run each lockers, electric
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lock, dumb as saying, I think with the Luxor ones, though, is that they use an iPad as their
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control interface.
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So what is, where are the Raspberry Pi is running?
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In the lockers?
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Yeah.
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Um, I'm not really quite sure what they're running.
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Um, I don't really get into the, I don't really have to ever access the Pi programming.
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Um, I do most of it, uh, all of the settings we do from a app that's on the iPad.
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It's, um, you know, proprietary app they have that controls the, uh, the Raspberry Pi.
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It pretty much just acts as like a, uh, what do you want to call it, like a, uh, remote
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access for, like, they can track everything with that thing.
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They can remotely, uh, open the door, watch a package being delivered, picked up all that
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with the Pi.
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That's really cool.
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It is, but at the same time, it's a pain in the ass.
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Job security for sure.
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That's funny.
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It's been, they've came out with these new ones is these Gen, Gen fours.
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And actually it's not funny, it actually really pisses me off.
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They, they say that these things are, uh, uh, uh, made in the USA, right?
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Well, sorry, that is totally bogus.
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They're not made in the US.
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They assembled in the US, but to me, those are two completely different things.
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And you could definitely tell the quality of the work.
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I mean, they're, the doors are showing up so janky and stuff that it like I'm having troubles
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getting them lined up and, um, the, the whole thing using a Raspberry Pi to do it.
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I mean, yeah, while the Pi is a great solution, there's, I think a whole lot better solutions
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that would, uh, clean things up quite a bit, especially with the whole using a, uh, an
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iPad as your, um, control screen or whatever.
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That's just the stupid to me.
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Right, cut costs by getting the Pi and then use an iPad.
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Yeah, somebody wasn't thinking I'd, you know, and like they have a lot of problems with
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it.
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Um, you know, for one, you have to put that iPad in like single app mode.
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Well, sometimes single app mode likes to, you know, mess with a person too when it tends
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to, when it does a reboot, um, it won't always go back into single app mode, which is kind
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of a problem, um, because you can't do shit if, uh, if it doesn't go back in because
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the only way to access the home button is to actually get into the locker itself and
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take out the screen and yada, yada, yada.
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So it's, it's quite the pain in the butt.
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So each individual locker is being, uh, controlled by an iPad.
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So they, let's say you have a bank of them, like a bank of six lockers, uh, each bank
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holds or has like 15 locker doors.
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Each bank has a raspberry pie in it, um, to control those doors and then we run a network
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cable from the pie to, um, a router and then of course a power cable goes to them.
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So then there's one main locker, um, that has the, uh, the iPad that ends up controlling
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all six banks.
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The iPad works as a server.
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Right.
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Yep.
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Oh my god, really?
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Yeah.
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It's see, so they use this, you know, proprietary app called, uh, just called Luxor Luxor
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something and it's, um, yeah, pretty much you're just in there, you, uh, the only thing,
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like admin you really do in there is you can set up the servers, um, you can, you know,
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manly open up each locker stuff like that, but, uh, other than that, like all the other
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control would be done, um, remotely from, from Luxor's servers.
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So if I was designing something like this, I'd almost have like, I don't know, see, I
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don't know if like an Arduino would be cheaper way to go or whether you'd have like an
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Arduino that was basically run by a Raspberry Pi or have a bunch of Raspberry Pi's, have
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it run by another Raspberry Pi.
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I mean, I, I can understand the advantages of a, um, not necessarily an iPad, but like
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a tablet because you have something that is, whether your application is, obviously this
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one is meant for like Apple, but I mean, if the, uh, the thing running everything is,
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like if you have it web based or even SSH based or something like that, you have, you
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know, the, the screen and the machine all in one little thing that you can attach to
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this to be able to control all of them, but I mean, uh, to have basically all of it run
|
|
on, you know, the Raspberry Pi, the Raspberry Pi is just as the controllers and then, uh,
|
|
there's got to be a cheaper way.
|
|
I mean, I, I don't know how much about Arduino's, but they always seem to be like the lower
|
|
end of things.
|
|
I don't know, has anyone else played with like Arduino's or, I mean, chips, I mean,
|
|
I, I figure like a chip computer is supposed to be what, $10.
|
|
That's got to be able to do the exact same thing as, as a Raspberry Pi in this situation,
|
|
right?
|
|
Yes, or a pi zero, which is five dollars.
|
|
Right.
|
|
I mean, it's, it seems like it's very basic stuff that the, that the controller is doing.
|
|
There's got to be a cheaper way to go.
|
|
Raspberry Pi, my, my opinion, Raspberry Pi, like I said before, is, is,
|
|
is use more as like a single-purpose server as opposed to other things, but that you could
|
|
probably get cheaper.
|
|
That would be used better for like controller boards.
|
|
Well, the question is, how much of that remote access stuff is handled by the iPad and how
|
|
much is handled by everything else?
|
|
Maybe the pi just controls the servos.
|
|
And again, if that's all that they're doing, I'm wondering whether something like an
|
|
Arduino, because that's, that was the basic idea of Arduino's.
|
|
They're pretty much just, you know,
|
|
controlling things like that.
|
|
But I don't know, like price-wise, where an Arduino would fit in that.
|
|
That's why I'm thinking like a, like a, like a Pi W or something like that would work.
|
|
It's probably been 10 years or so since I bought an Arduino, but they used to be about
|
|
$15.
|
|
I'm sure the prices come down and they've made smaller and cheaper Arduino's.
|
|
So, yeah, especially if you're buying them in bulk for something like that, you could get
|
|
them insanely cheap, especially since all the Arduino's, if I remember right, the hardware
|
|
is open source and you can build it yourself out of cheap Chinese parts.
|
|
And that would definitely make sense to do something like that and then have like a Raspberry Pi.
|
|
Even have like the Raspberry Pi as like the server controlling all of the other things and then
|
|
have something that go back up to whatever the home office is.
|
|
And then you can just kind of walk up and be able to lock it, log into whatever the
|
|
home office is to be able to control all the other things or like have a bring something
|
|
with you to be able to plug into the system.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
There's, there's got to be a better way, but it seems to work well for them, I guess.
|
|
Well, it works how well is questionable.
|
|
Well, it sounds like the only reason that they have the iPad in there is that in single application
|
|
mode, they can eat the processing power with whatever crappy code that they throw at the unit.
|
|
Yeah, the iPad is like, like it's literally the interface for both the,
|
|
the, the resident and the, the mail carrier access.
|
|
And then of course, I do very, you know, troubleshooting from there.
|
|
I mean, I can fire off doors, things like that.
|
|
I'm pretty sure that's what they use to do their remote access to.
|
|
But at the same time, I'm not quite sure because, um, see, they also say that they have to
|
|
have the pie connected as well as the tablet.
|
|
I know they just have to have the pie connected.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So the pie actually does the remote connection as well.
|
|
So can you not like, um, instead of accessing the iPad, if you're, uh,
|
|
if you were going to pick up your package, be able to log into this service and be able to
|
|
connect directly into their servers, be able to say, like punch in a code or say,
|
|
I am here type of a thing and then have it open up or do you have to access that iPad?
|
|
You have to access iPad.
|
|
Um, there's a little on the screen, he is pretty much, you know, touch the start.
|
|
And then I'll ask you for a, uh, pick up or a drop off code.
|
|
So I think somehow Apple has been able to sell themselves as being the durable machine
|
|
for this type of purpose.
|
|
And I'm not sure, you know, how or why or, but they, but they've been able to do it.
|
|
They've been able to sell themselves as, um, they've been able to sell themselves to businesses
|
|
as the durable machine, as this is something that you could use for this interface for,
|
|
it's like an all-in-one interface for this. You're not going to need anything else.
|
|
Um, you know, so companies like I've seen vendors, uh, who work in like, um, do orders and stuff
|
|
in, uh, uh, let's say a chip vendor, you know, uh, why is potato chips or something like that?
|
|
We'll go into different store, retail outlet stores and to order their stuff.
|
|
They would use a lot of times they'll have like an iPad or, um, I know my mother's a sales rep
|
|
for a company and they have, they given her an iPad to be able to sit there and, uh,
|
|
put all of her purchase orders in. So somehow they've been able to, uh,
|
|
Apple's been able to market themselves as being this durable machine for this type of a purpose.
|
|
Well, it's the, it's a variation of the old, uh, nobody ever got fired by buying IBM.
|
|
And it's an awful, uh, over-priced solution. I mean, an iPad to literally
|
|
log in to, uh, I mean, it's, it's pulling remote data. I mean, it's, it's talking to their servers
|
|
simply to say, yes, open this locker. No, you know, don't open this locker, blah, blah, blah.
|
|
It's a pretty expensive, um, solution for that, I think. I mean, you know, when you have the
|
|
each individual, um, raspberry pie in there in each bank of lockers and you add in that iPad,
|
|
in the main, I mean, that becomes quite expensive when it can be done super cheap. I mean,
|
|
way cheaper than what they're doing. And, um, you know, I believe that, uh,
|
|
uh, parcel pending has kind of got it down. I'm not sure what they're using for controllers,
|
|
because literally when they come, um, there, uh, it looks like it's in a, a computer case, you
|
|
know, like their main door, like it slides open and then there's just like computer case thing.
|
|
All of the wires just plug into there. Um, we have no access to actually see the controller
|
|
board ever, um, unless, you know, there's something that fries inside and we have to replace it.
|
|
And most of the time they just send out a whole new, uh, controller and you never access the
|
|
inside of it. So out of curiosity, in your opinion, what would you use besides the iPad?
|
|
Well, the way, um, parcel pending does is they have a, just a touchscreen monitor,
|
|
um, and then it plugs into their little controller, um, and it's running nothing but some basic,
|
|
uh, um, you know, proprietary software. I mean, I don't think it has anything else loaded on it,
|
|
but it boots to this one software. That's it. Like, it's not even, you can usually tell when it's like,
|
|
uh, um, something where it's like in single app mode or whatever, you'll usually see some sort
|
|
of boot screen or whatever. And this literally like boots right up into this, uh, this application.
|
|
And that's it. So you're guessing that it's something like, I'm gonna guess and say, well, uh,
|
|
what type the, um, the, the other service that doesn't use the iPad is what type of
|
|
machine is that running. So in my experience with a lot of these, um, smaller machines are geared
|
|
towards one thing. I'm assuming, um, I find that some of them are running the, um, windows,
|
|
there's RSE. I'll figure out the hell it's called, but the, uh, the, the, the really cheap
|
|
single-purpose version of it. But then other ones, they've kind of given, they've, uh, kind of
|
|
gone away from that and actually gone into Linux based systems because it's a lot easier to do
|
|
it that way than having all the bloats of windows just to be able to run one application.
|
|
And you're right. That's, that's probably like the best way to go is to find a decent touch screen
|
|
that the price of a decent touch screen and then just have something simple running in the background.
|
|
Why even do that? Wouldn't it be better just to have the pie there as, you know, the smartest part
|
|
of the machine and then have a phone app that connects to a server that sends a signal to
|
|
the pie and then have the pie open stuff? It is, but that would require that all people have a phone
|
|
app. And I think it is a specific phone application. Right. And which would then exclude those people
|
|
who either don't have, uh, phones that have that can actually do applications or people who don't
|
|
actually have like smartphones. Well, you could also set it up to, um, accept text message codes
|
|
as long as it's the proper code from the proper number. That's actually a really good idea too.
|
|
Yeah, well, some of us don't have phones that can do texting. But that works on of the same idea.
|
|
So I've played with this long time ago and I don't remember which direction I can go with it.
|
|
I have played around with the ability to send an email that would, uh, even so,
|
|
he wouldn't be able to, he wouldn't have anything that could send the email in the lobby with you
|
|
with you unless you had like a smartphone. Did I say anything? Well, you could still do it even then
|
|
as long as you had a touch tone phone, a phone call and a specific series of touches.
|
|
Yeah, I've actually worked with building those interfaces. Uh, don't know if they're still
|
|
available or how, how available they are. Yeah, I think having some sort of a touch in your face
|
|
for just people to be able to, well, people who don't have phones to be able to do it.
|
|
Just a very simple one. He wouldn't even, it wouldn't even need to be that big of a screen.
|
|
It would just be able to have like either you were sent like what a pin number or you've given
|
|
your, uh, you're put in your name and a pin or how do, uh, how do people actually log into these
|
|
things? Do they do their name and a pin number or like their email address and a pin number or
|
|
just a pin number? All they get is a, uh, just a pin number, uh, sent to their email or their,
|
|
their phone and then they use just that number to get the, get the package and actually what
|
|
happens is when you, you use it, uh, you log in with, like I said, you just enter this number and
|
|
um, it'll recognize it as a pickup number. It will snap a picture of your face and then, uh,
|
|
you'll click continue and then the box, the, the locker will open and you grab your package out.
|
|
So really all you need is a keypad. Yeah, it doesn't really have to be a touch screen.
|
|
If you're just entering in like a four-digit number or even like four-digit number,
|
|
it's still all you need is a keypad, unless they add like, uh, you know, uh,
|
|
uh, alphabet to a two and then you just need a keyboard.
|
|
Yeah, it's just, uh, just numbers and, uh, actually just having a keypad would be better
|
|
anyways because, um, some of these things go outside so whether proofing touch screens is
|
|
probably not as easy as you think. Right? So you just need a keypad and then maybe like a
|
|
very small, uh, a very small screen just to be able to, uh, display what you're punching in because
|
|
as most people know, punching in a number sometimes, whether you feel like, oh, I just move my
|
|
finger over or I hit accidentally, hit two fingers at the same, uh, two fingers, two buttons at
|
|
the same time. It's nice to have something that actually shows what you're punching in. Agreed.
|
|
All right, so just so everyone knows tonight, um, I have absolutely zero topics for tonight and
|
|
I'm finding that, uh, just general conversation is, is probably the way that we're going to go.
|
|
So I'm going to forego the whole reading of an intro and stuff like that and just keep going
|
|
with what we're doing. Yes, the Linux lug cast, Uncho. So have you been enjoying Plex?
|
|
Who was that talking to me? Yeah, Joe. Yeah, I have actually, uh, I had him shut the cable off.
|
|
Now I'm on the, on the mission of trying to find an IP phone service that will work with these
|
|
Cisco phones. Um, have you done any searching on the various open source PBXs that are out there?
|
|
And I'll tell you, they, they're not all that easy to set up. No, I haven't done any that I've
|
|
found a couple of options. I mean, I'm, there's a ton of VOIP services out there and I really wish
|
|
I'm trying to go through my work orders. I've been, I've set up one that was in these PETA
|
|
huts and like it's super frickin easy like it comes with, um, it just comes with their little, you
|
|
know, their, uh, their little box that connects to, uh, their server. Um, and then you hook the
|
|
phones right up to the switch. Uh, it's like the smoothest install ever. Um, and, uh, I can't
|
|
think of the frickin name of it. I've been looking all over for them. The only VOIPs I see all want to
|
|
give you this, uh, this box that converts the data signal into, uh, to an analog phone signal.
|
|
I think Astrix is the, I'm seeing that. Sorry, Astrix I think is the, is the most popular, uh,
|
|
VOIPs on Linux or open source of that matter. Right, open source PBX. Right. But you still have to pay
|
|
for what the PBX part of it? Uh, no, um, usually if you're using Astrix, you're, uh, just paying for
|
|
the one line and then, uh, or the one number and then using the Astrix to separate everything out
|
|
inside the system. Part of things too, where people used, was Google voice with Astrix and we're
|
|
able to have their own number. Yeah, I've seen it where you could set that up in the past, but I've
|
|
also Google likes to change things randomly and it'll stop working and then you have to find a
|
|
new way to make it work. Right. So what is it? Is it the PBX that you pay for? What is it? The,
|
|
because I know you have to go out to a, another company to be able to get a phone number,
|
|
because then after you get that phone number, then you can do, you can spread it out between like
|
|
multiple numbers and stuff like that and set up your voice mails and everything. I don't know,
|
|
I've, I've really, really, really like just kind of give it a quick look before, but never really
|
|
actually spend the time at, uh, dive into it. It's been a long time since I've done it. Um,
|
|
but back in the day, when you were using Astrix and, uh, Google voice, everything was free. So,
|
|
but yeah, if you're just looking for one line at the house, I'd say just Google voice,
|
|
you don't have to worry about anything other than that. Hold cell phones. I just want to be
|
|
able to use these fancy frickin IP phones. Oh, oh, this is an intellectual endeavor. Yeah,
|
|
pretty much. I always consider getting IP phones and using them as an intercom system around the
|
|
house. I got about five of them here and a conference, IP conference phone. What is that one?
|
|
Those, uh, big old, basically, it's a, it's a microphone-sized speaker that's supposed to sit
|
|
in the middle of the table. Yeap, with the dial pad. Now, Joey, you said you played around with
|
|
them before. Did you ever actually, uh, besides with, well, did you ever set up a, uh, uh, uh,
|
|
VIP or, uh, SIPR PBX server? Me? No. Um, I've used a SIP server. Like I said, it's been a really
|
|
long time. I've set up Astrix, but it's been forever. What did you do with the Astrix? Have you set it
|
|
up? I, I just set it up the couple, uh, call a couple of phones around my house. That was it.
|
|
Well, let's first look at what I'm playing around with it. I, there is a, uh, Raspberry Pi image
|
|
called, um, if look it up, but there's Raspberry Pi image that basically has Astrix and like PBX
|
|
already installed on it. So basically, like, there was burning on 2 and SD card, put it in Raspberry
|
|
Pi and that's pretty much all set up and then you just have to configure it after that.
|
|
But I didn't know what the hell to configure. I never really made it to the past, uh, the
|
|
installing it and putting it, setting it up on the network and I didn't do any configuring after
|
|
that. I installed a app. There's an, there's an Android app for, uh, I don't know, it's SIPR,
|
|
or PBX, I think it's like for PBX and, um, I don't know, I had it installed. I tried playing around
|
|
with trying to get it connected to the server and didn't have much luck. Like I said, I didn't do
|
|
too much deep diving into it and kind of gave up on that kind of quickly. What I wanted to do,
|
|
like I said, um, was a, was use like an old cell phone type of a deal for my idea of the, um,
|
|
home intercom system, but I didn't, I don't know, I never, I never finished deep diving into that.
|
|
Yeah, I basically remember I had a Linux program that was a receiver for Astrix. So all my
|
|
Linux computers could act as phone receivers, but I don't remember what it was called.
|
|
Lin phone. That's what it was. L-I-N phone. I think that was the name of the app that I, uh,
|
|
the Android app I put on too. So you said you're using that giant hunking server to, uh,
|
|
serve up, um, to client machines with type of desktop. So you're serving out for the client
|
|
machines. There's no client machines set up yet. Oh, okay. I'm a client machine. So I've
|
|
used my ASUS transformer, T100 TA to spin off a desktop on a server. What type of desktop's?
|
|
They're Linux desktop. I mean, it's LXDE that, um, we set up on there. It's basically you put, uh,
|
|
Ubuntu, all the Ubuntu on there and then you're just basically using it as a server as well.
|
|
No, um, we took a Ubuntu server and then installed the LXDE desktop and X to go and
|
|
it does it all. You probably just could have probably put a, uh,
|
|
Ubuntu on there and installed X to go on top of that. It's basically the same idea of
|
|
nice. Yeah, pre-installed. Ubuntu probably has a bunch of applications that are pre-installed.
|
|
Like you'd get the, uh, Libra Office and Gimp and, you know, apply, uh, a web browser,
|
|
file browser and all that. Have a graph too. And a graphical software manager.
|
|
Right, right. Does it, does Ubuntu have a graphical software manager?
|
|
It should. Is it using, well, did, uh, did Ubuntu give up on the, uh, um, their graphical software
|
|
manager or are they just using, um, odd? Dang, I can't remember the name of the one. Uh,
|
|
that's pretty much everything. That's it, synaptic. They, but they had the, uh,
|
|
Ubuntu software center beforehand. And I wonder whether they, I thought that was
|
|
basically killed and, um, but a lot of people use synaptic. I think, uh, there's a lot of some kind
|
|
of software center in Ubuntu or various flavors. And then people who, uh, want to go higher,
|
|
go to synaptic. Yeah, so after last week's fiasco with, um, I'm guessing the whole, uh,
|
|
kernel panic issue I have was I hadn't updated Debian in a while. And then I was suddenly
|
|
updated it and it went through a couple of kernel updates, maybe, I don't know, I did, it did
|
|
something where it just froze up on me on the, uh, main machine that I use for, uh, podcasting,
|
|
recording. Actually, this, this is for usually the podcasting, recording of the podcasts and, uh,
|
|
I have handbrake on there. So I do any of my, um, DVD ripping and stuff like that on there.
|
|
Um, yeah, so I decided I wanted to go with something that was going to be long-term stable.
|
|
So I broke down and just put mint on it. And your mint will, mint usually doesn't update as often
|
|
as a rolling release Debian or rolling release ArchType system. And it'll, like,
|
|
it's basically, from the best of my knowledge, Linux Mint basically just kind of does a major update
|
|
anytime, uh, Ubuntu does a, uh, LTS update. So I think I'm pretty safe. But other than that,
|
|
it just kind of does, like, uh, app, you know, application updates and, um, uh, what's it called,
|
|
security updates. Yeah, the only time I have problems with, uh, mint and updating is whenever
|
|
Nvidia comes out with a different update. Yeah, I don't think I have to work out,
|
|
worry about that with this machine. Um, that's an ATI. So it's for, but no, other than video,
|
|
and I'm not really doing anything really crazy with it anyways, as long as I can get the image
|
|
to the monitor and stuff that I'm usually pretty good. Right, as long as you're using the
|
|
non for proprietary drivers, it should be fine. Yeah. Don't know the XFCE version. I'm debating on
|
|
whether I want to put, uh, enlightenment on this machine as well. I have heard that, um, XFCE
|
|
and X2Go play nice together. I can verify. I believe it works. Good. They work while together.
|
|
Um, I mean, I've also used Motte with X2Go, and I haven't been able to get sent them into work,
|
|
but like, you know, I understand that you can also use, um, custom commands for any desktop.
|
|
To say, my understanding was Martin Wimperes was very big on, uh, X2Go. So I'm pretty sure it
|
|
worked really well with, uh, my team. Yeah, it works. Just, um, with the less known desktops,
|
|
you can't get the optimizations that you can with XFCE and Mate and LXDE. So what's considered
|
|
less the less known, uh, desktop? I don't know, I'd have to look them up. Yeah. Cinnamon,
|
|
Bodie, you know, Bodie's enlightenment. Yeah, well, I'm just saying.
|
|
So everything I hear about KDE Connect, to me, to really want to try a KDE.
|
|
You don't need KDE to use KDE Connect. Really? It works pretty well. Really? I've run it in Linux,
|
|
mate. Well, what does, uh, what desktop using that with Mint? I'm using Cinnamon.
|
|
Is it just basically like a QtBase application or, um, I'm not sure. It's been, well,
|
|
I had it set up last year. But, um, the KDE Connect work just fine if I remember right.
|
|
And it allowed me total control of my phone from my computer. And let me get notifications
|
|
on my computer whenever I got a notification on my phone. As long as it was on the same network.
|
|
I'm going to look just, uh, I have to look into seeing to try and do that with, uh, enlightenment.
|
|
I don't see why you wouldn't be able to put it on any desktop. That's awesome.
|
|
By the way, anyone know, uh, about the status of LXQT?
|
|
I think it's still going. Have you tried out the KDE Plasma?
|
|
I have not. Um, so my opinion on KDE has always kind of been that KDE is a,
|
|
in the past, it always seemed like a heavy desktop that just, it really just didn't feel like it needed
|
|
to be a heavy desktop. You know, I always, I always equated it to, um, uh, what was the thing right
|
|
before Windows 7 XP? Vista. Vista. That's right. I always equated it to Windows Vista.
|
|
It basically had some, uh, cool features. It looked kind of pretty, but it was way too freaking heavy.
|
|
That's the way I always thought of, uh, KDE. It's, so I always used, um, you know, uh, like, like
|
|
known based things. And then I found, uh, enlightenment. And I've always, I've always just kind of
|
|
put enlightenment on everything because enlightenment was, uh, I've always ever used like XFC,
|
|
LXD, or enlightenment because they always seemed very, especially with me,
|
|
enlightenment seemed like I can put, I had a lot of control over the way the system is, uh,
|
|
set up and presented and stuff like that. And it was just very lightweight while KDE seemed
|
|
in the past to be very heavy. And it, like, it really didn't need to be, you know,
|
|
to answer your question, no, I haven't used KDE in a long time, a little on KDE, not me on or anything.
|
|
Yeah, I understand what you're saying about KDE. It's just there are very few of the desktops that
|
|
are, from what I understand, optimized for higher definition displays.
|
|
That's true, but I'm running all old systems here, so I don't think I have any, uh, higher definition
|
|
displays. It's to answer your question, that minor, uh, it looks like, uh, going on the
|
|
LXQT website. They have LXQT 0.12.0 was released or at least the blog post of the release was, uh,
|
|
Saturday, the 21st of October, 2017. So yes, it still seems to be running.
|
|
Well, I've got one machine that I'm going to, uh, the replacing pixel on,
|
|
and, uh, it may stay a single screen, so I don't need XFCE kind of flexibility.
|
|
You were running the pixel as your main desktop?
|
|
I was trying it on an old 32 better. How was that?
|
|
Okay, but, uh, you ran a ground a lot. It is a very minimal system and trying to civilize it
|
|
just didn't seem worth it for, for, for that machine. Gotcha. I mean, I can see why
|
|
for just kids doing, you know, scratch or what have you, it may be enough, but if you really
|
|
know what you're doing, it, you run into, there's a lot of drag from those training wheels.
|
|
So Joe, are you running any civil board computers?
|
|
Me or the other Joe? Yes.
|
|
Well, I do have a Raspberry Pi Zero W, but I thought I already talked about that on the show.
|
|
Currently, it's set up running, um, a jukebox program and hooked up to an old stereo.
|
|
I think you did bring up the fact that you were having problems with that before with, with, uh,
|
|
Bluetooth? Yeah, I haven't tried again, uh, work on the Bluetooth pass through on it.
|
|
Um, the Bluetooth pass through was working just fine when I had this all set up on a netbook,
|
|
but, um, evidently, some of the bluesy updates that have gone into the Raspberry Pi has kind of
|
|
bricked that functionality. Either that or the updates, the pulse audio or a mixture of the two,
|
|
but it still works for anything that, um, I either have on the USB stick hooked up to the zero
|
|
W or anything that I want to access from the internet. I have it set up for, um, access to my
|
|
Google Play accounts and my, um, while archive.org and the only other one that I wasn't able to get
|
|
properly set up was, um, Libersonic. I can't get it to access my Libersonic server correctly.
|
|
I think it's a bluesy thing or I think if it's just the, uh, the Bluetooth, uh, the Bluetooth
|
|
on the Pi W is just not up to snuff for what you're trying to do.
|
|
No, because they might be able to get a connection. Well, it says that I'm connected to it.
|
|
The problem I think is pulse audio because it says that it's connecting to the
|
|
ALSA mixer that's there and it should be going out to my speakers, but then it just goes into
|
|
idle mode and I get no sound from my phone to that. And I've turned off the idle timer so it should
|
|
never go title, but still no sound. Yeah, that sounds a lot like me last week trying to get one
|
|
of these computers to work right with mumble. Which one? Which computer? Um, at least tool. The, uh,
|
|
the, uh, I have a Sony Xperia Play that I have running Bodilinix on, uh, that it seemed like the
|
|
audio was just so freaking up and down and I couldn't get it to come out right. Uh, was it, uh,
|
|
NetMiner couldn't test what, when he actually was able to hear me, I sounded like I was,
|
|
what, under water for a while, then I was too high and like at one point I was too low and then I
|
|
tried to put it on one of the, the, uh, my little Dell Latitude 2100 and that was just, um, like,
|
|
I had like no sound whatsoever, no matter which program I use, I've used PAV, you control to try to,
|
|
uh, change the volume through it. I use also mixer to adjust the, uh, levels and things and I was
|
|
having zero luck with that. So yeah, because that might, my main rig here, um, which was a, uh,
|
|
compact, uh, desktop that was originally considered a, uh, I think it was like a Windows XP
|
|
media machine way, way back in the day. Um, it, it, it's kind of serves, it's kind of served always
|
|
as my main, uh, podcasting rig, uh, slash DVD ripping, uh, ripping rig and it ran into the problems
|
|
with the, the kernel problems and then I couldn't get anything else work. That's my last week,
|
|
I was on plumbled. Okay, so it's just the client side that you were having the issue with.
|
|
For a moment, what do you mean? Yeah. My point being, I couldn't, but through both, uh, PAV,
|
|
you control to try to, uh, adjust pull, audio and also mixer, I was never able to get, uh, like,
|
|
the Sony, um, the Sony laptop, the Sony bio, I wasn't able to get, um, any of the levels adjusted
|
|
right. And on a latitude, I wasn't able to get any of the, uh, levels adjusted, I mean, like any
|
|
sound out at all, I had all really. That sucks. It sure did, but the good thing is plumbled works
|
|
really nice. Yeah, I'm using it right now. I think the other Joe is too. I'm used to, by the way,
|
|
um, I'm good to 18, uh, oh four, it's supposed to have a new, uh, pulse audio mixed,
|
|
serious life interface of some kind. Cool. I, uh, just wonder, uh, it was going to be backported
|
|
or, or available for, for us that are running, uh, older or non-unbuddo systems.
|
|
Eventually. I'm sure somebody will put the leg work into it.
|
|
For my understanding, most KDE desktops seem to have a, uh, uh, apparently there's a lot of,
|
|
there's like settings on top of settings on top of settings. So you can go to like six different
|
|
places. Well, my, obviously not six different places. They're like three, uh, three different places
|
|
just to, uh, just to fix one problem. And I'm not sure if that's directed at all KDE desktops,
|
|
Ubuntu or KDE neon, that's what I've heard. And just because Ubuntu decided to forsake all
|
|
their 32-bit systems, I'll never run a straight-up Ubuntu system ever again. That makes sense too. I'm,
|
|
I mean, there are so many 32-bit machines still out there. I, I found it kind of surprising when
|
|
gave that up. Right? Well, actually, it's not given up. What in Ubuntu? It is not given up.
|
|
Can you still download, uh, Ubuntu 1804 and a 3432-bit system?
|
|
Yes, it's at the back of the bus. It's very much at the back of the bus, but it's not, uh,
|
|
according to the YouTube thing when I just saw this week, uh, it has not been abandoned.
|
|
I will do some Google food and see if I can get to the right page.
|
|
So on Ubuntu, say itself, um, if you go with the downloads and then go to alternate downloads,
|
|
you go to 1804, it just shows the, uh, 64-bit desktop and server,
|
|
1604 and 1404, both you can get, uh, the 32-bit for both desktop and server, but, uh,
|
|
1804, it's not showing. I put a link in the free node chat on KDE Connect for Ubuntu,
|
|
but it looks like the PPA doesn't work anymore. This is interesting. They have, I went to the, um,
|
|
uh, official Ubuntu flavors and they have Ubuntu Kylin, which is, it's described as the
|
|
Ubuntu Kylin project is tuned to the needs of the Chinese users, providing a thoughtful and
|
|
elegant Chinese experience out of the box. Not sure what that means.
|
|
You don't have to go to a website to get your information sold.
|
|
Oh, it's based on the Yuku desktop environment, UK UI, desktop environment.
|
|
Well, gentlemen, if you plow deep enough, you can get your Ubuntu flavors in 32-bit.
|
|
Okay, I just finished setting up KDE Connect on Linux Mint.
|
|
On 7? Yes. Cool, I'm gonna fucking add that.
|
|
Yeah, 32-bit on Ubuntu or their flavors is definitely at the back of the box, but it is available.
|
|
Yeah, it definitely seems like the flavors will, uh, still keep it around with the, um,
|
|
not what I just do. Uh, still keep it in the, uh, the 32-bit alive, but, uh, official Ubuntu is not.
|
|
Yeah, uh, the, uh, thing that I saw on YouTube, so I don't remember, uh, the link was at the
|
|
bottom of the page, and it says, sometimes, trustworthy link. That makes me feel good.
|
|
That was Ubuntu's official wiki link, so it was on a wiki page, but I haven't been able to dig
|
|
down to that page. Not that I'm going to use GNOME-based Ubuntu. Yes, I'm gonna try
|
|
um, having Ubuntu available as a dual boot on some of my machines.
|
|
I forgot all the cool stuff that you could do with KDE Connect. You can use it as a,
|
|
use your phone as a touchpad. That's cool. Will it work on a tablet?
|
|
Uh, I guess it depends on what the tablet's running for an OS.
|
|
How did you download it?
|
|
Hmm? How did you get KDE Connects? Was it in the repos?
|
|
Yeah, I, um, in the free-node chat, I did post a link to the site I used.
|
|
Uh, that's right. I got that open up in front of me. Uh, uh, the first link I sent didn't work,
|
|
the second one did. All right, so corner of this is PPA.
|
|
You do also have to install it on your phone. All right, that makes sense. Give me a second
|
|
I'll be right back. So I'm thinking of attending a lug. There's one coming up here in North,
|
|
in the North Dallas area on the 19th. See you else in the community is around here.
|
|
All the people I work with use Linux in some form every day, but none of them
|
|
use it at home. Hey, Joe. Yes, sir. You said that, uh, you were thinking about setting up, um,
|
|
steam? Yeah, I thought about doing a steam server, yeah.
|
|
What games you're playing on there? None as of yet, but I know a site that I can get steam codes
|
|
really, really cheap. You excited about Borderlands 3?
|
|
Uh, not a huge Borderlands fan. I mainly play Call of Duty.
|
|
That's pretty much what I play actually is like FPS games like that.
|
|
I really enjoy Borderlands 2, especially with some of the expansions like Tiny Teenus.
|
|
I unfortunately just don't seem to have the time to fucking game. I play a couple games with my kid
|
|
when, um, when we get home, but then it's, you know, just like maybe three or four rounds that we're
|
|
done. Give up sleep. Say what? Give up sleep. Talk to that. I did that too much as a young stupid
|
|
punk kid. I don't, I like sleep too much now. Well, it sounds like he's giving up a bit of sleep already.
|
|
Yeah, I, I have. I'm absolutely freaking exhausted.
|
|
I'm actually still doing work and it's 9.41 at night here.
|
|
In that minor, you East Coast? Yes. I'm in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
|
|
So it's like 11 o'clock there almost. Yeah, we're both in Massachusetts.
|
|
Now see, he doesn't sound like a, uh, the typical North East coaster.
|
|
That's because I'm a refugee from West Virginia and Maine.
|
|
That explains it. And many points in between.
|
|
One of my uncles comes at.
|
|
I, yeah, I just say that because I was just on a job with one of the package lockers the other day.
|
|
And the GC is from Boston or the Duke came in, you know, with the biggest attitude ever.
|
|
I've dealt with a lot of North East Coast people and I've learned real quick that they're the
|
|
types that you just don't stand in front of. You don't slow them down because holy Christ,
|
|
do they come unglued? Yeah, well, I deal with the East Coast liberal twice a week.
|
|
Be me up Scotty. Most people in New England kind of scare me. That lives here for almost 30 years now.
|
|
Well, they have got their own automatic assault weapons ban in high capacity magazine ban.
|
|
Where's that at, Cali? Massachusetts. Oh, Massachusetts. Yeah, they randomly started,
|
|
they randomly started banning weapons because they looked scary.
|
|
Because they may have a military purpose. Oh, yeah, the ban on assault weapons, the weapon that never
|
|
existed. Well, the, uh, the thing about it is we have experts in the, uh, Bureau of Alcohol,
|
|
uh, alcohol tobacco and firearms that are supposed to monitor that shit. Although, uh,
|
|
my, uh, non-gun person declares them unfair because they have too many bullets in the magazine
|
|
and they're too technical, too much technology there. It's not a fair fight with the hunting weapon.
|
|
Funny back in the day, one of the articles I can remember is somebody shooting crows with one of those
|
|
things. Yes, shooting crows with a rifle, not a shotgun. Well, if you ever in a fair fight,
|
|
somebody made a technical error. Yeah, the rate don't fricking fair and fight.
|
|
Well, well, um, no, my friend is all, well, the person I deal with is, uh, is also vegetarian.
|
|
Ha, hey, Joe, I remember when you dated a vegetarian, that worked out real well for a lot of
|
|
sure go down like a sack of taters in the middle of the high school, uh, walkway. Heather?
|
|
Was that her day of the red head? Oh, dude, that was a long, long time ago. You don't have to be
|
|
more specific. Uh, oh, oh, I was about to say something, but I didn't know if there was other
|
|
years. No, I still talked to her on Facebook. I still remember your ride back to the airport.
|
|
Yeah, I remember that one too. I'm sure we all do.
|
|
What? I can remember the question she asked you that just made everybody crack up.
|
|
No, I can't remember. You must have, uh, faked it a time or two because she was questioning it.
|
|
Ah, fun fucking times. Yeah.
|
|
That's harsh, man. Real harsh. Oh, two thirds sometimes.
|
|
Well, you know, after the Orlando incident, my logic got challenged to the point that I was
|
|
spent six months in PTSD Orlando incident, uh, the mass shooting in a gay club.
|
|
Ah, yeah. Okay. She wanted me to test my logic on how I could justify people having a legal gun
|
|
able to do that. I'm still waiting for the ban on white vans. Heck, after 9-11, they should be
|
|
bending get aircraft. Right. I just find it so comical how they're going after, you know,
|
|
the assault rifle. I mean, you know, to me, it's the weapon that never existed. There is,
|
|
in my eyes, there's no such thing as an assault rifle. Technically, by the definition of the
|
|
assault rifle, it would have to be fully automatic, which is already mostly illegal and extremely
|
|
highly regulated. Even then, a assault assault is an action. It's a verb. So you really can't
|
|
define the rifle as a verb. I mean, it doesn't assault anybody. Then can you define a sniper
|
|
rifle as a sniper rifle? Well, technically, it's not really a sniper rifle. I mean, it's
|
|
a long distance rifle, a long-year-old rifle. Yeah, well, just like California has banned rifles
|
|
using the 50 browning cartridge. I mean, it really, the cartridge is more deadly, you know,
|
|
than the rifle. I mean, you want to define anything as an assault. I mean, the projectile coming
|
|
at you, that's assaulting you, and that is actually, you know, the thing that they should regulate,
|
|
maybe if they're worried about anything type of ammunition that's being fired. If you have armor
|
|
piercing rounds out there, yeah, that might be something to worry about. Well, but what is armor?
|
|
Well, even the military is getting away with ballistic olive points, which is shaving the
|
|
Geneva Convention pretty close. Well, they shave that Geneva Convention all the time,
|
|
anyway, and I don't think that the U.S. actually signed the Geneva Convention. We just usually
|
|
go along with it, such as the, in the military, you're not allowed to shoot anybody with the 50 caliber
|
|
rifle, but you're allowed to shoot all the equipment that you want to. So if a person has a canteen
|
|
on them, you're allowed to shoot that, but you're not allowed to shoot the person. Yeah, I just saw
|
|
a video on the Barrett M82. It's not a sniper rifle. It's an anti-material rifle.
|
|
The 50-cal, you don't actually have to hit your target. You just got to get close enough so that,
|
|
you know, the air going around it cuts them in half. Well, actually, what was an interesting thing
|
|
after the ban of 50-cal in California, Barrett basically cancelled any government banned
|
|
the California government from buying their stuff. And they made a new cartridge, which is the
|
|
416 Barrett, which is, which will run in the same actions you need to do barrel. And it's
|
|
better, ballistically, out to 2500 yards. Is it a 49 caliber? It's a 416, 41 caliber.
|
|
And it does have pure sniping capability, although I don't know anyone who's actually shot a
|
|
sniper with it. When was the last time you went shootin' Joe? Oh, let it probably two years ago,
|
|
went out to a body's farm and just did some clay pigeon shootin' nothing too exciting.
|
|
I'm gonna have to head up the Iowa again soon. Jeez, I'm trying to escape the place and you're trying
|
|
to come here. Just for a visit. They'd never made me why. Oh hell no, no, no, not at all. And everybody, you
|
|
know, keeps trying to give me shit about wanting to go out to Cali, you know, like, oh my god,
|
|
so expensive out there, yada yada yada. Well, yeah, but right now, running my own show, you know,
|
|
I'm pulling between, I don't know, 55 and 68-year-ish, you know, and that's not work in a 40-hour
|
|
week at all. I mean, but I do a lot of my work as platform-based, which is kind of a joke anymore,
|
|
like there's too many texts out there that are willing to do the work for way cheaper than what
|
|
they should be. And, you know, essentially, the texts are the ones that drive the market price.
|
|
But anyways, you know, so like I make, you know, about 60 right now, but then I pay all my own
|
|
insurance, pay all my own gas, I pay, you know, everything comes out of pocket. Plus right now,
|
|
with rent here, I mean, it's a thousand bucks a month, plus my internet and all that shit,
|
|
so I'm at like 1200 bucks a month, you know. So for me to move out there for a two-bedroom,
|
|
it might cost me like three grand or so a month, but my income will go from 60 to like I'm assuming
|
|
around, you know, the six, six figure range. And, you know, I will have less expenses and overhead
|
|
than I do right now running my own shit. I think the biggest thing is health care. I mean, if like,
|
|
I've been lucky over the years that I've gone from paying nothing for health care to just paying
|
|
a very small amount like, like it's like 25 bucks a week or something like that for a family
|
|
parent in health care. And it's not a spectacular plan, but it's still relatively good. But I know,
|
|
like, both my parents have had to pay for their own. And you're talking about like, I'm not sure
|
|
what you're paying, but I know some people are paying like two grand a month for whatever plans
|
|
that they're on. And it's that that's just freaking miserable.
|
|
Well, I'm on to have to pay for mine right yet. Well, to be technical, see, I was before I started
|
|
my business. I had the state insurance for my son, which gave me the insurance. And then I started
|
|
it and apparently they caught wind of it and they dropped my insurance. Well, I'm doing just
|
|
Medicare when it's 550 a quarter, something like that, closing on 600. That's with Medicaid,
|
|
Medicare and Medicaid doing the heavy lifting. Yeah, the insurance rates are just
|
|
disgusting anymore, absolutely disgusting. Right, I keep on saying that I work for a crappy job
|
|
and that the second they start screwing around with the health care again, then I've got to go.
|
|
Then it's just not worth sticking around anymore. Kind of hoping that this company that I'm
|
|
considering working with has some pretty decent coverage. I mean, that's that's one thing,
|
|
you know, I mean, I've thought about it real hard. I mean, I'm sure I'm not going to get the
|
|
hourly rate that I charge right now. But if I would accept, you know, a little less hourly if they
|
|
had, you know, a good benefit package. Well, you still pay for your benefit package when it comes
|
|
to health care. True that, true that. It's considerably less when you go through a business
|
|
because they're getting discounts because of the number of people that they're bringing with them.
|
|
I don't know, I'm still trying to decide on a, I guess, a bottom line figure and kind of,
|
|
you know, a deal to get me out there. I mean, geez, for me to move out there is going to be
|
|
several several thousand dollars. I mean, shoot better part of 10 g's. Yeah, yeah, just the
|
|
moving truck will be five or six grand. It cost me a 1200 bucks for a 25 footer from Iowa to Colorado.
|
|
So take that about two, take that, yeah, about times two. So yeah, it probably cost about two thousand
|
|
dollars, three thousand. And in which that case, I'd probably just go with one of them pod systems
|
|
to where they drop off the little pod. You fill it up, trucker comes, picks it up and drives it
|
|
across the country and drops it off for you. It cost me five grand to go from El Paso to Alan.
|
|
Yeah, well, you have a huge family and a bunch of shit. It's just me and my kid.
|
|
Fair point. And you know, if that's, if I end up doing that, you know, there's probably
|
|
going to be a bunch of things that I downsize on. I mean, right now, I got like, for instance,
|
|
I got three TVs, two 50s and a 32. There's just, you know, there's no need for that.
|
|
You still got both of those 50 interest? Yeah, yeah, I'm using the 4K one right now.
|
|
Most of the movies I've been downloaded are 4K. And to be honest, I really don't know if it's worth
|
|
the extra, the extra data space. I mean, it's, yeah, it's, it's super good quality. But, you know,
|
|
1080p didn't seem too far off from 4K. At least not on this TV. Yeah, well, also, I don't know how old
|
|
you guys are getting, but just like super high definition stereo, sometimes it's awful,
|
|
easy to get more definition than you can actually use. Yeah, I agree, fully agree. You know,
|
|
and also with the high definition televisions, you know, you only see that up to a certain distance,
|
|
too. I mean, anything beyond a certain distance, you're not going to really notice the,
|
|
the higher quality image. Hell, to be honest, I've almost thought about selling half my crap,
|
|
and if I actually go out there selling half of it and buying like an RV and going and doing
|
|
monthly rentals on, you know, campground space, they're saving a few bucks, but
|
|
jeez, I looked at that and some of them spots out there for monthly rates are like a thousand bucks
|
|
a month, but jeez, it's outrageous. Yeah, but you could still sell most of your stuff and then
|
|
pick up new stuff. Probably second hand. Right. For sure. Yeah, I mean, there's always certain things
|
|
that like, I really, you know, don't want to get rid of, I mean, and to be honest, like,
|
|
the server is one of the things, but it's kind of awesome with them things. I'm like, man,
|
|
it is like a super overkill. I'm really ever going to use it all.
|
|
So just let me curious, what are you, what are you living in now? What do you plan on moving into
|
|
when you're over there? Because if you're going to like apartment living to a house or a house to
|
|
apartment living, I mean, I'm pretty sure you can probably downsize everything you have right now
|
|
and like maybe sell it and then adjust to your new surroundings at the new place that you're
|
|
moving into and then fit your bare necessities into like a U-Haul and then just rent the U-Haul
|
|
from Iowa to where you are in California. Yeah, I actually live in kind of a small place now.
|
|
It's sold as a two bedroom, but yeah, that's not. It's a one bedroom with an extra,
|
|
it's that the bedroom's extra long and it's got a wall, but it's an open wall. I mean,
|
|
it's a complete pass-through from one room to the other. So in my eyes, not a two bedroom,
|
|
but that's what they run it as. And I plan on probably moving out there to either, I don't know,
|
|
probably a two bedroom. And it just depends on the way or just go with a one bedroom and get some
|
|
sort of futon or whatever for the living room. I'll sleep on that and the kid can have the room.
|
|
Depending on how badly these people want you, I mean, you get through a little signing bonus in
|
|
there and, you know, enough for the first class in the positive on a place and then enough to get
|
|
like a couple of essential furniture and then just bring some of the other stuff with you and
|
|
enough that'll fit into a, you know, U-Haul. And then just drive that battery down to wherever you're
|
|
going. I mean, anything else that won't fit in the U-Haul, just try selling in the yard sale,
|
|
Craigslist, whatever. And definitely check out and see if the company has a moving bonus.
|
|
Right. Yeah, I'm going to have to check that out. I mean, you've seen the emails, Joe. I mean,
|
|
it sounds like they they want me bad enough that I think that I could work something out, hopefully.
|
|
Yeah, but you really got to figure out where you're going before you start trying to set a salary.
|
|
True that, true that. And, you know, like he said, he's got to figure out some more, but
|
|
I mean, the possibility is that it's open to my discretion. However, boy, I just, I don't know.
|
|
If it's open, I would almost, like I said before, like to see myself go and
|
|
probably to the Bay Area where the engineer that they were talking about is located and
|
|
you know, train under that guy. He's quite the cool dude and quite knowledgeable. You know,
|
|
he's the guy that wants me there. So I think it'd be an alright place.
|
|
And it's always good to have somebody, you know.
|
|
Right. Yeah, I mean, I don't like no, no, the guy, but I've worked with him on this project here in
|
|
town. They actually called me, found my ad on Yelp and pretty much begged me to go out to this
|
|
job because they're about to lose a pretty decent client. I mean, small, I'm sure in their eyes,
|
|
I mean, shit, they do like 500 million, I think, a year, but this company was about to rip $30,000
|
|
worth of video conferencing equipment right out their walls. They had it for shit like a month
|
|
and it hadn't been operational. Well, I spent several days fighting with things. I mean, everywhere,
|
|
everywhere, all the way from media comm service, which is, you know, just, oh my god, it's a
|
|
fucking joke. It all came down to after we got the whole network set up fine. Everything was
|
|
good to go. Boy, yet the video, which is flicker in and out. Well, I got down and started inspecting
|
|
some of the HDMI cables and sure shit, dude, and like the person that did all their low voltage
|
|
pulling is an absolute moron. I don't get why people do this, but it's it's common here to see
|
|
people pulling right straight into junction boxes from conduit. While, you know, you can pull right
|
|
into a junction, you really need have like a plastic fitting screwed into that junction box. So
|
|
you're not pulling and stripping the fricking cable against the the sharp knockouts of the
|
|
junctions and that's exactly what happened. They had pulled the HDMI through those junction boxes
|
|
and stripped the cable and it was grounding out in the conduit. Yeah, that's that bevy of
|
|
little cost text you were talking about. Yeah, exactly, you know, and it's so stupid too,
|
|
because it's like, man, guys, you know, like, why would you even consider working for that rate?
|
|
I mean, I know y'all have been in my shoes and probably in deeper situations. Is there any
|
|
fucking way that you'd work for 20 bucks an hour? You know, doing that work? Hell no. I mean,
|
|
it's not worth the stress. I'll go, you know, for for 15 bucks an hour, you can flip a burger now
|
|
I hear, you know, why the hell would I do any sort of networking or low voltage cabling for 20?
|
|
No way. Well, you'd really be surprised how many texts on these platforms. I mean,
|
|
how many of these guys will just do these jobs at like a stupid low rate like
|
|
very, very low. I mean, I had somebody try have me come in. They'll mark it as like, oh,
|
|
this is a site survey, you know, real quick and easy. Oh, yeah, okay. It's, there's a point where,
|
|
you know, I consider that just a basic site survey. And then there's a point I'm like, dude,
|
|
you're having me fire up analysis software. I just have checking, you know, Wi-Fi signal strengths
|
|
and essentially doing a Wi-Fi heat map for you. Sorry, but I'm not going to do that for, you know,
|
|
a $40 flat fee for an hour and a half, two hours, no way. Why do you charge so much for
|
|
virus removal? Yeah, why are the people so cheap not to buy in? I fire software.
|
|
I literally, you won't believe how many businesses and I'm talking like places that, you know,
|
|
y'all been to don't have any sort of security. Or like I was talking to Joe the other day, like,
|
|
how many of these network rooms I walk into that are like 90 degrees in there, no ventilation,
|
|
no air circulation, no AC, nothing. And then at the same time, everybody on the front end of the
|
|
store is bitching and complaining how their point of sales run slow all day long.
|
|
Yeah, even the computers like their AC. Yeah, they definitely don't like to be at the
|
|
verge of heat stroke status all day. That's for sure.
|
|
Hmm, played network, Kerio X5 player install. Oh, yeah.
|
|
Oh, not a chance. Spencer technologies. Many y'all ever come across those fools don't ever do a
|
|
job for them. What is Spencer technologies? Kind of like it's pretty much a BPO group. They
|
|
they're like the they do the kind of same stuff. I do just they have different clients. They go and
|
|
do like one of the jobs I actually worked with them on was installing digital many boards
|
|
for McDonald's. And yeah, they sent a tech up from Chicago that was supposed to be the lead.
|
|
The dude shows up late. He's twisted out of his mind. You know, just sitting there bitching
|
|
the whole time how he's got to go to Minnesota, you know, and this can't take forever, blah, blah, blah.
|
|
Right. Well, this is like I said, this is digital many boards. These are nothing but flat screen
|
|
fricking TVs with media players. And there was five of them in a row. He literally got five
|
|
brackets, not full sets, but five singular brackets installed in 10 hours.
|
|
Oh, yeah. Yeah, he and you know, then he got pissed off at me because I was on the ground and
|
|
he's up on the ladder. I mean, he installs a bracket upside down starts flipping out. Oh, you're
|
|
the ground guy. You should have caught it. I was like, no, dude, you're the dumb ass with it in
|
|
your hand. You should have caught it. Forty some days to pay. He had just horrible. Forty days to pay.
|
|
Yeah. And you know, I mean, so like a lot of a lot of business will go on like net 30 terms.
|
|
That's kind of an old standard, but you know, anything over that is ridiculous. And even most
|
|
nowadays tend to go net 15 or less. Wow. See, here's another prime example of these low, low price
|
|
jobs that are way underpriced. This company, I don't even know if they'll show me who it is,
|
|
on site, done a little bit of work for him, but a server and switch up green. Looks like a
|
|
full day project. So you're going to be there roughly six to eight hours, 160 bucks. Yeah, right.
|
|
Well, gentlemen, I think I'll say good night. And it's really been fascinating. I wish you
|
|
the very best in your various endeavors. Have a good night. Have a good night, man.
|
|
See you, man. Have you done any more with that overly obnoxious-sized tablet?
|
|
No, not yet. I got the, well, I have a best amount for it, or I can mount it on a wall.
|
|
I'm just trying to figure out where I should put it. The life won't stab me for.
|
|
What's an obnoxious, obnoxiously-sized tablet? What was it, 22 inches?
|
|
Nice. Nice. I guess it was supposed to be, what, for a doctor's office or something?
|
|
Yeah, it's what they're used for. Digital wall posters, they call them.
|
|
And it was already rooted. I guess it originally came from China. So
|
|
I just reset it up so it had some soft buttons on it. And I could access just a regular
|
|
Android interface on it instead of the point of sale system that was there. And it plays video
|
|
pretty well as long as it's not trying to stream. I don't know why it won't stream properly.
|
|
Via Wi-Fi or Hardbide? Both. I tried both.
|
|
What are the specs on it, you know? I'm not off top of my head. But like I said,
|
|
when it's got USB ports on it, so I moved a couple of movies of varying quality onto a USB
|
|
stick and slid it in there and they all play great. So I'm thinking that instead of streaming to it,
|
|
what I can do is set up something like Btsync on it. Although I am worried about heat issues
|
|
and just over the network, put the whole movie on and have it go straight to one of the USB
|
|
sticks that I have hooked up to it and just wait for the movie to get there and then play it.
|
|
There's got to be a fix for that. I don't know why it would stream slow unless it was like a really
|
|
shitty network card possibly. Have you ever done a speed test on it and see what kind of speed you're
|
|
getting? Well, I can still get 20 or 30, which another thing I don't understand, 20 or 30 MBPS.
|
|
So it should be more than enough to do any quality of movie, but it's not.
|
|
It's got to be some kind of processing issue.
|
|
Yeah, I'm sure they're not built to be processing beasts. Again, that's another thing that I almost
|
|
think is probably a little overpriced for what it does. That's not a bad idea. Sorry,
|
|
it's going to say that that's not a bad idea, but with like a BT sync or a sync thing and
|
|
it's just set up a folder and then just if you want to play a movie, just send it to the the
|
|
syncing folder. Yeah, I get it all done in advance and then I don't have to worry about streaming.
|
|
But I know, well, I might have to limit the speed for BT sync. I know I can do that too and maybe
|
|
that would keep it from heating up too quickly because my phone, I use BT sync on it all the time
|
|
to bring audiobooks over and stuff like that and it will just get incredibly hot and burn through
|
|
the battery. But hey, maybe it's because it'll be charging at the same time that it gets so hot
|
|
and this thing doesn't have a battery so that shouldn't be an issue.
|
|
Which would be an awesome addition to that thing, although it's kind of
|
|
excessively large to be a laptop tablet. Yeah, you put a battery in that thing and it's just
|
|
going to weigh way too much. I think it'd be a seriously cool home automation controller while
|
|
mounted home automation controller. Yeah, but finding or creating the
|
|
API in Android for something like that. I know it's got the USB ports there, but
|
|
it would be too difficult. There is a program. What the hell is it called? There's one that's
|
|
made to go on it and let me let me look. It's open. Give me a sec.
|
|
Can you control an Arduino from an Android over USB?
|
|
Depending. I think there's no red might be able to do it and what is the other one that I think
|
|
floating rich Gibson talking about is if this than that, that might. I don't know enough about
|
|
if this than that to be able to say anything like that. Googling it comes up with the instructions
|
|
like right away. Oh, nothing else. You could just use a front-end or Raspberry Pi.
|
|
OpenHab. I think that has to be on Linux, but OpenHab is the home automation software
|
|
I was talking about, and you can load that right on that tablet.
|
|
Isn't there a program called the home automation assistant that should be able to do it?
|
|
I have to take a look. Yeah, the wife wants me to buy another echo and another
|
|
connected wall plug. I got an echo here that I don't even use, an echo not.
|
|
Yeah, that's what she was going to have me look at. I mean, I ain't going to argue with you if
|
|
you're going to send it to me, Joe. That's possible. I don't ever use that stupid thing like
|
|
not something that I really care too much about. It's become a lot more. Yeah, it's become a lot
|
|
more useful since I got prime, you know, just for playing music around the house.
|
|
For sure. Yeah, it's nice for that. It's nice. I like it's a alarm options. I mean,
|
|
it's kind of handy if you, if you want them people that are lazy and like, you know,
|
|
you leave your phone plugged in on the desk or something, you know, you don't want to use it for an alarm,
|
|
so you just speak out loud for it to set up the alarm for you. It keeps drunk people and kids
|
|
occupied all day while asking it stupid-ass questions. Yeah, I would definitely look into
|
|
Node Red, though, for working with the automation type stuff. It says it works with like Raspberry
|
|
Pie, Beaglebone Black, interacting with Arduino and Android, so I'm thinking I might do what you
|
|
wanted to do. I'm not completely sure what I wanted to do yet. It seems like something like that.
|
|
I would probably try to figure out something to put in like the kitchen area as like a calendar,
|
|
plus like shopping list type thing. I don't know. I'm not sure if I then add any other type of
|
|
functionality. Like if you have home automation type stuff like the lights and whatnot,
|
|
then maybe add that into it as well, but try to have something like that. Like maybe I have
|
|
whiteboards like my head, but I'm not even sure if like whiteboard would be a viable thing.
|
|
You know, just something like that for the house as opposed to something like another TV with
|
|
to stream movies to. There's gotta be like regular TVs or, you know, roco boxes or, you know,
|
|
the fire sticks or something, or even just really Raspberry pies with the with Cody installed on it.
|
|
That would probably do that better than having a 23 inch touch screen Android television for.
|
|
True. No, because I was thinking about, um, I'm gonna get a new soldering station once I get my
|
|
garage re-adjusted this weekend and having that just set up on the wall and able to pull out.
|
|
And then if I need to know how to do something while I'm doing it, I could bring up YouTube or
|
|
something like that, but I would like to find something a bit more useful for bathroom porn TV.
|
|
I thought that was a phone. Who wants a seven-inch screen when you can have a 22-inch screen?
|
|
Why would I look at porn in my bathroom when I have a perfectly serviceable garage with two
|
|
large TVs as computer monitors? Hey, the guy's shit in time. There's also a time to be looking at porn.
|
|
I mean, it's just, you know, it's, it's just what happens. That's a horrible time for that.
|
|
What's that? I said, that's a horrible time for that.
|
|
I can, I can, well, it always seems like every time I'm taking this shit, I get all these like
|
|
fault. You know, you've seen them joke the forwards. I said, yeah, I ruin other people's days because
|
|
people got to send me all them dirty ass shit. And I always seem to check it when I'm in the bathroom
|
|
because I've learned not to check my Facebook messages at work. I've opened a few of those
|
|
at the wrong time. Yeah, I took Facebook off of my phone because of crap like that. I put
|
|
metal on there, which is a Facebook replacement, one because it's a lot better on battery and two
|
|
because I don't really get the notifications of stuff changing on Facebook. So I never look at it.
|
|
Oh, you're gonna have to tell me about this metal.
|
|
Well, it's like Facebook light, you know, I still can get the notifications if I want to. It's
|
|
just there are a lot less abrasive. And you know, the Facebook app itself is designed to send you
|
|
messages as much as possible to get you looking at it as much as possible. And metal doesn't do that.
|
|
And the battery usage is a lot better. And it's just an app in the place to are called metal.
|
|
All right, I have to look into that because the only time I use Facebook is basically so I can
|
|
kind of keep in touch with some of my family. And basically it's just not, I mean, I don't ever like,
|
|
I don't think I've ever liked something or responded to anything or made a comment to anything or
|
|
put a little smiley face or whatever the hell they have for it for anything. But at the same time,
|
|
I just kind of just quickly scroll through and see like what my family has been posting. And I am in
|
|
two Facebook groups that I've found to be one is very handy, one I'm hoping later on
|
|
upon the handy. One is a I own a 3D printer, the Tronxy X1. And the Tronxy Facebook group seems
|
|
to be pretty good. If you have any, they're a really nice group. So if you have any questions
|
|
or anything, you can post it to that to their page. And they're like three or four people who will
|
|
respond like right away. And we'll try it. Do their best to try to help you out with trying to get
|
|
things fixed in running and stuff. The other one I just joined a little while ago is the Pebble
|
|
Facebook page. Pebble was sold to, well, the people running Pebble were, the Pebble was bought
|
|
out by Fitbit, but the probably the devices are still out there and they still run. And I bought a
|
|
Pebble 2 SE a while ago. And it's it's really freaking handy. And I really like the fact that
|
|
every once in a while, you know, if I get a text message from my wife, I can just look down
|
|
on my watch as opposed to falling the phone on my pocket. And just do, you know, it's got the
|
|
canned messages where, you know, I can say, okay, yes, no, maybe yep, or whatever. And I can just
|
|
get a quick response back to her about something that, you know, because she likes to get responses
|
|
back, as opposed to not responding at all. And then she gets all pissed at me. But, you know,
|
|
give a quick response back that way. I can get my messages right away. If I get an email,
|
|
I can just kind of see that it's the what's come in. I, you know, you can't respond to the email
|
|
right away. But, you know, I can just see what's come in right away. It's nice. I've kind of come
|
|
to enjoy that. And it's, it's nice that there's still a community out there looking to keep these
|
|
devices up and going. But it'll be nice to have something that's a little less embraced. Because I
|
|
think that the Facebook app is way too big, way too heavy. It is the Windows Vista of Android
|
|
applications. It's too heavy that it doesn't need to be that heavy. It doesn't need to be that
|
|
abrasive. It's not that abrasive. I can't even tell my, like, I only notice occasions I ever
|
|
really get is if my wife links me into something. And then I get like the little number next to it.
|
|
But it's, if it can, if the application itself could be less, that would be freaking fantastic.
|
|
I actually, yeah, it's, yeah, it's definitely not as pretty. The regular book, but it's
|
|
much less abrasive, less battery. I've actually considered just going ahead and
|
|
disabling my, my personal Facebook and starting one strictly to join. Like, you know, the,
|
|
the groups that you're talking about, those types of groups are probably the only reasons that I
|
|
actually do not want to get rid of Facebook. I mean, yeah, it's nice to be able to stick and,
|
|
you know, stay in touch with family and stuff like that. But, you know, that to me is also what
|
|
cell phones are for, you know. But I just hate the, the privacy issues with Facebook. I mean,
|
|
the fact that you have facial recognition on there is just fucking bogus to me.
|
|
Then on top of that, you know, you talk about having the Facebook on your phone. You know,
|
|
you say it's abrasive, that should be invasive. I mean, I know there's been several times that,
|
|
I've, you know, been talking about something. It's not just with Facebook, it's Google,
|
|
everything. I mean, smartphones nowadays. I swear to God, these things listen to you more than what
|
|
you really know about and more than what you're giving it permission to. There's been tons of times
|
|
where I've, you know, been talking with somebody about a product or something and then you'll
|
|
will literally type in one single letter and all of a sudden a whole phrase will come out
|
|
related to what you were just talking about. I mean, the chances of that happening out of
|
|
randomness, yeah, right. Yeah, I mean, what's the old adage? If you're not paying for a product,
|
|
you are the product, something along those lines. So basically, if, if you're not paying for
|
|
something, then more than likely, you're the one who's your data, your information is what how
|
|
they're making their money. And that's exactly it. That's exactly how they make their money. And
|
|
old Zuckerberg even said, you know, well, he danced around the answer when he was questioned about it
|
|
because it was mentioned that if we want to block some of these, some of our information from being
|
|
shared and want a more secure Facebook, like the user itself wants this, then there's a possibility
|
|
that they're going to end up having to pay to use Facebook and not be served ads and everything
|
|
and not have their data sold. Like, really, I mean, in order for us to have our shit secure,
|
|
we're going to have to pay you a premium. Like, what the hell? Well, that's the thing. It's a service
|
|
and they're making their money off of you. So unless, unless, you know, if they can't make their
|
|
money off of you anymore, they got to make money somehow. So, but yeah, you have to know when
|
|
you're going into anything with either Google or Facebook that basically any information that
|
|
you give them, they're selling off as fast as possible, you know. No doubt about it. I mean,
|
|
and you know, they're not the only company that pulls crooked things like that. I mean,
|
|
GoDaddy. GoDaddy, a lot of people that buy domains, there's a lot of people that go to GoDaddy.
|
|
Well, when you're searching for a domain to see if it's available, GoDaddy is actually one of
|
|
the worst places for you to go because there's been, you know, times where GoDaddy has
|
|
like this domain will be available, but GoDaddy will actually suck that domain up and then
|
|
resell that thing as like a premium domain. So while it was available to you, you know,
|
|
five minutes ago, you left that page, you went on to do something else, you come back and all
|
|
of a sudden that's, you know, not there. Yes, it's possible that somebody else bought it, but there's
|
|
been proof that GoDaddy has essentially, you know, grabbed that up and recognized that as what
|
|
they would consider a premium domain. And then they stick a premium price. It goes from literally
|
|
like, what is it, like, $14.99 for a normal price domain, and it can be as high as, you know,
|
|
$20,000 or more for a domain name, and they use, you know, certain ways to look at a domain to
|
|
see if it's a, or not, but yeah, they've been known to suck up domains on people. So
|
|
there's actually other, you know, tons of different registrars that you can go to in different
|
|
search engines and people recommend using those versus, versus GoDaddy. Well, if there's
|
|
a charge in $14.99, one of like a year, I might be switch over to GoDaddy. I'm spending, I'm
|
|
paying like 30 bucks a month for on register.com for the lengths.cast.com domain. And that's, you
|
|
know, it's, I actually made the mistake a while ago a bit. Their interface is freaking horrible
|
|
when it comes to paying their, their yearly fees. It's 30, it's like 30 bucks a year.
|
|
So what I did one time was, it was last year, I paid the $30, and I still had like the email,
|
|
like they sent me another email saying, like, your domain is about ready to expire. So I'm like,
|
|
all right, what the hell is going on here? I went in there again, and it went up going through
|
|
the whole system, the whole thing again. And it basically said like, you haven't paid the,
|
|
the $30, the $30 for the year yet, because their system hasn't up, it didn't update yet.
|
|
So I went in, paid the $30 again, went through all of it, and it basically said to that again,
|
|
like the next day or like a little while later. And so I want to paying for three years,
|
|
people were paying $90 for three years, basically all in one shot. But you know what,
|
|
I'm okay with having the domain for three years, that's fine, not a big deal.
|
|
But it's just really crappy that the fact that it took them so freaking long to update their
|
|
information just to actually say that I actually paid it, the fact that it made me freaking
|
|
pay it for three years. Yes, well, messed up. I've never had that happen. I usually buy most,
|
|
yeah, most of my stuff through GoDaddy. I mean, in hosting, I usually go through like HostGator.
|
|
I'm feeling I have to switch my hosting soon. So I was wondering whether, you know,
|
|
if anybody had any ideas about hosting, I am open to ideas. The biggest thing I've seen so far
|
|
is just through like Digital Ocean. There's so many, it's the $5 a month hosting, and then
|
|
like you could probably, there's always, everybody has freaking codes for like $10. So you know,
|
|
your first two months are free. So that's, I think about going to Digital Ocean for the hosting
|
|
for Linux loadcast. I've never used them. I've always just, I guess, been partial to HostGator. I've
|
|
used a couple of other of the cheaper ones and their server uptime kind of sucked. So I guess
|
|
that's just mainly what I look for is what their server uptime percentage is. And you know,
|
|
what you're going to do with it, do you need to, or you're just going to host a WordPress site? I
|
|
mean, are you hosting Ecom? Yada, yada, yada. I mean, you know, certain hosting platforms work better
|
|
for others. I guess, you know, not necessarily work better, but have easier integration methods.
|
|
You know, more, more walk you through, you know, take your hand and walk you through type of stuff.
|
|
Yeah, I don't necessarily need anybody to walk me through with things. I just need like, what
|
|
are running right now is just a basic WordPress site. And the biggest, I mean, with a podcast,
|
|
the biggest thing that you need is just something to serve up the RSS. And besides that, I mean,
|
|
I'm fairly certain that nobody actually goes to a website for anything. They just go to our
|
|
website to sign up for the RSS feed to get this podcast. And then that's pretty much about it.
|
|
I mean, there's no reason to go, no other real reason to go to our website for anything.
|
|
I mean, we don't really, I don't really post anything else to website besides, I mean, all of the
|
|
show notes and stuff like that will be served up to the RSS feed podcast itself. So, I mean,
|
|
just get a WordPress site with the blueberry press, what we've been doing.
|
|
The audio files themselves are actually hosted on archive.org. And then, you know, we even use
|
|
what the hell is the Google thing for RSS feeds there. I know what I just can't think of it.
|
|
Anyways, that kind of helps with the RSS if there's any like with the RSS feeds. We post a new
|
|
show on BeBurner. That's it. So, he used registrar as your hosting to them.
|
|
No, we use register.com just for the domain. A friend of the shows has been working with,
|
|
has been very, very, very, very nice to give us hosting for the last like four years or so.
|
|
But so, I've run into a problem with the WordPress and I've been unable to get a hold of him.
|
|
So, we had put a recapture on the site for security purposes and recapture expired.
|
|
And I figured most of the time I know it wouldn't have expired. It was mostly just sitting there
|
|
going, well, now instead of actually putting in one of the funky words and the pictures, now
|
|
all you have to put in is wordcapture, blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, that's still in my opinion,
|
|
just regular. That's halfway decent security in my opinion for the WordPress site. So,
|
|
that's not really don't care. But didn't that win away completely? So, now I can't even sign
|
|
into WordPress. But I can't get a hold of the person that does our hosting. So, now I'm going to
|
|
have to find a way to migrate all of our hosting onto something else and something I have more control
|
|
over. And so, I'm thinking about using like a digital ocean and setting up a different WordPress
|
|
site and then either resetting out the RSS or like doing everything I can to get all of this guy
|
|
to be able to get my old, the old RSS feed migrated onto the news site hosting. I don't know, I just
|
|
think I need more control over the site if I can't get a hold of the person who has the actual
|
|
hosting. But he was very, very, very gracious to give us hosting when we first started this
|
|
podcast up. So, I definitely can't complain about it at all, but I feel like if I can't get a hold
|
|
of them, then I definitely need to get my set up our own hosting. How much was the digital ocean
|
|
plan you were looking at? I mean, with HostGator right now, they're running a deal that if you buy it in
|
|
three years together, it's 95 bucks. So, like two something a month, like two sixty or something
|
|
like that a month. But if you go through eBates, you get $30 back. I mean, so essentially for three
|
|
years, you'd only be paying $65 to host your website. That's not a horrible idea. With digital ocean,
|
|
it's like $5 a month, and you can probably find something with a $10 credit, so the first two
|
|
months are free. So, I mean, if you can get two something a month plus $30 back, that's not bad.
|
|
No, not at all. Yeah, it's like two sixty four a month right now for 36 months.
|
|
And yeah, then my eBates thing says, yeah, $30 cash back. I mean, yeah, that's only once a year,
|
|
but whatever. That's not bad. Hold on one second. I gotta be right back.
|
|
All right. All right. I think I'm going to die, bud. Hey, you got to check out YouTube. There's
|
|
Cobra Kai. It's a karate kid saga continues 30 years after.
|
|
Oh, that Hulu TV show. This is right on YouTube. If you just go to YouTube,
|
|
look on the top left corner. There is it says like either live or Cobra Kai.
|
|
Yeah, I thought I saw some previews for that. I'll have to check it out later.
|
|
Just turn it on. I'll have to let you know how it is.
|
|
The karate kid turned into a used car salesman.
|
|
Something, yeah, I don't know. I just just got her on. He's eating fucking fried baloney right now.
|
|
Can't tell you how many times I've been that broke eating fucking fried baloney.
|
|
Fried. Is it any good fried baloney? Well, it's better than regular baloney, I think.
|
|
I do love regular baloney. It's right up there on the list with ramen.
|
|
I do think of baloney as like a giant hot dog though. If you were to just take a giant hot dog
|
|
and slice it into like paper thin sheets, then that's basically baloney.
|
|
Yeah, pretty much. Okay, I'll talk to you guys in about two weeks.
|
|
Have a good night.
|
|
Later. Later. How long have you been doing this podcast?
|
|
Well, I think it's about four years now.
|
|
Oh, wow. It's quite a while.
|
|
Yeah, Joe's constantly asking me to get out here. I'm just always busy.
|
|
I raise my kid myself and run in the business plus I'm in school right now graduating just next month.
|
|
So it's just been nuts.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know if that much going on, but I think kids in general take up most of your life.
|
|
Oh, that's for sure, especially when the other parent has like nothing to do with them.
|
|
That's horrible. Yeah, pretty much.
|
|
I mean, in the way it makes things easier and in another way, it's absolutely horrible.
|
|
I can see that. Like, if this job offer comes through, I don't have to ask her nothing.
|
|
I just get up and go. Right.
|
|
Which you know, this whole this whole job, I don't know, it's still up in here.
|
|
I boys can be a really hard thing to to go work for somebody else, you know.
|
|
Yeah, but you know, at the same time, you got to think about that all of those stupid little things
|
|
that you've had to deal with in the past, whether it's just I'm not sure if you've been doing it,
|
|
but you know, when you're doing your own business, you have to file your taxes
|
|
with like every four months or whatever and stupid things like you were talking about with
|
|
like health insurance, like do you have to deal with all the health insurance yourself,
|
|
you know, do with that anymore and there's I'm sure there's so many little aspects that you
|
|
don't have to deal with anymore that somebody else is dealing with that all you have to do is
|
|
basically work and collect the paycheck that's going to make it worthwhile.
|
|
Yeah, I agree. There is a lot, but you know, people think that when you work for yourself,
|
|
you got it made and really you're actually work a lot more, a lot longer, and a lot harder
|
|
than everybody else who punches a clock. Right. Especially if you ever get to the point where you
|
|
have other people working for you, that's a whole other headache added onto it.
|
|
Yeah, and I've you know, I've hired a couple of guys, you know, it's just pretty much like
|
|
day-help and yeah, it's not something I enjoy. I'm pretty picky on how things are done, so
|
|
you know, for me to trust many people, to get it done the way I want it done, you know, it's
|
|
pretty hard to do. Yeah, one people don't work like they do. You're like they used to, you know,
|
|
there's a lot of lazy people that are cutting corners and, you know, letting standards go in the
|
|
garbage. Yeah, and I'm finding a lot of very self-entitled people like they deserve something as
|
|
opposed to earning it. Yeah, I think that's the way society's moving towards now. Everybody
|
|
thinks that they're owed something and it's like, wow, you know, like, you know, and part of it,
|
|
you can blame the schools. I mean, they, they kind of teach you, you know, that, oh, you want it,
|
|
you can have it, you want it, you can have it, you know, no, you want it, you know, you can earn it,
|
|
you can't have it, but you can earn it. Yeah, everything should be earned.
|
|
Agreed. You know, I, I barely buy my, you know, I buy my kid stuff, you know, but he's not,
|
|
he's not spoiled. I mean, if he's, if he's not acting right, he sure as shit ain't going to get,
|
|
you know, anything. I mean, I'm not going to go buy him some new toy if he doesn't deserve it,
|
|
but so many of these parents every time they walk into a store, they're buying their kid something.
|
|
Right. I've found over time though that my problem is I feel like, so I work, I don't actually
|
|
work in the tech field. I work in retail produce tech is always been more of a huge hobby thing for
|
|
me. It's been a hobby thing for me that I've freaking loved doing that and I'm hoping to at some
|
|
point like four years down the line when I don't require like a certain day off a week and stuff
|
|
like that with my son, my son will be in pretty, when my son will finally be in kindergarten,
|
|
I hope to actually be able to get a job where it isn't the crappy one that I've been doing for a long
|
|
time, which is retail food. But I, the biggest problem with me I think is I feel like those people
|
|
who are claiming to be my boss, I feel like they need to earn that. They need to actually
|
|
know something, do something, act accordingly. As opposed to you have the title, you feel entitled
|
|
to that, because you have that title, you're entitled to it. And I think that's been my problem over
|
|
the last couple of years is I don't give the people who feel they're entitled to their respect,
|
|
their respect that they feel like they're entitled to. Agreed. Yeah, I put these people in
|
|
in charge, you know, like you said, they give them this title and it's like all of a sudden I'm
|
|
somebody special and it's like, bro, you should even have that title if you don't know a damn thing
|
|
about, you know, the operations here. Right, you know, if you look, I will give you the respect,
|
|
if you know what the hell you're talking about, or at the very least you're willing to come down
|
|
here, do what I do, and you can actually say, hey, yes, I can do this better than you, or I can,
|
|
we can do this, but I can do this better because of this reason. As opposed to, hey, I have earned,
|
|
I've somehow gotten this title. And so you should show me respect. That's just, I can't, I have a
|
|
hard time with that. Yeah, same here. I guess that's that's one reason why I know that, you know,
|
|
one of the reasons why I think, man, do I really want to go work for somebody because now I got to
|
|
go in with all that corporate bullshit, too, you know, and right now I don't deal with that,
|
|
I do what I want, when I want, I work when I want, you know, for the most part, I mean, I'm
|
|
free to do whatever the hell I want, but I don't know, I mean, at the same time, there's a lot of
|
|
benefits to working for somebody. It's just, boy, I hope, if I do decide to do this, I'm not
|
|
stuck into a situation where it's just like that, you know, we're working for some, you know,
|
|
entitled asshole. Right. And that's the one big, tough thing is you never know when you might
|
|
actually wind up having to work for some entitled asshole. You know, it's, it's, you know,
|
|
there's so many things like, there's freaking nepotism in every job where, you know,
|
|
some dudes son all of a sudden becomes the boss of things and, you know, they don't have any idea
|
|
about anything besides the fact that they've been bribing their father's co-tails for so many
|
|
fricking years and, you know, they feel they're entitled to their position and stuff. And
|
|
there are so many fricking things where people who don't deserve a higher position, get thrown
|
|
into a higher position for whatever fricking reason. I mean, it feels like a lot of times,
|
|
and corporate things that, you know, it used to be that the smartest person or the most
|
|
person with the best knowledge rises to the top. Yeah, corporate positions, it seems like the
|
|
biggest asshole, right. So top for some reason. And that's, that's a big, tough thing. So you
|
|
have to sit there and weigh out, you know, am I going to deal with all of the things of running
|
|
my own business with healthcare and dealing with other people and dealing with, like,
|
|
I look at as a big deal, but my other people who might actually run their own business might
|
|
not think it's a big deal or who are self-employed. The doing your taxes every, every quarter and
|
|
stuff like that. I mean, that's, you know, as a person who doesn't have to do that, that seems
|
|
like a big deal to me. You know, all of those things, you know, and all of the stuff if you get
|
|
employed, if you have employees working for you and stuff like that, and all of that, that
|
|
yes involved with it is all of that worth it versus dealing with somebody, dealing with a company
|
|
who takes care of all this stuff, but running the risk of having some, you know, jackass in charge.
|
|
Right. Yeah, I totally, totally agree there. You know, and I think this, this company will be
|
|
all right. I actually can't believe they even want to, you know, offer me anything. I'm a pretty,
|
|
I guess, you know, rough around the edges guy, I guess, at times, if something, right, I'm not afraid
|
|
to point it out real quick. And, you know, these guys actually had taken a little while to pay me
|
|
too. They're supposed to pay me in two weeks and it ended up being 30 days, which, you know, whatever,
|
|
if you're going to pay me in 30 days, you need to tell me that's been 30 days, not in two weeks.
|
|
And then they, they also, you know, pulled some stuff with this in the amount of insurance I had to
|
|
have, you know, they wanted me to have like one million dollars in auto insurance. Like who the
|
|
health has a one million dollar auto in policy, you know, but, you know, so we kind of had some,
|
|
some rough words. And, you know, I literally threatened to go get a lawyer if they
|
|
due to the fact that I didn't have a million dollars worth of car insurance.
|
|
They, they ended up approving it anyways. And within a week, they're offering me a position. I mean,
|
|
of course, they've been offering me and begging me for a while, but, you know, they, they finally,
|
|
they got me paying. They're like, hey, how about moving? I think the smartest thing to do. And,
|
|
you know, obviously, I'm not you, but I think the smartest thing to do is to
|
|
take like a week or two, go down to the area, figure out like where you would live, how much
|
|
you would cost the live, try to find what you would you get for a place. And then maybe figure out
|
|
what they want contract-wise. Like you're talking about base pay and stuff like that, but also figure
|
|
out like if within a year, like if you're sending a year contract with these people, like if within
|
|
a year, like you guys don't see eye-to-eye or something goes awry, how many, like if try to figure
|
|
out what the at your skill level, what other types of jobs you can get in that area, but also try
|
|
to find, figure out an area that you actually want to live in. So, figure out a way of a place you
|
|
want to live, figure out what you want to be making, figure out how long, like if this situation
|
|
at this place doesn't work out how long for you to be able to get out, and could you do basically
|
|
what you're doing here, like if you wanted to start up your own business in that area, could you
|
|
do it, and could you be making the same amount of money, but just in a different area, you know,
|
|
so you're not working, you're not paying the expense of moving to a different area and then
|
|
trying to restart over again with all your old clients and stuff, could you find new clients
|
|
in that area, and do you have the ability to do that job and then maybe hold like one or two side
|
|
gigs with things and maybe try to set up some other side gigs of things, like if you do,
|
|
if you already have knowledge of the system of the different types of postal systems with
|
|
the boxes and stuff like that, and I'm sure there are similar type things in that area,
|
|
what you want to move into, if you were, you know, those systems or have some sort of relationship
|
|
with those companies, those systems in those areas and stuff where you can do something, maybe
|
|
maybe part time with them or whatever, so you still have a relationship with that company
|
|
that if things go sour with this company, you can still go back to some sort of a contract with
|
|
them and then have that as just your general base, you know, you have some sort of an income coming
|
|
in and then you can then from there create, you know, start getting other income if you do not,
|
|
you know, see eye to eye with this company that you want to set up that wants you to work for them.
|
|
Yeah, I agree, and you know, I can, I can actually move my company,
|
|
probably do just as good if not better, because a lot of the companies I contract with, they are,
|
|
you know, nationwide companies, so there's work all over the country, and you know, of course,
|
|
Cali's going to be more metropolitan than, you know, a bump fuck Iowa, so a lot more work out there.
|
|
And with this job, you know, I question like why they want me so bad for one, it's like, man,
|
|
you know, like, for what, I don't have any certifications, I actually just started this company,
|
|
just short of a year ago, it was in August last year, my A plus, nope, sure don't have that either,
|
|
but I do know my way around, you know, a network a little bit, I know, you know,
|
|
terminations and, you know, a little bit of diagnostics and, but the fact that they do
|
|
mainly video conferencing, you know, they, they feel that with my IT skills that combining that with
|
|
the AV, that it would be very beneficial to them, I guess. And it could be that just that you've
|
|
proven to them that you're some level of competency that, you know, you're not going to dig them around
|
|
or whatever, so you've shown that you know what the hell you're talking about, you care about
|
|
what the hell you're talking about, and that's more of what they're looking for, is somebody who
|
|
knows what they're talking about and cares what they're talking about, or if they don't know the
|
|
answer, you know, they're willing to go figure out what the answer is, and go learn more stuff,
|
|
and that's what they're looking for in their, their company.
|
|
For sure, and go, yeah, I, they know that I'm, I'm no joke, hell, I, I got into a pretty much
|
|
yelling match with the media com guy there, at this job we're on, I had the engineers on,
|
|
on the phone with me, and I had the, the client that I was there working on their stuff,
|
|
they were in the other room, and was the media com guy, he ended up launching like,
|
|
shit like five, six things off of the shelf, all the network equipment that I just hooked up,
|
|
and he just kept unplugging everything that I had just wired in, so, and on top of that,
|
|
he wanted to tell me that it was going to take 24 to 48 hours for him to,
|
|
add our MAC address into, to the system to allow us access and everything, and blah, blah, he's
|
|
always going to take us, you know, 24 hours of my dude, it just took you guys five freaking minutes
|
|
yesterday, like I, I just was on the phone with you guys the last time I was here, it took you
|
|
five minutes to assign this thing, five minutes, now you're going to tell me, you know, and then
|
|
he pulls all these corners, and yeah, I ended up like, just going off on the guy, like, yell at
|
|
him, like, you know, it's real funny, you guys constantly, it's, you know, oh, we got this great
|
|
gig of bits, speeds, and network, blah, blah, blah, it's like, but who can use it?
|
|
Because it never does it ever work. I was like, and always you guys come here and you push it
|
|
all on somebody else's stuff, all it's all, you know, and long story short, yeah, huge yelling
|
|
match, and that actually is one of the things that, you know, gained their respect was that, you
|
|
know, I'm there, defending, not only the company that is looking to hire me, but the client that
|
|
you know, has this service, and both the client and this company are just like, wow, really,
|
|
you know, this guy is going to literally fight for us. Yeah, that's probably the thing they see
|
|
that you, you're willing to fight for the right thing, and not fight for the BS, so that's why
|
|
why they want you. Yeah, I'm a no BS kind of guy. I absolutely hate, you know, the,
|
|
the guys that just, you don't want to fill you full of crap. I mean, it's constant. I see,
|
|
and I don't know what your guys' internet providers are out there, but, you know, Joe and I ran
|
|
in here with, and I keep going back to media companies. It's absolutely the worst service I've
|
|
had clear across the country. I've lived all over the place except for the East Coast,
|
|
and I'll tell you that these guys are the worst. I mean, you literally, you cannot have a
|
|
static IP with a wireless modem. You also can't SSH if you have a wireless modem, and what other
|
|
internet providers are going to do that to you? None. That's pretty crazy. Yeah, we sat there
|
|
forever, like, what is going on? You know, like, with the SSH thing, like, we got it all the way down,
|
|
we tested everything, and Joe and I were just like, what in the hell? I mean, it's working locally,
|
|
but he can't access it from Texas, and I'm like, dude, like, I've poured forward, and I've done
|
|
everything. Everything is set. But media comm installs this, um, their own, uh, kind of UI on
|
|
this, on the router or on the modem, I should say, um, and this UI is called a home Wi-Fi, and it's
|
|
kind of their way of controlling the, the limitation or the, the what you can do with the
|
|
port forward. You really can't truly port forward. Um, you don't get full access to everything,
|
|
and, uh, one of the things that's static IP and SSH can't get them with Wi-Fi.
|
|
That's why I've never used their modems, and I've never, like, I've Comcast, I've never used their
|
|
com, uh, modems, and I've never used any of their routers or anything. Yeah, it's, it's kind of
|
|
just to be honest with you. I, uh, what I did is I just had them, um, pretty much set my modem back
|
|
to just, uh, pretty much bridge mode. And, uh, within 30 seconds, some of them doing that,
|
|
everything's back up and running. SSH is working. And, uh, media comm is still denying that they
|
|
block SSH. That's freaking horrible. Oh, yeah. I mean, you know what's even worse is when you ask the, uh,
|
|
the, you can't even call them technicians, they're not. When you ask the, uh, the fake support on, uh,
|
|
on the phone, you know, what, do you know what SSH is? Uh, uh, uh, okay. Do you know what
|
|
telling that is? Are you old enough to know what telling that is? Uh, uh, uh, uh, you know,
|
|
maybe you better put me on with somebody else. I'd be like, how could you sit there and call
|
|
yourself a tech? You know, uh, and not know what the hell SSH is, not know what telling that is.
|
|
I mean, do you know what DHCP is? Or do you just know what the, you know, uh, the letters are
|
|
because you see them on your fucking screen? You know, they know how to read from the script and
|
|
that's about it. That is all support is I've actually worked for a couple of phone companies tech
|
|
support and it is literally a, uh, a program with scripted questions and, you know, it's, uh,
|
|
yes, no, you know, selection and then now guide you on to the next question. I mean, it's,
|
|
if it wasn't for the software, 90% of the people wouldn't know what the hell to do.
|
|
Yep, and it's freaking horrible. Right. It is horrible. But that's how I suppose that's how
|
|
these guys get away with hiring, uh, quote, unquote, technicians, you know, fake missions. We'll call
|
|
of, uh, for like 10 bucks an hour, you know. That's true. Level, what, what level one is pretty much
|
|
just, um, did you reset? Did you unplug your router for a minute and then plug it back in?
|
|
Are you sure that everything is plugged in properly? Uh, yeah, that's, that's level one. That's,
|
|
that's the tier one, uh, help right there. Yeah. And they might as well be called customer service.
|
|
Right. That was funny is that you go to ask for a tier two with media comm and, uh, some will tell
|
|
you, oh, yeah, hold on. We'll transfer you and then they'll get back on. Oh, yeah,
|
|
forgot. We can't, what do you mean you can't? Yeah, we could only email. Are you fucking serious?
|
|
You can only email your tier two's like, wow, you guys get right on fixing problems, don't you?
|
|
Yeah, they're used dealing with people who have no idea what the hell they're talking about. So
|
|
they just, they used to, uh, make sure it's plugged in, uh, reset it by unplugging it for, you know,
|
|
the minute, minute and a half, whatever. And that's pretty much about it. They don't know any
|
|
actual, you know, they can't actually diagnose the actual problems. They can resend out the,
|
|
the information, what is it that they call it? Uh, every time I've dealt with Comcast,
|
|
I'm like, oh, we'll resend out the packets or whatever. It's, um, balls. Yeah, I can't remember what
|
|
it is. Uh, we'll resend the signal or sub-stupid thing. Yeah, good for you. I mean, like,
|
|
that's your go-to every time. Exactly, exactly. I couldn't even get them to, okay, so they kept
|
|
telling me that I am IPv4. I'm like, okay, okay, you know, that's, that's normal. Okay, well then why
|
|
in the hell is my, you know, my, uh, uh, uh, uh, default gateway. It was showing up as essentially,
|
|
like, hexadecimal, but it was like, it was improper. It was, it almost looked like a MAC address,
|
|
but in improperly formatted MAC address. Um, and the reason it says improperly formatted,
|
|
it's a pretty sure MAC addresses don't have percentage symbols in them. So it was like, uh, IPv6
|
|
is, it also has, you know, that style of IP. So I asked and asked and asked. And nope, we have no,
|
|
no, can't figure it out. Don't know why. No, no. Well, lady, if I'm getting this, because at the time,
|
|
my internet wasn't running right. Now, like, if that's the case, it's like, this could be, you
|
|
know, a configuration issue, you know, I mean, if I should not have a bunch of random letters
|
|
and numbers as a default gateway, I just shouldn't, you know, it should be 192 16811, you know, whatever.
|
|
And she just, the lady could not get it. Well, come to find out, I apparently have IPv6 now.
|
|
And running IPv4 and six, I don't know if that's a thing now, but apparently because I'm pulling
|
|
both signals. They really just need to give them, I mean, if, if you're a colleague or yourself,
|
|
any sort of tech support you need to have, like, basic knowledge of shit, that's all I'm saying,
|
|
is you should have basic knowledge to go into it to be able to make competent responses to things.
|
|
Because, yeah, obviously, you're going to run into people who have no idea what the hell they're
|
|
talking about. And they're going to get the modems from their ISPs, whether it's Comcast or whatever.
|
|
And the only thing they know how to do is push the little button on the top of it. That's going to
|
|
send out whatever fricking signal. And they're going to go, oh, look, here we go. Now I can connect
|
|
my ISP and then they're all done. And then they're going to have people who actually I know what the
|
|
hell they're talking about. But they need to know how to talk to the people who actually have some
|
|
idea what they're talking about, not just the morons. Agreed. Yeah. I've started my conversations
|
|
out any time that I've needed their quote unquote support. I've just started out looking.
|
|
I'm a field tech. I do this stuff every day. Let's just go ahead and skip the first three,
|
|
four pages of your little fucking question here there because I am not going through it.
|
|
I've already turned the power off on on. I've already said everything. I've already checked
|
|
all of the connections and make sure that actually is plugged in. I've already done that. Trust me.
|
|
Let's move on to the next one. Yeah. And then they still ask you, you're like, oh my god,
|
|
are you serious? It's fricking miserable. Oh, yeah. And I think the reason you'll get the ones
|
|
that still ask you is because they're literally so stuck like they just wouldn't know what to do
|
|
without going step by step through the screen. It's like, oh my god. What are you doing? There's
|
|
got to be some way you can hire some competent people here. I don't get it. They read their script
|
|
and that's all they know. I mean, what I worked on it, doing tech support for these guys,
|
|
like, you know, when I first started doing that, I really didn't know all the different things either.
|
|
But, you know, the thing is, is that was part of your training was to learn some of that stuff.
|
|
And I kind of thought, you know, it was like most call centers. If you didn't learn it, you know,
|
|
you were just, you were released. You didn't make it through. Sorry. Go get another job.
|
|
You know, but it seems like certain companies are at the point nowadays were, oh, maybe they're
|
|
struggling to find people. So it's just like, ah, let any retards sit in the seat, I guess.
|
|
I think the major problem is there's so many people who don't want to actually learn what the
|
|
hell is going on in the first place. They don't want to actually bother to learn. So the things like
|
|
make sure it's plugged in right and make sure that, you know, it's reset for, you know,
|
|
unplug it for, you know, the minute, minute and a half or whatever the hell it is actually works
|
|
for them because they don't, nobody wants to actually take the time and effort to learn this crap.
|
|
It, it bugs the crap out of me that no one wants to actually learn what the hell is going on.
|
|
And this goes to a whole other level that I have a complaint about. I mean,
|
|
I've heard of people who, like, kids who will learn things about freaking programming,
|
|
but they don't understand the fundamentals of the operating system.
|
|
Kids who will learn programming, but they won't learn things like, you know,
|
|
multi-boot operating system, how an operating system works in the first place,
|
|
they don't have the fundamentals involved to actually learn what the hell is actually going on.
|
|
So if the people, if the base, you know, if the base script actually works for 90% of the people
|
|
because they actually, 90% of the people who are involved, who they deal with don't have
|
|
the technical knowledge to know that any of this stuff is going on, then, you know, they're not
|
|
going to go ahead and hire people that are, but they need to have something that, you know,
|
|
hey, look, I am a person who is beyond this point. I understand this. I need to be sensitive to,
|
|
because we need to have a, you and I need to have a conversation or me and the person doing the
|
|
support need to have a conversation that does not involve, make sure the plugs are plugged rights
|
|
and make sure that, you know, I have unplugged it for the minute or whatever and reset everything
|
|
properly. I need people, I want somebody to talk to me, who knows me as me, you know, as an IT
|
|
professional, as opposed to the people who, you know, there needs to be some sort of a barrier,
|
|
you know, where I can say, you know, hey, I know what I'm doing. Let's move on to the next level here.
|
|
And, but you have to go through all of that stupid BS first. I don't know.
|
|
You know, and I always saw that, you know, for a long time, I'm like, God, you know, it'd be nice to
|
|
have a business level of internet accounts. You know, maybe I won't have to go through this
|
|
shit. Yeah. Right. They treat the business customers the same exact way. And it's like,
|
|
yo, you realize that most of these business customers aren't the fricking, you know,
|
|
the owner of the business or the manager of the business that is calling you. Most of the time,
|
|
these major businesses, they have a fricking IT department and their IT department, you know,
|
|
might have to reach out to you and we might know what we're talking about. So don't you think we
|
|
should be able to have a conversation with somebody on the same intellectual level as we are?
|
|
Right. Nope. Right. Unplug it. Plug it back in. Oh, you want me to do a 30, 30, 30 already did a
|
|
30, 30, 30. What the fuck's a 30, 30, 30? Yeah, you're an idiot. You know, like, that's your minute
|
|
and a half right there. You just reset it. Dude, like, you know, like we've done all of this and
|
|
you guys just don't get it. Like, tier two, it should definitely be accessible, especially to
|
|
the, the business customers. I mean, it's like, wow, you won't even let us business guys talk
|
|
to a tier two. Are you serious? Like, I'm glad I didn't sign a three year contract to have
|
|
business net put in here. Like, I really am, you know, like, because I thought that would be the
|
|
one thing. I got a little bit better support. Oh, wow, you're here in four hours if I need you.
|
|
Wow. And four hours, I can probably call some other people and figure this shit out myself.
|
|
Yeah, it seems to be like Google, Google, Google. That's the only way you're going to do it.
|
|
You're just bust out your Google food and you're going to figure it out faster than the
|
|
freaking morons that you actually call. They're going to figure it out.
|
|
Oh, for sure, Google's friend. I swear to God, I spend so much time on there. I mean,
|
|
there's a lot of things that I've, a lot of situations that I've ran into. And I'm like, uh,
|
|
well, this is a first, you know, so I go to Google right away, YouTube. I freaking love YouTube.
|
|
I swear to God, I bought an Android stereo for my car. And it's got a big seven inch Android
|
|
touchscreen. And I bought that just so I can stream YouTube in my car while driving down the road.
|
|
And so I got like the YouTube red or whatever it's called. And I can start a show and then
|
|
actually go back to my navigation. So I just pretty much listened to it versus, uh, you know,
|
|
watching it while driving down the road. But yeah, I totally learned so much from YouTube that
|
|
it's, uh, it's that important for me to have access to it like everywhere.
|
|
Yeah, real quick. Termux, YouTube, DL, been my friend for like the last month and a half or so. But,
|
|
so my wife, my wife has, has recently become like, before I met her, she was, you know,
|
|
she was the basic like I taught her all the stuff about like, you know, unplug it and unplug it
|
|
let it reset and stuff like that for a minute and a half or whatever. I taught her all the basic stuff
|
|
and then at her work, she's become kind of like the PC freaking guru. She's just known how to do
|
|
things like, you know, when an update to something. So she works in a, a, a pediatric office.
|
|
So anytime and, um, the application that they use, I think, was based on
|
|
Silverlight originally. So anytime, like some of some things update, uh, uh, update and like,
|
|
it would broke, it would break, but she was working on. So she had to pull back the version of, um,
|
|
internet explorer or whatever, just so everything was still work right. But she's learned a lot of
|
|
that basic stuff, but uh, she's recently run into a problem where there was, uh, through active
|
|
directory, one of the, uh, prescription printers was, um, able to be seen, but not viewed through
|
|
things and whatnot. And I tried to explain her the whole idea of Google food. And she actually
|
|
thought that like, Google food was like a website or something. I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, no,
|
|
here's the thing. All IT people at some point gain their own personal skill and that skill is
|
|
called Google food. Google food is your ability to go use Google or whatever your search engine
|
|
probably, you know, your search engine is whether it's stuck to go or whatever and use your Google
|
|
food to figure out where the problem is because whatever problem you had, I'm going to guess
|
|
that 500 people before you probably had that exact same problem. So if you use your Google
|
|
food, go look printer, active directory, maybe even type of printer or whatever and just put in your,
|
|
your, your, your problems, find through your search out there. There's probably going to be a
|
|
freaking forum or, uh, uh, whatever, well, probably forum, most of these things are freaking forum
|
|
questions where somebody put this in there and there's like six different questions and you have
|
|
to go through those, uh, like the people who found different type of answers to things, your ability
|
|
to go through those and find out what the right answer is, that's your Google food. I explained
|
|
my wife what Google food is. I'm like, this is Google food. As soon as you go into any form of IT,
|
|
you got to learn and you got to harness your Google food. Oh, that is for sure. That is for sure.
|
|
And what do you say it's Google food? It is Google food. I mean, there is a difference between, uh,
|
|
um, you know, just normal searching and being like, uh, once you finally learn how to,
|
|
and you find fine tune your Google food, you will get how to search Google and search it properly
|
|
to really narrow down your results and get the answer you're looking for. That's right. You
|
|
have to narrow down your searches to exactly what you're looking for and then you got to search
|
|
through those forums or whatever because you might find out like you might get your, your question
|
|
right to exactly what you want it to be, but then you got to dig through those forums through
|
|
like the like, you can't go through the first couple of responses because those first couple of
|
|
responses might have worked for that person at that time, but then you got to go all the way down
|
|
to the end and dig, dig, dig and make sure that like the first response might have worked for him
|
|
then, but it might work for you later. And it's just you have to use your Google food. It is,
|
|
it is the IT. It is an IT and just skill. That's what it is. That's what I try to impart in her. I'm
|
|
like, look, I know you knew to this and you were been in your in your pediatric office. You have
|
|
been the IT ninja there because everybody else has basically, you know, their, their knowledge
|
|
about stuff has been limited to I know how to look, look on Facebook and I know how to look on
|
|
YouTube. And that's about it. And you have learned those skills, those skills that I've talked
|
|
that I've kind of, I like to say that I've taught, whether it's true or not, I like to say that I
|
|
taught the ability that, hey, don't be defeated. The answer is out there. You just have to look, go,
|
|
hey, if I just kind of dig down a little bit deeper, I know that this is out here that the
|
|
answers are out there. That's the beginnings of Google food. Google foods, you had to go out there
|
|
into Google, dig through those forums, dig through the things and answer and ask the right questions.
|
|
That's the big thing is you have to ask the right questions, dig through the right forums to
|
|
find that answer that's going to match exactly what you need. Try it out because you're going to try
|
|
a lot of things out. You're going to try a lot of things out before you hit that right answer.
|
|
Try them out, try everything out and then you're going to hit the right answer. That's your Google
|
|
food. It's a skill. It's a martial arts. It's a skill. First time I told the tour, she thought it
|
|
was a website. No, no, no, no, no, no. It is a skill that every IT person learns. It's your food.
|
|
Yeah, there's almost be a certification for it. Hell yeah. I just hit my vape and that thing went
|
|
right to the wrong spot. Like one of the best things I've ever done is quit smoking cigarettes.
|
|
What's this damn vape thing? So I quit smoking about six years ago and that was about the beginning of
|
|
the whole vaping craze. The first vaping thing I tried was an e-cigarette that was like
|
|
mostly just the frickin... It made my lips fucking numb afterwards. It tasted like a Mustang cigarette
|
|
and then made my lips numb. That's what it was. So I'm like, yeah, this is no good. But at that
|
|
point I had already quit for like a frickin' month anyways before I even tried that. So it was
|
|
that early in the stages of vaping and e-cigarettes and stuff. So I kind of feel depressed because I'd
|
|
love to find something like an e-cigarette or something that gave me the taste. I love love and
|
|
miss the taste of cigarettes because it's a frickin' fantastic. I miss it so much. If I could get
|
|
that back, I would love it. But I don't want any of the... I don't want any of the tobacco or
|
|
anything else. I'm so past all the rest of that stuff where I don't need it but I miss the taste
|
|
of all of it. Like a real good cigarette. I miss the taste of a good cigarette. But I've gone,
|
|
I was... I quit way too early before the new adaptation of things into e-cigarettes and vaping. So
|
|
I missed out on all that. Yeah, I had tried the original vapes like you had said and they were
|
|
absolutely garbage. I tried quitting with those things and it was like, yeah, this isn't happening.
|
|
And I did it a few times. And finally, it was a matter of finding the right,
|
|
you know, I guess the right vape, the right juice and everything else. And
|
|
can't say it's really saved me a lot of money at all. I mean, it's not necessarily cheaper. But
|
|
I don't feel it shitty, you know, with it. So I mean, it helps. I eventually I kind of want to
|
|
wean off of that too, you know, and not really smoke anything. Yeah, I kind of like, I quit because
|
|
I knew we were at this point, at that point in my life, we were trying to have a kid. We weren't
|
|
necessarily going to have one anytime real soon. We were trying to have a kid. And my wife and I,
|
|
and so we were. And so I knew I was going to have to probably quit. But at the same time, I was just,
|
|
I was feeling crappy all the time. And I'm one of those people where like seasonal allergies just
|
|
kicked my butt constantly. And like all that stuff just kicked my butt. So you know, I wasn't feeling
|
|
right every time I did, but I always loved, loved, like half the reason why I started smoking in the
|
|
first place is I'd be running into my brother's car. And my brother was a big smoker. And he
|
|
smoked these camel reds. And the car would just smell fucking heavenly. It was just this awesome,
|
|
awesome smell. And I just, that's what sold me on is I love the fucking smell of it. I loved like,
|
|
I love cigars. I love, I love the smell of like cigar. Like honestly, even more than that is,
|
|
I love the smell of fucking pipe tobacco. I have never smoked a pipe in my life. But I love the
|
|
smell of fucking pipe tobacco. Oh, it's so fucking, oh, it's so fucking beautiful. But I, you know,
|
|
I've never smoked a pipe before. I've seen so many people with their freaking face and freaking
|
|
paralysis or whatever from smoking pipes and stuff like that. And there's so many horrible side
|
|
effects, but I love that like we had, so I worked like food retail. We had a person who like one
|
|
of the vendors would always go outside and smoke a pipe. And I love the smell of pipe tobacco.
|
|
It's freaking fantastic. But I can, I've never done it. I never could do it. And I want to,
|
|
you know, I quit. But if I could get something that didn't have any of the negative effects,
|
|
but still gave me that taste because it's a taste. Like I could like tobacco and coffee together.
|
|
Oh, there's a fucking taste right there. Tobacco and coffee. First thing in the morning,
|
|
that's freaking fantastic. I missed a cigarette and coffee first thing in the morning.
|
|
I'm a horrible quitter when it comes to tobacco. I'm horrible. I missed stuff like that.
|
|
If you can make that without the side effects, I'd be a happy boy. Let's put that way.
|
|
And it's funny because actually that is my morning vape right there is a caramel macchiato
|
|
ejuice that's kind of got a very slight undertones of tobacco. And it is heavenly. I do hear
|
|
they've made an e-pipe now, but it is funny. You say that about pipe tobacco because that is one
|
|
of my favorite smells. It actually reminds me of my grandpa. One of my only memories of him was
|
|
sitting on a porch. He was in his rocking chair. I was sitting on the ottoman and he'd smoke a pipe
|
|
and I just loved the smell of that pipe. And every time I smell a pipe, now that's exactly what I
|
|
think of. Pipe tobacco to pipe tobacco has such a great freaking smell to it. I love cigars.
|
|
Cigars are fantastic. The hardest thing with cigars was after so long of smoking cigarettes was
|
|
not inhaling cigar smoke. And I mean, we had a place up here on the Cape where like everybody
|
|
else, right on the time where everybody at all the restaurants and every place was going completely
|
|
tobacco-free. There was a place called Puff the Magic Dragon where they sold like cigars and
|
|
cigarettes and like pipe tobacco and stuff like that. But they also had like a little bit of a
|
|
lounge where they would give you like you can get like coffee or tea they had like chest tables
|
|
set up and a television set up and where you can just buy like a nice cigar, sit down,
|
|
play a game of like chest or something or play a game and just sit there and like a nice
|
|
recliner and relax and like smoke of freaking I love cigars. I love pipe. I've never smoked a pipe
|
|
a pipe so we got pipe always pipe cigars pipe tobacco always small degrees and then cigar tobacco
|
|
always always freaking small. I love pipe tobacco and cigar tobacco. But I was you know I one of
|
|
I started off with the like jewel sweets. The first things I've ever smoked were like these
|
|
jewel sweets type cigars which were the cigars that had the wooden kind of filter as thing to it
|
|
and then from there I went to lucky strikes which the lucky strike non-filtered tobacco and then
|
|
I went into like cigarettes with occasional cigars and like really really freaking enjoyed the
|
|
occasional cigar and went into like I love freaking cigar smoke. I missed it so much.
|
|
God damn it now I'm gonna worry a lot about it. I start talking about it and I really want to
|
|
like like reel tobacco again but yeah I know my wife probably several other people would kill me
|
|
if I ever freaking smoke anything ever again. I would really wish someone would come out with like an
|
|
e-cigarette or like a vape type thing where I can actually get the experience of like a cigar or
|
|
a pipe tobacco and not have all the problems. I'm pretty sure they got a e-pipe thing and an e-cigar
|
|
even I don't know what the flavors are but I mean I see that they you know blow clouds on
|
|
on you know much like you would a normal pipe or a cigar and that's always been the downfall
|
|
of those little you know little tiny original e-cigs that they had was that you would never really
|
|
get a true drag off of that thing. I mean it was like you blow the tiniest little cloud and
|
|
the shittiest flavor. Yeah the biggest thing is the flavor. You gotta have that flavor to it.
|
|
That's that's that's something that always drove that drove me to it and was the flavor.
|
|
I bet you if you would have if you would have got into the vaping this this stuff this caramel
|
|
macchiato town. If you like a good coffee I guess this one you know the caramel macchiato that's
|
|
what is you know all the fancy coffees much like a Starbucks one. Well then I have a double shot
|
|
one and that's just more of your uh more of your stronger coffee I mean it's got a little bit of a
|
|
sweet taste and a little bit of a tobacco undertone too so um very good uh morning vape.
|
|
Oh second I need back in two seconds I've been drinking beer and all this and uh yeah not like a
|
|
make sure I'm drinking a whole lot and uh fuck has been.
|
|
Sorry sorry that's very good. So all throughout the podcast I've been doing this uh
|
|
this uh yeah and about a tropical uh torpedo and then and then since then I've been
|
|
drinking my home uh homemade mead. I'm just gonna kick like you. I'm just gonna kick like a
|
|
mule. I love and miss mead. Not sure how well it balances out with like any real mead.
|
|
But uh make it homemade that up like uh homemade that up like uh honey and stuff so it's I guess
|
|
it falls in the sink. I guess it falls in the sink. Calculate is made and it's stronger.
|
|
Yeah it's stronger shit but I'm not sure how I'm taste level however but it falls with mead.
|
|
Yeah I don't know I I remember having it. Oh shit I bet yeah yeah that's gotta be
|
|
15 years ago man like I was like 16 17 years old uh they had it twice actually uh one of my
|
|
bodies he made it and should I remember that stuff was so expensive to make then another one of
|
|
my buddies uh and I went up to the Renaissance festival and they had some up there.
|
|
God that shit's so good. Yeah I'm not sure my ship will fall in the same category
|
|
but um it definitely falls in the same category as uh probably ABV levels because it'll
|
|
definitely do a job. I am about three down um do you drink at all? I actually don't drink a lot but I
|
|
I make my own Kaluah my own coffee liquor. I have no problem with that that's coffee liquor is
|
|
freaking fantastic. I've gotten more recently into IPAs. I'm more of a stout or a porter man
|
|
but um so I've gotten into like the Sierra Nevada torpedo IPAs and then I a while back got into
|
|
making my own stuff like through uh Mr. Beer and things like that and I've decided I wanted to make
|
|
my own meat and so I bought a freaking buttload of honey. I put it in a pot boil that shit up and uh
|
|
I got some uh from one of the local breweries so one of the local breweries used to deal more
|
|
in home brewery stuff and then more recently they've gotten more into being more of
|
|
they're more of like I don't know I don't know how to describe it they wouldn't do like brewery
|
|
tours they do like farmer's markets and like the local uh local um uh my wife went there when they
|
|
did a local creamery so like ice cream and beer and stuff like that type of things but it used to be
|
|
more just like uh local brewery and like home brewers and stuff like that so they'd have like a lot
|
|
of home brewers supply stuff and I got some I got a like champagne used from there and so I put uh
|
|
I did a bought a buttload of honey did some champagne used and made my own homemade meat
|
|
and I find that it's stronger shit and if you mix it with some OJ it's stronger shit and palatable
|
|
but if uh you're already three beers in it's stronger shit and already palatables because you're
|
|
in the bag anyway so yeah that's awesome yeah yeah I like uh I could stout beer too I'm not
|
|
a huge on IPAs but um I do like a few of them my my go-to drink is definitely a white rush and
|
|
though um my deal with the whole colloua thing is is that or coffee liquor whatever you want to
|
|
call it like you go to the store that's all it is it's just coffee liquor there's nothing more
|
|
nothing less it's just losing coffee um me I kind of like to throw a little twist on it you know
|
|
do like uh white chocolate raspberry or a caramel truffle or you know just uh go a little bit fancy with
|
|
it now not with you um I mean I would I for the longest time I loved straight up freaking uh I
|
|
mean I I did screw drivers for a while I did white Russian black Russian didn't matter
|
|
colloua is freaking great anything coffee related is freaking fantastic I could never ever argue with
|
|
anything coffee related at all ever yeah um so when it comes to things like porters and porters
|
|
and stouts like if you can get like a good like coffee porter coffee stout those are always fantastic
|
|
but I don't know what the hell it is that like recently I've gotten into IPAs to the point where
|
|
but the only I really like is like citrusy IPAs so this is searing avadas tropical torpedo IPA
|
|
and I think like other like more citrusy IPAs are going to be a little bit better like I'm going
|
|
to enjoy a little bit better than so now the ones that are what I like to call my stout my um my
|
|
hops can beat up your hops type IPAs which are just kind of funky yeah like I hate the super
|
|
hobby beers I mean it's just uh bitter oh exactly like I I first started off with like
|
|
Guinness and stuff and then I got into like more of the um the fancy freaking uh stout some
|
|
orders and whatnot and I found that there's a lot of them that are good and there's a lot of
|
|
no bad they like a lot of this um oh I want to call home brew but it's not home brew uh I figured
|
|
the whole thing with it is but it's it's so freaking hit or miss with things where it's out there
|
|
going to be just awesome or it's going to be freaking horrible but it's kind of fun to kind of
|
|
just go through the motions to calculate the micro brews exactly that's that's probably
|
|
what I'm going for is it's it's it's all the micro brews it's it's you know so many you know you have
|
|
so many local things um like around here we have so many uh local breweries um like one of the
|
|
main people who do this podcast is 5150 up in uh which talk Kansas he's he's he talks about
|
|
there's so many uh breweries around there that are uh local and whatnot so that every every
|
|
locale seems to have their like local micro brew breweries that are huge in their area and they all
|
|
seem to have their own versions of things like IPAs, Porter's regular frigginales and whatnot and
|
|
it's it's it's a lot of fun to kind of figure out where they are which which ones you want to
|
|
choose you know which which which ones are nice which ones are not which ones you know oh it's
|
|
it's I really enjoy the whole micro brewery thing that's going on versus like beforehand where
|
|
people had just like Budweiser course you know corona uh if you're cheap you go to the natural
|
|
ice and stuff like that once you hit a certain I feel like it's once you hit a certain age where
|
|
you can actually chew you can actually have discrimination with um what you choose for choice
|
|
for beer and whatnot there the broad freaking range of things that are out there that you can choose
|
|
from whether it's local or whether it's just a craft brewery that's that's become mainstream I'm like
|
|
I think severe Sierra Nevada has become a craft brewery that's just kind of mainstream at this
|
|
point so there's so many things out there that you can try that are just freaking awesome you know
|
|
that the fall in that category of you know do you want to drink just get drunk or do you want to
|
|
drink because there is actually some freaking flavor flavor out there you need to try oh I totally
|
|
agree I uh you know there's I literally hate the quintessential American beer whatever you
|
|
want to call it like you know the the Budweiser the natural ice or freaking hams I mean that should
|
|
just like it's water I mean it's essentially it's pure freaking water with a little bit of spice
|
|
I mean it's gross uh once these microbes started you know becoming really popular you know it's like
|
|
it's just a amount of different flavors you can get you know you're talking about the the whole ice cream
|
|
thing you know that's actually something you know we would have never thought of as kids you know
|
|
let's jump our let's let's make a beer float you know like we would have never made beer floats as a
|
|
kid I mean you know a gross I would have been having a beer float made out of anhyzer bush yuck nowadays
|
|
though that's just good stuff yeah you think a good porter ice cream with like a good coffee or
|
|
good chocolate ice cream that's probably pretty damn good it's really good I've had it a couple of
|
|
times that uh some of the breweries in Colorado there's like shit tons there it's really surprising
|
|
how many like local breweries are starting to pop up uh just on this area because I live in uh
|
|
kick out Massachusetts whether if you're if you're looking at a map of the uh america or Massachusetts
|
|
it's that little arm that sticks out of uh Massachusetts that's us so we've had like so many
|
|
little breweries start to pop up here and there to the point where we can probably run like our own
|
|
brewery tour during the summertime um and it's like the local one like kick out brewery like one of
|
|
the more bigger ones around the the bigger ones around here it has just like they've completely
|
|
they've they've been so friggin smart they've worked with one of the local creameries which is
|
|
four seas ice cream so kick out ice cream and like like so many other places and like the MSPCA
|
|
they'll work with the MSPCA they'll work with like they'll work with like the um they'll work with
|
|
um like some of the farmers markets and whatnot and they'll they'll do everything they can to try to
|
|
get themselves out there as being like their local brewery type of deal and it's just so friggin smart
|
|
they do like the things that they've sitting out to all of the um like they've they've been almost
|
|
chastised from the snobs in the area as they'll find a niche and they'll just kind of stick to that
|
|
niche so they'll find like they're red they're you know friggin al they're frying their their
|
|
porter and they'll just kind of stick with that but that's the stuff that they just send to like
|
|
the liquid local liquor stores or whatever but like if you go to the brewery or some of the stuff
|
|
that they send out to like they'll experiment with the stuff that they'll send out to like some of
|
|
the uh local restaurants that they'll they'll send like their kegs out to the local restaurants and
|
|
whatnot so they'll they'll they'll try like funky porters and stuff like that but the base
|
|
porter that they have they'll send out to their uh they'll the local liquor stores and whatnot so
|
|
i don't know i'm i'm i'm i'm a i love uh i love a good alcohol i love i love the idea of
|
|
making your own beer i love the idea of other people making their own beer i think it's a
|
|
friggin great idea i love drinking uh i b a's porters doubts and stuff like that i think this
|
|
fricking fan-tastic so i'm i'm i'm i'm completely into all that stuff so you know you you do all
|
|
that stuff locally it's just it's it's it's a fricking great idea for me there's there's ones that
|
|
run on um like i said there's the Cape Cod beer ones there's the Cisco brewery that's named
|
|
Tucket which is the islands right off of Massachusetts the uh off of Cape Cod um there's uh like
|
|
Barnesville brewery just started up which is a local brewery uh run right in the Barnesville area
|
|
there's so many look freaking local brewery it's it's fricking fantastic around here that
|
|
you know and i'm sure a lot of the local areas have this and i feel like i've just started
|
|
rambling on and i've forgotten where the hell i've gotten into in the first place
|
|
i'm sure i had a point i don't remember what it was anymore i'm sorry
|
|
no it's all good no i i how many local breweries are actually starting nowadays because
|
|
like in Colorado it's like 10 grand to get uh just the licensing to uh to brew your own beer
|
|
let alone all the money and the brewing equipment
|
|
and the i don't think it's that much around here because like i said there's there's so many
|
|
small breweries that are just starting to pop up there's like uh i guess it's Cisco i think is
|
|
part of one of the islands so we are browned Cape Cod so if you look at the uh if you look at a
|
|
map of Massachusetts it's got a little arm and then it's got two major islands sticking off of it
|
|
and what is Martha's Vineyard one is Dan's Tucket i think it's one of the islands that
|
|
Discovery is man Tucket maybe i don't know but it's one it's awful one of the main islands there
|
|
and then you have Kikot Brewery which is right there in high-endous you have Garnesville Brewery
|
|
which just started up which is right out of high-endous there it's right actually right off of
|
|
28 high-endous there's one of the main roads in the high-endous and it's there's there's just like
|
|
so many things are just starting to pop up that it's just it's fricking fantastic i love it
|
|
it's and if you want to even tie it back to the whole like open-source idea of things
|
|
so they people talk about free as in beer so they they talk about free as in beer as because
|
|
the whole concept of beer is the recipe is completely freaking open for beer but what you do with
|
|
it after that is your own secret sauce so you take something like let's say a buntu is your free
|
|
as a beer and then you put your own secret sauce on top of that like let's say Linux Mint where you
|
|
take Linux Mint is known for all of the like MP3 codex is in all the codex is in
|
|
maybe even like the Wi-Fi the Broadcom stuff that is not necessarily as open and a lot of the other
|
|
stuff make that open in in their version so they take that open version and they make that open
|
|
version of things and that's how the whole concept of free as in beer is and i think i might have
|
|
lost it in my mind my mind my way because i lost my train of thought because once again three
|
|
tropical torpedo IPAs and one of my own homemade meats and here i am well apparently some good
|
|
strong shit huh at the very least it's a lot of really good strong shit
|
|
well that's always good it's nice to be able to to relax live i would actually have a beer tonight
|
|
but i have to work tomorrow morning yay me too but the first and third Friday month i kind of
|
|
why normally i'm i usually get off by like midnight anyways but you know i made a section exception
|
|
this week but i really hope you come back i mean normally we try to you know stick more to the idea
|
|
of talking about Linux type topics but we usually try to we do a lot of bsing as well
|
|
so i really do hope you do come back because i like talking to you oh yeah i probably will come back
|
|
i mean it's just uh it gets nuts um i'm hoping like i said i got uh like a week left of school
|
|
as long as i pass everything but you know with everything else that's going on it's been awful
|
|
hard to do school but i'm sliding along uh but yeah i do enjoy it and you know being one that's
|
|
just getting into Linux i mean i've been a windows guy my whole life and so it's quite the uh
|
|
quite the learning curve i'll tell you that so i was a windows guy for freaking ages and the
|
|
biggest thing that sort of me away from Linux was right around xp when windows decided it was
|
|
going to go freaking crazy with it's um licensing of things so i played around that you know i used
|
|
like window like uh DOS file panel where somebody would have you know my father had a copy of DOS
|
|
and we just i would use it he would use it he'd give it you know if he worked on somebody else's
|
|
computer he would use it as well same thing with 3.1 3.1 was that way um
|
|
2008 and 2000 was still kind of that way and then you went into xp and xp got a little way to
|
|
intense and let's stuff xp all of a sudden it became that you know you had to have license
|
|
you know that you were certain license or xp would just kind of shut down on me it was around
|
|
about that time that i also started taking classes to uh so i wanted to switch my careers to
|
|
something more it based and so i took the a plus certs which is the um comtea certification
|
|
computer appearance of like that was the a plus certs and i went into that and i failed
|
|
miserably and so i decided i made me might need some actual like training involved as opposed to
|
|
just my you know usual bs i've just kind of take these computers and do with them with them
|
|
so i took some actual training at the local community college they had a uh pc repair course
|
|
and one of parts of the courses was just you know comtea a plus prep and so during that taking
|
|
that that class um the teacher there taught us about like dual booting and stuff like that
|
|
like part of it was uh actually building a pc from the ground up he bought some like uh from
|
|
new egg or whatever so bare road systems so we both got a case i'm on the board and a cpu
|
|
and we were we were supposed to basically build it from from uh the ground up and doing that he's
|
|
like look we can put windows on this and then we can also put these other operating systems i found
|
|
this um magazine called a boom two and it had different versions of a boom two and other versions
|
|
of Linux on it and one of them being like free spire and free spire was this uh kd version that was
|
|
based on lens fire and like had its own uh new version to like application repository and stuff
|
|
like that and like i had this own app store and whatnot and it was new and interesting and it didn't
|
|
require a um like at the right around that time xp started getting very very very very very tight
|
|
on their um licensing so i had no problem i bought a license an xp license i was like a failing
|
|
license so i was able to put it on like different machines or whatever and my wife was in college
|
|
at the time i even went up buying at some point for her a uh microsoft office
|
|
family license which let me put it on several different machines and but it it just it bugged
|
|
me that the licensing was there you know and it it got to a point where i was so used to the
|
|
past where we'd buy version of like dots or windows 3.1 or 98 like i didn't like windows 2,000
|
|
windows 2,000 was i don't know i didn't like windows 2,000 i stayed with 98 until xp
|
|
excuse me and um it felt like you know i spent so many years with just you know if you had a
|
|
version of it you could spread it around and give it to friends and whatever it was the operating
|
|
system the operating system is the base system that the thing is you know you just run applications
|
|
and if that became a struggle to be able to get that operating system and then these guys were
|
|
giving it away for free and they gave in what they gave me and i got to see the one the biggest
|
|
selling points was the versions of at the time it was leap office it was open office was doing all
|
|
the things that you know um DOCX was just starting out so you know DOCX and whatever
|
|
for their spreadsheet programs or whatnot i think just whatever the spreadsheet program plus x
|
|
was what they were doing to try to conform to things but i was using free spire and free spire
|
|
had a version of open office that had the ability to open all of those programs as well and that
|
|
just freaking sold me on monics because i had this free version of things where i had
|
|
complete control and it would do all the things that i needed to do for school and whatnot
|
|
yeah i i think the biggest thing for me why i haven't really been into Linux much is i mean i'm
|
|
trying it a couple of times i've always veered away was because of the lack i guess of available
|
|
software that was easily compatible with it and i guess it depends on what what type of software
|
|
you're looking for because like i said this the the operating system was called free spire it came
|
|
with open office installed with DOCX compatibility right out of the bat and this is probably going
|
|
back uh now it's probably about nine eight nine years ago if i do thousand i was in school so
|
|
2008-2009 when i would uh i went back into uh a little community college to do all this
|
|
and it had all the available availability to do all this stuff into edit all these you know DOCX and
|
|
whatever the spreadsheet file version plus x version this and it had the ability to edit these
|
|
to you know take in these programs and edit them without any problems without paying for the operating
|
|
system anyway i dealt some along in the past where DOCX and wherever was DOC uh you know when it was
|
|
3.1 when it was 98 was never that strict when it came to the operating system you know when you
|
|
would spread it out as much as you want this is the operating system you know if you wanted
|
|
if you wanted to pay for something pay for the application the operating system was a freaking
|
|
operating system you know and so i was able to do all the things in a free operating system
|
|
and then i went and i got a little creative i'm like look uh this is free spire it's based on
|
|
kde i went into the um i don't think it was a new config file that i just wouldn't renamed
|
|
a bunch of the dot png files so that the little uh it used to bounce around uh if you ever use kde
|
|
kde has this little k gear type thing um free spire had like every time you click on something it
|
|
it have a like this little squash and stretch of the kde gear image and i switched that to a
|
|
renamed everything so that the um tox which is just that penguin that the uh linux uh you know
|
|
the linux um images is just this little low penguin so i changed it to from the kitty gear to
|
|
the penguin and i did that just by renaming some files i'm like well that's freaking cool where
|
|
this much control over things where i can change where the start menu is all of a sudden it's
|
|
no longer a little k gear it's a tux penguin plus every single time that i click on an application
|
|
to start it is this little tux penguin going uh you know doing this little squash and stretch
|
|
as opposed to whatever else plus i have the ability through open office to open and configure
|
|
these files that was supposed to be proprietary for windows and it works fine so why am i going to
|
|
bash my head against the wall and spend this money with windows when i can do all this for free
|
|
and have this amount of configurability so i just stopped using windows i got to a point where i
|
|
was dual booting for a while and one of the only dual boots i had was for um i used to rip DVDs
|
|
and when i found things like handbrake it all just went away right didn't need to have this other
|
|
dual version of um you know you know this dual boot of windows and linux and be able to use their
|
|
office programs and rip the DVDs that i wanted and whatever else i mean a lot of people say that
|
|
you know i use windows still because of windows games and whatnot i was never a computer pc gamer
|
|
i had such a hard time with pc gaming because pc gaming meant that my pc had to be at the level
|
|
of the games and the games would come out for different consoles and stuff that was just
|
|
too quick and high so games would come out and like the requirements for uh GPU levels
|
|
was too high than whenever i had but they were still available for like consoles so i just bought
|
|
consoles because if you buy like an xbox 360 most of the games that came out were available
|
|
for the xbox 360 but if you try to buy them for the pc you had to have a certain level of
|
|
piece of a GPU to be able to get that that game to run right so i never really got into the whole
|
|
gaming on pc because gaming on pc always required me to buy a GPU that was way higher and way
|
|
more expensive than what i wanted to do so i was oh excuse me i was always in the console gaming
|
|
over uh computer pc gaming so once pc got to level between gimp and open office and everything else
|
|
that i needed to do i switched straight to Linux and then for any sort of gaming i went to console
|
|
gaming because i don't want to spend the money on pc gaming and gpu's to do pc gaming
|
|
i agree i've never really been much into gaming a whole on the pc because you know like it just
|
|
requires way too much money invested to do that um and you know pionist who wants the game on a tiny
|
|
little you know like laptop or whatever but uh i don't know there's there's certain like programs
|
|
i run you know um uh for instance i uh do some you know testing and marketing and building e-commerce
|
|
sort of profiles and so some of the software i used for them you know it uh it's a windows software
|
|
so i really need to learn like you know wine or whatever and and try to get some of these
|
|
programs that are you know specifically for windows to try uh to to work with Linux and
|
|
you know i find i'm using less and less uh that are uh programs that are strictly for windows
|
|
um you know another one i used to is like uh sony vagus pro i use that uh uh to tinker
|
|
around with and do video editing um and that's uh windows um i think mac but i don't think they
|
|
have a Linux version yeah video editing on one x has just been kind of pyrames over time um it's
|
|
you can do it and there are a lot of tools out there where you can do it
|
|
and different levels of uh like what your knowledge is when it comes to some of this stuff
|
|
like technically you can you know edit video and stuff on blender and um we have a friend and
|
|
a friend of the show uh Jason van gumster or fweeb who is quite literally the he wrote the book
|
|
quite literally wrote the book of dummies to uh blender but you can do blend you can
|
|
do like video editing with blender but there are other um video editing software out there um
|
|
um that aren't necessarily as good or as intuitive as other things so i can never say that like
|
|
video editing software is at the level where it should be when it comes to other things out there
|
|
if you want to do like picture editing and stuff then i can definitely say that between gimp
|
|
and blender you should be able to get to where you want to go when i come to a lot of that
|
|
and even like dark room and other stuff so if you take it like a picture and you want to do
|
|
whatever with it um like i i i can even like again the guy who wrote like he is he is our freaking
|
|
rock when it comes to um open source uh image editing because he can do he is the guy who wrote
|
|
the book called idiots to uh blender i mean but the idiots for blender he wrote the book to it
|
|
is Jason van gumster or fweeb he is a member of our community so he can he if i had any sort of
|
|
image problems he is the guy i know to go to but outside of that realm like like like video editing
|
|
video editing is like uh open shot open shot is a really good program that crashes a lot
|
|
but we'll do the job is there other programs for windows and mac that'll probably do it better
|
|
yeah there's a lot of programs that fight well and there's a couple of um open source ones that
|
|
will probably do it as well but it's it's at a point where if you really want to do video editing
|
|
you're probably better off in windows or mac anyways and as much i love i love i love lilyx i love it
|
|
because of just the openness and i'm not talking about the openness in the um the source code and
|
|
because there's a lot of people out there who know source code who appreciate the fact that
|
|
the source code is out there and i appreciate them but i appreciate the fact that i'm not spending
|
|
hundred dollars on my freaking operating system i'm not spending hundred dollars on
|
|
Photoshop when i can spend nothing on gimp when i can probably do the exact same thing
|
|
for the most part of what i want to do you know and and there's lots of of similar applications i'm
|
|
i'm so glad i i'm i'm not spending a hundred dollars or so on you know Microsoft office or office
|
|
360 to be able to do what i could do with like open office libra office or whatever you know it's
|
|
there's there's so many tools out there that'll come close to what it is and video editing is
|
|
probably one big big big biggest struggles when it comes to open source versus close source versions
|
|
of things but i've used open saw open office in the past and i've been able to another
|
|
open office um i forget what that all it's called now but i've been able to make
|
|
videos in the past and edit videos in the past and it's not been great it's not been super but you
|
|
know what i enough to pay for it and i'm not sure i can't tell you at this point right now
|
|
what is because i'm a cheap or whether i'm poor but out of the way i appreciate the fact that i
|
|
did not pay for it and the amount of configurability between like uh if you heard me talk earlier about
|
|
lightning i love lightning because there's so much configurability to the way i want to run my desktop
|
|
when it comes to simple things like always on top and if you've never had always on top you take one
|
|
like let's say you're let me tell you where i use always on top the podcast
|
|
cry updated i put this up this podcast i will later on use a bash script that i use to come
|
|
push altogether sometimes i'll use it so that any of the talk before the actual show will get put
|
|
on at the end of the show and put the bumpers on you know the music in between and whatnot
|
|
and i'll truncate silence and whatnot and then i'll update or archive that or
|
|
and then i will um take it and then i'll take all everything and upgrade it to WordPress but i mean
|
|
uh fuck i lost my point
|
|
grab a little smoke i'm sorry i'm sorry i've rambled to the point where i would don't more where i was
|
|
anymore um i know it was about uh you uh why you always you are why you like to use the always
|
|
on top which by the way why did windows get rid of that because that was an awesome feature
|
|
yes when i archive when i but when i post things are archive.org archive.org always ask for
|
|
a ton of information and i have most of information on a just general txt file which i leave always
|
|
on top so when i'm posting all that stuff to archive.org i'll leave the web browser open
|
|
and then i'll leave this text file open and whatever text file program will open
|
|
doesn't matter doesn't matter what it is and i'll always leave it always on top so i can
|
|
you know copy and paste paste copy and paste copy paste copy paste just directly i'll have this
|
|
thing of this this text file always on top so i can copy it all of that default information into
|
|
the um archive that or word information because archive that will ask for like a bunch of
|
|
data information about things to know like when the like when i when i post this podcast it'll be
|
|
like uh when this podcast when we record it um you know who recorded will put like lugcast.com
|
|
and lugcast you know the data was recorded and um metadata stuff was like lug was like lugcast
|
|
and stuff like that and so but to have that that txt file opened and have it always on top it's just
|
|
it's it's a huge thing that is not available on like on like windows anymore or on like windows
|
|
unless you have like the certain plug-in that you pay for or whatever the ability to be able to
|
|
change all of that and the ability to have things that are just like always on top is for
|
|
fantastic which is why i don't understand why other people don't use Linux desktops because of
|
|
the can just configure ability the amount of things that you can do with a Linux desktop versus
|
|
just like a regular Linux windows desktop is just fricking phenomenal but you know i'm not
|
|
going to complain you know the amount of people who use like games you said you like uh
|
|
call duty i love call duty but like i said before i am a huge idea of the console game because
|
|
i've noticed i had to pay the money for uh for you know graphics cards and whatnot i love the
|
|
call duty whatnot so uh you know i understand people who want to use windows systems for gaming
|
|
and whatnot i don't understand that but it comes with simple things like you know office
|
|
browser and whatnot why not use something that they can connect you can figure and use and pipe
|
|
and whatnot just it baffles me i've rambled on way too long i uh i agree i do like uh i i'm probably
|
|
always going to have to use windows at some point you know i mean there's just certain things
|
|
i'm going to end up having to use it for but uh i do like using the Linux uh i got it by
|
|
me i have two laptops one when Linux one without uh eventually they're both going to be probably
|
|
dual boots um and i'll just go right to my uh right to either oh probably like king win i get some of
|
|
the um what do you want to call them product keys or whatever from them uh i can't stand paying
|
|
a hundred dollars for an operating system either so um i tried to go and find like somebody that
|
|
uh that's reselling oem licenses and you can usually get them cheap fact i just bought windows 10
|
|
for like i think five bucks windows 10 looks so miserable so miserable i mean i
|
|
so my mother-in-law just got a laptop my father-in-law just bought my mother-in-law laptop that was
|
|
like it was like a core i7 with like 16 user ram and stuff like that i'm like yeah you really can't
|
|
go wrong with this hardware because this hardware looks fucking phenomenal that you're not going
|
|
to need anything you're not going to need like any upgrades or anything for like a long time
|
|
pretty much especially for what you're doing this is like the best thing for you just get the
|
|
freaking laptop she really wanted like a desktop type thing i'm like look you can make the
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freaking laptop like almost like a desktop anyways just you you can almost like use the laptop
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as your monitor and just use it like a freaking desktop anyways it's not that big of a deal
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this thing is a core i7 with like eight or like a gigs of ram or something like that i'm like
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that's more than you're ever ever going to need for what you need have for like web browser and
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like office and but windows 10 is so so ugly that i'm like i really i really want to put linux
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on this but i'm just going to leave it alone because i know that probably more than likely
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windows 10 is going to server right it's going to do what she wants it to do i put that i actually
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put libra office on there just go like look i don't want you to ever pay for my nose office
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libra office is going to be free it's going to work with all of the doc x versions or whatever
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the two have that you're going to need it's going to work fine i'm just going to put the reversion
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libra office you know maybe down the line i'll make sure that you have like firefox or something
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installed that you know decent browser but you know that when those tennis so horrible looking
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looking it's so horrible it's not as bad as eight that whole metro info metro interface but it's
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pretty close oh i can't stand eight that was the biggest mistake ever um well yeah that was the
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biggest mistake right along with vista you know a close second i was it was worse viscer or eight
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it seems to be like xp good vista crap seven good you know eight crap ten i don't know we're
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ten pulls and all this but it's not eight and it's not vista so there you go i don't mind ten i mean it's
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i i'm partial you know personally i i i do miss um i like seven seven wasn't bad but she
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needed to be honest i think one of my favorite operating systems of all time was windows 98
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maybe it's just because that's what i'm rocked for years i mean i almost hated going to xp
|
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as like what you know but uh i don't know i i kind of almost missed 98 days 98 i didn't like uh
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2000 i thought actually xp i thought it was saying on the same level as 98 so i was able to accept
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xp um but i'm with you i didn't i i never i i did 98 i never did 2000 i had this and suffer
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it for 2000 i'm like no 2000 is freaking horrible so i stayed with 98 until xp and then i did xp
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a lot of there's a lot of like my wife's machine was uh vista and she cut there's a couple of
|
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features of vista that you'd like and tree maybe actually at one point kick it back to vista
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|
and vista i don't like vista but i i don't mind seven so xp to seven seven's not that big of a deal
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but i don't like i don't like eight and i don't like what i've seen with ten i think ten is about
|
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the same way as i don't think ten is that far off from eight it's like uh a little cleaner version
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of eight maybe yeah eight without the tiles exactly but it's not that far off from the tiles because
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it puts the tiles in what it's it's start far and that's about the start menu yeah and i think
|
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you can get rid of them oh i think so but it's definitely not as uh you know easily
|
|
editable as like uh linux would be that's for sure and it's definitely not as clean as like seven
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|
and you know xp was um but as far as everything working with it you know i haven't had the headaches
|
|
as i have had with like you know vista vista was horrible when that dropped i was actually working
|
|
for gateway talk about a fucking nightmare yeah vista was just a freaking lightweight that's what
|
|
it was it was just it was way too much it didn't i feel like every other version of windows
|
|
they just didn't know what they were doing like i said 98 great i stayed with 98 until xp and then
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when xp came around i like skipped over two thousand i skipped so two thousand and the m e version
|
|
i skipped over them completely and went straight to xp i did xp up until uh wino 7 i did uh i actually
|
|
did wino 7 rc the release candidate and then up until the point the release the release of uh wino 7
|
|
and around at that time i got into linux and i'm like why am i gonna put crown with this when i
|
|
have the openness of linux and i can do things like i was in college you know but it's a kidney
|
|
college but i was in college and i was doing and then one of the oc x and you know open office was
|
|
doing the oc x and libra and um you open office why am i gonna bother with that why bother paying
|
|
money for open office if it's there you know oh i agree i i use open office a lot while
|
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i do i use a lot but i also i guess now as of recently i've been using um microsoft base simply
|
|
because i got it free for being a college student which reminds me why the fuck don't they give away
|
|
windows anymore they used to give that away to college kids nowadays nope i have no idea um
|
|
give me two minutes again me starting to catch up the catch up with me yeah i kind of hope that
|
|
kind of hate that fact that that half the reason why i feel like i am involved in open source is
|
|
because the fact of i really do not want to pay for my operating system or other applications
|
|
but it almost feels like i can see other applications but i don't feel like i should pay for my
|
|
operating system you know yeah i agree i mean you can't use your computer without the os so why
|
|
should i have to pay for the os right and i feel like back in the day when i was running like
|
|
dos five my father had a version of dos five and he put it on my machine his machine
|
|
and like if he helped out of the people other people's machines as well and it wasn't that big of a
|
|
deal but with once xp hit it was xp you know you had to have your licensing version and i like
|
|
xp but to have that licensing version you had to pay what ninety dollars or something like that and
|
|
you know it's it became a giant freaking pain in the ass just to have your version of the operating
|
|
system with was the base system that the you know you have to do anything with
|
|
yeah i agree i i uh i do miss the fact like we said earlier how you used to be able to just buy
|
|
buy the software put on you know multiple computers nowadays you buy a windows key unless
|
|
you spend a whole shit load of money that thing's only good for like one or two possible
|
|
tops two computers so i bought when i was in college the license for microsoft office for
|
|
whatever version of office it was for three machines and i kept it like my wife's machine
|
|
her mother's machine and somebody else's machine or whatever and it was just they were okay like
|
|
past that i think they were a little more flexible when i came to office when i came like xp
|
|
they were a little a little bit tighter on like that i had to call up microsoft support and they're like
|
|
oh so what you wanted to tell me was that you switched uh you changed your um
|
|
motherboard and that because you changed your motherboard it seems like a whole other computer
|
|
that you're using and you know i'm then like yes that's exactly it so i have three different
|
|
versions on these three different machines as opposed to these three different machines
|
|
which was actually pretty good to come uh compared to all the uh we were talking about before
|
|
about the tier one support and whatnot dealing with microsoft was a great deal easier than dealing
|
|
with any isp you have ever dealt with oh yeah for sure and you know as long as you can get over
|
|
the fact that you're probably going to be talking to somebody with a very strong accent that you
|
|
can hardly understand so as you can get the past at that point the people were at least very
|
|
educated and knew what the hell they were talking about and you know quite helpful
|
|
yeah i think the um video editing i think is one of those things that
|
|
what seems to have a hard time that uh Linux has a hard time creating getting towards
|
|
so i think uh gimp has done a good job of replacing Photoshop i think audacity can do any if you
|
|
want to do between audacity and socks if you want to do any sort of audio editing you can do it
|
|
in Linux with that any problem whatsoever and with like you can do whatever you want with it
|
|
audacity is beautiful beautiful so if you if you want to do audio editing if you look at audacity yet
|
|
you're doing yourself a great disservice because audacity is such such an awesome awesome tool for
|
|
that video editing it seems like we have not figured it the open source community has not
|
|
figured it out yet open shot is pretty good it crashes a lot but it's pretty good i actually have
|
|
me personally i have one video on youtube that i did it's under the category of Linux basics
|
|
and qem you do those those two searches you'll probably find it and you'll probably find what
|
|
i did and it's not great but you know what i did it and it worked and i was able to edit it
|
|
and you know it's okay but you're not going to find any great tools out there for it uh
|
|
we're struggling the door one source community is so struggling when it comes to video editing
|
|
audio editing on the inside we have freaking i think i said we've mastered audacity in between
|
|
audacity and socks socks i can use the command line so i can write and spray some scripts
|
|
the scripts and audacity if you want a GUI to edit audio with it is freaking beautiful for
|
|
but video forget about it um i don't know i just i i i want to go back to the whole idea of after so
|
|
so many years of just working with windows and then later paying for windows and i just i'm like
|
|
i found this thing called free spire i can edit do cx i can edit files that i want i have
|
|
on it and then i can then uh change it to do whatever i want to do it was just fantastic
|
|
and so i just went well why am i using windows in the first place i use it for the one program that was
|
|
you know uh i was ripping basically video files i was using it to copy
|
|
i forget the problem it was called but i used to copy uh DVDs so i copy DVDs
|
|
make a copy of DVDs and it wasn't until later on then i found the program a handbrake
|
|
handbrake is by the way if you're not a jazz handbrake is fantastic for ripping DVDs and stuff
|
|
like that i'll rip it to i cut in a habit of um we go tomorrow local library i'd get my daughter
|
|
Scooby-Doo and so we'd get Scooby-Doo movies and videos or whatever and i would rip them
|
|
and put them on my sombre share which was also my media tomb media share and my DVD player
|
|
one thing where we'd pick up media tomb and i was able to share that folder and choose
|
|
you able to watch anything that we picked up from the local library when it comes to
|
|
Scooby-Doo because she loves Scooby-Doo it was fantastic it was freaking great and i didn't have to pay
|
|
anything and i've just rambled on for a while and i don't remember why oh too much beer and meat
|
|
that happens to me when i get tired i start like rambling and like hardly make any sense
|
|
i think i've just hold on the button i just started talking and i don't know where i went from there
|
|
oh shit i suppose but i better get to bed i gotta be up at like freaking six in the morning
|
|
six i gotta be up at like four or four thirty
|
|
what the hell you stood up then it's like two hours of sleep i don't know i can just get
|
|
it's it's a podcasting night i usually clutch to close down around the midnight but i start
|
|
rambling you're gonna have one hell of a long day tomorrow yeah it happens hey thanks for showing
|
|
up thanks for listening to my bs that's all i can say not a problem that was actually a good time
|
|
i'll uh i'll join in next time probably cool um do we fear try something out with the super
|
|
that you're the server that you have i don't care if his Linux related or not just try
|
|
something out with that massive i can be server that you have and then come back next week and
|
|
tell me what you did all right yeah that's a deal we'll do that all right man i really enjoyed
|
|
i really enjoyed talking with you this past night all right yeah you too so we record every
|
|
first and third Friday night of the month uh try to join us if you can okay yeah we'll do that
|
|
every night you too bye
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our
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shows was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
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and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was founded
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binwreff.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is
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