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273 lines
23 KiB
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273 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2602
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Title: HPR2602: HPR Quick Tips July 2018
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2602/hpr2602.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:25:30
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---
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This is HBR Episode 2622 entitled HBR Quick Tips to I 2018.
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It is hosted by Operator and is about 25 minutes long and can remain a explicit flag.
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The summary is either a K backup and trekking that.
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This episode of HBR 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
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Donate.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio with your host Operator.
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I am apologizing again, get again for the audio, I am sitting again still in the same
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place we left off with you with me last time in gridlock traffic in Atlanta, Georgia.
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So I wanted to do another quick tip, this is going over cloud storage, the different
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providers and where I am at in that current process.
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So I have about a terabyte worth of stuff I need to put on the internet, images and music
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and all that, all my media and everything, try to backup portions of it to the cloud and
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I've looked at a few options here.
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Now the fellow just got out of the car, made me a little bit concerned.
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So the first thing I started with is my Amazon account which is $60 a year and I think
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up until you just missed it, March of this year you had you unlimited storage that is going
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to be discontinued.
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What you had gave you some brief history about that is I think they wanted to get the
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market on other providers, Amazon wanted to get the market on other providers like
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Dropbox and Google Drive and all that.
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So they said $60 unlimited.
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The cool part about that is for about a year and a half if you purchased a subscription
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with Plex live time you got the cloud for free.
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So their Plex live time is I want to say $85 to $100 and something now when I first
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spotted it was a lot cheaper.
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You got their unlimited account or you got the Plex pass for a media box streaming media
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services kind of like build your own T-bow right.
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You got that cloud version for free and you could actually aim it at your Amazon cloud
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storage which was $60 a year for unlimited access.
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So essentially for the price of a existing Plex pass subscription or for if you don't
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have it for like $85 and then another 60 bucks you could have unlimited cloud storage
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of your media server on Amazon for that price which is astounding.
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So what you had was a flood of people, trolls and folks trying to jump on that opportunity.
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So we had things like Amazon sync applications, I can't remember the names of the two that
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I looked at but if you look on like Reddit forms you'll see that it worked, it worked
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to work and then all these posts about people trying to sync their Plex boxes and they
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lost the ability to do that because the API key got banned from like Google or not Google
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but got banned from Amazon and another API key for another application got banned from
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Amazon.
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So they had a bunch of people trying to store their data and Amazon kept pushing back
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and not allowing people to store their essentially legal content on these cloud storage.
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So I tried to get it to work with Amazon, didn't have any luck.
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I also looked at a different provider that wasn't Google Drive and they also complained about
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the same thing.
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So I ended up sticking with Google Drive.
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I had worked with them before, I looked at what they were using as our clone I think
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to do the syncing and I had some familiar with it, familiarity with it, I've used Google
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Drive for a while now and I thought that would be a good choice for me because it's fast
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and all that good stuff.
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So what I ended up doing was paying for their 20 and some change on month, two terabyte
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plan and I, over the course of a month or so, I uploaded from my home connection all
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of my backups, had them up there and I recorded a podcast with a fellow that doesn't live
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too far away from here at this point downtown and I'll have that posted up probably next
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couple of weeks and I uploaded that with a zip file of the original raw wave files to Google
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Drive and they marked it as like copyrighted MP3 or something.
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I don't know what their algorithm is or whatever and not only did it mark the MP3, it actually
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marked the zip file with the wave files track broken out tracks where I stopped and started
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recording the podcast into into that.
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So I don't know what happened with their algorithm that marked it.
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I also had some instances where I shared my USB folder which has some content in it that
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can be considered pirated material where I took my license and I made it a virtual thin
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applications, a virtual portable application for that.
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So that way if I'm on the road, I can simply just go to my USB drive and install the application
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and have everything I need running and I don't have to worry about licensing or activating
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or having a local administrator or whatever.
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So what ended up happening is Google would flag those as spam and then in some instances
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as viruses and I couldn't even download my own files that I upload.
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So for the example of the MP3, it wouldn't actually let me download my own file that I
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had uploaded to Google Drive which is completely unacceptable and I do understand their licensing
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and their issues around pirated content but that's not the situation that I'd like
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to be in.
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So I made the decision to remove all my content and cancel my subscription to Google Drive,
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looked around for some other options and I'm not sure I'm going to even have the options
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that I want but I ended up sticking with Spyder Oak which is the no knowledge not to be
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confused with zero knowledge but a no knowledge of cloud storage provider.
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There are tools although not open source obviously, appeared to be good and I'm in the process
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of syncing all that content and I have shared some of the items that I had issues with
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in Dropbox through Spyder Oak and I don't appear to have the same issues that this automated
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automatic was being flagging stuff did and in Google Docs.
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So the short answer to all this is I'm still evaluating Spyder Oak, I'm waiting to get
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the same type of treatment that I got with Dropbox which was even worse than Google Drive
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whereas Google Drive, you could at least petition to have that information unflagged but Dropbox
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would do stuff like completely disable sharing altogether because of one random proof
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of concept executable inside of one of my security folder.
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So they wouldn't even tell you I had to go through several emails back and forth to get
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the actual reason and what file was involved with the kind of the disabling of sharing
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with my account.
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So I think that's pretty much covers all my setups and my ideas.
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You know again I started with Arclone which is kind of a kind of a sync that will cross
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against multiple platform cloud providers and I used Google's for that and I will say
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that when I back up my route I've been using Borg backup to do that but there's incremental
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backups and you can do full backups.
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So I'll make a change to my route or I'll make a whatever and I'll have those incremental
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backups in Borg and I'll have several, what I want to do is have several incremental
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full backups and several incrementals in there so that can constantly keep those sync
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to the internet if I go need to go back and look at a configuration file from six months
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ago that I completely destroyed.
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But anyways along with Borg backup to backup my route and using spider oak with their
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tool the command line version to back it up I did have to use the UI to initially set
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the backup locations and stuff what to back up and what to not back up I'm assuming you
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can do that via the command line but it was a lot easier for me to do that just through
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the UI and Debian and then once I set that up I was able to run the headless mode and
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do the verbose and look at some of the logs that we're going through and look at the traffic.
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So I'm looking at another month of sync time for that data but hopefully on the end of
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this we'll have some some ability to share with spider you can have a password for each
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share and each share has its own kind of encryption so that way for example if I share a folder
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my whole the idea is that that thing has its own encryption and it's different than the
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other from what I understand so if someone were to get access somehow to the rest of your
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data that key is only good for whatever the bucket or whatever that you shared so that's
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some good news and that they have that in mind so we'll see whether or not their you know
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anti piracy and anti shenanigans start flagging stuff within spider oak but I'm hoping with
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the password prompt and the limited amount of people that I do send this these links to
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I won't have to worry about silly automatic flagging flagging my my recorded mp3s in custom
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binaries as malware and not allowing me to read my own files anyways still sitting in traffic
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here and maybe I'll record another episode before the days end of a good one.
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There's another quick tip. I wanted to go over quickly my experience in tracking or hiking
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whatever so someone wanted to hike the the Appalachian Trail and I figured I could do it if they
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could do it so I was my first experience so I don't know anything about what you're supposed to pack
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or how you're supposed to pack or any of that stuff. I wore some crappy tennis shoes and I spent the
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whole time staring at the ground making sure I wasn't going to trip or fall and I didn't which is
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good but I think with some nicer shoes and a little bit less staring at the ground I could have
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enjoyed it a little bit more but I did not want to fall in the water and you know like down on my
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first try and then have a twisted ankle rolled ankle for like you know three days straight but anyways
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I'm more pertinent to know anything about anything about this but I'll tell you my experience going
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completely blind for three nights. I've only gone camping before and this says this was my first
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time doing a full bone you know night stay over and then and then breaking you know freaking camp
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for for the next day and then doing that three times so I can handle three times three nights
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without a shower that that that third night waking up in the morning I was kind of done and I
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needed a shower and I probably and a shower and a real meal I probably could have pulled off
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more days but my day is my you know I'm 37 38 whatever and I don't exercise that much and I
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enjoy being not feeling like grossness so three days three nights was my was my limit it was
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fairly cool it was fairly cool at night so I'm here in South Georgia and we went top of this
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blood mountain and it was a trek to get up there um we went I think at night or something like that
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um our first sort of run through we made it up there really like a two o'clock like 12 or
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something we finally made it up that way um when we camped out on top it was freezing cold I didn't
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bring enough warm stuff um but luckily I had a um I had had that same experience in 30s 30s
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6 degree 32 31 degree whatever it was freaking cold when I camped once so I got a nice a decent
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little I don't know how to explain it a little sleeping bag that can be compressed down and it's
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you know rated for something decent um a decent mummy type of sleeping bag and that saved my life
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I had a t-shirt other than that and there are two t-shirt three t-shirts I think it was what I brought
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with me um what I will say is that and everybody warned me I should have done the MREs at
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Inter at REI and not military grade MREs because they have they'll they'll they're just not
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as good and you'll want to not poop for four days um so I I run out the bat do not drink eat too
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much protein or fiber do not drink too much water um I think I actually drink too much water that
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also contributed to my to me having foul movement issues so I had too much MRE and too many
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we got some free protein bars I would have probably had to steal someone else's food
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because I didn't pack enough snacks and or MREs to to eat so I was eating protein bars for
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some of my meals um which was a really bad idea um other than that I'll say that um I was just
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very careful not to trip or fall um on roots or anything like that and not to fall in the water um
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I had three pair of socks I think total um and I was pretty legit now I did buy one of those fancy UV
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things for the water and I did not have a filter so I used somebody else's
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basically pee filter for the first two two nights and then we had somebody else join us
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our group and they had a um MRE MRE MRS MSR pump and that was okay and that was like super
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filtered water um and I didn't I didn't see it super necessary to to work that hard for water um
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we had a super skinny girl rolled up with her um platypus gravity fed platypus platypus
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filter and that is enough I mean and she was she had her three bottles she walked over there filled
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it up gravity fed and then fed it filled it back up gravity fed and she was off with her like three
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liters of water or whatever in very short time with the little oh he's crazy the little um plastic
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I think they're one liter maybe they're one liter and she had like two or three of those and she
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was in and out and in no time and I'm sitting over there with it MSR pump trying to back
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backwash it and all that crap and between that and then doing the UV I think that was a bit
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overkill I don't know um so we had some pretty simple one or two sketchy places to get water um
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and I I tried to be super careful I would I did like I'd shake up the water and do the the UV
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thing a couple of times because I wasn't super happy about having a basically a coffee filter for
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a water filter but I couldn't complain because I didn't bring any of my any of the gear for that I
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just brought the the water zapper thing um uh the memories like I said I wouldn't do the military
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grade I would if you could spring for the nice uh REI ones they are wonderful um wonderfully good
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and ten times better than the MREs you get the military grade ones um like got army surplus um
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they're gonna be cheaper and they're gonna have like more salt in them and they're gonna give you
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more bang for your butt but you're gonna have bowel issues and and it's got a lot of salt probably
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more salt in them than than REI stuff um what else um I did not know this that I actually borrowed
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somebody else's sack or rough sack russet rucks rucks ruck sack whatever um so there's like a backpack
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okay no and then there's like these sets compression backpacks based on the thing so it's a big bag
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a big sack and you shove it full of shit um and that's what I luckily I got like it was like a 65
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ounce liter one a 65 liter one and I was luckily I got to borrow with that and that saved me um
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I put I was the lightest guy the travel because for my first time I didn't want to be lugging
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around a bunch of shit and have my back go out but what I did not know about the whole thing and
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if you look at anything online it's all in your your waist and you have to keep the
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the the the the weight on the kind of off your shoulders and you shouldn't feel a whole lot
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on your shoulders and you can alternate back and forth to completely getting rid of all the weight
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off your shoulders and you know putting a little bit more weight on your shoulders to give your
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backs and relief and unbuttling the front um the idea is that front buckle um you're gonna need
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that for more than a day of hiking or trekking whatever if you don't have that front buckle with
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an actual real backpack you're gonna just be miserable the whole time and we had to do I mean half
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my size in in you know he was pretty built actually but he he didn't have a thing he just had a
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regular like sack and it had no belt strap because it was broken or some shit and he carried that
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shit on his shoulder for two days um we had three days and they'd end up with a slayer but
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I could not have done um because I I would have I alternated between on my back and on my
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shoulders and I had I that was about as much as I could handle um so yeah I wasn't experienced
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to me to to know that you know you put it all on your your your back your hips and put all that
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weight on your hips and try to keep you know your the balance everything balanced even the weight of
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your sack you don't want everything on the left or the right um that was interesting to to understand
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and figure out um and I didn't super think that I would enjoy it but it's it was something different
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and you feel like especially if you're doing you know the Appalachian Trail and you're just going
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you know to the wall also the walls with it for three days um we did 30 miles in three days was
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about ten ten ten miles a day but we did blood mountain and down and then we went to top of
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spring or at the end so we went backwards I think from what most people do um what supposedly was
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easier uh but I had a blast um it's fun um I want to do it more um just probably get some nice
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REI things um I bought some fancy shoes some Solomon shoes because I've got some Solomon
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Boller Skates that I've had forever um so I bought some fancy shoes and broke them in um just day
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hiking so I'm ready to do another big hike but um we got we got we caught a little bit of sun
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and uh towards the end we ran into a giant like military grade uh water truck or buffalo I think
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they called it and it was just a giant tank of water and it was cool because it was in you know
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a big metal tank and it was cool to go to the touch um and that was a godsend to be uh drinking
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ice because when you're drinking water out of camelback it's the at least the one I had was a
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was like a military drink camelback very sturdy but it was uh three liter I think um it the problem
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with it is that uh you you had the issue of I'm trying to not come myself here you had the issue of um
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it uh being hot so the the line was a black line um and it was warm so if you let the water sit
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in there for a while you you're just drinking like warm water and it's not super appealing to
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to do that but water's water and you can't complain when you when you're dying if there's um
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but I tried I tried to make sure I was just sitting on water the whole time
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because I did not want to have any issues with dehydration or not getting enough energy to
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make it through the day so I think that made a lot of difference um and I'm I made a I made a bad
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choice to wear some crappy tennis shoots but that's all I had and I didn't really have time to
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break in some new shoes and I I just you know debate it whether or not to bring broods um you know
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if you're light on your feet then you take care of your feet and you don't you watch where you're
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walking and very carefully um you can get away with nice hiking shoes or trekking shoes or
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whatever you call them that basically look like tennis shoes and then they have like mid pumps
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basically and then they have your full lawn boot um the problem with both of those is you risk
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getting blisters and I would rather roll my ankle than pretty much guarantee I'm going to get a blister
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when I wear boots um I'm sure there's tactics you can do to keep yourself from getting blisters but
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in general um the guy we had had a nasty one and I'm like no really particularly want to do that
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but I also don't want to roll my ankles so I can start the ground for three days um other than that
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uh don't really have any other suggestions I body used pack of the internet it was actually one
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of the osprey travel things so it's kind of actually I like a jack of all master of none um it did
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have a belt strap which is essential it was a 65 ounce and it had the compression stuff but it was
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more of like a travel sack so you could take it like an international travel or whatever and it's
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supposed to fit it doesn't actually fit in the overhead luggage but it has that kind of suit casey
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type of appeal to it and it's got a lot of a lot of um extra weight and foam which is more extra
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foam which is not a whole lot extra weight but it's extra weight regardless so I probably have an extra
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you know you know half a pound worth of just crap and foam I don't really need um so if I would
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have done it I would have got a proper rucksack not a military grade one I would have got a really
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fancy um waterproof one um which are really expensive I don't understand why they don't make
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them waterproof in the first place but they sell like waterproofing statues that go over the top
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of it um I'm guessing the idea is that whatever master wizard fabric they put on this stuff is not
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is not also waterproof which doesn't make a whole lot of point a lot of sense um talked about shoes
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clothes I'd add three shirts um I think I brought um three underwear and I brought three shirts
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and I think that's it and I had pants I wore um some uh true spec pants which I'm wearing right
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now it's because I did airsoft and I basically let the zipper open the whole time because I
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wore whitey tighties to help with uh air flow if you're a male um this will help you but uh I wore
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whitey tighties for air flow and then I left my zipper um fly open the whole time in it um personally
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helped me um get relief in that whole area um I hope people get water I got water for people a lot
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um I wanted to make sure people were drinking clean water so I tried to zap everybody's water
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they could I could zap um but you know there's no guarantee um you just kind of have to be
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whatever the odds of you actually getting sick are pretty if you if you even just use a filter
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I think a basic you know a basic basic uh gravity fed filter like a platypus nice platypus set up
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near pretty much unless you get something really nasty you're gonna be fine you're gonna get
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not gonna get dirty either the comment of crap you get um that's pretty much it and um if you
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haven't done it you need to do it at least you know one or two nights of uh of hiking of of
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spending the night and then waking up in the morning breaking camp and trying to get everybody
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wake up um it was fun anyways hope that helps somebody or doesn't or let me know if you have any
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questions or if I did something vastly wrong or said something vastly wrong please let me know um
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um because I'm really interested in it and I haven't done a whole lot of research um I was lucky
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we had a medic and like two army guys come with us so they had been doing a lot of walking
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and they're just like food and water and shelters all you need and it's like okay whatever so
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I pulled it off anyways I've been going to take this
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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 contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was founded by
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the digital dog pound and the infonominant 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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released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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