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123 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
123 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2865
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Title: HPR2865: The YouTube channels I really like
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2865/hpr2865.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 12:28:23
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---
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This is HPR episode 2008-165 entitled, The YouTube Channel I Really Like.
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It is hosted by your own pattern and is about 14 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is just some random thoughts on some random YouTube channels.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Well, hi there. This is Jerome Batten again with another podcast.
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And this time I thought let's talk about the YouTube channels that I really like.
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I just some random thoughts on some random YouTube channels.
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There are a lot of YouTube videos, a lot of YouTube channels and of course a lot of viewers.
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So what makes me any special? Well, nothing.
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So there's that. But nevertheless, let's just proceed and see where this is leading us.
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So the first thing that I like to talk about is it's a sort of a comedy channel.
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It's called The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.
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And he is sort of a late night talk show host in New York.
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He is clearly a liberal or a Democrat or both, but anyway, really not a conservative.
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But I just I find him funny. So lots of laughs, at least on my part.
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And whenever he publishes a show, it's one of the things that I
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what I try to do to end the day, you know, end the day on a good note.
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He doesn't publish it every day.
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And that's that's a weird thing.
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So he publishes outtakes of his show.
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So without commercials. Okay, that's great. I mean, I hate commercials.
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But if I then then become interested and I thought, okay, let's buy a subscription to view
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the content. It's banned because I'm living in Europe and not in the US.
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So, well, anyway, that's their loss, right?
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And well, I'm not going to talk politics because I don't think that this is the place for that.
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It's just, well, I like the show. By the way, all the shows and channels I mentioned are in
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the show notes with the URLs. So if you got interested, just hop over to the show notes,
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click on one of the URLs and enjoy. So the next one, the next channel I like to talk about is
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the one called Curious Mark. And Curious Mark is a techie guy and he likes to work on restoring
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old stuff. Now, that by itself is great. I mean, he has a whole story of
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rejuvenating a teletype model 15 and model 20. That's back from 19, 15 to 19, 35.
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That day, day and age. So long time ago. And, but, and this is rather special at the moment
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because it's about, this year, it's 50 years ago that the world put the man on the moon
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with the Apollo space program. Now, Curious Mark has somehow gotten his hand on an original Apollo
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A.G.C. And A.G.C. is the Apollo guidance computer. And the Apollo guidance computer is,
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it's a rather cool piece of technology even from 90. It's high tech in 1969, right? And before
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you think, well, that can't be high tech, trust me, it can. How do you put someone on the moon?
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How do you write software? How do you store a program reliably into a machine that go to travel
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through space? There are no spare parts in space. You know, you can't just hop over and start
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working on stuff. Anyway, and it's, at the moment, it's a series of, today I saw part 21. So,
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at least 21 parts in this series, the Apollo A.G.C. And it's, it's fascinating. It absolutely is
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fascinating there. The way the hardware in that time worked, how they sort of built hardware
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room by using magnetic core memory, but then weaving small threads in a specific order through
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the course in a way that it was a red-only memory module. As per one of the parts, they simulate
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a flying to the moon guided by the A.G.C. And at some point, they want to start to land on the moon,
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and for that, you need the input of accelerometer, accelerometer, so that the capsule, the rocket
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part, whatever, knows that he is descending in a controlled way. And, well, they haven't had,
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haven't got that hooked up yet, so that's where this exercise stops. But the way this works,
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and the way you use verb and nouns to select a program and parameters into a system.
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And you only have seven segment displays to see the output. It's, it's amazing. It really is.
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Anyway, so that's a really nice thing to see. Fascinating. That's all I can say.
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Well, and then there is the other channel. It's completely unrelated, except for one video that
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sort of overlaps curious marks at Apollo A.G.C. series. And that's the Moshek's channel.
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Now, the Moshek's channel, for those who have heard all my podcasts, because my first one was
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about running your mainframe on Linux for fun and profit. And I already discussed the Moshek's
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video channel there, because he puts in all, he puts online a lot of videos describing how old
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mainframes work. And in much detail and very easy to follow. But now his recent video is where he
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shows how you can find the original source code of the Apollo guidance computer, because the
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software for the Apollo guidance computer is an open source. It is on GitHub.
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And there's even a compiler that runs on Intel hardware that can compile the old stuff to
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the original bytecode. And there is an emulator that runs that bytecode. And it's all in one
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project. I'll put the link in the show notes to the link to the Git repository. Anyway, so Moshek's
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describes how you clone this Git repository and compile the software and then run it.
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And yeah, it's always one of the other things that I'm subscribed to to his channel, all three so far.
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And yeah, it's fun. And it's something else, you know, then the standard, oh, this is Linux
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stuff. And oh, this is Windows or this is I don't know. Anyway, mainframe is not really mainline
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anymore, except for some small parts of the universe. But nevertheless, it's fun to listen to.
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And the last one I would like to discuss is let's put this way. He's a hacker and this project
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is certainly one that you would call worthy of the term hacking. But what did this guy do? Well,
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he bought a missile base in the US. And one that was scrapped when there was this this sort of
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I don't know what the English English term for this, but at some point in the 80s or the 90s,
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the Russia and the US decided that they would cut down on all the nukes they had.
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And they all had both sides had to demolish parts of the infrastructure of their defensive nuclear
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infrastructure to show the other side that they were serious with it. And so he this guy he bought
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a piece of land from the government from knowing that that piece of land beneath all the grass
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would would contain a complete missile base, of course, without the rocket.
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And he starts to dig, he starts to, well, he starts to locate where the probable entrances he
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starts to dig. There used to be a sort of elevator shaft that was completely filled with debris
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from the demolition of the topside building. It was a small topside building going to the elevator.
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So he excavates that then there is a really big blast door weighing tons of, well, weighing tons
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anyway. And he gets in and he films a lot of the whole adventure, I know, and at the end
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of this all, I believe it's going to be his man cave or to sit and relax with drinking bodies.
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I don't know, but the whole journey from having just a piece of land and somewhere beneath that
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is a nuclear facility, defense facility is pretty amazing. And the fun thing is the channel,
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the name of that channel is Death Where's Bunny Slippers. Yeah, it's Death Where's Bunny Slippers.
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Now, why would it be called Death Where's Bunny Slippers? It seems pretty unrelated. You know,
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Bunny Slippers, Death, what has that to do? Well, Death is clearly, of course, with the nuclear
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rocket, but Bunny Slippers, really? Well, if you think about it, those facilities were
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meant 24-7 for years. So you went to your work for, I don't know, an 8 or 12-hour shift. I don't know
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how much, maybe 24-hour shift could also be, but if it's a 24-hour shift, at some point you're going
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to sleep. And if you go to sleep, at some point during the night, you'll probably wake up and
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wanted to go to the toilet. So you put on your slippers. Yeah, that's right. You're Bunny Slippers.
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And you hop on over to the toilet, do your thing and get back to bed. But at the same time,
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you're also responsible for a pretty hefty amount of death and destruction.
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Talking about death and destruction, you know, you've probably heard of those launch
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codes and that they're really secret. Well, I once was at, and I was looking, it was in a museum,
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it was a nuclear submarine museum. And it had 12 tubes to launch nuclear missiles. And on every
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tube there was this keypad where you could enter the launch code to really unlock the missile.
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And there was a small note there saying that up until the mid-80s, so 85, 86, 90, 85, 96,
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there was some concern that when it ever would come to the moment that they really had to
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launch those missiles, you really don't want people to be unable to enter any launch code.
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So, and it was 12 digits, but believe it or not, it was 12, 12 times zero. That's right, 12 times
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zero would be enough to launch a nuclear missile. Back until the 85, and then somehow I think they
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thought that they could wise up a little and do something else. Well, anyway, that's my short
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note for today. If you have any comments, any questions, just hop over to the show notes,
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give some comments, give some feedback, I love to read them, I really do. And till we meet again,
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bye-bye.
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How easy it really is. Nekka Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
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infonomicant computer club, and it's part of the binary revolution at binref.com. If you have
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comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record
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a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the creative
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comments, attribution, share a light, 3.0 license.
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