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223 lines
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223 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3778
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Title: HPR3778: A Squirrel Beeing on Google Products and Google Security
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3778/hpr3778.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:15:42
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,778 for Wednesday, the 25th of January, 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, A Squirrel Being on Google Products and Google Security.
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It is hosted by Zen Floder 2, and is about 20 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is I made a being podcast about Google Products Interpreability and their
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lousy security.
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Well, let me tell you about my Google World.
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I've got these Chromebooks.
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I'm recording this on the Samsung 310 Chromebook, which is a really nice little Chromebook
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that reminds me of the Dell Mini-Tan.
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It's so small and tiny and it's got a battery life over 10 hours.
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Anyway, I love the Chromebooks.
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Anyway, I wanted to talk a little bit about Android phones for a second.
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I can use an Android phones Wi-Fi hotspot with T-Mobile to get on the internet and post shows like this.
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Well, I'm out and about visiting relatives.
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Anyway, I was down in Texas and my phone started acting kind of funny.
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So I decided I'd erase it.
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You know, like you erase a Chromebook, I basically did a factory reset on it.
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Prop Ms. Squirrel didn't remember that they have to factor authentication with Google
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and it all goes right back to your stupid phone.
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So I couldn't log into or create any new instances of Chrome, you know,
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install them on Linux or log into Gmail, let's say on Firefox.
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Couldn't do that without the phone.
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I did manage to turn off the two-factor authentication on at least the Chrome side
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to allow me to, you know, install Linux distributions on this one laptop
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and install Chrome or log into Google, you know, with Firefox that way.
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But it wouldn't allow me to just enter my password because he's the time that asked.
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I need to verify your who you were at and we're going to do that through your phone.
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So I asked it to send me a text message that it wouldn't even do that.
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It wouldn't do anything. It locked me out of my account.
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And as I was locked out, I became angry with two-factor authentication
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because I started thinking about it.
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You know, I realized that this isn't so much about security as it is about just then
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making sure that you always have an Android phone.
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And you don't get rid of that Android phone.
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That Android presence is always with you.
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And it started to piss me off.
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Anyway, the way Google's got stuff set up is you can turn off two-factor authentication on the Chrome side,
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but that's separate from turning it off on the Android cell phone side.
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It's like two separate switches.
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So anyway, I traveled the day after to another Texas town.
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And sometime around 10 or 11 in the morning, I tried to log back into my Android phone again.
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You get my Google account activated and let me do it.
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Surprisingly, without a text message, no verification or any silly nonsense.
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And I thought, well, this is just crazy. What kind of security is that?
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So basically what they did was they locked me out of my account for a day
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because I factor reset my phone as punishment for doing it, I guess.
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I don't know.
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It certainly wasn't security the way they let me back in again, but I'm happy I got my phone back.
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But in the two-factor authentication, just flat pisses me off.
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And I realized that, you know, the security aspects of it are important.
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But, you know, the way it was handled, you know, I was reading a website about it the day I actually reset the phone
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and realized I screwed up that it would work if I went home and got on my Wi-Fi with the phone
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because it realized that that phone had been through my home Wi-Fi to receive updates to staff.
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And so it would let me log back in and they said that right on the website.
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But they didn't mention of me going to some town like Conroe, Texas the next day from the Dallas area
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and all of a sudden being able to log in from whatever cell tower it is they have down there.
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Isn't that weird?
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And, you know, I've never been there before.
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So how does it know it was me?
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I don't know.
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Maybe it was the fact that I had the Samsung 310 Chromebook with me
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and I was using it through the hotspot that it detected that, oh, this must be the same guy
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because the Chrome authentication is just as strong as the Android.
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Anyway, it pissed me off that Google decided that they weren't going to provide a switch or button that would pop up on your Chromebook
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saying, hey, would you like to log back into your cell phone?
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You know, it's always one way from a Chrome browser or a Chrome netbook, Chromebook.
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You have to authenticate against the Android phone.
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But it's never, you on an Android phone having to authenticate with a Chromebook.
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You see what I'm saying?
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In other words, they could send this authorization code to my Chromebook as well as they could the Android phone
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and have them both covered, don't you think?
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I mean, wouldn't that just be common sense?
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But they don't have any option to do that apparently.
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They have no option to do that.
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And it really freaked me out when they wouldn't send me a text message with their six digit code on it.
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You know, I can understand why you don't get a pop up, say, did you log in on a phone that's not logged in itself.
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You know, it's been erased.
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But you can send a damn text message.
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Anyway, it wouldn't do that.
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So the whole thing pretty much pissed me off.
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I was rather impressed with the security.
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And I felt like two-factor authentication is basically just another way of them forcing their market handle with Android phones.
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The other way that I see them forcing the hand with Android phones is the QR codes that are popping up all over in grocery stores and government offices and places like Pepsi and Coca-Cola and whatnot.
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You walk into a building and you need to know what to do.
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There's a QR thing that you can scan.
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In fact, I saw a rental card that had a QR code stuck to the windshield of the inside that you can scan with your phone.
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It would tell you about the car you just rented, you know, your budget car or whatever.
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Anyway, that plus of my doctor's office just recently went with a software company called Helio, H-E-L-H-E-A-L-I-O and they've got an electron app that is in the Play Store.
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And that's how I get my doctor's diagnosis and orders and communicate with the pharmacy now.
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So I mean, they're really getting to a point where the next thing you know, I'll be voting for Bush or Biden.
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I mean, excuse me, Trump or Biden using some damn app from Google, you know.
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It's going to be just that freaking crazy.
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So I guess they're going to get to a point where if you lost your phone or your phone became disabled, basically you were a dead man walking.
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So anyway, I'll get off that subject.
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I'm just today is Rambling Squirrel Day and I will post the highlights of my complaint session.
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You know, humans get to complain all the time.
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Squirrels should have the right to complain as well, don't you think? Don't you agree?
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So anyway, let's talk about Easy Tether and using Easy Tether to access your cell phone,
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to use all millenics or Fedora or Ubuda-based product or Debian.
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You know, one of the major distributions to use an Easy Tether driver, even FreeBSD has an Easy Tether driver where you can get.
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Cell phone speed to, you know, like grab an ISO through R-torque, you know, a torrent phone.
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Or watch a movie, for instance, or a video that has a higher bandwidth than they offer on your stupid Android hotspot phone.
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You know, it's funny, but they try to, if I use SSH to go back into my Open BSD server, all of a sudden we don't get this five to six megabit per second bandwidth that we do through Google services.
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They show great favor over the cell towers to Google servers.
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But apparently the cell companies, they won't let you communicate with your own private server much past two or three hundred kilobots per second.
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You know, it's deadly slow, even with Easy Tether, they throttle it.
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In fact, if you're using a Tor, I notice they do the same thing. They'll throttle it down to about 300 kilobots per second, even with Easy Tether.
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And of course, I've said the Wi-Fi hotspot of Team Rebels is pathetic. It's like 80 kilobots per second.
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There's a lot of videos you can't even play using a Wi-Fi hotspot.
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You can play a lot of YouTube stuff and a little bit of Bitsheet, but not much else if anything.
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And I was just sitting here thinking with this bandwidth hungry, as these Chromebooks are, it's funny.
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But when I started doing some major transfers to and from Google Drive using one of my Chromebooks through a relay that I'd set up with a Fedora and an Easy Tether driver and made my own Wi-Fi hotspot,
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I found that these Chromebooks could really throw files up to and down from Google Drive.
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I mean, if they see you're communicating with Google Drive, oh, you can get 10, 11 megabits per second bandwidth.
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I mean, it's just, it's jog-dropping app. You can get the whole Slackware CD in like three minutes or less.
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You know, that I've got stored out on Google Drive.
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It's jog-dropping, the performance that you have.
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If you're going to Google as opposed to anyone else, you know, even Bitsheet or Rumble or any of the other sites, they get throttled compared to YouTube and Google.
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And it's such a lot of sighted thing.
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And you think that Google had so much power over our cell phone companies.
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And I'm going to just call them this the silly bastards because I'm angry at them.
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And I'm getting angry at the whole Chromebook thing.
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I'm angry that they have these Android phones, but they don't have a way to allow a Google Chromebook to obtain that sort of bandwidth through the phone.
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We have to go through this slew of modem.
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And that's just a pile of crap. You know, it blows me away.
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I can sit there and watch it, suck down five and six megabits per second watching an HD video on YouTube through the Android phone.
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But yet, obviously, they've got a throttle and complain and bitch about me doing SSH over a server that has only one megabit per second connection uploader.
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No, actually, it's two and a half. I'm sorry, 2.6 something like that megabit per second up and down on the up and BSD server.
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Hell, let's got to cut that down to 250 kilobits per second.
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You know, no, why why doesn't Google have their own easy tether that'll work through the USB or work through the Bluetooth or even the Wi-Fi of their own damn Android phone.
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That allows Chromebooks to obtain the bandwidth that one gets when you're using Android on these cell towers, the cell frequencies.
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Doesn't that make you wonder? And I understand with the new 5G phones, it's no different.
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I mean, they have the basically the same policies they're going to institute, even though you'll be on 5G and it's got like 100 megabit per second bandwidth in some areas.
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You're still only going to get 80 or 90 kilobits per second through the stupid Wi-Fi hotspot.
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Isn't that just a pain issue and stupid? And it is. It's how they're going to do it.
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Because obviously they want everybody in the planet to communicate with Google servers through their cell phone networks.
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And only using an Android phone. You can't use Chrome OS, you can't use DevWon or Debian or Almolenics or anything else.
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OpenBSD can't use anything to communicate through that network other than a damn Android phone or iOS phone and to Google properties.
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That's it. That's the only time you're going to get that sort of bandwidth.
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Folks, it's utterly insane. In fact, it got to a point I had to transfer 20 video files about OpenBSD. I wanted them on my laptop.
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And here's what I did. I logged into my...
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I did an SSH to the OpenBSD server that I have at the house while I was out in the room.
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And I found the 20 videos I wanted. Put them in a file folder. And then I had RClone upload those to the Google Drive that I have.
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Which it did in, you know, five or six minutes.
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And then from Google Drive, I took my Android phone and downloaded all 20 of these videos.
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One at a time. Because you can't do file folders on the stupid Android app, you know, in Google Drive.
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It's one freaking video at a time. Got it at a good bandwidth. You know, each one of them transferred down in a minute or so.
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And they were pretty good sized video files. Then I just tethered the Android phone to a Linux-powered laptop.
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And I turned, I said, okay, to, you know, file transfer for the MTP file transfer.
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And I transferred them off of the phone onto the hard drive of the Linux laptop.
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I couldn't do it directly for the damn server, which would be more efficient, of course, than going through Google Drive.
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But it was the only way I could get the bandwidth to get all those files and say less than a day.
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I mean, their policies are crazy. And, you know, I'm surprised that we as a nation are allowing them to basically take over our airwaves.
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You know, we grant them a license to run these cell towers. They don't own the damn airwaves.
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We grant them privileges to use those airwaves to put their cell towers up.
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We should be telling them how they're going to run it and manage it, period.
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And to have it all biased toward one company for just Android services alone, it's like when I look at Google,
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when I look at this Chromebook or a Chrome installation on, say, DevWon or something of the Chrome web browser, I see one company.
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Okay. When I look at Android, which is also Google product, it's like I'm looking at another company.
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And the two don't get along with each other. They don't cross communicate. They don't interoperate at all.
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I can't get the bandwidth on the Chromebook that you get on the Android phone because it's not allowed.
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I mean, they keep effing it up.
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And I can't authorize a login on an Android phone from a known established Chromebook with good credentials with Google, which is insane.
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That's insane. They don't even have an option to do it.
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Every two-factor thing that they've got points right back at the Android phone that was affected, that was reset.
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Isn't that just insane, boys and girls?
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Anyway, I'm just in a tizzy about this. I thought I'd make a video about it.
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Other than that, I just wanted to tell you I've been goofing around with various Linux distributions.
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And I don't want to trash geeks, but I just tried the Geeks 1.4 install CD on it to achieve a laptop.
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It got about halfway through and just died.
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So I restarted it, tried it again. Same thing, halfway through and died.
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That's with picking the known desktop.
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So I guess I'll try again today or tomorrow with the XSE desktop and see if I can get geeks installed.
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But their install DVD is really buggy, but I didn't want to try it and see how they're doing.
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I haven't used it in over a year.
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And I also thought I might try downloading Magia and installing that and see what Magia is up to.
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Magia is almost like Fedora in that.
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They'll have the latest most modern kernel in there in software.
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And Magia is almost like a rolling release where their actual release cycles like when they go from Magia 8 to 9, which will happen soon.
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They're just changing their little control center where they allow you to set up sandwich servers and stuff like that.
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Your time zone and all that MTP step.
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You know, just their control interface.
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But to run Magia, as I recall, is like running a rolling release.
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By the way, you can't get an easy tether driver from Magia at all.
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The last one they made was from Magia 6, and that was quite some time ago.
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It doesn't seem to work with the Magia 8 at all.
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So there's probably some fix for that.
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Anyway, that's all I had. I just wanted to touch base.
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You know, the seasons, the holiday seasons.
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Hope everybody's had a good holiday season.
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And that their hibernation has been going well for the winter.
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I haven't been doing much hibernating. I've been traveling a little bit.
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The weather here in the Gulf Coast states, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, New Mexico has been warm.
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It's been in the 60s.
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On a couple days, it's practically got up to almost 80 degrees.
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There's no sign of winter.
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I can't remember the last day. It was below freezing even in the early morning.
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Back this morning, when I woke up, it was, I think it was in the 40s somewhere.
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So anyway, we're certainly not going to have any snow arrives this winter.
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If we do, it's going to be a free.
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Anyway, I thought I'd just post this to you as my squirrel beating session.
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You know, I can't use the real words, the real human words.
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So I'll use my beating session, which is, you know, like bumblebee, of course,
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for squirrel complaining.
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Bye for now. Everyone have a pleasant day.
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Love to everyone from St. Flutter this winter.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive, and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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