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350 lines
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350 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 579
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Title: HPR0579: Interview with Jeff and Loafy, two SELF volunteers
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0579/hpr0579.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 23:27:09
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---
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Hacker Public Radio!
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Hi everyone, this is Clat 2. I'm at a South East Linux best 2010 second annual.
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And I'm sitting in a room with Jeff and he was a volunteer here at South today as far as I know.
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Is that what you are?
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Yeah, it's originally a sponsor, but they asked me if I wanted to volunteer and I said yes.
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You're a sponsor?
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Indeed.
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Philly and you volunteered as well?
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Absolutely.
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Cool, alright, that's great.
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So what do you do at IRL?
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What do I do at IRL?
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I go to school and I study electrical engineering.
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Okay, so if you do electrical engineering, are you on Cat-a-lot?
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No, that's much as I'd like to be.
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Oh, okay.
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And how long have you been studying this?
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About a year and a half.
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Okay, so you're, is that like pretty early?
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So you're still not getting into like the designs as much yet?
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Oh, I'm graduating next year.
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I'm almost done.
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Oh, okay.
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So why did you say you weren't in Cat as much as you would like to?
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Because I took portfolio credit so I skipped a lot of classes that would basically make up the core of engineering.
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So what are you designing?
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Are we talking about chips or something or motherboards or what is electrical engineering?
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Oh, for me, I'm a technologist.
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I'm more of an applied engineer.
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I do a lot of microcontroller design and circuit design.
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And, you know, fun stuff like that.
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I have no idea what any of that means.
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Okay, cool.
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So how did you find Linux?
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How did I find Linux?
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Gosh, I mean, I've been, boy, I probably found Linux back in the late 90s when I had a 2400 modem.
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Probably maybe it's early 90s.
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See, it's probably about 14.
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So probably about 95.
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And I started dialing up to BBSs.
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So my first exposure was to AT&T Unix, actually.
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Wow.
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Yeah.
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And I mean, but literally, okay.
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So if you're on BBSs, if you're reading or listening about or I mean learning about Unix and Linux,
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when did you like really start, like when did you install it and like what did you start with?
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It was in the Navy.
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I started with Stellaris and Hpux and some various flavors of Linux.
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So you're kind of, I mean, you're actually kind of a Unix guy?
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Yes, I am, but that's off the record.
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Okay.
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I don't know if you saw my shirt earlier.
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It was a Tidewater Unix users group.
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Wow.
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And it's specifically that because the Tidewater area is a lot of military.
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Okay.
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And a lot of military use a lot of Stellaris and Hpux.
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And even not so much anymore, but AT&T Unix.
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That's, I mean, that's like from way back when, but still we have systems that are, you know,
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10, 15, 20 years old that still use ancient hardware and software.
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Okay.
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Well, not.
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It's really, really cool.
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So shifting topic a little bit.
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What do you think of the festival?
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And is this your first year here at Telfer?
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Is this your second year at the Second Self?
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This is my first self.
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Okay.
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I'm originally from Minnesota, so I'm just in Hampton Roads for the Navy.
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I've been to a lot of land parties growing up, but never been to a Linux festival.
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It's my first.
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Oh, cool.
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Okay.
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So yeah, what do you think?
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I love it.
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Man, it's great.
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A lot of good talks.
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I wish I could have gone to more, you know, maybe clone myself a couple of times.
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Yeah.
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So I'm looking forward to the online content as well and forums or just discussion about it.
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This is really, really exciting.
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You know, get pumped up and jazzed and meet other people that are just crazy about, you know, Linux and open source.
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Yeah.
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The open community is really what this is all about.
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Okay.
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Well, actually that was my next question.
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So I guess you kind of just answered it.
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But how I was going to say also the other question is how important do you think free software is in general in the world?
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I think focusing on free software would be the, for me it would be the wrong thing to look at.
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For me, it's the open community.
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It's the open communication.
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It's not hiding stuff from everybody else.
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It's just being open and honest and saying, hey, I've developed this.
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What do you guys think?
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What do other people in the world think?
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Because that's a lot of this.
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I mean, that's a lot what I do in the Navy.
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I developed systems and I developed software to, you know, interconnect everything basically.
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And the only way I can progress is by talking to engineers, talking to end users, talking to, you know, developers.
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And pretty much everybody that has anything to do with the software and hardware that I'm touching.
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And that's the only way that we can really succeed.
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Because anybody that hoards or tries to, you know, privatize or make something, you know, highly proprietary really is going to fail in today's modern world.
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Cool. Interesting.
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That's an interesting.
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Yours has kind of been a new perspective for me.
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I've never met someone who does exactly what you do.
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So that's really cool.
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You don't know what I do.
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Well, you said you made other computers talk to each other.
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A lot of what I've done in the Navy is linking systems together.
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Okay.
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Having them communicate, I've worked a lot of non-existent systems that pass tactical information.
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And, you know, they're not all the same flavors.
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And, you know, I've used a lot of, like, SAMBA and even wine to communicate in cross-platforms.
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So I think we're heading there because more and more businesses and people are realizing that, you know, we're in a networked world.
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Everything's connected and we need to be able to share information.
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And the only way we can do that is if we have, you know, standards that everyone can, or most people can agree on.
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Right.
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Well, cool. Thanks for, thanks for talking to me, Jeff.
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Rock on, dude.
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You might as well go.
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Do you have more tickets?
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There would be more.
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Do you still have more tickets?
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I do have more tickets.
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Other sponsors.
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You know, less sponsors, you've got to stick together.
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I would have given you mine, but I think you just weren't around whenever I was, like, losing them.
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So.
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Hi, everyone. This is Kwatu.
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I'm at Southeast Linux Fest 2010, sitting in a room, chilling with Lofi, who I actually know from IRC.
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So how are you doing, Lofi?
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I'm doing okay. How about yourself, Kwatu?
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I'm doing really well. Thanks.
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So, is this your first self?
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This is my first self.
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What do you think of it?
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Love the community.
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And you're volunteering this year, right?
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Yeah.
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All right. I didn't originally sign up the volunteer.
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Just, I walked in.
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Hey, you need help.
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Look how I take care of it.
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That's cool.
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Okay. So, um, all right.
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So, first of all, how did you, um, how did you find Linux and how long have you been using it?
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Wow. What year is this?
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2010.
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2006.
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Oh, okay.
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Coming out in the military.
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I took a redhead class, but I ended up leaving school for one reason or another.
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Okay.
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And I worked as a maintenance man.
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They came upon a couple of old computers.
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I remember Linux, so, huh?
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So, I went to go back and do the research.
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And I started off with a bunch of, and then rolled myself back out to Debian.
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Nice. Is that what you're running now?
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Just Debian here.
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Yeah. You're unstable or sted?
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Ah, stable.
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Ah, so you're one of the stable people, you know?
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Walking the walls out just yet.
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And me and you there.
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I mean, I know, um, Dave Yates, it's running, Sid and everything, but I literally did try it.
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And I guess I must have done it wrong because it blew up.
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It's just something about AppGit.
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I rather do that then.
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Yeah.
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You don't have anything.
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No, you know, young is not so bad.
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Really, I assure you.
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Yeah, I use synth also at work, so.
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Yeah. Um, so, well, actually, that is leading into my next question, thanks.
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Um, so what do you do in real life?
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Real life, I'm a private contractor for a small IT company.
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Nice, okay.
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Which entails, like, what, going out on-site to, like, fix networks or something?
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It involves everything from going in as far as antivirus to send up a phone system
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to hosting a couple of thermal servers.
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Cool. Okay.
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And so, primarily, you're, you're doing synthos on that stuff?
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Astrid.
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Okay.
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And for the most part, synthos plays a lot in today.
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Okay.
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Astrid and Tricksbox.
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Oh, you used Tricksbox.
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Is that still being, like, is that currently developed?
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Well, diversity has.
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Uh-huh.
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Yeah.
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Okay.
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So, as it stands now, half is Tricksbox.
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Half is Astrid's now.
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Okay.
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I'm working on point everything to Astrid's now, even though I had that.
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So, are you pretty good on the whole, like, what is it, PBX stuff?
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I'm getting there.
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It's one of those things I didn't learn in school.
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I had to go RTFM in for lack of a better term.
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Wow.
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So, how did you get into that line of work?
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And, you know, I mean, like, how did you?
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Because it doesn't sound like you had a whole lot of super formal training and computing.
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But you work in the computer industry now.
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I've always been a hardware monkey.
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I started off fixing VCRs and televisions.
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Oh, okay.
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So, I just moved up from there.
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And due to fact, I, for some reason, I love the fact that I can, one computer could talk to somebody way over here.
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Yep.
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That's why I got involved in networking.
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That's why I'm working on now.
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Do you have any of the certificates?
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I mean, I know you said you started to take the Red Act class, but like, the other certifications that some people are talking about sometimes.
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Do you have any of those?
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I'm actually working towards my Linux Plus.
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Okay.
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I'm going to have my school that trying to push me.
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Won't you go to Cisco route?
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No.
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I don't.
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Okay.
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I don't want to be just specialized in hardware.
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Okay.
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If I can do something that can run on any piece of hardware, it's a lot better.
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Yeah.
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What's your coolest, I'm going to call it a hardware hack.
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But you can interpret that as you, as you will.
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But like, what's the coolest thing you've, you've done hardware in Linux-wise?
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Hardware in Linux-wise?
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Yeah.
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Just going to network all the work with, there's not even Linux is Unix.
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Oh.
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With my free NAS server.
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Okay.
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Now, shall we run Windows, Linux, and Unix?
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Wow.
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Why?
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Oh, because those are the platforms that they have to support?
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He runs a, he does host Windows terminal server.
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Uh-huh.
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And he has a couple of clients.
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That's all they want is Windows.
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Right.
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Well, of course the phone system.
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Right.
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That's Tricks Plus Live Street.
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Okay.
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Units Plus comes in with free NAS.
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Right.
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And I'm trying to, I'm not, I haven't got a smooth wall to where I want it yet.
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Yeah.
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I'm working, that's my next project, working on a firewall.
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I know that some people literally will take like a, you know, a computer and, and like, have it as they, that is the firewall.
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That's, you know, like, a whole computer dedicated to being basically a firewall, right?
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Whereas other people, it's enough to have it, like, I guess, embedded on their router or whatever.
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Why would you need a whole computer to be a firewall?
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It depends on how much you really want to have to do with it.
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Okay.
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Like a lot of days, yeah, everything is a plastic, a plastic deck.
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Yeah.
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So, you know, well, who would go back doing anything by hand?
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For some smaller company and some people, they just want to manage better to have hands on.
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They just find the old box and do it themselves.
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I mean, what else you're going to do with the box?
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You don't want to throw away.
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Still good, still works.
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Put the work.
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Why aren't you recycling hardware?
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Yeah, exactly.
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So how many, how many computers do you have in your, in your home?
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Well, currently, three laptops, one old Dell server, three P3s, one P2s, and one P4.
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My Dell.
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That's it?
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That's just computers now.
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Yeah.
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There's also phones.
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I said VCR.
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Right.
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What about a lot of my hardware at the flea market?
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Do you?
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Give it away.
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Well, at least they're giving it away, and they're not just like throwing it out.
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Because there, there, I was, one of my old jobs.
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Someone came in and was like, hey, I need to recycle.
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They said, I think they said recycle a computer.
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And I said, okay, that sounds cool.
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Just bring it in.
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And you know what I was going to do with it, right?
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I mean, I was going to recycle it right into my apartment.
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So he brings it in.
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And he brings it in like a brown paper bag.
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And I was like, that's kind of weird, you know?
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And he, it's a laptop.
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And he, he puts a lot, brown paper bag down.
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And I was just like, why did he bring it in brown paper bag?
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So he, he leaves.
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And he says, you know, thanks a lot, man, bye.
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And so I, I opened the thing.
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And it's like this, his computer.
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And he smashed it.
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That I hammered.
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Like to bits.
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Poked holes through the screen.
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Smashed the keyboard.
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Totally ruined it.
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You know, ironically, because you know why I was doing it.
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I'm sure he was going to try to, you know, how they tell you, like, you know,
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just throw your hard drive or the identity.
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It's, we'll get you.
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I'm sure he did it for that reason.
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Yeah, but you still look at the hard drive.
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His hard drive was still good.
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The round.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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The keys for the left.
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It was insane.
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It can be parted in.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Totally.
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So yeah, that's, it's really annoying when people do stuff like that.
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But they do.
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A little mass trust.
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A little mass trust.
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Exactly.
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All right, cool.
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Well, thanks for talking to me, Lofi.
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I'm sure I'll see you in IRC at some point.
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Yeah.
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Cool.
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I think so.
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Thank you for listening to Half the Public Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by tarot.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of those meetings.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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