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289 lines
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289 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3747
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Title: HPR3747: Twitter and Dinner with the Humans
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3747/hpr3747.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:55:06
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,747 for Tuesday the 13th of December 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Twitter and Dinner with the Humans.
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It is hosted by Zen Flotor 2 and is about 27 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is I talk about Twitter after dinner with some humans.
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Hello boys and girls, Zen Flotor your favorite magical forest squirrel, former human being
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converted into squirrel by aliens in the 1960s and atheists.
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Trying an experiment today.
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I have a new Chromebook that I've been playing with for the last month.
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It is a Samsung.
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And I forget the model number of this.
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I'll have to go back and look at one of my videos and tell you what it is.
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But it's a really small notebook, Chromebook that I picked it for $149 at a Walmart.
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And I've just been carrying it around everywhere.
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It's got a 10-hour battery life.
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Anyway, the squirrel is in a restaurant in Arkansas and we're on the road today.
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And so I thought I would record a clip of me coming into a human restaurant which I have
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come in.
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I have sat down and said for no one has noticed that there's a squirrel in the restaurant
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which is good.
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No one's making a scene ever.
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The waitress did come up to me and took my order.
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I'm ordering coffee and water for my drink.
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And also a Western omelet with diced potatoes and rye toast and pancakes I'm going to have.
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Making a little recording here.
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Anyway, we've had a nice long day of driving and we're taking sort of a cross-country trip.
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And just checking in the outside world to see what life is like before the snow flies.
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Anyway, the waitress just gave me my coffee.
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I like it black, of course.
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However, when I'm in Texas, I like to get the Texas Picon coffee because you know squirrels
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like nuts.
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Anyway, I thought I would talk about my little Chromebook.
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Let's see if I can pull up the model number of this from one of my videos just a moment
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here.
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Let me click some buttons.
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This Chromebook does not have a touch screen to it.
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But you know that's just fine with me.
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I don't hardly use the touch screen on my Google Go Pro.
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Google Go Pro.
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So let's see which Chromebook was this that I have.
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Samsung 310 Netbook, here it is, yeah.
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And they have a couple versions of this.
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One of them has a slot on the side to read a plug-in memory card.
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But this one has a USB-C plug-in on one side.
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And then the other one has a regular USB plug-in, the big one.
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And I kind of like that.
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You charge it from the USB-C side, of course.
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And once you charge it, it lasts for ten full hours.
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Anyway, I thought I'd go ahead and close down the web browser and talk about the Chromebook
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a little bit.
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It has a regular trackpad.
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It's really small.
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It's slightly bigger than a textbook folded up.
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It weighs nothing.
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It's like maybe a pound or so.
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I've got a headset plugged into it right now that I'm using to make this recording.
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And I thought I might spend a few minutes talking about Chromebooks.
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I know a lot of people don't like to use something that's tied to Google as much as Chromebooks
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are.
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But I've sort of enjoyed it.
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It does have some shortfalls, of course.
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You can't do any low-level hard drive formatting with anything that you've plugged into.
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You can't boot an operating system from a USB keystick on your Chromebook unless you
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push a couple of buttons on it.
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But you can't actually use QMU to run an operating system unless it's in QCal format
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or something.
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And it happens that QCal format happens to be on your little SIM card that's buried
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inside the unit, unfortunately.
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You can't run QMU, at least I can't, from a plug-in USB hard drive.
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This doesn't seem to work.
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So it has some disappointing sides.
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But on the other side of it, I have an open BSD server at the house that I could just
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log into anytime I wish.
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And I can run QMU on any operating system I desire from there.
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So, and that, of course, has more memory, more storage capacity and everything else.
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So I'm really not missing it.
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If I wanted to run an operating system in QMU, I can just use the open BSD server, sitting
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at my house to do it with.
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I also decided to sign up for a Google One services, which gives you access to their
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Google Drive storage for which I signed up, probably, with two terabytes.
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It's 99 bucks a year.
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And they give you a VPN service.
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And I also decided to sign up for Screencastify, which I've been enjoying, you know, basically
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making videos for Demi's, you know, just click a button and they have everything all set
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up.
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That's one of the nice things about running Chromebucks is that everything is already set
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up for you.
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I also picked up one other program that I had installed in my browser here.
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And let me see if I can find the manufacturer of that just a minute.
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Let me pull up a web page here and have a look at something, or I know what I can do.
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I can pull up DistroWatch.
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And let me just do that and I've got a screen reading program.
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That I subscribe to for what is it, 50 bucks a year or something that it's basically
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a little more, a little better than the standard one that you get with a Google Chrome.
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And let me see if I can pull up the company that makes that one here.
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Here it is.
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Read selected.
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Let me read who it is is doing this because I forgot the name of the company.
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Let's see, where's the settings, I think that's the settings, maybe it gives me the name
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of the company in there.
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I'm not getting it to function for some reason.
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Anyway, it's one of the add-ons and it will screen read for up to, I don't know, 20 minutes
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or something and then they cut it off of the day so you get 20 minutes a day for free.
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But if you want more than that you, there are three tier plans for it.
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Anyway, I've got it now and I've been making some videos with this screen reader and enjoying
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it.
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It's a good addition.
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Anyway, I like this, it's nice and it stores everything to Google Drive and uploading
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it to YouTube is really fast.
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It's really fast.
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You just click the YouTube button.
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After you're finished making a video with a screen castify and you enter a title and maybe
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a description and click and it's done in like 10 seconds or less.
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No matter how big the video is.
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So there are some advantages to working with a network drive like Google Drive.
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I've also been installed a program called Drive 2 on OpenBSD and there's also what is
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it called our clone, I believe.
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Those are the two utilities that you can use to access Google Drive with and write files
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to and from the OpenBSD server so that I can do backups of stuff to and from the Google
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Drive from the OpenBSD server which I find useful from time to time.
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I have it running, the OpenBSD server, I have it running Bash Potter and it collects
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my podcast and then I have Drive 2 just send them out to Google Drive which I think works
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pretty dandy.
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I can also send ISOs or labor office documents or anything I want out there for storage.
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I have some business related and also person related type of documentation and spreadsheets
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and things that I keep out on Google Drive because I've become accustomed to it.
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Running in bucks a year it's certainly cheaper than running OpenBSD from just the electricity
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alone on a server.
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Of course if you run a Raspberry Pi to do it with it might be a little cheaper but I don't
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think it would be as dependable and you wouldn't have the backup capacity that Google does.
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Anyway, there are other cloud options I'm sure.
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Anyway, I thought I would pause the video I'm going to be eating my dinner and when I finish
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I'm going to go back to my vehicle and we're going to talk a little bit about Twitter and Elon Musk
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and Apple if we can. So I'm going to pause this for just a moment as the squirrel eats his dinner
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and we wouldn't want people to know that I could talk while I could eat.
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You know that's a magical property that we must keep secret between ourselves.
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Hang on folks I'll be right back.
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All right boys and girls dinner is over and it was just absolutely lovely eating human food
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in a human restaurant. Things went long swimmingly. I had enjoyed a couple of cups of black coffee
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and two glasses of water while I was there after finishing my meal.
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Well nobody really bothered me. However there was a pile up at the cashiers
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register leaving and people were lined up behind me. It was afraid maybe they might notice
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I was a squirrel but fortunately none of them did.
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They kept their distance. Didn't say anything to me.
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I didn't say anything back and then I left. Anyway it's fine.
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Sometimes there's tension between squirrels and humans. Humans don't like squirrels around
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that much especially in their restaurants. There are some states perhaps I was one of them
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that won't allow a squirrel in a restaurant or a grocery store anywhere there's human food.
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Fortunately I got away with it this time but you can never tell.
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Anyway I wanted to talk about Twitter and what was going on and I wanted to talk about
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the reality two cast podcast with duck surles and Catherine Druckmann. They spend a lot of
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time making podcasts talking about what's going on at Twitter because it concerns them.
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This squirrel has never been on Twitter. I don't know what Twitter is about other than I see
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people saying things that have been reposted on other sites from Twitter. I just never got to
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a point where I felt that I was interested in joining a site that would only allow you to type
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out 130 characters of text per whack. I mean I just didn't understand that.
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Twitter was kind of like when Twitter came on the scene on the internet we had my space
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and I forget what else. I don't think Google Plus was there yet and I was at Google Plus
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user but there were other sites that you could type two or three paragraphs of text.
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I believe Facebook was just getting started and you could type quite a bit of text on that and send
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pictures and everything. You weren't limited to 130 characters and I've never understood the
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fascination for 130 characters. But over time Twitter became center of a leftist politically
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leaning organization and then one day a man named Elon Musk came and bought them out for 44
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billion dollars and this concerns all the leftists because they feel that that's their left
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place. Twitter is where all the leftists go and without Twitter they have no place to go.
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And they absolutely will not tolerate people like Donald Trump being back or
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Carl Benjamin from England or some of these other people that have been banned
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of which I'm not going to name them all. There must be a thousand of them. I mean it was shocked
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at the number of people that were banned from using Twitter by the people that were running
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Twitter that are now fired. They're all gone. They're all out of a job. He's fired the entire company.
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They're gone. All I can say is what I've seen, what I saw they did with Twitter and what happened
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was just bizarre. It was social molding
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against the will of one half of society. In other words it wasn't a democratic function at all.
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It was just them just deciding what was going to happen with the site and everyone else could
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basically go to hell. I mean that's what I saw from it. In fact I've never thought that I would
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live long enough to see a sitting U.S. President banned from anything. It was quite shocking.
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And I'm not a Trump supporter. I just respect the office but apparently some people don't
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and even if you think Trump doesn't or Biden doesn't you still should respect the office.
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At any rate Twitter was a segregated society and having lived in a segregated society in the 50s
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and 60s in Tulsa, Oklahoma which I'm sure you've heard of my town. You know Biden had to come
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to our town and make a huge speech about the race rights of 1922, 21, whatever that happened.
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I remember being taken to the mound when I was a child and the school bus
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they have a plaque in front of it that commemorated that event.
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And not much was said about it. It happened a long time ago. It was over 100 years ago.
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I find it funny that when I was a child in the 1960s people would refer to World War II as an
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ancient event and that was only 20 years ago. And the Civil War was an ancient event also when
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I was a child. So things change, things move. But I think Twitter is also kind of like what happened to
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our residential housing in towns like Tulsa. When segregation ended, front porches were no
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longer being built on houses. They didn't want to have places where the neighbor who could come
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around and meet together. And in my opinion Twitter is kind of that way by limiting you to what is
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120 130 characters, they're basically trying to cut your conversation down quite a bit. Perhaps
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that was a part of the idea of making it so short was if you only had 130 characters you couldn't
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say enough to irritate anybody. And then there's the other issue that Elon Musk is going after,
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which is stopping grooming gangs in pedophilia. And he's basically, I believe he's pretty much wiped
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out anafa off of Twitter. That's what he's done right now. I don't know what other groups,
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what other groups he's going to be going after. But they're going to be leaning Twitter to the right.
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Hopefully not too far because we don't want it to turn into a right wing side either.
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That wouldn't be good. A balanced site would be better. But anyway, he's going to wipe out pedophilia.
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And that's fine by me. It's illegal to be a pedophile. And I think I did make a hacker public
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radio show about RMS and his pedophile comments in the past. You can go look that up if you want.
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I'm not even going to reference it in the notes. But at any rate, now that that Elon Musk has done
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all this stuff and fired all the employees from Twitter, they're all gone. Lock the doors,
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closing offices. But he's keeping the servers up. Twitter's still running.
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Apple Equipment Company, a computer company, has decided that they're probably going to ban
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the Twitter app from their store. So again, you have this extreme left versus extreme right
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fighting openly and publicly now on the internet. And really, I wish we wouldn't have fighting,
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you know. And I wish we wouldn't have to worry about discrimination like between
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Skural Human. I wish that didn't have to happen. I'm not on Facebook and I'm not on Twitter.
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I'm also not really unmasked on. I make hacker public radio podcasts and
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make some YouTube videos and bit shoot videos and honesty videos. But I like to make videos and
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podcasts more than I do anything else. But I do have a particular off-the-road social site that I
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go to that I use. And I'm not interested in accumulating crowds, obviously, because no one's
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that interested in what a Skural's opinion is of anything in this world. In fact, when humans
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look at me and they come around me, I just kind of write it off like I'm a movie star. You know,
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I'm one of the movie stars like Berber Stress Center, something they just have to be near me
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and touch me. You know, I'm like John Travolta. So that's what's special about me.
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And you may feel that way if you have problems with humans as well, depending on who you are.
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But even within humans, humans have trouble with humans. And Twitter is one giant example of
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about a hundred million humans having trouble with each other. Just amazing.
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And the front porch society that I had in my neighborhood in Tulsa at the first house we lived in
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there was wonderful. Of course, that was back when we had segregated society where you lived in
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these neighborhoods where everybody looked alike and they talked alike and thought alike.
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And there wasn't any political difference. You know, there wasn't any difference in the
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meaning of the mind. And one thing human beings have not learned how to do is they have
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not learned tolerance. They have not learned that it is a skill to work with other people
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and listen to their opinion and practice free speech. It's a skill.
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You know, it's something that you have to learn. And apparently in our public school systems,
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we haven't really taught that heavily. I think we're lacking in that area.
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So at any rate, tonight I'd like to conclude my podcast and extend my hand
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to you humans wishing you happy holidays and hope that you get something good to eat in a human
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restaurant somewhere some day soon. And you managed to get in and out of there without attracting too
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much attention like I did and enjoy your meal. And that you have a nice vehicle, a huge pickup truck
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like I do so that you don't get challenged by other humans in their cars because it's not only
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on Twitter where they try to challenge you. It's not on these things called interstates in
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US highways. They'll come after you like their hawks or something. You know, they're just nutty.
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They're zany. So anyway, I'm going to go ahead and cut this audio off.
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And I'm just going to make a reference to the Reality 2 podcast. They were complaining about
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Twitter by the way. I think Doc Sirles was because he was afraid he was going to lose his audience.
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You know, he's going to lose his way of life if Twitter gets modified too much or goes out of
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business. And so with a lot of these people who are huge personalities, you know, that might have
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instead of just six to 800 followers like I do in Bit Shoot, you know, people watch my videos.
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They might have 10 or 100,000 people that are interested in free software listening.
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You know, they might be very popular radio personalities, radio and video making personalities.
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And they're actually trying to make money off of this hobby.
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And as we all know, money is the root of all evil. But in some cases, some people are
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making Linux and free software their livelihood, which is something I've never done.
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And so they're worried about losing their livelihood or their Twitter.
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And I was just sitting here thinking to myself, how popular can you really be
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if you have to result in marketing techniques on a large distribution area of social network like
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Twitter? I mean, how popular are you really? If you move from Twitter or you move from YouTube
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to Bit Shoot or some other place, often you lose followers. You know, I used to make some
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Slacker videos up in YouTube. And I still have one of them left up there, I believe.
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And it had like 22,000 views, I think. And, you know, when I moved over to Bit Shoot, I got
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600-800 views now, 300 views sometimes, not as many. And not as many people subscribe to it,
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either, like they did up in YouTube. So, you know, I don't think that I'm good enough that I
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merit, you know, a huge audience. And I'm not worried about it because I'm not trying to make the
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living off of anybody doing this. But I wonder how much of this audience is fabricated nonsense,
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because a lot of Twitter is basically robots. You know, movie stars and singers will pay
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companies to have them followed in post comments that are fictitious on Twitter, just so that they appear
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popular. And that's another problem that I have with organizations like Twitter in that it's sort
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of a puff balloon. But in any rate, if Twitter goes out of business tomorrow, I'm not going to worry
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about it at all and I hope you don't either. And as far as Elon Musk goes, I've heard so much negative
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commentary out of the left from him. They've kind of tarnished his image in my mind a little bit,
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that our missile man, as they call him, are a man that owns the Tesla car company. But I also
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realized that, you know, he's the one that made all the stuff happen, including the that satellite
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internet that he's created that they're using in Ukraine and whatnot. And he does have some
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brilliance to him and I think he will make something of Twitter in the end. He seems to be a person
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of a good heart. If you just give him half a chance, he will probably do well by Twitter eventually.
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It'll take him a while though. But obviously he got into more than he could chew with Twitter and
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obviously firing all the employees of Twitter has made a huge impact and difference on how Twitter
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runs. In fact, I've recommended that in the last three software projects I've worked on.
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I just told the guy, hey, why don't you fire all of us? That way you can get some peace, right?
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Anyway, I'm going to let you go. Audience, I just wanted to make a quickie podcast.
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It's kind of a garbagey podcast, but it was a quickie. Love your humans, go out and get something to eat
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and don't go near the big bad social sites. They're no good for you. Bye for now.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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At HackerPublicRadio.org, today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it
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really is. Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onstoast.com, the Internet Archive and
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Our Sync.net. On this otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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