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81 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
81 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4098
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Title: HPR4098: Road trips without GPS
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4098/hpr4098.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:35:21
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,098 for Wednesday the 17th of April 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Road Trips Without GPS.
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It is hosted by Trey and is about seven minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, a short off-the-cuff discussion of how we navigated road trips in the past.
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Hello, this is Trey and this is an off-the-cuff recording.
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I am about 200 miles into a 700-mile trip from the southeastern United States to the
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northeastern United States.
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I am not sightseeing, I am just trying to get from point A to point B and I made a stop
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and after the stop my GPS decided it did not want to reconnect to data.
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So I thought to myself, this might be a good opportunity to share with the HPR community
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how I generally prepare for long distance trips like this and what type of redundancies
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I have in place for when things go a little bit pear-shaped.
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Now I have been driving for a long time, more than 40 years and long distance driving
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like this, not driving a truck, not hauling any cargo, but living far away from where I
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grew up and traveling to see friends that live in other parts of the country and traveling
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around the country for work, for a period of my career.
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I have done a lot of longer distance driving and I really do enjoy it.
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And at the beginning when I started doing it we had maps, we had lots of paper maps.
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In fact I made it a habit of making sure that I had the most recent road atlas for the
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roads in the United States and a road atlas is really cool.
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It's a paperback fairly thick maybe half an inch to three quarters of an inch thick paper
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back book of maps for sections of each state in the United States because that was where
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I was focused and that way if you needed to plan a route you could, if things changed
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and you needed to reference your route you could do that.
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We also had something that I grew up with which was trip ticks.
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When my parents were planning trips they would go to the American Automobile Association
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of which they were a member and they would get a trip tick and the trip tick was basically
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a small custom made flip chart of maps for each section of the trip.
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So they would tell the agent at the American Automobile Association, I'm going from point
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a to point b, can you do a trip tick and they would figure out what the best route was.
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They would also often figure out alternative routes and they would put them together in
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this little flip chart so you could flip from section to section to section and know
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where you're going get a little bit more detail for those sections than what you would
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have in an Almanac or a big folded map to try to deal with while you're driving.
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Now we very rarely use maps like that anymore because we have things like GPS and amazing
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tools like that where our phones and our devices can tell us where to go and what speed to
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go and whether there's any obstacles in the road or other hazards to be aware of.
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And it's been a wonderful innovation but it doesn't always work like in this case where
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I do not have enough of a signal now to load the next segment of my trip.
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But I went ahead and had printed the trip section by section before I left.
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So I have the equivalent of what those trip ticks used to be and I have those available
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to me so I can look and see all right this is where I need to go next and to be honest
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this particular trip is a trip that I've made hundreds of times and so I'm much more
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familiar with the details of the trip and where I'm going and what to expect.
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But there's also other issues that can happen on a long trip like this for instance there
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may be road hazards there may be backups there may be law enforcement officers that are
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making sure that you're traveling at a rate of speed that is safe and consistent with
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what the law allows.
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Being aware of those types of areas allow you to travel more safely so one of the other
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things that I do use when I'm traveling long distance especially when I'm traveling
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by myself is I keep a citizens band radio running in my vehicle.
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I think 27 megahertz operates at and many of the trucks that do long distance travel pay
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attention to some of the signals on that.
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If I can be here it cut in in the background here you'll know that it's a signal coming
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in from there and they'll post when there's a road hazard when there's a backup when
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there's law enforcement at a specific area that you might want to be aware of and that
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can just help me have a little bit of visibility further ahead in my trip that I do without
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having my GPS doing what it would normally do and this is the way I used to do it and
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I still use it as a backup and it's interesting to chat with people on the radio to once
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in a while but mainly just use it to listen to see if there's there's hazards around
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so when you are planning a trip that's going to take 10 to 12 hours like this one it does help
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to be aware and to plan for redundancy what am I going to do if my phone just dies or if my
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application that is going giving me navigation cuts out or you know some other issue there's no
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cell signal when I'm trying to load it so some of the old school ways are not that bad
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anyways I hope you enjoyed this this little chat down memory lane and how I'm still using it
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today if you like it comment if you don't like it also comment or even better record a show of how
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you would approach the same situation and look forward to hearing from you this is Tray
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work today's show
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was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording podcast and click
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on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hosting for HBR has been kindly provided
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by an honesthost.com the internet archive and our sync.net on the Sadois status today's show is
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released on our creative comments attribution 4.0 international license
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