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329 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 923
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Title: HPR0923: 12 Gazillion Buttons
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0923/hpr0923.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 05:01:44
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---
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Hello, it's PR listeners. My name is Jezra and I'm here with my buddy NY Bill. Bill, say
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hi. Hello, awesome. Well, all right. Let's get this cell, ball the rolling. First off,
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I'd like to say Happy Birthday to Moss Garden, Ultra Turquoise, Hannah. Happy Birthday.
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Happy Birthday. Yeah. So right now we've got 2011 coming to a close. Coming our way very fast is
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2012. By the time most people hear this, it will be 2012. So you had mentioned somewhere in a
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online computer forum that I happen to know you from. Did you have a certain prediction for 2012
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and I'd like to hear that again so we can discuss it. The probably the canonical Unity tablet one?
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Absolutely. I don't know. I can just see this coming down the line. Doesn't it seem like
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Unity is a very touch interface friendly? Have you used Unity? No, not at all. But I know the idea
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behind Unity is to have one unified interface for desktop tablet, possibly phone or mobile device,
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whatever you want to call it. And it seems very touch friendly, large icons and everything's used
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to be done in one on one window. So it's not very virtual multiple desktops like a typical Linux
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system? It wasn't. I confess I only used it probably 20, 25 minutes. I don't think that's
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probably long enough to give it a real kicking in the tires, but it wasn't my thing. But I can see
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where they're going with it. One user experience, if they were going to go public with it, if they're
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going to put out a product to non-tex, non geeky people, you'd want one user experience,
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ease of tech support. If someone was calling in for help, you wouldn't want people like us who
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tweak the heck out of our systems. It seems that's Unity's one type of experience, is that?
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Yeah, I could definitely see Shuttleworth and the canonical company saying, okay, we have
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this product and we need to get it out there. So who's going to put this on their machines? I
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could see them going to actually Dell. I could really see them going to Dell as a manufacturer
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because Dell makes them, well, they were making the streak for a while. And I can definitely see
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in the future, very large screen mobile devices, not quite tablets, smaller than your standard
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seven-inch tablet. I mean, like a five-inch screen mobile works as a phone, it's a tablet,
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and it has this one interface that is the same as a desktop Linux or tablet Linux.
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And they also seem to be coming out with some like the Ubuntu one like cloud services and
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things that would support a tablet type of device. Oh, yeah, what is Ubuntu one?
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I think it's cloud storage. Like just storage? I know they do, they do a music, do Hickey thing.
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Yep, I think if you purchase music, it actually gets stored there in the Ubuntu one.
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I've kind of been out of the Ubuntu loop for like a year and a half, though.
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I probably should have researched that Ubuntu one thing a little further, but the Unity thing,
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that's like even my wife used Unity and not being like a geek like us, her perspective of it was
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it seems like a tablet interface. There's no shutdown button, but if on a tablet you would have
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a hardware button, so I don't know. Yeah, the an ACPI button that press and it sends the shutdown
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signal. Yeah, actually my buddy was saying that he had been doing a lot of research on the Windows 8
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recently and he actually felt very similar that he said that it would be fantastic on a tablet.
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He's and he was you know excited about where the UI of Windows 8 was going to go,
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which kind of scared me, but I'm just kind of seeing a trend of like consumer devices are going
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to be devices like an appliance. You turn them on and you do a few things with them and you don't
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tweak them a lot or install new stuff. It's stuff is coming out of markets and
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it seems that's the direction things are going. That's my 2012.
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Like an off the shelf router, you buy it, you plug it in, you turn it on,
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it may be running Linux for the most part, you don't care. You can go and install your own software
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on some event if you want, but for the most part you turn it on, it does what it's supposed to do
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and you're happy. And people keep talking about this year's Linux desktop. This year is
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year of the Linux desktop. I'm going to have to disagree and say no year will ever be the year
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of the Linux desktop because I think 2012, this is my prediction, is the year of the network
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to clients so that and people always come say no, I don't need my refrigerator to talk to my
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network. Well, maybe those people don't, but there's going to be someone who does. Someone who's
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going to say with some sort of near field communication, their refrigerator is going to tell them
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your milk is old, it's gone bad, get new milk or press a button and it sends something out
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to the store and gets it ready for you or delivers it. Or your power consumption at home is too high,
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do you do you want to power down the refrigerator a little bit? Do you want to turn something else
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off, turn something else on? Do you want to adjust the heat in your house, the thermostat controls?
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I think all of everything will start not everything, but quite a few appliances are going to be
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going towards being networked and they're all going to be controlled by people's pocket
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machines and by a pocket machine I mean a mobile phone or a tablet. Or a Unity tablet?
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Yeah, it comes off. It comes all right.
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Yep. Me, I will be controlling everything with my Nokia N900 or makes device in my pocket.
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Nice. Which I've been using quite a bit recently and I'm really liking it. What a damn shame.
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Yeah, they keep dropping the ball on pretty much everything.
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Yeah, well, yeah, I think there's no hope for Nokia anyone. That's good, Ben.
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And let's see. So that's my prediction for 2012. Is that there's going to be more appliances
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networked and that is going to kill the desktop because the majority of users don't need a desktop.
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The majority of computer users need a cheap tablet so they can get online and see what people
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are writing on Facebook or Google Plus or whatever is the sweet social networking site these days.
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Cars are starting to come out all. I mean, you got a computer right in your dashboard.
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Which can have some scary implications. Yeah.
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Having a touchscreen computer in the car can be bad. I don't see really how it can be too much
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worse than having say a push button AM radio unless it's designed in such a way that it has
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menus and is super busy for the user. Oh, I'm sure. And it's going to cause problems. Oh,
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sure. Here's how to make it absolutely terrible. Let an engineer develop the interface.
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Here's how to ruin your product no matter what it is. They were trying to pass a law that
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can't use your cell phone. You can't use any portable device, not even MP3 player, no texting.
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I mean, this is like this was like nationwide. But the one that's in the dashboard, you're still
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able to use the one that comes from the manufacturer. And I put on my tinfoil hat and I just see
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backroom deals being made that you know, you're going to need a separate cell and data account
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for your dashboard and a separate one for your phone and tinfoil hat stuff. Go ahead.
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Well, there's nothing wrong with that. I can I can see that as well. I definitely see the advantage
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of having a computer in a car and being able to have a mesh network while driving down the
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freeway. Something that would say four miles ahead, there is traffic congestion. You may want to
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take this exit. Oh, well, thank you car computer. That's very helpful. But what I don't want to see
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is oh, hi, I'm an engineer and I put in 12 gazillion buttons into this thing. So you spend more time
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pressing buttons on the interface than you do with keeping your eyes on the wheel or you don't
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have your hands on the wheel. Or at a red light, you can play Tetris. Oh, that's not bad. I love
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Tetris. Really Tetris on the Game Boy. Probably one of my favorite countries. This is awesome,
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but we have enough distractions on the road. I hit it my horn three times today. People are almost
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hitting me. Oh, yeah, people can be crazy drivers. So speaking of user interfaces and this is
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something that I've discussed with a few people before and it's always really bothered me.
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The remote control to my former DVD player has like 40 buttons on it because an engineer
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developed it. The remote control for my television probably has about 35 buttons on it because an
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engineer developed it. I've seen the remote controls for the Google TV devices and it's full
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on, it's full-size keyboards. I haven't seen it. And yeah, well, you will. Yeah, the guy
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knows the Google is coming. And people say, oh, there's the remote control for these devices
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is monstrous. It doesn't matter what it is. Someone says, oh, the device has X, Y, Z feature,
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so we should put a button on the remote control that handles X, Y, Z feature. When what they need
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to do is put an on-screen menu on the device that can be accessed from the remote control.
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But that's what they need to do. I can just see some types. Not getting into menus and not liking
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it and suddenly their TV is all blue and too much green. But when they're creating the device,
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having a, oh, yeah, well, yeah, I guess I should probably think of a good example first of
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what one of these possible features are. Me, I just need to select what I want to play and hit play
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and let it play. Maybe fast forward, rewind. That's it. Volume up and down. That's it. That's
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all I want. That's all I need. If I need something else, put it in a configuration file somewhere.
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We're sorry, not a configuration file. Put it in a menu accessible configuration.
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That's what I would like. This man hates features. Yeah, it's your features to me are just big piles of
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cane. Are you willing to be shot? It's true. I hate features. I don't know if it's like a
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selling point of some people when they go buy a TV that looks attractive to them that the remote
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controls five inches by an eight inches and has LCD and 600 buttons. I'm not sure. I'm with you.
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Pause. Maybe mute fast forward. Yeah. And then rewind or whatever the new term needs to be for
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rewind because it's not a tape. It's not a cassette. It's not VCR. It's not an eight track. It's
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not real real. There's nothing to wind. We're getting old now though, so we don't know these new terms.
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Yeah, there is no new term. That's the problem. People still dial a number on a phone even though
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phones don't have dials anymore. But it's the nomenclature and that's just it's there. I need to
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come up with a new word. I will change everything. That'll be great. So looking forward. Would you
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like to warm up this topic for us? Well, you said our predictions and what are we looking forward
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in the next year? For me, it would be Northeast Linux Fest. And you went last year to Northeast
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Linux Fest. Three of us carpooled down. Three of us from the lug. All right, so
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well, we can talk about lug later, but tell me about the Linux. Tell me about Northeast Linux
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Fest. It's just great getting together in a room full of fellow Linux geeks. Basically, you're
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there amongst friends. It's like a camaraderie, like instant friends. And then it's nice seeing
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people that you know online. You've only ever talked to in text and you meet them, shake their
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hands. You finally put a name to a face. That's what I really enjoy actually just hanging out with
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everyone. Awesome. So I've got in the next year as far as Linux meetups go. Aside from my lug,
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I've got the scale, the Southern California Linux Expo, which I guess is in its 10th year. I've
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never gone before. I haven't really gone to any Linux based events other than my lug. And
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the me go conference in San Francisco. Okay. So other than that, I've never gone to a large
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system. Yeah, one of the big ones, isn't it? Yeah, it's pretty big from what I hear.
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So that'll be interesting. Yeah, Northeast Linux Fest was pretty small last year, maybe
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a hundred people. So you actually felt like you really got to get around and meet everyone. I
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don't know how big it's going to be this year. It sounds like it's gearing up to be a bit larger.
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Well, that's awesome. Well, I hope you have as much fun this year as you did last year,
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but it sounds like it's going to happen. We're already talking about Carpool and so it should be good.
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Nice. So other things looking forward to in 2012, I'm looking forward to the Raspberry Pi
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finally coming out and shipping. Yeah. And for any listeners who don't know what the Raspberry
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Pi is, it is a very small single board arm powered system on chip that has HDMI out, RCA video out.
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Did I mention it's small about size of a credit card? Yeah, they are tiny. Yeah, they are very small.
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I've been keeping my eye on it, but I'm not sure how or when we're going to be able to get one.
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25 bucks. That's what I find to be pretty awesome. Yeah, that's amazing. I'm not sure how they're
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doing that actually. 35 bucks for the onboard network. There's a version that comes out with
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onboard network and it is 35 bucks. Me, I would go 25 bucks because I would just throw. It's got
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USB so I can throw a wireless USB card in there. Yeah, I've been keeping my eye on it. I would
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really like to get my hands on one. I heard they're going to make a limited run, but the first production
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units are going to go to developers. So we'd have to say we're going to be developers. Well,
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I'm actually working on something that could possibly run on it. And so I will definitely,
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yeah, if they're only going to developers, then I'm going to submit my project. You're a developer
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there. Yeah, absolutely. I recently joined a 2600 group and we get into a little more
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hardware hacking over there. So that would be a great, that would be a great little project.
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What is the, I've heard about 2600 group before and obviously it's not in reference to the Atari.
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So what does the 2600 come from? 2600 is the frequency of a dial tone. That's where it comes from.
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And it's an old, oh geez, I don't know how far it goes back late 60s or something, but it goes,
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it's back in the hacker culture and the phone freaks. And it was a magazine for a long time and it's,
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now there's a podcast off the wall and there's off the hook. And it's just kind of like,
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like we go to logs and these are a little bit more hardware hackers go to 2600 meetings.
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Oh, well, I'll have to check that one out. But to be honest, everybody in our 2600 group are also Linux
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users. So it kind of, it all blends together. I think, yeah, as far as hacking hardware,
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hacking software, it's different parts of the same culture, really. It's just that inquisitive
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mindset that you want to just learn more and know more and how is this working? And why is it not
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broken yet? Or why is it broken? What did I do that happens to? Well, yeah, we try not to talk
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about that one too much though. So is there anything else coming up? 2012 that you're really,
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really looking forward to hardware software. You put me on the spot with that one. No, I can't
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think of anything other than Fests. I'm hoping to get to some of the, there's Ohio Linux Fest and
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there's Southeast Linux Fest. If I can figure out how to get down there and, yeah, I'm looking forward
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to Fests. Awesome. And lug. Well, tell me about your lug. And then I'll tell you about my lug.
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All right. So let's trade some lug stories. My lug is the North Bay Linux users group NB lug.
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I'm a little biased when I talk about it because I'm on the board of directors.
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My position is director at large. And by that, I have certain responsibilities, which are to
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promote Linux and to promote my lug. And my lug meets on the second Tuesday of every month
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at the O'Reilly building in Sebastopol, California at 7.30 p.m. How many members would you say?
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Like in general, in general, members and then in general, how many show per meeting?
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I have actually no way of knowing how many members there actually are to be a member. One needs to
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simply show up and, and they're a member. Depending on the topic of conversation. So the way our lug
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usually works is someone will give a presentation about something Linux related. And then there'll be
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a, and this could be like a half hour to an hour long presentation. And then there'll be some
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questions and answers afterwards. Or sometimes there will be just a sort of hack fest where hey,
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you know, bringing your project, we're all just going to sit around and talk about what we're doing
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with Linux. And depending on the topic of the conversation, it can get really, really full.
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And by full, I mean like 45, maybe 50 people. Our last meeting, the president Kyle Rankin gave a
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presentation on how to hack into your own Linux based router. And he had a specific router that
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he was working on. And he's actually giving that presentation again at scale is pretty interesting.
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Cool. It was how to through a web interface trick your router into running shell commands.
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Nice. So our lug is upstate New York. I'm not on the board. So I don't know. I mean, if you guys,
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if somebody's interested and in upstate New York, you could probably look it up and find it online.
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But yeah, we're once a month too. And basically, it's just a room full of Linux geeks and we talk about
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whatever we want. Some people get off in pockets of people working on a project. But somebody comes in
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with a problem and other people's help them and you can get pretty loud. A lot of shouting, a lot of
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BSD Linux fighting. I haven't seen a fight yet. But no, it just, I don't know. It starts off as a murmur.
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And then when everybody starts getting excited about whatever they're getting into it, sometimes you
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can come away horse because you've been shouting over people. But it's good fun.
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So all you listeners out there, go find a lug. If you're not a part of a lug, join one. It's a good
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place to meet people or start one. Yeah, or start one. If there's not a close by lug, start one up.
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Coffee shop, a pub, probably coffee shop. College would be a, that's just hang posters and get a room.
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You could probably get a bunch of people together quick at a college. College.
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It was so long ago. I don't know. You guys had rooms?
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Yeah, now it's all tablets and laptops and he used to be books and pencils.
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Oh, there's damn kids. The year after I graduated, they got a grant to get a computer lab
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to teach what I was there for. So at college, yeah, I went for graphic design. I learned the
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old rulers, razors, you know, pencils, drafting boards. Nice. I learned the old way.
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You couldn't get a job after I got out. They all said, well, computers could
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experience the I have. And I said, I don't. And like a year or two later, they got a grant from
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someone and put in a hole. I don't know if it was Max or what it was, but I was just, I was there
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at the wrong time. Right at the wrong time. Oh, they're probably all Windows machines running
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AutoCAD. Could be I haven't been back since. Yeah. But you know, you know, you had experience with
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with the Vic 20 and the 64. Yep. Yep. Back in back in the when and that doesn't that didn't count.
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No, they didn't. They didn't care about that. What could you draw? They had a koala pad,
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which you could probably do four colors of 16 colors. No, that didn't count. Now it's damn shame.
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Speaking of the Commodore, well, just the name. You know, they're made, they're coming out,
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they came out, coming out with new Commodores. I saw that a couple of juice about a year ago.
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Yeah, I guess they bought the name and it was like an atom-based thing, wasn't it? Yeah, as far
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as I know, they're like atom-based Linux box, I think it was. Yeah. So the machine, it seems
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like it's a mini ITX motherboard inside of inside of the keyboard. The first, so it looks like
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it looks like the Vic 20. Yeah, the first ones I saw were just kind of like a square metal
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looked like their own proprietary box. But then the new one, I saw a later picture and it was like
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it looked exactly like the old Commodore 64 or the Vic 20. Yeah. So I may have a couple models
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and the CD tray comes out the side. Exactly. And the Linux they have, I didn't really look into
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it too much, but it's monstrous. It is like every package ever made. Have you ever noticed they
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start rolling out things that are from our childhood when we get old enough to have some disposable
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income? Especially like movies and stuff to keep, to keep remaking movies that or toys that we
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had when we were kids are kids, so that you might want to bring your kid. Oh, let's go see this movie.
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Oh, okay. Then here's my prediction for 2012. There will be something I really liked in my childhood
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and some jazz ass is going to make a fucking 3D movie about it. In 3D. Oh, 3D. 3D. Just 3D.
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3D is just a headache machine. So they're going to take this story that I loved as a kid,
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they're going to get some shitty actors, they're going to get a ton of computer-generated explosions,
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and they're going to make it 3D. And everyone's going to hate it, and then the movie industry is going
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to complain that they're losing so much money because of piracy. Oh, let's not go down the soap
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line. Oh, yeah, well. This has nothing to do with soap. That's a soap line. Or beep-buck. That could be a
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whole episode, that debacle. Yeah. Well, I think for, no, actually it wouldn't because that would
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be preaching to the choir for the most part. That's true, yeah. Soap of bad. I didn't want to get
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too political right there. That's why I didn't start. Okay, okay. An employee company don't
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mention religion or politics. It's one of those things. My biggest concern with you discussing
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politics is that your avatar is a primate holding a fire. If you can, if you can get past that,
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I'm actually a nice guy. So we did actually, well, for, we briefly mentioned, well, I briefly
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mentioned a project as development, possibly for the Raspberry Pi. And so, hey, Bill,
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got any projects coming up? Hardware. Software. Hardware. Software.
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Have a little of each. Hardware with the 2600 group. I just bought a teensy board. Have you ever heard
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of these? No, not at all. A little tiny or do we know compatible development board like 16 pinouts
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USB. And I'm going to try and run a Commodore 641541 disk drive to USB. That's my project. I did
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it to a parallel port once and it was just so nostalgic when you actually like put up an M64
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emulator and get that old drive to start making those old noises. It was very gratifying. So I'm
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going to see if I can get it to work with USB. Now, do you still have data on drives that would be
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accessible through that device? Through the 1541. And I don't mean through the teensy, but I mean,
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what it was five and a quarter drive. Yeah, like floppies that are actually floppy. Yeah, I still have
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all of them. I have two drives, two Commodore monitors. My 64 is dead.
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I don't know if one of the chips burned up or something, but yeah, I still have all my old floppies
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and most of them are like hacks and cracks. There's a big scene back then. Now, yeah, I mean, say this
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might be a bit of a personal question, but what do you have on these disks that you haven't transferred
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to something? Or is it just there for nostalgic reasons? Yeah, it's kind of nostalgic with me.
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I mean, there's nothing you'd, there's nothing you'd really want to transfer. There's old programs
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that I used to write. There's some basic I used to do or sometimes you get the old magazines like
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compute and you'd type in a program that's in the magazine for like a day and then you would
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correct syntax errors for like the next two days. I mean, there's, there's stuff I saved and there's
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just a ton of games and things. But it's, it's, yeah, it's just nostalgia. You know, I understand.
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Sometimes it's as nice to kick back and play some Gallagher. I actually don't ever even turn it
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on and play it. I don't know why I keep it around. Just for things like that, like hacking on it.
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I mean, whoever thought a 1541 drive can run on USB, but what's your, you got any hardware hacks
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going on? You're talking on the red phone right now, aren't you? Yeah, I'm talking on the red
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phone, which is, well, I guess it's a hardware hack. It's just a, the receiver from a cheap plastic
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phone that I wired up to plug into the headphone and microphone port on my laptop so that I can
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use it as a phone. I like phones. Actually, I think the red phone was the, the reason you and I,
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well, we've known each other for years, but the reason you and I like talked first because I think
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you set up a mumble server and you mentioned like one time on Identico or maybe a forum just,
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oh, can you help me test this? So I put on mumble and we used to talk, you know, back then.
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Yeah, I needed, I needed the tester. I needed a subject and you, you stepped up to the change.
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And I was very happy. I'm always there. Hey, buddy tester. Hey buddy, yeah.
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I still use it every day. Oh, yeah, you know, I'm not using it.
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Until, yeah, I need to set up my own identity. Sorry, my own status.net instance.
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Actually, that, that will go right into projects because if we're going to talk about software,
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that is my software project. So it sounds like it's yours too.
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Well, so I looked into it, it, it will be, well, at least setting it up. I also looked into
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our status, which is a Ruby on Rails based. Okay. Federated micro blogging instance.
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Application. Some type of API that it can talk to different.
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Yes, that talk to, like, Identico and status net. Yeah, it goes through a,
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with O status to federate. Yeah. I took an old laptop and I threw a crunch bang on it and
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the lamp stack and status net 1.0. And I got everything up and running, but I was just using my,
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my external IP address. So my next step, I have to get a domain. Oh, and figure out all that stuff,
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you know, for some, so you can get, because I use a dynamic DNS service for routing stuff to
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my actual house. Yeah, that, that was one road I could have, I could go down. I do, I think we have
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dynamic IPs with, with my internet service provider, but I've had the same IP for about three years now.
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So I don't, not really sure how that's working out, but I SSH, SSH back to my house.
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And my IP has never changed. So I suppose I could go that route.
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You could go that route and it would be sort of in, in line with Eben Moglin's freedom box,
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which is have your instances of whatever it may be, micro blogging or some sort of social network
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stuff, have it on a machine in your own house so that you know exactly who has physical access
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to the computers that your information is on. Yeah, that's a good point.
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That was the idea of the freedom box. And I think that was, that came about when there was
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a lot of discussion about the Pogo plug, plug computers, or like the Shiva plug, those, the small
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wall wart size computers. A couple of them float around the log and looked at it. Yeah.
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I think that'd probably be a nice project for the Raspberry Pi. No, yeah, nice.
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No reason why it wouldn't work. So hardware-wise, and not too much of a hardware hack,
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I have a wooden box here at my place that was a former box that held probably six bottles of one.
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Hmm. Some winery had these, they make these pine boxes, and for shipping out their wine,
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and then when they're done, they just have all these dead tree bits laying around, which I think
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|
is terribly wasteful. And so they crush them up, and they throw them in a dumpster.
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|
And so I got my hands on one, and I'm probably going to
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|
gut my current home server, and my current desktop. Frankenstein smashed them all into one machine,
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|
and put them in this box, put it in my box. Right. So what I'm going to end up with is a one gigahertz
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|
machine running fan lists, so it'll be nice and quiet, and have a bunch of hard drives in there.
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Maybe one fan. I'll put it in one fan. Nice. Yeah, we're going to need to see before and after picks.
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Yeah, absolutely. I'll definitely document that one. The only other project that might be coming up for me is
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I just got some SD cards, Class 10, like a fast SD card, and I just want to do a couple of persistent
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installs because I want to distro hop when I'm at the lug, but I leave crunch bang on my EE,
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|
that's all it's like ever done on it. But I do want to fool around with backtrack a little bit, so
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what is backtrack? Hacking, cracking, it's a distro that's kind of tailored towards penetration,
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|
and cracking, got it, metasploit, and all that stuff. Now, well then I will give you my IP address,
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and you will let me know. So we're around 45 minutes of monster edits. Do you want to do the
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listener feedback we have? Oh, contact information. Yeah, contact information.
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If you like more information about anything we discussed, feel free to contact us. You can contact
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me Jezra at Jezra.net. And I'm around online in Identica, or forums, or sometimes IRC,
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|
but I will be getting an email just soon. As soon as I figure out that domain stuff,
|
|
I'm going to make an email that I can put up on HBRs or anywhere else. So it'll be out soon.
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Oh, we didn't say goodbye.
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Um, bye, everybody.
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Oh, fuck, goodbye.
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