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246 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
246 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2495
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Title: HPR2495: 10 Years of Xoke
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2495/hpr2495.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:07:39
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---
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This is HPR episode 2495 entitled 10 Years of Note.
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It is hosted by Note and in about 12 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is tomorrow marks 10 years since its first episode and Note talks about HPR.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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I'm Zoek on IRC and I'm going to talk to you about the system tunnel suite.
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Doing part 2 on the system tunnel suite.
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Don't turn around.
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Welcome again to one of my rambling, I mean insightful shows.
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I'm going to be talking about the host's file, my favourite Linux apps.
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Installing has been to heck this site today.
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I'm installing Windows.
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They're about encryption, programming 101, part 2, part 3, part 4.
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How to set your monitor up?
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Something Stephen Fry did.
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Copyright.
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Script, I wrote past spam.
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Wireless, Windows 7, Ultimate, spam.
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D-D-W-R-T.
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I have a question.
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I'm here with Dave Kennedy at Paul Coberts.
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P-W-Gen.
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Share X.
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This really is so good this time.
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And those are just some of the episodes I have done over the past 10 years.
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Yes, HPR 40 on the 24th of February 2008.
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I debuted with system tunnels part 1.
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Since then I have done over 30 episodes on many different subjects.
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I just played most of the intros for you and you can actually tell when I changed microphones.
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2008, I did 13 episodes, a couple on system tunnels.
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A Doctor Who, some security episodes and I actually started my programming 101 series.
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2009, I did six episodes continuing the programming and some on copyright.
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2010, I did five episodes on various things.
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2011, I actually only did a single episode on D-D-W-R-T.
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2012, I actually did a single calling episode and that was it.
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My daughter was actually born at this stage causing a big gap until 2015 when I did two interviews on Derby Horn.
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2017, I only did a single episode which is HPR 2393 on P-W-Gen.
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And 2018, this year so far I have done two episodes as well.
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This is the second one.
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I have slowed down over the years mainly due to my daughter taking lots of my time.
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10 years is longer than any job I've actually ever had.
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Just in fact, since I came to the US I have had four jobs.
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I've become an American citizen, technically dual nationality because I wasn't required,
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although they suggest you give up your birth nationality.
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Two and a half times my daughter's age.
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Since I started there have been three prime ministers and three US presidents.
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Facebook had about 100 million users.
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Twitter was just taking off.
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Snapchat didn't exist and neither did Lyft or Uber.
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Bitcoin was a gleam in whoever it was that made it.
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The AI bot known as Satoshi Nakamoto possibly.
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It's actually an amusing conspiracy theory that an AI bot created Bitcoin because it needs the CPU cycles to get smarter.
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So you make everyone run the Bitcoin miners given the AI all those juicy, juicy CPU cycles.
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We had a horrible slow DSL connection that was about 750K down,
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although that was still much faster than my first modem that had a button switch between 12 and 2400 board.
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It was also the size of an old laptop on weight even more.
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I think my favourite word I use is so.
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I actually seem to use it all the time, although I am very consciously trying not to use it too much.
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I tend to use it as a bridge word.
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So anyway blah blah blah blah blah.
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I have met several of the HPR corresponds.
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Mrs. Zoke of course.
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Tottenkoff.
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Lots of the old infonomicon people.
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I met Lord D just once, unfortunately.
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Lotec, John Dock, Slick Zero, Sporus, Dussman, Mirovengers, Zack.
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Probably others, so apologies if I missed anyone else I've met.
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This is also the HPR's 10th year.
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I had episode 40, as mentioned, which was about two months after it started.
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Each prior episode, one with Stang Dock was aired New Year's Eve 2007.
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I remember being in IRC actually before then.
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And they were talking about it with the techie people.
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I thought I would do an episode or two.
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I hated my first episode.
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Still hate my voice.
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Sounded so much better in my head.
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I actually sent the episode to Dave Yates first to see what he thought.
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He said I was natural and I should do more.
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So if you don't like me, send hate mail his way.
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Some personal stats.
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My Python episodes actually took the longest.
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I was writing the script and the code and then checking the code.
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Although I did actually manage to get a job because of it.
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Well, I got an interview, probably.
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But I'm going to say that I got a job for it.
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I actually had Google approach me as well because I put Python in my LinkedIn profile
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and they did contacting me about it.
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Although they ended up wanting more experience than they had.
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And they have limits on if you apply, you can't apply for a few years if you fail.
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So we decided that it was better for me to walk away at that stage.
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Dave and Ken actually sent me some stats.
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The top contributors are Jerome Rull.
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I don't actually have a drum.
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So just imagine a drumroll.
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Number one is, of course, Class Who.
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I don't think I need to tell anyone that he does the most.
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He seems to record something every day and twice on Sundays.
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This is ignoring the community news, by the way, as otherwise Dave would be top.
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But Class Who is top with 187 shows.
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Ken Fallon has 146.
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A hooker has 132.
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HPL volunteers 123.
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Dave Morris has 80.
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John Cope has 71.
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TGTM starts to keep to me as a news team.
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I have 45.
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Various hosts and 6 Flop tie at 44.
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Dan has 43.
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And then somewhere under there I am with 32.
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I was looking at the download stats.
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At least the ones we have when I will come back to that.
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Episode 40.
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My first recent journals.
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It's actually still getting downloaded a couple of times a week.
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I should probably do an updated episodes.
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They have updated some of the apps.
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Okay, they pretty much updated all of them since then.
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But a couple of them combined and renamed.
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And so I should probably do another episode on that.
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If you want, you can go to HTTP archive.org slash details slash hacker public radio.
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You can actually sort by download.
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The caveat here is we've only done this for a little bit.
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So this is only actually recent downloads.
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And it does give you some numbers.
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Which, as I am not top of obviously wrong.
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Apparently my top episode is the recent one on share x to almost 500 downloads.
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But given that this is only the recent downloads it does make sense.
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Feel free to look through this some more.
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But I only think there's much I can say about this yet.
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Maybe in 10 years for the 20th anniversary we will have some better numbers by then.
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I did look through the stats Dave and Ken sent.
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And again, caveat is we lost the server logs quite some time back.
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So again, these are wrong.
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But it does say the most downloaded episode are enigmas.
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Specifically, HTTP archive 385.
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Why Zanderos doesn't suck?
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Were they whopping 57,388 downloads?
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At least at the time they sent me info to me.
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Ken does say he thinks this is because people think that enigma is the band.
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And these are the bands bootlegs.
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You can go to Wikipedia.org, enigma musical project and look it up there.
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My top show is Python programming part 3 with a little over 4,000 listens.
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Which I guess means I need to apologize to 4,000 people for never actually finishing that series properly.
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The least downloaded shows are unsurprisingly the ones just before we switched over to the internet archive.
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Although you're not wearing any shows with 3 downloads,
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which for some reason is basically every single non-episode or future episode.
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The least downloading shows are in reverse order.
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HPR 00000 with 69.
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HPR 8,218 with 60.
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HPR 9,999 with 29.
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HPR 3755 with 26 and 3754 with 24.
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Now I guess the 4 zeros and the 4 9s does kind of make sense top and bottom.
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Why on earth people are downloading 8,218, 3755, 3754?
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It looks like there's no automated script to me,
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but I really think someone does need to listen to one of the HPR programming series again.
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Fix their stuff.
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I've learnt numerous things from HPR episodes, even just little things here and there.
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But there are lots of things I've learnt about.
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Just things I found interesting.
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Some people that just do episodes you just want to listen to.
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You don't care what they talk about.
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You just want to hear them talk.
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My favourite episodes in no particular order and no means my entire favourite list.
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But some of my favourites are.
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Any episode talking about recording audio.
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And I've always learnt at least one trick from these.
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Any episode talking about useful apps, file extensions and similar things like that.
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I do actually enjoy finding new apps.
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It was actually a running joke about me and interviews at work.
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Whenever I've been involved in interviewing someone.
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I always ask what their favourite text editor is.
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Now I used to say that there's no answers.
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But then someone proved me wrong.
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So now I say that I don't actually care what you say.
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I'm more interested in the why.
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I really don't care what your favourite editor is.
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I wouldn't know why it is your favourite.
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For example, you can say plain old note pad.
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It's more of why you find that interesting to prove you actually understand IT and have worked in there.
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If you turn around and say, yeah, I'm in a Windows background.
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I love note pad because it's always there.
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If you're copying something from a website.
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Paste it into a word.
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It used to do that horrible trying to put all the HTML in.
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Drop it in a note pad.
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Copy and paste it from there.
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Back into whatever.
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And it strips out all the extra HTML.
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I'm going to turn around and say via Emax for the same reason in Linux.
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That's great.
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You can turn around and say no pad plus plus because it's fantastic.
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That's fine.
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Just don't do what this one guy said and say word.
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Yeah.
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Anyway.
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Episodes about favourite podcasts, although I do actually have plenty enough to listen to thanks.
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But I always enjoy hearing about other people's favourite podcasts.
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There were several episodes about SSH tunneling which I actually ended up not using.
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But it was looking at it for a while and it did help me understand some more things about networking.
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Ubicix did a programming his art which I completely agree with.
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Programming is an art form.
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Just some people are not very good at it.
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Lost in Bronx pretty much anything he does actually.
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The watts in my bag episodes I do enjoy and then end up adding things on my Amazon wish list.
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And then I carry way too much stuff around in my bag.
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Sick flop talking about mental health.
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Even just the episodes where people were talking about making coffee and then other people replied back.
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Back how they made coffee.
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There are some I skipped over.
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I will be honest here.
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There are some where people have talked about it and I know about it or I don't care about it at all.
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I'm like I'm just going to skip this.
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I do at least listen to the beginning of every single one and make a decision if I care or not.
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The only ones that actually I do skip always are my own episodes because I hate the sad of my own voice again.
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Also I've listened to them four or five times as I've recorded, listened back, realised I've screwed things up, re-recorded, listened again, re-recorded, listened again.
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The theory is that I don't screw the audio up and have massive issues where I'm only playing out of one ear or something.
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I did that one so I don't want to do it again.
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I would like to thank each and everyone involved in the podcast from people running the websites, the contributors, to just people who listen and make up our listenership.
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HDR truly is a community podcast and it would not exist without you.
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As always do please consider recording a follow up episode on this or an episode on pretty much anything.
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The general idea is that if you're interested enough to make an episode someone's going to be interested enough to listen to it.
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Thank you to everyone who has recorded an episode.
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Thank you to everyone who's taught me stuff.
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Thank you to everyone I've met.
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Thank you to everyone who listens.
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Here's to another 10 years.
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You've been listening to Heka Public Radio at HekaPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Heka Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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Thank you.
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