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1184 lines
105 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3874
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Title: HPR3874: 2022-2023 New Years Show Episode 9
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3874/hpr3874.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:11:34
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3874 for Thursday the 8th of June 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, 2022-2023 New Years Show Episode 9.
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It is part of the series HP Our New Year Show.
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It is hosted by HP Our Volunteers and is about 123 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is 2022-2023 New Years Show where people come together and chat.
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Yeah, I had a Pentium-1 machine that I built to run Dawson.
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I initially wrote it, built it up to be a MSDOS sort of server.
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Because with free Dawson, you can do some basic Ethernet networking.
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Now, because of energy concerns, I'm going to be setting that machine aside
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and eventually I will probably replace that with emulation under Linux
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or on a Raspberry Pi or something.
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Back then, I mean, a lot of stuff was like, I remember working on like,
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token ring networks and a lot of the stuff was like, just coax networking.
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Yeah, and some of it was regular coax, and some of it was a big fat coax
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that was a real barrier to connective.
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I mean, some of it was BNC connectors, which was maybe slightly harder to use
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than your cable, TV cable.
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Right. It had one that was also, it was almost like a garden hose,
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and then they had tap units that would pierce through the shielding
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and pick up signals from the signal conductor in the middle of the cable.
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And it would be connected to your computer through a, well, there was an empire
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of it that punched through your cable.
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And then there would be a ribbon cable that would go back to your interface car.
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Right. And all the network cards wanted to be, uh, no veil compatible,
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and not for no bells no longer around.
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Well, what's interesting is that there is, uh,
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they're resurrecting a lot of the old network.
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Um, there are, uh, networks which are designed either for hardware or
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emulated access, uh, for things like, uh, IBM's Bitnet,
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which if you were doing token ring stuff, you probably were aware of.
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Right. Right. And there's a deck net out there on the internet as well.
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Right. But now the original networking protocols, both for digital equipment
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cooperation and for the original OSI model, uh,
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had very, very few networks in them.
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So actually getting a large population of computers to talk to each other
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was a good trick with a lot of magic hand waving going on in the background.
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Yeah. I remember three calm was a big name way back in the day.
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Yeah, three calm was like real tech or what have you or, or damn, I can picture it,
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but, but my brain is fading, uh, like TP link is today, you know.
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Right. Right. Yeah. Super nuts.
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Now, a lot of it was more, I think you'll TP link selling stuff at Cisco
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prices. Exactly. Also, one of the most interesting things is that
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IBM internal network was not built, uh, by the IBM suits.
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It was built by systems people so that they could get software updates and
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email and documentation and stuff between IBM systems,
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IBM, IBM system, uh, and it was all pretty bootleg because the primary
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IBM had, uh, what they called VM, which was one of it had two features.
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Each VM user would have an environment, including what they call the mini disk,
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which was what we would call a partition, and he would have
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something that behaved much like a single user computer.
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The terminals talk to and it transmitted data and it stored data and it did
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everything like that. And it ran applications, submitted jobs, whatever.
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And as far as the user was concerned, it was his little life of heaven.
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Right. Right. Also, it originally started out as a, uh, something that could
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be run on the first virtual memory, uh, IBM 360 machines, the IBM 360 67.
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But eventually when it went to 370 modes, this environment was translated so
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that it couldn't run on a bare 360 or 370. It had to be run under, under a bare
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metal hypervisor that they called VM. And one of the things about VM,
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which IBM hated because it wasn't a batch operating system.
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It wasn't their monster and thus monster moneymaker that would do punch cards and
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mag tape and a lot of stuff like that. This one was very interactive because of
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its eventually used, uh, multiple user sessions that behaved like, like everybody got,
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got their computer, got their own slice of the computer instead of having a bunch of cards
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and then having to hand them off to somebody to eventually load it in the main
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frame and then you have to wait for, for the, uh, where your answers are your problem.
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Right.
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Or bugs or what have you. But because IBM really was pushing this batch operating system,
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which started out as, uh, multi, but it was a multi tasking operating system with first
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a fixed number of tasks, variable number of tasks. And it was a monster, uh, just like the original
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360 operating systems, OS 360, which was cobbled together and just over time developed more
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cropped and more cropped and more cropped. And in fact, one of the uses of this VM system
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that the IBM brass, that the IBM brass were used to having all their,
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their machines like the prior to 360 generation, everything would be on punch cards, paper tape,
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or if you were a good boy, it may be actually on mylar mag tape.
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This was not a big deal, uh, early on in the development of things, but as Fred Brooks,
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God rest his soul said, IBM started falling behind and then they started throwing more programmers
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at OS 360 and these, and these MBS stuff. And the MBS, which was their flagship, had so many
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memory leaks in it that they would, would run, run that on VM because VM could fake a large
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address space and their favorite operating system running under VM ran more efficiently than
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as a VM, uh, MBS or whatever it was was running on the bare metal. And, and this, this operating system
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was, was interactive and it was much loved by computer science departments and stuff like that.
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But the IBM suits hated it because it meant users could sit down on their terminals and do
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typical, you know, go through databases or whatnot without having to wait for a stack of print,
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print, print out six inches high or a stack of cards or what have you.
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And those, those were the crazy days when everything was printed on like, um, on wide carriage
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green bar paper. Right. And, but the interesting thing is that they're powerful,
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all singing, all dancing operating system, which sucked at interactive functions could not be used
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as the routing nodes for their own internal network. VM was much lighter weight, could be used
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as a routing node. And every so often, a new, uh, a new class of IBM brass would come in and say,
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we got to get rid of this VM stuff in our own networks. We have to move everything to MBS or whatever
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they're, their big bloated operating system. And they would launch a project and they would find
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out that their MBS very inefficient for this application couldn't do what, what the rather
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streamlined VM system could do. And the project would be quietly held until the next crop of,
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I'm going to fix everything management. It was just, it was insane. Also this internal IBM
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network, which they called because it's there or because it's time network goodness was larger
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than the internet until relatively late in its life. And also in the 90s, a lot of official
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regulations required using the heavily theoretical OSI protocol X 25 and X 29 and a whole bunch
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of other things, which didn't have a large address space and weren't very efficient and assumed
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that you would get your network from the phone company for your nation and a whole bunch of
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other things were quite crippling. A lot of the people who knew what they were doing would want
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to use the American TCP IP stack, but their, but their bureaucratic structure wouldn't allow
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them to do that. So what they would end up doing is they would use TCP IP, but they would
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bury it in whatever protocols was was the official government protocol. Okay. All right.
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This wasn't very efficient and because of the billing structure, which made your cell phone
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data plan look generous, it was quite inefficient. But when the government says you're going to
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run your data through only this type of pipe, you run your data through that type of pipe,
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and you encapsulate the what the protocols you actually want. Right. Right. Because the OSI did not
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like using American standards coming out of America because they were coming from our
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military end. They didn't want to surrender their power to it. Also the OSI, which did do some
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interesting stuff that made certain that telephones could talk to each other and you know,
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stuff like that. And you could plug in stuff at different places, you know, cables were standardized
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and whatnot. But they were heavily bureaucratic organizations and a lot of conferences and whatnot
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were held about this theoretical networking, how to get the seven layer OSI model implement.
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And a lot of people would lie to a lot of interesting destinations and interesting times of
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the year on the government dime or your company's dime or whatever, you know, somebody would be paying
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for it. And they would have issues for both theoretical implementations and explanations of the
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OSI protocol. The one thing that they wouldn't have would be actually anybody really implementing
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the protocol. There are always impermanent data. Now the TCP IP and whatnot were far more efficient
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because somebody had actually written the standards, passed them around, had them criticized,
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and then they had to talk to each other. So they actually worked. But because of the politics,
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you had the politicians and OSI using a lot of money and a lot of paper while the people in
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America were and using American standards were actually building the internet as we know it.
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I don't know if I'm, if you're finding this interesting or not, maybe I'll put you in sleep.
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Oh no, definitely, definitely. Well, I have got this out of a book because the people in Geneva
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needed somebody to translate their hack together documentation into a form that they could
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actually have printed, PDF form. So they hired a guy who went through with a bunch of pearls and
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whatnot and actually was able to produce documents that somebody could actually use. And he was also
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supposed to have a report on the state of, of international networking at the time. And this guy
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coming from America, or he'd written a bunch of networking books, especially on things like
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digital equipment, decknet and whatnot, maybe no bell stuff. And he knew what he was doing.
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But with the help of Sun Microsystems, they put up a server out in Colorado with all this stuff
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and had an FTP server on it so that anyone in the world could download these international standards,
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which in paper form were an armor leg up to the knee because they were a flush front
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for the OSI brass and the OSI people. Yes, if you want, if you want our standards, you buy our books
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all five tons of them or whatever they were. And they were printed in large quantities and sold
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in small quantities because of the incredible markup. And the bureaucrat said, well, if you don't,
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if we don't price them like this, we're not going to get the money to do other international
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project. Of course, if the other international project would be funded through UN grants or
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what have you, they wouldn't be funded by folks that attended to end up in the OSI sellers
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being replaced by a new stack of folks printed this year, sort of, sort of like the phone book
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thing, but gilded and some very cozy arrangements were made between the printers and the government
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bureaucrat. But the writer of this book actually went around the world a couple of times and interviewed
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various people who were putting the national and international networks together. This was like
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1991. And at the time, the connections were rare enough that people could actually tell
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how, let's say, Japan was hooked through Hawaii or hooked through cables headed elsewhere. And because
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of the usage restrictions at the time, because a lot of these would government funded or research
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only or what a military only, whatever you wanted, a lot of these connections were this traffic could
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go through this route and this traffic could go through that route. And there were people who
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were doing like out in Hawaii, they did the first kind of networking that it looked like
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Wi-Fi, but was done to broadcast networking signals all over the Hawaii and islands. And there was
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a whole bunch of stuff going on. And the European Union was trying to get its networks wired together
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and countries like the Eastern block would connect to the global network through basically phone
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patches, all sorts of crazy stuff going on. You know, one thing that I've always found interesting
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is, you know, I guess I don't follow this stuff, like some of this stuff very closely,
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but say for instance, like GPS, GPS was like basically a military thing for a long time,
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but then all of a sudden it gets like opened up for a civilian use, you know, just like, well like
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DARPA, you know, it was like, you know, basically the beginnings of the internet and then all of a
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sudden, you know, it was opened up for a civilian use, but you know, I like to know, you know,
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exactly, you know, how that process, you know, actually goes because, you know, it's like, you know,
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it's like first something is like used by the military is sort of like secret and then all of a
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sudden they're like, anybody could use it. I think that's really interesting. Well, part of what was
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happening was DARPA was having all the universities or a lot of universities and contractors
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would go to DARPA with their projects and they would be asking for a big computer and the
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universities or researchers would want their own big chunk of computing power. And yeah,
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there were military uses for it, but in the early days, well, while it was still a DARPA project
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where the D was pretty silent, they were debugging this thing. And yes, because a lot of the initial
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funding was to unify the defense slash research, basically the networking was to give a backbone
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to the military industrial complex. Yes, there would be a command and control element,
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but early days, a lot of it, a lot of the networks traffic was to connect research institutions
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and to try to harness together everything that was being done scattered across the country.
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It was only later in its life did the ARPANET actually get into military use because they first
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had to figure out how to make it work and how to hook computers to each other and how to
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rug stuff and all of that. But a lot of the military, the so-called military uses for the ARPANET
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early on because it was a very limited network. It was made up of 56 k-bots synchronous lines
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in the early days. 56 k-bots sounds familiar. It's what your fast dial-up modems were selling.
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As their good speak, they never really achieved it, but on a synchronous line when nobody
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else is doing anything anywhere it's cut, where it's not just residential quality phone lines,
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or hopefully it's better than residential quality because it's commercial grade, they could actually
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do shit. But the deal is that by, I mean, they were telling the truth that putting together a
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network, a packet switching, where if a link goes down, your network routes around it automatically
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and all of that good stuff was great stuff for the potential nuclear war. But a lot of it early on
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was how do we connect it, how do we connect this machine to that machine? And the interesting thing
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is that we killed that noise. So now you're making me want to look up some of these like
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old RFCs for like a telnet and a FTP. Yeah, well, the whole thing with the original RFCs were
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people working on the project and whatnot. We're handing around, and in the early days,
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since there wasn't really a network, it was a lot of nailing paper back and forth. But the way
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the original network was made up and a small firm called both Beck and Newman in Cambridge got
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the deal. The computers, the big computers, which the network was made to serve, were not cooked
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up to the network. They were hooked up to many computers, which behaved as basically as routers.
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And those machines talked among themselves over the primitive networking protocols. This is a long
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time before TCP IP, but they talked to standard language between each other. And every computer
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all you had to do for your, whether it was an IBM or a digital machine or Sparry or whoever,
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is you had an interface that could talk to these many computers. And you sent data into the
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many computer and you said, all right, I wanted to go to node whatever. And the the M network
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would handle all of the packet handling. And they did all this networking stuff
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was done so that they would come out with a standardized design for an interface card for each
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machine and interface software or not. And the basic data handling and whatnot
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was handled by interfaces to these, to the many computers. And the many talked among themselves
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and could do things like reload each other from paper tape or they could send diagnostic
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information. A lot of the early networks traffic was the network talking to itself,
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telling everybody who's who's who's alive, who's dead and who's sick.
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And that's interesting because I'm I'm used like punch cards before and same punch cards before,
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but I've never used or seen actual paper tape.
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Well, I have started out using paper tape. What they had at my high school was a couple of
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teletype. And these were mechanical keyboards printers with a punch for an inch wide tape,
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which I believe it had eight dots across because it was an eight-bit code. Now on the teletype,
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so we use they only use like you had six dots and one channel was used for parity. So you could
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try to see if if the signal that if the character that you were transmitting has gotten corrupted
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along the way. Right, right. But the actual machine were uppercase only at least in your basic
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teletype model 33. Later on, they had the teletype model 37, which used seven bits out of the eight
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possible. So you had upper and lowercase, but on the initial machines, they're all lowercase,
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all uppercase, pardon me. Now in Unix, a lot of that cryptic things why CP and Unix is so short
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and LS and all of the other alphabet soup is that on a teletype, it didn't have an ordinary electric
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typewriter type keyboard. It had a very mechanical, very heavy key press keyboard. And using those
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horrendous keyboards, you didn't want to type anymore than you had to. So you kept everything short,
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kept everything to a minimum, as well as on the early PDP 11, you may have only had 32 meg
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or kilobytes. You may have had only so many kilobytes of core. But what I, in my high school, we had a
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Wang, I think it was a Wang computer, or we had a certain chunk of a Wang computer that was
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close up over the telephone at 110 bars, which was 10 characters per second. And
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whenever you were typing something, it was a thud, thud, thud, thud, thud, thud, thud, thud,
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as you were pressing keys. And when you were running paper tape through the machine,
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because paper tape was your storage mechanism, it was a way of sending back to the computer,
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your program in digital form. When you had a, got a listing, or you were satisfactory,
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you would have it punched out on paper tape. In fact, the first sub routine library,
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were actually libraries of snippets of paper tape, covering different problems for different
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computers. And everybody's programmers got together and created these snippets of tape. And when
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they were doing programming, you'd have some new stuff, but you'd also pull out of the bag,
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individual snippets of tape to do things like maybe calculating a square root or whatever kind
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of functions you were going to do. But by having them on paper tape, they could do what were
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essentially cut and paste operations to put your program together. Man, paper tape storage on
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paper tape just seems like it would just be so flimsy. Well, actually, the tape was fairly
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sturdy. And it was a fairly standard software medium, even on many computers and whatnot.
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In fact, there's the only difference between some of the absolute bare bones, sort of hobbyist,
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or, you know, is that when you got to a certain level of certification,
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you didn't use the teletype paper tape reader and writer. You used a separate device that could
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read and write printed tape much faster. And a lot of that stuff, you see in a ticker tape
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grade, is the use of these kinds of mechanical recordings or sorting punch machines. They would
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punch stuff on paper. And every time that they would do that, they would also punch the
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except seven bits plus parity in a row of holes on your paper tape. Now, once things got
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sophisticated, they would hold, say, you would take your paper tape over to a special reader
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in the front of the computer, a refrigerator, high stack of different modules with different cards
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and then, but the way you started the tape is you put it in the reader with a little bit of naked
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cereal ahead of you, but the whole thing, as you put it there, and then you would, you know,
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start the tape reading and the tape would go through its reader and the keys would
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further respond and the printer would probably print out what it was seeing.
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And that's the name of that tune. And the teletype attached were for slow application.
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If you had to build an app, build something like an operating system for this particular
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configuration, you could use paper tape too, but it would be likely a number of different passes
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to get everything into the into the computer's memory. A nice feature of the memory of the time
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on most virtually all computers is it was magnetic. It may have been a bit to get those bits in
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there, but while they were there, you know, if you turn the power off, it didn't all go away or
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go to complete crap. Now that was awesome. Also, if you shut down a core memory computer,
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you could stop at hard piece, so to speak, and then with the right clip of the front panel switch,
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you could get it running again and all of the stuff would basically be where you left it.
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So it would just start up from the same spot. So how long could you like leave it off and still
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have the program theoretically years? Okay. Because it was stored in there would be a matrix that
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looked like a window screen. Hey, what happened? What happened? What did you see happen?
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All of a sudden, everything was quiet. Maybe you dropped off the channel.
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And how long was I off channel? Maybe about like 10 seconds maybe?
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I know what happened. Micro sleep. Wow. Is the time for bayet?
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Actually, I probably should sleep, but if you can probably look up most of the stuff if you want.
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Yeah, I think I will. I think I'll look up some of those tape readers because I don't think I
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can remember even saying one, but I think I will. Also, the interesting thing about core memory
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is the cores where they had x wires, y wires, and then there would be a third wire, which would be
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a sense wire. And core memory, when red, they would put appropriate voltages to the x and y
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wires. And if they got a pulse, that would be a one or if they didn't get a pulse, that would be
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a zero. Because when the two voltages interacted, they would flip the magnetic polarity of the
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magnetic core. However, because reading constructive process, they would have to read the information
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out and then immediately write it back to the memory. So it was almost like the
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refresh process of dynamic memory. Now, also the interesting thing about these cores is that a lot
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of them that early on, they were hand threaded in the far east because you could get
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ladies in Japan or China or what have you thread these cores by hand. IBM later on developed
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machines to thread a whole bunch of cores and to test the cores and to do a lot of stuff. But
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also, every generation of core memory ended up making the little donuts smaller. So the first
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generation was a certain size. And then the next generation would not quite fit in the center
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of the donut until they got down to a small size. But anyway, this stuff I have read enough
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that I could recite this sort of stuff as I have for hours. And I thank you for your paper.
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Hey, no problem. It's really interesting. Hey, like I say, I'm going to have to look up and see
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if I can get some good images of these paper tape readers and writers. Well, one of the things
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when you when you got your Microsoft basic back in the day, it did not come on a floppy disk.
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It did not come on a cassette tape or anything. Your Microsoft basic would come with the early
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micros, the CPM error micros or the pre CPM, because a lot of stuff would have the tape reader
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to load the software, the commercial software, and audio cassettes used to record the actual data.
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But all of your software would come as paper tape. And in fact, a lot of the early Microsoft
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shipping was they would have copies of of the basic punched out on paper tape. And somebody would sit
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there and fold it into a fan fold style. And then they'd put that in an envelope and they
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ship it off to you. Wow, that's amazing. And then when you got it to your home computer,
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you could run it through a tape reader, which was a roll of little electric eyes. And a light would
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be trying through. And each roll of dots would be turned into one bite that was that your computer,
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the monitor and your computer could could read. And that's how you would load your software
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before there was floppies. And even after there was floppy, in a lot of cases, the paper tape,
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because it was plain asking, would be far more compatible because every person who made the
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disk interfaces and the disk drives and everything would have their own idea of what the format
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should be. Right. Right. Yeah. So being able to load the stuff into memory and then have your
|
|
operating system write it out to your particular format meant that even if we had different
|
|
disk formats for the pro for a lot of the small programs, and you got to remember back in the day,
|
|
sometimes the machine would only have for a kilobytes of memory running at having a tape punch
|
|
on your teletype console was the easiest way for you to send me a program and know that it was
|
|
going to be reasonably compatible. Anyway, thank you for your patience. And if you'd
|
|
why would I pack it in, that's fine. Well, that's amazing. All right. I think it's a bedtime for me.
|
|
So maybe I'll leave the channel up and see if anybody else drops in. Well, that's right now,
|
|
that's my mission. I'm going to be here with my headphones on. And since I'm not going to be talking,
|
|
I can read or patch or or even listen to YouTube. And then if I hear something, I can come out here
|
|
and do the meeting great thing. So I'm going to be mining the store. This reminds me of the good old
|
|
days when I was doing security work. And I would be sitting at a desk in a little sort of look like
|
|
oversized a toe booth. And because you'd been up a lot of hours, especially when we were losing
|
|
the contract and you were working 64 hour weeks, you would be caught by micro sleep like that. And maybe
|
|
and some people didn't fight sleep to talk if I did. And they would just go to sleep.
|
|
And of course, if you fell asleep because you were in a warm little capsule and you would work
|
|
along the shift, you could be let go because you were not alert. But let it was a constant struggle to
|
|
stay away. Well, to stay conscious or wake might have been over, over building yourself.
|
|
Anyways, thank you for ever for letting me ride along. Hey, no problem. All right, I'm going to
|
|
hit the set. Take it easy. Okay, just don't hit it too hard. I want to get hurt.
|
|
Anyway, I think I'll stay out here and see if somebody drops by where we're in with the
|
|
farmer's cold and short rows. If we're going to wrap this up at 7 o'clock or 8 o'clock in the morning,
|
|
I'll do seven. Another glass of coke and motor on. Okay, take care. Thank you. You're a sip.
|
|
You've been very, very patient and very helpful. Oh geez, my laptop's not with the guy right now
|
|
when he's in the house he's moved into. The van crash or whatever, but what if these glows is a
|
|
rubbish job and left the bag out on the sidewalk or payment, I say over here, but it's what I mean.
|
|
The specific part every three minutes of the van and then come back and get the other stuff, but
|
|
some companies got to help and move stuff out. I'm going to have to probably take my SSD space out,
|
|
something, I don't know. They got like, there's a company called Clevo in China or somewhere
|
|
and they buy in, I think some of these companies buy in the Clevo laptops and then we've random
|
|
stuff a bit. So like my junior computer laptop is really a Clevo laptop or it was, but then getting
|
|
these parts has become the problem that breaks it turns out. And the Clevo only sell to small
|
|
businesses as well like that sounds like as well. Maybe that might not actually collapse now for real.
|
|
Maybe I don't see him. Maybe he really has. Oh, uh, he hasn't used to this.
|
|
He has a pocket pop in here once in a while, once in a while. I guess Lovecraft is just hanging out
|
|
up at the lobby. Who's Lovecraft? I've seen him around here. He's a part of the Linux Logcast.
|
|
I guess he's a friend of the characters. I don't know him. I believe more than he knows him.
|
|
Some ways it's like Christmas is over and in you yet because it basically means that
|
|
things are back to normal. The shops are open and at normal times and restaurants and things as well.
|
|
Maybe traffic with actinormal people are. Well, yeah, well, yeah, in a way. So I do have a school nearby,
|
|
or two school nearby and so there is a school run that like 3.30 in the afternoon or 3 o'clock
|
|
sort of thing. And in the morning as well. But that's not too bad around here actually.
|
|
But actually, it's him that while I live as well, they're going to build a down the road. They're
|
|
going to build a massive arena for use for bands, for music because there used to be an airport
|
|
down there. And the airport has been closed on the airport for ages, but the big company that
|
|
works on airplanes, one of them Airbus is still down there. And they're off this or some of their
|
|
stuff is. But on the actual runway, they've started to build though how there's already in the stuff
|
|
and there's a little thing. But the big thing is it's going to be a arena down there where big bands
|
|
can come and where bands can come and play music and stuff. And it's going to be actually
|
|
not playing I think next year. So it's where the airplanes were stored before. The hangos
|
|
or whatever. And then they're changing that into the arena or refurbished it. Yeah. And it's near
|
|
the city, the actual city as well and where I am. But what it means is that it's going to get very
|
|
busy around here in the future probably at times. And the roads can't really be extended either.
|
|
It's going to be a train station put down there. So I don't know quite. I say that this road
|
|
is busier today as it is like like what like now for example, but it's going to get even more
|
|
busy at times once that arena comes. It's sad in a way actually how the world is sort of
|
|
how it's been built. Well, I developed countries and stuff. It's like, you know, you want to go
|
|
somewhere? Well, okay, but you'd actually go travel on the road somewhere. I'd be at a car or
|
|
a bus or or almost a train sometimes. But we have to like travel these distances because of how
|
|
it's all set out as well or how a lot of things are set out. And you have to basically travel
|
|
if you like it or not at times. Just how it is. Then we'll hear me say that.
|
|
Yeah. And they could do it making the buses better here. Well, there are buses. Well, people
|
|
can think about the buses around here, but they're not too, they're not worth really,
|
|
they're not too bad really, I find, but they may not always be better on time with things.
|
|
And then they were going to talk it there. We're talking about making it possibly an underground
|
|
train or metro, but the chat, but it's going to cost four billion pounds or more and it's not
|
|
going to happen probably. But it would have been a nice idea because other cities have them like
|
|
London and Brussels and New York, yeah. But we don't hear their trends way back. That's gone.
|
|
Yeah, they could do it with improving public transport and that's not just England. That's
|
|
probably pretty much any country really. Be that trains, buses, yeah, public transport.
|
|
Is it any good way you are public transport? Can you get on the bus and get around these
|
|
way or is it just like no drive? They usually just drive. There's a bus that goes by.
|
|
Because load easier to drive, yeah. They're what? Because the load easier to drive,
|
|
where you are, you're not trying to get a bus or something. I don't know, they even think there's
|
|
a bus stop by me. We have such a small town. But do you say it was in Chicago or nearby?
|
|
Hour and hour. What time do you say you're coming up to 7am?
|
|
Yeah, 6.50. So it's 7, yeah, 6 hours behind then.
|
|
5 or 6 depending on the time zone and the day of the same time.
|
|
I mean, GMT or UTC, they were there, they were there, yeah.
|
|
Well, that was the other thing. I've said it's the net money, whether or whether,
|
|
but even as humans, we messed that up. The day is 24 hours, yeah.
|
|
Because you got day like saving times and they have a move forwards as well.
|
|
That's why the New Year show was 26 hours, see?
|
|
40 hours ahead of GMT, 12 hours behind.
|
|
For even 24 hour day, we messed up.
|
|
Should I do that? We have 24 hours. No, 26 hours now, actually, for the whole world.
|
|
Well, it's a fantastic testing. That minor argue lifestyle.
|
|
Maybe you wanted to get something. Did he?
|
|
Oh, I don't know.
|
|
Yeah, well, I've just been drinking, letting my ice water steep.
|
|
So some of the ice melts and then I'll drink a little more.
|
|
Letting me water that I've already drank, rebelling to my system.
|
|
And then we'll see what for another 16 hours, man.
|
|
Oh, see, that must collapse, I'm sure.
|
|
32 hours plus 16 hours. Imagine that, actually.
|
|
No, I can't.
|
|
That has to last a long time, isn't it?
|
|
To be awake.
|
|
Yeah, well, back around the turn of the century, I was doing this stuff all the time when I was
|
|
even getting paid. Now, not much was getting paid.
|
|
Well, to be awake for long time, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, I was a security guard at a, at a condo complex near here.
|
|
As far as traffic, I live in the, in the Boston area.
|
|
And, well, Boston drivers are known.
|
|
It hasn't been proven that someone can get their driver's license out of a cracker jack box.
|
|
That's funny. That's what life says.
|
|
When I was over at MIT, at the Monterejo Club, in one of the temporary buildings that was left
|
|
over from World War II a little bit before the turn of the century when they tore it down,
|
|
somebody was saying that his wife, our buddy's wife is getting a driver's license.
|
|
I suggest everybody get a Chrysler product, preferably an M1A group.
|
|
Well, that Boston driver's would not break it, is that what you're saying?
|
|
Uh, that's British understatement as best.
|
|
Yeah, well, yeah.
|
|
Boy, saying that was, they're really, really, really bad, yeah.
|
|
Well, you have a, a real problem here.
|
|
For one thing, according to videos I've seen, they used to have special parking areas and one
|
|
whatnot where they would educate young drivers about the rules of the road and they would learn
|
|
to signal and all sorts of stuff. But in modern times, the young drivers are thrown into manic traffic
|
|
right out of the gate. So they never really have a chance to settle into, into knowing how to do it
|
|
right. They're just doing the best they can in a very manic situation with a lot of people honking
|
|
their horns and whatnot. Yeah, no, that's not where you get there.
|
|
And, and a lot of, and a lot of older drivers push a younger, younger driver to do something stupid,
|
|
which is why it costs something, I don't know, $5,000 a year for, for insurance for an inexperienced
|
|
driver. No, the use case, very, very, very strict. Um,
|
|
you really don't just put people out on the road on the main road at that, you have to, you have to
|
|
do the whole theory test, pass that, and also the how to perception test, pass that, plus you have to
|
|
pass the practical test. And then, and then, and then, and also, and then you can, when you can drive
|
|
with someone who drove, drove long, long, long enough over 21 or something, but as you, as you're
|
|
learning, but also with the motorway again, you're not, or the highway you'd say over there,
|
|
you, you definitely don't go on the motorway or the highway until you pass the normal test,
|
|
you're not, that's, you're not allowed on there. You can't do driving lessons on the motorway.
|
|
Not, not a lot of normal. Maybe later on, you can actually get some special motorway lessons,
|
|
after you pass the normal test, but they don't, but they, they're, their drivers will not go on the
|
|
motorway or the highway. Uh-huh. And the insurance is going to be really, it's going to be quite
|
|
expensive usually for new drivers as well. And they had a company who gave the women, or
|
|
cheap insurance, same with women, and I think they got some trouble for that. Like, hey,
|
|
you can't just do that, because men, the idea was that women would crash less, or hardly ever,
|
|
and men would crash more. That, uh, we lost action now as well. I'm still here. I'm going to go
|
|
go grab some coffee. You'll, uh, coffee and that mind is going to just go out and, um, I hope
|
|
somebody heard what I think about car, car, stuff in the UK as well. Yeah, I don't know if it's
|
|
different for women, for the current trucks out. There was a, there was a, there was a
|
|
mattress. It was a company called Shia Hills, and used to have TV adverts, and it was like, yeah,
|
|
Shia Hills, woohoo, and aimed at, aimed at young women in particular, probably, learner drivers,
|
|
and like, hey, you're female, okay, well, in that case, you can get car insurance for low
|
|
cheaper than the men that come with us. Come to our Shia Hills wheels, but then they got into
|
|
some flat about that, like, you can't, you can't, you're not allowed to, you can't just do that,
|
|
come on. And, and, but it's a bit like, there was a chocolate, we're not the same thing really,
|
|
but it was a chocolate bar called Yorky as well over here. And for ages, there was a sign on it,
|
|
and it basically had a woman that was crossed out, and it was advertised as Yorky, like, man's best
|
|
chocolate, male, very, yeah, manly chocolate or something like that. And, um, again, they got
|
|
then some trouble later on when you got people going, hey, you can't do that. That's, you know,
|
|
so they had to block that as well, because people are people, I think, as a general
|
|
idea, because I was a gender, well, it's supposed to be like that, but, um, when we're
|
|
gonna see there are a few differences, but, but really, yeah, really people are people, which
|
|
shouldn't be so much about gender, someone is or not. Oh, they both can be a pretty aggressive at
|
|
times, especially when it comes on driving. Both can be aggressive, eh? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
That's true. Women can also get requested on the roads, not just, not just men when it, when
|
|
it's driving, yeah. Maybe sometimes they don't realize how fast they're driving. No, the women,
|
|
or the men, either one, because they're getting those big SUVs, and then it doesn't matter how
|
|
fast you go, because nobody's gonna pull you over. Oh, the big cars, the, the big, uh, the big
|
|
suburbans. Yeah, we've got, uh, what's the, maybe it's probably the same thing really over here.
|
|
There are a few of these cars that are like, watch higher up in there, although they're quite a bit
|
|
higher up, and they're definitely big cars as well, and they're called, um, oh, there's got a name here,
|
|
I can't, I can't think of it now, but it's probably the same thing, basically. And then I guess in
|
|
the way it's true, unless you go and crash or something, then it, then it, then it becomes a problem,
|
|
isn't it? Finding good and so you crash the car somewhere. That's what I'm trying not to do,
|
|
and I let everybody else go faster around me, and I'm like, I'm, I'm slowing down, I'm, I just
|
|
turn 50 over the past couple months, and just don't feel like going fast anymore.
|
|
Oh, you've come out like, you're like, hey, I'm a little man now, all right, I'm going great,
|
|
really slow. I don't really, so I'll just the speed limit, and nobody likes it.
|
|
I remember seeing a documentary on TV a few years ago, it was in the Maricops, and it was about
|
|
motorway, and there was an old woman who was driving so slow on the motorway, or highway, yeah,
|
|
let me say motorway, you say highway, but yeah, so I'm going to say the motorway, and I think
|
|
I'm somewhere in there, right on the motorway. And she was driving so slow on the motorway,
|
|
highway, that the police had to follow her and pull her over, yeah, not because she was driving fast,
|
|
but actually because she was driving like maybe five miles per hour, or something stupid on the motorway,
|
|
yeah. Oh, how I want to do that. Very much so. What's normal,
|
|
kind of, 100 kilometers? No, no, no, we have miles per hour in UK, it's your work that has
|
|
the current car on per hour. There, there, there, come on per hour, it's like 120, which is,
|
|
no, no, our speed limit because it is basically 70 on the motorway, 70 miles per hour.
|
|
That's about right. Yeah, although some people are going to go 80, aren't they, or 90, sometimes.
|
|
But yeah, 70 is probably about right, you're going quite fast. Well, you're going to,
|
|
if you crash with 70, you're going to, you might die anyway, so,
|
|
yeah, so one other thing, isn't it? You crash at 70 miles per hour.
|
|
Well, you might go surviving, get quite hurt, and the car depends.
|
|
I do think there's too many cars and stuff, look at a road now, it's busy.
|
|
I just, it's just people, just people don't care. I mean, there's cars polluting stuff too,
|
|
people just don't care enough. Oh yeah, I'll drive around and see you out, I'll go into my place,
|
|
I'll do whatever, okay, and then the next person, same attitude. Oh, okay, so people might have
|
|
to drive into work, or the school run, or take some retosts, or something, that's a bit different,
|
|
but there's also a lot of joybiders, I think, just out in the car because they have, yeah.
|
|
It's the way I feel about the motorcycles, I think they're out joy riding.
|
|
It's so-and-and probably are, yeah. Yeah, that's a lot of dangerous.
|
|
Well, yeah, if it crashes into a car or something, but both motorcycles pull even more fun as well,
|
|
I'm not, not like, drove a motorcycle, but I'll be on the back of ones in, but, oh yeah,
|
|
and they're going to do electric cars now, but that slide, that's a bit behind, that should have to
|
|
more so, I think. You can also, I would drink on water and net minor, not that likely, but,
|
|
could that could potentially happen? I'm just settling down here,
|
|
taking a good sleep, huh? Just taking it a little easy. You don't like where you are now,
|
|
net minor. Yeah, it's eight in the morning, it's quite well within reason, not. Maybe a bit cloud
|
|
deal or something, but, like, yeah. Still a bit dark here. Definitely like Hill, though, it's a cloudy
|
|
day out there, but why not too bad, actually. What are you going to do this year, Archer? What are you
|
|
going to do this year, Archer? I stepped away. Oh, he didn't hear me that. He's actually quite okay,
|
|
right? I said, what are you going to do this year, Archer? I just keep working. I don't know yet,
|
|
I haven't made any plans. Working, working, what are you doing? Electronic technician.
|
|
What's that tech stuff, yeah? Working on high voltage machines, drives, spindles. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Who just popped in? Just, net minor has made it after, he's still alive after being on weight, I think,
|
|
34 hours, it is not like that. I'm going to just popped in in the morning,
|
|
so I missed all the opportunity to pipe in before. Tell you. I missed the opportunity pipe
|
|
being before. Well, it was already heated last night in places, so that's as you heard.
|
|
Oh, yeah, that was out, so maybe I have to listen back later in the year. You can listen to them
|
|
out during later in the year, yeah. That was nice. It was entirely too much like home,
|
|
but that's happened before. I've heard this before from them and another. Well, the whole
|
|
light, the whole idea is that because of my background, I'm a little sensitive sometimes,
|
|
especially when I'm tired. Literally, when all that went on, I kind of told, I knew it would
|
|
go on for a while, so I kind of dulled it really low, and then I just like crashed about 45 minutes,
|
|
and then Kieran, who was in King Jose, what's going on with these guys? Probably not while you'll
|
|
never see Joe in here and in Tekken, because Moss is always off, we kind of run it. So how's it
|
|
officially in? Yes, yes, it has. It hasn't been shared, and it's officially bowed around
|
|
12 minutes. I think that's about the time I woke up, and I noticed my phone was still in here,
|
|
and then I tried to click on the app and it crashed. So I was like, it's a sign. We said goodbye to
|
|
2019, it's history now, not in the whole world as well, and I think 2020 for you is going to be
|
|
a better year for many of us, not all of us. I mean, if you can die in, you know, if you can happen,
|
|
that would be a section of that. There should be conferences again for like Foss David Brassel,
|
|
that's a good one for him, I'm looking forward to that in a month of time. High five show as well,
|
|
might be the other thing on the England again, I don't know. And obviously America's got
|
|
conferences too, but I feel that's a bit far away from me to go to America. I prefer conferences
|
|
over there. I'm there here, they're okay here. Wait, wait, wait, wait, we read some of them over here as
|
|
well. I'm well, I go over there quick. I mean, I used to. What England, England's got like, but I can't,
|
|
I've been, I've been, I've been, I've been, well, you, I talked to you last night as well,
|
|
you talked to a bit last night, you said you'd been to old camp, yeah. Multiple times. Yeah,
|
|
yeah, yeah. But not the Sheffield one, you claimed the signature. That's right. That was the other,
|
|
that was the other, that was the other American guy, then I met in Sheffield. Got you, yeah, no, no,
|
|
I had not, I think that was that one of those two. 2017 was camp debris, do you know that? Yeah,
|
|
and 2018 was Sheffield, yeah. And 2019 was Manchester. No, I did Manchester. Yeah, I had missed the
|
|
two four. Not even sure. I'm hoping, no, I'm hoping there'll be an old camp 2023 somewhere,
|
|
really, because I think they were looking for new organisers or something as well.
|
|
The love, do I am love, yeah. Yeah, there's a love here. They meet up,
|
|
please call team. I go occasionally. Now, or there's a, did you go free no live as well?
|
|
So what I'm sorry? Have you been to free no live? Did you miss that? I've not. That was in my city,
|
|
Bristol. I've got one on my bike, but I'm, yeah, the love that I've got is not particularly good,
|
|
either anymore. I mean, the main thing this is okay and still going, but actually trying to meet
|
|
people at a pub again, being that absolute nightmare this year, disaster trying to get us
|
|
there at the same time. And then there's only about two or three of us anyway. It's like, oh,
|
|
someone of a very old in that group as well. And weird are here. I mean, it's turned into a
|
|
political racial thing. I'm just, I'm an empty man. So I go in and they're like, claiming, making
|
|
these weird things like, we only use it because secure and you can help us cover up things. They're
|
|
like, no, I got to go. Really? Figure it out. You're, well, hit pee like, oh, we just secure.
|
|
Have a while. Well, one guy joined, like, tech and coffee. Yeah, here in the sun. He joined the
|
|
community and everything else and different politics differed. Everything else made all these weird
|
|
claims. Like, like, when I told them Ubuntu was based off of the South African word and it's
|
|
based in England, he was like, no, it's an American. Linux is American. I'm like, no, it's kind of
|
|
finished when you get it all like testing. Yeah, yeah. Well, yeah, that, yeah, you're right.
|
|
Well, yeah, it looks exactly finished when we talk about it. Point out the facts to them. They
|
|
think it's like something. When you're talking about the kernel, it's finished. Like it or not,
|
|
lines 12. I know. I know. I know. Like it or not. It's what it is. It's like, or not, is even
|
|
no conicals being based in London or the office there and whatever. Really, you can say it's South
|
|
African because Mark Shuttleware for South African. Yeah. So I met him once. Mark Shuttleware,
|
|
if that was good. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah, yeah. Foss, Foss, Foss Dem 2016, right? In Brussels,
|
|
Belgium, yeah. I was, I was there for the tablet talk. So they were going to release the Ubuntu
|
|
tablet, yeah. And there were two talks, something I was sitting there. And then there was talk,
|
|
it was like, okay, yeah. And then some guys started answering all the questions. So to speak
|
|
them out, speaking there, like sitting there, if you're going to be like, hey, that girl,
|
|
what do you seem to know what he's on about, doesn't he? And then it clicked with me because I've
|
|
seen videos before. It was like, oh, it's Mark Shuttleware. Of course. Oh, my God. Mark Shuttleware.
|
|
Yeah. Of course. Oh, of course. It's Mark Shuttleware. I think somebody else might have done it.
|
|
And he went up and met Mr. Stalman and Bath as well, um, 2013 at the end of his talk. But,
|
|
anyway, so I've seen him met him before, but Richard Stalman. So, yeah, sorry, Mark Shuttleware.
|
|
And I was like, oh, Mark Shuttleware. And I went up. And I'm not sure if Stalman might be in
|
|
anything. Yeah, yeah. Well, he gave us all over the place we did. And yeah. But Mark Shuttleware,
|
|
it was like, oh, Mark Shuttleware. Okay. And I think somebody go and talk to him. Maybe.
|
|
Anyway, anyway, I did. I went up to him. And I was like, I was like, hi, um, yeah, I,
|
|
yeah, and he chopped my hand as well. And I was like, yeah, I kind of moved away from
|
|
and banded some other this through. Although, I'm very interested in this phone project and start
|
|
a tablet. And it's kind of winning me back over. And I could have said a better question really,
|
|
but I said to him, I just said to him, how will you strip the space station? Yeah. But instead,
|
|
I said, oh, we'll have to tune in online in the past. Oh, we'll put everything in mainstream.
|
|
I could have asked them a better question to be fair. And he was like, no, probably not.
|
|
It'll be a bit niche. But he did check my hands. And he said, hello. And you know, and it didn't
|
|
last very long. But it was, it was very, but I text my friend from the love. And I was like,
|
|
guess what I just met today? Mark Shuttleware. And it was like, yeah. And it was nice.
|
|
Well, I got weird alarm. What have you got? Oh, my phone's telling me I need to do
|
|
to wake up. Oh, wait, you're awake. Oh, no, it's something I need to add vinegar to my HVAs.
|
|
It's something. Well, so here, because I'm in Florida, to even barely live during the summertime,
|
|
you need a HVAC's a whole house. A conditioner. A conditioner. Yeah. So like, I just had one
|
|
install done literally out of pocket. It was 10 grand. A new one. Well, so even in January,
|
|
it's still about very hot. Yeah. Yeah. So I barely turned it on nowadays. But I mean, I'll turn it
|
|
on like kind of low. So it just keeps, okay, you're supposed to add vinegar to it, especially here in
|
|
Southern. All this build up the little spout with pouring like a cup of every three months change filter.
|
|
You know, I have things in my calendar. I'm just trying to figure like, what was going off that told
|
|
me I had to do it right now today. I'll be right back and drop some vinegar and before I forget.
|
|
Now I'm going to smell what? It's not a bad thing. We clean it with it. I love it. It's when
|
|
you run it through. Yeah. As soon as I do it, I just chase your portion. Good morning,
|
|
modern scene. Good morning, modern scene. Especially there. Someone asked what I was going to be doing
|
|
this year. Hopefully in the near future, going to get all of a laptop and put prox mox on it.
|
|
First, I got to figure out my friends windows issues. Everything's heating up and they won't let me
|
|
put anything on but windows on it. Why is that? Well, I want her to get rid of windows, but she's
|
|
comfortable with it. I'm like, now a day, since I stop working, I don't need those problems. So
|
|
even have friends that you've got windows. No, don't do windows. I'm done. I did 30 semi-mine.
|
|
I understand. I only want it because her old laptop is the one I'm trying to get a hold of
|
|
for the prox mox project. Yeah, when my wife is doing things, I put an older laptop with
|
|
element. I mean, it looked like a Mac. My wife loves her fedora laptop too. It's the only OS that
|
|
could get past the new biosis. Maybe I just didn't know enough. I had wanted to put slack
|
|
we're on there on this particular laptop that didn't work out. I have Pokey.
|
|
Now I've got another long count. Yeah, I've got my new machine, but it will be
|
|
sometime Tuesday before I get the SSD to put in it. See, Pokey just popped in and then out again
|
|
just to say happy new year. I was hoping to talk to him. Well, I'm back how it was miles away, kind of
|
|
listening. So we've got pre-works, yeah. I'm still here. Oh, that?
|
|
I'm still here. I was going to see if Netmider does anything social. Like on the mastodon.
|
|
So it would be neat to get on with him. No, no, no, no, no, you have to go into Dreamland and you
|
|
can't help it. No, he's actually still sociable at the moment, but I don't know for how much long
|
|
I just was wondering if you did anything like a mastodon. So a mastodon is a big hype right now.
|
|
Well, at least for some of the tech people, it's actually had on Facebook Messenger, it's left
|
|
it for mastodons. But I remember, I remember something called Identity.can. Anybody bring a bell
|
|
with that? Identical. Yes, that used to be really good, but that was like 2008 or something.
|
|
Have you used friends? And then it became status. status.net as well. And then the
|
|
SFTucket webbing, it all collapsed. And Pampio got forked into Pampio, it all kind of collapsed.
|
|
But it's not open source or time to Twitter. Very good time. Wait, have you used it?
|
|
Yeah, somebody else talking about it? Have you used friendika? I don't know. Identity
|
|
can used to be a thing that was good. Well, friendika is pretty much like mastodon because it's
|
|
you know, a fedaverse type. Like not as many servers, it's not as well you. But friendika, I think
|
|
was the natural progression of anything. I don't know. I'm just guessing. It's a shame. I even got
|
|
to meet the Canadian guy who started Identity Car in the in Brussels that paused them one
|
|
of those years. And I was there and I was like, oh, oh, he's going to. Okay, okay. And I think
|
|
he had to stop it because he was running his own server and had to pay himself. I think it was
|
|
doing that as well. Yeah. Asked your question. Archer, I have notes, social presence to speak
|
|
about. Okay. That minor is not sociable. So we get to tap trim here and that's about it.
|
|
And then the logcast, right? Yeah. And I'm never on there. I think really podcasts anymore.
|
|
Well, I never really did. I mean, I've been on some other podcasts lately, you know,
|
|
guests or whatever, but I've been on this new year show, but I think really podcasts. And I don't
|
|
really tend to distance the podcast either. I did distance some of the old stuff. Not that old,
|
|
when I was in HPR, the other day, the other night. But normally I prefer to listen to some nice
|
|
metal music. Yeah, something with a bang or some sort of music, you know. And more of an
|
|
easy synth pop. Plus with a podcast, you have to listen to it in the slow speed for hours,
|
|
all the joke is you put on to what to to plus speed or free plus speed. Yeah, I can't do to speed.
|
|
I do about one and a half, 1.8. Yeah, somebody said, something that's mean like have clad to or
|
|
someone be the DD menu at two plus speeds. They get you through their own voice. Same with videos,
|
|
or what videos is that worse sometimes. I don't know. Oh, is that how they look like? Well,
|
|
I don't know. Yeah, videos drag on. Well, I do public speaking as well. So, so I've got like,
|
|
I tend to get my speed in toast masters. I don't know if you heard of that. And I tend to get my
|
|
video of my speeches recorded then as well. But then at first, like, oh, no, I just, I look like
|
|
that and I spit sound like that. So I help them and then get used to that little bit. Lots of people,
|
|
lots of people say they like caring their own voice. I did radio for a while. I hate my shit,
|
|
literally. And listen to myself. I'm like, ah, no. I know. Lots of people, I like that. I guess
|
|
it sounds okay to other people then. But, oh, they hear it in their certain way. But when you hear
|
|
yourself, your brain is just like, oh, no. Oh, I feel a lot of the editing for some of the
|
|
god. I sense so nasally. I sense a horrible. Why do I sense a horrible? Well, my, my unasked opinions
|
|
you don't sound horrible to me. All right, buddy. Sounds good in here. I just don't like to listen
|
|
to my own voice. Now, is there anything you'd like to know our hero or anything on your mind?
|
|
I'd like your interest. I find it difficult sometimes to be social because of
|
|
anonymous factors, including the way I'm programmed. Well, it's fine. Your programming is fine.
|
|
People are people. And now you have me. I have that D-Pesh mode song going off in my head now.
|
|
I told you I was 80s. Nice to be. What was that? That was like a hello mode. That was a
|
|
Morton chief phone. Yeah, it's a Motorola. That's all I use. In fact, I need to get the new 22.
|
|
Thinking about the style. So I bought the stylus for my goddaughter and she's loving it.
|
|
Morning. I'm going to go get headphones. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
Yeah. Roll the phone. V-O-L-L-A. Look at the Google that. What I've researched and you're going to
|
|
use. But basically, you can have that. I've got I've got this. You can have it with the
|
|
Motorola OS, which is based on Android with the privacy stuff, or even better than that. You can
|
|
have with UB port. So basically, UB did what's up the bundle touch, you know, living on the community.
|
|
On what's actually on what's actually new hardware, the Motorola phone 22, 2022. Yeah.
|
|
And the other one was only like two years ago or something as well. So and there's also a robust
|
|
version of almost robust when you're working factories or whatever. So the idea, again, people
|
|
think there's no but there's no one sells a bunch of phones. And that's not true. You can get a
|
|
Motorola phone. It comes in from Germany. And I've got the one recently, you know, last few
|
|
months. I've got the Motorola phone 22, the normal one. And I've also got the other one in
|
|
the more robust thing. But very nice phones. And the crowdfunded. And yeah, you'd be buying
|
|
off one of these innards companies. These companies actually care about the stuff that we care about.
|
|
It's set up buying off. It's set up buying on which the Motorola will only have that nonsense.
|
|
Then it's off the phone off like this. It was great. Okay. They might not have the might lack apps.
|
|
But some of them can emulate the app sending away, depending what you got. And all you can set up
|
|
and box or something. But yeah, how's my sound now? Little low. But didn't hear me talk about the
|
|
Motorola phone. Motorola. Motorola. Motorola. Motorola. It was crowdfunded about two years ago
|
|
the first one. And now they've had the Motorola phone 22. There's also a more robust version. The
|
|
phone the X. It's called from Hello Well Systems now, the company in Germany. But basically,
|
|
you can have the Motorola OS, which is Android with like one of those more privacy respecting
|
|
versions with some changes, you know, or even better than that. You can have UV ports on there.
|
|
The Ubuntu touch, you know, the recent. The UV ports, what they're doing is amazing. That operating
|
|
system is very nice. Yes, it might haven't. Well, yeah, some people say, oh, we can't run that.
|
|
Can it run Android apps? Well, you can get an inbox working or something,
|
|
pull certain apps if that's the problem. But you have a choice between the two.
|
|
You go to the phone, you can refresh it yourself or send it back. I've got the, yeah,
|
|
no, the phones themselves are very nice. The hardware looks nice. It feels nice. And you'd
|
|
actually be supporting a company you cares about the sort of stuff that we care about,
|
|
instead of Motorola or whatever. It doesn't really care. They don't care less.
|
|
I say Android. And that's, you know, that's how it is. It's Android or iPhone. The mainstream
|
|
only thing else is not mainstream. But some of these things are great. Like, the Ubuntu touch,
|
|
UV ports, Vodafone. And I'm saying Vodafone because that's where you can buy something pre-installed
|
|
with it as well. Because the old stuff like the MX-4 is obviously not really sold anymore
|
|
the beat you and all that. And all those sale-fish OS that you can put on to certain devices from
|
|
a lot of former Nokia developers and things like that. Yeah, I've looked at the bullet phone before.
|
|
You know, if they shipped that to the US? Yes, yes. They should ship it to the US now. It's
|
|
being crowd- originally it was crowdfunded. That's happened. So they released the D.O.
|
|
Vodafone. I couldn't get hold of one though. Like, not the normal one, but I've got the Vodafone X,
|
|
the, um, other one, the more robust version. So I do have one there as well. And then they
|
|
call the crowdfunding campaign for the Vodafone 2.2. And you can, I believe you can just buy it
|
|
on the German website. Yeah. And how it sends to the US as well. Yes. That's cool. I have a,
|
|
I think it's a Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 that I have UB ports on. Yeah, oh, right. Oh, Xiaomi,
|
|
yeah, I think I saw that as well. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's Chinese, isn't it? Yeah, it was
|
|
a pain. I think I read that that was one of the writers that could support it. But the thing with
|
|
the Vodafone is obviously it's pre-installed. You know, they're supporting it. It's, you get,
|
|
you can buy it with the money you touch straight out, pre-installed. Yeah, or the Vodafone OS,
|
|
pre-installed, you have to make a choice between the two. But, um, but you can also then re-flash
|
|
yourself if you know what you're doing anyway or send it back. But, but yeah, that's actually pre-installed
|
|
here's a great option. One of the, one of the guys they used to work with. He has.
|
|
left of the Firefox OS stuff but if it's something else then. Something else. C-A-L-Y-X-O-S. It's an
|
|
Android system that it runs on phones that have special chips in it so you know everything is
|
|
secure in the end when you're using it. Oh yeah. Yeah. Where is there's this Kaya and
|
|
C-A-Y? Yes. There's a Kaya and then model, whether it's cool, or maybe it's that. Is it one of those
|
|
Android more privacy-respecting Android-based OSs as well? Yes it is. I put it in the chat.
|
|
Yeah. I don't know. There's a few of those. I mean that's what both of our OSs as well. It's
|
|
basically Android with the privacy stuff in there. There's a button you touch on the other hand.
|
|
I mean that's a decent operating system. I mean people go, oh but it's based on 16.04 still
|
|
and it's like well yeah but but they were going to be based on 22.04 and it's not really met
|
|
I don't think because because it was always behind the desktop like that anyway but I don't think
|
|
that matters so much because the actual operating system is great. You can get you got your terminal,
|
|
it's a very desktop-like, you got U-N-T-A and things and the app store is not overloaded.
|
|
Last time I looked I could go through with all the apps and just figure out what I wanted
|
|
upon with Android and I know I know as I find as well. Is there just way too many apps in the app store?
|
|
I can't go through two million apps and decide which apps I actually want like that you know
|
|
going on properly. There's too many apps. There's too many garbage apps that want to inundate you with
|
|
yeah yeah I was going to say that as well basically and that's exactly it as well and it's not
|
|
just too many in apps so there's a lot of garbage apps or junk apps that give you address. That's
|
|
what I found found exactly that with Android as well when I started even with just a few apps on
|
|
so I get an address somewhere or things pop up and you're like what where where where did I come from
|
|
and before you know you can sit in there with address when you're saying yeah whereas with
|
|
something like if I'm new touch on the other hand but the apps are the native apps are made by
|
|
people who love well yeah well they're not garbage apps but well there might be a few in there
|
|
somewhere depending what you call garbage but no they won't be giving me
|
|
adverts and it will be and it's mostly good. I refuse to use WhatsApp by the way. Yeah I don't use
|
|
WhatsApp. I refuse to use WhatsApp. I've never actually used WhatsApp. I thought about having
|
|
it installed possibly because I have a public speaking group on the committee. Oh oh my
|
|
might you join a WhatsApp group? No I don't want to join it. There's a group for the members too.
|
|
No I don't want to join the WhatsApp group and then my family you have a very group but
|
|
I think WhatsApp no thanks. I've got Facebook Messenger. Yes Facebook and WhatsApp now I know
|
|
that's not the point I'm getting out here but yeah I do have Facebook Messenger for those sort of
|
|
mainstream few people that I might want to talk to. I've got email. I've got don't really use
|
|
I.O.C. that much anymore but occasionally I'm like login. I'm not really on the mumble but
|
|
that's less but there's just too many different ways to communicate. It's a bit like when my public
|
|
speaking groups had to go online in the pandemic I was forced to use Zoom. Zoom yeah although
|
|
there is no meeting. I remember I said something. Can't we use something like Gypsy maybe or
|
|
it was like no but there's just too many ways to communicate and I was still like mastered on
|
|
that people were talking about. Yes I could sign up but on the other hand I don't really need that.
|
|
Yes that's maybe open source great. Yes too many ways to communicate but when we wanted to
|
|
communicate it should be open source ideally as well. Open standards open source but unfortunately a lot
|
|
of stuff is not that is popular. What's that? Zoom and I know that one of the three software foundation
|
|
guys Bradley Finney was definitely refusing to use Zoom. Whereas Karen Sandler on the other hand
|
|
who somebody might know the name here over here she gave in a little bit because she
|
|
of what she was working there and I think as well and that Bradley guy would refuse to go on things
|
|
unless it was a preparatory I think as well. That's kind of amazing with some of the FSF type people
|
|
how they would really put their mole nefics first even if they can't do certain things. Any comments?
|
|
Wait no I don't think. No somebody must have heard me but um yeah I know the name Karen Sandler
|
|
she had artificial heart. Yeah that's right she's being public about that as well she has some
|
|
sorts you've got some sort of the heart condition. Maybe it's bigger than it should be or something
|
|
well I'm not sure quite but she's in public about it and then she needed the device or something to
|
|
keep her alive basically. Right a matter to her. A set a set problem now as well. While she had to
|
|
give in here she she oh what I heard is that she needed a not some sort of device medical device
|
|
to keep her alive as well but but it's one by software and all the software was preparatory software
|
|
yeah yeah yeah I think I heard her and I'm glad they both talked on the past but I'm not
|
|
asked in in in when she touched I think it was yeah yeah Bradley could have a case maker yeah
|
|
maker whoever is um but that's one by preparatory software and of course Karen would prefer to have
|
|
an open source or free software you know but but by the sounds of it there was nothing like that
|
|
as such in the medical medical you know tech like that so she stuck for now with this preparatory software
|
|
yeah yeah I believe when she looked into it or the FDA the government agency in the US doesn't
|
|
test that they trust the manufacturer to test it and and uh say that it's secure and works properly
|
|
yeah well yeah it's probably probably do um and so she stuck you know she doesn't trust it
|
|
probably herself or you but she's got like no choice well uh things will change if a politician
|
|
pacemaker or medical device gets hacked and by the firm as he's called yeah he refused
|
|
to use things like zoom from because Karen Sandler gave in and has you zoom for teaching or something
|
|
it sounds like on virtual post them etc but and Bradley Come he made it quite clear that no he's
|
|
not using zoom it's probably a preparatory software and he said that he would even refuse to do
|
|
speeches online and stuff if they were using zoom you know he offered to do speeches and yeah
|
|
but that's what they do they stick to their ethics as much as possible these kinds of people which
|
|
is made which is quite amazing even if it even if it means that the Wi-Fi doesn't work on some
|
|
the rights it could be or whatever it is you know because there's drivers for preparatory yeah
|
|
although rich as salmon does apparently go on websites normally that was I mean that was
|
|
that was news about a few years ago leave a planet that that story yeah false death is good
|
|
should be there like Bradley Come Karen Sandler those people should be there but there's also
|
|
going to be a security bedroom it looks like this time so that can be great to go to again
|
|
we still here somebody's still here yeah have you you haven't you haven't you haven't
|
|
been to false them have you been to false them I have not oh okay you need to go to the
|
|
false them first if you've been to all camp and you come over it was you wasn't it
|
|
was that the other guy or you get mixed up somebody was it you he said you've been to all camp
|
|
well that the other guy somebody else all right well either way if you're going to come over to a
|
|
conference in Europe I highly recommend false them and it's happening here this first weekend
|
|
pepper again and it's like the biggest open source free software conference in Europe it's
|
|
that I'm actually recognizing as well and yes people like Karen Sandler and Bradley Come come
|
|
to that as well so I usually go to the southeast Linux in the Ohio Linux best I'm in Ohio
|
|
that's where I live I've been to the Texas Linux best once and in Ohio we used to have a
|
|
electronics hobbyist hacker convention called not a con that I used to go to but they lost
|
|
funding and stuff and fell through yeah I would go I would be interesting going to some of the
|
|
American ones but problem is obviously it's about the same for you if you're gonna come over here
|
|
really it's the same problem but the other way around is that you have to basically
|
|
pay a load of money on the plane flight probably to begin with and then you have to sit on that
|
|
plane for about maybe six seven eight hours or seven hours or something to flight flying over
|
|
we shouldn't much fun either and and yes all money isn't it somewhere to stay when you
|
|
over food etc yeah I actually just took my second international flight I'm in Thailand right now
|
|
oh somebody said there somebody was in Thailand and I didn't really understand that
|
|
you but maybe they were talking about you they were probably talking about me yeah yeah that
|
|
that makes sense so somebody what somebody's coming here from Thailand won't oh oh okay if you're
|
|
on top yeah if it was you that makes sense then why are you in Thailand yeah why are you in
|
|
Thailand I'm visiting my best friend and we're seeing if if we'll probably get there best friend
|
|
who I found somebody online from Thailand yeah a couple of years ago online yeah and she was
|
|
scams and dating sites and things now it's horrible oh yeah yeah when I first got on the
|
|
internet in 95 I always looked for a pen pals because I always loved that when I was a kid I'd
|
|
have been yeah I did that you're I did that as well like eleven years old sort of thing got
|
|
the internet and I did have like one two or three pen pals yeah we we we've released balloons with
|
|
our information on it and they made it over to Europe in most of us got one or pen pals from
|
|
Thailand no no I pen pals from Europe when I was a kid and when I got on the internet in 95 I tried
|
|
doing finding people around the world but most of the time I find people close to me that wanted
|
|
to cheat on their husbands there were unhappy marriages and of course all the scammers and and
|
|
stuff but when when her and I started talking we finally video chatted and she she told me that she
|
|
didn't want my money she wasn't going to send me money and she didn't need a man in her and I
|
|
told her that was wonderful because I didn't need a man in my life either right and but but the
|
|
I mean I've talked to tons of people on the internet over the years and it's usually scammers
|
|
people who want to get married tomorrow which is just the bad no I know I yeah I've talked to
|
|
loads of people on the internet over the years too and it seems these dating sites are free
|
|
one really well also it's all full it's just horrible but you can get you can get some interesting
|
|
people and you find and get to know how you buy I anybody really awesome I find I usually stay
|
|
friends with them for a between two weeks and two months and then for whatever reason they're gone
|
|
yeah or they do something really crazy and I'm gone but yeah she's she's uh
|
|
we talk every day and uh she's been wonderful um I ended up I was supposed to go crazy you said
|
|
like what oh sets of people I'm talking to or but you said that you so all they do is saying
|
|
really crazy and then they go what does that mean really how like one time I talked to somebody
|
|
in a couple messages and we went we went out and had lunch and watched a movie and uh
|
|
uh when the movie was over she was like uh I really need to know is this gonna end in a marriage or
|
|
like right that second she needed a decision and I was like uh at this point absolutely not
|
|
but if I had somebody else laughing there as well was that you were that you pardon
|
|
if I had somebody laughing there as well was that you I don't know yeah yeah so sometimes some of them
|
|
want to rush stuff too quickly yeah yeah but all the scammers or something yeah yeah lots of
|
|
scammers lots of uh um well and I also tried not to talk to anybody close to me because I don't know
|
|
I think it's easier to find out if you are really compatible in a friend level before
|
|
relationship level but further you are away yeah I stay as difficult but why why I think
|
|
well I was having this chat with not letting mine earlier amongst other things and so this
|
|
was part of it but um it's not sure if he's still here now that's just that one he's still there
|
|
oh he's probably maybe he really is maybe he really is asleep oh yeah he'd be talking about
|
|
after 35 at six seven hours yeah okay well I'm starting to see more of the thing more
|
|
I think I think we're dating when I've dating sites that are all for the only way scammers are
|
|
we're saying but what what I what I'm thinking why I was thinking as well is that some people have
|
|
have with open source and stuff have got some really extreme passions and interests or they're
|
|
kind of really really really into it and some people be it might be because I'm always a mass
|
|
booker as I don't know but some people would even pick during their special thing let's say we're
|
|
open source whatever it is be it programming some niche shop school project hardly anybody use it be
|
|
it testing updates quality choice be whatever they're doing right but they would pick drivers
|
|
packaging packages whatever they're doing but they would pick that and that would be the thing
|
|
that makes the most happy in life as well and they would pick that over anything else pretty much
|
|
including finding love having a partner right although saying that of course there are people with
|
|
girlfriends and stuff too that are into this there's a spouses and partners touring Brussels for
|
|
the time for it for them where you can their wives and girlfriends go on look around Brussels while
|
|
the men are in wherever in at the conference but I I had some years ago who said to me like oh
|
|
when you're looking for a girlfriend on a dating site I said to him one day I'm not doing
|
|
my I'm looking for some I'm on some dating site and he's like why are you doing that you gave me
|
|
a he was in his 50's early 50's he gave me a and that a bit of nasty British saying to sort of
|
|
say like yeah why are you doing that waste of time don't stop doing that waste of that what's
|
|
kind of good saying but it's been nasty in the context he gave it in and I and I was doing much
|
|
and he was like why are you joining quality shorts team why don't you become like a
|
|
passenger why don't you do this why don't you do that and that's what he was doing but he was
|
|
unemployed at the time he was going to go back into work can be self-employed had a plan
|
|
worked in factories in the past he ended up dying of lung cancer instead but I mean think
|
|
it I mean thinking about that time since because I'm going to do anything with speech later on
|
|
in March or something I want to talk about some of the extreme passions stuff I think if I can
|
|
do it right and I'm thinking like do these people I was saying and and and and and also when
|
|
he died he didn't just died he he decided he knew he's got lung cancer and so he donated two or
|
|
three years computers to the quality insurance so even in death he still wanted to contribute
|
|
because that project meant so much for him see it was and there was a story something in
|
|
gloom apparently they fixed a bug they were going to die as well but they they fixed a bug with
|
|
their feet apparently in gloom too before they died about a day or so before they died and I'm
|
|
and I was like if that's not extreme passion or whatever extreme interest except for what what
|
|
is and also it's a bit like why do they have that why do they why are some of these people so
|
|
passionate but I don't know but maybe it's linked to authors and Westburg in summer I mean I had
|
|
this chat with that minor earlier yeah I'm passionate about not using windows I uh well
|
|
and mostly Apple yeah yeah yeah yeah well yeah that's a bit different though that's like that's
|
|
like every nearly everybody using the looks we'll say hey I I think we're not using windows uh there's
|
|
a couple of us at work that are trying to push together to allow us to have a red hat on our
|
|
workstations and uh and uh all leave if uh they continue to refuse because our job is so difficult
|
|
using windows to manage the Linux with all the restrictions they have asked well yeah that's
|
|
that's a good point with that as well but I like it and all the experience but some of these people
|
|
as well these are so-called passionate people they will have a nine to five job let's say it could
|
|
be what you're doing whatever it doesn't matter some sort of tech job or whatever but then when
|
|
they come home they don't just go and go hey I'm a home now I'm going to eat some dinner or whatever
|
|
I'm going to watch TV or whatever in fact many of them will probably come home and be like you know
|
|
what I'm home now it's like it's my time okay I'm now going to contribute to my project my open
|
|
source project as well on the same day yeah even though they're not getting paid to contribute
|
|
there's not even being paid to work to do that open source projects but they do it anyway
|
|
because they think because they think it's that's a good thing to do or or whatever it or whatever
|
|
the reason there's and they have the passion and the next day they're probably doing the same
|
|
thing again some of these people and and it's quite amazing really and some of the projects as well
|
|
are brit niche it's a bit like or a bit like you need some technical expertise for this the
|
|
open SSL project had a bug in 2014 that you may have probably heard of actually called shell shock
|
|
remember that do you remember here mech shell shock shell shock yeah I remember hearing this yeah
|
|
and it sounded like apparently it was a small little library or project open source about 15
|
|
developers or something and some people were supposed to be checking the code as well but this
|
|
peacher got put in that was had a bug in it that it didn't take the both both men didn't pick up
|
|
on the bug they're both didn't realise the bug was there and then they got found that about
|
|
exploited by criminals and it's like the service areas to update but what was made it interesting
|
|
as well it was like open SSL saw that only about 15 developers or whatever it was not that many
|
|
developers apparently but yet such an important project suddenly it turns out for encryption on
|
|
on the internet of many when you're doing transactions bank transactions and things and
|
|
and then and then Apple and Microsoft and Google and so on found out as well and I believe what happened
|
|
was they were like sort of oh dear we're using this all summer so we need to sort this out we need
|
|
to work on this together let's get together when these bugs pop up we will put money into it we will
|
|
fix it we will use our people we will sort this out quicker in the future and I just think it's
|
|
amazing it that happens well for example everybody was so locked into it everybody was using it but
|
|
nobody was nobody was helping in any way yeah but yeah and it was maintained by only volunteers
|
|
apparently no paid developers yeah no one with a day job work on open SSL which is which is what
|
|
makes it quite interesting as well and then and then there's a there's an idea that the open source
|
|
stuff is a is like it is a hobby or a pastime and not a profession and it's like I got to ask Joe
|
|
Reese this briefly last night and I said okay he's a professional podcaster you know but but um and
|
|
so on but his response was yeah he sort of said it as well it's a bit mixed here and it's like
|
|
his open source just a waste of time and a hobby or is it something that matters and I mean if
|
|
it's a gaming project okay it's some hobby it's whatever but when it comes to something like
|
|
open SSL even the Linux kernel I mean our paid developers that now I believe but some of those
|
|
you know certain project surely it's not surely it even if you're not getting paid surely it
|
|
something worth doing and being involved with even if you even if pending on the project a little
|
|
bit as well it's not just dumb fun is it and people didn't work on Linux distributions as well
|
|
okay we don't need as many Linux distributions as fragmentation that's what people have said
|
|
years ago but but those are real projects and they need quality assurance testing and all that as
|
|
well and and um you can in the bank probably which projects are waste of time and shouldn't really
|
|
exist in general and open source and which ones should exist but and which ones are more important
|
|
than others but but surely it's more than just a hobby and even and sometimes you know people
|
|
are doing things that aren't are a hobby or they're doing it in the past time out of funnel because
|
|
they think it's good for you to do it they're not getting paid but sometimes actually that's
|
|
probably better than a paid job even because a paid job is just to make money really and do things
|
|
but but certain things should probably pay really that don't pay like when it comes to open source
|
|
plenty of example you know what i mean yes i do because i i'm faced with hearing a speech later on
|
|
about now i'm doing it i'm doing a do public speaking or do toast bachelors calls clubs all
|
|
around the world 144 countries and um my next one's going to be about rock and metal music
|
|
it says i'm faced with doing some nonsense with body language or something as part of the project
|
|
as well but then the next one it says something like talk about um the difference between non
|
|
between professional and personal communication style and or don't talk about the project
|
|
and i was just thinking like well really the next feature i want to do after that
|
|
is the stem steam stream plunge i've called it stem yeah science tech engineering mathematics
|
|
yeah have you had that term for stem yeah science tell me into it's nice to have heard
|
|
yeah you've had you heard toast masters as well right yeah so stem science tech engineering
|
|
mathematics so i bet that you can know my friend said to me face the computer you can
|
|
debate the part um art into it now stream science tech um no no reading and uh
|
|
well no no no no no no yes steam is next on the science tech engineering art
|
|
mathematics artistic expression presentations not being bored head don't know quite
|
|
and then it's on the internet you can call it you can even call it stream if you want now and
|
|
add reading and writing it which is like really so in the course of each the stem steam stream
|
|
people basically but says i'm simply talking about communication style hobbyist and personal
|
|
now which caught me a bit first because i was thinking like am i a profession i was like no
|
|
because i because i've got um OCD and i've been disability stuff a bit i'm not i'm not actually
|
|
working currently in that class but i'll just say that right i may have worked before but
|
|
whether right or may have not worked at all but it's not really the point i'm getting that
|
|
quite but when i first read the description i thought oh jeez they want me to talk about being
|
|
a professional and and and how i communicate and how i how i talk otherwise and they got me a bit
|
|
but but i think i think that's just part of it but but there is a difference from how you talk
|
|
anyway if you talk on here i mean net miners said it earlier how he's up to adapt how he will
|
|
talk in different situations but with you say there's some yeah and things like that
|
|
you talk differently if we give it a tech with we're talking to tech people be it in a conference
|
|
or be it on here the podcast whatever we talk like the way we do if you're talking to your doctor
|
|
or something you're going to talk in a different way and if you talk to your um girlfriend in
|
|
Thailand you're going to be uh speaking in a different way again i expect but i was what i want
|
|
to give them is a speech about about um stem and some of the episode stuff i guess and how
|
|
that people have a string passion and interest but it doesn't but it's really it's a good thing
|
|
they they know what they're talking about um they but it's something they matter yes you're not
|
|
being paid but what you're doing is amazing anyway it'd be like the UB port project which i mentioned
|
|
that's all volunteer based now and it's amazing what they're doing and you said you heard the
|
|
toast masters as well as that right yeah yeah i've worked with several people that are members
|
|
you have that's interesting i think i think toast masters upon with toast masters as well is that
|
|
in some ways is that they they there's two there's the kind well most people i'm the exception
|
|
some ways really i mean i mean i mean i mean it's aimed at kind of like business see type people
|
|
they're going to present in their business or or they're going to present in their university maybe
|
|
or well not just that not not only that it's supposed to sort of cater for everyone really but
|
|
but i think sometimes they cater too much on the kind of business side i'm the exception most of my
|
|
life i've not worked actually maybe all of my life because because because of uh
|
|
disability yeah OCD obsessive compulsive of sort that's the thing that causes most problems
|
|
in my life especially with timekeeping yeah because the world's very much about being somewhere
|
|
on time yeah and if you're if you're late it causes problems usually or well for lots of things
|
|
about it's already constantly late it's not just that there's the other stuff with those the
|
|
intrusive for stuff a bit it's not just a few people think it's handwashing and yes handwashing
|
|
it's not just checking handwashing it's quite a quite complicated thing then link that with um
|
|
i'm gonna say mild asperger the autism could apparently have got that as well a bit old diagnosis
|
|
age routine you see it's a bit it all comes a bit complicated um but and i'm thinking i'm the
|
|
exception of toastmasters in a way but even i'm also i'm also a vice-president membership at a
|
|
moment i'm supposed to be trying to get people into my club new members but um that's an under
|
|
committee i've got one of all but um but it's a good way to sort of practice speaking public speak
|
|
learn to do it get your feedback even rich astoundment that in toastmasters i ran originally
|
|
and they started going all the way around the world doing his speeches about why she didn't use
|
|
free software um and then i got used to doing that mentoring and i was thinking i thought that well
|
|
doesn't work in this place that didn't happen and whatever and no one's really mentored me but
|
|
i've taught people things online as well etc um but i think the steam thing is interesting and
|
|
what i'm wondering one thinking as well is there a link between steam in most not just steam but
|
|
it does seem that a lot of the inventors and scientists and programmers and and all this have got
|
|
have got at least some aspect traits they got either got autism aspergers diagnosed or they have
|
|
just a few of the traits and it's not diagnosed but it does seem that there was a link between
|
|
and maybe the stream passion thing as well is also linked to aspergers because most people don't
|
|
have that they they they're not really extremely passionate about anything like that i think
|
|
but we're all a bit we'll maybe we're all a bit different we're the STEM people see
|
|
we're not we're not average Joe and Jane are we we're the STEM people huh Joe I join I mean
|
|
do you know what I mean for you say someone was saying something what can what happened there
|
|
oh i said i said i do i in a gree did you see what i'm saying yeah and also and also people think
|
|
aspergers not with them is a bad thing and it's like well the whole spectrum and yes there are
|
|
people with learning difficulties and things as well and they look a bit different old and
|
|
stuff at times but but everyone is different but they don't say that aspergers usually the more clever
|
|
people the more higher up clever clever people and someone said like if you do a science degree
|
|
and say high-end physics or something like that PhD and say physics either probably meet a few
|
|
aspects a few aspects people definitely high you know we've got really complicated science yeah
|
|
yeah and tech tech there's more logical i guess tech is generally you got one way and that's it
|
|
for a lot of stuff it or it doesn't work or there's a bug if it's a program or you know it's
|
|
there isn't yeah it's quite straightforward when you understand certain things i guess
|
|
saying we'd like partitioning a Linux distra you you you have to partition it in a certain way
|
|
or it won't work that's true but i think there's flak around stuff like that as well so i was going to
|
|
like a bit older now i want to kind of i want to kind of i don't know we all die eventually i guess
|
|
it sounds sounds a bit sad saying that but it's true isn't it and it would and it would probably
|
|
get to try and do something but it's still really young be fair but you know things can happen
|
|
i guess i guess we call it but i didn't do something isn't it otherwise otherwise life is a bit like
|
|
what was what was what have i really achieved in my life oh or not a cheat you know i mean i do
|
|
that's one of the reasons why i'm in Thailand i just went through a year and a half a
|
|
cancer oh have you yeah i had a stage 3 colon cancer wow are you able to stop now uh i hope so
|
|
yeah now i have to say to well what were you talking about because because you thought why i'm
|
|
going to get love now then well uh we've been talking before i was diagnosed and uh uh did
|
|
student by invited me to come over and and and visit we had plans to go to Cambodia to see
|
|
Angkor Wat ancient Buddhist temple civilization that was lost um they rediscovered it in the 1990s
|
|
i think they 80 certainly nine um but uh she kept getting upset that i hadn't committed to come in
|
|
and it was because i was having uh issues with my health that i wasn't telling her out and uh uh
|
|
then i got diagnosed with cancer uh stage stage three uh colorectal cancer
|
|
oh yeah well yeah that's well yeah that's basically it isn't it's like well yeah we don't know
|
|
where i'm going to die it's actually either or or if i or or or it could just be health going down
|
|
so badly or something happened and then then you can't and then you can't go and do weather
|
|
something so uh i think a lot of people think oh we live for ages especially if you're young
|
|
on the other hand i mean i mean people can get shot something they can be in the wrong place and
|
|
get shot and okay things can happen yeah yeah i've seen uh i've uh been close to situations that
|
|
are just random and crazy yeah yeah i think my health is mostly okay but it's not perfect either
|
|
or i know and i know that full well i know there you know nothing major probably but but it makes
|
|
you think about it like yeah i'm getting older as well and i mean i hope i'm not dead in 10
|
|
years time or or in really bad health or something but you know you don't you don't really know
|
|
what's gonna happen to you no you don't and my my treatments and stuff were really aggressive uh and
|
|
i think everybody everybody was really surprised and the medical uh in oncology uh that i did so well
|
|
one they were surprised that my treatments were so aggressive and two they were surprised that i was
|
|
doing so well uh but i was like yeah this isn't this isn't what's gonna do me and it'll be
|
|
something else yeah no i know i know i know i know i know a guy from my group uh also uh you know
|
|
or whatever he had cancer but um he's i think something similar or whatever but he's he's over it
|
|
in my heart seems does like years ago yeah i just uh got the uh my last surgery was in september i
|
|
think august september um and i just got the go ahead the beginning of December to get uh
|
|
travel vaccines and and uh to travel so as soon as that happened i scheduled an appointment for my
|
|
vaccines got my vaccines scheduled my airline tickets and left yeah yeah well fun enough
|
|
it's kind it's kind of crazy uh because it's uh i'm not comfortable uh traveling or going to
|
|
new places and stuff it's a big deal for me uh i went to linux conferences for years before i
|
|
made any connections with people because uh i don't know just just too shy to introverted uh and
|
|
clatty was actually the first one that i was uh talking to i think that the southeous linux
|
|
vest i'd met him uh at one or two conferences every year for like three years and he didn't
|
|
remember who i was yeah i talked to choose not on film this time or see yeah uh but but we were
|
|
talking we were talking about sequel light because uh Richard hip who uh created sequel light was at
|
|
the southeous linux vest and uh um uh we were talking back and forth and and uh i i i got to the
|
|
point where i was talking past his knowledge level i can say and and he was like he was like wait
|
|
what's your name again so people have fast-faced or veckin as well i don't know if it's linked to
|
|
autism, mass barely could be or whatever because because i don't i have it at times as well and it was
|
|
like it's like it's like uh i was at um well now as a guy it came to my lug years ago i i talked to
|
|
him it really didn't box maybe twice and he remembered me and i met and and it was like um i didn't
|
|
think much of it a year ago but then i went to conferences and he'd seen me in he'd seen me at um
|
|
the thing in england and he'd seen me at picking brustles he's once or or something or
|
|
oh what happened and then and then and then also back in near my in my city when the other thing
|
|
was on and and then he was like oh it loads me and i was like well at first i was like i think
|
|
he was like like well i don't i don't i don't i don't i don't i don't recognize him at all like uh
|
|
they kind of told me who he was he reminded me and i was like oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah
|
|
yeah we yeah we yeah i met you years ago right um and also once i'm right followed
|
|
wrong people back from Liverpool to go to hotel or and i said can i go back with you
|
|
but i wouldn't be able to throw away what it wasn't that far away but i wasn't sure and i
|
|
followed the wrong people got wrong people and then i don't wish them whether my compass actually
|
|
they're like oh you get taxi from here or something like uh i wouldn't very far away but um
|
|
yeah generally people remember me as well be that be that in person or possibly online
|
|
sometimes well um they remember me yeah but i i don't i don't always remember them that's for sure
|
|
and i and i'm face of recognition okay if i'm if i've seen somebody i mean i was i was that i was
|
|
out i was out i'm in a walk um 2018 around here sort of there's a nice walk a bit of a
|
|
card journey away let's say but i was walking around there with someone and some woman
|
|
said a lotin it was like something and it was like why she was like hey you in the uh competition
|
|
in uh toastmasters weren't you for like um um table topics it's called with me and i was like
|
|
yeah years ago in the other club sure and it's like another house how she remembered me but she
|
|
remembers me seeing me in the competition i guess when she came along and so she's only really
|
|
being there once but even then for some reason uh but yeah face of recognition and stuff um maybe
|
|
voices to extent as well but that's a bit different three of those very much about faces really
|
|
isn't it that's how we recognize people generally speaking you you see somebody again oh yeah see
|
|
new before but we can't saying that we can't remember every single person we've met either
|
|
and what was what was a bit weird as well as i was going down to the wall in my city down here
|
|
judge a year because anyone twice to three knows rent but um i was at the bus running a bit late
|
|
at my at my local bus stop just out there and some guys suddenly started talking to me like hello
|
|
it's bastion i was like well what and you're like oh yeah i've been at the other conference and i
|
|
said you're like well why you go to this conference then but i'm expecting to i really
|
|
wouldn't expect you to meet someone out there that it's been that my one you know one your
|
|
other conference i've been out not out there no you you know you really have a problem when you
|
|
look in the mirror and says hey who is this guy in my mirror and that and glad uh uh verbal has appeared
|
|
now and that that's the first thing he says yes uh that happened to you didn't it verbal
|
|
oh yeah oh this old guy in the mirror oh jeez he's got even more grey hair now i think from
|
|
that time and a grey beard so happened to you i don't know if i do this uh i do the other
|
|
crystal laugh um pine me or someone else yeah yeah you yeah do you hear what i was talking about
|
|
face facial recognition stuff yeah yeah i read an article one time about uh uh like uh uh
|
|
disconnecting with people um uh when when too many people are in the same area like cities and
|
|
stuff that below a certain number of people there's more uh a piece and uh harmony and stuff
|
|
and it's supposed to be related to tribalism and how we can only uh recognize and keep
|
|
associated in our minds around 200 yes that as well that's that's kind of a different point but but
|
|
but yeah i find this as well that i mean i'm in a place i live in a place that is generally speaking
|
|
quite busy in the day lots of cars going through as because of the actual city is right there as well
|
|
but um you know lots of cars going through there's cold there's a college not the same in Britain
|
|
there's the USA but yeah big your college is that educational based down the road there's a university
|
|
down the other side campus there's lots there's shops there's lots and lots of people around but
|
|
obviously when you go out there the other thing is people don't say hello or what or barely say
|
|
hello you just basically walk past people for the most part and it's a bit sun the way really
|
|
if you see somebody you just definitely walk past no one says hello it's like it's not like the
|
|
Simpsons for example the cartoon you know where everybody knew everybody yeah well so part to that
|
|
conversation um where i live in Kentucky everybody says hi it doesn't matter if you've never met
|
|
this person in your life you're like hey how's it going and that's literally like that's all you
|
|
ever say but yeah i've i've lived in places like upstate New York nobody ever said a word
|
|
and i'm the weirdo going down the street hey how you doing you know this yeah waving people in there
|
|
just like in me like i swear i don't know you get away from me you know yeah saddened it like
|
|
that and then it's and then then what i've heard as well is when people found i think there's
|
|
somebody found someone online or they moved somewhere else and then and then some some other person
|
|
moved as well then it's really family children online and it was like hey we used to live in the same
|
|
place basically before but we didn't even know each other so we meet here instead it's like what
|
|
yeah i'll have i'll have customers come in i'll work at a a local cell phone to you and uh i'll
|
|
have people come in you're that guy that said hi to me and like Kroger one time i'm like probably
|
|
about 30 times yeah but i don't remember like it honestly like earlier you guys were saying
|
|
200 people is what most people keep in their minds i'm like i'm lucky if it's 20 like i don't remember
|
|
anybody i think people tell my customers i'm like it's nothing against it's it's not that i don't
|
|
want to remember you it's just i usually deal with on average 40 people a day yeah i don't
|
|
want to understand how teachers do it other than they have the person you know they have the kids
|
|
every single day yeah i think i think about it yeah well that thing appears to have a list of names
|
|
in front of them to help out yeah that helps too i don't get that luxury i have to sit there and go
|
|
what's your name again you know and i i tell them i'm like you i'm wearing a name badge you're not
|
|
i promise you it could be a year from now unless you come in like once a week which i do have a
|
|
couple of customers who i'm like hey you know bill how's it going how are the kids you know there's
|
|
a few people that have come in so often that i remember them but it's very rare where do you work
|
|
and there's a few that i don't even have to ask them their phone number i just punch it in while
|
|
they're pulling into the parking lot what do you work uh i work for t-mobile okay i think the right
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day i think what happens as well is that to be remembered you have to also do
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have something that well something that makes you stand out something weird maybe or maybe not
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was weird but something you know something that kind of makes you stand out in their mind and they
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think oh yeah i remember that person oh yeah i remember that oh yeah that's the one
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that's crazy crazy and believes in every single white you know uh thing about any experience
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yeah yeah so you going around saying hello in a place where no one's over there is probably
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enough to do it because they're thinking that shit crazy guy yeah exactly that this one guy
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gave me day brocky will be remembered forever but it's sad that it's like that as well
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and what it is but it's also funny because i can be like so if you heard anything you know
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interesting like i used them to find out what the newest conspiracies are like uh Biden has been dead
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for three years JFK juniors still alive and running with country uh well i can't remember
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there's so many of them that i'm just like oh okay cool what i found what i found as well
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as this right when you're out and about and these kind of places now like i was saying people don't
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say hello people generally ignore you but there are exceptions to this so for example i
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went up to my it's only up to a rotate we've got something called Greg's in Britain say it's
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right well go check go try it out if you ever come over here it's basically a bakery type
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chain but it's all over like well most of the country and you can have your little sausage rolls
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you know veggie vegan stuff and that and and you can get that you're very quick go in there
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get something come out with it but i have a paper john next door it's closed currently you might
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have a pump we've got a paper john's over there believe it well um there's a domino so i had to
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down but i remember on one tickler afternoon i was it was reasonably nice whether i walked down
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it's not only about 50 minutes walks like that far and i and i and i thought well i'm going to buy
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the Greg's and i'm going to eat it outside the Greg's buy buy the Greg's i should like pretend to do
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but but i wasn't i was not in the rush to go home when you think and it was like come at the
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fire clock the boat's quite busy but the paper john was there and what was interesting is this guy
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came out of the paper john to deliver a pizza somewhere on his bike or his car or whatever
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and i i i i think i've eaten my Greg's been there about half an hour start looking at my phone
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whatever i'm still there and about an hour later i'm still there right so he came back
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and he looked at me and he was a bit like uh like like like like like like like like like why
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why am i so late you know like why why am i still there basically i don't know are you all right
|
|
are you waiting for bus or something i'm like no i'm i live nearby what i say i just that's one
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|
example but it just kind of shows if if you if something makes you look a bit weird or unique or
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bit like hang on you've not left this area you're still in this demo area and you haven't moved on
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it's out later people start to wonder don't they when they don't really know what's going on yeah
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yeah uh poppa johns was actually started by uh a Kentucky and so yeah i know poppa johns very well
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he's a he's a jerk but he still does things for Kentucky i guess uh yeah what was that comment in
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the chat said just tell them something you're at my side yeah uh well i did it in the shop once as
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well now as well as conference and eating properly and i was like should have moved back so tell
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us again they kind of wonder them waste or outside here where we don't left the the shop area
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did the whole way outside in the service station but but yeah so it's it's it's it's kind of
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sad there and then again where are you from what are you doing why are you out there why are you
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out there still so it's like people just don't care unless unless it looks a bit odd then it's the
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exception isn't it then okay yeah you have to say yeah i don't find that happens around here lately
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it's people are kind of getting to that point like uh you're you're there all day okay sure whatever
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yeah you have to say uh if people ask why are you sitting here you have to just say hey i'm
|
|
planning my attack and then they'll really pay attention to you so we have this really nice
|
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white jacket for you to try on uh we may also have a padded room and it's great you get to go and
|
|
jump against the walls we gave you great hills you get to hug yourself all day well point me in
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that direction yeah there's been a few days where i'm like you know what i'll take that that's
|
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fun yeah let's go yeah the missus is a therapist of sorts and from time to time i'm like how much does
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it cost to go to eastern so i can get a vacation and she just gives me this look and i'm like i'm
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not kidding like literally what do i have to do you have been listening to hacker public radio
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