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157 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
157 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3212
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Title: HPR3212: A Pi Model 3B as your daily driver? You must be joking.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3212/hpr3212.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 18:56:07
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3212 for Tuesday, 24th of November 2020.
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Today's show is entitled, A Pi Model 3B at Your Daily Driver.
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You must be joking.
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It is hosted by Beemer and is about 13 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
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The summer is Beemer's laptop in a way being fixed.
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Can he manage for a few days using just his Raspberry Pi 3B?
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello there HBR.
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This is Beezer again.
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The laptop I use as my daily driver is a Dell Inspiron.
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I've had it for at least seven years and other than the battery life drop into about 10 minutes,
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it's been absolutely thoughtless.
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Recently the fans started making lot of noise which I knew from past experience,
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usually means that the bearings failing.
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So the solution is just to replace the fan.
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Nansom laptops to reach the fan requires a lot of disbanding which can be very
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fiddly with clumsy hands like mine.
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So a range for a friend is a bit of an electronics note to fix it for me.
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While the Dell was away, the question arose of which computer to use in its place.
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The rather than just use one of the other laptops, it struck me as an opportunity to
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conduct some of my theorize about for ages.
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That is, can you use the Raspberry Pi as your primary computer?
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Clearly this depends on what you use your computer for and for some people you don't need to
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conduct an experiment as the answer is obviously that you can't.
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If you're a gamer or you're into a video editing, a Pi falls along way short.
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What though if you're a light user doing a bit of internet browsing, webmail and YouTube,
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could a Pi plus a cheap USB key, board and an else plugged into a second-hand monitor
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and an old TV be enough to meet your needs?
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I wasn't going to be making it easy for the Pi as mine is not a model 4, even a 3B plus.
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It's a plain model 3B. I always use it connected to a 24-inch Samsung monitor
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with a mouse and keyboard occupying two of the four USB sockets.
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It already had a copy of where I was being installed for about a year ago.
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Now this had a reasonable fit of software like numeric for spreadsheets and adiword
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word processing. These are considered a bit outdated but in actual fact they still do a perfectly
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good job for simple office and admin tasks and the browse was Firefox ESR edition I believe.
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Now in the search for optimal results I decided to replace this with the current version of
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the desktop software. I considered Ubuntu Marta but there's a warning on the download page that
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suggests it kind of works on the 3B. Now I suppose it's not unreasonable the Ubuntu Marta team
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have tuned the distribution to a more powerful model 4.
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Instead I decided to go for the latest version of Rails View which has now been rebranded
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Raspberry Pi OS. I don't know the image from Raspberry Pi website using a Torrem and then installed
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it on a 16GB micro SD card. The boot time is very quick. We'll under 30 seconds. The default
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desktop is simple with number of the compositing effects that we are used to with heavier desktop
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managers. So a certain amount of customization of the user interface is possible such as the
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title bar color, highlight color and the system from it and you can change this to all papers so
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while you can't craft the appearance as fine as with KDE, Cinnamon or XFCE I think most people could
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come up with something they can live with. I decided I'll start with a default applications and
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only install anything else as and when my workflow required it. So I didn't do a side by side
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comparison with last year's version of Rails View and so the only obvious differences I could see
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was that numeric nabby word had been replaced by LibreOffice. Given the considerable
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additional functionality the LibreOffice applications must be heavier. So I was interested to see
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how they perform. Also the default browse was now chromium. Of that it looked pretty much the same
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as before. So how use what is the Pi Model 3 as a daily driver? Well I'll take you through the
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task I tried to perform. I started off with a bit of web browsing. Now chromium opens quickly
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and signing into my hotmail account was only a little slower than I'm used on my regular.
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My inbox has got hundreds of items in it but scrolling through was no problem.
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Though perhaps a little slower than I'm used to but it's not a problem though.
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I tried to open up the online versions of Excel and Word which come as part of our live.com
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subscription but these were a non-starter and I mean that literally. I tried to open a spreadsheet
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stored on my one drive that is about 350 rows and it just locked up the browser.
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Now don't allow noting a copy of this same spreadsheet and opening a LibreOffice
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LibreOffice account this could have been more different. It opened quickly and I could navigate
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around it easily. YouTube videos play fine with a nice sharp image which I know is no longer
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jerky and slightly I've synced with the audio which is what I got with last year's Razbian.
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Forget about getting full screen though. The image remains watchable just about but the audio
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sync is lost and returning from full screen to a normal viewport takes forever.
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Watching a YouTube video clearly takes up a lot of the available power in the Pi3
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as anything you may try to do at the same time whether in another browser tab or a complete
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separate application runs very slow or not at all. Audio is different matter though. I could
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listen to a radio station in one tab while working on email in another or typing into a LibreOffice
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document. As I alluded to before LibreOffice works surprisingly well I didn't try any really
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large documents or any with loads of embedded pictures but for general use the performance
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absolutely fine. What I had real problems with though was printing. With Ubuntu on my Intel
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paled Dell I don't think I've had to do anything to get it to recognise my HP printer scanner
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as long as it's plugged into a USB socket it's just there automatically. Not so with the Pi
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I installed cups and the HP specific HP lip utility and followed all the other advice I could
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find online but it was all to no avail after spending an hour or so and now I just gave up.
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It is sprawling the menus I found the Raspberry Pi diagnostics utility. Now one of the test
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it can perform is an SD card performance analyser. The idea behind this is to tell you if the SD
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card you've installed the operating system on is likely to be a performance bottleneck due to
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slow read or write speeds. It strikes me a bit late to do that by the time the OS has already been
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installed but it still makes for an interesting test. My car was apparently below the recommended
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minima but it seemed to be performing okay as far as I was concerned. What it does imply though is
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that a higher spec SD card will presumably deliver better results than just the largely satisfactory
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ones that I was experiencing. Again on the multimedia front I tried watching the TV programme using
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the iPlayer facility on the BBC website. Both recorded and light TV programmes worked really
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well though it was very much better using the default image size. Going full-screen resulted
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in a degraded image quality and a jerky delivery. I listened to a lot of online radio and
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networks extreme will either coming through the browser via streamer or by entering a stream URL
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into VLC. Either way the audio reproduction is really first class using headphones connected to
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the 3.5 jack in the side of the pie. My monitor has an audio socket in the back so you can feed
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the audio into it via the HDMI cable. There really isn't much difference but I do feel that the
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direct audio jack possibly just as the edge over the HDMI output but that's just subjective.
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Having tried YouTube, Hotmail, iPlayer and worked on some documents and spreadsheets for
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LibroFace. I'd already covered a fair chunk of my daily workflow all of which could be accomplished
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without installing any extra software. I do from time to time do a bit of video editing which I
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use open shot but that's far from part of my daily routine so I wasn't going to attempt to do
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that in the pie. I do a fair bit of audio editing though using the sounds captured mainly on the
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Zoom H2 handheld recorder. I'm not a big fan of audacity. I must prefer a simpler lightweight
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or it's the called MH wave edit. I installed this on the pie using Synaptic and was astonishing
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at how quick it was. It was slower than my Dell laptop for sure but only a bit. The only real
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difference was with the time taken to save a file. The actual processing was remarkably quick.
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Next time I installed the sound converter application to turn the default wave files into MP3's
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now this ran considerably more slowly on used to but by no means at the extent that I would be
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putting off using it I just needed to be a little bit more patient. With last part of the test
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I really felt I was pushing my luck. I decided to try a bit of photo editing using GIMP.
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Again using Synaptic I installed version 2.10 and imported the 10 megapixel photo of about 5 megabytes
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size and tried to make some changes to the color balance and saturation. It was a little bit
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on the slow side but wasn't this archery slow. To touch up a few photos now and then would not be a
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big issue in my view but I think if you had a large batch it might present a bit of a problem if
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you're in a hurry. So well my conclusions. Well I've got to be honest that I expected the notion
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of a Pi3 as a desktop substitute to be unrealistic but for somebody with anything beyond the
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most modest of these I think that's probably still true. However as a standby for emergencies
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just so you can keep up with your email than the news it does the trick. I think also for
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grandma who's not interested in computers at all but just wants to be able to do a supermarket
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order online or send the occasional email it would do fine. The biggest single surprised to me was
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how well the office worked. I created several large occupants while at the same time listening to
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internet radio in good quality stereo. The best on the responsiveness I could have been using my
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regular Dell. I've no doubt that the problem I encountered trying to get the printer recognised
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could be resolved I just didn't have the patience or the need to spend any more time on it.
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Video via YouTube the BBC IR player and a couple of other streaming services I tried
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was also surprisingly good as long as you stuck with a default viewport size. With a supplied
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version of Chromium though it's not possible to view DRM protected content so that restricts
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what you can watch though it's not a limitation of the hardware of course. The important thing to
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remember with the Pi3 is that it's very light on resources you can have three or four static pages
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open and browse and no problem and you can run a couple of less demanding applications concurrently
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without locking one another out. But if you want to do anything else though especially where video
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or graphics are concerned it's best not to try to run anything else at the same time.
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The bottom line is that this experiment was run with a suboptimal microSD card using one of the
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lowest powered Pi models and it's still delivered up to a point. It's not difficult to imagine that
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a high spec Pi4 is going to take care of all the performance shortcomings other than perhaps in
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the areas of video editing and top-end gaming. I was going to finish it at this point but there's
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a stop press. Today, 2nd of November a brand new Pi model has been announced. It's the Pi400
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which seems to be a Pi4 with much needed heatsink built into a keyboard make yourself contain unit.
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This is surely ended precisely the market I've been addressing namely turning a Pi4 into a
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desktop substitute. Maybe the Pi400 will become the desktop counterpart to the PiBrook Pro.
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I think the world of unpowered computers in the consumer market is about to get very interesting.
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Bye for now.
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You've been listening to Hecopublic Radio at HecopublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. HecopublicRadio was founded by
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the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
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or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the
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creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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