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1066 lines
91 KiB
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1066 lines
91 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3336
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Title: HPR3336: 2020-2021 New Years Eve Show Episode 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3336/hpr3336.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 21:08:16
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3336 for Mundi, the 17th of May 2021.
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Tid's show is entitled, HPR 2020, 2021 New Year's Eve Show Episode 1.
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It is hosted by Hunkie Magoo and is about 104 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, the HPR community stops by for a chat.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Good morning, you've been good morning, sir.
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How are you?
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I'm alive and kicking.
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Just more than can be said for a lot of people, I guess.
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Right?
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How are you keeping all healthy?
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Yeah, I'm pretty good.
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You guys?
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Yeah, my life is responsible for some care homes.
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Yesterday there were six and four lacto contamination modes and this morning there are 10.
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It's not going good.
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Thankfully, nobody's too sick yet.
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That's good.
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Now, have you been on full lockdown mode?
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Yeah, we're on the, well, the Dutch definition of full lockdown, which is
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you can still go out and stuff.
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But the shops are just except for food, essential products.
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Oh, really?
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All the shops are shut down?
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Yeah.
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We had that for a little while and they slowly kind of re-open a lot of stuff back up.
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Yeah, we had that at the beginning of the year and then it was open.
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And then it went around the Christmas.
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We celebrate the kids Christmas around 5th of December.
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And then there was a lot of spreading events as a result of that.
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And the fact that it's winter and more people are traveling and more people are inside.
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And also the fact that people are sick to death of literally sick sick of being in the house.
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So there's not as much compliance as there was in the first lacto.
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But there you go.
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I think it's going to get pretty bad year and a new year before it gets worse.
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Oh yeah, before it gets better, yeah.
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Now, how are people coming along with it though?
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I mean, one of the things that we've kind of noticed is that
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I have known people to get it and then a lot of people.
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There seems to be a lot of a large number of people who are kind of asymptomatic right now
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as opposed to at first when it...
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I feel like a lot of the people who were more susceptible to it already got it.
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I don't know.
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I feel like a lot of people who are getting it now are able to shed it a lot faster than
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a lot of people who got it at the beginning or at least it doesn't seem as doom and gloom
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as it did at the beginning.
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I think that's actually just a matter of a few weeks when my changer ideas that my brother and
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those parents are both not doing well after surviving the first one, yeah.
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Really? They had gotten it and then they've gotten it earlier and then they got it again.
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No, they've not used to avoid it before.
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Oh, okay.
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This new string coming out of the UK is not blaming the UK or anything.
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At least they identified it.
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Seems to be a lot more the chances of contagion seems to be a lot higher,
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particularly in kids under 50.
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You call them kids under 50?
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Kids under 15, one five.
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Okay, put your hat, get off my lawn, new kids.
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Oh, it's early.
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So what time's it there?
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4.43 in the morning.
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What the hell are you doing up?
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Starting this.
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Very good, very good.
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I still have to work today, so I'll be doing a bit of that.
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I try to take the occasion between Christmas and New Year's and the way that Christmas fell this year.
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I had a Saturday is my day off, so my whole week restarted, so I have another few more days of vacations.
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We're very nice.
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14 minutes left.
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Have you been working remote during all of this?
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Yep.
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And your kids have all been
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schooling from home?
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On the initial lockdown, yes.
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How long do you need to find the phone?
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Then they went back to school during the summer,
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and just before Christmas, the schools were all so shut.
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And also what they say about this new virus is true.
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I don't are new variant.
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I don't think they'll be going back until the vaccination programs have rolled it.
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My daughter finished off last year, last semester,
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working remote, and then she started off this year actually going,
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and then right before winter break, they had them go remote the last
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week before winter break, and apparently going, they're supposed to, was the next week,
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on Monday, they were supposed to go back to going into school, and we just got,
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we just found out the other day that they're going to be remote for the first week,
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and maybe more after that.
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Yeah, my daughter was on the, so the secondary schools were like full whack.
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One school had us where the kids just walked into their room, stayed in the room,
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and the teachers moved around. The other school, the kids moved around, like there was no change.
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And then my daughter is in third level, so she has two days a week remote, one day in school,
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they have a next church, an old church that used to be part of the thing.
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So the class is able to fit in there, and they get lectures there.
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And then she has her work experience is still going ahead, so that's fine.
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She's getting out of the house.
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Yeah, but I kind of feel like that idea where they just keep them in the one classroom,
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and then they kind of rotate the teachers around, kind of seems, it seems like a good idea.
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I mean, everything that was explained to me, yeah, I mean, everything that was explained to me that,
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you know, they basically eat their lunch at their desk and stuff like that, and they do,
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my daughter did like a little bit of recess and stuff, but there wasn't, you know,
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there was, there wasn't much actual interaction, but she got, my daughter's eight years old,
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she's just in third grade, she actually kind of needs that human interaction, you know what I mean?
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Yeah, exactly, yeah, exactly.
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But it's kind of weird the way that in some countries, the like pods of four or five kids,
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and that's the only kids they're allowed to socialize with.
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I think they're doing that in Ireland as well.
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But you also don't see the numbers necessarily going up or down, yeah, it's going to,
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as I say, it's going to be a statistician's playground now with all the numbers for this.
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Yeah, and what seems to work in one country doesn't necessarily seem to work in another,
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it's kind of weird. So this year, we're going to be talking about COVID instead of guns and
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guns. What do we normally talk about on the HBO show?
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Guns food. Guns and beer. Yeah.
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Good old 5150 may rest in peace, sir. Yeah.
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It's kind of weird. It's, it's, it's such a weird thing that, you know, I don't feel a lot of
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people grasp. And he's not in this country that this is a worldwide thing that's going on.
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It's not something that's centralized just to, you know, their state, region, you know,
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town, whatever. It's this is a worldwide thing that's going on and everybody is going through it.
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Yeah, absolutely. United, we stand down. But it has highlighted to me a lot of,
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yeah, just things that I would have assumed were part of the general knowledge of, of a nation,
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particularly with, yeah, for example, people's inability to interpret a bell curve.
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That has amazed me. People, the people's lack of understanding and how vaccines work,
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even at the broadest sense that, yeah, even if you get vaccinated, you're still going to be
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carrying around the virus to other people. So, you know, it's not a free for all for you.
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Just simple, simple things that seem logical to me seem to, and they're just, you know,
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deniers I struggle with that, I struggle with that. Do you get that in your country?
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Oh, yeah, yeah. And it's not, it's, it's not, I would have expected that to be, you know,
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limited to stupid Americans. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, limited to people who, who, you know,
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they, they, okay, we have got they, we've got the conspiracy theorists, but
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they're what I'm seeing now is just people are not bothering because it's affecting their life.
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You know, I couldn't be asked to wear a mask and the restaurants are shut, so it's, it's
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upsetting me. I need to go to my restaurant and I need to go on my ski vacation and I need to do
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this, you know, the selfishness of the thing. All these people, you know, you see all these people
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who are in the homes, taking care of people in the ICU's, people who are coming out of retirement,
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going into the health care and then people are out clapping and yet at the same time, now they're
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complaining that they're, that they have to stay home and oh, well, you can let your kids go to
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a party because what does it matter? It's just very frustrating that they, yeah. That's, yep,
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that's it. Yep. I feel kind of stupid with my comment earlier. And it's really not, it's,
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it hasn't changed the amount of people, the type of people that it's hitting, it's just,
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it's, I'm noticing a lot, maybe I'm just noticing a lot more younger people getting it
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than I was or I'm, I don't know, it's too early. Well, yeah, exactly, but there's, it seems to be
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affecting younger people a lot more as well. Well, yeah, I'm fun. I guess the treatments are a
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lot better, you know, the people are not spending are getting out of ICU's and stuff, which means
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they're not dying, so they're not freeing up beds, which is a good thing, but also put more stress
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on the, on the healthcare system. Yeah, I think I'm, I'm seeing a lot more younger people
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getting it now, you know, than I, but that's just the people who I am involved with or, or
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know, or something, I don't know, it was a stupid comment and it's way too early. Because
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no one I think about it, I have, I know that other people on discord yesterday, you know,
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flying rich. Yep. On the pine nuts discord, door had made some mention that flying rich was
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actually in the hospital with it. Oh, that's not good. Yeah, and, you know, at first, you know, it
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said in the hospital and then I read further and it said, well, he said that he had gotten it,
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but in the hospital with it and in the hospital, that's, that's not, because he's a relatively
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healthy individual. That's, that's really not good. No, that's not good. So I'm going to grab
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a coffee before we start. You do the intro, yeah? Sure. Good morning. Good morning.
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Two minutes. Okay, on the main HPR website, I'll put a link to,
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way to capture the streams. Okay. To record how to record the show. Yeah, I think Kevin is
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going to do a recording off the stream since I'm going to be home pretty much fostered today.
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I think I was just going to sit and alarm on my watch about every three hours or four hours
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or so and stop and start the recording. I had pre-start the recording. I had pretty good luck
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with my recording last year. So I'm recording this with a, um,
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um, uh, epoch time in there as well. Okay. One minute, thirty seconds. One bad thing about
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Etherpad is if you don't have the exact name of the pad, it'll just create a new pad. Like if
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you, if I had the HPR one, but it was like not capitalized in the right spot, it would just create a
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new one. Instead of just telling me like, this one doesn't exist. Which if you're looking for one
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individual one and it's, it gets very frustrating. Luckily, there is a admin plugin that you can put
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in though to manage pads, but it's not there by default. Etherpad is such a fantastic tool too. You're
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right. Hi everybody. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio's ninth annual 26-hour New Year's Eve
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Show. 2020 is over. Welcome 2021 in Geerede Matty. At least some people can benefit from 2020 being
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over. Joining me today is, oh, uh, how can we go? Hi, how you doing? I thought you were going to be
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doing the intro, but then it's so switched over. So did I, but all of a sudden you jumped right
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on there. You go right ahead, you go and you're doing great. No, no, no, no, let's, let's start.
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We start. Well, too bad. My, my recording's already been going for a little while, so we
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already restarted. Too late. You're gonna have to do it next year. Ah, all right. I mean, what is,
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what else is there to say with this is the ninth annual Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve Show,
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a show where people can come on, uh, say hello, you know, ring in the new year, talk to other
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like-minded Hacker Public Radio people. I don't know. Other hackers. I don't know. It's something I
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enjoy doing because it gives people a chance to come on and talk about Hacker-y type things. Things
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that are normally discussed on Hacker Public Radio and just have a good time. I mean, a lot of times
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I get on to hearing those people I don't normally talk like you. This is about the only chance I
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get really get to talk to you, but I accept for through email. Yeah, true, no, actually, I'm officially
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at work now, so I'm gonna have to keep it very technical today. This time is trading. Yeah, but I,
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I do like the, uh, I don't like the editing of this is very stressful, but yeah, thankfully you're
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doing that, so I don't need to worry about it. I hate it. As long as the, the audio files want to
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play nice, and I don't mind doing the editing. Yeah, if we can, it also helps if you keep the show notes,
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so the Z to pad along with the show. If you go to the Hacker Public Radio website, it's all
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exp in there. And, um, yeah, links and stuff. It just makes life a lot easier. And then, uh, yeah,
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hopefully we'll be good. Yep. Last year, Kevin did some of the editing, and we really didn't do much
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by way of the show notes, but in years past, I've, like, I've sat down and re-listen to absolutely,
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I get everything, you know, edit it up finally, and then I sit down and re-listen to everything,
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which is kind of fun on its own, which means that it doesn't necessarily get out as quickly.
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I want to say, in years past, it's been like June, July before I fully get it out, but, uh, fine with
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us. But it gives me a chance to sit down and fully listen to all of it. I just, there've been times
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where I've sat down and listened to it, and the purpose of, uh, maybe pulling some links for
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show notes, and I've been in situations where I couldn't, you know, write down links and show notes
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then had to go back and re-listen to it afterwards. But, you know, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's kind of like,
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I just recently re-listened to, uh, the previous years ones, and I mean, there were parts of there
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at the end that I didn't catch from before, just because of the way that the, uh, uh, so there were
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some problem with the truncate silence and the one that got uploaded. And so it kind of
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screwed a lot of things up, but my version had a truncate silence that was, and surprisingly,
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still a little bit rough, but, uh, I was able to listen to all of it. Like, Pokey's audio at the,
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the end of the show there was getting kind of worried. It almost seemed like it was chopping off
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his first word of everything that he was saying. Yeah, you know, but hopefully 2021 is going to be
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a better year, but, you know, uh, 2019 was in a fantastic year, um, 2020, uh, 2020 wasn't a fantastic
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year. So, um, you know, figures crossing all that. Well, actually, I think for a worldwide pandemic,
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the, uh, the COVID virus could have been a lot worse. I mean, it could have been Ebola,
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and that would have been a different, uh, different ball of fish to be brutally honest with you.
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Well, yeah, it could always be worse. Uh, yeah. That's not to minimize this or anything. Oh god, no.
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No, but the World Trade Organization, or the World Trade Organization says, you know,
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FYI, this isn't the big one. When we spoke about the big one before, this isn't it. So I think
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people, hopefully, it'll be an eye-opener for one thing, it's meant things like remote working,
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and, uh, you know, that we need, you need to physically move the atoms that compose yourself to
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a location to be online seems a little bit silly. You know, all the arguments that I've heard for
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not being able to work from home or work remotely seem to have gone out to India. Well,
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that those arguments were mostly by like, uh, people's employers who don't think that it was
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an idea, wasn't it? Yep. How are you doing along with, uh, working remotely? Um, yeah,
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it's pretty much the same as if I went into work and plugged in because, um, the teams that work
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with our, uh, remote, anyway, I've only ever met them in person, a few of them in person.
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So, uh, we start more or less every day at 10 o'clock with a stand-up. Some of the teams have,
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have always, um, uh, what they do is they have, uh, TV, they have offices, and then they had, uh,
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a big TV at the end of one of the off, of both office locations, and then they have a
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constant, uh, Google Meetup going, and if you want to, so the teams then go for coffee at the same
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time, you know, even though that one is in the Netherlands and one is in Poland, and they, you can
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walk over to, to the wall, and then ask a question of your colleagues over there, or, you know, be, uh,
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yeah, she will talk or whatever tools you happen to be using.
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So, basically to me, the work didn't change as much. What did change was the interactions with
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people that, uh, yeah, I missed that more than I thought it would today was really. All right,
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one second. Hold on. It's happening here. Happy New Year. Happy New Year. What are you doing up
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this hour in the morning? Oh, we, we make her stay in bed until five. She's probably, probably
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been up since about like four. Oh, I was, I was corrected. She's been up since 415.
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I'm tired here. What time is she good to bed? Uh, around eight. Very good. Very good.
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So you have a television with a, a team's thing set up at the end of the hallway?
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Yeah, so like they, um, they have this, uh, they, at the, in the office themselves, in the
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offices, where the teams are working. So you're working on project acts here, and one person is in
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one country, the other person is in another country, and so you have three different offices.
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So what they do is they put on a, like a large monitor, TV, because we work in the TV industry,
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so we've got TVs. And, uh, you hook up, uh, like external mic and HDMI, uh, HD camera, um,
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like a conference call microphone, a good quality microphone, and, uh, then put on teams or put on
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whatever your, um, whatever your video conferencing app of choices. So there, there's the camera in
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their office pointing, uh, uh, uh, pointing at them. It's camera in your office pointing at you,
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and you're just there working. So it's like, is if you're all in the one office.
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It's a, oh, video conferencing. I didn't realize that. Yeah. Wow, that's, that's kind of crazy.
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Well, not really. When you think about it, it's just a video conference that's going on all the time.
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Fair enough. Um, it's, uh, for me, when this, when that, uh, when they sent them home,
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when everybody had to work from home, they, uh, consulting company, they sent them all, uh, iPad,
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and, uh, the purpose of the iPad or our tablet of some sort, and the purpose of the tablet was just
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to be, uh, that's your video conferencing thing you're there. And then they have a, like, a one big
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meeting that everybody's in just on the wall. So you got one screen just for that where you can see
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everybody else. And it's pointing at you. No, no, that's not, but that's going to say,
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it's not, that's not running all day long. Is it? Yep. Yep. There's so many watching you while
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you work all day long or everybody has their choice. You don't have to put it on, but it's their
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choice. And to be honest, you, it's, while it seems freaky at first, if, if it's your choice,
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then it actually does aid in the camaraderie. Yeah. You know, it gives you an office feeling.
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Right. Yeah. I know there's some people who apparently had to be, like, monitored during all of it,
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you know, the whole time with the remote, they were, there was somebody basically sitting there
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watching them and they had to be much of their recorded or what, but that sounds a little nicer,
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especially if it's your choice besides the one, um, you know, you said there was like, well,
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once a week, there was like a meeting where everyone's supposed to get together. Yeah, I've seen
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some, some reports of tools that monitor the amount of activity, what websites they're going to,
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how long are you clicking, how much you're doing and in each of the word documents and all sorts.
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So it's a bit weird. But that seems like a better compromise to me. You have control. You can
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always just, you know, turn off the thing. It's your choice whether you put it on or not. Right.
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So Brexit is going ahead apparently. I've already went ahead. Yeah. As of, uh, no, it starts tomorrow.
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Oh, they had a, they had a year, uh, years graced. See, I don't know as much about it mostly because
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I don't, uh, you know, I don't, um, I don't live in the, in the, in the UK. So I don't
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follow it as closely. I just have a kind of general knowledge. So the big, the big thing is that
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they're leaving the European Union, right? Yeah, they left the, they left the EU last year and then
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they had a year where they agreed to a transition of one year, where the both sides agreed that the
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same rules would apply. And then that gave them a year to come up with a deal. And then the deal,
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if they failed to have a deal, they would resort to world trade organization rules,
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which means tariffs on tariffs, uh, on goods coming in and out of the countries. So they,
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COVID happened then and people stopped caring, basically. And, uh, on the continental
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Europe, a lot of, uh, a lot of the concerns that I had and I think, uh, a lot of people had was,
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the situation in Northern Ireland, uh, but I think we need to now welcome in
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Chathamine Islands in the, in New Zealand, who only enough have a 10-15 welcoming.
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Oh, I need. So, um, then there was a big, who, how about they, uh, how about the deal with Northern Ireland
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because, um, it's a continuous border, the 300 kilometers of a border, um, with multiple border
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crossings. And, um, in fact, the road, there are roads that, that form. So if you're on the left
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and side of the road, here in one country, if you're on the right hand side, you're in another
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country. So that, uh, that's interesting. And since the peace process, they've been doing an
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awful lot to try and integrate the various different communities and make it seamless so that
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is a seamless border. Even, even the signs and stuff don't, you would need to be fairly far
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into the, each jurisdiction before you start seeing the signs of the jurisdiction you're in,
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um, in an order, in order to de-escalate potential locations of conflict. So, um,
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uh, the truth, um, that happened, that was agreed to in the Good Friday Agreement, kind of,
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basically, but based on the fact that, um, the UK and the Republic of Ireland are in the same
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customs union. So, in essence, it didn't really matter what, you know, what community you felt
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more affinity to, you are, um, all intensive purposes, you could still get in your airplane and go
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somewhere else and benefit from the shared island approach or the shared economy. But then
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|
Brexit came and, um, suddenly the UK is no longer in the EU and they're a third country. So,
|
|
that raises, uh, very legitimate questions for the, uh, unionist community in the North.
|
|
And it also makes a lot of the national community very worried because the status quo has brought
|
|
a lot of peace and prosperity. So, the agreement then was to allow Northern Ireland to be part of
|
|
the European Union while still being a part of the United Kingdom. How that's going to be
|
|
implemented in practice is anyone's guess, but, um, that essentially means there's a economic border
|
|
around the island of Ireland and I can see that that would be very troubling for a lot of the
|
|
unionists in Northern Ireland. See that as a, and with justification, a, um, separation from the,
|
|
from the, uh, union that they have a desire to, to continue to be part of. Don't know if I said that
|
|
as, so that, and that's very sense. And then the rest of the UK basically, uh, just abandoned,
|
|
yeah, the Scotland don't want to be, uh, there are some significant majority in Scotland that
|
|
don't want to be, uh, leaving the EU either and are, there's talk of, if you listen to the Scottish
|
|
nationalists, they're, they wish to have another referendum. Um, they had a referendum a few years ago
|
|
and one of the main reasons they believe they lost the referendum was because, um, the voters
|
|
wanted to remain in the European Union. And now that they've left the European Union,
|
|
they feel that they should have another chance as, um, as, uh, getting their own sovereignty back
|
|
because they've always been an independent country. And then they would apply to join the European
|
|
Union themselves. So yes, Brexit explain. I'm kind of like confused as to what the upside to not
|
|
being part of the European Union would be. Mm hmm. Yep. No doubt we'll seal that because, um,
|
|
Britain will prosper musically apparently quoting their Prime Minister boss. Yep. I, I, I'm
|
|
a bit of a loss myself. See, I've always tried to explain things is that, uh, I look forward to the
|
|
day that we have the, um, uh, you know, like back and, uh, and, uh, and Star Trek, you know,
|
|
the federated, just, uh, the United Federated Plan. It's everybody's all together and one.
|
|
Not necessarily Kumbaya, but it's, you know, all under one flag. Do we decide whether you want a
|
|
3D printer yet or not? Well, yes, I definitely do, but, uh, I'm not gonna get on as yet.
|
|
Nice, uh, next year. I don't have the space at the moment. It was nice to have the, uh,
|
|
shows on, uh, 3D printers. Yeah, I like those. Enjoy them. Do them more.
|
|
Well, I tried convincing the lugtest guys to just kind of do a, before show, talk for a while
|
|
as to why we enjoy using 3D printers, but I didn't take. Bummer. Okay. I definitely would find
|
|
some use for it. All right. What's, um, and that, the one, uh, the one that was recommended,
|
|
I can't remember which one seems affordable and doable. Inner three. Uh, yeah, the inner three.
|
|
But, uh, yes, I'm still in a project trying to clear out this backroom because we're going to
|
|
renovate it. Uh, and, uh, that's just taken forever. Oh, yeah. I want to start putting other stuff in
|
|
while we're doing that. I understand. But it is extremely fun to hobby.
|
|
Beyond vacation. It's just, uh, it's one of those hobbies where I feel like when it's not being
|
|
used, I almost feel sad. Like, I have to figure out something for it to do. Yeah. Yeah. I also got
|
|
all sorts of wonderful filament for Christmas. So I got all the crazy, crazy ones. I had, uh,
|
|
one that wouldn't, looks like wood, glow in the dark, um, one that looks silver, uh, golden brass,
|
|
one that looks, uh, well gold. And it's, and now I got to figure out cool things to do with all
|
|
this stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What a good, uh, just doing some work here while I'm in
|
|
between. What have you got an ender? No, I have the, uh, Anet E-T4. Did you do a show on that?
|
|
I did not. I'm shocked. I'm shocked. Again, my, my plan was to try to convince other,
|
|
I see I'm not good at doing shows by myself just sitting in a room talking about to myself.
|
|
I work better when I can talk to, uh, talk to somebody else. So I try to convince the other people
|
|
on the one cast to just do like a talk about, uh, but 3D printing. Yeah. Good. If you remember in the
|
|
past, most of my shows, I convinced Kevin to come along with me. So Kevin on earlier and, uh,
|
|
he's not talking to me. Yeah. I think he's just on there to have the stream going. No, he's up
|
|
the z-stream, but he's got the other, I think he's just on there. I've been mutin' in everything.
|
|
I must have annoyed him or something. It's the only explanation.
|
|
Rexus. Rexus. Where would I find the link to Rexus? Yes, Kevin. We're seeing the chat.
|
|
Keep the e2pad updated. Lowell. Ken Fallon. You don't annoy me. I'm just not trying hard enough, Kevin.
|
|
Why is he listening? I love taking part. I don't understand. I'm supposed to be working here.
|
|
Okay, microservices, yes. I bet you're missing that long ride into work, though.
|
|
Surprisingly enough, yeah, it's effective on podcasts listening a lot. Yeah.
|
|
I mean, don't get me wrong, like, four days a week, three hours in the train. It's not pleasant, but,
|
|
uh, I also noticed I have zero time for myself from my own stuff. So I come out here in the morning,
|
|
you're at work, you go in and you're immediately into pop-a-mode. So there's no,
|
|
there's no, uh, gap at all. And then you come back to the same place if you want to watch a video or
|
|
something, it's back to here. So I'm getting a bit sick of being out here. I got you.
|
|
Sometimes I take the, uh, I just load the videos I want to watch on my phone and just go out to the
|
|
live room. All the, everybody's sitting on the couches next to each other, just everybody watching
|
|
the old videos. Yeah. I don't think there's anything wrong with that. Yeah, that's fine.
|
|
Like, can you not listen to the stuff while you work? No. Yeah, that's okay. Hello.
|
|
Kind of a nice over here. I can't do that work. I can't do it either.
|
|
What line are you using? Uh, mumble. Just the latest version. I...
|
|
Yeah, seems okay. Well, how are you installing it?
|
|
Um, the future of God. I'm on the back list of apps.
|
|
Is it to this app? No. Uh, we try that I still do it. Kind of for sure.
|
|
It's weird that there's an issue to connect to the mumble. Yeah. Somebody had in the etherpad.
|
|
The version 133 was being rejected on Linux, but not on Windows. Strange. Really?
|
|
Always. Yeah. I find it amazing that these certs, you know, renewal things all seem to
|
|
happen on the first of January, blah, blah, blah. It seems almost stupid time to do it.
|
|
You know, do it on Wednesday in the middle of the day in February when people are available to
|
|
deal with the issue, not on New Year's Eve. Right? Just because round numbers. Right.
|
|
The Romans had it down first of April, 12 o'clock. That was the time that the New Year switched.
|
|
Don't give me start with about the 26 hour time zones, which actually makes sense.
|
|
But okay, fine. Or time zones period? Yeah. Well, yeah. It's fine.
|
|
Summer time zones, I can see a reason for it. I mean, we have epoch so fine and we have UTC so fine.
|
|
If people all use Daiso, it's a one so the correct year format.
|
|
And I don't, this has been bugging me all year. Thankfully, there's just to give you some
|
|
background. Daiso, it's a one is the date format where the year is first, then the month,
|
|
then the day, then the hours, then the minutes, then the seconds. And that's the only same
|
|
human readable time format because when you sort it, it sorts correctly. It's very, very simple
|
|
and it means that you don't need to, there's no disambiguity if you switch from 200 kilometers
|
|
away from here. They use month day, then here they use day month and then the US use month day.
|
|
So it's a little bit strange. That tears all that up. And it's amazing. There's been a trend on
|
|
applications on Linux to rely entirely on the local based on your computer. And Firefox has
|
|
Thunderbird has had this issue where it only relies on the locales for date and time information.
|
|
So there is no option. If you happen to be located in, if you're, if you're happened to be located
|
|
in the Netherlands, like I am, and want my dates sorted by year months, whatever.
|
|
According to this decision that Linux has taken, you don't have the option. You are forced to have
|
|
your dates and times, your emails, your calendar, everything sorted by month, by day, month, year.
|
|
So then when you look at your calendar, you've got all these numbers out of date is absolutely
|
|
frustrating. And there's been a bug that I've been following for the last two years trying to
|
|
convince them that this is actually an issue. And it's now an issue as well with on cloud or next cloud
|
|
that I get AM and PM when in my calendar. And there's no way to change it because this is the
|
|
locale you've chosen. So therefore, everybody in that locale, this is the preference they have.
|
|
Do you understand what I'm on or not? Oh, yeah. I don't, I don't necessarily run into that issue,
|
|
but I definitely understand what you're on about. Yeah. Okay. But the vast, you're living in the US.
|
|
And the vast majority of the US follow the same time zone stuff. So that you're, you're more than
|
|
happy dealing with that. Now, say you move to the Netherlands, right? On a vacation. And you
|
|
get stuck here because of COVID. Now you're in lockdown in a hotel, right? And suddenly the laptop
|
|
that you've been assigned from the hotel because you've got your own laptop thinks that you now have
|
|
the ability to speak Dutch. So every web page that you go to suddenly starts displaying Dutch to
|
|
you. This is a, this is a big issue with going to Google. If you go to Google from the Netherlands,
|
|
you are assumed to be able to speak Dutch and there is no way on their web pages to be able to
|
|
change that. That's thing number one thing. Number two, all your dates will turn from Wednesday,
|
|
Monday Tuesday, Wednesday, it'll be Manda, Dinsdag, Boonsdag, Dondodach, as an example. And your date
|
|
formats will also change and you have no way of changing it back without saying that you're in the US.
|
|
But now you need to fill out your text forms. So now you don't have the euro symbol and you don't
|
|
have the your dots on the comma as decimal point separators. So floating point separators here is
|
|
a comma, whereas in the states, it's a full stop. So now I'm here. I can, I can do all my stuff, but
|
|
I'm forced in a compromise. I don't have my, I don't have the euro. What I wanted to be able to do
|
|
is have the euro symbol as the currency sign. Okay, fine. So I'll select Ireland as my time zone.
|
|
But then I'll select Ireland as my local. So they've got the euro grant. We're good so far. Okay,
|
|
but they don't use the ISO, it's excellent date format. Okay, so I can switch to a Scandinavian
|
|
country where they use that date format. Okay, that's great, but they don't use the euro. Or I can
|
|
switch to Denmark. So if I switch my Denmark English, then that'll, that'll sort of that,
|
|
then I have at least English. But then that got dropped because there's no official Denmark English.
|
|
So now all of a sudden, everything turns into Danish because there's no option to go into your
|
|
preferences. So file preferences, set your date format, use the locale or specify it using the date,
|
|
you know, percent Y, Y, Y, Dash, M, M, that you get. So unless you're dealing with it, I can
|
|
understand that people don't think about it. But when you stand back and think about it, if you
|
|
base it on just a locale, you're making the assumption that every person in that geographical region
|
|
all agree on what the date format should be, regardless of their historical background preferences,
|
|
you basically are removing their preferences from by doing so. Okay, I'll stop talking about that.
|
|
No, no, that's fine. I mean, that's, you're absolutely right. There's no reason why there shouldn't be
|
|
some way to fix that. Change it at least. And add some links to the show notes, you know what I mean?
|
|
Yeah, I'll be right back. No worries. Truncaid silence will do its thing. Wait, is that
|
|
correct? The same silence that I'm likely? Yep. If you go into audacity and then let me see
|
|
tools or something, truncaid silence, then you can specify if there's a space of gaps in between
|
|
the audio, then it'll basically narrow them down and you can specify how much like half a second
|
|
or something. So it's a good idea if you're editing audio to first record some silence. So if there's
|
|
any background homes or something like that, and then do noise removal, noise removal is a two-part,
|
|
you select an area of silence of the background home, and get noise profile for that,
|
|
and then select the entire track, then do noise removal again, only this time apply,
|
|
and then that will remove that buzz from the entire track, and then you've got a clean audio,
|
|
and from there you can go tools and truncaid silence, and it'll truncaid all this down. So
|
|
that mixes a lot cleaner. Yeah, we definitely get rid of some of the awkward pauses in this.
|
|
That's part of the crack of the New Year's show. So where are you from?
|
|
America, Boring, Florida, Florida. You're all barely, I guess. Yeah, I'm in early rising.
|
|
Pretty good, pretty good. How did you hear about this event?
|
|
Through the website. I don't remember where I found Hacker Public Radio, but like a month or so ago,
|
|
and I've been enjoying the show. Hacker News had a song for oil.
|
|
So have you thought of recording a show?
|
|
I've thought of it, but I'm kind of scared it's going to go horribly wrong somehow.
|
|
Not too late, you're already done, you've already done your first show,
|
|
everybody's introduced, you know. It's all upheld from now.
|
|
Upheld? Downhill? Downhill sounds negative. It gets easier from now on.
|
|
Yeah, downhill's probably easier to do, but upheld's the phrase, I believe.
|
|
I just closed the ticket. Okay, so anybody from my work is listening.
|
|
Sorry, I'm working. I'm only asking. That's the bunny. That's very quiet now. This year are
|
|
in between the holidays. Lots of people are off on it. So I'm striving for inbox zero.
|
|
Would be lovely. Any shows you particularly liked so far?
|
|
I mean, none. They can stand out to me. I'm not very good at it.
|
|
Yeah, I did it. Mixed bag, truly, truly told.
|
|
Yeah, there's definitely been some interesting ones, but I just, when I'm asked to come up with something
|
|
on the top of my head. Yeah. I couldn't pick a favor as my standard response.
|
|
That's part of the theme of politely saying something rude.
|
|
No, actually, I find it hard to compare shows because they're so random and sometimes I think,
|
|
really, I'm never ever going to find the show useful, you know, and then a few weeks later,
|
|
you're desperately searching for the exact thing that was said in that show.
|
|
And then yes, thank you. Thank you very much for that niche thing that,
|
|
unfortunately, has just happened to me. Yeah, I definitely got some knowledge. I never expected
|
|
to know. Yeah. Okay, the bug still remains open. So I will carry on. I'm not going to be able to
|
|
close that one. So you could do an introduction show. Hi, my name is Alive and Bla. I got into
|
|
tech as a result of Bla. I'd ask you that now, but that will be wasting a show. And as you know,
|
|
the new year's show doesn't count to your show, Tally. So.
|
|
Yeah, wait, hold on. I'm, I use middle mouse button as my, uh,
|
|
push the dock and every time I hit it, it pays something and I have to watch out.
|
|
Yep. It's so convenient, but so awful at the same time. Yeah, exactly, exactly.
|
|
I just pasted like free lines into the show notes. Can I remove this?
|
|
Your passwords. Yeah. Password 123.
|
|
I'm going to grab another coffee because that's what I need to get through today.
|
|
I think I'm going to do that too. The coffee I mean monster. Actually, it's already lunchtime.
|
|
Good morning. Who are you? That was my five year old.
|
|
Sounds a bit more tired. Oh, he's grumpy. He has a video that's not working.
|
|
We'll go fix that. Uh, it's something that should be free.
|
|
The, I gave them the, um, the fire tablets with the, uh, the kid mode setup and whatever video.
|
|
For some reason, there's like one video that just doesn't want to play. So if it was an issue
|
|
that I could fix, trust me, I would. And he's getting angry at me like I could fix it.
|
|
Yeah, super dead. Right. I returned to this network. Yeah, I didn't even think to try, you know,
|
|
doing it the way normal people do it. So I had tested it out because, uh, Kevin, I noticed the
|
|
issue a while ago. And, uh, I had tested out yesterday in a VM and I went through their store
|
|
forgetting that, uh, uh, their store would have automatically put it in as a snap. So,
|
|
but apparently the snap works and the one from the repo, uh, in Ubuntu, uh, as soon as the
|
|
either one having the problems, I can deal with the snap. Are you all gonna need the problem
|
|
to be fixed before it shows up or is just going to have to be something that is? I believe it's just
|
|
something to do with the, uh, the server itself. Uh, it's just a problem that is unfortunate. Indeed.
|
|
We debated using a different server, but, um, my reasoning for not pushing for another server
|
|
is because this one is basically the HPR server. It's the one that's well known. So there's a lot
|
|
of people who are returning to here who are gonna, uh, have like this server already set up and
|
|
automatically go towards this server. So I didn't want to have any confusion by those people
|
|
as to what's going on or how come this thing would, because this would still be set up and then
|
|
they'd be going to this room and then there'd be nobody there and get all confused and I don't know,
|
|
I just, uh, the less less than confusion. Yeah, do you have, uh, kids in the background there?
|
|
What is that? Yep. Ah, yeah, I suppose it wouldn't be a very good idea to change the server
|
|
in the middle of the show either. Oh, no, nothing in the middle. Just on the mumble server there,
|
|
I'm thinking that, uh, yeah, you're right. At this point, it's too late to change people to
|
|
another server, but the HPR server looking at all the people, all the rooms, uh, a lot of these
|
|
shows don't exist anymore. So the only people, uh, using the server is the HPR and that's an
|
|
expense that we don't need. I don't mind paying for it if all the people were using the server as a,
|
|
but I think the majority of people have moved over to Delwin server and, uh, yeah, I would prefer
|
|
to give him the money that I'm giving to, uh, to this provider, uh, in order to maintain the server
|
|
there for everybody. Well, that's something to do during the year, I guess. And you guys' resolutions.
|
|
So the Delwin server, I believe, is just, uh, us and, well, the Linux logcash and tilts, I believe.
|
|
And this, this server has been around for a very long time. Yeah, but they don't do maintenance
|
|
on it. So that's an issue. Yeah. And looking at the, um, looking at the podcast on it, I did, uh,
|
|
something like six or seven of the podcasts, let me just grab it one second. So the Boston Browns
|
|
ledger the cast, null text show, null craft, review, unity, can't find anything about those on
|
|
the internet. And we have the techie geek, Duke Maninoff, Geeks with guns, Linux basic, Linux
|
|
expert, open service musicians, prob brewers, and scanner drum, all seem to have, uh,
|
|
pub faded, that leaves pod nuts, uh, who have already said they don't use the server.
|
|
And Mintcast, who, uh, say they have their own server, I think, they haven't got back to me yet.
|
|
And suddenly morning, Linux review, which, uh, they have their own server, I don't think they use
|
|
the server other and on seeing studio have moved off to their own server. So essentially, I've been
|
|
paying for this for no reason. The, for my understanding, the Mintcast guys use this server as a backup
|
|
one when their own one isn't working, which I don't know how many, how often that's happened.
|
|
There's a possibility that some of the Mintcast guys might come on here later so we can
|
|
ask them in their hair. Now, I wonder, I wonder for the, the frequency that this is used. I mean,
|
|
it's mostly what, um, the, uh, monthly rundown show that this is used, right?
|
|
And I wonder how, uh, how difficult it would be for someone to spin up their own version of it
|
|
for the few times it's being used. Yeah, no, Dublin has already offered to, uh, to host our room
|
|
and his server. So, oh, okay. Yeah, so that would be cool, but, you know, they keep in this server
|
|
just because people have it in their, in their, uh, mumble client. It would be confusing if this
|
|
server existed, but if the servers didn't exist, then the people who wanted to join will go,
|
|
oh, the server just didn't exist. I'll go to Hacker Public Radio, find out what the new server is,
|
|
and then go there. Yeah, fair enough. Kind of a shame that the show geeks with guns is
|
|
an existing work that sounds like an interesting idea. Try to remember who else was a part of that show.
|
|
I think it's just about dawning on me that it's going to be 2021 in 18 hours.
|
|
I don't know if I can believe that one. Yeah, this year flew by even with all its craziness.
|
|
I mean, that's the surprising part. I thought it was going to take like 10 years this year.
|
|
Still expecting to wake up and see it's March 15th or something.
|
|
February 2nd, it's all been a dream. Yeah, but what are people's feelings about the vaccine
|
|
in which one? I don't know much about the different vaccines, but I mean, I'd probably get one.
|
|
I guess there's some risks involved considering how fast they rush it out, but I just want this
|
|
whole thing to be over with and I want to start looking at the vaccine and just stop dealing with
|
|
this whole thing. Well, from my understanding, I don't think it's ever going to be like fully
|
|
away. I think the vaccines are going to be something that's, it's almost like the flu vaccine,
|
|
something that you're probably going to have to get every year. Yeah, but I want to hope,
|
|
because I guess there was a mutated virus already. If that's a thing, I don't know, I only heard
|
|
whisperings about it. So what? Apparently it mutated in England or something, but I don't know if
|
|
that's true or not. Oh, yes, yeah. I heard something that had mutated in, I didn't read the
|
|
article fully, but I saw something that had mutated in Africa. I just don't know whether that was
|
|
the exact same strand that was in the UK or it was a different one. Oh, fantastic.
|
|
Yeah, mutates all the time. It's just in the UK and South Africa monitor for that sort of thing
|
|
and they actually got harshly penalized for the fact that they're doing the sign following the
|
|
scientific process better than all the countries. But yeah, they're penalized by who?
|
|
By the fact that they got shut down and locked out all the new strand of virus, let's shut down
|
|
the country. Got it. Yeah. So if you've got a new strand of virus, are you going to basically tell
|
|
anybody or you're just going to go, oh gosh, forgot about that. Two weeks later, your country's
|
|
going to have it anyway because this people moving hand over and back. Right. However, I will put
|
|
in the show notes a very good link to a article that a friend of my colleague and work wrote about
|
|
reading the source code of the virus. Let me paste that in. I was a little apprehensive about the
|
|
the vaccine at first, but I mean, it's, I think enough people have gotten it where it seems to be
|
|
okay. I was concerned about the fact that they seem to have rushed it out. But like I said,
|
|
enough, enough people, enough people have gotten it have taken the vaccine and seemed to be fine
|
|
and there are a lot of people that I even know personally that have gotten it and seem to be fine.
|
|
So I'm definitely feeling a lot, I'm feeling better about it. I think you need to be careful about
|
|
saying that they rushed it out because yes, they improved the process. But they followed the same
|
|
the same procedures that they would normally accept that they released their findings on a
|
|
continual ongoing basis rather than waiting for the end of the trials and submitting it before
|
|
moving on to the next phase of the trials, which was a lot more expensive to do, but in fairness to
|
|
the US government, I think they funded a lot of that research so that vaccine trials could continue
|
|
like that. And the fact that they were producing it prior to the trials being improved meant that,
|
|
if the trials had failed, you have this complete waste of all these vaccines that have already been
|
|
produced, but as it turned out, it was just kind of messing with the Gantt chart so rather than
|
|
rushing it out, if you get what I mean. Yeah, I understand. I definitely don't want to be responsible
|
|
for anyone thinking they shouldn't get the vaccine either. I'm sure if they went through the testing,
|
|
it's probably not going to be a big deal. It's a, I just put a link in there in the show
|
|
on what's the reverse engineering, the source code of the BioNTech Pfizer SARS COVID-2 vaccine.
|
|
And the guy writes us from the point of view of a 90% or a computer scientist,
|
|
so like metadata and bits and bytes. And you know, let's look at the source code, what does the first
|
|
bit do, what does the second bit do, what does this do, what does that do. And then where is the
|
|
the differences between the virus and the vaccine and why they put those things in place,
|
|
it's a very, very good read. Yeah, a heavy read, no less, but a very good read. Yeah,
|
|
I'm just going through here. It looks quite interesting. I have to read this whole thing here.
|
|
I would put it into reader mode and have it text to speech here is the best way to do it.
|
|
Yeah, let's say I was thinking, I have something to text to speech for it.
|
|
How do you know anybody who's gotten the vaccine?
|
|
I don't because our wonderful health service
|
|
were less than efficient in rolling it out for the last country in Europe to start vaccination.
|
|
Oh boy. And the second last was Ireland, but they had their, yeah, yeah, I won't go into it.
|
|
Use articles in. It's not a race. Actually, actually it is a race. It is the more
|
|
sooner you get it out, the less people who will die. That's the sort of race it is.
|
|
Right. This New Year's show will be the COVID show. Yeah, well, it's kind of a,
|
|
kind of a big topic, you know, one of the hard to avoid it. Yeah, we're not going to go very
|
|
long in this show. I don't think without discussing COVID. Right. If I'm here long enough,
|
|
I'll set a timer, see how long it goes. We have friends who work in the healthcare industry
|
|
who have gotten the vaccine. And my wife works at a front desk at a pediatric office,
|
|
and they're offering the vaccine. Actually, they told her that this Saturday she could head down
|
|
to one of the hospitals and get her vaccine. I'm kind of waiting. I work at a grocery store that has
|
|
a pharmacy that does like the food vaccine. Apparently they're supposed to be getting it at some
|
|
point. I probably wait until they get it there and probably get it then. But like I said,
|
|
I was, I felt like I was a little apprehensive at first, but you know, it seems to be fine. So
|
|
I'm definitely feel like it's best to get it. And, you know, try to, like you said, kind of get
|
|
things back to normal as best as we can. And the only way that that's going to happen is through
|
|
this vaccine or a vaccine. Yeah, I agree. I think for me as soon as it becomes available to me,
|
|
I want to get it. Same here. I wonder if the first person to get the publicly available, like,
|
|
it's been rolled out. Vaccine knows they were the first. Probably. Yeah, I was into all the papers and
|
|
everything. I call the political figures to get their vaccine live on television. I want to see
|
|
that, but they're scared of the needle. Yeah. Well, be a good guy here. I'm not sure who it was,
|
|
who they put like the needle in, but they didn't push the plunger in. Yeah, I think I saw those on
|
|
the conspiracy theory sites. And the BBC said it was as a result of that they had given the shot,
|
|
but it happened so fast that they had to go back and do it again.
|
|
Classic television. Right. Just double vaccine of the Baxter stone. Well,
|
|
technically the vaccine, you're supposed to get it from my understanding. It's you get the vaccine
|
|
on the new about to wait 30 days and get the second shot. Yep. So they just sped it up. Yeah.
|
|
More faster. Boom, boom, done. I'm out of here. I'm the new step back. First of all,
|
|
ski trip. Yeah, I'm reading here on CDC.gov. You have to get two doses. One three to four weeks
|
|
after the first. Yeah, I think about the only thing I'm waiting on is the, so the Pfizer one has
|
|
be stored at like negative 20 or something. It has to be stored very, very cold. And because
|
|
that has to be stored at very, very cold, there's a lot of places that where they don't have the
|
|
facilities to handle that. So that the second one, the Moderna is doesn't have you stored super
|
|
cold. And so that one's going to be available to more places because they don't have to have a
|
|
facility to hold something that cold. And like I said, the pharmacy at the store that I work
|
|
is going to be getting those. And once those get rolled out more to the public, it should be
|
|
available to me and I'll probably get it. And that was a explanation that Dr. government had.
|
|
That it was more suited to large inoculation events where people could drive by and not more
|
|
suited to nursing homes that are currently getting blasted. However, the argument counter
|
|
argument might be perhaps that if you brought it to a strategic location and then organize
|
|
that it could be taken the doses for the day it could be taken out and immediately dispatched
|
|
by a team of 10 doctors, then you only needed to, yeah. Okay, one go into that, one go into that.
|
|
Organization could have fixed us, I believe, is this what I'm trying to say? You're not wrong.
|
|
Does anybody work in any interesting projects this year?
|
|
I don't, well, sorry, would you say if I knew you? Has anybody worked in any interesting projects
|
|
this year? Oh, it's not only a project in the sense that you probably meant, but you know,
|
|
open street map, I've kind of been getting into that whole thing. Oh, it's a project.
|
|
Yeah, it's just a very big project that the whole world is part of.
|
|
That's a show right there. That's true. We use open street map a lot. Yeah, I use it to navigate
|
|
OSM and... Nice. Same here all the time. I should definitely use it more, but the amount I need
|
|
navigation, it's a lot easier just to bring up Google Maps real quick. Sometimes I have to
|
|
Google Maps to give directions to other people, because you can't really share OSM and like,
|
|
you can't share that to another person as far as I'm aware, you can't share the location.
|
|
I'm gonna say I'll also use open street map. Does anyone think they're gonna stay
|
|
stay until tonight? New years? All right, you're all gonna leave. Oh, I'll definitely
|
|
can't make it that long. Yeah, same here, but there'll be loads of people who can probably extend
|
|
as well tomorrow due to the fact that it's Saturday, it's a weekend. Yeah, it's almost Friday,
|
|
right? I'm in the mess of the day, yeah, David. Yeah, sorry, what I mean to say is that it's a
|
|
free day bank holiday, blah, most places. Yeah, and then on to Saturday, because that is a weekend.
|
|
How long these shows usually last? They can go on for days here. It depends on the timing.
|
|
Sometimes they're fast, sometimes they're advanced who's on, as well. Hello, Dave.
|
|
Well, how are they? Oh, it's Scottish accent, can you understand?
|
|
That wouldn't work here. I'm as bad as English as they come, as far as Scotland's concerned,
|
|
hang on. Enjoy your last few hours of European Union.
|
|
Oh, it's utterly, utterly, utterly insane. It really is. It's like somebody
|
|
soaring their own leg off and then saying, there, your goal got rid of that thing. They don't want that
|
|
anymore. Oh, no, I can't walk. Crash. And it's gonna, it's gonna be a nightmare here, I think.
|
|
Absolutely a nightmare. Oh, I doubt that, Dave. It'll be perfect. It'll be prospering
|
|
mostly to cause an order. So who gains from this? This is the question. Who is making money out of
|
|
this? And, well, I know where I point my phone. No, no, not at all. I think my finger's going to
|
|
point you in the direction that I want us to just now. Yeah, it's such a silicate.
|
|
You don't get to be as old as me with that being a cynic, probably. Yeah, it's, yeah, I've learned a
|
|
lot this year, actually, this year has been a revelation. I've lived my life in a little bubble
|
|
in some respects, not really being that aware of what's going on. Certainly not very aware about
|
|
politics. I think the lockdown has helped me to go and read more and also avoid the dreadful
|
|
rubbish that is out there on the internet and in newspapers and on telly and radio.
|
|
So that may, I may be describing some form of conspiracy theorist maybe. I don't know, but
|
|
it seems to me that I've got a clear review of the way the world works, the way that humans
|
|
manage stuff. And to, usually, to amass pile of money themselves, that's the way that most
|
|
things seem to be driven. Yeah, it is a little bit depressing. Very much so, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
So, I was listening to you on the stream as I was getting things sorted out here and you were
|
|
talking about the vaccines and stuff. Yep. One of yours, we're conspiracy theories now, David,
|
|
just the facts, please. My son's a girlfriend, I guess, is the, I'm not sure what the
|
|
PC version is these days, but she is an adult and so she got the Pfizer vaccine last week, I think.
|
|
So, yeah, we're good with her. It's some people have had painful arm as a consequence, but she and
|
|
other, none of her colleagues did as far as I'm aware. So, she's, yeah, she's obviously there's
|
|
another one coming in four weeks or something. But, yeah, it's looking good as far as she's concerned.
|
|
Yep. They're talking here about given special rights to be more freedom to people who got the vaccine.
|
|
And I'm thinking, all on paper, that sounds reasonable, but they can still be carrying the virus.
|
|
They can still be, yeah, okay, I know. No, it's just true, it's true. These things are not really
|
|
known yet, but the chances are that it's not what they call a sterilizing immunity, where if the
|
|
effective agent attacks you, your immune system just zaps it and destroys it totally. It's more
|
|
likely to be the one where you get it, but you don't get the disease. The disease is blocked from you,
|
|
but you could still be a carrier. Just like typhoid Mary. Yeah, exactly.
|
|
So, she got a bad, oh yeah, she had a really bad time. So, yeah, it could be a world full of typhoid
|
|
Mary's with the vaccine, you know. Didn't she guess in prisons, basically? Yeah, yeah. She got
|
|
picked up. Yes, yes, she got out, always let out, and then she went and backed it, and it was
|
|
under the understanding that she wouldn't be a cook anymore, but she, that was what she knew. So,
|
|
she went back and did as a cook in a household and gave them all typhoid and stuff.
|
|
Yeah, it's a very sad story. I've not, it's a while since I've read it, but it's fascinating.
|
|
Dave, Dave, Dave. So, we're getting the, we're likely to get the
|
|
AstraZeneca Oxford vaccine. That's just been approved by the
|
|
before it's filed. It's filed. It's almost as good as the older vaccine.
|
|
It's just a different one. I don't, I think there's, there's maybe less known about it. It's one
|
|
that's in a, it's in a, it's a virus. It's no. It's a genetically modified chimp virus. So,
|
|
the chimp virus is a denovirus. I hope you've pronounced that a denovirus, which gives chimp's
|
|
a thing a bit like a cold, and people in general don't have any immunity towards it. So,
|
|
they don't, there wouldn't be any sort of allergic reaction in the virus majority of cases.
|
|
And it has, it's a DNA. So, DNA, whatever. Anyways, genetic materials have been modified to
|
|
generate the spike protein of the, of the coronavirus. And that's the thing that want the,
|
|
your immune system to get excited about, because that's the thing that will kill the,
|
|
the viruses, the SARS-CoV-2 virus, if you get it. So, yeah, it's pretty, it's amazing stuff.
|
|
It's pretty amazing stuff. It's all genetic engineering. The other one, the Pfizer and the Moderna,
|
|
they're both mRNA viruses. They make messenger RNA, which will generate spike protein. And they
|
|
just stick it in a lipid envelope or something and inject that into it. And it latches onto
|
|
your cells and makes them make spike protein. Which is, again, amazing. So, they can change it
|
|
relatively quickly, if there's any need. Yeah, sounds pretty good. Did you read that article?
|
|
I sent you on the source code thing. I started looking at it. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's
|
|
pretty good. It's, it's, it's talking a lot, a lot about biology and genetics and stuff. So,
|
|
it's, it's fairly tough going, but it's definitely very interesting. It's, it's, it's,
|
|
it's sat in a tab on one of my browsers. So, we'll get ready. Do you use a reader mode at all
|
|
and Firefox? No, it's just releasing. If you go all old or Romeo and then you can press play
|
|
and it'll do a text to speech. It helps with that. Yeah, yeah. It's, I, I've not tried it,
|
|
obviously, but I don't know. I find text to speech things, throw me a bit because they
|
|
pronounce things wrong and that really bothers me. Because there's things like polyadenilation
|
|
and stuff in there and I bet you know speech synthesis is going to get that right. Anyway,
|
|
that's why I can't listen to LibraVox, by the way, because there's some brilliant readers on
|
|
LibraVox, but there's some people have the most devastating accent and they don't, the way they
|
|
read stuff is completely wrong to my mind. And I'm just, I just have the sort of brain that says,
|
|
no, that's wrong, no, I can't listen to that, I'm off by. It's just really stupid when I say it,
|
|
but it is, it is a fact. Yes, this is, I'm familiar with the side of your personality,
|
|
you did. I'm going to be wrong on the internet and it's Ken, I'm going to be nice. Yeah,
|
|
usually yes. Although I've used that to my advantage, I must say yeah. Oh, dear, dear. Speaking
|
|
of y'all naming each other, it's, I should put a name to you all's voices. What should I call you
|
|
now? Your lordship has found him. Make a being, please. Yeah. So I've actually put my name in my
|
|
comment on the, on mumble, I don't know if that helps anybody, but yeah, I'm Dave Morris.
|
|
Oh, this parent can't underscore a father. I'm sure I'll forget, but I'll try to remember.
|
|
I just find handles too confusing, so the underscore is the closest thing I get to be in the
|
|
elite. I, yeah, I was doing sort of pre-internet things quite early on. In fact, I was starting to
|
|
put together a show about doing, about being involved in the UK academic network and stuff,
|
|
I'm not going to say it's vast amounts of stuff, but during that process, I tended to join things
|
|
and write things using my full name. And so my, although it's mostly vanished now, there was a time
|
|
when my name was in lots and lots of forums and that sort of stuff. So I've never really bothered
|
|
too much about whether it's out there. I might regret that later, but I tried to compartmentalise,
|
|
I should say, you guys, it's a great word, my using names, so you can't, you know, find my
|
|
other existences online. No, that's, that's good. That's the way my children work. They're
|
|
much more sophisticated about this than I am. Do I see Mr. X there in the, in the, on the channel?
|
|
Do you see, does he have a soldier in the other name? There he is.
|
|
And the Haggis and the other. Sorry. Like Haggis pizza. Isn't that a sheep intestine?
|
|
That's such a thing as Haggis pizza. Oh, you've got to try it. Wonderful. I don't think I'd be
|
|
able to find that anywhere around here. No, I don't, I don't suppose you would. The, the,
|
|
the, uh, we, uh, companies just, uh, they make some, uh, local store, the co-op sometimes,
|
|
but, uh, just a nice speech every now and again. Uh, it's very nice indeed.
|
|
I, uh, I had, I think it was Papa John's. They had a pizza called a hamburger pizza.
|
|
That was an interesting experience. It, it, it tasted like a hamburger, but it was just all
|
|
off because it was the texture was not right. It's amazing what you can put in it, I guess, really.
|
|
I'm not sure how long I'll be on here for, uh, the Mrs. X's out there walking the dog and it's,
|
|
I'm guessing like it's doing here. It's, it's, it's kind of snowing quite a bit,
|
|
but it's like a year with you. Yeah, yeah, it's snowing here too. It's, it's, it's not that heavy
|
|
just at this precise moment, but, uh, the forecast is snow till early afternoon, um, and then
|
|
possibly it's going to turn to rain. She's never, never at the best, um, because it then turns
|
|
to ice most likely. Let's see. It's in the 70s all day here. Where are you at? Florida.
|
|
So pretty much always in the 70s, except for apparently on Christmas, it was in the 30s.
|
|
Yeah, it got real cold, not cold enough for a white Christmas.
|
|
I always thought I was one of the wrong country. I really felt like the cold alcohol, uh, so, yeah,
|
|
I've been to um, the Vegas once, uh, 70s, 21 degrees for the rest of us. Yeah, I've been to,
|
|
to that part of the world too. Uh, that's Vegas and that around that area, the Grand Canyon.
|
|
And the, um, the heat is, uh, so dry that it doesn't feel as hot as what I discovered to,
|
|
whereas I imagine that Florida is very, very humid, and I hate humid heat that really,
|
|
really kills me. Yeah, that's the thing is the, just pure sweat that comes out of you when
|
|
it's humid out is ridiculous. Yeah, I wouldn't like that very much. If it wasn't so salty,
|
|
I could probably donate the water to Africa. Yes. Yeah, I, I spend a bit of time in Singapore,
|
|
which is a tropical, not far from the equator and is a very humid, a bit on the highest
|
|
humidities ever encountered. And that, it's lots of air conditioning, because soon as you step
|
|
out into the, in the real world, that, that humid heat just knocks your flower and does me anyway.
|
|
It takes, I think it probably, you have to be there for months before you start to adapt to it.
|
|
Yeah, well, when I was in, when I was in Vegas, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, it turned up at the,
|
|
the hotel, um, laundry, a condition, the bus bus, and when we stepped out, it was all like,
|
|
carcorder, something was, it was a roof, I said, just, you know, oh, it's cat, these bus
|
|
fumes, it's a potty on your face, sort of thing, you know, and the, my tablet corner, and it continued
|
|
as I was in the open, I thought, wait, man, that's nothing to do with buses at all. It's just
|
|
what it's like, I just couldn't believe it. Yeah, yeah, we drove, I told my kids, I say kid,
|
|
the nearly 30 and nearly 26, but, you know what I mean, um, we went there a few years ago,
|
|
around the area, I went through Arizona a bit as well. And, uh, I don't know, I,
|
|
I imagine it would grind you down that sort of, uh, very low humidity. It's, uh, it's supposedly
|
|
not very good for you, the inside of your, your nose and stuff. I heard people say that you, you're
|
|
more prone to infection. Have I understood that right? Um, through the fact that you're so dry,
|
|
there's sort of, you know, your breathing route is, uh, you know, you're inside of your nose,
|
|
and your throat and stuff gets so dry in that area. Drink vast quantities of water in my,
|
|
my experience. But, uh, yeah, I don't know. It's, it's not a place I'd particularly want to live,
|
|
but more so than in, uh, Florida or Singapore. Yeah, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I didn't really always
|
|
colds. Yeah, I, I see that, um, there's been cases where, uh, I've been on a, a cycle path,
|
|
and I've seen people wondering about it with, uh, t-shirts and stuff on, and I'm straightforward
|
|
and often, and I've got jumpers and shots, and I'm still, uh, maybe just comfortable in one-ish
|
|
sort of thing. Um, I'm just, seem to be fat cold than anybody else, and I've seen me in a holiday,
|
|
is that there's a picture of me and, and a wife and, uh, and, uh, we're something of alchemy
|
|
pictures taken, and so no, no, no, no, that's subsequently that, uh, I can see my face is,
|
|
is completely dry, uh, and hard to supporting with sweat. So I, I, I, I'm just a cold person
|
|
naturally. So, I can't understand why people drive with their windows down, you know, can you
|
|
see that? This seems better madness. Yeah, I definitely agree. I'm always wearing the same thing.
|
|
Sweat pants in my, uh, malngood city. Yeah, I, I think, um, I think, um, I think maybe, uh, I,
|
|
I definitely, the cooler doesn't, doesn't agree with me. So, I just, I just see before,
|
|
definitely born in the wrong, uh, wrong, wrong partner level, uh, but, uh, well, hi, hi, this,
|
|
hi, this, this is a lot of the place. Uh, do you mean me, the warmer? I, uh, I've actually been
|
|
moving north all my life. So, I'm probably going to stay around, but I tell you, there was once I
|
|
went to a conference from Edinburgh in the, the south of England, uh, coming over to the Exeter
|
|
University maybe, and, uh, the difference in temperature was amazing. To me, anyway, it seemed
|
|
really hot and clammy there. And it was, it was pretty much the same weather. It was in the summer,
|
|
yeah, but, um, maybe spring or something, but it was, it was surprised how many degrees of
|
|
temperature difference there were between one end of the UK and the other, which is not a very big
|
|
place for 600 miles, 700 miles maybe, between the two. Don't know. Yeah, it's funny, you should say
|
|
that because, you know, my wife's brother and my brother have both moved down so, and, um,
|
|
uh, and then they definitely forgot what it's like up here, you know, it's, um, and, uh, my brother
|
|
and I came up one time and, uh, because this is a good thing it was, and, uh, we're met in Princess
|
|
Street t-shirt on, you know, and I'm like, are you mad, you know, I mean, he tested really heat,
|
|
he always said to feel a bit in the hot side, uh, which must be really nice, but, um, you know,
|
|
obviously the temperature was such a, such a point, and, and I think it said this snow as well,
|
|
that it overcame his natural, um, heat pinnities and his blood, whatever, you know,
|
|
and all of a sudden he started shabbering and shaking, and I said, well, you know, if you
|
|
walk it in Princess Street and I'm, I'm like, Christmas, but I piece it on, that's what's going to happen.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. When I was a student in, um, Manchester, there was one of the, the lecturers there
|
|
who was notorious for the fact that he seemed to run at, uh, higher temperature than everybody else,
|
|
his thermostat was, you know, set wrong, because he would ride his cycle tune from the university,
|
|
and he would, uh, you'd just wear a sort of light shirt, and I guess it was the days when
|
|
people wear, you know, white shirt would roll up sleeves or something, but he wore that throughout
|
|
the year. I mean, I think he had some rain, rain wear, but he, um, if he didn't, he wasn't bothered
|
|
by the cold, that was the thing. Everybody remarked on this. How is that possible for a human to,
|
|
to do that? But he, he was just constantly hot. Yeah, and I'm constantly cold. I think, I think,
|
|
I think my brother was about like, he's constantly hot as rarely. I don't know. I know,
|
|
hopefully I'll catch you again. And it turned that, that's, that's sorry.
|
|
It's okay. The argument, the sentence, and see how you turn that off. Um, yes, I, the, um,
|
|
brother and I was always always too hot, but, uh, I don't know, there's, well, there's a
|
|
blood circulation in my hands, particularly get quick cold as well, but, uh, it seems kind of alien
|
|
to me. I wish I was the other way around. Yeah, you need to, you need to move somewhere hot.
|
|
I, I'm always cold, but I feel like I always wear it hard. I would have an issue with hydration,
|
|
because I have a massive diet co-connection. Hmm, yes, yes. I'll probably kill you if, eventually,
|
|
you know, that's up. Yeah, I've heard about the kidney stones. That's what I'm worried about.
|
|
That's not a nice thought. No, no, no. It's, it's got some funny stuff in it, Coke. There's
|
|
something called sodium benzoate that, uh, that is pretty nasty. Oh, and I was getting my car fixed
|
|
before Christmas, and it's a fuel injected diesel. And I was saying, and I've had a problem with it,
|
|
a year or so back with one of the fuel injectors failed, really expensive fix, but it, um,
|
|
I was saying to the guy who was doing the work this time about it, and he said, yeah,
|
|
those costs a lot of money because getting the fuel injector out of the engine is really difficult,
|
|
because it sort of seals itself in there because the fuel blows past it as it's failing,
|
|
and it sort of, um, makes a carbon, if carbon type sticky stuff around it that, that glues it in.
|
|
And he said, in the garage trade, the thing we use to free that off is, you know, it's always
|
|
Diet Coke. You pour Diet Coke into that part of the engine, and it melts. The, the glue
|
|
that's been created by your engine, and, and out comes the fuel injector. So there you go.
|
|
That's your card. What am I doing to myself? Slowly dissolving.
|
|
It's okay, others inside are overrated anyways, must be hollow.
|
|
I, yeah, I absolutely drunk my share of these sorts of things, but not quite so keen these days,
|
|
but there you go. Probably drinking something else that's bad for me at the same time.
|
|
Instead, I mean, coffee lots of coffee, that's, I'm not sure that's good.
|
|
I said I was going to cough it. Oh, I said I was going to get a coffee earlier and I
|
|
ended up with a monster, which is probably equally bad. When we were in the States, um,
|
|
I'd been listening to a podcast then, and the guy was always talking about how he was drinking
|
|
a mountain dew on his, on his travel. Then you can't get mountain dew here. I've never really noticed
|
|
it, but there's lots and lots of it available in the States. So we bought some. I think we were on
|
|
the road to getting addicted to that stuff, actually. No, you all really enjoyed it, but went back
|
|
here in the UK. It's really, really hard to get and a bit more expensive, I think. So we didn't
|
|
end up addicted, but it's amazing how easily you could get that way, I think.
|
|
Yeah, I had a mountain dew once and I didn't like it. I haven't had one since.
|
|
Yeah, it probably depends on the, on the context and on who you are or whatever what it is you like.
|
|
We, we quite enjoyed it. I think we were buying the diet one, but uh, just seemed,
|
|
it's probably because it was the novelty of it. I was going to say maybe I'll try one,
|
|
but I think that's a bad idea. Keep, keep clear of these things if you can.
|
|
Yeah, I used to, uh, Mr. Junk, I'm sure when I was younger, I don't know if I drunk more
|
|
juice or fizzy juice or whatever, you know, but, uh, I tend to drink. And then, and then I sort of,
|
|
the message got me into drinking pee, uh, and I drunk loads and loads. And, uh, you get to that
|
|
age where he becomes a bit of a problem. So when I'm packed off the pee now and I'm, I'm drinking
|
|
a hot water. And I believe I'm not, I'm really quite enjoying that, uh, if you can say that,
|
|
I said, that's okay. Um, but I also drink a case out of that diet with a little thing juice,
|
|
not, I mean, that's a kind of going back to your childhood. I'm sure that in my childhood,
|
|
I'd have that with the juice, uh, but it's kind of mixed water with a little bit of,
|
|
concentrate, you know, uh, like I'd be now or whatever. So, um, um, there's probably less,
|
|
I'm sorry, there's less, there's less, depending on the question you put, there's less sugar than
|
|
that, maybe then we'd be in the cooler, but yeah, it's, uh, I'm not, I'm not, I've been a coffee
|
|
junker that's, that's one thing I've never, never heard of, I think it's all fine anyway. The, yeah,
|
|
I've also drunk, um, hot water, there's times when maybe you just want to drink, but you don't,
|
|
and it's usually if it's in the cold weather and stuff, um, and you don't want to take on board
|
|
the tannings and all the other stuff, uh, because it's late at night, perhaps, uh, yeah, I've
|
|
certainly done that, and it's quite, it's quite palatable actually. I know a few people who do that,
|
|
but, uh, yeah, the, the, um, diluting juices that you get in, in this part of the world, they, uh,
|
|
a lot of them are low sugar these days, I think, because they're not a Scottish drive to reduce
|
|
sugar in all these sorts of things at one point, because, um, I remember them warning in the supermarket,
|
|
you won't be able to buy this anymore because it's, uh, the ruling is that it should contain less
|
|
than X amount of sugar. So, uh, yeah, we, yeah, it's, it's something we, we have, are taking it, um,
|
|
the other thing that we tend to drink. I say we, because my kids visit a couple of times a week to
|
|
eat with me, and, um, there's always, there's always a collection of, uh, micro brewery or
|
|
local brewery, real ale, type beers and stuff, so these, these are not healthy, but it's not because
|
|
there's only one or two a week, I think it's okay. Yeah, well, um, it was not that, I think,
|
|
is it not, you get, uh, there's extra tax put on, uh, high sugar drinks, it's not that you, well,
|
|
effectively, you can't get it because what happens if you've got two companies producing a similar,
|
|
uh, drink, then, um, if one just dips below it, then there's substantially cheaper. So, if, if,
|
|
then encourages all the other manufacturers to do, to do likewise, but it's not that it's a
|
|
typically band, I think, it's just that, uh, I could be wrong, I think that's what I think,
|
|
it's what I can remember, they call it, to go to the sugar tax, um, but you're right, and of course,
|
|
obviously, I'm, uh, my opinion is probably, probably a good thing, um, in the long period. Yeah, yeah,
|
|
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so I'm just, you see, there's been going to point on at what it was,
|
|
but oh, well, you go, it's, it's my age, I guess, my mind going again. Because I'm of the age where, uh,
|
|
I, I have, uh, type two diabetes often happens, uh, above certain age and stuff, if you're not
|
|
looking after yourself well enough, I guess. But, uh, one of the recommendations that go when I was
|
|
diagnosed with that, uh, 10 years or so ago was to, to drink these diluting juices, the ones with
|
|
the low sugar. So, um, yeah, I think medically, they're seen as quite, uh, quite desirable things.
|
|
They have to watch out for the sweetness they put in them, because those can have
|
|
rather impressive effects. Yeah, yeah. We, we've also, um, uh, gone, I think I'm a dimensionist before,
|
|
about 80, maybe 89% to 50, and now, uh, it was more of a, my wife's choice. Yeah, I've
|
|
been really enjoying it. It's, uh, it's, I mean, I thought the meals would be quick bland, but, uh,
|
|
the modes of flavour, I guess it's defensive, you know, that the, the blends of
|
|
spaces, it's like, yeah, there's a checkered gear issue. Yeah, it's, um, yeah, we did talk about
|
|
this, I think you and I, when we were chatting one time, and, uh, it's, um, it's a thing that's quite
|
|
popular in my household, because my son and his girlfriend are both vegetarian, my daughter's sort of
|
|
semi-vegetarian, and I'm pretty easy going about, uh, about that. So, yeah, we, we, we have a lot of
|
|
vegetarian meals, in fact. So, in fact, I'm feeding them tonight, and we're having rata-tui, which is
|
|
already made, and then put it into, um, or the whole meal flour, buckwheat flour pancakes,
|
|
and then you, you roll them up, put them in the oven with a bit cheese on top, and, uh, they're not
|
|
vegan to the cheese, uh, but, uh, yeah, that's pretty, pretty nice, um, pretty nice meal. Of course,
|
|
I say that, but that, that, that I could just see Mrs. X, and get the companion by our side. So,
|
|
I'll need to go, but, uh, after saying all that, I, I noticed that there was, um, some, maybe three or four,
|
|
um, tasting one, tasting one. So, uh, I'm guessing we're not having a, a meat-free meal today,
|
|
at some point, with them. I don't remember the, it was the World Health Organization classifies
|
|
a sausage, is, is, is damaging to your health as a cigarette. So, there's something to, to,
|
|
to think about when I'm having my, my sausage tonight. Okay, I'll speak to you all later. Yeah.
|
|
Okay. Yeah. Nice to hear you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, I told you, you'd never leave.
|
|
Oh, you know, I just realized after all of that talk, I actually do have a, a bottle of,
|
|
what do you call unflavored seltzer that I am drinking. So, I'm not completely unhealthy.
|
|
That's good. That's good. Should have come up with that before saying I only drink diet
|
|
coke, but I guess we're past that now. I tend to drink Roy Boss or, uh, Red Bush Tea. Doesn't
|
|
have any of the tonns and stuff. Yeah. There was a time, that was a really popular drink around here.
|
|
Alexander McCall Smith, the author, who's an Edinburgh guy. Uh, you know, he's, uh, what's it called?
|
|
The, the, the, the, the, the, the, yeah, Botswana. Um, he was pushing, he wasn't pushing it,
|
|
but he meant, he was mentioned a lot. And his books were very, very popular at the time.
|
|
It was a TV series and stuff. That seemed to trigger something with, with, with, um,
|
|
the supermarket. It's because they, the, the Roy Boss Tea was quite common, didn't they?
|
|
Certainly drunk. It's nice. It's pretty nice. Yep. There was a series, TV series was very well done.
|
|
And I got the books and I must say he lost the plot a little bit, became a bit of a cash cow,
|
|
which is a pity because I like the idea of solving little mistreatment. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
There were some of them that were really, really great. And I, I read all that were available at the
|
|
time, but then I sort of, yeah, it's one, it's one sort of an enthusiasm that you get bored with
|
|
eventually. I don't know whether that was me or him, but, uh, I think he just got very luxury and
|
|
starts, started the boot like the last, the 18th book now. And really, I just couldn't finish it
|
|
because very pretry and yeah, all I can see was that a Scottish guy pretending to be a Scottish guy
|
|
lecturing me as opposed to a character and Botswana. That's kind of, I guess. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Well, yes, I don't need another Scottish guy lecturing with it.
|
|
Do they do that? That's dreadful.
|
|
McCall Smith has actually organised a thing in Edinburgh called the really terrible orchestra.
|
|
He was, I think, his idea and this bunch of musicians who are sort of in training,
|
|
some of them are quite, quite advanced with their training. They're pretty good,
|
|
in other words, but the orchestra is called the really terrible orchestra and there've been a few
|
|
shows that they've been abroad in the past to give performances. Are they really terrible?
|
|
I think it's a joke on the fact that there were a few people who were none of them
|
|
of professional musicians. They're all amateur musicians and some of them were learning at the time
|
|
so they would make a few mistakes along the way. So it was, I just, just his humour, I guess.
|
|
But my friend Tom, who I know you've been with, at Fosden, he's a cellist in that orchestra.
|
|
I've been to a few of their performances. They're actually pretty good. They're not perfect,
|
|
but they're damn good. But yeah, I was hoping to meet McCall Smith, but I wasn't on duty that day.
|
|
Yeah, check them out. I think I have a website. Not sure how busy they are these days,
|
|
not much, I would imagine. I've been thinking, I watched almost all of Mr Robot.
|
|
How many of you'll watch that show anyway? I know it's more popular in techy communities.
|
|
I think I have the last season to go, but there was three seasons, right?
|
|
Four. Four, okay. Yeah, I think I still have to leave the last season to go.
|
|
I was just wondering, it's a really good show to me. I don't know how much it treats and feel.
|
|
I'm afraid I'm one of these people who is abandoned, television totally, and all of the
|
|
the popular media, so it's a close book for some consent, sorry.
|
|
Yeah, more or less the same year, I'm afraid.
|
|
I know a lot of people who don't watch TV and stuff anymore. It's just not
|
|
this common for people to watch television. I think it was the Heroes series, because I like
|
|
science fiction, and heroes was a sort of sci-fi. I think watching that, whenever that was some
|
|
number of years ago, the obviously, as the series progressed, there was obviously no plan whatsoever,
|
|
which is some ideas that were thrown around and just randomly spewed out, cleverly done,
|
|
and stuff, good effect. But no story. It was a huge disappointment. Then that's after coming
|
|
through like Twin Peaks. I watched all of Twin Peaks years and years ago, and it was one of those
|
|
things you come out of and go, why the hell did I just watch that? It's such crap.
|
|
And I know American television may be worse, but British television is pretty grim on that
|
|
front. Plus, also reality TV is makes me want to vomit. So yeah, I'm happier away from it,
|
|
to be honest. Sorry, but heroes seem to have like a plan for that first season, and then
|
|
not much afterwards. Or if they did, they make a plan for that season, but it's not like one
|
|
grand scheme. It was like they had said, right, we're going to have this thread and this thread
|
|
and this thread. We're not quite sure where they're going to go, but they're going to be great.
|
|
And then they got so far and said, all right, we're bored now. We can't be bothered to run
|
|
the rest of it. Or somebody in management said, no, no, you're spending too much or some nonsense
|
|
like that. It wasn't as if there was an overall structure. I know people write books that way,
|
|
you know, let them develop as they go, but you shouldn't be taking them to the public until
|
|
they're finished. That was my view. But I think the way the TV model works is that you just get enough
|
|
that you can put it out there. And then hopefully you get another chance to add some more to it.
|
|
So, you know, it's, I'm in Doctor Who. I don't know. I used to watch Doctor Who
|
|
quite seriously when it came back again. I saw the early ones because I'm not old, but we
|
|
we were really excited with it. We both enjoyed it a lot. And then it also went into one of these,
|
|
now we're going to wheel in a new right and now. And he doesn't believe in the stuff that the
|
|
previous writer did. So, you know, it just gets more and more ragged and silly. And I just haven't
|
|
got the patience anymore. Reboots. I hate reboots. Yes. Oh, yeah. I think the last step. Because of
|
|
the shows having new writers or the shows are more funding. That's because the franchise doesn't
|
|
allow them legally to refer to the content of the previous owner blah, blah, blah. So they have to
|
|
reboot it. I guess it's time to welcome to the new year for to Funifuti, I guess. And
|
|
somewhere in Russia. So, happy New Year, somewhere in Russia. Don't know if we have a very
|
|
strong Russian listening base, but underdog. Martial islands also and some other places.
|
|
Hopefully the new year really is happy. Yeah, they would know by now.
|
|
I find there's been a lot of shows where they seem to have a plan for like the first season,
|
|
like a really good solid plan for the first season. And then everybody likes it. And then they go,
|
|
okay, now what the heck do we do for the rest of the season? For the rest of the episodes after that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh no, they've given us a go for another series. What the hell do we do?
|
|
Right. Run around, headless chicken. Ah, it's, yeah, it's true, it's true. That's really bad when
|
|
you think about it though. Because they must have some really powerful people. People with good ideas
|
|
with great sort of abilities to make stories. Because they have done it already. And then they,
|
|
is it that they're just not getting proper support? That they have to
|
|
profit what they're doing to some bunch of accountants or something who say, no, I never can't do that.
|
|
Is that what kills it? Because it's pretty dreadful when you look back. I mean, what was it?
|
|
Firefly. That was a classic case of cold feet destroying the thing, I think, wasn't it?
|
|
Well, at least they got to make the movie and wrap up the series, which is more than other shows.
|
|
People of Earth was actually a good series. And then it just stopped on the cliffhanger.
|
|
I think that's partly that that's why they're doing the get a contract for for one season.
|
|
And then they're right in big cliffhangers so that the people, the people who watch the show
|
|
start complaining if the show doesn't come back on. And that plays a part into whether it gets
|
|
funding or not. The amount of social media buzz about the show. Yeah, which kind of sucks,
|
|
because you know, ratings aren't everything. I think the last season of the show is either
|
|
always really good or really bad. And there's no in between. I don't think I've ever seen a mediocre
|
|
ending. Well, that's not true. Yeah, I have. Which show was that?
|
|
Good ending. You know, I think the last great show that I've seen will be Breaking Bad and Mr.
|
|
Rubat, I guess, but at like a mediocre show, I think Dexter, everyone gives it a bad route,
|
|
but I don't think it was that bad, but it definitely wasn't great.
|
|
Picard had a mediocre ending. So over now, I hope so. I stopped watching Star Trek franchise
|
|
on the first intro to to discovery where the skipped over Yuri Gigan. Okay, that destroys
|
|
Jean Roddenbury's legacy right there. It's weird with Star Trek. It just seems like it's a very,
|
|
you know, each week is something completely different where we've kind of, it seemed like
|
|
in some shows, we've kind of evolved into telling a grander story. Star Trek was a commentary on
|
|
pop culture and current events every every episode related to something that was happening
|
|
then. And it was either a satirical take or a serious take on what was going on at the time.
|
|
There was relevant each episode, something some emotional, political or world event that was
|
|
happening at the time. And from the original series through later series, they kept up with that
|
|
for the most part until they got away from that and decided, hey, let's just tell stories.
|
|
That's the point of science fiction is to take stuff out of, yeah, to reflect on the current
|
|
state of society, which is what, which is why I think the, what do you call it? The Orbel is a
|
|
closer, is more Star Trek than the current Star Trek. Love the Marvel. It is brilliant. Did the
|
|
new episodes ever make it to Hulu? Because I know it was supposed to be taken off of Fox and then
|
|
just put only on Hulu. Does Navy Sea own Hulu? Well, technically Disney owns Hulu, which I think
|
|
also, do they own a BC or CDS? Disney owns ABC. Okay, then yes. Actually, I think from what I
|
|
remember, Disney basically just owns a controlling factor of Hulu and they were going to slowly buy out
|
|
the other companies who also had a share in it. If Disney owns Hulu and they also run their own
|
|
service, obviously Disney Plus, that is just, I don't like that. Well, Disney Plus is something
|
|
completely different. Disney Plus is kind of like there where they have all of their animated stuff
|
|
for kids, their Marvel and Star Wars stuff. While Hulu is more of, since they now own Fox, it's a lot
|
|
of their Fox stuff, Fox affiliated stuff, their ABC stuff, their free forum stuff, stuff that isn't
|
|
directly related to or, you know, something that isn't directly Disney. Yeah, that makes sense, I
|
|
guess. I just, you know, don't like having to pay for all the streaming services. Well, I don't.
|
|
The idea of- Yeah, I'll load it. I do. I usually pirate my things except for Netflix and my music.
|
|
So my issue with Disney is Disney likes to segment all of their stuff apart and they all
|
|
have to rate or flow control. How would you- Child. They like to rate or flow control their
|
|
content. So, for example, Beauty of the Beast came out in 1995. Then in 2005, you couldn't buy it.
|
|
Yeah, that's ridiculous, I think. I think the copyright law should be amended so that you
|
|
lose your copyright if it's a piece of material is not available to the public at a affordable cost.
|
|
I don't think copyright just needs to not last as long as it does.
|
|
Yeah, that too. But in this case, you would solve that Disney issue and you would also solve a lot
|
|
of the issue where by media is getting the copyright still exists, but the media for the thing that's
|
|
been copyrighted has gone degradated. There was a time that if you wanted to copyright your work
|
|
that you needed to submit the physical artifact to three different locations in order to get
|
|
you copyrighted. So that when it goes out of copyright, then society has a copy of the thing that
|
|
we were giving you. The monopoly on orphaned works is what I'm talking about. Yeah.
|
|
Speaking of copyright, my all-time favorite copyrights grew up with charades. They're charades.
|
|
How so? Yes. It's a I think it's a 1960s film with Audrey Hepburn and Kerry Grant and it's in
|
|
the public domain because somebody screwed up the trademark. Let's show them the dead. Did that
|
|
or not show them the dead, but don't of the dead had the same thing. They forgot to put in the
|
|
copyright thing at the end and then it began into the public domain, which is why zombies are so
|
|
copyrightable. There are so many zombie movies versus why there are so few Frankenstein movies.
|
|
It's Frankenstein's still under copyright. That's like your own. Jesus. You're never going to see
|
|
anything that was written in your lifetime come out of copyright ever as the thing that will never
|
|
happen again. Yeah. I'm sure of that. Something radical happens soon.
|
|
Copyright is a horrible thing and then to add to copyright, all the entertainment things being used
|
|
for marketing purposes, so other things is also a horrible thing. Yeah. Star Wars, for instance.
|
|
The third one was just an advertisement waiting to happen. Okay, I got to drop off and do some
|
|
work. I'll talk to you guys later. I can. Where are you all at? Well, I'm in Nedden,
|
|
in Scotland. I'm in New Brunswick, Canada. It's snowing where you are? No, sir. I'm just having
|
|
sorry. I'm not sure how I feel about snow because I am from the Midwest. I've just lived in Florida
|
|
quite a while and I'm kind of over it, but I kind of want to see it again. We just had a few days
|
|
of snow here and it's just stopped snowing, actually. It's great to see all the kids and so excited
|
|
about it. There's a number of hills around here and they all slid down them and stuff, but yeah,
|
|
for people of my vintage, we hate it. The cold and the prospect of falling over and breaking
|
|
something. Not good. It's not just people of your vintage, people of all vintage hate that.
|
|
I've steadied you are on your feet. My balance is not the best, so I definitely don't like
|
|
guys.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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