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1163 lines
55 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4111
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Title: HPR4111: HPR Community News for April 2024
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4111/hpr4111.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:47:26
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,111 from Monday the 6th of May 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, HPR Community News for April 2024.
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It is part of the series HPR Community News.
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It is hosted by HPR volunteers and is about 70 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, HPR volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in April 2024.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another exciting episode of
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Hacker Public Radio today.
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It is the HPR Community News for April 2024.
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And joining me this evening is, hello Dave Morris here.
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Hi Dave, how are you?
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I'm good.
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Thank you very much.
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And we're recording on a slightly unusual date and time, but that's all to the good pleasure.
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So flexible we are.
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Yeah.
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Places too for a reason.
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Yes, I have some family commitments that I need to take care of.
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It's been a hectic month.
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It doesn't look like it's going to stop in a hectic month any time soon.
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So we will continue to persevere.
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There's one thing that HPR does is continue to plot on.
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HPR is a community podcast network and that means podcasts are crowdsourced from the community.
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Who is community?
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The people listening to this show.
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You are the community.
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And we are the janitors.
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What are janitors Dave in the context of HPR?
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You keep asking me this question.
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Well, where the guy is at the moment we're guys.
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Yes.
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We haven't really recruited any non guy people.
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And we look after the sort of infrastructure, the metadata, the background.
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In fact, we have virtual mobs and buckets and a floor to mop I think.
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And there are plenty of mobs available folks.
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In all connoisseurs, shades, sizes of the rainbow.
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And feel free to bring your own mop if there's stuff on HPR that you think you can contribute to the community.
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It ain't an ivory tower.
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You don't need to fill out an application form.
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You just need to do equally submission shows.
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After a quite good burst beginning of the year, we're reasonable amount in the reserve queue.
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But we are seeing a slowdown again in the amount of contributions.
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This is typical for this time of year.
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But if you haven't contributed to this show, please do so.
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There are free slots coming up.
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We will be posting reserve shows.
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So keep the community alive.
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Keep the project alive by submission shows.
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And this show is where we review the news and the stuff that's been happening.
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And the most important thing is where we welcome new host Dave.
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And that is traditionally something that you do.
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It certainly is.
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Not quite sure why, but there we go.
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I'm very happy to do it.
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And this month we have a new host.
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New in one respect.
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Dave Hingley.
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And Dave is the brother of Mike Hingley, who's an existing host.
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And I think if we've been to all camp, we will met both of these brothers at various points.
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But Dave has joined us and is wonderful to see him.
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I was absolutely chuffed to see that show coming in.
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Absolutely.
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Chuffed.
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So the Hingley brothers are indeed very close to what I consider the HPR community.
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So good grace to have them officially on board as these as hosts.
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Nothing is.
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Sorry.
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Thingies.
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What are things?
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Okay, Annie, who during this show, the community news, what we do.
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Dave and I put down our proverbial mobs and hypothetical mobs.
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And we come out of the closet, so speak.
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And we go through all the shows that have been aired in the last month and give you a little bit of a summary.
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In case you haven't downloaded them yourself or you're just following the feed for this particular show,
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you know to go back and get these episodes.
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And as sometimes happens, episode four or a six was the community news for March 2024.
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And there were two comments on that show.
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I work and one with you because you do yours.
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I had a senior moment on that recording.
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So as my excuse anyway, and I used the word dire tribe in appropriately.
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And so I apologize in to Scotty because it was his show I was talking about.
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And commenting on his show for away three.
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Let me read it.
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Apologies Scotty.
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In commenting on show for away through a called a dire tribe, which means a rant or critic writing.
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I think I was probably going for discussion or discourse or similar.
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It wasn't a dire tribe, I think.
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I mean, the phase of library where we're sometimes don't pop into my mind when call for all the wrong wonders.
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So thanks to Ken for pointing it out at the time.
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And that's my excuse and I'm sticking with it.
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I thought it was a very good excuse. What do you mean?
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Some guy on the internet replied to Dave Morris.
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Dear Dave, no worries.
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I am known for panic-driven pro clutching nonsense.
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Hopefully your show will encourage more men to discuss men's health.
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Thank you.
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Good. Yes.
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Good show.
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So the next one was getting started with did you come photo management software?
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And unbelievably, this is by Henrik.
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There are no comments on this.
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Did you come is such a fantastic piece of software?
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Yeah, I used it for a number of years.
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But I think I loaded loads of pictures into it at one point years ago.
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And just sort of left and there.
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I don't take pictures much these days.
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So it was really interesting to hear about it because it's changed a lot since I last used it.
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And so it really tempted me to go back and do some stuff with it.
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Organize things better.
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Because it's all about editing stuff and changing stuff and organising it really the thing that I wanted it for.
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Can I find that picture of such and such?
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Absolutely.
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Yes.
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Because it's in that collection or it's searchable or whatever.
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So yeah.
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Excellent show.
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Really good.
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I have it on my list.
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And this is the second on what I hope will be a series.
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So good stuff.
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Keep them coming.
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Keep them coming.
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Yeah.
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And folks, you can contribute to HVR by giving you know post and other comments,
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giving a little bit of positive feedback really helps.
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Someday on the internet, I learned more bash tips.
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And there's no comments on this and either.
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But that's not going to stop us from commenting, Dave.
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Indeed not.
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No, it's some nice couple of scripts which are listed here and explained in a little detail in the show,
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which I think is a great thing.
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It's really nice to have more contributions to the bash scripting series,
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which goes way, way back to the early days of HVR.
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So yeah.
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Yeah.
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I was going to comment on this, but I think I actually messaged Scott himself
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because there was an issue with his notes and said,
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you want me to do this to your notes to fix them.
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And by the way, the show is really good.
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So I should make sure I do that.
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I should be more public in my chitchat.
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So yeah.
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So I did find this to be very, very good at it.
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We definitely need more of this sort of stuff, I'd say.
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And I tend to have comments on my head,
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which I serve reserved for commenting on this show,
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but I probably should just type them in.
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But then if there's a day where I forget to do that, people might feel like,
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I have to comment on their show when I want to.
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I know.
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Sometimes I listen when I'm not available.
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Sorry.
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Yeah.
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I usually do what you said, I think.
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As listening, I'm sort of constructing a comment in my head,
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and then I forget.
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Because things constructed in my head tend to fall out fairly quickly.
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So yeah, it's a, but yeah.
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Oh, and he's, this show is actually in two series, although we can't do that.
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But yeah, today I learned in the best scripting series,
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which is, which I find quite amusing.
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It'll be good.
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We can use that one as a, and as an example,
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when we do get to the point of fixing that issue.
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Modifying Python scripts with some help from chat GPT.
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This is from Mr X.
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And he is using the HPR,
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modifying a Python code to or with help of some chat GPT.
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What do you think?
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Excellent.
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I've done the same.
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I actually commented to him in person,
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but forgot to write anything on the show itself.
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I think I'm going to lose my janitor's badge if I keep this up.
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But yeah, I like what he did here.
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It was an interesting way.
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Oh, a necessary way, I feel.
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I don't think he could solve this easily,
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but he just, he also wanted to use it as a way of finding out
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how useful chat GPT is in help.
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Exactly.
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To solve these sorts of problems.
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And that is excellent.
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Yeah.
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And he got there.
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Do you know what?
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He also made me think,
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we need a series of shows about how you process Jason files in.
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We do indeed.
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We do indeed.
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Yes.
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You know, I like it.
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I'll put that one day.
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That may be a series that I'm going to contribute to.
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As I'm living for a few years ago,
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it's living in XML.
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Now I'm living in Jason.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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It's an interesting subject to me.
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Yeah, there will be a few episodes on that spoiler alert.
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No comments on this one either,
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which is playing civilization part three, part one.
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And after doing this by a hookah, of course, who else?
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A computer strategy, James.
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And we had already civilization and civilization part two.
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And now we're on civilization part three, part one.
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That makes sense to me, at least.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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You have to differentiate between the Roman heroes and the Arabic ones.
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Exactly.
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It's interesting what they do to make games more interesting over time,
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particularly these strategy ones.
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I find it interesting more than talking about the game and the programming,
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the idea behind that a hookah has given us the stories.
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In the developer's mind about what's going on,
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and how their ad improvements and stuff.
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So it's, yeah, it's a great insight, not only into how to play the game,
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but the thoughts behind developing a game.
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So great, great shows there.
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Sort of high level view of the concept of games like this is quite interesting.
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Yeah.
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Cool.
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So we had, Norris, with a test driven development demo,
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using pi test to just to pi test, sorry, to do a test driven development demo.
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And this I found was super, super useful for me.
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This clearly explained the concept and will be used as a reference.
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Absolutely guaranteed internally here.
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And for explain to people what it is and how you use it.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Yeah, I found it most intriguing.
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I've not really spent any brain power on running out more about it.
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So it was very good to hear this.
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I've been, as I've been calling myself,
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I wrote quite a lot of bash scripts for stuff.
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And I find myself, when I was listening to this going,
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I don't know if I would ever do test driven development.
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And then as I was doing that, I was realizing everything that I'm doing within my script.
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So I'm checking for this file.
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Does this file exist?
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Yes or no?
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I'm checking for this.
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So it will be like trivial as I'm writing it to write the equivalent test driven scenario.
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Pull it out of my code.
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If this file exists and is not empty, then blah.
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Then you could have an assertion in the test file going assert that this file exists.
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And so as you're developing, you can equally be doing the test driven.
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So yeah, I don't know if that is a thing.
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But more thought, more thought required by me.
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And it's a great episode because it has me thinking about the whole thing.
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Not necessarily, but I will do it or agree with it.
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But I'm definitely thinking about it as a development model.
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Yeah, it's a different mindset.
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And it's quite interesting to hear, if only for that reason,
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to make you rethink things you do.
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When I was, when I became a, again, paid for,
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I was going to say a professional program.
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That's a bit hard for me.
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When I got paid for doing programming,
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I picked up a method which was very much all the rage in the 1970s
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called stepwise refinement.
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Where you wrote a program which said, you know, be an end and nothing in the middle.
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And then you went, you put some comments in there and said,
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at this point I'm going to do this, then I'm going to do that, then I'm going to do that.
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Then you went to each comment and expanded it, which this was the refinement.
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So you wrote out all the steps.
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And sometimes you saw some sub steps that you needed to add in.
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And then you went and refined them by expanding them.
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So I did that, but it was, I don't know.
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It was Glasgow computer science that originated from, I think,
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but I'm not sure.
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And it was in Pascal, because Pascal was the language that I used on,
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on deck, backs, VMS, because that was their favorite language at the time.
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That was the one that got the most support.
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So that worked great.
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For me, I suppose I sort of semi do that now, but not formally.
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So it's these, these methodologies are quite interesting in, you know,
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making you think in different ways or in organized ways.
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So yeah, true.
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Right now for something completely different.
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Following day, we had more man talk with some guy on the internet talks about bidets and other things.
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And there.
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Yeah, yes.
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There are two comments.
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I'll read four keys one.
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Oh, no.
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I really wished I had more ideas for shows.
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So I could help press down this kind of show from some guy in the internet to the reserve few smiley face.
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And.
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I like that.
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Yes.
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I think he's.
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He's.
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Yeah.
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So you're donating on the concept of one.
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Yes.
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Second comment is from mad Swini squeezing at his show.
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He says, I think I feel the show building up inside.
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If only I could flush it out.
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It's very good.
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It's very good.
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I kept hearing B day, which is I think the French pronunciation pronounces bidet.
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And I kept going.
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Good day.
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Did you say your Australian Australian in my.
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Because I.
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Yeah, exactly.
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Australian's a fair bit.
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But I don't know how B day got turned into that.
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But we do the same.
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The money.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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But yeah, it's my daughter was watching some show on YouTube.
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Which was about somebody fitting one of these things.
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And we're worried about whether you fit it on his toilet when he was in a.
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An apartment rented apartment.
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And nobody seemed to be all that bothered.
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But yeah, it's just a sort of fairly shallow thing with a cold water supply.
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So yeah, the chilly day.
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That's going to be quite.
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Yeah.
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Chili.
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Good tips there on.
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I'm keeping the garden rules out of the sun, etc.
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So if you want to know what that's about to listen to the show.
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The following day was a requested show by myself to Claudio Miranda on mastodon.
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And Claudio responded with a show installing postmarket OS on pine 64.
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And all the steps involved in doing it.
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And it's on my list of stuff to do.
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But I just don't actually know what is the best.
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A postmarket OS will give you loads of options for what was to install.
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But I don't know which one.
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I don't know what desktop environment is.
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So if somebody has a tip for me that would be great.
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I would appreciate it.
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It was nice and nice and detailed.
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Yeah, excellent.
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So the next day we had Daniel with one year of Linux in which he.
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The experiences of running Linux full time for a year.
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For example, there are three comments and I'll do the first, which was R&B books in Linux.
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I've never had any problems with Linux until Ubuntu 23.10 waiting for 24.04 LTS.
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Foki says, thank you.
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Thank you for your show.
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Interesting to hear from someone coming from Windows to Linux with an open mind.
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Being on Linux since 2001 and only using Windows when constrained to it by university or employer.
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It's always good to get the view of the other side.
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Absolutely.
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Hendrik responded saying, enjoyable to learn about Linux user case and experience.
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It was an enjoyable listen to your Linux experience.
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I went over to Linux as my daily driver in December 2023.
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Linux Mint Debian Edition and MDE.
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We have different use cases but nevertheless interesting to learn some about your needs and experience.
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Great stuff.
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Excellent.
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It was an interesting show.
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It's good to hear that sort of viewpoint in a balanced way.
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Absolutely.
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And, yeah, so we'll panel it to him for doing that.
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And the following day we had Delta Ray, 27 years of Linux, which rumbles on for 45 minutes.
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An over exaggeration is over exaggerates about how awesome it is to use Linux.
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And essentially what he does is go through every app that he has installed.
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And this is very, very close to the what I'm running.
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Instead of except CEO I'm running Alex D and what it is essentially a complete list of all the stuff that I currently have on my machine is also.
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I'm very happy to see that probably because I follow him on master done stuff and I haven't installed and Twitter and have installed some utilities from command line.
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That's all there.
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There you go.
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Three copies.
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Excellent show.
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It was my feeling too.
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Yeah, I think he beats me in terms of years of Linux.
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I can't get to 27.
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I can't remember when I started it all clearly but so yeah, excellent.
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I think I'm 23 minutes.
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Yeah, I think I'm probably in there.
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I can't remember that clearly.
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I know it was a red hat when it was a desktop thing.
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But yeah, so I was running that on a on a cast off PC that we could get from work because they clear that the student labs you could ask for one and you got an old criminal PC.
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Yeah, it was red.
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It was red hat.
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Sorry, I was I installed Linux more than 20, you know, 25, maybe 27 years ago.
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Both running with my daily driver will be 18, 90 years, 18 or 20 years.
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Okay.
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There we go.
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Cool.
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Anyone's welcome.
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Comment.
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No, no, it's good to hear these stories from long since.
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So comment from Nick correction.
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Hi, great podcast.
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Thank you.
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Small correction.
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The Oracle virtual box extensions are not false, but they're free for personal use.
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And Delta says, thanks, your right, Nick, thanks.
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What I failed to mention during the podcast is that while it is indeed free for personal use, it's not available to make personal use claims anymore because I needed to use it at work.
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And Oracle detects this and sends an astrogram to the organization asking them to pay.
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Wow.
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That's Oracle.
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Yep.
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Henry Cameron says, interesting review of your Linux softwares.
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I like to show your review of your softwares include several I use.
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Some have not heard of, but of interest and some I know not started to use and some not in my current need.
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One of those I've installed and started to look at is Gramps, and I was happy to hear your positive comment about it, which gives me more confidence to use it.
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When you talked about your early Linux days, it was when I used sun workstation with the Unix as my daily job driver.
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I believe I started with sun in the 1990s, had it for probably more than a decade of job.
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I liked the Unix environment, and I remember a colleague talked about Linux when I was very new, and I became interested in Linux, but it was much later I actually started to use Linux.
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I could relate to several details in your story to my Unix background.
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Finally, you mentioned the freedom to put the operating system in other software I want to on my device.
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One big device, many have, is a car, and I believe modern cars lack software freedom.
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Anyone with knowledge in modern cars, softwares, please enlighten us in a pod show.
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Yes, very nice. That will be interesting indeed.
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Yeah, I know nothing about that at all.
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It would be fascinating to be able to hack a rubbish software that you often find on cars.
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Over 10 years old. I suppose you expect the software to be rubbish, but you can't turn the radio off.
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It's impossible to turn the radio off. What you do is you press the turn off and it just goes very quiet, and then it gradually creeps back up again.
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You get the sound of the radio coming in when you restart the car later at very, very low level.
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I asked the engineer at the garage, he said, oh, yeah, they're all doing that.
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I think there's all the same software in all of them, so they all do that.
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Yeah, yeah. So, you know, probably the show will go away.
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Probably will.
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So, yeah, good show. Could I say that already?
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Yeah, good show.
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It's, it's, yeah, very good. Oh, grams.
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I was going to comment about grams, not, not think anybody's ever talked about on HBO that I would call.
|
|
I used to use it, somehow stopped using it because I ran out of real motivation to do it.
|
|
No, no, no, there's still lots, there's loads of lurking in, in censuses from ancient times.
|
|
I found one who was on a ship bound for the Boer War, which you believe in, in a censuses like that.
|
|
And my grandmother's brothers.
|
|
Anyway, yeah, grams has moved on enormously, such that I can't take my XML version of my database and turn it into grams anymore.
|
|
That's a project I really, really want to pick up on.
|
|
You don't have to hand craft the XML and stick it into the, into the, you know, hand read it and write and put it back into a grams.
|
|
But yeah, I'm about that, please.
|
|
I've stored a lot of information in there with the view that my, or my father was alive.
|
|
I focus more on getting information out of them whenever, whenever I was home visiting, I would take the time to ask them.
|
|
I'm asking about that.
|
|
So now I have all this information, but, you know, it's not cross-reference, it's not checked, it's not whatever.
|
|
So if there are people who have used grams, please do some shows on it, because it would be, yeah, it would be very useful for, for me, essentially.
|
|
And me.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, that would, that would be super.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Next.
|
|
Next one was power of twos.
|
|
And well, did you have the same thing Dave, when you were processing the show going, is this spam?
|
|
I did.
|
|
And I was, how the hell is it going to get laid out, because it was sending us a piece of plain text.
|
|
And of course, HTML would have just turned into one, but gigantic number.
|
|
Um, we're probably with spaces in it or something, but yeah, yeah.
|
|
And for those of you not looking at the show notes, it's basically, the show notes are two new line for new line, eight, new line, 16, new line, 32.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And that continues on for a lot of lines.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
It's really good.
|
|
Forever.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Who's trying to do mine?
|
|
And that's, I'll do those two and you can do your own results.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Wendy Gauss says, very enjoyable episode.
|
|
I can't wait to find out what happens in the sequel.
|
|
HVR is one, nine, two.
|
|
And I was going, what?
|
|
And then I realized, uh, this is four, nine, six, everybody.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
It takes a special brain, Wendy Gauss, to be able to figure that one out.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
Brighton and Ohio says another example.
|
|
One of the powers of two is mentioned in Ender's game.
|
|
Ender's runs through the powers of two to claim, to calm himself down.
|
|
A nerdy way of counting to ten.
|
|
Enjoyable show.
|
|
That is lovely.
|
|
I like that.
|
|
Now, I used to suffer from insomnia when I was younger.
|
|
And I used to do powers of two in my head, um, two, uh, two or try two.
|
|
And I'm not very far, but that was one way of trying to, to sleep.
|
|
Um, anyway, I commented and my comment, uh, title is eight, three, eight, eight, six, oh, seven.
|
|
Great show of thanks.
|
|
It got me looking at slash, et cetera, slash services to remind myself of us about, in a signed
|
|
port.
|
|
That was the thing he was talking about.
|
|
Um, and then back in the 1970s, when I abandoned my biology PhD and got a job instead,
|
|
I ended up working in the computer service department at Lancaster University in the Northwest
|
|
of England, where we had an ICL 1900 series mainframe.
|
|
This is a 24-bit machine, which is magnet core memory, as you believe, running an operating system called
|
|
George III.
|
|
It's when, or, for instance, it's a nice cuddly name.
|
|
When somebody left, I stumbled into working in a assembly language program using the plan assembler
|
|
on ICL 200s, 1900s.
|
|
Of course, we had a source access to the operating system, which was on microfiche, which you
|
|
never want to do if you can help it.
|
|
And we're enhancing it with other universities in the region to implement an early form of networking,
|
|
a network called GANIT.
|
|
Uh, burnt into my memory from that day to this is the value of two to the 24 minus one,
|
|
which is eight, three, double, eight, six, oh, seven.
|
|
Of course, it's the largest sign integer that can be stored in 24 bits, slightly face.
|
|
Oh, and because I was looking at the HVR database today, I feel I am in the presence of greatness,
|
|
because not only is the show number 4096, the duration in seconds is 1024.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
That was a hundred percent look.
|
|
Isn't that wonderful?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But I think that's his original length, because we store that as opposed to adding the
|
|
interior.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So maybe he is crafted this specifically.
|
|
So this is why I say the presence of greatness, definitely, that takes some, some detail
|
|
to achieve that.
|
|
I wonder how many other little easter eggs there are in the show.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
Amazing.
|
|
I didn't enjoy that.
|
|
I don't know why powers are two, so I'm here.
|
|
I don't know where.
|
|
This was just a nice episode that really for me just is the sort of thing that HVR throws
|
|
off now.
|
|
And again, just.
|
|
You have no idea.
|
|
Just a lovely episode.
|
|
It's great, great work.
|
|
Following day, we'll take our jobs.
|
|
Of course, they will.
|
|
A bladder on about thoughts on robots taking our jobs about DoDoDoMe.
|
|
And this was an interesting one, actually.
|
|
And there it is.
|
|
Come on.
|
|
One thing that DoDoDoMe.
|
|
Oh, sorry.
|
|
I was track where we were as your turn, yeah.
|
|
You had the big spielder.
|
|
DoDoDoMe.
|
|
The next thing, the one thing I forgot to mention in the previous was when tech
|
|
had obsolete.
|
|
There have been new things for the people to do or make.
|
|
I'm not seeing the new things in this case.
|
|
And he also says, I know that people still smart people saying,
|
|
AI will not take your jobs.
|
|
But have you seen the latest at the very least taking heads should be worried.
|
|
Talking heads should be worried.
|
|
On the other hand, the people who rise the talking heads maybe just don't need the talking heads.
|
|
Part now, here's the video demo.
|
|
There's a link in there showing an example of AI taking our jobs.
|
|
But it was interesting from the point of view that, you know,
|
|
that's what computing has been doing since, you know, day one.
|
|
And the computers are going to take our jobs.
|
|
I remember my father lost his job as a result of it being computerized.
|
|
And the jobs replacing the jobs are, yes, there are jobs to replace the jobs,
|
|
but it's usually in order of magnitude fewer jobs, maybe higher value, but fewer jobs.
|
|
So there you go.
|
|
And I, he met the point about how many people he may have met unemployed by improving scripting and stuff.
|
|
And I was thinking, gosh, I didn't quite imagine that myself in my day.
|
|
Yep, yep.
|
|
Me too.
|
|
Me too.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
The only comment I made to myself on this one, I'm terrible at writing comments to people.
|
|
I'm sorry.
|
|
Was that, yeah, I don't disagree at all, but a number of people warned.
|
|
It's what you just said that the number of jobs were diminished.
|
|
But that's the point at which we need UBR, universal basic income to,
|
|
because that's always been the vision of the future.
|
|
Robots will do things and we'll have less demand on us, which will be a good thing.
|
|
So long as we get it, because, you know, as things sound at the moment,
|
|
here we go.
|
|
We just have any more.
|
|
Socialist, communist point of views, yeah.
|
|
This is common sense.
|
|
This is common sense.
|
|
It's a common sense.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's your official opinion, Dave.
|
|
It's my common sense.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Anyway, that may or may not disagree with you, but that's my political opinion.
|
|
However, yeah, no, it is, it is interesting.
|
|
I feel like this is the first time that the IT industry have, you know,
|
|
oh gosh, this computer is taking our jobs might actually affect us.
|
|
And we're scared.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it's true.
|
|
Yes, it's definitely going to make a massive difference in all sorts of things.
|
|
But yeah, it's, it's, yeah, I can't predict it.
|
|
And one part to me says, yeah, well, if you're such a bad programmer person,
|
|
like where an AI can do your job, then, you know, you shouldn't be doing that job.
|
|
And then on the other hand, I'm thinking, yeah, boss.
|
|
That call will not be made by that person.
|
|
That call will be made by that person's HR department.
|
|
So whether they are or they are not, it'll still be made.
|
|
The cost, the cost savings in their course will be made.
|
|
And then they inhernd mess that's left as a result will be left behind.
|
|
So, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
That was my political opinion.
|
|
Those opinions of mine and not that it just really does affect the public radio.
|
|
But this is just standing back, this is a great thing to have a show like that
|
|
also thrown into the mix where you're, you know, you're kind of forced to think
|
|
really about actions and reactions and stuff.
|
|
And you know, when we looked at the coupers who lost all their jobs
|
|
because aluminium barrels came and we kind of went, oh, I don't make barrels.
|
|
I don't care.
|
|
Oh, sure, sure, sure.
|
|
It's my son's working in the area of Ayurveda.
|
|
So I've said many times.
|
|
And his position exists because all the local banks, probably all the banks in the entire UK
|
|
have reduced the number of actual physical banks enormously.
|
|
So the times when you used to go and ask for advice about this, that the other local branch
|
|
just down the road have all gone.
|
|
And you're supposed to phone up some chatbot and have a chat with them with that with it.
|
|
You know, so it's there.
|
|
It's clear as clear as day.
|
|
But I don't know.
|
|
I'm glad that DODD dummy did this because I think he's got a clearer
|
|
view than I have.
|
|
I tend to get lost in the weeds very quickly thinking about this.
|
|
And so it's good to have his view point on it.
|
|
I think it's early days with the AI that we have at the moment.
|
|
It's it's predictive.
|
|
Very good predictive text pretending to be.
|
|
Somebody said it's a it's a Paris pretending to speak.
|
|
But yeah, we'll see.
|
|
We will see following the road trips without GPS.
|
|
A short off the cough discussion about how we navigated road trips in the past.
|
|
And this is by trade and great.
|
|
I mean, you might.
|
|
Great tips.
|
|
Basically, great.
|
|
And there was one comment.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Archers 72 says road trips to that GPS.
|
|
This is an interesting show and I'm looking at the transcriptions to see what I'm missing.
|
|
I recently found myself also losing signal and got it back by cycling in and out of airplane mode to remedy the problem.
|
|
This to get me thinking that I should also have a backup as I travel semi frequently from Kentucky to the Chicago area suburbs.
|
|
Also because of my family situation.
|
|
Depending on which location I travel, it's between 350 and 400 miles.
|
|
With this large last road trip and also some roads that I wanted to avoid.
|
|
I did using OS say OS M and.
|
|
So he said osman which causes open which uses open street map in the background.
|
|
I would have to read the transcript to catch all your points, which were very interesting.
|
|
I'll probably be getting at least a handheld CB radio in the near future.
|
|
Also, it's been 20 years or so.
|
|
But I used to print out directions from map quest if the destination was somewhat local.
|
|
Thanks for your show.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I.
|
|
I both too.
|
|
I was thinking when I was listening to this, I was in the position where.
|
|
I went down in New Year's Eve to collect my daughter from a party somewhere.
|
|
And on the way back, it kept the navigation systems kept rerouting me over a ferry on the Rhine,
|
|
which a pulls death 10 o'clock in the night.
|
|
Everything the road was there.
|
|
So I ended up having to drive to Rotterdam, which is completely out of the way.
|
|
And then from there, like following the regular boring road signs up.
|
|
And yeah, thankfully, so I have those, I have the maps for this, you know, as a backup.
|
|
And thankfully, OSM Android now has the ability to allow you to go back via a specific direction.
|
|
So you can follow a, if you do a route down and you do route tracking, you can track that route back,
|
|
so you can go back the same way, which is excellent.
|
|
Oh, yeah, that's really nice. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
I had a job as a van driver at one point, just to supplement my,
|
|
just a little, I heard about all your jobs.
|
|
Yeah, it was a part-time job as I was doing my advanced degree thingy.
|
|
And yeah, so, and that was way before GPS.
|
|
I got quite good at storing, that was driving around Manchester and the environment,
|
|
so sort of Lancashire area.
|
|
I got pretty good at working out routes myself.
|
|
But there were times when you'd come off a motorway and then onto a roundabout.
|
|
And then, oh, God, which one of my, which of these is these nine exits do I take?
|
|
So I evolved the method going round the roundabout several times to read all the exits.
|
|
And then, oh, it was number three.
|
|
Yeah, oh, thank goodness.
|
|
You know, because I don't know if anybody spotted that, I thought I was insane, maybe.
|
|
But it was a way of just sort of taking stock and also finding labors and sitting and looking at that,
|
|
was a common thing to do doing that sort of stuff.
|
|
Yeah, I got pretty good at it.
|
|
And for our American listeners, the roundabout is a circular four-way stop sign.
|
|
Traffic circle.
|
|
Four-way, the term that traffic circle.
|
|
The tendency is some cities have got lots of mobile phones.
|
|
Yeah, that's true.
|
|
They're not popular.
|
|
When I took my kids to America to do your semity in various places around California,
|
|
I sat for nights looking on Google Maps and working at all the routes.
|
|
And then I printed them out.
|
|
So we had a sheet for this stuff.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Even though we hired a car with GPS, it didn't work.
|
|
It didn't seem to get, it didn't charge from the car for some reason or other.
|
|
So you'd start off and then the thing would die.
|
|
You'd charge it in the hotel.
|
|
And then it would last, you know, for what?
|
|
We kept turning it off all the time.
|
|
So we actually used these maps for a bit.
|
|
What was that?
|
|
What was the name of the company?
|
|
I can't remember who we hired from, but they were Alamo.
|
|
That's right.
|
|
Alamo.
|
|
They said, oh, yeah, yeah.
|
|
We don't allow you to power stuff off our USBs in the car.
|
|
So how are we supposed to use this GPS?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I just work here.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Anyway.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But yeah, that's enough anecdote, I think.
|
|
But yeah, it's a fascinating subject.
|
|
It's the 72 comments about getting map quests, maps and stuff back in the day is also my experience in the UK version.
|
|
Always good to have a backup reckon.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Following day, an introduction to home assistant, a new series all about home automation.
|
|
This time an introduction to home assistant, where I, more or less, read all the people's websites.
|
|
And what better method is exactly.
|
|
Henrik says, looking forward to learn more about home assistant.
|
|
I'm uncertain if when or to what extent I start with home automation.
|
|
Although it can be fun, I only want it in the case where it is better to our ad value.
|
|
Also, prefer a not convicted device.
|
|
Anyway, I have been looking at home assistants, which would be my first school for home automation.
|
|
So I'm looking forward to learn more about it here on the hacker public radio.
|
|
And I'm looking forward to having the time to do this.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I also, as you know, because I've told you, I'm planning home assistant at some point, but not getting on with it very fast at the moment.
|
|
But yeah, yeah, that would be nice.
|
|
But I'm not, I think, probably have the same viewers.
|
|
Henrik, I don't really want to have cameras at my door and chatting with the guy delivering to the wrong house and stuff.
|
|
But yeah, something that opens and shuts the blinds would be nice.
|
|
That's what I hope to be able to do.
|
|
Build a foundation on this about an installing home assistant at least as a base.
|
|
And then then some sample use cases of, like, just turn the temperature or whatever, whatever we come across, see what's useful.
|
|
People can build upon that and refer to the, these shows, which are the foundations to get them into the, into the up to speak basically.
|
|
And hopefully you do shows about their experience.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Charleston, South Carolina.
|
|
We visit South Carolina when we meet up with some friends.
|
|
This is a show from Hookah, who was traveling was early around about South Carolina.
|
|
It's a little while ago now because he's retired.
|
|
As you're tired from retiring and traveling with vehicle in Charleston, South Carolina.
|
|
And I do apologize to everybody going, Ken, that is not a South Carolina accent.
|
|
I appreciate that.
|
|
Well, so have you heard any of the Irish accents on American TV lately?
|
|
In my defense.
|
|
It's just, it's Charleston, by the way.
|
|
Well, as in the dance.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Very good.
|
|
No, it's absolutely.
|
|
Again, they look at the photos and read their signs, etc.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I had a, I had a most enjoyable half hour or so hunting through all this stuff.
|
|
After listening to what, even while listening to the show, yeah, very good.
|
|
AIOMG, some other guy on the internet talks about artificial intelligence.
|
|
And this is operator.
|
|
And yeah, operator is operating as a completely different level to me with this AI agents.
|
|
This all makes, I was following it as I was listening to it.
|
|
But now for the life of me, I have no clue.
|
|
I just found it very, now I'm looking at it as very confusing thought of Dave, your thoughts.
|
|
Well, I had similar thoughts.
|
|
I wrote down here that I had, I missed about 90% of it.
|
|
But it feels like there's a lot of really important information, very valuable stuff in there.
|
|
But until I know more, I need more context to be able to dig into it more.
|
|
So I'm hoping that gradually I will learn more about this and be able to say,
|
|
oh, there was a show about this, I can go and check some stuff in there to find out more.
|
|
So yeah, it's, it's, yeah, I'm pretty much on the same level as you.
|
|
Yeah, but obviously he is using it for stuff that I'm not.
|
|
No, fantastic.
|
|
Yeah, massive notes.
|
|
This is really, really, I applaud.
|
|
The amount of work is gone into this.
|
|
Okay, the next day was R272 with more MPV quick tips.
|
|
And this was the text to speech version, which I was listening to.
|
|
And I really had to go to the transcript to go, what is, what is he saying?
|
|
I'm not sure the tips really, you're reading out all go slash dot zero, zero, zero, zero.
|
|
Was the best use of a text to speech ended.
|
|
No, no, no, those zeros really go.
|
|
It's, it's quite hard to understand the, the, the con, the full context,
|
|
that the full details of the show, because I, my brain gets stuck totally on the numbers.
|
|
I just can't, they sort of rattle about in my head while I should be listening to the next bit.
|
|
And I can't, because I'm stuck on those weird, weird chains of numbers,
|
|
which I'm trying somehow to, to make sense of.
|
|
And they're not really that important.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Well, the point was he had his history for MPV and bookmarks and stuff like that.
|
|
So it was reading that out.
|
|
And there was a lot of, a lot of stuff like URL links and stuff,
|
|
data codes and play times, which, if you were reading it, you would probably skip over,
|
|
you know, the links of the show notes.
|
|
You read the title of the link and then leave the, they listen to you.
|
|
Not that I'm saying you shouldn't send in a text to speech show.
|
|
It's just, if you're just sending in text to speech show, try and have just text and not computer.
|
|
Output.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
How far are just 72 doesn't, doesn't get annoyed at me now for saying that.
|
|
I think the concept of it was, was great.
|
|
But, yeah, the, especially I always take the time.
|
|
And as has Archers 72 and so to turn, turn my links into, into proper links,
|
|
not reveal their, their weirdness, you know, with all the commas and presents
|
|
and things in it.
|
|
Because it's, it's better for the, for the eyes, it's better for understanding.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So, of course, GTSN, can I do that?
|
|
It's going to borrow, borrow right in, I guess.
|
|
I'm wondering how you got the bookmarks like that.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I've never, I use MPV all the time.
|
|
It's brilliant.
|
|
We use as a main media player at home, like literally the kids have to drop to a console,
|
|
change directory into the directory, MPV full screen, do the full Monty.
|
|
But it's classic.
|
|
Even, you know, you have those dark scenes where everything's moody and you can't see a thing.
|
|
Like, there's a one episode of Star Wars thing that was watching with the, with the,
|
|
with the, uh, Pucky.
|
|
And it was so dark.
|
|
It was like, there was nothing on, there's literally nothing on the screen.
|
|
But you could adjust by hitting three, four, five, six, seven, and eight.
|
|
You could increase, decrease the brightness, the sharpness, the gamma level.
|
|
So at least it was visible what they were doing on the screen.
|
|
Brilliant.
|
|
Brilliant player.
|
|
But Archer, something to do.
|
|
A show on bookmarking.
|
|
It would be excellent.
|
|
No, no, no, it's now running off on the, the official size of my show.
|
|
I've never been a show again.
|
|
That's, it's an interesting subject.
|
|
Oh, it says, uh, I've never got, got into MPV.
|
|
Oh, it's, it's classic.
|
|
Brilliant player.
|
|
Yeah, I know.
|
|
And I miss, Mr X is into it as well.
|
|
I've just sort of looked at it and thought, nah, not that one.
|
|
But, um, it's, uh, yeah, it's quite, uh, quite intriguing to, to use it for, for something like that.
|
|
I think I might, well, we'll do that.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Okay, we'll carry on.
|
|
What's in my bag?
|
|
Dave Hingney has a bag.
|
|
Uh, he's got a watch in it.
|
|
Hing says, nice to hear your first show of Dave.
|
|
I hope, uh, to listen to you again soon.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
And I liked that, uh, my messenger bag, actually.
|
|
And also, I liked the power bank.
|
|
That's cool.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes, yes.
|
|
No, interesting stuff.
|
|
Although I don't tend to use messenger bags myself.
|
|
But, uh, this looks like a good, if this was a rock sack, I would probably, I would be interested.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Yeah, I've used messenger bags in the past, the ones with laptops and that sort of stuff.
|
|
But they're uncomfortable after, for me, anyway, after long use.
|
|
Whereas a rock sack, you can balance better.
|
|
You can even strap it around your waist and get the weight distributed better, I find for it.
|
|
It's a personal matter, it's personal things.
|
|
It's good.
|
|
I thought I took the, um, links out of those, uh, in the show notes, I see that they've got all the tracking links still on.
|
|
I thought I took all those out.
|
|
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
How do they get past?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
That's weird.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
And we'll have to give that out.
|
|
As a general principle, we, we, I think we agreed that we, we should maybe be doing that.
|
|
Um, because, and I was actually contemplating writing a script to do generic tracker stuff removal.
|
|
Um, as these, these being processed.
|
|
Yeah, I, yeah.
|
|
I went to the episode and edited it in the database to remove it.
|
|
It was kind of weird.
|
|
Why they're back.
|
|
Yeah, I don't, I don't know.
|
|
I, I didn't think to do it at the time.
|
|
And you, you, you, you commented about it after it.
|
|
So I just left it with you.
|
|
So we'll be able to get a myth to change this first.
|
|
Strange.
|
|
And maybe that Amazon did a restore of the database.
|
|
Yeah, that does.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Anyway, some other guy did an introduction to JQ part one.
|
|
Jason format using the JQ utility.
|
|
And this is what happens, Dave.
|
|
A show idea along and off somebody else will do it for you and steal all your thunder.
|
|
There's, there's not a huge lot of thunder there.
|
|
Actually, it's more of a sort of small paper bag being being exploded.
|
|
Um, but yeah, it's, yeah, it's, we've talked about this for ages as it being needed.
|
|
But it was Mr. X's show where he was, um, he was using Python to, to pass Jason,
|
|
which is all fine and good.
|
|
But if you want to do anything, um, the command line, then you really struggling without this.
|
|
Um, so I thought, okay, now it's the time to, uh, to start on this down this road.
|
|
So there we go.
|
|
And you've done another few episodes.
|
|
And when you've done those, then I can do other, we'll see, I'm interested to see where you end.
|
|
And then, uh, I'll, I'm not saying that I'm more of us than you, but I've done some fairly hairy stuff here.
|
|
You probably are because you've been using it more than I have.
|
|
But, uh, that's fine.
|
|
I mean, um, it's brilliant.
|
|
It's, it's a big subject.
|
|
It's an enormous object.
|
|
And I do not want to spend the next year working on it, particularly.
|
|
Um, one thing I discovered looking ahead just the other day is that, uh,
|
|
Jackie uses a regular expression engine, which I had not heard of before.
|
|
Uh-huh.
|
|
Uh-huh.
|
|
Which is an engine which tries to consolidate all the others.
|
|
You know, there's one used in Python.
|
|
There's one used in Perl.
|
|
Uh, there's one in JavaScript.
|
|
It tries to consolidate them all into one thing, which is, it's a good choice for JQ.
|
|
But, uh, you, you've got to, you've got to, but you can come in with your,
|
|
with pretty much all of you, uh, of your regular expression knowledge and use it.
|
|
But if you want to do the more advanced stuff, then you're going to have to go and do a reading about how,
|
|
how it moans in this, this moment.
|
|
So I don't think I should begin into that, that aspect of, uh, JQ.
|
|
So I think I'll leave that for the reader, or the listener, to get into more.
|
|
But yeah.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
Um, the following day, my story, how to cure, uh,
|
|
I found the cure for my obesity, talk about historical weight gain and recently learned,
|
|
uh, so that how to lose weight.
|
|
And this is the, uh, Jason Fung fasting method.
|
|
Um, and there's one comment.
|
|
Is it my turn?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Traces.
|
|
Thank you for sharing.
|
|
Many of us have struggled with excess weight.
|
|
I've been using an intermittent fasting eating pattern.
|
|
Quite some time now with mixed results.
|
|
And I behave for my remaining meals and minimize my sugars, then all as well.
|
|
When I binge and eat half a box of cookies, it doesn't work so well.
|
|
So thanks for the inspiration to be more disciplined.
|
|
Fantastic.
|
|
I hope it goes well for, um, Yerun, um, maybe a follow-up show in a year?
|
|
Tell us all the word.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
It, uh, I liked some of his, um, suggestions about, uh, effectively prolonging your,
|
|
your nighttime fast, which is what breakfast does as he pointed out.
|
|
Um, but by not eating, uh, your first meal or till later.
|
|
So that's, that's when I would not hurt off before that makes a lot of sense.
|
|
I actually tried, uh, the fast diet, uh, as they, as the person was called,
|
|
I, I did for about six months or so a few years ago.
|
|
It definitely helped.
|
|
And getting into the habit of just being, being hungry all day, uh, you can control it.
|
|
And then the meal that you have, this is one where you be fast all day and then at a meal at night.
|
|
Um, the meal that you have at night, which is supposed to be very pro tenacious and high fiber and stuff,
|
|
uh, is, is the most wonderful thing.
|
|
This is a treat, but you don't do it every day.
|
|
You do it, you know, two days a week or something like that.
|
|
It, it helped.
|
|
But, um, it's a very, very hard thing to do because you, uh, your body wants to eat stuff.
|
|
Of course, that's the way it's evolved and, uh, and designed as it were.
|
|
So yeah, it's, so yeah, good luck to your own.
|
|
Um, the following day we had my tribute to feeds by Henrik, uh, Henrik.
|
|
Feeds are useful and keep me up to date with new information for websites I'm interested in.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Feeds are a thing and they're absolutely cool.
|
|
And we have lots of them.
|
|
One of them, by the way, um, which brings up two questions.
|
|
Um, on mastodon on the HPR channel, we, uh, have a lot of engagements with the community.
|
|
And one of the comments that I think on past was that somebody requesting not necessarily for HPR,
|
|
but, uh, for another, you know, to general call to all podcasters out there,
|
|
please include the transcripts as a feed.
|
|
And we, of course, have transcripts here on HPR.
|
|
So we should be producing a RSS feed with the transcripts.
|
|
It'll be trivial.
|
|
No, no problem there whatsoever.
|
|
Uh, the only thing is which version, uh, should we use community input, please advise, please advise over.
|
|
Um, so that was us.
|
|
Uh, great, great show.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I would also like to know how to get the feed out of mastodon.
|
|
I think we should include some of those comments here on, um, the community news.
|
|
So if you, if anybody has any, knows how to do that.
|
|
So that I don't have to do it.
|
|
Can you please tell us the regret?
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
I did manage to get, um, notifications coming out in a feed in Thunderbird,
|
|
but, uh, but it's not very reliable.
|
|
And notifications I get.
|
|
So, uh, yeah, I'd like to know that as well.
|
|
There's, there's, there's bits of mastodon, which are still quite strange, I find.
|
|
Um, I've no idea what lists are.
|
|
Anyway, that's a whole, so by the way, somebody do, uh, introduction to, uh, to mastodon for us to regret.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Then the next day, which was, I think the last day, is that correct, Dave?
|
|
It is.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Uh, response to HBR 40, 65 shoutout to a shoutout about the framework laptop by Swift 110.
|
|
And this is, uh, more stuff about the, um, new news was talking about the initial, um, about, uh, the framework laptop and stuff.
|
|
So this was a response to that.
|
|
Those framework laptops look really cool and upgradable and awesome.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Very tempted, drooling at the mouth.
|
|
If I didn't have enough computers.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, it's, uh, same here, really.
|
|
A more desktop, these days rather than laptop, but, uh, yeah.
|
|
If I was in the microphone laptop, that would be one of which would be very keen on.
|
|
So that was this.
|
|
What else was in the docketive?
|
|
So we have a couple of comments from previous shows.
|
|
Um, I'll start with a news show by some guy on the internet.
|
|
And we get comment number two on that from El Muscle about George Santos.
|
|
Uh, it was, uh, was mentioned on that particular episode.
|
|
An excellent podcast on Santos from a left queer perspective explicit in brackets.
|
|
Bad Gays, George Santos, episode webpage, and he gives a link to badgayspod.poorbeam.com.
|
|
And media file, also, uh, podbeam link on that subject.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And there was a comment on the Norrist, uh, making a, um, duri timer.
|
|
An operator does some free, um, free diagnosis.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
You got a day, bro.
|
|
And a picture to the autism spectrum disorder.
|
|
A page.
|
|
Although, I don't think it's this one.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Um, I got that.
|
|
I got, I mean, I understood.
|
|
Anyway, it was coming from.
|
|
And yeah, it's once you become alerted to these things.
|
|
And you, uh, you see it everywhere.
|
|
Just true.
|
|
Um, in the, we're skipping over the events counter.
|
|
There's a link there in the short.
|
|
That'll probably be moving to the main page.
|
|
Um, in other business, Craig Maloney, host of the open metal cast, uh,
|
|
has passed away.
|
|
And, um, uh, we're putting together a little bit of, um,
|
|
remembrance for him.
|
|
Um, we're going to, uh, do that this month, uh, possibly playing one of the episodes.
|
|
Um, so if there's anything if, uh, he was, uh, it was unbelievable.
|
|
The number of communities that he was involved in, um, uh,
|
|
like Tarot and Pepper and Carrot.
|
|
A lot of, he was, uh, one of the cold maintainers over there.
|
|
He was involved in Linux user groups.
|
|
And there's a link there to his obituary, uh, Greg guy.
|
|
We'll be sorely missed by the community.
|
|
And, um, so if you have anything in any way affected your life, uh,
|
|
and you want to contribute anything to this, uh, episode, um,
|
|
feel free to do so.
|
|
Either text and I'll read it out.
|
|
Or if you have some audio, you can send it in to me.
|
|
That'll be great.
|
|
Over to you, Dave.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Well, I just put an item in about one of the, uh,
|
|
issues that was raised on Get You Repository, which was, uh,
|
|
to do with, uh, using Markdown for show notes.
|
|
And, um, the issue was that if you're using, if you use syntax highlighting for
|
|
fenced code blocks, that's where you, you write a bit of script or whatever,
|
|
whatever code you're writing, you put three back ticks before and after it.
|
|
But the first set of back ticks are followed by the name of the language.
|
|
And you expect in certain contexts for, um, script for the, um,
|
|
highlighting to be enabled.
|
|
So you get different colors for the various elements of the language.
|
|
But this doesn't work for us.
|
|
And the reason for that is that, um,
|
|
well, I've turned it off because the way it's implemented, uh, using
|
|
Pandoc is that it adds a lot of div and span tags around the bits of,
|
|
of text that, uh, to be highlighted.
|
|
And when that became available and we tried sending it to archive.org,
|
|
then we found that all of the tags were stripped out.
|
|
Um, so you lost, you lost any highlighting that, uh, that you might have wanted added.
|
|
Um, so what I've said is that I will look to see if I can, uh,
|
|
whether that restrictions have been lifted, whether that stripping out has finished or not.
|
|
And the other thought is, well, put the, uh, the, um,
|
|
the complex, the colored stuff in the notes on the HBR site in the static site.
|
|
And if it gets stripped out on, on archive.org will so be it.
|
|
Um, we'll, we'll not, we'll not show any tears on it.
|
|
So I'm just making the point that I'm going to try and look at that over the,
|
|
over the next month and see what's the best way through.
|
|
I'm on a question.
|
|
We've done the migration of the websites, uh, and stuff.
|
|
So we have content that's in the database.
|
|
So we've got the HBR hub, which has got their PHP stuff that can really only be done in one place.
|
|
And we've got the automatic generating stuff, which looks at the database and then generates all the static files.
|
|
But aside from that, there are general static files that don't,
|
|
but are not part of the database that we need to keep.
|
|
For example, host images and, um, uh,
|
|
uh, wild files of the host introducing themselves.
|
|
Hello, my name is Ken.
|
|
For example, those are outside of that as are the show notes.
|
|
As are they, and not the show notes, but as are they, um, extended show notes when that's the case, images or attachments or source code and stuff like that.
|
|
So it was always a million attention to have an RSS, you know, transparency.
|
|
If you transparency layer, so if you imagine it as you have a blank disk and then you or sync up all the static stuff.
|
|
And then you have on top of that, you superimpose the dynamically generated stuff from the database.
|
|
It should, with both of those things, you should be able to get everything.
|
|
And then one of the other transparencies is the media files, which will be a choice, whether you download those or not.
|
|
From the internet archive or locally.
|
|
So I'm, so that's work that's ongoing.
|
|
And I haven't documented that as yes.
|
|
I know, Ken.
|
|
I know I've been bugging you about a bridge.
|
|
We have, this is a subject which has passed, passed, passed us by.
|
|
We have, we have told one another about it and told ourselves about it, probably as well.
|
|
But we've not necessarily moved forward significantly.
|
|
I, yeah, so I absolutely agree.
|
|
And we do need to reach some decisions about how we do that.
|
|
And the reason I bring it up now is that I'm in the process of clearing out.
|
|
So I'm trying to get that second computer at home sort of, but every time I do, I run into other issues.
|
|
And I've got a large terabyte size disk drive that can associate with that.
|
|
And now we're bandwidth.
|
|
I have half a gig of upload that I can dedicate to serving HPR files, which would be more than off I reckon.
|
|
So the infrastructure is being worked on in order to be able to do that.
|
|
And the implementation itself is, is some rsync script switch.
|
|
It shouldn't be too bad.
|
|
But if somebody has a way of advising us on how to track media outside of gate.
|
|
So I don't know here we use artefactory as a method of doing that.
|
|
But what is the other way of tracking stuff, tracking files and check sums of files.
|
|
We're doing that manually in the database.
|
|
And we're also doing a little bit in Git.
|
|
But I don't want all the images and web files being in Git.
|
|
And equally, it's a pain having them in the database having to manage that in the database.
|
|
Is there a like tool that I can go up guess and install Blah and pointed at something and go here.
|
|
This is managed this for me.
|
|
There is a tool I just wrote for you and Pearl.
|
|
No, no, having a bad day.
|
|
I'm not ridden yet.
|
|
There is something called Git and Annex, which I've heard people using for that type of thing,
|
|
where you've got a lot of non-gitable in appropriate for Git type files.
|
|
But you want to track them all through Git and Annex is one.
|
|
And I think there's a number of others that are similar to it.
|
|
I don't have any direct experience.
|
|
I've just heard people talking about them.
|
|
So yeah, hopefully we'll find that or be pointed in that sort of direction by anybody who knows about them.
|
|
Yep, so that's written in Haskell.
|
|
God, if there was only somebody who knew Haskell here.
|
|
But I can talk to us about this.
|
|
Apparently, JQ is originally written in Haskell.
|
|
That was not written in C.
|
|
But yeah, cool, eh?
|
|
Cool.
|
|
So I think that's it, Dave.
|
|
I think it is.
|
|
Yes, yes, that's everything.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
And thanks again for adjusting the time to do this.
|
|
Problem.
|
|
Tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker.
|
|
Public Radio!
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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