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151 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
151 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4308
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Title: HPR4308: What tech Kevie would spend £2000 on
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4308/hpr4308.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:46:26
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4308 for Wednesday the 5th of February 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, what tech kevy would spend pound 2000 on.
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It is hosted by kevy and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, kevy discusses what tech related things he would spend pound 2000 on.
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Hello, hello, this is kevy from the TuxJuan podcast and you're listening to another
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episode of HPR.
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Now before I even start going into the actual episode, I have to confess that this episode
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took inspiration from episode 134 of the Linux Lads podcast that was released in December
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2024.
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And that show they were each asked if they had 2000 euro, what would they spend it on
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and had to be tech related.
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So this got me thinking this actually would be a great spin-off series if this would catch
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on for HPR.
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Why?
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Because it might actually talk about some things people don't know.
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People might not know about some, especially some quite niche products which I'm certainly
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going to look at.
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And also I'm going to discuss some different donations that I would give as well.
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So again, it might actually get people thinking about donating to certain areas that maybe
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they hadn't even thought of before.
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So for mine, now I converted this to pounds.
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I know it's not ideal, but euros pounds aren't too dissimilar.
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However, you know, this will maybe be a series just for consistency sake.
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Maybe it might be that you either want to change it so it's 2000 euro or 2000 pound and
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then converted into your own local currency.
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But anyway, I would leave that up to you, but I wouldn't encourage you to actually think
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about recording a show for this because I do think I find this very interesting myself.
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So what would I look at?
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So the first thing that I would take, and this is actually going to take a fair chunk
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of my three products, take a fair chunk of the two grand, to be honest.
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So I'm going to look at three things.
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So the first thing is the pillet.
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This is against links to all these things will be in the show notes.
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So pillet is a Raspberry Pi 5 powered modular computer.
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Now you can get one, which is an all in one, however, that I think that's a pillet 5.
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The pillet 7 is actually the one that I like the look of.
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It's got a considerably bigger screen, but as it says, it's modular.
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So you can get this look, the bottom part of it can turn into a keyboard with a trackpad.
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So that's for your daily computing almost.
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However, if you want to make into a gaming device, it also includes an option to have,
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it makes into a gamepad.
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So they say there's more to come.
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Right now it's at the Kickstarter stage.
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So I can't wholeheartedly say, yes, you should run out and buy one.
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But the doosles seem to be available at time of recording.
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But as with anything with Kickstarter, just be wary purely because some of these projects
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do come to nothing, although these guys have been developing its slow leaks before it came.
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They actually teased it on, mastered it on, I think almost a year ago.
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But they said that they wouldn't be releasing it until everything was done and they had
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ironed out most things before it was going to go to manufacture.
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So that is the pillet and the computer itself is £295.
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The reason I'm saying £295 is it's a wee bit to see, even if you go onto that website,
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it will say £200.
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However, then you read that doesn't include the battery.
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And it doesn't include the NVMe storage device.
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So I've actually added their own ones in.
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The other thing though, it doesn't include is a Pi 5.
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So with everything included, and I'm just going to go, this is fantasy land, so I'm going
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to go the Pi 516 gig that comes to a grand total of £409.90, so quite considerable.
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Now the other thing that I would do if I had this money is go for a Juno Tab 3.
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I've used Juno computers before and I really do like their laptops, but I noticed they've
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got a tablet.
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This is a 12 inch tablet, so a bit bigger than the majority of tablets I've used before.
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However, unlike the other ones which always used Android, this one actually runs the
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mobile desktop environment, which is obviously mobile and is debut and mobile edition.
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However, this is not arm-based, this is actually Intel-based, so one of the things is that
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you actually are getting almost a pure replica of your Linux desktop on a phone.
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Now, you cannot say it's on the website, you can actually install whatever disk through
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you want on it, anything that runs will theoretically run on this.
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There's a big problem with that though, some things certainly know and especially I would
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say Ubuntu are kind of set out so they're designed for touch screens.
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However, Linux Mint is my daily driver and just looking at this, there is not a chance
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I would like this squashed under 12 inch screen and use it with any level of accuracy.
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Of course, you've got the other issue there as well in that you're going to probably have
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to modify quite a bit, although Mobian probably does this for you, in that you think about
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all your top menus and things.
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Those are designed for most clicks, not finger presses, so that's something to think about,
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but it's something I would love to try out, so £631.75 at time, that's from junocomputers.com,
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as I said, links will be in the show notes.
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So now, for the ballast indulgence to myself, I would love to get a fair phone, so the
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current one is a fair phone 5 and this is available from fairphone.com and they actually do an
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offering which has the e-operating system, which is one that they're describing as a custom
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one that they've done for their own security and a sorry to ensure security and it's totally
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dig-uggled, there is no Google services or apps on that all, so that one actually found
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very interesting.
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Now, if you don't know about the fair phone, it's something that I would love to, but the
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problem is, my phones don't tend to last long, I work in a metal work room as my day-to-day
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life, and nine times out of ten, my phones get hit against something, they fall on my pocket,
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they hit against a metal floor, I hit them against the side of the centre, leth, and anvil,
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something of that, so nine times out of ten, my phones don't actually go loose support,
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instead, they actually are smashed, so I never buy anything much more than like the Moto e-phones,
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it's just purely because I won't spend any more than £150, why are you asking?
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Because I really have a phone more than six months, that's why, so at £500.99, this
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okay if you're used to a Samsung Spine and a Samsung phone, that's cheap, however, not
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for me, that would be the equivalent of a £1200 a year if I were to switch to the
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fear phone, but it'd be one of those things that in an ideal world, I would love to get one.
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Now this leads me on the last section I've got is donations, so I've worked this out, now I've
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got four donations that I'm going to mention, so according to what I've got left with a calculator,
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that is £89.83 each, I'm just going to split them evenly. Now the first one on my list would be
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the master on instance that I'm using, master.me.uk, however, that is not going to be what I would
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recommend, I would have definitely do, but I would say please consider supporting your master on
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instance if you use it and if you're a regular user of it, because of course all these things need
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money to run and very often they are a labour of love, so even if you're not expecting people to
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be making millions of them, but you just at least want the person who's running the instance,
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to actually be breaking even at the very least, if they make some money great, but if you happen,
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I mean okay, this is obviously fake money I'm using here, but I would encourage everybody just
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to go to that instance and just do something like putting a pound a month, I mean what is a
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pound a month, you cannot get a cup of tea or coffee for a pound a month, not in the UK anyway,
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you couldn't even get one for a pound, so I would highly recommend just doing that and even
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just these micro payments, if more people did them and we encourage more people to do them,
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people would be able to run these things without any loss, so that's great.
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Now the next one on my list is the open rights group, now you have been aware of them for
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quite a while, I haven't actually spoken to anybody actively knowing it from the open rights group,
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until I actually got a chance to speak to them, I don't camp, and so that's they're a great
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group in the UK, are we, but like the EFF in the US, these guys are UK based, they're lobbying
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more for things to be open and encouraging, I think shouldn't be hidden behind the
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the guys of proprietary and copyrighted software, so yeah I think they do good work.
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Next one I'm going to go on to is archive.org, so yes they do require donations and they
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are just now obviously at a bit of a low point because the pop-ups I would say, they're on the
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site at the top of the site, I'm getting more regular, actually my bad ones from my browser
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blog or pop-ups, but you can certainly even see them on that on the top of the website,
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so they are obviously struggling and it's something that I use a lot, purely because
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with Tuxjam, every one of our podcasts are on there, you're listening to HPR, HPR hosts and stuff
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on a source of files on archive.org, so it's something that's well worth supporting.
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And last but certainly not least, HPR hosting, the HPR is, the hosting is provided by an honest host,
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however that is there, I'll link for you to click on on the donate area where it goes to
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an honest host.com and it's actually specifically for the HPR hosting costs, so can I please
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actively encourage everybody to actually go and support this. Now there, so that's my 2000,
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that's me, spainted to the penny, but what would you spend your 2000 on?
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So if you think that this is something that you could talk about, please do make a show and
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also be in the scene to actually hear, especially for me, I'd be in the scene to hear what things
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other people would support and we have donations, so I had what did I have there, three products and
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four causes that I would donate to. Now remember, this isn't kind of, this is exclusively
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technical to kind of keep adventures to hackers. I'm not saying this is what I would definitely go
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and spend my last two grand on, no, of course not, but if I was given 2000 pound that had to be
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specifically technical, this is what I would do. So this is Keri signing off and tune into model for
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another episode of hacker public radio. You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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at hackerpublicradio.org. Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcast, click on our contribute link to find out how easy it
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leads. Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive,
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and our sings.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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