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2563 lines
178 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1152
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Title: HPR1152: 2012-2013 Hacker Public Radio New Year Show Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1152/hpr1152.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 20:07:32
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---
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Music
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And we started up again and you're chaining back into part three of what is Haka
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Public Radio's New Year show and that's it, Karil.
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The main problem with us wishing people in North Korea a happy New Year is that they
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won't be able to hear us.
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And I hope they release the source code to their Linux distribution and they're currently
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violating GPL.
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When you read flag, is that what you're talking about?
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I think it's red something.
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I thought the red flag was Chinese, but it's a red star, that's a Chinese.
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Oh right, that's it, yeah.
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Which sounds like a great arcade game, doesn't it, Red Star OS?
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I think the Red Star Army was the bad guys in that Game Boy game.
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I think it was what it was called now, though.
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I've got actually red flag on an actual tiny little atom that I bought just Haka on
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anything else put on.
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For Linux, that's the most commercial version of Linux that I've ever seen because I think
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you have to pay to get the repositories.
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Red flag or red star?
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I mean, this, this, this one that they're, the repose for the version that's on there
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are most percated because you go to update, you can't do anything.
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And if you hit their website, you can't, you can't get any help on anything unless you
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subscribe.
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I think red flag was a red hat clone for China.
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Yeah, it could just be like the RHN network or something that you need to either uninstall
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or, yeah, pay to play.
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You can just see Bradley Cooper being overjoyed at being given North Korea as this year's
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assignment.
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Right.
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North Korea's GPL violations that year, that's your target.
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They just need to get Class II to switch it up the red hat and celebrate a centauss.
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Yeah, yeah.
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So Jonathan, um, white man had a follow up question for you and he was an, and actually
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I had a question relating to his, but he wants to know if you prefer a, an accessible
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GUI environment to a command line, only environment or, or would you rather have just command line
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only, but there aren't all the, uh, all the applications you need.
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Yeah, that's a good question.
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Huh, I've, I've tried to do strictly command line stuff, but like with E-links or like
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links and stuff, the problem with that is if there's like logins on websites or like
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JavaScript and stuff and none of that works with like E-links or links.
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So that's one problem.
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I could get by with like, you know, a mail client like Alpine or mutt or whatever, I could
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use that, um, pigeon as a command line version called Finch.
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So everything in pigeon works in Finch from the command line.
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So I could probably do most things from the terminal, but you know, unfortunately there
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are some applications that are strictly like GUI based.
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So kind of stuck using the GUI, I personally wouldn't care.
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I wouldn't use whatever I could get worked on the fastest on.
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So if I could get my workflow to strictly command line stuff and not have to do GUI stuff,
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I would totally do it.
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But it does seem to be potential there.
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I mean, if you look at the way we now put in virtual machines, uh, as heads for the
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cloud, um, is there potential there to make accessible, um, tech work spaces as, as
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cloud environments?
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Hmm, yeah, I guess there would be at some point.
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You could essentially access a headless environment, like you were saying.
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I can see a potential in that.
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I shall make a point of, uh, bringing that up, uh, when I get my feet under the type
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of the company, I'll make a mention of that to join because, uh, this seems to be
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light to you there, doesn't it?
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Yeah, definitely.
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Is there a distro or a sonar or a distro that you can just pop a CD into a headless
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machine and plug in a keyboard in the set of headphones and, and go to work?
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Yes.
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I believe, uh, I believe the Ubuntu 1204 and 1210, I, for a while, they were requiring
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that a monitor was plugged in.
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Like if you put the disk in, it wouldn't boot up, but I think as of 12 or 1210, you can
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put a disk in, it'll boot off the disk, even if there's an monitor plugged in and, you
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know, you'll hear orca talking and you can just walk right through it.
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I think that you might have better success with, uh, Puppy actually, because Puppy is compatible
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with all the, um, Ubuntu repositories, um, but it's designed to work off a USB disk.
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Um, so you, that might be an easier route.
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Yeah, that's right.
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You can try that.
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And, and we're talking about like a server here, not a desktop computer is what I was
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asking about.
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Oh, um, hmm, I guess there would be a way I could implement a server kind of distribution
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where, because I, I know the Debian installer is, uh, really accessible.
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So I probably have to figure the way I had to like tie in the Debian installer.
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I mean, if I was going to do that, I guess I would just build a total Debian, like server-based
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distro with the talking installer and be a lot easier than to try and take a Debian
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installer and tie it into good, why does it matter?
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Why does it matter?
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I don't understand the question, like, if you can get something installed, then you can
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turn it into a server.
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I mean, who cares if it's got LXDE running in the background, is that taking that many
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resources?
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Yeah, probably.
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I think LXDE takes up like 35 megs or something.
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No, I didn't mean to give you a task, John, then I was just wondering if it existed.
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Uh, not to my null.
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I get, I guess the best bet were to take a, uh, as of the Debian Weezy, uh, net installs.
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If you did that, there's an accessible installer net.
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So you could just get the net install of Weezy and build up your own server right from
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that, if you want to go about that way.
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Okay.
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Yeah, no, I, no, I, I thought X was fairly heavy, though the client too was why I was asking.
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Yeah, that's a good point.
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Yes, I don't know.
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You know, I, for a while, I sort of thought the same thing, and then I, I was talking to
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Red Hat back when we had a Red Hat, uh, license or whatever, um, and it seemed like
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all the, the support people kind of assumed that you were running X, you know, like every
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call I would make, they'd be like, go to this window or something.
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And I was like, uh, don't exactly have that.
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So I don't know.
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Kind of surprised me.
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And ever since then, I've, I've kind of, uh, on, on a lot of the, like, the desktop machines
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that are acting as servers, I go ahead and install X just, just so it's there.
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And it doesn't seem to bother me.
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So Clot 2, when you called in, did they refer to you as Mr. Clot 2?
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No, no, they, they didn't.
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Mr. 2.
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Yeah, Mr. 2.
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Did you say chivaly?
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Did you say chivaly and get transferred to someone with a minimum knowledge of two programming
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languages?
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Yeah, I've had issues with, with that.
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What about, how to feedback, um, is that going to be usual to you at all?
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Yeah, it's actually pretty useful on, like, an Android phone where, like, you know, you
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drag in your, uh, finger across the screen and it lets you know, like, hey, you're kind
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of, like, it vibrates when it lets you know you're kind of in a different region.
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So it'll, it'll read to you what you're schooling across as your fingers going across
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the screen, but also will give you a little feedback of the phone vibrating or whatever
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letting you know, hey, this is a new region of the phone that you're on now.
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Maybe I just heard it wrong.
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Did you just say it lets you go now?
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Exactly.
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That's beautiful.
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Yeah, I, um, we had a, we had a show, I think it was the accessibility show, right?
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Where someone came on and she said her brother was deaf and he couldn't feel his phone
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buzzing anymore because of the stupid little haptic vibrators instead of the actual spinning
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motor with a weight on it.
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Yeah, exactly.
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Maybe that could be a nice, uh, hacking project for, um, Raspberry Pi if he could, um,
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get some low breeze for haptic feedback into, into Pi as well.
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Clot 2, you have like a, a mobile like a raspberry Pi, don't you?
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No, I'm, I'm working my way there.
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I'm, I'm looking at all my options, but I've not actually implemented that yet.
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But I'm not, that's not a project I've forgotten about.
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He's something we were talking about a year ago, the feedback motors.
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I don't know, 50 and 50, what, what about them?
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Oh, uh, on, on the New Year's podcast a year ago, wasn't this something that came up,
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the, how, how to create feedback motors, what we, what we could use, uh, uh, you know,
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could you, could you take one of the little motors out of the vibrating, uh, uh,
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razors or something like that to build one?
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I don't know what we talked about last year.
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I was drinking.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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I don't know if you can remember that.
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Caught to, when was it that, uh, you were working on Red Hat stuff because I've talked to
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Red Hat support recently and they didn't expect that I was running X on any of the servers
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I was working on.
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It was almost exactly a year ago.
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And also I only ever dealt with like the first tier support.
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So I don't know if you, we had a very basic academic license.
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So we got, I feel like we got people, and I've said this before,
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it felt like I was talking to people, it felt like I was talking to myself.
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Like they knew exactly as much as I did.
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It was really kind of interesting and kind of cheered me up because I was like,
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I could be working at Red Hat.
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I know, I, I know that much about Linux at this point.
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Nice.
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So were they, were they just assuming that you had a rack of servers with a KVM switch on it?
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Or what, what, I don't know.
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I didn't exactly ask what they imagined I was doing, but that's kind of how it felt.
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Yeah.
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That's, that's weird because I've run into managing servers remotely,
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just like in systems engineering, where I would just SSH into it and work on it that way.
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And I figured that that was the normal way that most people did it.
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Yeah. Yeah.
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That's what I thought.
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You know, I mean, that's how I manage my servers and that's kind of the,
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the little bit of training on servers that I, the formal training that I've had.
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That's that, that was the assumption there as well.
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So I was really surprised when they kept like literally two or three phone calls that I made.
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That it was, it was very consistent.
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They would always refer to, you know, where, where to go in the GNOME desktop,
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to find that system setting or the system config, you know, thing.
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And I was like, well, I don't have X, but I'll, I'll bring that up, you know,
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in incurses or whatever.
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So yeah, I was, I was a little bit surprised by it myself.
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Well, I think that the thing there is that the red hat,
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when they actually offer their training, actually shows you how to do everything
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under the GNOME desktop and X, whereas those was who've actually been admitting
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for a while, actually always do everything from the command line and through a shell.
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And so, you know, it's really, depending on what level of support you get,
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it's going to depend on what they think your level of knowledge is and that's going
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to basically dictate how they actually handle your stuff, especially if you have a support
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contract that you actually have an account representative and stuff like that.
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They're not going to assume that you're running an X server on your server.
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Yeah. And like I, I, I know that I got, I was at the bottom run for, for support,
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for sure. Like I just, I got that, I mean, they were very, they were great.
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I would have renewed the license if it had been up to me, because they always had,
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like, they would always have that one idea that I hadn't had yet, or they would,
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they would know about one tool that I didn't know about, you know, so it was definitely worth it.
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And it was great. I really enjoyed it, but I definitely felt like I was getting people
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who were just barely ahead of me in their knowledge.
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One thing to do with Red Hat, this is a little hint for anybody who has like a basic
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contract or anything. If you run a sauce report and attach that to any ticket that
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you open with them for their support, that will actually get you a little bit further
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with them, because as soon as that's there, they're going to try to analyze that.
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And that might help you get past this. Oh, do you have X install type thing?
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Cool. Yeah, this was me interfacing with Red Hat as an engineer for corporation.
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So I'm guessing that this wasn't level one support or lower level.
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Whichever way you want to go on the support chain.
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Yeah. We had two, we had two licenses.
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One was the, the, just the really, really super basic one that was for one building.
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And then in the other building, I had it licensed just the academic one,
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which was like, I think self-support only so you could sign into the knowledge base.
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I don't think I could make calls.
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So I got it, those were the two levels I was at.
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I never, never really got elevated anything beyond that.
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And that's fine with me, because if I'd had to go higher than that, then that meant
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my problem was very serious. It was always just silly stuff that I'd overlooked.
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You didn't just, every time you talk to them, be like, so you're still using RPM, huh?
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It wasn't just that every time.
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Did I troll them? No, I did not.
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I chose not to do that.
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Not so much trolling. It's more of a griefing thing, you know, but you guys,
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you people, you people have, you have RPM issues that I've never had.
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I mean, I just, I don't have that experience.
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I don't have that negative, uh, coral, uh, that negative association with RPM.
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I just hasn't happened to me.
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I've run into problems in the past and, uh, I just recently after hearing your,
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uh, podcast about, uh, Slack, where I give it a try.
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And it's been really pleasant, especially knowing, uh, about all those Slack builds.
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And once you get everything up and running, it's pretty good.
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I like the fact that it has like a base install of all the packages you need to
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basically get the work done from the beginning.
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So getting the Slack builds up and running doesn't require you to go download
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and install all the other stuff.
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Yeah, I, I mean, and that solves your RPM issue too.
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But yeah, I mean, I, I love, I think with Slack builds on, and, and, and
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Slackware being such a robust installation in the first place, you're,
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you're pretty set up pretty quickly from the get go.
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I, I like their model a lot.
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That was a two to two to Slackware.
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I wouldn't be here even because that's, that was the very first distro I ever found.
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Like 12 years ago.
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I started out on soos, but it ended up being so unstable.
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Then I found Slackware and it just booted up right to the shell.
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And I was sort of forced to learn how to do the command line, how to compile
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packages and do most of the, the stuff from the command line and it even
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configure X and all that back then, it was problems with audio.
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So I had to try to configure also the right way.
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And only would able to have one audio stream working at the same time.
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So it was, uh, get your hands, uh, you know, dirty doing all the stuff,
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but you learned a lot.
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I came through an original route.
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I came through the, um, lint spy route.
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That's where we're going to empire.
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No, not really.
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Oh, yeah, Sandra or whatever it is.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Yeah.
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So you liked it enough to stick with Linux, I guess.
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How'd you like it?
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Like in general?
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And they, they had some of the ideas like they, um,
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uh, their repositories were all set up through a web interface,
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uh, long before that was popular, um, so they got into the app store idea,
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which made, um, uh, making it usable, very easy, um, uh,
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and that was before a bunch who went quite some mainstream and that's where
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I went to after, um, lint spy started, uh, collapsing.
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Yeah, see, now this is an interesting question that you bring up because, um,
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like, I mean, I think that idea is great.
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Having the repository interface be like, I don't know, web based or,
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at least look web based, like, you know, pretty with big buttons and icons and
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text that you can read.
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I have yet to find a repository interface that I think is worth any good.
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You know, I mean, I would much rather deal with repositories on the command
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line than ever deal with any of the gooey ones that I've, I've seen so far.
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Is it just me or am I just not looking in the right place?
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How do people feel about that?
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What about synaptic?
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Oh, my gosh, I hate that.
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I hate synaptic.
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Really?
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Really?
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Yeah, maybe I haven't used it lately.
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But I mean, my only memory of it is that it would have, you know,
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you would search for something that would bring up a bunch of things that were
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not relevant as the top hits and you'd click on them and they'd just, like,
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no pretty icons for the new user to kind of like, yeah, that's what I want.
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A word processor.
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I know that's a word processor because there was a piece of paper on it and a pin.
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You know, I don't know.
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It just didn't strike me as visually fun.
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Mints for three more.
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It's just a synaptic is just always seems slow to me.
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Of course, probably it's because my low bandwidth because the first thing it does
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before you before it even comes up is do an update.
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But I have the same experience as claw two.
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I never could find what I wanted it.
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I was, was a lot better off if I didn't know what it was.
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I wanted to install to Google search and find the package and then just do it through app
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yet.
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Okay.
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Now, but what you said there, Clature didn't make sense to me because you said that
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dealing with repositories in the graphical user environment was problematic for you.
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And that's, I think that's why everybody said synaptic because dealing with,
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you know, repose there is great.
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But you're actually talking about looking for software in the repositories.
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And that's maybe a little bit of a different story.
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Oh, I'm, yeah, no, I'm an inter, yeah, I'm in browsing repositories.
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Are you saying you thought I meant adding and removing repositories?
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Yeah, adding, removing and managing them is pretty easy and synaptic.
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Sorry.
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Yes, you're right.
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I agree with you.
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Yeah, no, I meant browsing.
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Oh, yeah, probably more specifically.
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I'm really talking for that mythical new user who I guess I'll never actually have to deal
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with, but I still think I will.
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Oh, yeah, then I think Ubuntu's got it.
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They're, they're, I forget what it's even called.
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I haven't used it in a while, but is that it?
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Yeah, for browsing, that might be the best one.
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I meant, I was going to say Mint has taken the software center and I think there's is nicer.
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Simply for the fact that it's less complicated, it's less, you know, they've simplified the
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idea and they've baked it down to something which is much less complicated at face value.
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Okay, I'll have to look at Mint and I guess Ubuntu's just, I'm just always curious to see
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these.
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Yeah, I wouldn't bother Clattery.
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I don't think you're the target audience mate.
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Yeah, you're probably right.
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So, but let me ask you though, because you said you'd rather have the command line version,
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but how is that help the new user?
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Because you're not going to get icons or anything there either.
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Yeah, I guess I'm speaking as two different people.
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I'm speaking as the sort of nagging conscience thinking, oh, we need to have pretty things
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for new users and then what I actually want for myself, which is completely the opposite.
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So, yeah, you're right, that makes no sense.
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Yeah, I think I find that the best browser for me is Firefox or Iceweezer when I'll
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just search for a package on the Debbie and they've got a pretty good search online
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search for their repos and then I'll read the description there and then I'll just install
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it on the command line.
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Oh, that's an interesting way to do it.
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Sort of split it into two.
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One thing that I don't think any of the software managers or package managers or anything
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you've done, and we found this out in tech and coffee earlier this week is equivalency
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to Windows and Mac popular software.
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The classic example that popped up was if you were looking for a GUI HTML, a whizzy
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week kind of thing, and trying to find one of those that's equivalent to the popular ones
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like Dreamweaver or whatever you use in the Windows environment, that's very tricky and nobody's
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really got a handle on that yet as far as I can see.
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But that's what I'm saying, is that not the job of the package manager or the GUI wrapping
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around the package manager, I think that's small, the job of the social web and people
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recommending it, and so you're just going to Google.
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That's fine if you're hooked into those networks.
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Yeah, I think the whole idea, that's one of the reasons for Ubuntu doing their software
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center thing is to actually go ahead and give the newer users the quick way to find the
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most equivalent applications to fit their needs, and I kind of have some issues with that
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in some respects, because I think a lot of times there are applications that they're promoting
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over other ones that maybe aren't as good, but by the same token, I think that's the
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general idea, and maybe that's the right thing for a distro-like Ubuntu to do.
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Yeah, possibly.
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I don't know how their algorithms work for how they rate their software, but is it just
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done within Ubuntu software center, or do they pull data sources from elsewhere, I don't
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know?
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Well, it's always going to be a wisdom of soul, I think, because which one is the correct?
|
|
Take the bog standard text editor issue, which do you recommend as the best Unix text editor,
|
|
and then you get into the whole fi emax blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
|
|
I think.
|
|
Yeah, but I think that's slightly different, because your average new user would imagine
|
|
would use something like jet it or mouse pad or something, they're not going to be looking
|
|
for them, are they, or are they, I don't know?
|
|
No, they're not, even GVM, they couldn't handle, I mean, it's just not something that a new
|
|
user does.
|
|
Actually, there is a version of them that is designed for general users that doesn't
|
|
actually force you to use the command line or anything like that.
|
|
You can actually do everything through shortcut keys, I forget what the name of it is, but
|
|
it is actually there, so it could be used.
|
|
I say the same thing about emax, those sound chaser, and because there's, I mean, gooey
|
|
for emax, it can be done, but I just think people, I don't know, I think there's a lot
|
|
of just preconceived things of how things should work, and if it doesn't work that way, then
|
|
they can't deal with it.
|
|
Yeah, it's surprising the issues that new users have.
|
|
I mean, I introduced a friend of mine who was a long time Windows user to move onto a
|
|
little while ago, and he just wanted to get a Linux distribution working on an old laptop
|
|
that he had, so we could have a poke around, and one of the buffers he hit into straight
|
|
away was with his scanner.
|
|
He wanted to scan a few old photographs that he had in, and he said, my scanner doesn't
|
|
work with it, and I said, how do you know it's not working?
|
|
And he says, well, I plugged it in, and I couldn't see any of the driver's packages installed,
|
|
and I couldn't see the scanner interface, and I couldn't get across to him.
|
|
You don't need one.
|
|
You just open the, well, probably GIMP would probably be the way he wants to go.
|
|
You just open GIMP, and just grab the scanner from there, and it's all integrated, and
|
|
there is no middleware, and there is no thing.
|
|
So it's not necessarily a problem with Linux, it's just a different way of working that needs
|
|
to be explained to maybe a little bit more clearly in the GUI.
|
|
Oh, I think you've just summed up most issues with Linux.
|
|
I mean, at this point, I mean, I honestly don't, I mean, the fact that we all use Linux
|
|
all the time, I don't think there are that many problems with Linux as we're using a user
|
|
environment at this point, it's just, it's literally just that people grow up on other
|
|
stuff and can't adjust to the idea that it might be different on another platform.
|
|
It's actually hurting Linux in this case because it is too good and you don't need drivers
|
|
externally.
|
|
That was the weird thing, the fact that it hasn't got a whole raft of middleware that you
|
|
have to install to get things working, it just could become very alien to them, and this
|
|
was an argument I was having about recommendations on packaging, you know, where you get the
|
|
little works with Mac symbols on boxes and works with Windows 7 and works with Windows 8 and
|
|
stuff.
|
|
This is, it doesn't, that's the thing, what you actually have when they say supported
|
|
by Windows or made for Windows is we've got the middleware hack fixes in the box.
|
|
So why don't they make works with Linux on it because that's if you're lucky because
|
|
nowadays they don't even do that, they don't do it in the box, you still have to go to
|
|
the website and get all the fixes that they've discovered since they shipped the thing.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely.
|
|
And you just go, no, it doesn't work with Windows and you can hopefully get it hacked together
|
|
to work with Windows 8.
|
|
Yeah, I spent a good two hours over Christmas break discovering what you're talking about
|
|
right now, something that advertises itself to work on a computer platform that I don't
|
|
use and it just would not, it didn't work.
|
|
I actually bought a raid card about four or five months ago and it said, it said that
|
|
it supported Linux 2.6 at a minimum, it was like Linux 2.6 plus and I just had plugged
|
|
it in and I just booted to Ubuntu server and it worked immediately and I was just like,
|
|
oh, and like I was sort of taking a back that they had actually, you know, thought to make
|
|
that work just out of the box.
|
|
Yeah, but I work on the other day, creative one and it actually says just works with Linux.
|
|
It doesn't even have a qualification about, you know, which distro you need or anything
|
|
just as works with Linux and plugged it in and it works with Linux.
|
|
It's lovely.
|
|
That's your all on about how brilliant Linux is, I spent a whole afternoon trying to
|
|
configure a printer from my mother and I know who was on Mint and I could not get the
|
|
thing to work and beat my head against the wall.
|
|
What brand of printer was it?
|
|
Well, actually what happened was her printer was under the desk and every time I plugged
|
|
it in, there was a pop-up coming up in the screen and the pop-up was gone by the time
|
|
I came back.
|
|
So by the time I finished it, all I had to do was press the print button, everything
|
|
was already configured, new where I was, everything was enabled for, it was just the pop-up
|
|
button that disappeared that microseconds longer than it took me to get from under the
|
|
desk back up to see what was happening on the screen.
|
|
Actually, which version of Mint we use in there, Ken?
|
|
I have no idea.
|
|
I was going to say because I am becoming a massive evangelist for Linux Mint because it's
|
|
the latest version especially is just brilliant.
|
|
They've introduced this new thing on the little, I don't know whether you're supposed to
|
|
call it a taskbar or a tray or whatever you call it these days.
|
|
It's, they've changed a little thing in the notifications where all the notifications
|
|
don't just disappear once they've gone through Debus.
|
|
They actually sit there, almost like an email inbox, so that if you've missed a notification
|
|
you can click on the notifications and it lists all the ones that you haven't acknowledged.
|
|
It's brilliant.
|
|
I think you could do that in KDE already.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That's probably where they got the inspiration for it's only annoying.
|
|
No, it's not.
|
|
But they've now got it.
|
|
Fight, fight, fight.
|
|
You and your cute razor stuff, you're all anti KDE now, that's a nice feature.
|
|
No, it's terrible.
|
|
Well then turn it off, it's in the config panel thing, system settings.
|
|
Or could I just add it to a database that I don't need on anymore?
|
|
Yeah, well, yeah, there's that.
|
|
There's an alternate one that works more like the one on Unity that you could install.
|
|
They basically made it whole modular, so you could replace the whole notification system
|
|
for a different one if you want.
|
|
And the other thing we've meant that I was going to say was when I installed this latest
|
|
version is it 14 now, but yeah, I have a HB wireless printer and as soon as I booted
|
|
up for the first time, it just automatically configured the printer on the wireless network.
|
|
I was like, wow, that's very cool.
|
|
How did you handle the passwords for your wireless network or is it unsecured?
|
|
Well, I was connected, my main PC is connected to the wireless network on Hardline, so obviously
|
|
it's got a cat5 cable into the router.
|
|
The printer was already connected to the wireless network securely.
|
|
So when it found another thing on the network, it just said, oh, there's a printer, lovely,
|
|
you can go have that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, that's what I mean.
|
|
How did you get your printer to connect wirelessly with the password?
|
|
Because every wireless printer I've tried to hook up, it wants you to use some Microsoft
|
|
program to put your key in.
|
|
This one had one of those old, so add a red button on the router and a red button on the
|
|
actual printer as well.
|
|
Oh, that thing, yeah.
|
|
Why if I protected setup?
|
|
That's the baby.
|
|
Isn't that thing supposed to be terribly insecure?
|
|
Yes, it is.
|
|
I actually use it to crack people's Wi-Fi all the time, whenever they lose their stuff
|
|
or can't get to it.
|
|
Is that the thing that shows up when you're out and about and it says HP setup or something
|
|
like that?
|
|
Yes, it's always.
|
|
Yeah, okay.
|
|
Is Linux meant still a derivative of Ubuntu or are they transitioning away from that
|
|
more?
|
|
Both.
|
|
They have their main distro is still based on Ubuntu.
|
|
They have a side distro as well, which is the Debian addition.
|
|
I thought the Debian addition was kind of dead with the main dev of that moving over
|
|
and running a solace OS.
|
|
Your information sounds like it might be newer than mine then.
|
|
I've not looked at the Debian addition for a little while now.
|
|
Yeah, I've heard that, I mean, I've known a couple of people who have tried the Debian
|
|
version and by and large, they didn't seem overly impressed with it.
|
|
I think it seems like it's a safer bet to go with the Ubuntu based one.
|
|
Well, yeah, I mean, the main thing I certainly found with the Debian addition is I couldn't
|
|
find what I added to Debian that wasn't already in Debian.
|
|
So if you want a Debian addition, just get Debian.
|
|
Philip, would you like to talk?
|
|
Hello.
|
|
Why would that even run a distribution based on Debian?
|
|
That isn't Debian.
|
|
I don't know, really.
|
|
Maybe added Polish Ubuntu is based on Debian.
|
|
If you wanted a better default, so different defaults, different installer, if you wanted
|
|
a different sort of package, if you wanted KD as a default desktop, or maybe if you wanted
|
|
maybe a little more current KDE packages, because Debian is a little slow with that.
|
|
And the 4.0 transition was kind of rough, so you wanted the latest one.
|
|
It might want to have one that has the Debian core packages, but KDE has its own different
|
|
repository that's part of your distro.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Someone, I think they emailed, it was an email message to me, and they were basically saying,
|
|
thank you for working all crunch bang and stuff.
|
|
And they said something which kind of stuck with me, and that was the Debian, it's an absolutely
|
|
fantastic system.
|
|
It's almost as if it's a communist state, and they imprisoned all their artists, and
|
|
basically, you know, so what you get with Debian is pretty much what the upstream want
|
|
you to have.
|
|
They do very, very few changes, so, you know, in a similar fashion to how Ubuntu started
|
|
and they just made Ubuntu look nice and aimed at users, I think that's what you get downstream
|
|
from Debian.
|
|
You get that little bit of added polish, which is you may be lacking Debian, but I don't
|
|
think I'm not saying that as a negative to Debian, because that's what I love about Debian.
|
|
I think it's just...
|
|
It's sort of like a rock that the rest of the community is tied to, isn't it?
|
|
Yeah, I think so, definitely.
|
|
And then how in some of that is Debian any different than Slackware from what I hear from
|
|
a lot of, you know, die hard Slackware guys that, you know, or even, you know, Slackware
|
|
more so in some cases that it's even more vanilla than Debian.
|
|
Yes, Slackware is pretty much vanilla, but I use KDE and I like the oxygen looking
|
|
feel and the air theme for the plasmoid, so I'm pretty happy with the way it looks.
|
|
To be honest, I don't think you can have too many rocks to be tied to, you know, it's
|
|
kind of reassuring that there are these very stable distros and, but importantly, more
|
|
than one of them, so you've got different directions to go in if you want to.
|
|
But I guess the biggest point I'll come back to with Linux meant for me is, why do these
|
|
guys keep tying their ship to Ubuntu?
|
|
I mean, it just seems like more trouble than it's worth with as much as they're starting
|
|
to separate themselves from Ubuntu, unless it's just they don't have the developer resources
|
|
to do some of the things that just letting Ubuntu handle form is easier.
|
|
I think that's right, but I think that's maybe a little bit harsh on Ubuntu in that we
|
|
have a tendency, I think, in the community to forget just how much good work they do underneath
|
|
the interface. So if you take Unity out of the equation and then look at the sum of what
|
|
Ubuntu adds to Linux as a whole, that's a very big body of work that needs to be done.
|
|
I think that's why they do it is because they want to create an every man system, which
|
|
goes in a slightly different direction at the interface level, but still has all the
|
|
good work that Ubuntu does.
|
|
I mean, just install Ubuntu Server and you'll see that, I mean, that's a great piece
|
|
of software.
|
|
Amen.
|
|
Debian is a great piece of software on the server.
|
|
That's true.
|
|
I'm kind of a fan of CentOS on the server side of things.
|
|
Yeah, I just like my operating system to be less binary in that.
|
|
What do you do if Microsoft happens to distribute what you want and need, but you haven't got
|
|
any choices if you hooked into that toolchain and it doesn't do what you want or need?
|
|
That's what it's all about, freedom from that.
|
|
Going back to the Mint Ubuntu thing, I think I'm not sure how much of it stems from
|
|
the Ubuntu installer because I think the Ubuntu installer is ubiquity.
|
|
That's probably one of the better installers on the market and I think they do a really
|
|
good job at that, so I'm not sure how much of Mint being based on Ubuntu is purely
|
|
down to the fact that the install is so good.
|
|
Yeah, both installers I've found have been extremely good and they're still pushing on
|
|
that front as well.
|
|
Yeah, they're constantly developing ubiquity and it's in comparison to, because for Crunchbang,
|
|
I use the standard Debian installer, so it doesn't run for way that.
|
|
You can run from a live environment, but it's best not to, let's put it like that.
|
|
In comparison to ubiquity, I would imagine for a new user, it looks quite clunky.
|
|
It's not.
|
|
It's really powerful and you can do lots of stuff and you can precede it and make it
|
|
pretty much doing anything you want, but from a user standpoint, I don't think there's
|
|
any real comparisons.
|
|
I think ubiquity is head and shoulders above pretty much everything else.
|
|
Out there.
|
|
I think the Mint developers probably know that and that's why they're happy to stick with
|
|
Ubuntu.
|
|
I've also got the added proprietary stuff.
|
|
In comparison to Debian, things like installing Nvidia cards on Debian can be a bit of a
|
|
pain in the ass for some people, especially new users, but Ubuntu, they've pretty much
|
|
got it down to a fine art where it's just a couple of clicks of a button and it's done
|
|
for you.
|
|
There's also one thing that gets underrated and forgotten about is the wooby thing from
|
|
Ubuntu as well.
|
|
That's brilliant.
|
|
If you're trying to convert a Windows enthusiast over that, I think it's very easy.
|
|
I think they've stopped.
|
|
They've stopped actually stopped developing that, I think.
|
|
They've stopped developing it, but it still just works.
|
|
It does do a very good job.
|
|
For anyone who's wanting to check things out, I just point a virtual box anymore.
|
|
I've just kind of started telling people that who have an interest in trying it, that
|
|
I think a dual boot is kind of a dangerous situation to get involved in.
|
|
I've been a fan of the dual boot.
|
|
If you set it up properly, that's the whole thing.
|
|
It's kind of tricky to get it all set up.
|
|
I have been burned on a dual boot because of printer drivers once.
|
|
I've just, I've worn, you know, I just think virtual box is a better choice.
|
|
I would agree with that mainly.
|
|
I've just put one little caveat in that I've only ever been burned on dual boot when
|
|
I've tried to install a Ubuntu first or, you know, Linux first and then Windows second.
|
|
And that sort of indicates to me the benefits of a Linux system because you, Linux will
|
|
play nicely with virtually anything else which has to be installed, whereas Windows doesn't
|
|
want to know that it's been installed alongside everything else.
|
|
You have to sort of go in around it.
|
|
What about big Windows updates?
|
|
Does that ever clobber your...
|
|
I'll tell people to do for a dual boot is to put a second hard drive in their machine
|
|
and to use the boot option or the boot from option through their BIOS.
|
|
Yeah, that's probably a really good alternative if they have a second drive back.
|
|
You also install to SD card which works pretty well as SD card.
|
|
I've got a Windows 7 installation on an SSD playing alongside a mint installation perfectly fine
|
|
and haven't had any problems with that yet.
|
|
It's just if you try and tell it and go through all the, you know, the registration key and
|
|
license key installations on a new Windows installation where there's already a Linux installation,
|
|
that's where you get the problems.
|
|
Sounds like the problem isn't dual booting but Windows.
|
|
That's what I was alluding to, definitely.
|
|
That's one thing I definitely do not miss like having to do with all those licenses and
|
|
registration.
|
|
I just never had that since using GNU Linux.
|
|
Hasn't everybody forgot about a live CD to we want to forget.
|
|
Oh no, I don't I love live CDs.
|
|
Yeah, me too, I absolutely need them, but the people I've dealt with are typically just
|
|
savvy enough that they understand how to do some things and a live CD the couple times
|
|
I put people in front of it, it kind of throws them because it's running a lot lower than
|
|
they think it should be and I've actually seen better performance running something inside
|
|
a virtual box than off a live CD and it gives them the option to be able to install things,
|
|
play with things and a little better than a virtual or than a live CD will.
|
|
Hey, Lord D, can you increase your mic volume just a little bit?
|
|
You're coming across very low, probably lower than me even.
|
|
Turn it all the way up to the level.
|
|
All I can do is try to eat the one a little better.
|
|
I use virtual box at work.
|
|
I've got a, the host machine is a Windows 7 machine and I run crunch banging a virtual
|
|
system on top of that.
|
|
I've got dual monitors and it works brilliantly.
|
|
In fact, if you didn't know otherwise you wouldn't, you'd be mistaken to think that it
|
|
runs on the bare metal, it's pretty quick, so I love virtual box.
|
|
I think it's brilliant.
|
|
Is that why I use Qemoo?
|
|
Yeah, that's what I use.
|
|
Yeah, I'll use that for testing crunch banging images, but I'm not self-finished burning
|
|
them.
|
|
Do you use a GUI wrapper around it or do you configure it directly?
|
|
It just runs for a shell script.
|
|
I just type it into the shell.
|
|
Does anyone remember KQEMU and whatever exactly happened to that whole thing exactly?
|
|
I think it's still around.
|
|
Yeah, pretty quickly.
|
|
I got used to all the line commands, although now they've changed them a little bit, but you
|
|
just get used to that and then you don't really need the GUI wrapper anymore.
|
|
Did you do a show on that or no?
|
|
I thought I did.
|
|
On the nightcast with Nightwise talking about Proxmox, I was just KQEMU was a kernel module
|
|
for QEMU that sped it up, and I just wondered if KQEMU became KVM or something, or if that's
|
|
something completely different.
|
|
Oh, yeah, yeah.
|
|
No.
|
|
QEMU can use KVM now, for sure.
|
|
I didn't know that's what you were.
|
|
I thought KQEMU was a GUI wrapper or something.
|
|
Now for sure, advertising break joints, virtual solutions can use KVM.
|
|
I thought you didn't work for them yet, Black Crow.
|
|
Starting early.
|
|
Early, that's just the worm.
|
|
I feel like we should forward this to whoever your manager is going to be in order to get
|
|
some points with you.
|
|
I was pitching to Airbus about how he could use virtualised toolchains to replace redundant
|
|
equipment.
|
|
I already got that one sorted.
|
|
Do you do like Unix stuff now at your current job, Black Crow or Linux or what?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I finished with Airbus on the 21st of December, and what I was doing then was using Unix
|
|
boxes to take surveys of all their licensing arrangements.
|
|
So I'd surveyed the entire company once every 15 minutes to see who was using what tools.
|
|
That's where it was before.
|
|
That is oddly similar to what I do, Black Crow.
|
|
Yeah, it's becoming a very popular field.
|
|
I mean, when you're talking about, say, a KTSE costing somewhere in the region of 5,000
|
|
pounds per seat per year, you have to know how many of them are being used.
|
|
Same by a rewatch, Jurassic Park.
|
|
Saw the scene where they said it's a Unix system.
|
|
Oh, yes.
|
|
That's actually the only part of Jurassic Park I've ever seen.
|
|
It was on YouTube.
|
|
You should watch it.
|
|
You should watch it.
|
|
I'd rather go back and watch the movie or read the book, I mean.
|
|
But what about the part where the philosopher actors open doors?
|
|
That's in the book as well.
|
|
We don't get to see it.
|
|
We actually had a lady called Sue who was deeply eccentric.
|
|
She just wandered around the place.
|
|
She's only about four foot high.
|
|
She just wandered around the place with a sort of hunchback, mumbling to herself, and
|
|
she was the IBM mainframe controller.
|
|
Oh, nice.
|
|
That's hilarious.
|
|
What did the mainframes run on, do you know?
|
|
Yeah, X, probably, maybe, I'm guessing.
|
|
Sue, carried them around on a back.
|
|
Yeah, I think that's what the hunch was.
|
|
And it was very strange.
|
|
It was like, oh, she keeps hold of the dinosaur enclosure.
|
|
She was like me.
|
|
Burned it up was a bit of a Unix, though.
|
|
Yeah, X.
|
|
I'm sure somebody will Google it from too busy writing scripts of the minute, but it
|
|
was an experimental version of Unix that they were running there.
|
|
If you're talking about in Jurassic, actually, I'm pretty sure that was irx.
|
|
They had a 3D file manager, that was a weird FSN, go to wikipedia.org, FSN, FoxTrots
|
|
here on November.
|
|
Wonder what they were using for the login manager.
|
|
Actually, if we're going to go old school, what was the system that they were running in
|
|
wall games with Matthew Broderick?
|
|
That film was on today, I think.
|
|
Oh, cool.
|
|
That was like a mainframe operating system, like a PDP operating system, I believe.
|
|
It was a one something, p slash pm or something like that.
|
|
Oh, CPM.
|
|
Well, okay.
|
|
So the machine that in Matthew Broderick's room is actually an old MSI, I am S-A-I,
|
|
8080 machine, which was just an S100 bus that you plug the CPU card into.
|
|
It's typically had an 8080 processor, and yeah, they did run CPM on them, which was,
|
|
which actually was a digital computing product at one point, and that's actually the operating
|
|
system that DOS was based on.
|
|
I've done going to geek heaven.
|
|
I am reading right here that it's actually called I Am DOS, the version in war games.
|
|
It's a modified version of CPM.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
Well, that could be.
|
|
One of my first, one of the first machines I ever worked on was actually one of those
|
|
MSI, 8080 boxes, and I got to play with the toggle switches on the front panel and
|
|
try to program it that way.
|
|
It was never successful, but it had fun trying to do it.
|
|
That's what's missing from computing these days is there's not enough switches and little
|
|
flashy lights.
|
|
I missed them.
|
|
One of the more interesting file system or file system managers I ever saw was actually
|
|
a version of the original doom, where you could run around and shoot things inside of
|
|
the game that represented files, and when you shot it, it would delete the file.
|
|
Can I just stop everyone just to say happy new year to China and Beijing, Hong Kong,
|
|
Manila, Singapore?
|
|
Happy new year, happy new year, China.
|
|
They have their own date system, so they don't apply, surely.
|
|
Yeah, actually, you're probably right.
|
|
Well, the new browser on this, this is great.
|
|
We've got to count down on one of our many monitors on our table.
|
|
Yeah, I think you guys don't have enough think pads.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Oh, yeah, we do like I think pads in this family.
|
|
I don't know where I saw this gag just going back to what we were talking about at night
|
|
off buttons and flashy lights, but there was a gag in the TV program somewhere.
|
|
They might have been, and they said, but if the serve guy stays in there like 24, 7, how
|
|
does he eat and somebody replied, oh no, he doesn't, he's just learned to photosynthesize
|
|
from LED lights.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
Awesome.
|
|
The CIT crowd.
|
|
Oh, is that it?
|
|
Was that it?
|
|
All right.
|
|
Now, all right.
|
|
So, if you guys used, I hate to bring it over to the Windows side, but there's been
|
|
something puzzling me forever, is back in probably 2001, 2002, before I'd even heard
|
|
the Linux, I bought a Windows computer and there was a program on there.
|
|
I think it was called Vizio, and when you opened it, everything kind of seems like it was
|
|
all red and line art, and I don't know, it seemed maybe it was a file, which I don't
|
|
know what that thing was.
|
|
I never figured out what the heck it was or what it was supposed to do.
|
|
Did anybody ever see that thing and know what that was?
|
|
That's still a news.
|
|
Yeah, it's a spreadsheet application, basically.
|
|
Really?
|
|
I thought it was for drawing a dog.
|
|
It's a dog.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
I got confused.
|
|
I think Vizicale, which is the old spreadsheet versus Vizio.
|
|
I use Vizio work.
|
|
It's really good for doing the diagrams, flow charts, stuff like that.
|
|
Does it save the open document format?
|
|
No, but in the latest version of Libra Office, we'll finally have Vizio support.
|
|
My personal opinion, Vizio, was an excellent application, open to version two, which coincidentally
|
|
was when Microsoft took it and turned into a big pile of fraud after that.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Goodbye.
|
|
I wonder if there was any coincidence.
|
|
For the people who use Vizio, how does something like DIA stack against it?
|
|
It's ugly compared to the, it works exactly in the same way.
|
|
It's actually easier to use.
|
|
The problem is, again, it's an entrant market now.
|
|
Everybody's got diagrams in Vizio, and the Vizio diagrams are tidier and, you know,
|
|
nice 3D, arty graphics, whereas the ones in DIA tend to be ugly, 2D, ugly ones.
|
|
Yeah, I agree with you.
|
|
I can't on that.
|
|
The reason is that they're starting to build some of those capabilities into Libra Office
|
|
as well, into the drawing app.
|
|
Does anybody use the new Collegra Office?
|
|
There's a review of it in this month, or the latest Linux format magazine.
|
|
I'll just turn to that, because I happen to have it here, surprisingly, and see what it
|
|
says about it.
|
|
I haven't used it, but I've been curious as to how they're doing, are you asking because
|
|
you tried it?
|
|
I've used it.
|
|
I actually kind of like it.
|
|
I think they finally made an interface that's designed around widescreens that they're
|
|
actually in use.
|
|
They have everything in a sidebar that is all accessible.
|
|
All the buttons are all there.
|
|
You could do quite a bit of interesting things with the text boxes and whatnot.
|
|
You could rotate things and drag on objects.
|
|
It has the basic supports for headers, footers, and page counts, that sort of thing.
|
|
I like it.
|
|
It also has good importing of the Microsoft formats, but it doesn't save to them.
|
|
I tried it not too long ago, and the thing just crashed and burned pretty hard on me, but
|
|
I haven't tried it since two or three updates ago.
|
|
The thing I'm most interested in is checking out author when it comes out.
|
|
That seemed like a really neat idea, basically creating a tool designed for authors to publish
|
|
ebooks.
|
|
It seems like Caligra is really positioning themselves not to be in office suite, but
|
|
a suite of tools for people doing creative endeavors instead.
|
|
Creta actually has their own foundation now.
|
|
I was going to say the Linux format has some very interesting conclusions when it comes
|
|
to office suite and Caligra in particular.
|
|
One of the sections of their review is on other tools, what else have they got?
|
|
Caligra has the most productivity apps.
|
|
It has plan for project management, which can create Gantt charts and flow for drawing
|
|
flow charts.
|
|
The latest addition includes an app for writing ebooks called author that's similar to
|
|
iBooks author, and Connectsport ePubs, besides a general purpose note-taking app called
|
|
BrainDump.
|
|
Well, ladies and gentlemen, it's time for me to call the end of my day already.
|
|
I will see whoever's around later this evening.
|
|
Bye, Lord Dave.
|
|
Take it easy, man.
|
|
See you later.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
Bye, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
Bye, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
Bye, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
See you later, Lord Dave.
|
|
Kate's pretty good, actually.
|
|
I use Jeanie.
|
|
I'm using Kate right now.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
I can't tell you what I use.
|
|
Speak out.
|
|
糨
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hi!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Hello!
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I should've never read my new year's one before, so...
|
|
I should've known it before, so...
|
|
But.
|
|
She can't promise me the colour.
|
|
I should've known it before, so...
|
|
I should've known it before, so...
|
|
I should've known it before, so...
|
|
to go upstairs. Are we going to be getting drunk later? What did you say? What did you say?
|
|
Are you going to be getting drunk later? No, we don't drink beer. Oh thank goodness. Did
|
|
you dad buy you fireworks? No, did I? Did I? It's only Ken Fallon that's the irresponsible
|
|
father in this chat room. I think we should have them too. As long as you let them off outside.
|
|
Ken is going to strap his kids to them. Sometimes the thought has crossed my mind.
|
|
Well we've got them champagne. Did you get champagne? We've got champagne. We got it when we got
|
|
marriage. We haven't opened it yet. If you have enough sparklers, you'll be surprised what you can do
|
|
with them. That was a conversation, killer. No, wait, who said that? Sorry, I missed
|
|
who's little lights lit up. It was me. Were you at Southeast Linux Fest that year? No.
|
|
But maybe that was a reference to something that happened that almost took a couple of lives,
|
|
I think. Someone had like 300 of them rubber banded together. Yes, I thought it would be a great
|
|
idea to light them. It was insane. You could also grind them up. Oh, oh, interesting. I wouldn't
|
|
listen. Would it? I was just turning into the Jolly Rogers cookbook. Yeah, I think so.
|
|
Might as well just buy a barrel of gunpowder. Yay. Well, if you grind them up, make sure you don't
|
|
create any sparks. So anti-static spray is a must. And make sure you're grounded.
|
|
Where does our wrist wrap? Did you get that kit? Make sure you're grounded.
|
|
Yeah, they're looking at me with it. You'll be grounded if you try any of this.
|
|
They're looking at me with their eyebrows raised, not knowing what you're talking about.
|
|
Good. Are they excited to be getting a little baby soon?
|
|
Yes, we are. How's mummy is she feeling any better? She's okay now.
|
|
What did Santa bring for Christmas?
|
|
I'm washing my sister's DS game. Leggo? Yes. Lots of Lego, didn't you?
|
|
Lots of Lego. We got Lego. We got Lego from Santa. I may have seen a photograph of it all.
|
|
Wow. Did you get a redberry pie? What?
|
|
No, but daddy did. Oh, you got to share. Well, I've got three of them now. So, you know, there's
|
|
always that option. One for each of the kids that you keep producing.
|
|
Did you get any new socks? Did you get any new socks? Yeah, I did too.
|
|
I got new socks too. I was thrilled. I got so many socks. I got wearing socks right now.
|
|
I got two. Oh, I am. In fact, I'm wearing socks. Becky bought me for Christmas.
|
|
They've got my fits on them. When we said she's not going to put on the socks.
|
|
I've got Philip, Waldorf and Statler socks. Oh, that's cool. That makes a lot of fun.
|
|
Family goi socks. I'll go back to you. You scoff, but socks is the tickle me Elmo of 2012.
|
|
Oh, I love, I'm not scoffing. I love socks. I go through socks at an alarming rate. I don't know,
|
|
I must be walking wrong. That I always wear out the heels and the toes. No, that's not my thing.
|
|
Oh, I got it. Okay. I'll try it. It's not too walking around barefoot with deserving camping.
|
|
Yeah, I do a lot of walking, but I feel like I must be walking incorrectly or something.
|
|
I don't know. I'm going to work on it this year. I got my new socks are completely synthetic,
|
|
and they seem to be lasting forever, so I asked for more of those for Christmas.
|
|
I bet that's it is the change of everything to cotton because I've got, I mean, I've got socks
|
|
from when I was in college and they're perfectly good, except all the elastics gone out of them.
|
|
But yeah, the ones I buy today seems like they last six weeks and I got to get another pair.
|
|
We'll ask how long it was since you went out of college.
|
|
25 years.
|
|
You are joking. You're wearing socks at 25 years old.
|
|
Where am I just having thrown them out there, but they're in the bottom, they're in the bottom of the
|
|
drawer for when I when I run out of good socks, then I get a pair of those out that the
|
|
one thing is that they want to slide on, but because the last is bad. But I'm still in it.
|
|
There are there's no holes in the bottom or anything like these these ones I buy now,
|
|
you know, I got to buy a new package of socks every six weeks, it seems like.
|
|
I'm still in telling jokes at 25 years old. There's nothing wrong with 25-year-olds stuff, you know.
|
|
You sure? There was a kickstarter for something called Socrates that uh,
|
|
well, it had um carbon fiber and um, what's that material um,
|
|
Kevlar. Kevlar woven in with it. So uh, the socks won't wear down.
|
|
Do you kids want to get down five-year-old socks next Christmas?
|
|
I don't think so. No, me neither.
|
|
Anyway, one of us is not doing this anymore.
|
|
Yeah, Karah is disappointed. Oh, okay.
|
|
Can I just tell you a very quick story that happened on Christmas Day?
|
|
The kids got a lot of clothes for Christmas and uh, we we went to church on on Christmas Day
|
|
morning and Amy went into and spoke to our minister and said, we're wearing all new clothes,
|
|
all except, what did you say? Pants. Awesome.
|
|
And she didn't say, she didn't say quietly like she did now, she shouted it out.
|
|
I'd go, oh my new pocket clothes except my niggas.
|
|
And I laughed when I was saying it.
|
|
That's been on camera. Emma, Becky took Emma to see, um,
|
|
each artist guide to the galaxy once in the cinema. And what does she say?
|
|
There was a, Emma was quite young at the time, was she about seven or eight?
|
|
And right at the end of the show, the film, he, he swears, he says something naughty.
|
|
And Emma said, he just said a swear word.
|
|
In a packed cinema. Brilliant. At the top of the lungs, probably.
|
|
I've had a mom, so yes.
|
|
So Dave, we've all been, we've done like a round robin and explained to everybody what we're
|
|
using our Raspberry Pi's for. You said you got three of them. So what, what are you using for?
|
|
Well, um, I have got two 256 Meg ones that I got from the original launch.
|
|
One of them was being used as a, um, an XBMC media center, um, which I have now, um, since
|
|
swapped out and used the 512 one that I just received on it instead.
|
|
So I have two 256 Meg Ram Raspberry Pi's sitting in the box doing nothing.
|
|
So any suggestions of something practical to use them for would be very welcome.
|
|
IRC. But was that IRC? Yes, like an IRC, um, relay or something.
|
|
So you can stay persistently connected to wherever you're IRC.
|
|
I'll like a BNC box. Right. Right, yeah. Well, I could use my VPN for that.
|
|
So, but I mean, being on the back end of a, of a broadband connection is not,
|
|
persistence, not really the buzzword. How about, uh, getting a USB, uh, wireless card and using
|
|
as a wireless print server? That would be a good idea. We do have a, uh, three-com print server,
|
|
but it only, um, it only satisfies one USB connection. So we can only get one printed to it,
|
|
and there's two that want to print connect to it. So I suppose, yeah, we could do that.
|
|
Come, what are you going to say? Thanks.
|
|
You won't go. I just want to go over.
|
|
Yes, thank you.
|
|
Print servers, they're just comical. Clearly, yes.
|
|
The, um, so have you not got any use for it for the bug cast that you could use it for?
|
|
Um, I suppose if I got a, um, a decent, uh, like a portrait monitor, I could stick it on the
|
|
screen and on the wall and use it as a, um, a show notes thing rather than having to switch back
|
|
some forwards from between when going from my laptop. But I can't really think of anything
|
|
practical to use it for. I mean, we've already got a VPN, a, a VPS. So, you know, I've got a,
|
|
a nice cast server running on there. Actually, at this moment, because we're relaying this on,
|
|
on one of our, of course, Oscar servers. Um, but I can't think of anything else specifically
|
|
that, um, that I could use it for on the show. Uh, a soundboard, possibly.
|
|
Is my name fab? I don't know. Is, is your name fab?
|
|
Uh, who's the Indian? Sorry. Who was that?
|
|
What, well, you want to say something? What do you want to say?
|
|
We got new DVDs and we only watched two of them. How many DVDs did you get? Gosh, how many are left?
|
|
Um, I don't know. I haven't counted, really. What about me?
|
|
But we're watching only on Julia and the smooth.
|
|
Cool. Did you get any Muppets DVDs? Muppets are my favorite.
|
|
No, but we did get little and like puppet toys.
|
|
Oh, those are pretty rad. Can you make them talk?
|
|
You can if you actually talk, talk with your hand in them going like the Pac-Man movement for the
|
|
mouth. Yeah, I was going to say unfortunately hand signals don't work on audio conversation.
|
|
They weren't made, they weren't made out of 25 year old socks, were they?
|
|
No, they were not. They were real puppets. This kid knows Pac-Man. That's incredible.
|
|
When that's awesome, when the Google Doodle was a workable Pac-Man game, she saw it for the first
|
|
day and every day for about the next month. She said, oh, can we play Google Pac-Man,
|
|
play Google Pac-Man? She loves it. Did she beat it? I know.
|
|
I would be even more impressed if that was true. Oh, give it give it give it time. She's seven.
|
|
Come on. That's true. Maybe you could set up your Raspberry Pi as a dedicated Pac-Man client.
|
|
Yeah, use Mame. Mame is pretty good. So we got Mame running up on a Raspberry Pi.
|
|
Yeah, it wouldn't run. That's pretty intensive.
|
|
Oh, it's a bomber of Raspberry Pi Mame cabinet would be beautiful.
|
|
It would be. No, I think I saw on a tech artist technical article. I thought there was someone
|
|
who was maybe it wasn't Mame, but it was something like that on a Raspberry Pi. I'll dig up the article.
|
|
I saw that too. They put the little cabinet, but it was like there. It couldn't have been
|
|
Mame because they only had four games with this emulator and none of them ran very well,
|
|
unfortunately. Oh, okay. Has anybody clustered Raspberry Pi's yet? Oh, yeah. Yeah,
|
|
there've been some super computers made by Raspberry's. Yeah. And how they've been connected?
|
|
You don't know. There's a GPIO port. Right. There's a Southampton University. They created,
|
|
I think they created the first super computer of Raspberry Pi's. Awesome. I might give that a check.
|
|
Doing it just Ethernet? I thought they would piggyback in the GPIO ports, but I could be one.
|
|
Well, there's someone that used the Ethernet and just like a cluster. Yeah, that's the Southampton
|
|
one is that they connected via Ethernet. No, that's funny. We got a spinning top and then we actually
|
|
we discovered it was actually a spinning top like spinning top shape. How you mean? Did it
|
|
draw swirls all over your floor? What? Did it draw swirls all over your floor when you
|
|
spun it like a top? No, there's a pen lid on it. Oh, thank goodness for lids.
|
|
Sorry, Becky, did you want to say something? I just wanted to ask Amy when she's going to record
|
|
her own episode. I don't know when, that's the pencil face daddy lets me. Do you want to do it though?
|
|
Yes, I would like to do that. They have co-hosted. Amy, I think it was an episode five and it wasn't five
|
|
for 12. Amy co-hosted and we've had the kids on one of the more recent shows and I have to say
|
|
the show just descended into complete and totally mayhem. It was interesting to say the least.
|
|
Your nanopodmo as well. Oh, yeah, they did that as well but that doesn't say it doesn't count.
|
|
Of course it counts but yeah, that was quite manic as well. It kept me in use for 12 minutes.
|
|
I was going to say my sister noticed how technology has changed kids recently. I've got one
|
|
nephew that's six years old and another two nephews that are both two and all of them do the
|
|
same thing which we never did as kids and that's when you take a photograph either with your
|
|
camera phone or with your normal cameras these days as soon as the pictures take and they run
|
|
round and have a look at the LCD screen to see what the pictures like and of course when we were
|
|
kids you didn't do that because they had to be sent back to the developers and yet to get the
|
|
the film developed before you see the phone and you saw wow how massive a change is that.
|
|
If you're like my parents you didn't take that many photographs so you had to wait till the
|
|
role or film was filled up so it was like two and a half years later before you actually saw
|
|
the pictures. Yes, that's about right, yeah. You never had a Polaroid then? No, we weren't push kids
|
|
like you were. No, I didn't have a Polaroid either actually. We couldn't afford a Polaroid,
|
|
they were quite expensive back in the day. Yeah, they weren't cheap. Comparatively expensive,
|
|
should I say. I don't have a cheap. The camera wasn't expensive, it was the film.
|
|
Did you guys ever hear that song that George Rab song? It's when I was your age. No, it's a line
|
|
in there about having to bring your film to a man who lived in a booth. It's a pretty funny song.
|
|
That brings up something I thought of the other day maybe I bet it would fit. I've got a couple
|
|
old antique brown on the cameras but of course there's so many of them. They're not worth
|
|
anything. I was thinking of that might make a good case, got one and put an RPI and figure out
|
|
something to do with it. Oh, you know what that reminds me since we're talking about that. My wife
|
|
I think was an 8 by 10 or 5 by 7 glass plate camera. That's cool. My wife finally gave up her film
|
|
camera and got a digital one and she just got her last roll of film back from the developer and
|
|
you know had it put to CD and of course it was the wrong person's CD. We got the wrong
|
|
people's film. The very last one. What a way to hand it, huh?
|
|
Tell them and say hey I would like my actual pictures. Oh yeah, she went and got it back.
|
|
Fortunately they had the right negatives in the little folder with it. Yeah, I have to say as
|
|
technology battles go it seems like film did like the worst job of trying to hold its own. You
|
|
know it just it it didn't do us any favors as it was dying. I mean I guess it's still dying but
|
|
I mean they haven't gone down in price. It's just getting messier and messier. It's just
|
|
they're making themselves less attractive. The better digital cameras get. It's really bizarre.
|
|
But this is still a market for film. That's the thing. The film gives certain things that digital
|
|
imagery can't give you the graininess and the the the tonal quality of film is actually
|
|
fasting period at that of of digital. Look at the difference between video recorded
|
|
films or television programs and filmed television programs. There's such a difference and there
|
|
is still a market for it. Yeah, that's not for recently said to me that the big difference between
|
|
film and digital is the resolution on film is infinite which is kind of profound. No, it can't
|
|
not. It's not it's infinite because it's organic. There's no pixels there. No, but there's
|
|
chemicals and you're limited to the size of the chemical. Well, it's over highlights. I mean,
|
|
it's over highlights on film. So there is definitely a limit. But what he happens is when you look
|
|
at film you actually have an infinite number of frames because as long as you can actually move
|
|
faster you can actually have more highlights and there is no limitation there as far as that goes
|
|
accepting for whatever your motor moves at. What I thought was always interesting about this
|
|
switch to digital is that a company like Kodak actually really kind of botched everything.
|
|
They early on knew that digital photography was going to come into things and they actually had
|
|
a number of the patents and things and stuff and yet they didn't do anything to try to bridge
|
|
the tool between film and digital. In a lot of ways, I'm kind of glad they didn't take advantage of
|
|
their patents because we've been a lot worse state now, wouldn't we? Right guys, we're going to be
|
|
heading off very shortly. Just thought I'd mention we spoke about having the kids on the show.
|
|
The last time we had the kids on the show, I said it was quite recently. It wasn't. It was over two
|
|
years ago. August 2010. I posted the link into the mumble chat room if anybody wants to pick
|
|
that up and carry a pick it up and listen to it later on. But we're off and we will be back later
|
|
on. Say goodbye. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Happy New Year. Happy New Year. Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's.
|
|
Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's. Happy New Year's.
|
|
Has anybody heard about the Franken camera project? What? Say it again. I'm just looking at that right
|
|
now. Is that Franken camera? No, it's like a programmable open source camera. It looks pretty good
|
|
and they have like an API that can make a regular, you know, crummy cell phone camera make pretty decent
|
|
pictures. What's the advantage of this over, you know, a lot of like the DSLR type cameras? I
|
|
mean, it would seem to me that DSLRs actually have a higher resolution than working with like a
|
|
camera phone and they have the optics in that that you get with this. The advantage of this camera
|
|
is that you don't have to wear like a nerdy t-shirt to let your freak flag fly. You can actually
|
|
program it and have it control the camera in ways that it normally wouldn't do. So basically,
|
|
you're at the mercy of whatever your camera functions are with a Franken camera. You could program
|
|
your own routines or tell it to focus in certain ways and do digital tricks with it that normally
|
|
your camera wouldn't be able to do. There's also a lot of differences between like in digital cameras,
|
|
there's a lot of differences between what what amounts of compression they're applying to what
|
|
you get out of the camera. So, you know, in terms of color correction and stuff like that,
|
|
there could be a big variation there. I don't know much about all of them that are out there,
|
|
but that's one different. You could just shoot in raw though, too. Yeah, you want to say the
|
|
ping PNGs? Oh, no, they say to JPGs. Yeah, I've seen raw and JPGs is the two options. I have a
|
|
new cannon rebel and it will shoot as either a raw or a JPEG. One or the other.
|
|
Not a big fan of JPEG. Well, the way I've seen it, and I don't know if this is the way that it
|
|
works on yours, but it'll shoot raw and then it'll save like a copy, a JPEG copy of that raw. So,
|
|
the the JPEG I think is just sort of mid almost as a quick and easy preview, something to look at
|
|
and kind of play around with before you actually switch over to using the raw.
|
|
I can set it as either actually. I can set it as just JPEG, just raw or both.
|
|
Oh, okay. I had to update Photoshop to get it to interpret the raws from my camera.
|
|
Have any of you guys heard of this CHDK thing that might man's talking about in the IRC?
|
|
No, I hadn't heard about that. Oh, yes. Yes, I have heard about this,
|
|
also along with Magic Lantern. Oh, yeah, I've heard of Magic Lantern, yeah.
|
|
It's very much like Magic Lantern. This looks very cool. It's like Rockbox, but for your camera.
|
|
There was one model of camera. It was one of the ones with the better sensors. They would use it
|
|
with Magic Lantern, and then they would use it for like professional videography. So, people would
|
|
like shoot films that way, because you would actually get better quality on that than you would
|
|
get with anything anywhere near that price range, except for like renting a red.
|
|
What's it called again? Magic Lantern.
|
|
Have you used that? And how do you say your nick?
|
|
Fathano. Fathano. It's like Fathalo. Like the blue. Okay.
|
|
I have used Magic Lantern, yeah. It's a 5D Mark II, or a 7D, or is usually the cameras that they
|
|
would use, which are way cheaper. I don't know now how I'll look to see how much they are.
|
|
I think they're about, you said the 5D, is that what you said?
|
|
The 5D Mark II is $1800. Was it that low now? Is that just the body then?
|
|
That is just the body. Okay. Oh, it's even less according to my scripts and Chrome. You can get
|
|
it for $900 on eBay, apparently. That would be worth it, too. Those are nice cameras for digital.
|
|
Very, very nice. When I saw the DSLRs, like when I really started to shoot DSLR for real, like on
|
|
projects, I just, that's kind of when I was just finally like, okay, the trouble involved, the cost
|
|
and the trouble involved with film is no longer worth it now. When I started seeing the burst
|
|
fires, the burst fire stuff, that's what I do. It was a technology that couldn't be competed with
|
|
by any other traditional means. I don't know what burst fire is, what is that? You can rapidly take
|
|
pictures and succession for things like fast photography, and you're getting up to like 15
|
|
frames per second that you can take. It's insane. That's really cool. Another thing is it could take
|
|
burst shots and you could focus at different lengths and then combine the pictures together to have
|
|
like a wide focus view. Right. Yeah, yeah. I've seen that. That's really cool. Adjust your focus
|
|
post photography. It's really cool. There was that demo a while ago where they unblurred the
|
|
picture in Photoshop. This is for the CS5 demonstration. They were just like, oh yeah, so we figured
|
|
out an algorithm to unblur photos and they just did it and then the audience just completely lost
|
|
it because they realized what that means. Yeah, wow. I'd never seen an audience do anything like that,
|
|
especially on like a YouTube recording. It was really weird. Have you got a link to that YouTube?
|
|
I am pulling it up because it's YouTube.com. Yes, there you go YouTube. That'll be narrowing it
|
|
right down. Thank you. No problem. YouTube. I think I'm spelling it wrong. It's Y-O-U, not just
|
|
U. It's Y-O-U. If you're using KDE, just open up KRunner and type Y-T colon. I found it.
|
|
How do you spell to? T-O-O-B, isn't it? Right. That's what I thought. It's still not coming up.
|
|
It's coming up with some pronsite. Now I'm only kidding. Greetings from the US. T-U-B-E. Why are you T-U-B-E?
|
|
Are you on the East Coast or West Coast Geospart? Geospart, yes. I'm in Charlotte, North Carolina,
|
|
normally from New York there. Oh, cool. Wow, this YouTube thing is pretty cool. There's like
|
|
videos and stuff here. Oh, is that right? I just get a bunch of things that say you don't have
|
|
flash installed and I generally navigate away. Why don't I do? Install flash and you get to see
|
|
cool commercials. And you can start out block over that. People can comment on your videos as well
|
|
and you get really helpful feedback on your videos. I never seen that being the case. The
|
|
comments I usually see on YouTube just seem to be just horrible. But Clad 2, as far as being able to
|
|
watch YouTube videos, get this Slack build of YouTube-DL and then you just copy the URL,
|
|
put it into the command line, YouTube-DL, then paste in the URL and it'll fetch the video.
|
|
And then you can just open it up in like VLC or whatever media player you use. Or you could just
|
|
use J-Downloader. Yeah, okay. I have to admit, like this is kind of bad that they're coming up with
|
|
hacks around this. But for the longest time, I could get out of following YouTube links by just saying,
|
|
oh, I don't have flash installed. But now it's like, that's no longer a valid excuse, unfortunately.
|
|
I actually was like one of the first people in the HTML5 beta. Yeah, yeah. I mean, I did sign up for
|
|
that or put myself on that as well. So that does get me around it a lot too. One thing I've been doing
|
|
is, on my browser, I've been setting it to disable cookies by default and I've just been
|
|
only allowing the websites that use the cookies that I choose. Which makes me a little hard when
|
|
I have to add the things, wasn't it, but at least I don't have to worry about anything going wrong.
|
|
But so far, YouTube works pretty well. I usually just tell people that I'm awmish and then they usually
|
|
leave me alone. That's what I'm going to switch to. And they're like, you have two degrees in
|
|
computer science. And I'm like, what are you talking about? Let's go make butter. What's a computer
|
|
science? That's like a cat, right? Did you hear about the Amish terrorist, the faction that went
|
|
around cutting off men's beards? No, I hope this is not a lead into a joke. This sounds really
|
|
interesting. No, it's true. He's right. It's being prosecuted as a hate crime actually.
|
|
I heard about the Hindu guy that got pushed in front of a train. That's the worst. That's
|
|
horrific. So this video of this old guy pushing this woman onto it train tracks and the boyfriend
|
|
beat him up. Well, that accelerated quickly. Not escalated.
|
|
So did we get here just because the Amish can use trains? How did we get off the one story
|
|
and under the other? Can the Amish use trains? I guess if they're cold. Well, they don't own
|
|
the trains. So I guess they could. They can use the trains for transportation. They just can't
|
|
use it as like a way of life. Unless it's their job, I guess. I think the thing about the technology
|
|
is that they can't own anything more than any other body in the community. So that's why everything's
|
|
down to that base minimum. So everyone should just get Android phones then is what you're saying.
|
|
It gets complicated because there's no one group called the Amish. There's, you know,
|
|
they're splintered into a bunch of different groups that have different rules. Sounds like they
|
|
would fit into the Linux community quite well then. It does. They've got the bids and everything.
|
|
Oh man, RMS may actually be Amish. That would make so much sense. I hope not.
|
|
Nice. He's an atheist. Yeah, I guess that's true. That breaks it. He's also the most religious man
|
|
of ever see. I think perhaps. What do you define as religion? It all comes down to what you define
|
|
religion and be. Well, would it be appropriate at this point to say that the best interview I've
|
|
ever heard was done by Pokey? What was that two months ago, Pokey, that that ran on HPR?
|
|
No, not be appropriate to say that now. Sure would. Wait, that was the RMS one that I heard.
|
|
That was you? Yeah, that was me. Yeah, that was awesome. That was a great interview. That's
|
|
actually probably my favorite interview with them that I've ever heard. It was actually, I had to
|
|
say it was everybody because very few of those questions were my own. Most of them came from
|
|
IRC and from like, you know, just my HPR pals who I just asked you have anything you'd like me to ask
|
|
people, give me questions to ask. It was the way you presented them though. I've seen somewhere
|
|
that there's a definition between a religion and a cult where it basically defines the differences
|
|
being how many churches you have, i.e. more than one and how many people you've killed, i.e.
|
|
more than one. Do you know what the difference between a cult and a religion is? A cult is religion
|
|
or a religion is cult plus time. Religions what I believe in, a cult is what you believe in. Exactly.
|
|
Alistair belongs to a cult. I've always heard that a cult was a religion that was like harmful to
|
|
you, like, measurably harmful. Aren't there a lot of religion? You could say that into a lot of
|
|
religion. Yeah. There was that woman that was denied abortion and then she had a the fetus
|
|
diner in her and then she ended up dying of infection. That was based off of religious grounds.
|
|
I think that was in Ireland. Yeah, that's in Ireland. I didn't know Ireland had that backwards,
|
|
like, old laws on abortion until I heard about that. That's really bizarre. No, they don't,
|
|
they don't have backwards laws about it. They have, she was denied it by the hospital. They were
|
|
supposed to have granted her that. Oh, okay. See, I had I had read the headline and I guess the
|
|
headline was misleading then. They linked it, they linked, they definitely linked it with Catholicism.
|
|
Yeah, I was going to say there were Catholics, I think. I don't think all people in Ireland are
|
|
Catholics. No, there is some legislation on the Irish statue that does actually make abortion legal
|
|
and they've only in the last few weeks passed law that it's okay to have an abortion if,
|
|
you know, if it's life threatening. So it is on the statue. Yeah, I just
|
|
don't know. There was a referendum over 30 years ago in Ireland where it's called the X case where
|
|
a the high court passed a law saying that the abortion would be allowed in the case where there
|
|
were serious risks to the life of the mother. And there was a referendum that that was enshrined
|
|
in the constitution. The thing is the weak-minded politicians didn't put in the law in place,
|
|
so despite having a referendum where they were required to put a law in place, they didn't do that
|
|
because of their pro-life lobby. And speaking to all the doctors and everybody in Ireland,
|
|
there is nobody who would interpret that what happened there as in any way being the correct
|
|
course of action to have occurred, so there will be probably repercussions as a result of that.
|
|
You've also got years and years of history to overcome in Ireland and the facts that, you know,
|
|
for a very long time abortion was, you know, frowned upon, it was an absolute no-no, it was, you know,
|
|
an underground activity that was carried out in like, you know, sort of like back streets and,
|
|
you know, women's parlors because it was, you know, just, it didn't happen, you didn't,
|
|
it wasn't talked about. No, I think it was. It's right now there is, I think, almost universal
|
|
horror as what happened with that lady that her life wasn't considered. Well, whatever series
|
|
of events that occurred to cause the loss of her life, there was actually an absolute shock and
|
|
horror from people about that because we've had this abortion debate for over 30 years and even
|
|
before that, there's been I think two, if not three different referendums and each time
|
|
people are very clear about, yes, we don't want abortion, but yes, on the other hand, we do
|
|
want to save the life of the mother and that's a very difficult thing to both into law because
|
|
you can veer either side of it and what happened in that hospital was, from what I understand,
|
|
was they said, somebody just said, no, we're not allowed to do this when in natural fact,
|
|
another doctor in another hospital somewhere else would have had no problem or well,
|
|
probably would have a problem, but would have carried out the procedure that was necessary in order
|
|
to save the mother's life. I think that's even not defending the Catholic church, but I think they
|
|
some of the more sane hierarchy seemed to be supporting that sort of line, a lot recently,
|
|
from what I've seen them come out with, you would question that as well, but there has been,
|
|
since I was born, there's always been quite a lot of debate and we've had a lot of discussion
|
|
about where it's been convenient for I think the government in Ireland to just put girls
|
|
on the boat and they head over to the NHS and they get the job done and they come back in
|
|
and it's been very cowardly approach to a problem that needs to be solved.
|
|
Another thing is Uganda's killed the Gaze Bill. Oh yeah, I read that too.
|
|
That needs to be killed to death badly. Greetings and salutations everyone.
|
|
No, this is not Chad Wallenberg. This is Claudio M, just passing by to say happy new year to
|
|
everybody. Hope everybody's doing well. It's not the new year yet, but I hope the holidays are all
|
|
treating you well. Happy new year Claudio. Happy new year Claudio. Happy new year Claudio. Happy new year Claudio.
|
|
Happy new year Claudio. Yeah, happy new year Claudio. And what do you mean in the new year yet? We've had,
|
|
we're almost on our sixth one, 10 minutes from now. Ah, that is true. Got to think globally.
|
|
No, I figured somewhere it's already the first six somewhere is actually.
|
|
It's not new years if you have to work through it like me. Yeah, good point. Thankfully,
|
|
I don't have to worry about that. Yeah, it's Becky tracking where that is. Was it? Yeah, we're
|
|
coming up 10 minutes and it will be Indonesia, Thailand, the small region of China, Vietnam,
|
|
Cambodia, Laos, regions of Mongolia, Antarctica, and a small region of Australia.
|
|
Well, a very happy new year to everyone that's in all those locations. And hope everybody else is
|
|
prepping for some new year fun. I get a chat. Does anybody heard from him like the last six
|
|
months or a year? He doesn't even seem to come around anymore. Yeah, he's at the clinic. He's at the
|
|
conferences. Just want to make sure Claudio hadn't done away with him and buried him in the
|
|
clinic's basement. So that's what that smell was. Oh, I guess I should take care of that.
|
|
A little for breeze. He'll take care of it. Sudo for breeze. By the way, Claudio, congratulations.
|
|
I've been following you on Google plus and pictures of your lovely bride.
|
|
Thank you very much. Okay. Yes. I'm a very, very happy and very lucky man. I'll tell you that much.
|
|
Right on. What's wrong with her eyes? What even was wrong with her eyes? Nothing's wrong with her
|
|
eyes. Really? She can see you just fine. Yeah, she can. You know, Claudio, you should post
|
|
ASCII art of your wedding pictures in IRC for those of us who don't Google plus.
|
|
Do we know it? And I'll look into it. I keep trying to convince my wife I'm as good looking as you
|
|
as she don't buy it. Man, you really have some low expectations of yourself then. You could say
|
|
that again. That's why I'm very rarely disappointed in me. Man, you really have some low expectations
|
|
of yourself, don't you? Classic. Oh, thank you. I don't know. I kind of figured the line can't go
|
|
any lower, so I'm glad to be down there. Well, I don't think I can get any farther than the floor,
|
|
Sandy, given that one episode of DevRandom. That was like 10 feet under. That's where I figured.
|
|
That was awesome. I was rolling on the floor, but not literally like some others, but yeah.
|
|
Well, I've been married for 33 years. I just hope that you're as happy as I am in 33 years.
|
|
I do too. Thanks, Ahuka. By the way, Ken, my wife and I have made a decision. We're going to
|
|
visit Ireland. It's probably going to take us a year or two to save up the money.
|
|
Cool. If you need some tips of where to go, give me a shout. I will be consulting you, sir.
|
|
Avoiding hospitals and goldware.
|
|
Do not let them convince you to kiss the Blarney stone. Oh, yeah, please kiss the Blarney stone
|
|
and post pictures, especially in asking for the people on R.C. You don't want to know what the
|
|
locals do to that thing when there's no tourists around. Of course, now that you said that, of course,
|
|
we do. Just make sure you just infect the first. Not to mention, of course, the long
|
|
cues just to kiss the stone. No one wants sloppy Blarney stone seconds.
|
|
Well, I think the music is going to be a big thing for me. We have a Kaylee here around the end
|
|
of the year that I went to on Saturday night and just had a great time. Ahuka, will you be going
|
|
to Southern Ireland or to Northern Ireland? Oh, yeah. Only one island. Shut up, Ken.
|
|
Yeah, I haven't. We just made the decision that we were going to do it. And I think my brother and
|
|
his wife made join us as well. Southern Ireland is beautiful, especially the Waterford and Trimor area.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know, I don't know exactly how we're going to do it if we're going to try and get
|
|
like a package tour or roll our own or whatever. There's a lot of planning and discussion to happen.
|
|
But for both of us, it's kind of a bucket list thing that you know.
|
|
You're a lot cheaper to go do a to do it yourself. And there are really, really good deals now
|
|
with hotels because half of the hotels in the country are owned by the National Asset Management
|
|
Institute. And they have no interest in making a profit at all. Just keep the things open.
|
|
So that they can sell them later. So you can pick up the phone and ring right. I got the steel
|
|
somewhere right there. I want this sort of deal. I want free Wi-Fi. I want free parking. I want
|
|
black. I want breakfast. I want dinner. I want the whole nine yards.
|
|
Cool. But it's a bit more work, obviously, a bit.
|
|
And you tell him you wanted for less than 30 shillings. These shillings, right, Ken?
|
|
I think they use yours. Farthings.
|
|
Yours for what they're worth now. I thought they're paid with potatoes.
|
|
Right, that's it. You're fucking bad. That's it. Yeah, you're out.
|
|
That's a little bit racist there, Muffela. They might be worth more than $1.
|
|
All right. We all now racist father.
|
|
His big willy father.
|
|
All right, everyone. I'm going to bow out. I wish you all a very happy new year if you haven't
|
|
already rung it. And I hope the holidays were really good to everybody. I'm going to start
|
|
getting the kids ready and all of us here ready for some festivities later. So have a great one.
|
|
Before you go one thing, last year you said that you didn't want to take over Linux
|
|
basements. I think it's time now that you did. Yeah, I've been thinking about it. Trust me.
|
|
I just got to find the time. Time is very limited now. I've got other priorities. I'm sure you're
|
|
all aware of. Yeah. Yeah, hey, thanks for stopping in and take hello to the kids for me. I sell
|
|
one of them on the Minecraft server the other day, but didn't stay long. Yeah, they've been mine
|
|
crafting this whole Christmas break. So been two weeks. And since I worked for the school
|
|
system. So I'm off these two weeks as well. So I'm definitely enjoying the time off.
|
|
And yeah, and lots of mine crafting around here, you know, whether I like it or not, it seems.
|
|
Yeah, of course.
|
|
It beats the heck out of texting. I heard they're reporting minecraft to the Raspberry Pi.
|
|
That's another use for it. Yeah, they are. They're they're they're porting it to that and I'm dying to
|
|
get one of those. Happy new year. Happy new year to YouTube, bobobex. Happy new year to everybody.
|
|
Enjoy and hacker public radio. Number one, love it. Thanks a lot, man. Great to see you here from
|
|
you. Same here, guys. Take care. Happy new year. Bye, Claudio. And with that, we're about to roll
|
|
over to our next our next New Year's time zone. Go on then, Sam, try to see you do it this time.
|
|
I don't have them all written down. So I don't have a thing here with a list of them.
|
|
So in New Year, then to Indonesia, Thailand, small region of China, Vietnam, Cambodia,
|
|
Laos, regions of Mongolia, regions of Antarctica, and a small region of Australia. Happy new year.
|
|
Happy new year. Happy new year. Happy new year.
|
|
All right, now I'm leaving. Bye bye. I'm not doing the next one in an hour's time. I can't
|
|
fall for now. I can't pronounce them later. Yeah, well, if you just post them, someone will do them.
|
|
Don't post them now. It'll scroll by. It's my enema and the cocoa islands.
|
|
I haven't brought this a chance to bring this up, but I've mentioned on the mailing list before
|
|
that we're sort of under underrepresented in those areas of the world we've been saying. Happy new
|
|
years to the last three hours. So I'd like to invite anybody in those areas who's listening now,
|
|
or listening on the stream, or later, if you're hearing this as the podcast,
|
|
you know, would really like to meet some people from that area of the world and include them in
|
|
our discussions, because we all too seldom hear from that part of the world. And it'll happen
|
|
again once we move past the West Coast of the United States and out there into the Pacific Ocean,
|
|
except for Hawaii. We don't really talk to anybody out that direction. So please,
|
|
don't feel like language is any sort of barrier. We'd just like to make connections out there.
|
|
Well said.
|
|
Becky and I are just going to pop out and get some dinner and stuff. So we'll probably
|
|
be back later. Have fun. Can I go with you Phil? I'm super hungry.
|
|
Chinese is. Hello, Joe. How are you doing, mate? Hey, what's up, mate? I don't know. I'm just
|
|
figured out coming here. I'm also going to hang out and rebroadcasting all this in the hangout as well.
|
|
Cool. I'm sorry. Posted. You were rebroadcasting. That's cool.
|
|
Hi, George. How are you doing that, by the way?
|
|
Well, I'm just basically, I don't know. I have no clue. I just basically haven't both going
|
|
at the same time. And some people are listening to it via the hangout. And I'm trying to
|
|
coax people to come in, but you know, I think some of them are scared. In fact, one of them is
|
|
looking at me sweating all through his forehead right now. Is that George Tosha? Of course it is.
|
|
Oh, sorry, George. Sorry, I was, I didn't connect you. Hello. Happy New Year.
|
|
Happy New Year, Alistair. You probably didn't get when I was talking about you joined a cult earlier.
|
|
You know what cult I mean. Ah, I do. Now, I have mentioned the wonderful people
|
|
at Tekken Coffee, but I'll mention them again, because I have enjoyed joining that community.
|
|
It's a good bunch of people over there. Well, thanks. Thanks.
|
|
And, and, and anybody's walking to come over and sample some of the Kool-Aid. I'm only kidding.
|
|
It's a joke. Cool. I appreciate you joining us on HPR for sure.
|
|
Thank you. Thank you. Are you sticking around, George?
|
|
I'm going to, I'm going to be in here for a bit. I'm probably going to leave this going.
|
|
About 45 minutes or so. I'm going to take a quick lunch and head out and do something,
|
|
but I'm actually working today and I'm possibly working tomorrow from like seven to two or something.
|
|
All right. Well, if you're about a bit later off, I'll catch up on the chat.
|
|
Sweet. It's cool.
|
|
Okay, so you have a great meal. Think about me when I'm not having Chinese and
|
|
probably having something out of the microwave. Yeah, that's not going to happen.
|
|
Okay, folks. Let's take this opportunity to stop again and think we're more than six hours in,
|
|
so this will be the end of first Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
I think you're on the third. Yeah. Well, how are we going to do this? Because there's going to be
|
|
more than 26 hours of shows. Hello, everybody. You're listening to the next episode of Hacker Public
|
|
Radio. Anyway, there's going to be, I don't know, what? 24 hours we've done, six hours, seven hours now.
|
|
Um, so if we're going to squash them into one week, or do we have them go over two weeks?
|
|
Anyone? Might as well just do two weeks. Could you set it up so that you
|
|
script it to cut out silence and dead spots and condense it down a bit?
|
|
Yeah, I'll do that. All right, but that's not going to take massive amounts of time out.
|
|
Looks like the MP3 streams are down, folks. Just give us one second.
|
|
Yeah, that computer's not even logged in right now.
|
|
Looks like Kevin's working on it. Okay, the aux streams are available for our listeners who count
|
|
here. Yep. And if you need MP3, the new radio.net is also up, though it's not in the automatic
|
|
rotation. That might have been that six hour timeout we were talking about. Yeah, it could be,
|
|
yes, sir. Has anybody's mumble client been disconnected and reconnected?
|
|
Not mine. Not here. Then again, if we're active, I don't think it will disconnect and reconnect.
|
|
I think it was the only time out if you're not active. Mine did about 45 minutes in,
|
|
it disconnected and reconnected one time, and it stopped my recording for a while, which I didn't
|
|
realize. Yeah, mine did that about an hour ago, and just I went to reconnect and it connected.
|
|
Yeah, mine reconnected automatically, too, before I even had a chance to do it manually.
|
|
But I didn't realize it had stopped the recording, and then it didn't automatically restart.
|
|
Oh, Poki, what are we going to do with you?
|
|
Oh, exile? No, that would be too good.
|
|
That we won't have anybody to edit this mess.
|
|
Oh, Ken volunteered this year. I'm good.
|
|
Oh, Ken loves editing, you know that.
|
|
I love editing here.
|
|
Loaded in Odacity, chopped the first bit off, chopped the last bit off,
|
|
do remove silence, slap on the intro and outro and we're done.
|
|
There you go. That was easy.
|
|
And looks like the MP3 stream's on its way back.
|
|
Okay, don't forget to hit record again, Ken.
|
|
I've been recording all along.
|
|
Oh, are you doing it from a different machine?
|
|
You know, I discovered recently that that's kind of a dangerous way to do it,
|
|
recording from a second machine and not recording from your primary,
|
|
because if anything happens to that network stream, you wouldn't know it.
|
|
Yeah, well, my primary one, the pulse audio just crashed for the first time ever.
|
|
I had to reboot my machine, well, a few minutes ago.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
The MP3 streams are backverified. Welcome back to all our listeners and MP3 land,
|
|
freedom-hating people you are. Although dots said don't move to the extreme,
|
|
because it's currently going to be switched from one server to another.
|
|
Sure, insult everybody and then get my lollipop.
|
|
Thank you, thank you guys.
|
|
Did it? What is Doors ET? Did anybody figure that out?
|
|
He's what now?
|
|
What is Doors ET? Did anybody find that out?
|
|
Oh, yeah, that's his machine that's streaming out to the new radio.net.
|
|
I'm on that one now, actually.
|
|
Okay, the streaming server thing seems to be working a little better,
|
|
but for some reason, still not picking up the bug cast,
|
|
ice cast server. Amazing.
|
|
Kevin, are you around? Kevin, wish you're?
|
|
He's in the chat hall. Very soon, folks, I'm going to go off to let off some fireworks
|
|
with my children. So, if you need me, what would be your children's strap to them?
|
|
Sometimes I feel like that, but as a good parent,
|
|
good parenting sometimes is not doing the things that comes into your head.
|
|
Right, is that good? As a good parent, he doesn't strap them to the fireworks.
|
|
He only lets them light them.
|
|
This is why I own two hours, not children.
|
|
You can strap the show hours to the bottle rockets,
|
|
and they'll actually take off on my children.
|
|
No, I hadn't had that idea, but now you've said it.
|
|
Well, if you get the big ones, not like the tiny little thin bottle rockets,
|
|
I think you could probably get a show out and get some air.
|
|
Well, there's a thought.
|
|
Tweet!
|
|
It's like a variant of the weather balloons in the lawn chair.
|
|
Oh, I love the Darwin Awards.
|
|
Are they still going?
|
|
I hope so.
|
|
I guess there's still stupid people, isn't there?
|
|
As long as there's an America, I have hope for the Darwin Awards.
|
|
I didn't want to say it.
|
|
Sorry, that is very racist.
|
|
I'm an American.
|
|
Even so.
|
|
Wait, America's not a race.
|
|
It's true.
|
|
This is true.
|
|
It's a good job, isn't it?
|
|
Yeah, it is until it's not until somebody attacks you, and then all of a sudden you're
|
|
It's a good job.
|
|
That's not a race, because there'd be too fat to get anywhere quickly.
|
|
Here is I.
|
|
Trying to bring up the tone with the conversation.
|
|
It says me at 21 stone, by the way.
|
|
I'm frankly offended those comments were made in the fake American accent.
|
|
Well, I have to say they sneak sugar into practically any of the package foods that you get
|
|
in America.
|
|
That's not sugar.
|
|
That's corn.
|
|
That's high fructose corn starch.
|
|
Not sugar.
|
|
That's sugar, like substance.
|
|
As desperately as they want to call it sugar so that they don't have to label it as such,
|
|
you know, as high fructose corn syrup on the package, it is not sugar and your body
|
|
can not handle it the way it can handle sugar.
|
|
It's not a great farmer.
|
|
What was that?
|
|
I'm the rare underweight American at 12 stone.
|
|
I don't know what the heck a stone is.
|
|
It's 14 pounds.
|
|
Hey Ken, the ZHPR music one that you've got recording there is still keyed up.
|
|
I know if you leave it keyed up like forever, it'll eventually have problems.
|
|
It's not a bad idea to key it up every now and again so it doesn't get kicked.
|
|
But if it's left like that, you get like lag errors.
|
|
Okay, it's off now, thanks for the heads up.
|
|
You get the kind of thing that happens to John DeVore, and Adam Curry, if you guys ever
|
|
listen to the no agenda podcast, they use mumble and they have problems all the time just
|
|
because they leave it keyed up constantly and never give it a chance to re-sync when
|
|
they're not keyed up.
|
|
Well speaking of bad Americans, I recently lost three and a half stones.
|
|
Wow, that's a lot.
|
|
I lost one and a half if it's 14 pounds, I lost about one and a half stones recently.
|
|
Yeah, for those who didn't get my stone reference earlier, that makes me 294 pounds.
|
|
That's okay, I'm sure whatever stones you guys lose, I'll find.
|
|
I thought you guys were talking kidney stones for a second.
|
|
That would be even worse.
|
|
That's not fun at all.
|
|
Boom, boom.
|
|
That too will pass.
|
|
I'll out.
|
|
My father just recently passed one.
|
|
There are a lot of fat people here in America, too many, because I'm in the Midwest.
|
|
Well, if you stop drinking a lot and you start eating vegetables a whole lot more, cut
|
|
out sugar and stop eating a lot of bread, it could lose quite a bit.
|
|
I do none of that except to eat bread, I do eat bread.
|
|
But all those things are tasty.
|
|
That's pretty much all I did was stop eating bread and I dropped 20 pounds in about a month
|
|
month and a half.
|
|
Did you say cut?
|
|
Did you say cut out, bread?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yeah, good stuff.
|
|
Don't do that.
|
|
Oh, man, bread is like my favorite.
|
|
I love bread, especially those good bakery loaves, but yeah, they had to cut them out
|
|
pretty much.
|
|
As Scott Pilgrim said, bread makes you fat.
|
|
It depends what kind, but most kinds do, yeah, so the high gluten and it's difficult to digest
|
|
the way it's made.
|
|
Yeah, I've been doing the paleo diet and that bread is definitely not allowed.
|
|
Is that where red steak raw comes from?
|
|
No, I had that before I went on the diet.
|
|
That's hard on.
|
|
That's weird and self-fulfilling, then.
|
|
Yeah, it was just justification for the name he's always liked.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Well, I went vegan, I lost some weight and then I like, no, I need the steak, so I went
|
|
paleo and I lost the rest.
|
|
It's one important point here, guys, on a health-related issue, and I can tell you this
|
|
from personal and family experience.
|
|
If you change your diet and take bread out and that improves things, you need to go and
|
|
see a doctor and get a celiac disease test because that will probably indicate a gluten
|
|
intolerance and it's a serious health issue.
|
|
So if you're finding that cutting bread out improves your health in some way, that might
|
|
indicate a serious problem which you need to pay more attention to.
|
|
Cool, good to know.
|
|
Brother make me sick, it just made me, it just generally led to a higher weight.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, that's what I've been going through.
|
|
Yeah, it's one of these things that's all to do with the way that gluten in the bread
|
|
is actually digested, but if bread leads to either weight gain or weight loss, it can
|
|
be an indicator to this disease, celiac disease, which if you find you have that, then there's
|
|
a whole bunch of other things which you can cut out fairly easily from your diet which
|
|
will just improve your overall health just a thousand percent, it really will.
|
|
What are the other things that you could cut out if you're in that ballpark, but just
|
|
to say, it seems to me like what you're saying is mostly for people who are extreme cases
|
|
of feeling benefit when they cut out bread, most people probably could benefit from cutting
|
|
down the high gluten bread with their digestion and weight gain, you know.
|
|
Well, it sort of creeps into quite a lot of foods, but the obvious ones are pastas and
|
|
also choosing just slightly different foodstuffs, like for example, ketchup and things, between
|
|
the brands, some will have a lot higher gluten content than others, so just changing your
|
|
brand of ketchup might have some effect, but left undiagnosed, it can creep up on you
|
|
with time, celiac disease gets worse over a period of time, if you catch it early in
|
|
the progression of the disease, the outcomes are generally better.
|
|
Is it just created by the gluten, because it's just worth noting that most old varieties
|
|
of bread making materials are very low in gluten, so you can still consume bread, make
|
|
it in a different way from whole grains and fermented, you know, sourdose, and using
|
|
the old varieties, you know, rye and some old varieties of wheat and stuff like that.
|
|
If you really, if you really can't manage without bread, yeah, there are a lot of commercially
|
|
available gluten-free breads, which are very good, even Domino's pizzas recently started
|
|
doing a gluten-free pizza base.
|
|
It's just not fermented, unfortunately.
|
|
One thing I can do is you can make a meat, you basically take a sausage meat or meat and
|
|
put that as a base for the pizza instead of the bread.
|
|
Yeah, I mean, so go ahead.
|
|
Yeah, there's a lot of help you can get with it, but it's mostly just knowing that you
|
|
have it and getting some good dietary pointers and just slight adjustments that you can
|
|
make to your diet, which improves it a hell of a lot.
|
|
The trouble comes is if you carry on with it for a long time, the villi and the intestines
|
|
get worn down and they don't regenerate and the longer that goes on, the progressively
|
|
worse it gets.
|
|
I'm already eating gluten-free.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
One of you say you were paleo, does that involve low fat generally, or do they have different
|
|
interpretations of paleo, what some have lots of fat and some mostly lean meat, or how's
|
|
that?
|
|
Well, you know, I'm not going to intentionally eat a lot of fat.
|
|
I just eat it with the meal and I try to trim off some of the stuff if it's there.
|
|
As far as oils are concerned, I stick to olive oil for most of the stuff.
|
|
And I try to balance my meats with my veggies, so I'm not just going to eat a big thing
|
|
without having a decent amount of veggies like I try to at least have as much or even
|
|
more veggies as I do for me for any given meal.
|
|
Maybe you misinterpreted me, I'm a big proponent of meat and fat, you know, no vegetable oils.
|
|
We consume a lot of butter and fat and meat per breakfast in a lunch, I don't have any
|
|
kind of obesity problems, but maybe you haven't heard of the West and A Price Foundation
|
|
because I mean there's a lot of criticism over the paleo diet for their exclusion of fat
|
|
because it's actually very important to eat all the fat when you have meat, otherwise
|
|
you can't create problems.
|
|
You can't deplete your body from vitamin A, my wife just calls me my ear.
|
|
Well, I do eat the fat, it's just that I don't eat a lot of it.
|
|
I think that you, it's a myth though, the only reason I mention it, you know, it's a kind
|
|
of myth and most people have believed the lies being told to us about fat being bad
|
|
for us.
|
|
But you can't really eat too much fat, it doesn't do you any harm, in fact quite the opposite
|
|
and there are many, many individual groups of people who mostly lived on fat, you know,
|
|
it's a lie that you get fat from eating fat and for all of you who like cream and butter
|
|
and all of those lovely rich things, I mean it doesn't make you fat at all, unfortunately.
|
|
Is that coming from the same theory as the Atkins diet came from?
|
|
No, I don't think so, I mean, if you look at the look up the website, WesternAprice.com
|
|
or dot org, am I just did a hack a public radio episode about it but it hasn't quite come
|
|
out, I think in a few days it will, but it's basically a dentist, a US dentist in the 1920s
|
|
on 30s who went around the world, he was a dentist and he was trying to find out why people
|
|
had bad teeth and he found individual groups of people who were sticking to their authentic
|
|
diets over hundreds or thousands of years and first of all noticed they had perfect teeth,
|
|
you know, was surprised but pleased and then went on to study what they were eating and
|
|
they were all eating slightly different foods but none of them were the Atkins diet, none
|
|
of them were paleo, none of them were vegetarian and basically the foundation has sort
|
|
of built up on top of his work and he's got a wonderful, amazing website, so you could
|
|
easily be very overwhelmed with all the content on there and the sort of deep research
|
|
and work. I do eat the bone marrow. Oh, that's wonderful, that is.
|
|
Maybe we just killed a bull that we've had for two years and first of all, we're such
|
|
a luxury to go and, you know, your freezer get as much beef or meat but the thing we love
|
|
most is the liver, all the internal organs, they had such a massive heart and, you know,
|
|
have plates and plates full of heart, the tongue, you know, all the internal organs,
|
|
you know, if you want to eat your eyes, just eat the eyes of the animal, you know.
|
|
I love heart, that's one of my favorite meats to cook up whenever I can get hard, I
|
|
get that. I like that because I like the consistency of it, I like, and it's usually also
|
|
cheaper than, and a lot of people overlook it, they say, oh, it's gross, it's disgusting,
|
|
well, it's also delicious.
|
|
You have chemicals, testicles, you know, go for the testicles, they're all, all these
|
|
funny because the expensive parts, which are the lean steaks, they're the things which
|
|
aren't good for you, you know, they will be good if you consume it with the fat and, you
|
|
know, all the Louis, I think that's what it's called in English here, more the fat around
|
|
the internal organs, if you feed the cow right, of course.
|
|
But all the internal organs, they can be so cheap because people have forgot that they're
|
|
the most valuable, fortunately, so you can get them great and cheap.
|
|
I just bought like two pounds of chicken hearts for like a dollar and a half.
|
|
That is wonderful.
|
|
It has to be said, there's a wonderful thing in French cuisine called a duck confie,
|
|
which is ducks, various parts of duck, which are cooked and braced and then preserved
|
|
in just pure duck fat, which then solidifies and then re-cooked again, oh, I love duck.
|
|
I just, yeah, duck confie is something you should try proper, you know, from a French recipe,
|
|
absolutely unbelievable flavor.
|
|
Oh, better still, just, so it better still just get your own goose and cook the whole
|
|
thing, you know, it's lovely.
|
|
But my wife introduced me to a dipping bread into all the fat around the, after you've
|
|
baked the goose, that's lovely.
|
|
I recently made a leg of lamb and then after that was all done, I boiled the bones and
|
|
made a nice stew out of that and that came out really good.
|
|
I see what is absolutely superb, a very underrated piece of meat is lamb shoulder, but you
|
|
have to do it very, very slowly.
|
|
If you get a whole shoulder, you want to be talking about a minimum of four hours cooking.
|
|
But if you want to, that is the most wonderful piece of meat going really, really tasty.
|
|
But very, very fatty as well.
|
|
Have you guys heard about grass fed as opposed to grain fed and the differences in quality,
|
|
you know, organic and grass fed?
|
|
According to Paleo diet, they recommend grass fed whenever possible.
|
|
I find it kind of difficult where I am to get a hold of that unless you want to spend
|
|
a whole lot more, but the lamb was grass fed and that tasted a whole lot better.
|
|
Yeah, we're lucky in the UK, in the UK, most certainly, most beef and lamb is grass fed
|
|
as standard, we're very lucky in that respect.
|
|
Are you really sure about that because I'm a big listener of farming today and so I hear
|
|
all the journalists going and visiting farmers and they isn't the impression I get from
|
|
the way they're keeping their animals, you know.
|
|
Oh, sorry, that might be a bit more regional to where I am.
|
|
I live in the southwest and my brother and nor is a beef farmer.
|
|
So I tend to get less supermarket stuff anyway.
|
|
I guess the stuff you would regularly get in the supermarkets would probably be more
|
|
grain fed and more intensive farmed, but here in the southwest it's very easy to pick
|
|
up.
|
|
We have more proper old school butchers who are outside of the supermarkets and they have
|
|
more direct link with the farm industry anyway.
|
|
So I'm guessing talking from that perspective really.
|
|
So you know what your brother feeds the cows specifically yourself, but during winter
|
|
the rations don't include the cow cakes that they make for them.
|
|
No, no, he makes quite a good living aside from the beef.
|
|
Many of his excess soilage is obviously very valuable and when the actual meat side of
|
|
the business doesn't do well, he makes that up with any excess soilage he can sell off.
|
|
So yeah, it's the real deal grass.
|
|
That's nice to hear because I haven't heard many other people just feeding 100% a hay
|
|
or a silage or grazing.
|
|
Over in the U.S., it's FDA standard that all beef has to be grain fed for two weeks before
|
|
it's slaughtered to flush out anything in the system.
|
|
So a mixture of, he's kind of like fattening up, but it's just like corn and grain.
|
|
I wonder exactly what they try to flush out, you know, all the good things.
|
|
Corn prices went up and they were feeding them candy.
|
|
That's the reason I asked about what they feed in the UK because I heard an episode on farming
|
|
today where they were talking about all the out of date like breakfast cereals from supermarkets,
|
|
chocolates, pasta, they were all being sold in masks of this one company in the UK that was
|
|
reprocessing it into cow food, you know, and that was like, my God, you're joking, aren't you?
|
|
Well, this is the trouble up on the soapbox time.
|
|
This is the trouble with the supermarket.
|
|
It takes over whole rafts and dictates to the whole supply chain, exactly what happens
|
|
within the whole field.
|
|
And that's the trouble just encapsulated that if you put one part of the chain in control of
|
|
the whole rest of the chain, then you get these practices become popular.
|
|
I'm not sure you can blame completely the supermarket because it's all the consumers are
|
|
complicit in it, you know, because we all want not to think about it too much, but get the
|
|
cheapest price, you know, and the education isn't there to actually inform people what's going on.
|
|
It's a shock for me sometimes, I listen to the farming today and I'm surprised what practices
|
|
are being carried out, you know.
|
|
To a degree, I agree with you to a certain point, but when supermarkets deliberately put themselves
|
|
in a monopoly position and eradicate all the possible routes of competition, then you can't blame
|
|
the consumer when the consumer has no other choice, which in many cases they don't.
|
|
It's like the Walmart problem, it sounds like.
|
|
And it's happened slowly over the years.
|
|
So I mean, in the beginning, the consumers maybe didn't realize the big pound these supermarkets
|
|
would have eventually, you know.
|
|
So it's always a bit cheaper over this little supermarket.
|
|
Let's go over there, but of course, that gave power to the supermarkets for them to get
|
|
bigger over time and hence the problem.
|
|
So it's a slow growing cancer, you know.
|
|
I got a question I want to ask you, farmer, guys, just before we get too far off.
|
|
And I know, I think somebody else had just asked about rabbits, but I want to know from you,
|
|
farm, guys, what's the deal with eggs?
|
|
Because I know if I buy grocery store eggs and, you know, and buy, like fresh chicken eggs
|
|
and crack them open, they are not nearly the same.
|
|
They don't taste the same, they don't look the same.
|
|
They cook about the same, but how come grocery store eggs are so yellow and
|
|
runny and fresh eggs are orange, almost red?
|
|
And I've got to come in here.
|
|
As somebody who gets all my eggs from five hens in the backyard, I can tell you exactly why
|
|
that is. And it is diet.
|
|
Can I jump in and say as well, as a man who has 20 chickens in his shed sleeping,
|
|
I would absolutely agree with you, it's diet.
|
|
Yeah, not to give them grains unless you really have to in the winter if it's only slow,
|
|
snow, let them have as much free forage of eating bugs.
|
|
It's amazing how excited they get to eat worms and little bugs and stuff like that.
|
|
And then you get orange eggs.
|
|
Yeah, what you get with commercially farm chickens is they only get fed things called layers pellets,
|
|
which are just the worst end of the food chain compacted into these dry pellets
|
|
with very little nutritional value to the chicken, whereas the chicken is the most
|
|
incredibly omnivorous animal you've ever seen in your entire life.
|
|
They will eat almost anything and they're designed to do that.
|
|
It's incredible how much a common garden chicken will lay waste to give them the opportunity.
|
|
They will, they are unbelievably destructive but wonderful creatures.
|
|
I saw a good setup where they had a big field and they had a cage enclosure for the chickens.
|
|
And the chickens to state whatever was in the thing and each day they would move it one
|
|
cage place forward rotating the whole field so they didn't have to worry about
|
|
cleaning up after them and each day they had a new supply of grass and whatever bugs were in that
|
|
area. The chicken extractors.
|
|
Brother Mouse did an episode on this backyard chickening, probably 2010 it was one of my favorites.
|
|
It's a really good method but it doesn't quite give the chickens the free range to really find
|
|
the bugs they want because they're in a limited space and the bugs can hop out or they
|
|
need to hunt around and dig in different places so it's better than the commercial but if you
|
|
have the chance to have them free range you can easily train them to come back to the same place
|
|
every day if you have a little orchard for them to be under it is better still.
|
|
Well the thing by me I have to worry about coyotes and raccoons and some other animals that
|
|
might try to kill them off. Up here we got foxes, bears, raccoons, coyotes, pretty much the gauntlet
|
|
stray dogs. Yeah I understand what you mean. It's in ideal conditions but those chicken
|
|
tractors are really nice ideas still if that's what you're limited by.
|
|
And don't be fooled, a chicken is a feisty accretia then you'd imagine.
|
|
Once you get to a healthy weight they can defend themselves to a degree, they're not totally vulnerable.
|
|
One thing I'm hoping for is the chicken assaurus, did you ever hear about that project?
|
|
Well the birds evolved from the dinosaurs and they still have some of the DNA that's just
|
|
a lot of those genes are switched off so the project is trying to find the genes that code for teeth
|
|
and arms, claws and a long tail and to re-enable it in the chicken so you basically have a dinosaur
|
|
looking chicken. Thanks for that Dr. Frankenstein. I don't know whether or like that idea.
|
|
Me neither, hi. I think it's not such a good idea actually but did we worry about Jurassic Park?
|
|
So I'm reading on the Western A-Price Foundation website,
|
|
Dude Man and he on their dietary guidelines it says things like
|
|
microwave radiation is to be avoided and fluoride and drinking water is a bad thing and a lot
|
|
of stuff that generally is it looks pretty pseudo-scientific. Do you know anything about this?
|
|
I'm not sure that that's pseudo-scientific. There's a lot of evidence to show what actually
|
|
happens to food for example in a microwave. There's a lot of references. My wife is translating
|
|
one of the books into the Czech language and it's amazing the things she comes across from the
|
|
amount of study. I definitely wouldn't dismiss it and the biggest factor which is impressed us is
|
|
the difference is in people's shape and development of their teeth. Like ask any other dietician
|
|
why people children have to wear braces when they're younger and let them explain why and how they
|
|
can avoid it without any surgery or intervention and just by what they eat and I don't know any other
|
|
nutritional expert that will tell you exactly how it occurs and all the other changes in physical
|
|
shape of growth of children and maintenance of health of adults. So look a little bit further still.
|
|
Another thing that kind of brings it down is it's harder for the average American to eat some
|
|
of these from the farm. Healthily fed animal foods is the governmental policy sort of favors of the
|
|
big factory farm over the smaller free range family farmer. Yeah I mean that's definitely part
|
|
of the problem and part of what they're trying to educate the public on. I mean they're not saying
|
|
I mean we live really pretty perfect lives by what we eat because we produce it all ourselves
|
|
and he's taken us 10 years to get the practice to be able to do that you know but in the beginning
|
|
we were we were buying not perfect types of food you know but everybody can focus on some of the more
|
|
nutrient dense food even if it's not of perfect perfect food origin you know even if it's from
|
|
commercial sources and you know it's it's metro prioritization and doing a little bit you know
|
|
cutting out the things which aren't so good and introducing gradually more of the things which
|
|
are good and understanding but most of all you know not falling for the the state and the money
|
|
led propaganda which is really really abundantly and when somebody mentioned earlier that
|
|
you know you you can't always blame the supermarkets personally speaking I have absolutely no
|
|
problem at all lumping a whole heap of blame onto the supermarkets because the the trouble is
|
|
the nobody's tackled changing their ethic some people have had some success changing some of their
|
|
practices but it's whether we are actually encouraging them to improve their overall ethic
|
|
to move away from profit being the only good to something a bit more valuable to society I don't
|
|
I don't see how we do that I don't quite know how we do that but it doesn't seem that anyone's
|
|
trying to change that fundamentally it seems to me grabbing a stick by the wrong end to be honest
|
|
you know because they're a business at the end of the day and it's also not really constructive
|
|
trying to find someone to blame it seems more constructive to think and to study properly
|
|
what food is actually good for us you know and then how we can source it ourselves maybe you can
|
|
get some stuff from the supermarket but for individual people to actually you know vote for their
|
|
feet and create change that way after all it was them who created change by giving the supermarkets
|
|
power gradually and progressively over time which which got us into this situation you know well
|
|
but it actually goes back to the suppliers for the supermarkets and probably the best way to
|
|
change the suppliers attitudes is to actually put pressures on the supermarkets to actually
|
|
carry things that are actually appropriate for us as opposed to saying we're not going to support
|
|
the supermarket and go to someplace else that's just going to make them hurt more and it's going
|
|
to make them get cheaper worse stuff that's going to hurt the overall population.
|
|
Well we only have to look at the milk market. We only have to look at the milk market to see a classic
|
|
example of how it works I mean I don't know how it is in the US but currently in the UK most milk
|
|
producing farmers are actually producing milk which is being sold on the shelf at a lower price
|
|
than they can actually produce it for on the farm and that's purely because milk and milk
|
|
distribution has been placed into an almost exclusively monopoly position towards four companies
|
|
and the independent producers of milk have been wiped out by the big supermarkets so I don't see
|
|
you can take responsibility away from the supermarkets for the market situation
|
|
if there's nobody else to compete with them. Not on the US and the US is basically most people get
|
|
the milk at the supermarket and it's usually from big factory farms milk places.
|
|
Just wanting to sort of summarize even not wanting to deliberately be controversial but the milk
|
|
in those supermarkets isn't really fit for drinking and actually causes so many problems
|
|
and is the reason why milk currently today isn't healthy to drink. There's a half true there.
|
|
If you just go to warmmilk.com you'll learn the story but basically the milk needs to be
|
|
as it comes out of the cow and the cow needs to be fed the right food and the cow needs to be
|
|
the right kind of food. We need high fat milk and all of this is explained in very very big detail
|
|
in the Western A price and warmmilk.com. I currently got some bacteria in the milk as well
|
|
because you've got flora depends on it. You need the bacteria which is supposed to be there and
|
|
you don't want it cured by a pasteurization and homogenization. When it goes rotten and off
|
|
it stinks the high heaven but when it's raw and fresh it only gets better when it goes sour.
|
|
If you let it get sour and don't drink it quickly it's amazing. It's an amazing thing
|
|
warmmilk and I find it difficult to imagine going back and not having it to be honest.
|
|
We've been drinking it for 10 years. But does the milk actually need to be
|
|
gargled first like they do at white power milk? I'm not sure what you're talking about so
|
|
here's a joke. Back the chickens real quick. How much land do you need per chicken would you say
|
|
for them to be free range? Well we we have an area where they go which is about one one just
|
|
around our farm buildings which is half a hectare which is one one acre but but we don't even
|
|
notice any impact for them and that's about 20 chickens so I will guess at least a thousand
|
|
square meters maybe two thousand square meters and then you might even not notice any impact
|
|
and I know it might be different in the US with more aggressive predators but in Europe and the UK
|
|
if my understand as long as you've got some tree cover so the predator birds can't come down and
|
|
get them then you're pretty safe I think if you've got a fenced in area to have them free range
|
|
that's at least been our experience there's a lot of tree cover yeah they're beautiful beautiful
|
|
creatures they really are I went out to so I went out to the barn just yesterday and I'd given up
|
|
collecting eggs and I heard one of them just clocking up oh god this is going to be one more egg
|
|
and I looked underneath her and there was about 15 eggs I'd missed over the winter you know
|
|
so we were really happy to have some eggs again so how often do they make the eggs?
|
|
well it depends on the breed you can get some breeds which you know lay in very intensively
|
|
almost all year round and one egg every day but it's again it's like it's a compromise between
|
|
an old variety which might be more sturdy and more more healthy but it might not lay so many eggs
|
|
so regularly and I would personally go for a larger quantity of older variety of chickens you know
|
|
which haven't been so modified for sort of high production but they tend to be hard here
|
|
and more self-reliant and self-sufficient you know how do you keep them in the winter I mean
|
|
over in New England it gets pretty cold sometimes do you have like heated enclosures or what do you
|
|
do well out here in we're in central Europe in Czech Republic and we have pretty deep snow it
|
|
gets down to minus 20 or minus 30 on occasions ours just sleep inside a shed as long as I've
|
|
got a place out the wind it doesn't matter necessarily if it's cold you know what you can do is
|
|
make a like a small boxed enclosure just open it in the morning for them somewhere off the ground
|
|
out of the wind and the rain just at night and they're they're really pretty sturdy creatures you
|
|
know as long like all creatures nor humans if you give them good food then they'll have much less
|
|
health-related problems and if you don't demand too much from them you know but that's a problem
|
|
with all the the kind of industrial and when you put any business element then you start to think
|
|
well how can I get just a few more eggs a few more liters of milk you know and then the temptation
|
|
to pump it up a little bit with grains and then a bit more grains and and then you can run into
|
|
health health-related issues you know which you might not connect with food directly but they are
|
|
you know like humans. What do you feed them in the winter? We give them scraps from our food
|
|
we we have we boil potatoes for our pigs and and give them away from cheese making we give them
|
|
some grains but we sow them in some warm water and you know let them start to ferment a little
|
|
bit so or we we killed a bull recently so they were eating all the meat scraps from after we'd
|
|
boiled all the bones and everything like that pretty much anything you have you know but try and
|
|
make it rarer and you know minimize the grains if possible because it's it's just full of gluten
|
|
you know you're probably better boiling rude vegetables or you know maybe turnips or potatoes
|
|
or so on like that instead of corn and grains they seem to be the kind of the modernized poison
|
|
for for feeding in industrialized animals and maybe even you know a worse culprit is the soil
|
|
being you know unfortunately which humans are being persuaded to eat but which is very poisonous
|
|
I don't eat soy and all that's part of the paleo too is cutting out like soy and legumes for
|
|
the most part yeah that there's a real so it should interrupt you continue now that there's a
|
|
real there's a lot in common between paleo and understand and the western a price but I'm
|
|
understanding the problem with with paleo is that they they exclude or don't emphasize that you
|
|
should eat more and more and more fat that it's a catalyst for many aspects it depends on the
|
|
there's several different you know strains some people were saying oh eat a lot of fat a lot
|
|
of animal fats and some people were saying lean meats so I think it's very much up in the air
|
|
and whether you should have lean meats or or very fatty meats I um you know I was me my wife
|
|
had been studying it kind of for the last 10 years and so in treat and interested you know one
|
|
point we're interested in macrobiotics or vegetarines and but we could never quite find the depth
|
|
of knowledge the foundation to justify why you know for the the macrobiotics my wife was in
|
|
Japan for two years and what they said was that Japanese motivated diet just had no relation to
|
|
what the natives in Japan that she met and heard of reading so you know that kind of put a nail
|
|
in the coffin of that one but what were they well I mean they were reading very much what the
|
|
Western A price diet is you know pork fat pork fermented vegetables broths you know um when
|
|
the vegetables were eaten they were eaten in small quantities but as kind of condiments as a
|
|
kind of real a real tomato sauce you know but fermented all the vegetables will be fermented and
|
|
like a sauerkraut and pickles but in much smaller quantities on the side of the plate you know
|
|
but a bigger emphasis on organ meats and fats not to mention of course the the fish and the eggs
|
|
and everything like that now have you ever raised any rabbits we we did try and we we had some
|
|
rabbits from a neighbor I love Czech Republic because a lot of people still have animals and it was
|
|
our our first animals we tried but to be honest the rabbit is a poor man's food and the rich man's
|
|
food was you know the rich person had a cow but the poor poor person had goats or rabbits you
|
|
know because it's not so fat it it it survives more marginal marginal areas and here in Europe at
|
|
least it's a problem with meximatosis and other other places with rabbits and we we couldn't get
|
|
out red our our rabbits to survive unless we either injected them or gave them a kind of
|
|
food specially made for them which had been got some kind of medication in them and we didn't want
|
|
to do that but the biggest problem is that the meat is too thin and they're fluffy and cute
|
|
I read a little thing once about rabbits and squirrels and how there's tons of them out there
|
|
but but you can starve to death eat nose
|
|
it is the best way I think I was thinking about doing deer hunting getting some venison
|
|
it's harder than it looks have you got some land
|
|
okay it's only hard because you're using the gun use a truck it's a lot easier
|
|
I know what I'd like to do is jump out the tree and strangle them
|
|
bait man use bait sometimes that's illegal that's a whole well no it's not strictly illegal
|
|
there are ways to do it legally it's illegal to hunt over bait but you can bait out of season
|
|
well at least down south yeah up here you can bait but you need a permit and landowner permission
|
|
and it just it gets into stuff that I wasn't ready to get into my first year hunting you know
|
|
I mean there's a big enough learning curve as it is to have to deal with bait but to answer your
|
|
question dude man no I don't have any land just just a yard oh I was only gonna encourage people
|
|
you know chickens are amazing because sometimes it's a bit wasteful to keep killing an animal
|
|
and you know I'm not a vegetarian but I don't like killing things although we do but chickens are
|
|
great because they've got quite a long life and they make so many eggs and eggs are just you know
|
|
wonderful you know they're fed on good good food and we'll have you so I think anyone can have
|
|
there was a guy earlier who said he had an apartment with some some chickens didn't he?
|
|
I'm a very small garden outside so anybody can keep them I think they have apartments that have
|
|
them over here but they're usually used for fighting so you use you keep your chickens years at a time
|
|
when I was growing up we'd keep chickens through you know like the the beginning of the year
|
|
till summerish and in fall we'd slaughter the chickens get more chickens and then
|
|
rents washing repeat yeah I mean it depends if you're gonna have them for meat or for eggs I mean
|
|
I think a better system is to keep them for the longer run because then you're not gonna do
|
|
so much killing and you actually get more return from the eggs then for the lifetime of the chicken
|
|
and for the input and when you do kill a chicken because he's too old the meat will be yellow you
|
|
know and there'll be such wonderful fat in there because the chicken has had time to mature an age
|
|
just like all the animals you know killing them too young the the meat and the fat and whatever
|
|
you're gonna make bone broth from hasn't hasn't sort of accumulated the wealth of nutrition that
|
|
we're hoping to get from them you know so I would recommend against the just going through that
|
|
short-sighted cycle and rather going for the long haul well the reason we went with the short cycle
|
|
hang on I got a cough and the reason we do the short cycle is there's a chicken house
|
|
that's up the road from my parents place and they get rid of their chickens every fall
|
|
because they have to clean out and wipe everything out and so we get free chickens that are already
|
|
lying and they're not even a year old yet and we just use those yeah I understand it's only
|
|
that the the quality of the it's gonna take you a while to to get some good food into them and
|
|
change their diet and I'm not saying that the wherever you get them from is terrible but it's
|
|
gonna be commercial and you know that the chickens gonna be laying different quality of eggs and
|
|
then you could get if you did it yourself you know it's not difficult if you just have a few old
|
|
chickens it's not difficult the first as long as you have a cock the first 10 eggs you have put
|
|
them in a small incubator and 30 days later you've got your own little chicks you know and
|
|
easy to breed them yourself and and no trouble to keep them over the winter they're they're very
|
|
easy keepers dude man can I ask how you got into doing this stuff like living you know farm
|
|
hippie lifestyle yeah you won't believe it was it was a linux it's it was Linux
|
|
really yeah yeah yeah I mean because I never just I was amazed by the freedom and the the sort of
|
|
attitude of openness and sharing with source code you know and because I just had free time at
|
|
the job I was doing and I didn't want to be doing proprietary stuff and this was like the good 12
|
|
or 15 years ago I couldn't find any kind of job to get into for open source and I thought I can't
|
|
stay at this anymore so the more I've read about it on the internet more I realized I had to do
|
|
something and of course the first year it was just a few chickens and a few rabbits and a go-to
|
|
too and it built up gradually you know yeah definitely research along the way and I mean my wife
|
|
never thought that we'd have cows but basically because of the Western A price foundation and
|
|
the new aura and respect towards butter I realized that there was no choice but to get the cows
|
|
because we wanted butter and the first time you know we were scared of big animals like a cow
|
|
so we got a donkey to begin with and I was scared of him to be honest now I had some problems with him
|
|
but since then we've got more cows we've had bulls we've got some horses now and everything but it
|
|
is a little bit you know one step at a time but it's definitely in the realms a possibility for
|
|
a useless computer program because that's what I was and I'm still cool sounds really cool
|
|
but sorry guys to dominate this a little bit you someone mentioned food and it's a bit of a
|
|
passion of mine oh no I have a perfect time for me to get on starving now well and on this note
|
|
I think we have another new year's passing here was it like Myanmar and some other countries
|
|
the new bar is left and they were the ones with the they had a map going that that was showing
|
|
and where it all was yeah they mentioned it before they left and I don't remember what all
|
|
countries other than Myanmar no I don't remember either and I didn't see a link it's time and date
|
|
dot com I just couldn't find the the thing that they were looking at everybody frantically searches time
|
|
and date dot com I think I just found it I see what she meant about not being able to pronounce any
|
|
of them though phenom pen maybe uh Chongqing air kuchsk possibly Singapore or my too far behind
|
|
now I don't know but with that kind of mispronunciation you my friend or a true American
|
|
thank you I know you it's a strip of of Russia and China definitely are in the new year
|
|
okay everything's going well Ken I'm just panicking there my 3g connection died so what did I miss
|
|
hopefully not an interesting conversation about food I'm cold better of that yeah no we weren't
|
|
talking about food Ken we were talking about strapping kids to fireworks still yeah we just
|
|
sit off a few small ones one of them actually you fell down and come streaming
|
|
straight towards the kids and I said right when I saw it falling down and I said right come on
|
|
run back here and the day then it just landed where they were show of hands guys who's surprised
|
|
anybody anybody because your hands were so well and I know this is why you don't
|
|
yeah yeah this is why you don't buy fireworks for your kids Ken you make them yourself don't have them
|
|
it's actually when I come here it's a very funny thing for for me to have fireworks because
|
|
fireworks are banned in Ireland for obvious reasons fireworks is can yeah in the states it's
|
|
it's kind of like buying a state by state basis but normally what happens is you have someone
|
|
and you go on a family trip to another state you buy it and then you smuggle it back to the
|
|
the state that has the restrictions on it so it's easy to get them in the northeast you
|
|
always go to New Hampshire or if you take a trip down south you always bring it back up but uh yeah
|
|
that's more or less what happens you can always live in New Hampshire like some of us do that sounds
|
|
good so when I was growing up you wouldn't see fireworks at all because you know if you were
|
|
called for fireworks you would call for explosive material and you were going down to the farm
|
|
for a while so when I came over here I couldn't believe it like the amount of fireworks at the
|
|
neighbors fire off it's absolutely incredible oh Ken you would love some of the trailer parks we
|
|
got here I mean it's every Friday night from July until end of summer so true where are you
|
|
who me yes I'm in New Hampshire I mean that's the southern corner of southern south eastern
|
|
corner of New Hampshire over by keen uh yeah a little south of that I'm in Rochester actually
|
|
oh sorry not south that to be east to be quite a ways east of of keen keenes in the western corner
|
|
the state what's that you didn't work up or I did it didn't hear you so what do you think about
|
|
those free stators um I wish there'd be more of them and get here quicker are you one
|
|
well not by choice but uh yeah I was already living here and thinking like that before that
|
|
movement started I've been following that I might try to uh move up there eventually
|
|
you guys want to explain what that is cult no it's a movement actually you'd probably
|
|
be better at it than I would be because I don't pay much attention to them it's basically trying to get
|
|
as many uh libertarians to move up to New Hampshire to uh influence the system and make uh the
|
|
state more libertarian oh interesting that's a cult I could get into possibly and their logo is a
|
|
sweet hedgehog perfect uh porcupine oh looks like a hedgehog but yeah I guess that is a porcupine
|
|
sorry for looking in but what's a free stator uh that's what they were just uh libertarians that
|
|
move up to New Hampshire uh for uh to try to influence the system maybe uh create more freedom
|
|
in their life and the the ideas as I understand it is that New Hampshire is a good place to start
|
|
because our state constitution is quite a bit more it's it's quite a bit freer than even
|
|
the US constitution and the US constitution was largely based upon the New Hampshire constitution
|
|
and a lot of it was actually cut out um to be more agreeable to some of the other states but I mean
|
|
you know for instance our state logo is live free or die and uh you know I frankly would would
|
|
hope people get here faster because we have more people more liberals coming up from
|
|
from Massachusetts and coming over from Maine um and even Vermont to some degree but just
|
|
our our state has turned very liberal lately and it's uh it's uh it's not gonna end well
|
|
wait what do you mean liberal you mean like what do you mean uh democrats basically okay
|
|
where it you know they they come here like especially especially for Massachusetts
|
|
their Massachusetts is very very democrat very liberal where they have just like everything
|
|
is a service everything is taken care of for them um and they just they pay tremendous amounts
|
|
of taxes and hearing New Hampshire you take care of stuff on your own and we don't pay many taxes
|
|
up here other than uh our property tax and when these people move up from Massachusetts and they
|
|
start demanding all these services um you know our economy really can't handle the the tax
|
|
increase that all these services cost and a lot of them uh you know the laws that they want to pass
|
|
and stuff are just they they kind of take your freedom away take away your liberties
|
|
i mean another thing New Hampshire has no sales tax so there is quite a bit of people that uh
|
|
live right on the border and go into New Hampshire and go shopping yeah there's that we have no
|
|
sales tax and we have no income tax and uh but but our property taxes are are really high compared to
|
|
other places in the US and surrounding states everything has to be paid for yeah absolutely
|
|
and i and i think it's just it's just a matter of you know do we pay for it collectively and and
|
|
leave things up to politicians to bargain for them and uh you know we know the kind of corruption
|
|
that happens there or do we you know try to take care of things agree to do it on our own you know
|
|
what i mean and it's just you know it's six to one half it doesn't know the other but um
|
|
you know it's nice to have some choice i will just point out that our new year's marathon has
|
|
now hit religion and politics weather up next and we got some nutrition already so
|
|
oh you got twenty one hour when you have twelve hours to fill um you got to talk about all
|
|
number of things i guess see that's the funny thing too you you mentioned having to fill time and
|
|
that's the kind of the idea that i went into it with last year when we when we just did the
|
|
twelve-hour show like how are we going to fill twelve hours and man cool people just show up
|
|
like this and it fills itself you don't even have to worry about it it's so great
|
|
well that's good i you know the thing that uh i was real happy to be here this year and
|
|
this seems like as good a time as any um because you did the uh the new year's marathon last year
|
|
and i i was listening to it on hacker public radio because it came out is i don't know eight episodes
|
|
or something and i thought i really need to be a part of it so it was it was as a result of last
|
|
year's marathon that i started recording shows for hacker public radio that's awesome that was
|
|
absolutely the goal that was that you know anything else that came out of it was bonus but that
|
|
was the goal was that it would get people excited definitely got me excited i've i've recorded
|
|
quite a few programs by now yeah and the good ones too i'm trying to get my wife to listen to your
|
|
your office series she's uh she's a teacher so i think it'd be useful for
|
|
and it's just started to poke i i've got at least four more that are loaded up and in the pipeline
|
|
and i'm writing more stuff now so uh you know this could be 20 or 30 episodes before i'm done
|
|
don't really enjoy your um podcast on where to find good ebooks and whatnot that was really nice
|
|
i love yeah that was good yeah uh it all closed together for me
|
|
well thank you uh you know one of the things that i come at that from i i hope it was fairly obvious
|
|
this idea of market incentives um i was professionally an economist for a number of years so i
|
|
have a certain bias towards thinking that way and uh you know i'd like to see um uh yeah i'd like
|
|
to see more companies that are putting this stuff out because they see uh an economic benefit in
|
|
doing it that came across pretty obviously uh now that i actually think about it in that context
|
|
that you were actually an economist because it was definitely from that standpoint
|
|
looking forward to it uh hookah uh i'm hoping my small company can uh start listening to them because
|
|
nobody there knows office it's a fantastic site series of hookah you know you should be applauded
|
|
first as i said to you on an email uh privately it should be required reading for every person
|
|
and every company in the in the country it's gonna say country but countries will be the
|
|
a better uh explanation but you know maybe we should at some point we'll collect all the emails
|
|
and publish them somewhere but um i was uh the way i get into this was that i was a professor of
|
|
economics at a fairly small college and then i was asked to become the faculty development officer
|
|
because i seem to have a better handle on technology than anyone else on the faculty uh and that
|
|
led me to developing all of this training and it was Microsoft office that i started with because
|
|
that's what the college was using um and then when i got into Libra office it was well this is all
|
|
the same stuff really and so that's one of the things i keep emphasizing to people is if you learn
|
|
the basic concepts right you can use any office suite that you happen alike so someone could
|
|
listen to what i'm doing and get the basic ideas for Microsoft office or word perfect office
|
|
and use all of that stuff uh hookah are you going to do something uh could take three or four
|
|
episodes to uh uh how to fix uneditable stuff that co-workers put out oh that's that's not even
|
|
a whole episode there's a recycle bin up in the upper left hand corner of your desktop
|
|
and drag and drop is all it takes or start from scratch yeah absolutely well you know by definition
|
|
if it's uneditable then it can't be fixed right well sometimes it's uh yeah i guess starting from
|
|
scratch everything's a long process if you have to fix what's already there so what do you mean by
|
|
uneditable do you mean uh stuff that's so tragically written and poorly put together that it's a
|
|
nightmare even to try and read it are you talking about like PDFs that can't be opened in any other
|
|
format no i'm talking about uh this is mostly outlining we do a lot of outlining and procedures and
|
|
stuff and i don't know people just put in number outlines to make it look good and uh call it good
|
|
i i don't think that's the best way to do outlining frankly no no that's the well i consider uneditable
|
|
yeah one of the interesting things is uh i've been focusing on styles a lot right now because
|
|
it's such a key concept when you're working with this and uh the trick that a lot of people don't
|
|
get is that the way to outline is use heading styles and then you can take what you're doing
|
|
and you can bring it right into um the presentation graphics program that will create all your slides
|
|
for you just by reading it yes uh with the type of documents i'm thinking of uh that have been
|
|
produced over years literally uh where you're supporting some old product where manufacturing
|
|
and what happens is these people had no concept of styles yeah that's uh that's unfortunate
|
|
and um yeah i don't other than trying to explain to people no this is really the way you need to do it
|
|
uh i'm not exactly sure how to deal with it um i i started off by taking a look at how this stuff
|
|
is done on the web and we know w3c has talked about separating presentation from content
|
|
and i use that as a jumping off point to basically say well you should approach
|
|
office productivity in much the same way the presentation and content are two different things
|
|
and then get this idea of what what is the functional meaning of each element
|
|
yes that in that kind that concept uh i i'm gonna try and uh get it throughout throughout the
|
|
company if i can but uh a lot of it's just lost cause yeah that's that's too bad because it's a
|
|
really great concept i you know maybe at some point we'll throw so much computing power at
|
|
everything that it'll overcome our sloppiness but uh for the moment i'd just as soon
|
|
learn how to do it the right way yeah i'm talking of a small company that doesn't even have an
|
|
IT department the IT department is the boss's son uh yeah been there done that well i've done
|
|
training in uh small companies as well where uh people not all of the people with the vast majority
|
|
people were very receptive to um you know going for a days training on
|
|
word and a lot of them got really into it and uh started correcting other people's documents
|
|
then after the training so i don't think for a lot of people it's i don't think it's necessarily
|
|
intentional that they want to produce crappy documents it's just they haven't they haven't seen
|
|
another way and it hasn't been explained to them the advantages of doing it correctly
|
|
i had an interesting uh experience with that at at this college i was at they had a program
|
|
for people who needed to finish their bachelor's degree and the idea was that they might have had
|
|
in a couple of years of college and then had to drop out now they're 40 years old and realizing
|
|
they're never going to go anywhere in their career if they don't finish their degree so we set up
|
|
a degree completion is what we called it and it was a series of seminars that they could take over
|
|
18 months and as part of this you had to demonstrate a certain level of computer literacy and you
|
|
could do that just by taking a test but if you didn't feel comfortable taking the test i created a
|
|
class well you know the class mostly focused on office productivity that was the biggest part of it
|
|
and everyone who was going to take the class would put it off until the very last moment because
|
|
they thought it was going to be terrible they didn't want to do it and then they take my class
|
|
at the end they'd be yelling at me why didn't anyone make us take this earlier when we could have
|
|
used it yep yeah exactly that's not my fault you put it off until the end i wasn't the one who made
|
|
that decision well who could i tell i put in the chat on your latest episode my pet peeve i have
|
|
yet any any of the companies i do consulting for sit down the secretary's computer and need to
|
|
open up their Microsoft Word and the zoom level isn't at that default 50% of the screen wasted
|
|
because there's gray space on either side of the document and you're seeing you're seeing the
|
|
entire margins now i guess that some of them probably do like that they can see further
|
|
vertically in the document but if you're going to do that by one of those rotating monitors but
|
|
it's just it's absurd that till they just sit down and like you said they don't configure it at
|
|
all they have no idea the interface for it is also kind of cripples the vertical space because
|
|
you know the ribbon takes up a lot of vertical space and it's designed at a time when wide screens
|
|
were coming popular so i mean i made absolutely no sense that's one of the things that i liked about
|
|
colligra as they they put it on the side instead of putting it up on the top and using a big vertical
|
|
bars well there's one of the things i like to do is i will use some of that space by having
|
|
my styles window open all the time well if you want to conserve vertical space the best i found
|
|
is to have a system that has a global menus i set up in kde i put this panel on the side like
|
|
on unity and i put the menu button that opens up the file edit no menu bar in a button just
|
|
says menu that's right underneath the launching button and then i set it to automatically put the
|
|
windows into full screen mode and one in full screen mode to not show the the decorations and i put
|
|
the decorations into a window control panel that's hidden up at the top so i when fully maximized
|
|
there's no menu bar no window decorations and just all app and it actually works out pretty well
|
|
yeah interesting i i don't i don't think i'd actually like that but maybe i should give it a try
|
|
was i when you start talking i said oh man there's there's one of those global menu people
|
|
it's a global menu plasmoid that i use it's uh but the there's also more options in kde uh there's one
|
|
this i think an app menu you could put in the actual window decoration and uh then you can also
|
|
put one in the panel and or you could just have one in the panel that just says menu and then
|
|
it goes the file edit you know so uh there's definitely more options if you go the kde route
|
|
well it's pretty much by definition if an option exists anywhere it's in kde that's very true
|
|
the thing is you need to have um you need to have i think the the package installed for it it's
|
|
uh i think app menu dash qt or something like that uh it it comes on default i think on the
|
|
boom to base like kubuntu um i recently migrated to slack where i haven't compiled it yet
|
|
but um i'm gonna go look to do that maybe i'll try to get my hands dirty and create a slack build
|
|
well what are the slack builds and global menus platoon must be you i know that's like yeah that's
|
|
all i really needed to hear i agree with that that kde is quite customizable but i also find it
|
|
hardest customize and and unity is okay as well but i've been actually customizing groom shell 3.4
|
|
in my jay to quite recently with extensions and i'm like sort of a mate quite first time
|
|
quite recently i'm quite amazed at what i like what i think is that bridge really because it is
|
|
quite customizable with extensions well one of the things that i think links all of this and we
|
|
take a look at whether it's kde or office productivity suites or whatever they have a lot of
|
|
capabilities there's a lot of customizability but you have to invest the time to learn how to do all
|
|
of this stuff well they're trying to make some of this stuff easier um i know that they're they're
|
|
making it so you could download uh the window manager scripts uh right off of the config
|
|
dialogue uh just like you would like a desktop theme and they're trying to make it so it's easier
|
|
to download some of these add-ons so uh but you have to learn that there are add-ons and
|
|
how to uh get them which is a big stumbling block for many people
|
|
yeah i i i love kde that's been my desktop of choice for a long time and and i know that i don't
|
|
know half of the things i could do with it um but i just haven't sat down and spent enough time
|
|
to figure it out as i might try to uh plasma active you mean like literally on a tablet or just
|
|
like the interface itself uh the interface or the tablet either one i've not tried it on a tablet
|
|
i did play around with just like that uh i guess it's the active interface but you know that one
|
|
where it's just kind of like a search bar in the middle of your screen and you can search for your
|
|
applications and then they all launch full screen i i've messed around with that i think that's a
|
|
nap i think that's a netbook uh interface oh okay that's yeah you're right that's what i've messed
|
|
around with it didn't love it but no i've not tried active yeah plasma active is the kde netbook
|
|
interface and um i haven't tried it but i've been reading on sites about every now and again and
|
|
looks quite interesting so i hope it kind of ends up on devices and so on in the future
|
|
it definitely looks interesting they're uh they're trying to go away from the the file-based uh
|
|
you know system and go based on uh meta data tags and uh activity based the
|
|
organization so basically whatever you have open you could easily pin to your activity
|
|
and the activities are basically separated based on what you're actually doing so you could
|
|
easily create an activity which has its own separate desktop which i couldn't have applications
|
|
associated with it uh files associated with it bookmarks associated with it
|
|
and be able to easily open them up once you go and switch that activity and each activity can
|
|
also hold windows too so it's almost like uh like a more advanced uh virtual desktop
|
|
anyone actually use activities no i tried i can't figure it out i hate them
|
|
yeah i looked at the last time i actually played with kde and i just couldn't figure it out it
|
|
just was a clumsy interface the thing is uh here's a trick if you want to use activities there's
|
|
a couple things you might want to try yeah but one has to be a trick it should be here's something
|
|
that we have in our desktop it's a core feature of it let's let's let's hear the trick first
|
|
okay there's the activity bar uh plasma and what you do is you put a uh an extra panel on one
|
|
corner of the screen that uh is like auto hide and uh whenever you want to switch the activities
|
|
you just put your mouse down then the panel pops up and you could easily switch between the activities
|
|
and another thing you can do is you could set uh the mouse action on the desktop to uh switch
|
|
on uh scroll or a button press and you could quickly navigate that way too well okay so i mean
|
|
well great you can switch between thousand virtual desktop yeah like how how do you get your activity
|
|
to like let's say i want a video editing activity and a music editing activity how do i get those
|
|
two activities to be distinct from one another that's the well i don't know yet for for activities
|
|
they actually for the kde apps it saves the state so when you press the activity management thing
|
|
and you press stop it saves the state of each of the activity so if you had like a bunch of like
|
|
let's say you had kade open with a bunch of uh config files you were working on uh and you stop
|
|
that activity while uh that window was open in that activity it would save the state and the file
|
|
of what you're doing there so when you uh re-open that activity it would pop up with kate with
|
|
that file that you're working on okay but say you say you have a shell or something open and
|
|
you're processing something you're saying that that's going to be suspended for the entire time
|
|
that is not continuing to work in the background while i'm doing something i there's two things
|
|
you could you have them opened and then you could stop them so all the open ones you could switch
|
|
between but you could also stop the activity which would suspend the the application only the
|
|
suspend only really works for what i found the kd app applications that have like some sort of
|
|
session management but uh the the thing is that uh the there have a new interface and a new paradigm
|
|
they're trying to work with which is called the share light connect and uh being able to
|
|
associate uh files with activities even on the desktop so you could set the folder view to uh
|
|
your activities and basically whatever and you could connect files to an activity uh it's
|
|
in its infancy it's being worked out in plasma active uh but once the the share light connect is
|
|
open it'll be easy to pin the the application i mean the files you're working on to an activity and
|
|
make it a whole lot more useful i don't sorry i just don't see this activity thing has been
|
|
useful because okay i i just think it's too complex it's not obvious to me yeah i think probably
|
|
what it's suffering from is the same thing that nipa muck and all that stuff is suffering from date
|
|
they introduced it in a completely non-working state at four dot zero and it's just been there
|
|
and we're at four dot well technically ten now i'm on four dot eight but you know we're we've
|
|
it's been this whole development time and it still isn't working and so we're just kind of
|
|
staring at these options and they're not even functional yet so why are they there i think well
|
|
i'm on plasma active the the thing is they have the activities like writing your face it's
|
|
right there and it's easy and accessible to use them and the desktop definitely did not have that
|
|
it wasn't a parent it's like here's like this extra thing you don't have to use it but
|
|
it has a whole bunch of features that you could if you want to uh i don't even see it having
|
|
features that i could use i mean i literally do i want to make an activity for someone
|
|
for like a me that they want to sit down and they want to do their music stuff so i want
|
|
certain applications like qjack control i want that to launch i want lenex sampler to launch i want
|
|
certain things to happen and i i unless i'm just missing it which is totally possible but i haven't
|
|
seen it online yet like i how to i can't figure out how to get those things to be bound to an
|
|
activity i can write a shell script that will launch them all and so and then a desktop file that
|
|
they can double click to trigger the shell script but not i can't get it just to switch over
|
|
an activity and bang there's your workflow yeah i think i think the thing that i from what i've
|
|
seen and heard about the kd activities it's like it sounds like it's an interesting concept
|
|
but it sounds like it's like flawed from the start like it doesn't actually do the things that an
|
|
end user expects it to do as far as being able to set up things like for a project type thing
|
|
have an activity for a specific project and have it actually be persistent so you can actually
|
|
use it as a method of navigation and it doesn't sound like it works correctly in that respect
|
|
well that's the thing right now at least on the desktop there's no easy UI to say
|
|
here i'm working on this file i want this to be on my activity or be able to open it up
|
|
hey do you know if is it you said no easy UI is it something that you can do and i can
|
|
fig file or something do you know well you could you could kind of i think in
|
|
4.9 you could right click on an application in like dolphin and say associate this with a
|
|
current activity or something like that okay and you could set the folder view to use the
|
|
activity folder okay okay so you're it's almost like on a mobile phone where you put
|
|
applications on a certain screen like on and yeah okay okay but the share like connect once
|
|
that hits the desktop any applications that are designed for it it'll basically gets the
|
|
information of what file is currently open and if you do share it basically gives you things like
|
|
upload this to flicker or email this to a contact or that a like would basically add
|
|
metadata to nipple mark like add a tag like this add it five stars and connect would associate
|
|
that file with the current activity so you have a quick easy UI to basically do the kind of
|
|
interact with the kind of kde technologies and actually make them useful interesting I still
|
|
think they shouldn't have advertised it until it was ready but that's cool yeah but it's completely
|
|
tied into kde so now an application like case or some some application that wants to take
|
|
advantage of any of these things is completely tied to the kde desktop and can't be migration
|
|
to handle the one I honestly can't see I can't see myself using this outside of kde I can't see
|
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myself using it at all you know this is something that I would be using for someone I set up a
|
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computer for and said here's your look here's the environment I've constructed for you and here's
|
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how to use it well this is mostly the whole paradigm is going to be hammered out in in plasma
|
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active that's basically the testing bed to basically get everything down because they don't want to
|
|
break the desktop again and they'll slowly trickle things out but one of the interesting things
|
|
that you will be able to do is once you have the ability to associate files with an activity
|
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there is a it's currently in the works to be able to lock an activity and it encrypts all those
|
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files on that activity so you can actually use it to hide stuff and and use a kind of workflow like
|
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that or what concerns me as well about it is the fact that none of this is file-based it's
|
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completely gone away from the units many of the Unix philosophies for for start one small thing
|
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do one small thing and do it well everything is file-based this is now a metadata database
|
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he linked in through mine types essentially a mess and yeah I think you could access activity
|
|
stuff through I think a KIO KIO so you could open it up in dolphin but and most of the KDE apps
|
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but I'm not sure about the non KDE apps and command line sort of things I wonder I'm not sure if
|
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there is a bridge since it sounds to me like the activities is designed in a way to help you
|
|
manage your applications and windows and files and stuff but as a knock-on effect you're
|
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instead of doing that manually now you're managing your activities so it seems a bit strange
|
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yeah the UI definitely isn't down yet and they haven't really worked out the whole concept on the desktop
|
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yet that's one thing that was lacked they had the capabilities it's just that they had no way
|
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I mean the user had no good way of doing it which is the big big problem you have these things but
|
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no one really could do anything with it but it's just starting to really come around and I'm
|
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saying the big big thing would be when the share like connectors that is lands on the desktop that's
|
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what I think of it really push it forward I think there's still some people here need convincing
|
|
and maybe I maybe I'm just missing it maybe I just need somebody for five minutes or a presentation
|
|
just to get somebody vision but I think it's a north lot of buy-in just it really goes
|
|
completely back to a desktop philosophy that I have completely given up on well here's the idea
|
|
of being able to run one application from one desktop and another application from another
|
|
desktop all intertwined with you know scripts running on the console well yes scripts are definitely
|
|
a good thing basically that the whole idea behind activities is that at least initially you have
|
|
all these plasmoids and they can specialize your desktop to do different things but they're limited
|
|
in space and you have multiple different things that you use your computer to do so the idea is if
|
|
you have another activity you could use it to hold different things like you could set up a separate
|
|
activity that has that uses the folder view to your projects folder or you could set up an activity
|
|
that basically you know manages things you could set up activity that has maybe a picture of
|
|
you know a picture of your family while you're at work and then when you go home you have something
|
|
else it basically the idea is to separate your different activities and have a separate
|
|
specialized desktop for whatever task you're doing yeah but do people really work like that and
|
|
if they do why don't they just use a different window or but yet login is a different user I mean
|
|
all of those things which are supported by the majority of desktop environments we have out there
|
|
yeah I'm with Ken I don't work like that I tend to you know if I'm doing a job I use the
|
|
application I'm using for that job and if I start doing something else I open another application
|
|
I might put it on a virtual desktop I might not you know I don't think that that clean vision of
|
|
having different spaces or areas for different activities such as you know video editing or
|
|
photo editing I don't think computing really works like that things tend to merge into one another
|
|
don't worry yeah the workspace is in desktop environments I mean I yes there it's been
|
|
now in game 2 it's that in KDE it's there come whilst they're a bit differently in game 3
|
|
XFC has it Alexey has in so on but I I never really use the workspace is I just tend to just
|
|
stick to the one one workspace or window if you like yeah that's fine but there if you want to
|
|
use them what I'm saying is they are supported you know whether I've got dual monitors or not
|
|
I'll use works you know if I'm just on my laptop I might use I might throw the IRC window into
|
|
the second into a second workspace or if I've got dual if I've got an attached monitor I'll
|
|
whack it onto the second monitor but kind of the point being that I don't as Phil says I don't
|
|
work like that I do I'm say even in work I'm busy doing something I'm writing some code so I've
|
|
got code page up then all of a sudden somebody comes in says hey we need to check this spec or
|
|
this interface so you open up a few words or word documents or PDFs or something and then you're
|
|
printed them off and then you need to take a screenshot or something because you need to file a bug
|
|
report you know the next thing you're SSHing into a Linux box and comparing something on a Windows
|
|
server and then and then three or four hour later you find you've got about a gazillion window
|
|
open and you start closing them all down to start again yeah but yeah at that time you need them
|
|
and sometimes what I'll do in that case is if it is getting really cluttered I'll feck all the
|
|
windows remote desktops to a virtual desktop I'll move all then I'll divide it by activity but
|
|
you know I can't automatically say it just requires an awful lot of thought oh Johnny you've come
|
|
in and now there's an urgent matter let me just hibernate this activity while I open up
|
|
something else sorry for pulling the piss about it but I genuinely don't work that way and
|
|
I've never seen anyone who does yeah that I can't can't see it myself either yeah there it is
|
|
very small and it's almost like a new paradigm of looking at it and maybe it makes more sense on the
|
|
mobile devices like the tablets so I guess we're just gonna have to see just what happens but I'm
|
|
looking forward to some of the newer developments and the newer AIs around that yeah don't
|
|
sorry I think I think I'm I'm ragging on you cause I'm really glad that you that you come on and
|
|
are explaining this stuff to me and I love my frustration with it is they put in this foundation
|
|
they have a vision which is grand they put in all this foundation which is grand but they're
|
|
loading up services that I believe I don't need running on my machine like on my SQL database and
|
|
and a ss sorry my brain is just fried tattoo I don't know I was just thinking my ass is kiddie runs
|
|
yeah I have that virtuoso the thing about streaky a streaky is getting axed for four dot 10
|
|
finally but never mucks getting their own internal indexer so they're doing everything in house
|
|
and apparently it indexed a whole lot quicker and uses less resources and as far as on the horizon
|
|
when kde ports to cute five they're also moving over to frameworks five which moduleizes their
|
|
their frameworks and makes it a whole lot more attractive for an average cute developer to
|
|
bring in those libraries and and since they've been working on plasma active they've been
|
|
thinking a lot more about trimming down the fat per se so you can fit kde on lower resource the
|
|
devices yeah but again why yeah again and like I said all these services running that were going
|
|
to allow developers to build on top of it and the developers didn't rush in well I like like the
|
|
pin I like I finally fell in love with the akinati it's running in the background I can have it
|
|
a sink with my cloud accounts I have it I pulled down all my contacts off of Facebook and I was
|
|
able to liberate that made it a whole lot easier to build a nice functional address book with
|
|
nice pictures and rather complete and you know it it it's finally getting the point where it's
|
|
it's really usable and getting gaining more and more features and my the contacts actually
|
|
and your schedule can actually show up in your clock app when you click on the clock app it opens
|
|
up a calendar and it will show you all the the things for the day it's actually getting quite
|
|
integrated nice okay that's fine that's lovely but you know what there is not one desktop out there
|
|
not one desktop out there that addresses the real need that every business has and the reason that
|
|
Microsoft is still winning on the desktop to this very day yeah and that is integration seamless
|
|
integration with Microsoft exchange came ill doesn't do it thunderbird doesn't do it and there's
|
|
no reason now before it was like a psychological thing we don't want to support an undocumented
|
|
interface well since the EU thing has come along that's been no argument so I think there is
|
|
something that you can set up akinati for maybe some sort of groupware thing yeah it's a
|
|
different replacement not an exchange okay this is just another by the way thing and just
|
|
allow me here is a hpr segment going around about this because people are chasing fantastic
|
|
desktops and interesting technologies and the latest thing the latest thing in broadcasting across
|
|
the network and bonjour let's everybody jump on that and desktop search is going to be the next
|
|
thing let's jump on that and interfaces everywhere you know unified interfaces touch screen interfaces
|
|
everybody jumps in the latest thing but the one thing that will help people get Linux deployed
|
|
on the desktop is a viable seamless replacement to Microsoft exchange and actually I have an answer
|
|
for this at the end because I've been researching quite a lot and when I say seamless integration
|
|
with Microsoft exchange if you look at any any device that's been out there Microsoft Windows
|
|
phone the original version took over from because it had seamless integration with exchange rim took
|
|
over from that because it had seamless integration with exchange calendar and outlet the iPhone took
|
|
over from that because of the seamless integration with Microsoft exchange Android has taken over
|
|
quite a lot from the engineering at least because of the seamlessly integration with Microsoft
|
|
exchange so I would argue right here and right now the reason we have one and many other things
|
|
Linux is one on many other areas is simply because we do not have a good connector to Microsoft
|
|
exchange and what I mean by that is if you go to your boss and you say hey boss I want to run Linux
|
|
and they will go here she will go yeah fine doesn't bother me but you need to be able to do your work
|
|
and you can't look them in the eye and say I can do my work if you don't have if you're not able to
|
|
communicate with everybody if you arrive 20 minutes for the meeting then you're instantly told
|
|
oh I cannot use I cannot use this this desktop of yours you need to switch back to the
|
|
corporate desktop because we need you to be here on time that's fair evolution's got a plugin
|
|
for exchange evolution is shite yeah I was just about to say and I will tell you why it shite
|
|
back 10 years ago when it was you know that monkey mechelle de cassas he had a zimian I bought
|
|
the connector for for exchange from them because it was proprietary at the time and when I
|
|
purchased it it didn't work because we had a self-signed search and ever since then I've been
|
|
using that into integration it has simply not worked the solution of course has been
|
|
devmail has anyone used that it devmail is a application that's run it's a Java app that runs
|
|
and what it does is is you start it up and you give it the connection to your outlaw web access
|
|
server and it uses the same protocol that apple ipad uses uh Microsoft mail on the apple ipad
|
|
and with that it will allow you to connect via iMac to your Microsoft exchange server
|
|
it will also allow you to connect a devmail server up it will also allow you to connect
|
|
and yes so I've got a pop I've got iMac I've got SMTP I've got HGTP Caldev and I've got a local
|
|
LDAP port however this is my round absolutely brilliant software you should you should definitely
|
|
support it it's devmail and it is the URL is devmail.sortzforge.net if you're not using it you should
|
|
and I've been using it for sorry I obviously not I Bob my friend Bob no actually I have been
|
|
using it and it is really really very nice so could you back up can and explain what exchange is
|
|
to some of us you don't know this sort of thing right Microsoft exchange is a mail server and it's
|
|
a coloring server and it's also a um company directory so you can look up people's emails and
|
|
that sort of thing it is the backbone of every small yes it's awful as maybe but it's the backbone
|
|
of every small business they get a Microsoft server and it comes with this small business server
|
|
thing it's got exchange and people connect their outlook email client to it and they're able to
|
|
schedule meetings with Bob Tom and everybody and they're able to shout schedule and meeting room
|
|
and a projector something and it all works and then it syncs with their phones and everything
|
|
works fine it is the backbone of business and when I say backbone it is literally companies just
|
|
operates entirely on on email and their outlook and their exchange yeah I've got your back
|
|
it does that we our company uses it so you know and on a Linux desktop my only option is to use
|
|
they there's a thing called is it where exchange web or something basically turns exchange into
|
|
an email client an on a web base client but it in comparison to our look it's got very limited
|
|
and I work for the government and we definitely have no choice other than to use microsoft
|
|
exchange you know open-source technologies not even an option absolutely it's everywhere and if
|
|
you're if you're talking to a set of before but if you're talking to your managers and they really
|
|
don't care they could care less what you're running they really could and so long as it's secure
|
|
you know because when you think about you know I've been thinking about this for a long time
|
|
and how best to do a topic on it and this was the best thing is a rant just here on the new year show
|
|
so on you you can't stop me but when I think back to like microsoft didn't always own the desktop
|
|
it was the fact that years before you had a thing called lotus mail if anyone remembers that
|
|
and then they that owned the desktop and it was it was brutal because you had to take the
|
|
sorry it was ccmail it was called ccmail and you had to take the thing down every night to reclaim
|
|
the database or to reduce up all the hard disks and people all the unique skies are thinking yeah
|
|
but we have mail sorted we run mail on the back end but they haven't exchanged sorted and none of the
|
|
developers seems to me have ever worked in an area where they've worked for small shitty businesses
|
|
that run these not criticizing people yeah but small companies who just want time to be able to
|
|
talk the managing director to be able to talk to they to the sales guy in the fields that's all
|
|
they want to be able to do and if it's able to do that they could care less what it runs up
|
|
has anyone ever used zebra at all how does this fit into this whole quandary it's it's a
|
|
replacement for exchange but it's not okay for right here's the thing here's how technology comes
|
|
into a company you know because we've heard about people why has Linux not succeeded on the desktop
|
|
reason one yeah anyone want to give me a reason they've heard and i'll smack it back down to to
|
|
being no good connector to an exchange because there's no good connector to exchange
|
|
excellent good night actually i'll give you a different take though at several of the companies
|
|
i've worked at they didn't use exchange they actually used lotus notes instead now here was the
|
|
worst part about this there is actually a lotus notes client that will run under Linux however
|
|
companies don't want to get it even though it's pretty much free they still will not approve it
|
|
which basically keeps us from using Linux on our on our PCs well don't get me started about
|
|
lotus notes but yes but they you know if you hear people saying hardware manufacturers want
|
|
ship Linux that's absolute Rolex because the hardware manufacturers will ship anything that
|
|
makes them they don't care they'll ship Linux happily because it's cheap they don't have to pay
|
|
anybody first but the fact is people need to be able to buy it or it's no good for them
|
|
the the fact remains as if you look at the recently the how how technology gets into a small
|
|
company or even a big company for that matter it's not that the IT department sits down and makes
|
|
a strategic decision to do that that's how upgrades happen that's how you go from windows 95 to
|
|
2000 whatever that's how upgrades happen but that's not how technology is introduced to companies
|
|
it's introduced by the employees themselves if you don't believe me look at the ipad coming in
|
|
and before that look at the blackberries coming in it was brought in by people had to set
|
|
whole set up a home the gutter for Christmas it's really handy it's really useful i needed for my
|
|
job da da da da da da all of a sudden ipad started appearing everywhere agreed or not as people
|
|
seen that agreed and has anyone does anyone want to argue with me that a business case was ever
|
|
done by any IT department anywhere to get ipads in
|
|
rujip please do push the talk
|
|
so um sorry i've annoyed everybody on my set of time time for another timezone isn't it
|
|
and you can't can't talk about that for an hour okay let's
|
|
start our recordings for a second and restart them again please
|
|
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