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954 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3086
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Title: HPR3086: HPR Community News for May 2020
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3086/hpr3086.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 16:32:47
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---
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This is HACCO Public Radio Episode 386 for Monday 1 June 2020. Today's show is entitled
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HPR Community News for May 2020,
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and is part of the series HPR Community News. It is hosted by HPR Volunteers
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and is about 54 minutes long
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and carries an explicit flag. The summary is
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Dave and Ken talk about shows released in comments posted in May 2020.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthos.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthos.com.
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Hello everybody, my name is Ken Fallon. You're listening to another episode of HACCO Public Radio.
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This one is the Community News for May 2020 and I'm joined as always by Dave.
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Hello, you're also joined hopefully not, but you might be joined by my neighbors
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who are all out in their various gardens making noises and stuff.
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But it'll just add to the ambience of that thing, you know, it'll be lovely.
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Until somebody starts a little more than I'll run on each other.
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Ah, but it's normal May.
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Well, if they're all out in the garden, they probably don't want to be cutting the graduates at all.
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They'll have to get out of the way to do it, so hopefully we're good.
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So this is HPR, HPR's community podcast network, where the shows are contributed by members of the community.
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So our podcast listeners are the people who submit shows.
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Just one second, I need to shut a door, Dave.
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And this show is where we once a month give a roundup of what's been going on as far as we're aware in the HPR community because we are but two.
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And this is where we introduce new host Dave.
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Well, I'm sorry to say there are no new hosts this month.
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What's one last month, but not this month?
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I'm not angry. I'm just very disappointed.
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I must say this COVID-19 thing is really messing up my podcast listening experience.
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It's doing a lot for me to be able to record podcasts, but as far as listening goes, that's more of an issue.
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Yes, I know. I can't catch up with the backlog I've got.
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I've got from 10 gigabodes down to 8.8 or something at the moment.
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Wow, that's really hard.
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Yes, really hard to get any further.
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So shall we go through the shows for last month?
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So the last one was on the Friday, the first.
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And it was a case for unattributed messages.
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And it was by Ahuka.
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And also known as Canada brand.
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And there's a comment there from Brian.
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So the premise of the show was.
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And anonymity has an unfortunate consequence of enabling tools and trolls and abuse.
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And Brian and Ohio says enemies.
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It's sad that Ahuka considers his fellow citizens on the other side of the political spectrum, his enemies.
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Also, all governments, not just Russia, so political discord for their gain.
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Just listen to Voice of America and check out all the CIO A ops in Central and South America.
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Quit picking on Russia as a straw man.
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I think to say really.
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I never heard that.
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I never heard any straw manning.
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Yeah, I suppose we're not as sensitive to American politics as.
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I guess Americans will be.
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Yeah, seems reasonable.
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So the following day we had HPR community news.
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And there were six comments on that show.
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What was the one where I abandoned you Dave left you all to yourself?
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Yeah, I probably needed the practice.
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Yeah.
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Anyway, Tukatoruto says thanks.
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Thanks for keeping the flag of HPR high up and doing the community use episode all by yourself.
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Listening to the recap of the whole previous month's worth of episodes is one of those things that I look forward to when a new month starts.
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Tukatoruto, you need to get out.
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You don't need to stay in them till lockdown is over.
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But then you need to get out.
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In a safe manner, you'll be all right.
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So I felt on a band to answer this as I usually do it.
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And I said no problem.
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I appreciate the feedback to Tukator.
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It's a abbreviated thing.
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I also feel the community news is an important part of HPR on the show must go on as they say.
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And then we have a comment by Tukkey.
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Blood type distributions.
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Dave mentioned in passing that all positive would be an unusual blood type.
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One might think so when you're just looking at how they all these work.
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Aliens.
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Thank you, Dave.
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All you need is one A and one B.
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Alil.
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And then the all positive would be overruled.
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You might be tempted to believe that it's 25% of each of all A, B and A, B.
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But that assumes an even distribution of genes.
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My blood type is A plus and I grew up being taught it was one of the most common ones.
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When I moved to Hong Kong, I learned that the blood type distribution is your universal.
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Someone told me that my blood type was unusual.
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While A plus is not exactly unusual in China and I assume Hong Kong, nearly 50% of the population is all positive.
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While A positive is at around 25%.
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It is also not as dominant in Sweden as I was led to believe.
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37% of Swedes are A positive, while 32% are all positive.
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While in the UK and the US, all positive is somewhat more common than A positive.
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The reverse of the Swedish distribution.
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And he links to a Wikipedia article.
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Blood type distribution by country.
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And then I'll do a hookah says, I love the show you did a great job, Dave.
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Though I'm guessing you would like to have come back next time.
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So I replied to you.
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I replied to Clackin.
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And I said I think I was confusing because I have learnt this stuff with I know about this stuff.
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I can't have that model.
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And now I think of it.
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I was learning about blood groups more than 50 years ago.
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And I should say this is an adentiment.
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And done very little else with it since then.
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So yes, there's times when you can rely on your memory sometimes.
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Maybe back to the comment.
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It's an interesting subject though.
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And I must go and refresh my dwindling, slash dwindled knowledge about it all.
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And I would jump in and suggest that somebody should do a show about it.
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Save you the effort.
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You have plenty of stuff that I have on my list for you to do, Dave.
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Yeah.
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I look at many things that I see in daily life.
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I just found a really interesting paleontology, YouTube thingy.
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I was thinking, oh, you should really be highlighting paleontology.
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And I think, is it really my thing to do?
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Well, I'd like to make a hash of it, then.
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Anyway.
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So, referring to a hook, I say, thanks to hook.
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I'm glad you enjoyed the show.
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In having run through it earlier, I went and mumble refused to record anything for me.
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I obviously gave myself an accidental rehearsal.
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So maybe the show wasn't as disjointed as it could have been, smiley face.
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Yes, it's more fun when there are two of us to discuss and banter a bit so I could throw the normal setup.
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When I remember that it's on.
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Happens, it happens.
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This one, I listened to while queuing for the recycling center.
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Getting my Python 3 code working in Python 2.
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And this was a Mr. X modifying some of his old code, trying to get a working on a thing,
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a new Raspberry Pi or something.
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Yeah, yeah, the thing that he uses to listen to is podcasts.
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I actually got this meld tool from him, which is absolutely excellent.
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Oh, I thought he had been mentioned before.
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I've been using it for years and I'm sure somebody's recommendation.
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But yeah, it is a brilliant thing.
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My favourite.
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So, should we move on?
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Any comments on that one?
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No, I should say it was a great show and I do feel his pain.
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It sounds like this Python 2.3 transition stuff is really, really horrible.
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But it's what happens.
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It's a thing that happens is happening in the world as well.
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I got into Python later in the game so I started everything as Python 3.
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Don't do any Python, do it all.
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Same here, same here.
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Keeping track of downloads in Elm.
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The tutorial shows us how to keep track of data is been downloaded in Elm.
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This made perfect sense while I was listening to it.
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Yes, yes, same here really.
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I can see you on everything else to see about this show.
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If you came back and looked at this page afterwards like now, you'd go,
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Oh, goodness, what was that all about?
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Yes, yes.
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You wouldn't say I allowed that.
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Would you know it would be too sensitive?
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No, no.
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Although I did have a smidgen of the Dave Morris effect over engineering something here that you're downloading.
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But I suspect with the tutorial, it's part of a larger project that we will see at some point.
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I assumed it was part of his space game thing that he was building.
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I don't know whether we actually said it as much, but yeah.
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So then we had the Linux in laws season one, episode five, porn and Skynet.
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This is the one where they did the Nvidia thing at the end.
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And Bendy says, Skynet, why?
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Wow, I didn't realize Skynet was really Nvidia.
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I'm going to bid my graphics cards right now.
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Thank you so much for the heads up.
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Yes, they're having fun with that stuff.
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The following day, it was CRVS with some dim hints.
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And I thought to myself, that's got to be right up your alley there, Dave.
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Yeah, we had a little conversation about this.
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I think there were a few issues with the way he'd put together his notes and stuff.
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Not a lot of that, anything.
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Anything that's imaginable.
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But yeah, he's quite of them, he's just.
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So yeah, this is pretty good.
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It's a mistake here when it says dim info plus equals end dollar.
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Just send in an email and ask him.
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Anyway, yeah.
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My only thing about this is it's very clever and I'm quite impressed.
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I don't know why you'd want to do it or why I'd want it.
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But maybe I'm just stuck in the mug and don't see the need to have things in this.
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The xdg.config directory.
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I mean, it's nice that things have developed to place themselves there.
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That's great, but things like VIM and VI and other things.
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There's a lot of other things that don't follow that line and forcing them to do so is quite a job.
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But if that's the way you feel it should be, then fun.
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Well, it makes the other desktops work.
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Make it makes it compatible.
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So actually managing dot files is a thing, then certainly helps with that, isn't it?
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Would be nice to have somebody give us an introduction and then a in-depth look at like the free desktop and xdg and some of the applications.
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I use xdg dash open all the time to open files.
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And it will be great to know where the configuration files for saying,
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okay, I want to open this with this application, come from the mime types and all that sort of stuff.
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I'm sure I could find out, but it would be just easier if somebody told me.
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Yes, yes, it's always good to have somebody who knows the way around this stuff.
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Give an overview and explanation.
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It's much better, it's more fun, more interesting than just digging around in dry documentation,
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which I'm not all that good at, to be honest.
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So the next one arose from an issue I had, which was working on a show they find in Raspberry Pi on the network 3052,
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about putting quotes inside a, inside a bash sparing hand, I thought, hey, I've got a bash expert here online.
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What's going to come of this four hours later?
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Four days, four days later.
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It was just a thing, occasionally I think, oh, I am not as clear about this as I should be.
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So their boards, likely that a lot of people were similarly unclear.
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So why not just make, make, make myself clear and on the way share the, the clarity.
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So that's what I did.
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And yeah, bash is a little bit of the way it handles quotes.
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I mean, partly because it's a rag bag of bits that have gradually accumulated, I think,
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but not, not, not, not to mean that that's a bad thing necessarily.
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No, it just happens.
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I just sort of, you know, bought it the scrapyard type of accumulator.
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Anyway, so comments.
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Nobody who a long time commenter, but are they a horse, Dave?
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Let me just check that.
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No, Dave, they are not.
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That's amazing, isn't it?
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Isn't it? Yes, yes.
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It made some very helpful contributions over the past few months.
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So yeah, it's surprising.
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Very, very shocking impact.
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Shocking.
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Shocking, I tell you.
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Anyway, nobody says, further simplifying, there are actually more than two types of courting and bash.
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In addition to the single and double, there are also NCC and localized courting quotations.
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And by the way, this is not going to be an easy comment to read.
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For this problem, I would have used the NCC quotation, Aliash Show Network dollar single quote, end map.
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Du, du, du, du, du, du, you're going to have to read that.
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Personally, I find it a bit more readable.
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It might not be as portable, but that shouldn't matter as the episode specifically addresses bash.
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There is a, there are explanations of NCC quotations in the bash manual.
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So what is that there?
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There is, you put in dollar, then the quotes?
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Yes, there's a thing in, in bash where dollar and then a quoted string allows you to add all sorts of backslashy things inside it.
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So you can put unicode sequences in there if you want to and backslash N and backslash T.
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And all that sort of stuff.
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So yeah, it's great, it's really good.
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But let me go on to my comment.
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I said thanks to you.
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You're of course perfectly right.
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I tend not to think this way of doing things.
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Maybe because I originally learned unics on HPUX and Sanos and Ultra exception a long time ago.
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And I might be accused of being stuck in my ways.
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I did think of mentioning this in the show, but didn't do it because it was a snippet.
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I didn't want to go into too much detail and make the episode too long.
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I did link to the relevant page in the documentation.
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There's a link in the comments here.
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However, feel free to add the bash scripting series yourself.
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I look forward to hearing a different view from you and you of course.
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A little boy next door.
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Yes, got a good pair of lungs on it.
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Yeah, no, good.
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It's also nice to hear kids.
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It's amazing.
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Now, you know, kids are playing a lot more in the street.
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And here, since the lockdown, kids are playing more in the street.
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But the number of accidents and deaths hasn't decreased because they've moved from the highways to children getting knocked down.
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And pedestrians getting knocked down.
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Anyway, yes.
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So that's...
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Anyway, after depressing everybody, let's move on to the next show.
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The joy of pip tools and pie end virtual environments.
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In the little bit of Python series, but clacky.
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And there were two comments, clarification from clacky himself, Arata.
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We want to pipe in virtual and works just fine.
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I confused myself when creating the NYX Python virtual environment, which doesn't work.
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When I thought I was creating an Ubuntu Python virtual environment, which actually does work.
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Just absorbing that.
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Sorry.
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To Toto says, interesting and insightful.
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It's been a while since I needed to do Python package management.
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But thanks to this episode, I'm ready next time to need arises.
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Yeah.
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I think it's kind of important if you ever plan to distribute your Python program.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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I am not good at thinking at that level.
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I'm afraid so it is good to get a occasional kick in the backside to win that.
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It's a good mindset to be working with.
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Absolutely.
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And the next episode was Tony Hughes.
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The first in a mini series on matchbox and die cast restoration.
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And Tukutoruto says, sounds good.
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Look forward to this series.
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I haven't ever stripped matchbox cars, but I've done my fair share of miniature stripping.
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I'm interested in hearing how you handle this as these models are both metal and plastic parts.
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Yes.
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It's really intriguing.
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Tony Hughes himself applies saying feedback from Tukutoruto.
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Thanks for the comments.
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I'll be covering how I go about dismantling the models, removing paint from the casting and plastic parts.
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It's part of the series.
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My next episode will be about basic tools and materials you need to get started.
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Cool.
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I've been intriguing because these are toys from my era.
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Well, my era is before this, but I do remember them.
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You look at some of these poor tatty old things.
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I think it would be nice to bring it back to life again.
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I'm really impressed that Tony's doing this.
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Yeah, it's pretty cool.
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All the cars that he has remind me very much of the cars that I had, because they were all in this state when I got them.
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Having had five brothers used it, four brothers used it before me.
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Yes.
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So kids tend to be a bit hard on these things.
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So the following day was something that I had planned to do for months or years, actually.
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And was surprised that I'd never gone brown to it.
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And I heard that the escape pod series were in trouble financially because of their room.
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Yeah, they're still trying to pay their authors and, yeah, during this period, it's a top firm.
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So I had several ones that I wanted to put on the show, but I thought this one was the most appropriate for HP.
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Yes, it's a lovely, lovely episode.
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I've listened to the escape pod for a while, but I missed this one.
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I never heard it.
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2018.
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I had to reflect and listen to it straight away before I, as I was posting the show, which is a bit notable.
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No, well, sorry.
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Sorry.
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I went back to, and downloaded all the escape pod shows and listened to them from the start,
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while I was doing a renovation at one point here in the house.
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They are absolutely excellent.
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And there was one other show that I wanted to put on, but I can't find it.
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But this one, actually, I ended up hearing it come into my feed.
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And then I was thinking about, I've already listened to this twice before.
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So I won't listen to it again, but, you know, I had the face mask and stuff on.
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And then I ended up listening to it for a year, third time.
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I really, really thought they did a very good job on this artificial life form.
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It's basically about a artificial robot who gets into...
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Is it anime, I think?
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Yes, sort of a fandom type of...
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Yeah, exactly.
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It's in the name, isn't it?
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A fandom of robots.
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Yeah.
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That's what I mean.
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Yes, I could really sympathize with that.
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And the author's written a...
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I'm going to find out more from my particular source.
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And the narration is absolutely excellent.
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Top notch.
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Yes.
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I've heard him many times.
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He's got a really good delivery.
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And there's some excellent people on that.
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The thing is, with the skateboard, you can't always know if it's going to be a nice, uplifting episode.
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This one definitely is.
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So, it's a good, a nice episode to start off with.
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Oh, yeah, yeah.
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Oh, absolutely.
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It's a bit of a...
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You can come out and think of...
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Yeah.
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Oh, I wish I hadn't listened to that.
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It was just...
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Yes, exactly.
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Good.
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That's not to say the shows are not good.
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It's just, you know, you're there in tears sometimes at some of the episodes that you go.
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Oh, I...
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I am an internationally renowned worse.
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So, that's fine.
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I'm allowed to do that.
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Anywho, following on.
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Federated blogging with Wright Freely.
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And this is part of a hookah's social networking...
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social media thing.
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And Taki says,
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Federated links for talks on Fediverse thing.
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In addition to the archive.org location above the talks are also available
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on the Federated free social web at Ante gives a link.
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That's cool.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Nice.
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There was a distraction free tool for writing, which is pretty cool thing.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, interestingly, I'm talking about WordPress and Microsoft Office and stuff.
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I'm sorry, WordPerfect at the time that you just sat down and wrote.
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And then Microsoft Office Command and people productivity went down.
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I actually saw that from day one.
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Yeah.
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We had WordPerfect somewhere other on a machine in our department.
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I was working at, but I never used it myself.
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We were all writing documentation by getting it punched on punch cards.
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So, you'd sit with a coding sheet and write stuff up, get it punched.
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And then there was a text processor which read the cards and produced stuff on that
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line print or a daisy wheel or something like that.
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That's the state we were at.
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So the following day was keep calm and virion.
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Is that how it went?
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Yeah.
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Text to, the text to speech thing made it, made the right message by my pun.
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Sorry, just to find it.
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Sorry, I guess.
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Oh, you were the one who wouldn't let me put puns on your bash series.
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Thank you very much.
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It's all right to put your own puns on.
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Come on.
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I think Andrew and I were debating what to call it and made some suggestions.
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And this was the one, this one that we both agreed with.
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I mean, it doesn't mean anything, but it just sounds good.
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And after 225 shows, not counting all the community news ones,
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you still don't know how to use a USB recorder.
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Who could know that if you got a multiple ports on your laptop
|
|
and there's several USBs, if you plug it into the first USB, it works great.
|
|
Plug in the second USB, it doesn't.
|
|
You get this incredibly shitty noise.
|
|
It was not as bad as the next time I tried to do this.
|
|
But it's just, I don't know, I don't understand why this laptop would do that.
|
|
Oh, it's weird.
|
|
I do, of course, mess, because the gods of audio recording can fall on any of us at any time.
|
|
Well, I'm back to my, just for anybody who's listening and might be vaguely interested,
|
|
I'm back to using mumble on my main desktop.
|
|
And the way I managed to solve that one was by recompiling mumble to make it work,
|
|
whereas before the version I had was not playing ball at all.
|
|
So yeah, yeah, the gods of sound recording really, really hating.
|
|
Well, this is a nice episode.
|
|
Great to, I ended up listening to this one twice because the first time I was making a bike shed
|
|
and they are rearranging the bike shed.
|
|
And I didn't know if I had got to the end and then the second time I was down shopping
|
|
and thought, I'll just listen to it again, because it was worth it.
|
|
Wow, that's a punishment.
|
|
I like the pain of making tea.
|
|
But we had fun anyway.
|
|
We enjoyed it.
|
|
I'm enjoying the reasons.
|
|
Shinwagi, Taken, Taken.
|
|
We'll maybe do another one before two, I don't know.
|
|
It depends.
|
|
And Dan Dixon was on the following day.
|
|
And this one went viral in my work.
|
|
And I posted this.
|
|
And about how to use a push to talk thing.
|
|
And some people have adapted us to use it on the map on the Mac as well.
|
|
So there you go.
|
|
I have actually found a Android Nano here.
|
|
I don't know if you can hear me clicking that.
|
|
That is intended to be my push to talk.
|
|
But I got distracted.
|
|
His code is good, but very.
|
|
It's as a two-cutor or tall level as far as my Python is concerned.
|
|
So I was thinking of modifying it just the basic bling script sketch.
|
|
Because I'm not interested in the LED light and all that flashing.
|
|
I just want off on off on.
|
|
So I've been kind of hacking at that yesterday.
|
|
And then I had to stop because it was exercise time.
|
|
Well, yeah, I think it's a brilliant thing.
|
|
It's really amazing.
|
|
It's just a character.
|
|
By the way, Dan Nixon.
|
|
Sorry, Dan.
|
|
But yeah, a brilliant piece of work.
|
|
And the pictures were great too.
|
|
It really adds a huge lot to these things.
|
|
And we got to see some pickies.
|
|
And we got our act together.
|
|
We got my act together.
|
|
And we managed to get the pictures properly interleaved with text and whatever.
|
|
And with thumbnails and stuff.
|
|
And this prompted me to write some scripts behind this to do this in a less human intervention-y way.
|
|
So I can't screw up.
|
|
That's where scripting comes from, Dave.
|
|
Oh, absolutely.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
It's all about protecting yourself from yourself.
|
|
In my case, anyway.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
No, but I really want to get this work.
|
|
And I've, because I'm sick and tired of having to find a key on my laptop.
|
|
And I want to have one of my, uh, basically on all the computers that,
|
|
rather than a printed one, I was thinking of just getting a,
|
|
yeah, one of those thick, thin nanos, you know, about the,
|
|
about the width of a credit card and about a centimeter, half an inch wide.
|
|
And then kind of shrink wrap them or, you know, put them on,
|
|
put them in some clear heat sink tubing.
|
|
And then use the onboard LED as they,
|
|
as the light to tell you whether it's on or off.
|
|
So that's kind of what I'd like to do.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I think tubing is wonderful stuff.
|
|
Different sizes.
|
|
Yeah, I got a little,
|
|
I got a little, uh, uh, uh, USB oscilloscope thing,
|
|
um, from BitSchool that uses that.
|
|
So, might work.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But I have a lot of cool working.
|
|
I might get in touch with him and, uh, ask for his help.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Yeah, I'm in hand.
|
|
Look to the code.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I'm going to have a look.
|
|
It's, uh, it's a great little project.
|
|
Really, really, really impressive.
|
|
10 finances.
|
|
Brilliant idea.
|
|
I must try this.
|
|
I'll probably use different parts.
|
|
As you can tell.
|
|
Yes, I am.
|
|
And I've got nowhere.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
And you know why I've got nowhere?
|
|
Because since this lockdown thing,
|
|
I've become the house, uh,
|
|
from morning until night,
|
|
I have to fix things.
|
|
Just 24, seven.
|
|
My, I can't use zoom.
|
|
I can't use this.
|
|
My laptop cables fallen out.
|
|
My charger is missing.
|
|
My door has,
|
|
my door not has stopped working.
|
|
It's just brutal.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
That's not happening here.
|
|
I think my kids are not around.
|
|
Not much anyway.
|
|
So, yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
How do you?
|
|
So, are we able to add a comment from Jesra who says,
|
|
an amazing mix of custom hardware and software.
|
|
Thank you for sharing.
|
|
I've found down a rabbit hole of links to software.
|
|
I think, you know,
|
|
I need it.
|
|
It's one of your days.
|
|
This is very much up Jesra Street.
|
|
I would think so.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
Cool stuff.
|
|
And the next one.
|
|
Health and health care.
|
|
This is another one by Ahuka.
|
|
And it is about the coronavirus to date.
|
|
And Zen Flotter gives a link to the magical forest
|
|
or apious comments.
|
|
Capitalism is successful.
|
|
As it models nature's kill or be killed ethics.
|
|
At a conscious level.
|
|
In short, yes.
|
|
You're going to get out there and you're going to die.
|
|
The problem was in allowing China into this global community.
|
|
Not whether or not you're going to hide in your house.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Don't know how we got back from that show, but.
|
|
I think I hope it's sort of.
|
|
Making a few comments about how capitalism wasn't helping with this.
|
|
Capitalism is driving the.
|
|
The.
|
|
Remove the lockdown.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
See that now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Which is, which is a common analysis.
|
|
And it's also being used as analysis in the UK.
|
|
And here.
|
|
Really.
|
|
It's far far too early for reasons.
|
|
So I disagree with Zen.
|
|
Floatron every level, I think.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Well, he says you're going to go out there and you're going to die.
|
|
So I don't know if he's pro or anti actually here.
|
|
Capitalism is indeed a killer be killed type ethic.
|
|
Although I don't think that that's necessarily models in all of nature.
|
|
Because there are plenty of species who cooperate within the same species.
|
|
And.
|
|
Elephants lions.
|
|
Where were we?
|
|
What episode were we at?
|
|
3079.
|
|
Which is porn and Trump.
|
|
Where the lads discuss audacity.
|
|
Kidney live blender price wild water house coopers.
|
|
The current war better things and etc.
|
|
There are no comments on that show as yet.
|
|
And the following day we had a show by myself.
|
|
Ansible ping trouble shooting a basic and civil install.
|
|
I just not an answer expert by any means, but.
|
|
I do like it as it's something that you can run on your laptop.
|
|
And just configure stuff in a standard way around your network.
|
|
So what I wanted to do was give people basically the.
|
|
How to on how to get something up and running.
|
|
So you're not to make trouble shooting a little easier.
|
|
Yeah, very, very helpful.
|
|
I think it was an excellent journey through through the basics.
|
|
I found anyway.
|
|
It'll it'll pass me fairly quickly.
|
|
But the point when I start trying to do this, which I do intend to do.
|
|
Using a battery pie, maybe.
|
|
And then I'm sure this will will start to become clear and will be very helpful.
|
|
Yeah, the steps in the episode are there.
|
|
You should should take you about 15 minutes in total to go through.
|
|
That episode and you know install Ansible.
|
|
And then you can install it after you're finished.
|
|
If it's if you don't like the concept.
|
|
No, it looks good.
|
|
Yeah, it's definitely something I want to do.
|
|
Okay, the following day we had to go tour to who was talking about testing a formal verification of software.
|
|
And there's harking back to episode 3057 where you forgot to mention why somebody will want to do it.
|
|
And there's lots of people in my work with swear by this methodology.
|
|
So I go to a good discussion.
|
|
Yeah, it sort of opened up windows to things that I wasn't completely clear about aware of.
|
|
I guess you can say so.
|
|
I've seen people doing this sort of stuff.
|
|
But in a sort of computer science construct context.
|
|
And one didn't buy and never had to do this.
|
|
Then I'm not that sort of a programmer or more of a sort of nuts and bolts and nail and plywood.
|
|
So yeah, it's not a cheap operation.
|
|
The message I took from it.
|
|
But important in certain contexts.
|
|
If you're building stuff to run a ventilator for patients or an aeroplane or a car or whatever.
|
|
So these are these are important things.
|
|
Well, you know, it just says money on the long run.
|
|
There earlier you can text the scope of the better.
|
|
So the next show was a discussion on RFC 5005 part one.
|
|
Paged an archive feeds.
|
|
Who cares, question mark?
|
|
I care.
|
|
I care very deeply.
|
|
I love equally love and hate this protocol.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
I do actually understand that point of view.
|
|
You work with it more than I have.
|
|
But the times I've messed around with both RSS and Adam.
|
|
I've found them rather frustrating.
|
|
This extension seems to be a cool thing to have.
|
|
But I don't know how well it's going to exist in the real world.
|
|
Now and there in lies your problem.
|
|
I've had reason to think that this is going to save my bacon in two locations.
|
|
One being here on HPR.
|
|
And the other being in work where it would allow the offlining of a online database.
|
|
And what where it fails and it does fail.
|
|
It's it fails in its vagueness and it fails in the archive archive.
|
|
The the fact that an archive can never be touched again.
|
|
Means you it's essentially useless because we can't use it on HPR.
|
|
We can't have one archive.
|
|
And then every day add another episode into this archive episode.
|
|
So that would mean we would need to archive a month or archive or whatever.
|
|
So then you have lots of different archives linked together.
|
|
And it's just completely horrendous to deal with.
|
|
And also vague in this.
|
|
How you interpret the specification even with two or three different people on it was different.
|
|
And I had a different interpretation as well to what the specification says.
|
|
So essentially it's unimplementable them.
|
|
Great idea though.
|
|
And the first last and previous thing they did mention on the HPR feed that we have two feeds.
|
|
And we have two feeds specifically for this reason.
|
|
One is that we maintain the two week feed.
|
|
And then there's the full archive feed of everything.
|
|
And that is a pain that is boss.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
What can you do because this doesn't fix that problem.
|
|
Unfortunately.
|
|
So there you go.
|
|
That's all I have to say about.
|
|
I did read start reading the RFC itself.
|
|
We've been quite fascinated by RFCs and stuff but.
|
|
But got lots of sheds and masks and all that stuff in it.
|
|
It's certainly readable.
|
|
But.
|
|
Very.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The implementation.
|
|
As you say might well be.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The struggle.
|
|
It is quite readable.
|
|
Well.
|
|
I'm also.
|
|
The what I found interesting in this was the how Google.
|
|
You know, the Microsoft is known for its embrace extend extinguish dialogue.
|
|
I think.
|
|
They made a very valid point that anything that Google touches you should be very wary of because.
|
|
They will embrace extend and then abandon.
|
|
And I think a lot of people are very sore about Google reader since.
|
|
Since they dropped Google reader.
|
|
I think a lot of.
|
|
There's a certain population of the tech population that had.
|
|
Decided.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
That's that's enough.
|
|
My whole Google.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And with it with it went.
|
|
The popularity of RSS where you could.
|
|
Where you could use it as a feed mechanism.
|
|
Yes, people will say that.
|
|
Podcasting has never been more.
|
|
Open.
|
|
But you.
|
|
They.
|
|
Or SS feeds themselves maybe used.
|
|
In the background.
|
|
And then I some feed or XML.
|
|
And I use them interchangeably here.
|
|
But.
|
|
The majority of podcasting.
|
|
Now would be more than happy to hide the feeds from people and give dedicated feeds to.
|
|
Apple iTunes or whichever stitcher or.
|
|
Whatever these proprietary world garden.
|
|
Podcast listening applications are.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I was having a conversation with.
|
|
Tie the guy who.
|
|
Organizes.
|
|
Ember.
|
|
He's a group.
|
|
Yesterday about this.
|
|
Just.
|
|
He.
|
|
Part of a new podcast that he was.
|
|
He was advertising.
|
|
It turned out that it's available on Spotify and.
|
|
No RSS was.
|
|
Was.
|
|
Was visible.
|
|
I did quiz him about that.
|
|
And.
|
|
You could find it if you dug deeply enough.
|
|
Dave Lee was kind enough to.
|
|
To dig and find it.
|
|
But.
|
|
We're having a conversation about why this is so.
|
|
And it is exactly the same.
|
|
People are trying to make money from it.
|
|
And just having it out there and available is not the way of.
|
|
I'm doing that.
|
|
It's seen.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
And it's.
|
|
Let's.
|
|
The Clebs have too much freedom.
|
|
What kind of that.
|
|
I'm sorry.
|
|
Did I say that out loud?
|
|
No, no, no.
|
|
Coming with our left wing.
|
|
Communist views here.
|
|
So.
|
|
I knew.
|
|
More than like.
|
|
And.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
You're an anarchist.
|
|
Oh, get off the ship.
|
|
That's right.
|
|
And.
|
|
Yourself and the stretch had a chance when we all have the pleasure of listening to it.
|
|
And I also had the additional pleasure of watching this video that Dan Nixon added into
|
|
the into the mix.
|
|
Oh, yeah, yeah.
|
|
I'm.
|
|
I haven't done that.
|
|
Yeah, actually, I haven't done that.
|
|
I was asking.
|
|
I've just emailed the stretch to say, do we know.
|
|
What this, what the thing you referred to actually was.
|
|
And I haven't heard back from you.
|
|
He's a busy guy.
|
|
But yeah, I'm just looking back.
|
|
That.
|
|
Video.
|
|
Very good.
|
|
Well, I really comment.
|
|
He says group based tape format is.
|
|
Tell.
|
|
Excuse me.
|
|
Tefifon.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Tefifon.
|
|
And there's a good review there on Tecmon's YouTube channel.
|
|
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, he's excellent for talking about these types of things.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, good.
|
|
Good, good, good.
|
|
I listened to this yesterday, I think.
|
|
So to tend to be reluctant to listen to my own stuff.
|
|
And this one, I thought was going to be a total nightmare.
|
|
It was a bad dream, but it wasn't a nightmare.
|
|
It was fine.
|
|
It was fine.
|
|
It was fine.
|
|
It was crap, but it was very small.
|
|
It's a rabbit drop.
|
|
It's a big steam.
|
|
It was fine.
|
|
Well, I was listening to it on the bike yesterday and it was absolutely fine.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And now the next day, the really, the audio book club is just to note the sellers here.
|
|
And it was Star Trek, the continuing mission.
|
|
And the podcast for the next one is Tinture, an apocalyptic proposition.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
Tinture.
|
|
It's Tinture.
|
|
It's my grandmother always used that word.
|
|
It's a valid word and it means a suspension or dissolving of something or other in alcohol.
|
|
So you have a tincture.
|
|
There's no tincture of that.
|
|
And she would think it's also a Victorian.
|
|
She was a Victorian.
|
|
And it was used as slang to mean just about have a little tincture, which was, yeah.
|
|
A little glass.
|
|
Oh, you can run.
|
|
That's right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So tincture is the word.
|
|
Ahuka says.
|
|
And I agree.
|
|
Missing 50, hearing 50 makes me miss him again.
|
|
And I must admit, I was surprised to discover that I appeared in this episode.
|
|
But good work for the reviews, folks.
|
|
Yeah, it's a great shame to say to this.
|
|
But it's good that we have these reminiscences.
|
|
We just sort of banish off the face of the HPR world.
|
|
It's nice to have these reminiscences.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And it is nice to know that they're on archive.org.
|
|
And the best of 50 and 50 is up there for anybody, new generations of people to listen to.
|
|
And I'm sure whenever the first probe heads off for the new worlds that a copy of archive.org will go with them.
|
|
Other life forms will have the joy of listening to our musings here on the network.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
We could like to speak.
|
|
Speaking of aliens.
|
|
No, it's not that too.
|
|
Architecture of robustness by Huka.
|
|
Definitely not really.
|
|
Although, if there were aliens on the planet, a retired project manager would probably be the most clever disguise of any of them.
|
|
Just saying.
|
|
And social networks platforms, histories and stuff.
|
|
This is how do you secure networks against attack while still be opening to strangers.
|
|
This was a...
|
|
Probably people haven't listened to this one, but this is a very good...
|
|
How do you strike that balance pretty much?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Quite a problem.
|
|
And why are there some links here?
|
|
I've only just started looking at these because then a lot of time.
|
|
And, yeah.
|
|
I hope it's great for the links.
|
|
So, thank you very much for that.
|
|
So, going back to the previous show's comments.
|
|
Bash tips 21, but Dave Morris.
|
|
Nobody also had a comment about that.
|
|
Seeing, personally, I feel like the best and most complete resource for Ock is the Gwok manual and links to said document.
|
|
To which Dave felt that he had to reply.
|
|
I do, I do.
|
|
Well, nobody's comment was in response to something where I'd said to CRBS, I think.
|
|
That we'd done a series on, because he made a comment about Ock.
|
|
And that was also available on the resource.com.
|
|
We don't know if nobody thought that I was blowing my hand to trumpet in some sort of way and saying that we have a far better resource than the Gwok manual.
|
|
So, I always felt the things to point out that wasn't the case.
|
|
So, what I said was, thank you for your feedback.
|
|
I interpret you correctly. I think you made this understood the spirit of my earlier comment.
|
|
I was replying to CRBS when he mentioned the use of shibans in the context of writing Ock scripts.
|
|
I took him to mean that this particular episode had helped him to buy an insight, which assisted with this understanding.
|
|
In my reply, I pointed to the series that Beezin and I had done on Ock where we tried to introduce people to this tool that made them in and references the Gwok manual along the way, of course.
|
|
There's no contest with the Gwok manual itself, as is what we were implying.
|
|
The manual is obviously the most comprehensive interpungent of resource on the utility and the language.
|
|
The resource which Beezin and I had tried to provide was simply a way into concepts which may have been daunting and somewhat inaccessible to some.
|
|
Our role was one of supplementing the manual itself and not superseding it in any way.
|
|
I hope this clarifies any misunderstanding. This understanding may have been.
|
|
So the next comment was on blood witness and more, more and see says I love this book can't wait to listen to this episode.
|
|
David hit is amazing and there's other stuff to listen to and gives a link to David hit.com for such podcasts.
|
|
While I agree with most of his opinions and information that have been a few things I absolutely disagree with them about.
|
|
But I get to hear a different point of view from someone and.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I don't know to the drop his phone at that moment.
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So there has been pens pencils paper and ink comment on that one.
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One of your episodes by Archer 72 saying this episode leaves me wishing I were a writer and an artist.
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I am interested. It is an interesting medium that my daughter not artist may take up.
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Since she has been sketching pen drawings lately.
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To which bookworm or actually I do bookworm and then you can do the year to own replies. How's that?
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Bookworm says to the same up. So David my apologies for the late comment. I had intended to get it in prior to the community news, but life happens.
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I too have always been fascinated by these tools.
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My fascination was multiplied by both of my parents working in parallel industries when I was younger.
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My father worked in an art and drafting supplyhouse. I'm a mother in an office supply store.
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Instead of turning to found pens, my disposition is towards ballpoint pens.
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While I do agree that the art and degrees writing tools I have leaned toward advertising pieces and novelty pens.
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I have pens in my collection from as early as the 1950s and 60s.
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Mostly local business advertising, a few national chains, brand names.
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Art class in middle school introduced me to papers and textures and artisan papers.
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I am proud owner of 100% handmade journal. Not my body, I don't have the skin level.
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The 300 pages of paper is all handmade from recycled cardboard and denim.
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And the entire volume is bound in hand-tooled leather. It's so nice. I'm scared to write in a little more.
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Well, well, thank you for doing that. I'm worried you were doing it.
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I seem to fall off the network and come back on again automatically, which is a...
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Can you press record, please, because my recording is very dodgy.
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Yep, sorry. I didn't do that.
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So, yeah, I don't know what happened. I was getting unable to resolve post-name with the DNS.
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My husband's DNS got enough money.
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Anyway, continuing. Shall I? Yeah, we good?
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Yeah, please. I'm trying to see you actually have my recordings here because...
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You're very depressing. Very depressing.
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So, I said in reply to Archer 72. Hi, thanks for the comment.
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I know what you mean. I'm no artist myself.
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My daughter took out in science at school. I must have developed her art skills since then.
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She always tells me to keep sketching if I want to get better at it.
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That's what she's done to try and get to a place where she can start to combine her science interests with her art.
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I guess the message is that you can develop abilities if you keep trying.
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Yep, do the next one as well.
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Yep, we're applying to Bookworm.
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I said, thanks for the comment. It's much appreciated.
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My interest in fountain pens didn't really drill until I was beyond school age.
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School had the effect of making me dislike using them because I was forced to do so.
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I've been a frequent ballpoint pen user for my university student days,
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but it was easier to write rapidly with one when in lectures, while the places where rapid transcription was needed.
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I can see how an interest in the older 1950s, 1960s designs of ballpoint pens would be a thing.
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Quite collectible. Your hand made journal sounds wonderful. They're the cover too.
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I've never owned anything so good, but I do have some notebooks that I like so much.
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I've never used them, I've probably never with them.
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Your reaction to your journal is perfectly understandable.
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I'd like to hear more about pen collection in the journal if you feel you could make a show about them.
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It's my only case.
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Okay, and then we have the comments of this month's show.
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And there wasn't a lot on the milling list.
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And there are no events, pretty much because of the lockdowns.
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On the any other business front, which is me telling myself,
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I'm a person I am, but having sent in nine updates to the attack in summaries.
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Cool, good news.
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Okay, so without further ado, I think we'll bring that to the end because my neighbors start at Sunday.
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That would just cut the grass here yet.
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Okay, thanks everybody.
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Thanks everybody, and remember to tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of...
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Acre!
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Public Radio!
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the creative comments,
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