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223 lines
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223 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4211
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Title: HPR4211: Rapid Fire 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4211/hpr4211.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:26:05
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,200 and 11 from Monday the 23rd of September 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Rapid Fire One.
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It is hosted by Operator and is about 18 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Neurodiverse Movies DIY Liquid Conductive Paint, Cold Hands Feet, Linux
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CPU Info Apps.
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Hello everyone and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio with your host Operator.
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So this one is going to be a live episode working backwards from my list is getting long
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in the tooth.
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So I have probably 50 HPR episodes and I'm starting from the bottom.
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So depending on what the show does look like, you'll know whether to skip this one or
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skip ahead or whatever.
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First thing I'm talking about is autism spectrum and TB and movies.
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So if you're a Neurodiverse and you want people to understand what it's like, what comes
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to mind to me specifically is more recently the Sheldon series and on more of the extreme
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side or the past ADHD traditional is the professor of his professor who basically says things
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that's not, you know, it's out of turn or over sharing or whatever.
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And then Sheldon pretty much just says what's on his mind and that's what ends up happening
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over sharing or making offending people but not really understanding what you're saying.
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So that's a good place to start.
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Another one is let's see, the Strupters 2021, that one's a good feel good movie, feel
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looking for like a feel good movie for people.
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That's a good one.
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An older one is called ADD in loving it.
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It's more of a documentary and it's kind of more traditional older 80s almost style.
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I don't know when it actually came out.
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That one's pretty good.
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There's a few of them online out there.
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There's a BBC one called, I mean, I don't know what it's called but it's pretty good.
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Basically there's a woman in there and she drinks like a cup of coffee today and then
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her kids have ADD and she's, you know, just decides to take medication and then she's
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like on her way to work.
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She's like, I feel all jittery like well you probably didn't stop drinking coffee so
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now you're on, you know, you know, 12 cups of coffee instead of six.
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So anyways, that's a good one.
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Ron's gone wrong is a good one for kids.
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I think that one mixed kind of touches me in a way that, you know, how a kid feels or
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how young child feels when they're growing up with ADHD.
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I will say things like the behavior wheel.
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I'll put these in the show notes.
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But that's a good one to go, neurodiversity affirming practice is a good resource.
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But under the more TV come back to more TVs, let's see, Trevor Noah under pressure in
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the ADHD.
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That was a good one.
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Very quickly, you know, get a feel for what it's like, let's see, Ron's gone wrong.
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Oh, it's living with ADHD, BBC documentary, that was pretty old.
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It's really good.
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It's got all of the place.
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It's got the feel good.
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It's got the parents that, you know, need to learn a little bit more and have some opportunities
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to figure things out.
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There's some other ones out there like drugging our kids.
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That one's kind of the controversial side of it.
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Let's see.
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ADD understanding the superpowers within.
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I think that's that doctor guy that I love, though, he's an older, heavier set guy.
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Actually, let me, let me click it and see which one it is.
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I think this, that was a YouTube video that's for free.
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Other than that, no, this is something else.
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So anyways, that's pretty much it.
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So we'll move on from there.
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There's, that's pretty much it.
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There's a couple of spectrum based ones, autism ones, or I guess, that are pretty decent,
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but I don't remember them and they were not really quick and easy to digest for people
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that don't understand it.
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But I would say my top pick would be the disruptors because it's very positive.
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And then my second one would be, I don't know, it's kind of, it's mainly positive
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but anyways, I'll move on.
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Sorry.
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We're already four minutes in.
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So that's that.
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That one's more or less done.
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And if, you know, anybody wants me to expand on these, whatever.
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Carbon powder.
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Now I made, this is, this is so old now.
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Carbon powder I made out of batteries so you can make liquid, liquid DIY, DIY liquid,
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conductor, paint.
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You can buy a conductive paint, it's very expensive, but you can make your own out of like
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old batteries or something and there's other chemicals and batteries that you don't want
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to, and then it's like the heavy metal batteries.
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It's, it's not cadmium, it's some other chemical and it's this black hard core and you,
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you know, I did four of my batteries and I crushed it up and I tried to, one of the ideas
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I was going to make gloves that you could, you know, touch, use to touch and then just
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kind of have fun with the paint.
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And then I realized it's probably not a good idea to have, you know, try and easy and
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battery chemicals on inside of the glove.
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But you can make your own with, there's videos online, but my experience with it is,
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I realized that the way the phones work, it's a little bit different.
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So like if you put the conductive glove on and then you put the phone on the table and
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then you try to touch the glove without having grounded or whatever with the phone, it's
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different.
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So if you've ever tried to put your phone on a table and then try and use it, it's a
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little bit different or if you've tried to, whatever.
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So it's weird, conductive, I didn't really figure it out, but when I finally got rid
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of the liquid stuff or the powder, I realized that, oh, the reason it didn't have a problem
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and it wasn't working is because I wasn't grounded properly or whatever, you have to
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be touching the phone essentially for it to, you know, more than one contact point kind
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of it.
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I couldn't really figure it out.
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And there's some higher math involved with that one, that was an interesting experiment.
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Old hands and feet, for me, pedaling desk, wearing nice slippers.
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There is probably some of the best slippers I've ever had.
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They are, I can't remember the name of the brand, a North Face, I think they're North Face
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slippers and they're almost like shoes and they're relatively cheap, I mean, they're
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expensive, like 60 bucks, 80 bucks, something like that.
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That works for my feet when it starts getting cold.
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I had circulation issues back, it's just not enough exercise, not eating right foods maybe.
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So my hands are still relatively cold.
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I just have to make sure my core stays nice and warm.
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I'm wearing a fleece jacket here at work, so I don't freeze it at, excuse me, I'm trying
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it.
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Try not to yod.
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Sorry.
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It's early in the morning, not some of these out.
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So I'll wear fleece, make sure your core is warm, make sure your feet are warm and
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your head is warm, if you have to wear a beanie and slippers, whatever, it's like what
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is it, 20% of your temperature is in your head and feet.
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So if you can get a nice beanie, not like, not whatever one, not the acrylic ones or whatever,
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you can get a mostly wool one that's not super uncoverable.
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I bought a decent one, it's very warm, I can only wear it, but very low.
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So that's kind of hands cold feet, let's do that one, let's see, go back, where did I,
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if I exes out where they end up, sorry, I'm looking at where I've done it, I don't think
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I'll just do some exes here.
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So that one's done, other things about cold hands feet, caffeine, restricts your things
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and actually makes you cold cooler warmer or colder restricts your blood vessels and stuff,
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standing up, going exercise, I do the stairs here at the office, so that helps if I start
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getting cold, I'll do my exercises early, going up and down stairs, get that blood pumping,
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as crazy and as silly as it is, jumping jacks, I do 60 jumping jacks and then I stop and
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that gets my heart pumping and basically gets me warm no matter what, but it's kind of
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silly to do that in public, but I look like an idiot and I'll do it in the stairwell
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if I have to, but if I'm cold and I'm like, man, I'm cold and then I'll, you know, an hour
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or 30 minutes will go by and I'm still cold, I'll just be like, forget it, I'm going to
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go in the stairwell or I'm just going to do jumping jacks wherever and that gives you at
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least an hour or two hours, if not, so it's that getting that circulation going is what
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helps.
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All right, let's see, what else we got here?
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Top and friends, Ellis open file, proc, bashtop, until GPU.
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So this is basically understanding in a Linux environment, what kind of options there are
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to figure out what is going on with the computer with the, you know, status of the computer,
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the usage of the computer, all kinds of other good stuff, I'll see if I remember, so this
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is going to be a larger one where we at, we're at nine minutes, so trying to remember my
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passwords.
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Nope, wrong server, that's wrong server, okay.
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So some of these, a lot of these you need root to get access to the status of, you know,
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devices and hardware, Phoenix, it's like Phoenix info, something like that, Phoenix test suite
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is really good, that just kind of just a generic dumps everything you need to know about
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your system, pretty much tells you as much as it can, was there's a diagnostics, I think,
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but it's got an easy tutorial info, all tests, test usage, test possibility dependencies.
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So there's tons of, tons of stuff with Phoenix tests, it's Phoenix test, test, test suite
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is the binary.
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That's one that gives you like generic information, or information about your, it's like MS info
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or DX Diag, but for Linux.
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So that one's a good one, I use H top, as an easy to look at, um, bash top, or bash
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PUI top, BPI top, I think is, yeah, bash pie top is a better, a cooler UI, I don't, I
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use it for, because it shows network, pretty much everything, it shows you memory, disk,
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process and network.
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So it's a little bit busy for me, but if something's going on with the system, I'll run
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bash pie top and be like, what the hell is going on?
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And usually it's processor, but sometimes it's network or, you know, maybe, um, for whatever
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region to log is running, I don't know why that's not supposed to be running, that might
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explain some things, see, there we go, I just used it to figure something out, um, so
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yeah, I need to fix that, let me put a note, fix, that's a torrent client it, I serve
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up archives of, what's that show, Beakman's world, so, and that doesn't need to be running.
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So anyways, H top, top, of course, is all legacy, um, see, there's SS, I don't even remember
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SS, SS is, um, socket something, let's do your main page SS, I don't even, I don't even
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know what it is, another utility to investigate sockets, yeah, SS is good, um, the other one
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I use is all as open file, or, um, Nets that, and it's L, LDP, LDP, ER, ED, something like
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that, yeah, Nets that dash, LDP, LDP, ED, I think, I'm probably missing one, but it'll
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tell you the socket and what's the process that's listening on it, that kind of helps when
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you're troubleshooting, yeah, this is not it, nope, no, this is it, pretty close.
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So that one's good for stuff, as far as networking goes, there's, um, of course there's Nets
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that, but for networking, I usually use, um, in top, or no, in top is something else, um,
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for networking, I use, I have top, I think, yeah, I have top, is it easy one to look at
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never, you know, it'll, it'll show you the, it'll resolve the port names, it'll resolve
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the host names, and kind of give you an idea, okay, well, that's, that service looks like,
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you know, uh, that service looks like, I think you do a dash P, or a dash something, you
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pass parameters to that one, and it'll tell you the ports, and with the ports, it'll
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tell you the service, dash big P, dash big P, so it shows you the ports, I map, once
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are random ports, because that's, looks like, um, it looks like the torrent client, 30,000s,
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wow, that's a lot of changes, anyways, um, what else we got?
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First up, I've told you proc, so in Linux, most Linux distributions, you've got LS, um,
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proc, and then there's a bunch of process, by process ID, um, CMD line, CMD, LIN, is a
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good file to look at, other than that, there's not a whole lot of information in proc, but
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I'll use it to look for, if the command is running, and I can't figure out what process
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it belongs to, based on using traditional methods, I'll get the proc folder and do a
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grip, and just look for, whatever string I'm looking for, like, you know, torrent, or
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whatever, um, Intel DQ, that's part of my top script, so which top, um, I have a top
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script that runs a bunch of stuff, whoop, that just pressed it, so the first one, it
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runs CMUX for the new session, I went to, uh, B top, it was BASH top, the other one,
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net hogs, um, so, uh, run B top by itself, net hogs, net hogs, dash V, three, dash
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P, I don't even know net hogs, I don't know, I have top, something about I have top is
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not great, so I switched to net hogs, um, something was missing, net hogs will give you
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better information than I have top, if I remember correctly, but it's more like, uh, I think
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it's got a little bit more features, and I can't remember which, I was using, uh, for
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whatever reason, so net hogs, the dash V, which is, I guess, verbose three, and then dash
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P, which I guess is reports, um, Intel GPU top, if you have an Intel GPU, you know, you
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can use that to figure out how much, uh, Chuchin, your Chuchin, it's 4% just idling, which
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is 0.01 watts, so that's interesting, uh, let's see what we got, the other one I like
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to use is, that's pretty much it, net hogs, dash top, Intel GPU, with that, those three
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commands I'll put in a window, um, and I'm using tmux, and then I'll adjust the size, select
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pain, t0, resize pain, select, select dash pain, space, dash t, t, space zero, and I guess
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that does something, it selects the first pain, and then makes it 24, a long or wide, um,
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so I don't know, and then attach session, which I don't know what that means either, so,
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let me open this in the show notes for you guys, sleep 8, you know, this is what is this,
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showing, okay, let me just put the whole thing in there, all right, we can tap, put down
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the show notes, okay, all right, so we're probably at 15 minutes now, and let's see,
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I'll do Android, this last one, Android apps 2020, actually no, I'll, I'll spare y'all
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and cut another one, so this will be the next one, I'll go over Android, status k,
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bark, uh, front door, mobile app, so anyways, cool cool, y'all have a good one and keep
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it poppin', as they say, 20 years ago, you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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on their creative commons, attribution 4.0 international license.
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