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83 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
83 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1409
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Title: HPR1409: Xircom PE pocket ethernet adapter
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1409/hpr1409.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:58:47
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---
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It's Thursday the 26th of December 2013.
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This is Hacker Public Radio 1409.
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Today is Thursday the 26th of December 2013 and you're listening to Hacker Public Radio
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episode 1409.
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Today's episode is by me, Ken Fallon and it's a submission I did to the twitch.tv network
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and their show over there called The Gizwiz.
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If you don't know, The Gizwiz is a Dick Dibartolo, he's a writer from Mad Magazine and it's
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more or less a comedy show about the best and worst of gadgets that are out there, sometimes
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they're very serious, sometimes they're not and it's probably that is one of the only shows
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that I have continued to listen to on the twitch network, continually since it started.
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I do listen to some of their other shows, they're quite good good resource for the community.
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As part of their shows, they request people to send in videos about old gadgets that they
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have, that they knew, that they loved and they simply couldn't throw away or just, you know,
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pieces of crap, stuff that they bought that was totally not really useless or indeed,
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stuff that they invented themselves.
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For this episode, I wanted to promote the upcoming HPR 24-hour show and it was
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through this show as well that I got Dick and Leo Report to congratulate us on our 1,000th
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episode. So for your delight and delegation, this is the show that I recorded and submitted for
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them. Links to the presentation and the video will of course be in the show notes.
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Hi Dick and Leo, my name is Ken Fallon. The last time I spoke to you was around May 2012,
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where you guys congratulated Hacker Public Radio on that's 1,000th episode. We've continued
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producing shows but we still haven't got all to the daily gizwis. Today I want to send in a
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submission for gadget warehouse. Recently, I've cleaned out my gadget warehouse which was in
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the basement and I got rid of all of the devices that I had bought my own and ones that people
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gave to me. The reason mainly is because of this device. It's a raspberry pie. I have lots of them
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around the house and generally there are as powerful as the computers that I'm recycling but also
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they're very very simple that won't take any additional components. They're all encased in
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the one unit and they're very energy efficient to run. So it simply doesn't make sense to resurrect
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old PCs and reuse them again. When I was bringing all these devices down to the recycling center,
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there was one or two things that I just couldn't throw away. The first one was this. It's a floppy
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disk adapter for taking a memory card from a Fujitsu camera. That's a whopping two megabytes.
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Last day camera is no longer with us but this worked very very well long after the camera had
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gone. I used this device in order to increase the amount of size that I could put onto a single
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floppy disk. Strangely enough, most of the computers had no problem reading over the 1.44 megabyte
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size of a traditional floppy disk. But the device that really want to share with you today is this.
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Can you guess what it is? It's got a printer connection at the side. A red ribbon that goes across
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to screw it in and at the back you guessed it. A network, two network ports, a BNC for the old
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coax type network and a thinning ethernet which is now a hundred times slower than what we have today.
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But this was very very useful. It came with its own cable and an additional wall socket but I always
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used this cable which would connect into a PS2 port. And for those new people among you, a PS2 port
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was a dedicated port for putting in a mouse and a keyboard. So you would unplug your keyboard,
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plug this guy in and plug the keyboard into the back of this guy and that would drive enough power
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and you'd have two LEDs, a green and a little red and you'd know with the green one flashing
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if it was day to go on through. The reason this was so useful, the model number is 0.pe3-10bc.
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And the reason they were so useful was back in the day, computers didn't come with network cards.
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So we used to add network cards to the computers. And it was always a struggle getting the dip switches
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to get the correct interrupt in MSDOS in order to load the drivers so they'll just communicate
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with the hardware so they can get on the network to get, download all the other applications that we had.
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As time went on, they stopped using dip switches and jumpers and went to using small MSDOS utilities.
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Now the problem with these ones was that every network card had its different
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different little program that you needed to have to configure the network card. So in order to
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configure the network, those were of course all kept on the network for us but they mounted to a
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big stack of floppy disks. So what this device allowed us to do with one floppy disk we could boot,
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MSDOS, load the drivers for this guy, pull down all the drivers for all the network cards that we had
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in our entire organization, put them on the hard disk and then one by one go through the one
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top we got the right one, configure the interrupts. So this guy allowed us to get on the network,
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to get on the network. Brilliant, brilliant device. I liked it so much. I actually went out and
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involved my own. So that's it. I hope you enjoyed it. They are available for sales still. I saw
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them on eBay in the UK for around 60, 70 dollars down to something around 20 dollars.
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Just one other thing. Hacker Public Radio will again this year be running its New Year show.
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It's a 24 hour show again this year or more actually 26 hours because we do from one of the
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first time zone goes into the last time zone. I was just thinking it might be a great idea for
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something that you guys could do there on the twit network. I guess it would be a great idea to
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do a 24 hour show. Leo, you might even consider getting a tuxedo or something like that.
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Anyway, good luck with your guys 24 hour show and we'll probably call in just to say hello
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during it. Anyway, that's it. Thanks for listening to my show. Bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday and Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economic and computer globe.
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HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com. All binref projects are proudly sponsored by
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Lina pages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LinaPages.com for all your hosting
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needs. Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons,
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attribution, share a life, lead us our lives.
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