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667 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2696
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Title: HPR2696: HPR Community News for November 2018
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2696/hpr2696.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 07:41:29
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---
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This is HBR episode 2696 entitled HBR Community News for November 2018 and is part of the series HBR Community News.
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It is posted by HBR volunteers and is about 72 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is HBR volunteers talk about show release and comment posted in November 2018.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Hello folks. K-wisher here to remind you that it's that time of year again.
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Time for the Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve show. For those who don't know,
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on New Year's Eve, December 31, 2018 at 10am UTC. That is 5am Eastern Standard Time.
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We will have a recording going on the HBR Mumble server for anyone to come on and say happy New Year
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and talk about whatever they want. We will leave the recording going until January 1, 2019,
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12am UTC. That will be 7am Eastern Standard Time or until the conversation stops.
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Please visit HackerPublicRadio.org to find all the details and links about how to set up the
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PC Mumble client, your favorite mobile app, the mobile server connection details.
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Our Etherpad show notes and the live audio stream if you only prefer to listen in on the
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lively banter. So please stop and say hi and maybe join in the conversation with other HBR
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listeners and contributors. It's always a good time.
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Hello everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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This time it's Community News for November 2018. This is a community podcast,
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net or a choir of the shows are submitted by people like you and we are the volunteers
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across them on the background. By which we mean they shows that get posted by you,
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we comment on them because we can and some people listen to the show and then we'll go and
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download them as a result of what we say. Joining me tonight as ever is Mr. Dave Marles.
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I don't know what that is, you've got a sore throat there Ken. Hello everybody.
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And as I said, basically this show was started to make sure that
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everybody likes all the shows. It's just sometimes you don't get any feedback because you go hey,
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that was a good show. I bet all the people have given feedback on that show. But usually they don't,
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so we will do that and we comment on them and read their comments and then we tell you if there's
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anything going on on the network. It's kind of been busy this month, Dave, with shows needing
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three hours and stuff. Yeah, I was going to apologise quite early because there's three in the
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list here that I couldn't actually listen to. I think my ears are now in a state where they don't
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they don't function too well and some of these really just I just couldn't work them out.
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It's probably maybe I could have identified, you know, hacked them around a bit and slowed them down
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or something like that, but I haven't got around to doing that yet. So it's yeah, we'll talk about
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that as we go, but it's has been that sort of month. Yeah, sometimes it's quite sometimes it's busy,
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you know, with mistakes people make and when they're posting, so better that than more shows coming in.
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So anyways, do you want to welcome the new horse because that's what you tend to do?
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Yes, we have one new host this month and it's Dessertia. Now, I assumed he would his name
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would be Dessertia because it's D-E-S, but I heard him saying it himself and it was Dessertia,
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so there you go. Yeah, and welcome to the network indeed. So let's start, shall we, with the Raspberry
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Pi 3 Open Media server and somebody sent me in that there were, so this was how to set up a Raspberry
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Pi as an Open Media server by a JWP and yeah, a good show. I didn't have problems with myself,
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but some people mentioned that that was one of the ones that was difficult to listen to.
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Yeah, I'm afraid I didn't I'd listen to it, but I didn't get all of it. It was too quiet,
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and he must have used really, really harsh silence truncation because it just blew my ears up.
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I don't know what it was. I'll have to try it again because it's a subject I'm really interested
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in and I know JWP knows a lot about these types of things, so I haven't got ran to
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re-listening to that one, I'm afraid. Okay, Jason Lewis commented volume, volume is
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goo quiet, so I think it remains too quiet. So this is one of the ones I sent off to audio
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fanics or all fanics place and they tidy it up, so if you had trouble listening to this one,
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download it again and the audio will have improved quite a bit. That's actually quite a good service.
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It was a tip from the Dave tips about podcasting was mentioned there. Yeah, I already have an account.
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I don't use it all the time because sometimes if the audio is coming in over compressed and edited
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too much, there's nothing I can do about it, but which is why you should always try folks,
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always try and send us the original. Don't worry too much about editing, don't process this,
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just if you if you can record stuff in WAV or FLAC, a lossless format, then the best thing you can
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do is if you want to edit it, that's fine, convert it immediately into, so if you're recording it
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in MP3 or ARG or something, convert it immediately into FLAC in Audacity, don't edit it in MP3,
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don't edit it as a lossless format. This is also a daily give this tip in their show as well.
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So basically, yeah, what am I trying to say Dave, record the absolute best quality that you can,
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we ask for FLAC but don't convert it from something less to FLAC for us because then we will just
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process it again and it's going to lose even more quality in the process.
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But as ever, any audio is better than no audio, correct or not, indeed, indeed.
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So the following day we had how to solve a problem with following YouTube channels and this
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was by Ahuka who once basically his problem is how to play on the web form from back to front
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and Gus says praise, thank you for two excellent tips, both how to manage a playlist and the
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iridium plugin, it works great. And Ahuka replies saying, my pleasure, I'm glad you found this
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useful, that's why record shows to share with the community and I have recorded an audio response
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to the show. It was one of the shows when I heard seeing the coming into the queue I was going,
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no, I was going to record a show about something like this but it actually turns out to be
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complimentary and perhaps we'll have a series. Yeah, it's interesting isn't it? It's odd that
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they're it's actually quite difficult to do this with the tools that you get on YouTube
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and I've certainly struggled watching playlists and myself in the past and wondered why I can't get
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them in the order I want them. So yeah, cool. Yeah, I'm going to refrain from commenting because
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all my comments are in the show that I posted. So then we had the community news itself and there
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were some comments about that Ahuka says, what were you going to say? I noticed that on my show
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as you kept saying we'll get back to that but I don't think you ever did. Did you have a comment?
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Yes, I did. Ahuka, thank you for bringing that up and I'll get back to that in a minute. So Dave,
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if you could read the next one. I'm just going to go on for months of month. So do do do he says
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smiling all the way to the end? I love the addition of RMS's rendition. However, I did not intend
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to replace, I didn't, yeah, I didn't intend it to replace Ken's version. There you go.
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So Do Do Domi says, Ken's perfect example. Ken illustrated my point well. Buster dynamics might
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be might have scripted Atlas's latest test, but there is still nice progress in the last couple
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of years. Seems clear to me that soon we'll be able to navigate things as they come, same with
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Watson. It won't take many doubling cycles before he stops making these types of mistakes.
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And with AI robots automation, whatever you want to call it, the knowledge is transferable,
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whereas often osmeet sex have to repeat the mistakes of our previous assessors to relearn as they
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did. Seems odd to me to look back on tech improvements in just the past 20 years and not think these
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areas, not think these areas will be vastly improved upon too. Yeah, yeah, I can see it has a point.
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I can see it has a point. Why should this trend not continue? I guess he's saying.
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Oh, do you want to read your own comments? Sorry, we got the time. I got the order wrong.
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I said, we'll get back to that. I often face a hooker shows with trepidation, given I know that he's
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likely to say what I'm not wanting to hear. This is about his health series shows. The old head
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in the soundtrack has worked for grandpa, so it's good enough for me. But then you listen to his advice
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and it's always good and it's always doable. And now I just feel guilty about not doing it.
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Yeah, yeah, quite so.
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Anyway, my thoughts on learning the RPG part four. This was from Dododomi,
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D-O-D-D-D-Domi, sorry, and looks like I forgot to try to get silent. Sorry about that.
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I didn't find it was a problem, particularly, did you? No, but then I was reading that I have
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an automatic trunk silenced truncated silence on my script, so I might not notice it.
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Do you know what? So do I. So yeah, yeah, we're good.
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Sorry, I don't know if anyone else had an issue with that.
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Then the next day we had explaining controls on your amateur HF radio part four,
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and Mr X, yes, milking this for all that's worked. Good man. Yes, come from the Ken Fallon
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school of podcasting. That's for sure. What is actually, to be honest, if it was any longer than this,
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it would be just too much to take and he's gone through to the controls and it's, yeah, it's
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he's able to explain it and I'm not getting confused during the process, so I think that's quite good,
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whereas I think if he just did it all among gold, it would be tougher. Yeah, I like the fact that he
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was actually demonstrating a number of the functions he was talking about, and as well, that really
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brings it alive for me. Yeah, I can't. Oh, that's what it means, yeah. Very good, very good,
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like this. Don't feel, I'm a bit sad now that this series has come to an end, possibly using
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the amateur HF radio series for the good next, you know. Yes, yes, yes. Turning on my device,
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how to check it, regular maintenance, that sort of thing. Yes, yes, yes, I'm sure this
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more shows in that one. Speaking, speaking of segueing nicely into how to milk shows for all
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its worth, bash and silry tips 13. What are you saying? This is our bash scripting series where
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their bash and silry tips sub-series is up to 13, where we're up to making decisions in bash
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part five. Yeah, come on, I mean, have you ever tried reading the man page or the bash man page?
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Series dots, series 42 dot 13 dot five. Definitely, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm just writing number 19,
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so you know, it's gonna run and run this one. I'm, yeah, keep keep keep doing that.
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But, yeah, what was this on about? Let me just check. This was all about bash regular expressions
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of the rematch thingy. I was walking under a bridge in my way home from work when I put this
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on. Didn't know you could do the rejects in bash, and then I looked at some of the scripts and I'm
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doing it, but didn't know I was doing it, so there you go. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I think it was
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Mike Ray who was saying something to this fact that he'd been using it, but he never quite got his
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head around it, though, for Mike, I'm surprised that he hadn't completely got a grasp of it,
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because he's a pretty sharp guy, but maybe I haven't had the time, but I'd agreed that I would
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get around to talking about this at some point and trying to explain it. I don't know whether I did,
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but, you know, no, no, I followed it helped. I'm working on the assumption that you need to follow
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the following the show notes helps anyway, but, yeah, I'm looking forward to the book when this is
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with the CD Compendium. I'm about to be one hell of a book.
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Clackay says, immediately useful. Don't we like that? Very good episode about some functionality.
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I was always vaguely new was there, but never considered using or even looking into.
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Well, low on behold, a week after listening to it, I have already made use of my new phone
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knowledge to parse some predictably formatted JSON. I ran into an issue with quoting the expressions
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and worked around them by assigning the expression to a variable and referencing referring to the
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variable in the conditional. I'm now listening to 2669 and I understand exactly what
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why it went wrong. For the sake of a readability, I actually think the assignment work around was
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the best way to express it. So, I replied to that saying, thanks, Clackay. Clackay found the
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show is useful only using bash-regal expressions and capture groups. parsing JSON with bash is a
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challenging task to take on though. I used jq to do this myself or the JSON module in Perl, of
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course, smiley face. Yeah, jq was absolutely awesome. Well, yeah, it's a brilliant thing and I've
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not actually used it much in bash, but I'm sure you can do some clever things of turning things
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into into bash statements or something. I'm not an expert on it, but would really like to have
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somebody walk me through how to request all variables and stuff like that. Stuff I know we can do,
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but walk through series would actually be excellent if somebody could do that for us. Who
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has brought that to our attention? The quann line tools? Was that who was that? This wasn't a
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easy one, was it? I remember where it was. Yeah, it was easy. He's often finding really, really
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useful, being a data manipulator by day. He knows lots about these types of things. Very good.
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Cloth, Cloth, that would be easy. jq series. Oh, Cloth, they're winter coming on, you know.
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Anyway, yes, some additional talk about characters 0, 1. Lost and Bronx having a series about
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random elements of storytelling. I really, really enjoy these. I don't know why. Just why I do
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know why, because they're great shows. And I'd love to know, right? Lost and Bronx and Cloth too,
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both of them sit down and you have the feeling right, excuse me now I'm sitting in the car,
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blah, blah, blah, stream of consciousness, consciousness, and it's all cohesive and it's all
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coherent. And I've never had a conversation in my life where I'm not going, oh, no, let me just
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think, I'm sorry about that. Oh, uh, um, um, Zanas. How can they record these things so well?
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I find I have to use about 90 percent of my brain to drive these days.
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I don't have, but 10 percent of it left to even have a conversation, which,
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yeah, my kids know that when I sort of trail off and I'm concentrating on what that guy in
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front of me is just about to do. Maybe the rods are just a little less busy in the
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Arizona, I don't know. Maybe, yeah, yeah. Bad brilliance, I'll love it and recommend it to my son
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to have a listen. Yeah, I like the comment about Star Wars and the the odd disjointed nature of
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some of the some of the stories there, which was a really good point to make. And he's also nailed,
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not necessarily on this show, but in some of the shows nailed it on the head. I found certain things
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irritating and annoying and never really understood. I couldn't put my finger on why I felt like that.
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And then, yeah, it's it's obvious. It's a one-dimensional character. That character was just
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put there for that thing and there's, yeah, no, I understand. Yeah, yeah, it's good to have that
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that extra insight, that sort of depth of viewing into into the structure of these things.
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I think that it's an excellent thing to do. Let me join the series for that reason too.
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So the next day, very short show with a very good show, Hacker's Forcharity. If this is something
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that you can you can help out with, it's an excellent an excellent project, didn't great work,
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four-minute show, but it's all really packed to punch in there with that interview.
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Yeah, I enjoyed this one. Yeah, so that's very good at this. Yeah, that one anyone can listen to,
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just have a great listen. Not all about Blender. Now, this is one of the ones that needed to go off to the
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to the school of fixing, but that said, so if you happened, if you downloaded this one and you found
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it a little bit tough to listen to, and I don't think it was the guys fault. They were recording one mic
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between two people, and that's difficult to get that working out well. So if you are sending
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in a show that you think the audio is going to be a bit dodgy on us, can you tell us? Because we
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don't listen to the shows beforehand, and there's a reason for that. The reason is we are volunteers
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here and we don't peer review any of the shows. So when I pick a random period of time within the show,
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I have no reference as to whether it's louder or quieter or whatever. If you want us to do
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actual editing with that, just make an note. Somehow, how would you do that?
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You would email us. You would email us and tell us. Yeah, exactly. email us and say that
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can you do something with the audio audio on this? So don't do any super cool processing with the
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show one. We can try and get it fixed. They all phonics or phonics is it?
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It is. Yeah. Yeah. They have cleaned this up no end. It is night and day different. So
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if you have already downloaded this, this is in the queue. If you haven't downloaded it, we've
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already replaced it. And so you get much better versions of this. I listened to the first one and
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then went back and re-listened. It was listenable, but it's a good show. Gosh, they're a chuck
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full of stuff in the show. I like it. I know the bits that I did listen. I have to listen to this
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or the second part yet because you said you were going to process them. I was waiting for the
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nod to that was now ready and was going to go and check it out. But yeah, I'm going to pick
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them up later. And also we need to re-upload the audio to. I have another good few shows in the
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queue as well because I need to. The new year show is going ahead more about that later. And we
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want to add a promo to the shows for December. So I've not processed them all week. So I need
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to process them tomorrow morning. So expect this one in so that we can get it up and then I'll do
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them all tomorrow, I'll do them all tomorrow, including this one if that's okay Dave. Yeah, Shusha.
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But a good show. I recommend a beverage of choice sitting down, open fire. And then you have the
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feeling that these two guys are stuck in a lab cabin somewhere and they're basically talking
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about shooting the breeze about cool tech stuff. Well worth a listen. Yeah, excellent. Good.
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The following day, using open source tools. No, this one doesn't deserve that sort of thing.
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Let me go back and do this properly. Using open source tools to visualize the heart rate and
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blood oxygen saturation levels of my stepchild. Yirun. Yeah, my comment on this is
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so he uses Python, PHP, J query, and Linux to visualize the heart rate of his
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daughter who needed treatment. The only thing I miss from the show would be I would love to have
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seen some of the some of the charts, not necessarily from her, but you know, just to see some of
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the cold and you know screenshots. And I replied, super dad, wow, which I think is
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as a folder myself, I just, you're fucking hats off. Yes, yes, yes, absolutely.
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Clinton Roy says, thank you. Thank you for being so open with this. And yeah, I very much agree.
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It's it's a brilliant thing. It's really is a wonderful thing to do. I mean, to be faced with
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with that situation and then see a device and think, oh, I wonder if I could get data out of there.
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And I wonder if I could make some use of it and and to be able to do so is it's just amazing.
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That's true hacking. Yeah, I'm I'm I've just seen a PBS documentary on
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on people opens, you know, using open sort of hard monitors where they're able to get our insulin
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injections where they're able to monitor their insulin and they're using open source firmware
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on these devices so that they get the steady flow of insulin and keep a so there's no peace and
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peaks and troughs that's yep. And a lot of these things are of course not approved by the FCC
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because the FCC takes a FDA federal drugs administration because the FDA takes a long time to
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approve them having worked in an industry where we did get FDA approval. I think the work that
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they're doing with medical devices is absolutely imperative to get right because you really can't
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mess around with those stuff. That said, I also think there there should be the ability to, you know,
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the open source software in your hard monitor so I can see I can see both. I don't think both are
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necessarily mutually exclusive. So there you go. Yeah, it would be nice if maybe we can solve a lot
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of this by having the code open and that code is audited and approved but then they read a lot
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of the data should be exported to the open protocols so the device itself can be controlled safely
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and the open protocols can give you information on your device which can be then approved by a doctor
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to be put back in if you know what I mean. Yes, yes. This wasn't about controlling it of course.
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No, no, it's about getting data out of it and understanding what it was doing. It wasn't
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necessarily doing the right thing this device. It was given the information but it was not given
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enough and then he was able to take that data, give it back to the doctor and then the doctor can
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make an informed decision based on the data that they received which I think is awesome. That's
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the best of both worlds. So yeah, great. How it should be isn't it? So these things should be
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if you can't they can't do what you need them to do. There should be ways in which you can get
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random and you as absolutely as the parent or the person involved should be able to do that.
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Yeah, brilliant story. So how do you follow that? Well, I did so you didn't have to
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I didn't know at the time but okay. I walked out one day I think after recording a HPR show
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and my daughter showed me this remote control and I thought okay, I'm going to record a show
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about that because it's awesome and it still works. It's a great solution. Yeah, absolutely.
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So I have to see you know this sort of natural thinking going on in the family. Wonderful.
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And Claudia Miranda says, lol, ha, hilariously short sweetened at the point. Thanks kids. Thanks, Ken and kids.
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Paul B says, great hack. Great episode. I'm absolutely going to do this. Thanks a lot.
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Excellent. So my daughter was chuffed. She was a bit annoyed that I wanted her to record it but
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I said we recorded it in the Wednesday. So I'm not going to say I'm scientific and medical reports
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by health and health care by Ahuka. I wanted to just make one comment about this but before we do
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we'll go on to the next show. And that's the second part of Merit Shades which I think we've
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already talked about. There was no comments on that. That's not fair. The health care reports. If
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you're not following the series guys you really need to cause especially this one he's not
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actually asking you to change your life in any way that would be hard. This is just evaluating
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medical studies. And you got me on to what's it's sceptic, sceptic podcast is that's the guy?
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Um, what are we doing? Sceptic's guide. Oh, sceptic wood. Yeah, yeah.
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Yeah, sceptic. It's a brand earnings one. Yeah, he's done a few on these and I think Ahuka's
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done an excellent job of bringing it to our audience. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's done a great job here
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as you say. And it's, um, that the business about using a bit of critical analysis
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as you hear all this stuff because there's so many, so many factions that want you to
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get excited and rush out and do something about the messages that are coming through
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all the various channels. You know, you'll never, you'll never guess what happened after such
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and such. Click here for the whatever and all that sort of stuff is all riding on on these,
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these reports, some of which are perfectly valid and great, but they've just been puffed up into
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into nonsense that selling stuff. Some of the researchers just are very annoyed that their
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reports are being mishandled and so. Yeah, well, I've certainly had tales of universities
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where some useful and important research has gone on in that organization, but they have a
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publicity manager at the front who doesn't really understand it, but knows it has to get out there
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and, you know, make make the name of that university and that that's how the whole spiral of
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nonsense can can begin, you know. Yeah, exactly. But good show. Well worth it. It's actually a show
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that even if you think you don't want to listen to it, you should listen to it just so you know,
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in the back of your head, the things that you should look out for. It's seriously not that long
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and it's really worth it, really well worth it. Yeah. Yeah, no, Hook is doing a brilliant job of this.
|
|
He's summarising it beautifully. I think very, very impressed with this. I want my daughter to listen
|
|
because this is the area that she wants to get into the whole business of science communication.
|
|
So she, I think she should, she should listen to this and start thinking about how she could do
|
|
similar, similar things. Yeah. Not all about Blender Part 2, the discussion continues.
|
|
And it isn't all about Blender. Quite a lot of us about different types of games and bugs and
|
|
stuff and I'm very interesting if you're, yeah, it's basically fireside chat. And this is the
|
|
second part of was the following day, Lost and Brunks. Some additional chat about characters Part
|
|
2, typical ways to create characters and your story should you create the plot first,
|
|
character first and excellent examples as always. It's Mr. X explaining the controls of the amateur
|
|
HF Radio Part 5. I wouldn't mind getting my hands on one of them, actually, as is.
|
|
It's, yeah, yeah. Remembering the pictures that I think he either referred to or put up on the
|
|
an earlier show, it's a proper looking right? Yeah, it is. Of course, I need to get my license.
|
|
Bash tips 14, the four loop, the break loop on the continued loop, as a direct result of that
|
|
discussion we had two months ago, I think. Yes, yes, yes, of course. I have been part of my place, okay.
|
|
The argument was about SFF MPEG and not working with four loop, which I can't replicate now.
|
|
Well, I think it could be the yes, I never fully understood what your problem was, but yeah,
|
|
there's hopefully there's some useful tips for things to do and what not to do and stuff.
|
|
Well, expect in four years, David, come into this episode gone, I told you so.
|
|
To which you reply, yes, what you're piping in the colors from the console and that has got
|
|
special characters, which also spawns off another shell, blah, blah, blah, blah.
|
|
Did you not read the mandate? I make great reading, yeah, ever have a sleep this night,
|
|
then you just get that open a year away. The following day, I had some training homework
|
|
from these guys and you know, from Hive in Q about MQTT brokers and stuff, so they've got,
|
|
they actually run a broker on the internet. They run a free version on the internet,
|
|
for the community, and okay, there are software's, probably, yeah, the other, but they have an
|
|
absolutely excellent blog. So the MQTT essentials follow up page one, right to whatever, just the facts,
|
|
nothing more, nothing less, and it's about MQTT in general on the protocols that's underneath it,
|
|
and it'll just give you a clear understanding of how MQTT works.
|
|
Yeah, that's very cool. Yeah, it was nice to hear something about MQTT. We haven't heard
|
|
that. I'm sure a lot of people are using it, but nobody's said much about it in recent times,
|
|
but it's a great way of doing things, I think. I was a bit skeptical about it, but it is a
|
|
fantastic way to be able to distribute messages about the place. I was a bit concerned about the
|
|
queuing system and about redundancy and about all that sort of jazz, but I think they've,
|
|
they've got it covered, but even if you're not using their server, there are other servers out there,
|
|
Mosquito, for instance, is a broker that you can run yourself on a Raspberry Pi.
|
|
But it's actually a very valid way of communicating on the network,
|
|
and secure enough as well. Yes, yes. The Mosquito security was not brilliant to start with,
|
|
I'm not going to see whether it's got better, but hopefully the whole subject is moving forward.
|
|
I must check out the blog and see if that's a subject there.
|
|
Yeah, I think if you've been dealing with MQTT a lot, we suffer from the,
|
|
we know about technologies a lot, sometimes prior to them being fully matured, let's say,
|
|
and if you form your opinion based on back then, at least, which I did, then you really do need
|
|
to keep yourself appraised of the updates and changes. Right now, I think it's quite a good protocol,
|
|
it's low resource intensive, and it's for the type of protocols.
|
|
There is a niche for it. There is a niche for it, so if you're thinking a lot of the stuff that
|
|
was previously UDP type messages, that would be good enough for UDP. If it's good enough for UDP,
|
|
it's good enough for MQTT, so that's what I, it's the message I took out of it.
|
|
Yes, yes, it's not the big boy queuing type system that exists out there.
|
|
I don't know many of that, but I've got a, I was looking into alternatives, and before I
|
|
implemented MQTT for one of my little projects, but for fairly simple lightweight stuff,
|
|
it's great. The only problem I hit was that the thing that handles the message is like an
|
|
interrupt routine, you can't hang about too long, you can't do too much in there, because if you do,
|
|
then you can tie up resources where you could do forking, you could fork it, but I don't think that's
|
|
necessarily a part of what you get with MQTT, with MQTT. So there are factors like that that I don't
|
|
know that you have to worry about some of the, the more powerful systems, but for the sort of
|
|
stuff it was designed for, it's brilliant. That's why if you're looking into some serious
|
|
MQTT servers, the IVMQ is one of the things that you should be looking on your list, you might
|
|
choose not to use it, but you should definitely compare whatever your solution is against this to
|
|
see, because these guys are leading the field up in a minute. Cool. Okay, Derby can't interview
|
|
with John Strand, who didn't Zolk score one there for people in the security fraternity John
|
|
Strand is one of the big names, so that would be recognizable to a lot of those security researchers,
|
|
so a nice, a nice win there for us on the network. Yes, yes, good, very, very powerful stuff.
|
|
Sure, sure, both are quite good. Yes, yes, yes, it's short, but very, very good quality.
|
|
And Spawning Dissearcher says YouTube, URL, and Tricks, I'm liking this, what he's doing with the
|
|
letters on the, right, okay, I don't know, two shows myself on YouTube playlist, which are in the
|
|
YouTube, and you can update the user upload playlist by modifying the letters at the, at the
|
|
channel, what I thought were the channel or playlist URLs, so you can change the letters,
|
|
the second letter from a U to a C, and it'll behave differently. That's very interesting.
|
|
Yeah, yes, indeed, yes, I've never wanted to do this personally, but it's weird how that
|
|
that would work, isn't it? Yeah, I assume that was some sort of a hash or something like that,
|
|
but it's, yeah, exactly, secret stuff in there somewhere. And, personally, I don't watch,
|
|
I don't use the web player, but this might be useful to people. Yeah, yeah, I never use playlist
|
|
personally anymore. If you see it, but if I join a new channel and they look like there's good
|
|
stuff to watch, I'd quite like to use playlists to play older things, but otherwise I don't do that,
|
|
but what you're saying there might actually be something I should be looking at.
|
|
Yeah, so if you're following up on these YouTube shows, if you're interested in YouTube,
|
|
playlists and stuff, that's definitely one you should have a little listen to.
|
|
Following day, getting started with web-based games in Haskell and LM by Turo Toto.
|
|
And, wow, again, did you try to get this running?
|
|
I've not had time to do that, let's say. Yeah, yeah, somebody who did was tattoo.
|
|
Cool game idea, cool intro. This sounds like it would be the kind of an amazing game actually.
|
|
I hope it happens. If not, it's still an neat idea. And thanks for a taste of Haskell,
|
|
I'd been mind-le-curious about it for a while, so it's nice to hear something substantial about it.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. Turo Toto replies, thanks. Thanks, I'm kind of fond of the idea too.
|
|
Ideas of course are cheap and actual implementations tricky part. I'm trying to get at least
|
|
very minimally working system up and running at some point. Main idea is just to explore the idea
|
|
of writing such a game and learn a bit of Haskell and LM on the side, which is fantastic, I think.
|
|
That's a great way to learn. Yeah, I don't think I'm going to be able to contribute much to this
|
|
project, so we'll see. No, no, no, I wasn't really planning to do that. But I would really like to
|
|
learn Haskell, but I'm not sure whether I'm up to it. It's not easy. It's just totally different
|
|
concepts to my mind anyway. So, the following day we had Bandit update in my build as a quick
|
|
episode to mention there are new over-the-wire and bandit levels out. You did an episode in 2138
|
|
and I didn't get time to finish bandit. It's something on my list and yeah, I really want to do that,
|
|
which is an SSH kind of game. So, you go to the first level and you basically catapult or something
|
|
and then you get the key to go to the next level, etc. But the thing about this show that got me
|
|
Dave and not judging the street cred of in my build, the geek cred or anything, but I would have thought
|
|
somebody like in my bill would have used Gator something to put all his clothes into and check
|
|
them into the repository and then wouldn't have to worry about if his laptop got blasted over.
|
|
I like that. Yeah, yeah. I was catching up with shows when I was ready for tonight's recording
|
|
and I listened to this one and I thought that sounds motentry. I was just going to check
|
|
that out so I landed on four hours of bandit. Exactly, exactly. And I wrote to in my bill on
|
|
new social and said, massaging actually and said, well thanks Bill, I blame you for that for all that
|
|
time away. But it's all frustrating yet stuck at the level. I know. I know. I think I've got to
|
|
13 so far, but I just had to stop because there was nothing it was going to get done. Nobody is going
|
|
to get fed, you know, I'm not going to go record it. I get stuck doing other than thinking about
|
|
it the whole time and then gone, all right, okay. And then now that's me. Me and Lemmings, after Lemmings,
|
|
you know, hours and hours worst at the Lemmings. And I'm not one for computer games, too addictive.
|
|
No, no, but the thing about this is that it's teaching you Linux or Linux or both. And you
|
|
you think, oh yeah, I'm just reasonably good at this stuff. And then you hit a level and you
|
|
realize, oh no, I've never had to do anything of this sort before. How the hell do you do this?
|
|
You know, and I can't say anymore as Bill couldn't, otherwise I give away spoilers, but
|
|
but the things there you think, well, wow, this is this is hard. This is difficult.
|
|
You really got to think. Yeah, but I'm not sure if you're doing it, if you, you know, the ones
|
|
that you're going, oh, I do this every day, I'm sure there are people stumbling over what we
|
|
consider easy as. Oh yeah. Yeah. Oh, I'm sure that's true as well. Yeah. Yeah. But it's an
|
|
excellent exercise in learning the subject, I think. So as it happens, because he had brought
|
|
this to my attention before, as it happens, there was a kid in who I came across who was,
|
|
let me say, demonstrated a interest in hacking to protect the innocent. And I pointed them to this
|
|
going, look, dude, if you want, if you want, there are plenty of places out there that run
|
|
competition servers that allow you to go and detect them and stuff. And this is one of them. So,
|
|
yes, hopefully you haven't put them on the street in a row. Oh, yes, yes.
|
|
Righty, the following day, problems with studies. This is another one from Ahuka, last one from
|
|
Ahuka, and I can't use my, we'll talk about that later because we're at the end of this month's
|
|
shows. And yeah, this was more details about, about what's good research on where I can go wrong.
|
|
This one was just interesting from a, from a human point of view, really, what people
|
|
walk in. The pressure people are on there. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's, it's, it says a lot about,
|
|
I mean, the whole subject says a lot about the way that aspects of science are broken. The way
|
|
that science is done in, in higher education is broken because there's a huge pressure to produce
|
|
papers and, and results and stuff. And the journals don't want negative results. So if you do an
|
|
experiment, you get a negative result, then that's effectively thrown away, even though it's
|
|
valuable information to the world, but it doesn't get, it doesn't further your career. And it's,
|
|
it's a mess. It's an awful mess, I think, and, and it's just, just becoming clear that, um,
|
|
that's the case when people can't replicate work that's already been done, been done on all this
|
|
p-hacking business. My daughter finished her degree last summer, and she, she got a lot of stuff
|
|
about, you know, she was told a lot of things about things to avoid and how you shouldn't be
|
|
taking your results and filtering out the bad ones and using the good ones and stuff like that.
|
|
So that was a subject that was being kicked around this family affair bit. So, you know, it's a,
|
|
that was an excellent, um, survey of the situation. And it's finished with a comment,
|
|
ignore whatever Gwyneth Paltrow says. Absolutely. Which I loved. Absolutely loved that.
|
|
So if she offers you a, a Jade egg, then you'd tell her what she can do with it.
|
|
No, I mean, more power to ourselves,
|
|
person-ship for being able to, no, actually not cause there's lots. No, no, no, it's, it's
|
|
complete and out to nonsense and fooling people to make money for them is, is a thing I appore
|
|
personally. I had, uh, I have to agree with you. Um, I had, and the pithany, after listening to
|
|
this show, when I was thinking about this and the U-Random podcast where I have probably, uh,
|
|
I've been having to question my political stances and things listening to those guys,
|
|
which is always good. Always questioning is, uh, is a good thing. Not a four o'clock in the
|
|
morning when you can't sleep, obviously. But I was thinking, just talk him into my mind,
|
|
should we have a fourth branch of government, which is the scientific branch, you know, the,
|
|
that, you know, going to powder stuff should be just fucking, you know, shut down straight away.
|
|
There is no scientific evidence to support this, you know, should, should we now treat
|
|
include science in government a little bit more because it, it seems to me that there's a need for it.
|
|
Well, yes, I mean, my view would be yes, but then I was trained as a, as a scientist,
|
|
there are not too much of it lately, but, but yes, I would say so. And engineering, I mean,
|
|
obviously, but, you know, the cost and accounting and whatever, that, you know, rational fact-based
|
|
yes, the department of facts, filtering out the nonsense is so important because, I mean,
|
|
when, if you watch, you know, cowboy films of the day's gone by, then a lot of them
|
|
consisted of the, the medicine man coming to town selling snake oil and it's was sort of a joke
|
|
that people were, were very, very vulnerable to being sold this sort of nonsense. And now,
|
|
look, we've, we've, we've got much better systems, we don't let people do that sort of stuff,
|
|
but hang on, that's not true at all. No, in some cases we're supporting, it's worse, yeah.
|
|
It's the snake oil sellers are all there and they're, they've got TV advertising and in some
|
|
cases they're in newspapers in what look like genuine articles and they're not. They're, they're,
|
|
you know, at such and such, discovered that if you rub this oil of such and such on these dog,
|
|
then it, it occurred in before these ill, these sorts of strange things are still there and
|
|
a cloak behind all the fake news stuff that's going on these days. You know, it's, it's not,
|
|
it's not moved on at all. So, yes, I think we do. We do need something like that.
|
|
Now, even, even stuff like fake news, I'm, what particularly bugged me was,
|
|
the recent budget in Ireland, which probably nobody outside of two, one or two Irish people
|
|
listened to this know, but, you know, we had an economic disaster in Ireland and now they,
|
|
they put in a fiscal advisory board and the fiscal advisory board says, well, the budget you
|
|
just produced is madness and it's a, you're completely heading down to another fiscal disaster,
|
|
but they're still doing it to invoke, you know, I'm not sure, be a, those guys should have legal power.
|
|
No, you're not allowed to, you're not allowed to spend this. I'm not going to tell you what you're
|
|
allowed to spend it on, but go back and go back to the draw board. Which would actually get
|
|
the politicians off the hook because I, you know, I'd love to, but the old fiscal advisory board
|
|
let me do that, you know. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, it could work, it could work.
|
|
Okay, but if you've got thoughts on that, folks, don't put it in the comments. Good God, no,
|
|
we'll help you wasting shows and we've got 260 brand new spank and fresh straight out of the old
|
|
fridge here. Sure, slots ready for you to upload. Yes, absolutely, I can't, but agree. Yes,
|
|
okay, enough about that political. Actually, this whole point of HBR was supposed to be a political
|
|
tab diverse political topics to be discussed, but it morphed.
|
|
Okay, additional comments that were not included in the last shows. There are nine in seven
|
|
previous shows and note volunteers, comments marked in green were read in the last community news,
|
|
I should be ignored by this one. I love reading that out every time. Hello,
|
|
it's at this point, Dave's tries to get his comments out. So this is a comment by Dododomi to
|
|
using superdue to create landmarks on your keyboard, which was posted in 2007 by Dododomi himself.
|
|
There's nothing new under the sun and I found out that it is not a new idea. So he's points to
|
|
YouTube video showing somebody doing something similar. Yes, I did look at that video.
|
|
Somebody who had keys on his laptop, which had red blobs on it. Yeah, 51.50 says you missed one.
|
|
Okay, probably more than one. I can see why English is so hard if it is not your first language.
|
|
Amazing. We forced it down the world's throat as a universal tongue over Latin and French.
|
|
Ye team Anglo question mark. Anyway, in a future episode, you should reference effect and affect
|
|
an effect. I also learned something else. No American would think of using tenant as a verb.
|
|
That's another elephant in the room. In the US, we reference ourselves with a term that applies to
|
|
an entire hemisphere. The topic abounds on YouTube, British versus USA culture. Maybe we should open
|
|
this up internationally and ask for a third party to tell us why we are both farting.
|
|
Farting nuts. Farting nuts. Fart. Thanks for to you.
|
|
That's a great email. I like that one. Farting nuts.
|
|
So I said hi 50. Oh yes, English is difficult. It's rich and interesting to me anyway,
|
|
but it's a beast as well. Yes, to affect an effect. I thought it was in my list, but it was not.
|
|
Can I just tell you I spent an hour looking on my wardrobe of Dave's corrections looking for that one
|
|
because I couldn't believe you had it had not done it already. No, it's an easy one to fall into.
|
|
I have to do a double take on that one myself sometimes and think, which one? Oh yeah, yeah, but yeah.
|
|
So it's something to bring into the series. So continuing British versus USA stuff.
|
|
As I've aged, I've tried very hard not to do the finger pointing and criticizing a US English.
|
|
I try to be critical across the board. Exgoation mark.
|
|
Annick, though, in the 1980s, I went to conference run by Burrows, the big mainframe
|
|
manufacturer, and we had we had a mainframe at my work. And the speaker from the US said the word
|
|
instantiate. Some British guy interrupted and criticized them saying it was not a word.
|
|
I don't need to be shot down with a dictionary reference. He looked, he looked a fool, I thought,
|
|
and I vowed to myself never to do that because it's not, you know, it's not just letting him
|
|
blight for one thing, but it's not possible to say this is correct and that's not, you know,
|
|
you can say using it that way is not sensible, but it's not more, not traditional or something.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. Well, there's, I've got a list of things like that, which I'll come to in due course,
|
|
but yeah, I take Stephen Fry's stance on this. He's very good. Basically,
|
|
Bollocks, language evolves, you know, you would imagine he or all people would know the correct
|
|
use of this and the correct use of that, but you have to, you have to let it evolve to some
|
|
degree, but sometimes you can see it evolving in a way that's just really silly. It's a,
|
|
in many cases, it's an ignorance. There's a certain ignorance. People miss here a thing,
|
|
and then the misheard version becomes the norm and you think, oh, why? That seems so
|
|
dark. Those are the ones that irritate me and I have to point out, but not that it will make any
|
|
difference. It's okay. You can vent on this network, Dave. Okay, 5150, this time without all the
|
|
smarmy comments, 5150 said, and this is actually comment. Getting paid in crypto currency,
|
|
it's a good comment because I was thinking of commenting on this. I didn't. This is a response
|
|
to HPR 2562, I bought a laptop, tangential to the main topic. I was intrigued to learn that
|
|
you were paid in crypto currency. You did that mention which type, but given the volatility
|
|
in better known crypto currencies, I'm curious how that might affect one's income, as am I,
|
|
also will send us in a show. I'm sending this to your email referenced on the HPR website,
|
|
but I'm also posting these questions to show comments, so any listeners getting paid in crypto
|
|
currencies can weigh in. I'd rather hear from community members whom a significant portion of
|
|
their income comes in the form of crypto currencies, but maybe somebody who makes extra money from
|
|
a hobby side project can contribute their tails of fortunes won't and lost. At this time,
|
|
I'm not asking for stories from miners or people who lost their stash due to alleged mal, what?
|
|
Mal-feasons. Doing bad things. Yeah. Mount Gok, for instance. One, you said you were paid
|
|
in crypto currency. Is this the form of you get equivalent to ex-euros or place that rather
|
|
than national currency, a week based on the currency exchange, or is it a fixed unit, why units
|
|
of crypto currency? Good question. If the latter answered the question one, what happens if the
|
|
bottom top side of the cryptocurrency, are you under contract, stuck working for nothing? I guess
|
|
the calorie would be what happens when crypto currencies go so high that they can't afford to pay you.
|
|
Has volatility in the cryptocurrency market affected your financial status? In other words, have you
|
|
ever made plans based on the sudden uptick in crypto currency savings only to have them dashed
|
|
when the bubble was burst? Almost a year ago, my non-techy friend started asking me about Bitcoin.
|
|
By that time, Bitcoin was the very first stage of its ramp upward.
|
|
I really hadn't been paying attention, but suddenly Bitcoin was all over the news.
|
|
Has this magical money tree that nobody ever knew existed? I wore my friend that I thought
|
|
the bubble was speculative or driven, and it would burst as fast as it had inflated.
|
|
That's the comment. That's a hell of a comment. It's a really good comment.
|
|
Yeah, it's brilliant. Might have been a show.
|
|
Joel H. comments on episode thoughts on knowledge learning game story mode,
|
|
where D-O-D-D dummy is working through game. Good idea. I just wanted to leave a quick comment
|
|
comment about the show. I think the ideas and theories you present in the episode are very good.
|
|
While the contents of this episode, with the contents of this episode alone,
|
|
I believe somebody could make an excellent video game. You've done a great job
|
|
of working out education small details to encourage learning. A point in click game sounds okay,
|
|
but I was wondering, what would you think of these ideas in a first-person exploration,
|
|
again, something similar to this Stanley Parable? Not knowing what the Stanley Parable is.
|
|
One duck-duck goal later. Wikipedia. It's an interactive storytelling video game designed
|
|
by David Warden. The game was originally released on 27 July 2011 as a free modification of Half-Life 2.
|
|
There you go. Random Windows. That's probably why it's probably not why it didn't hear about it.
|
|
I don't do gaming. Lemmings. Common's first session of earlier. Also, I don't really
|
|
run Windows. There you go. Okay, this is a comment on exercise and diet.
|
|
DODD dummy says, okay, you've convinced me. Hooka, I have a couple three of conditions you've
|
|
described and I found myself being more and more convinced as this episode was that I could change
|
|
my lifestyle to thanks map. Actually, I don't think it was meant to be read like that. It's like,
|
|
okay, Hooka, I've coupled the conditions you describe and found myself more and more convinced
|
|
and this episode went on that you can make lifestyle changes to thanks map.
|
|
Yeah, I think so. So I do Kevin's one. Please do. So Kevin O'Brien replies,
|
|
it is about making a decision. I'm glad I could be of help. My purpose in this series is to say that
|
|
we can take charge of our health rather than be passive victims. Then I can offer some tools to
|
|
help in that. You just need to make a decision. Yeah, very good. Very good. Very good. Now I know
|
|
I myself, I'm failing because because it's my fault. Do we have the last and Bronx one?
|
|
Great gear. No, we did. We did. Yeah, so we read that last last week because it was just forward
|
|
on from the previous one. Okay, yeah, yeah, super excellent. So that is all the comments,
|
|
additional comments for legends, but there's one there's one more. Is it? That's the the show 2672
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port is by cloud two. Okay, quite as we have it. Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So Alison,
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should I do it? Yeah, Alison Chacon says particularly informative episode. I've never made
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much use of live media except for installation and system rescue, but I found the idea shared by
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cloud two particularly thought provoking. I've been traveling and wanted to perform some simple
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task like airline check in from a lobby computer that hesitated over using windows of any flavor
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for anything. It would be fun to at least try to reboot these machines as Linux. I don't think
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things like network proxy configurations screw up such a tense question mark. I would also
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it would also be fun to test drive Linux on PCs or laptops in computer stores, but don't staff
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wander by and tell the perpetrator to stop and doesn't secure boot stops such attempts anyway.
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I'm curious therefore cloud two and what kinds of systems has this approach been successful.
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Older, pre-secure boot systems, the PCs I should say.
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All the other questions I think. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's that's a good point. Yeah, the thought of
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actually booting a live media on a computer in the airport. I think there would be guys with
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thing with firearms behind you quite quickly. More than likely the probably shops they just don't
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care. Yeah, I was just thinking I knew that name from somewhere. I did a quick
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Google of her name. And I know she was she came to speak to us at the HBR table at
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all camp in Liverpool some number of years ago. I don't think you were around that year,
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it was the year that NY Bill visited Liverpool second term year in his wife for then.
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Yeah, it was the year after that. Yeah, yeah, missed him. Okay, and then we had any other business
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breaking news. Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve show. Yes, folks, it's that time of year
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again when Hacker Public Radio does this 24 hours, 24 hours, I laugh in the face of 24 hours,
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26 hours New Year's Eve show. For those who don't know, a New Year's Eve 2018 12 31 at 10 AM
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UTC. That's five o'clock Eastern. We will have a recording going on the mumble server on CH1.teamspeak.cc
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on port 64747. That's the port we're server reusing right now. For anyone to come along and say
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happy New Year and talk about whatever they want. We will leave the recording going on till 2019
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0 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 UTC AM, which is actually 0 0 0 0 UTC 7 AM Eastern or until the conversation stops.
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|
So we're definitely going to be recording that long. And for those who have never used mumble before,
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|
there's a guide over Linux logcast that come and section explain how to set up a mumble client.
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Mumble isn't only available on desktop, it's available on Android and IOS.
|
|
And we're going to be an etherpad. So please stop in and say hi. And there's going to be a
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live stream as well of that. So if you don't want to join a mumble, you can just listen to it along.
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So it's always a good show. And even better in the last few years when I haven't had to do anything, Dave.
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Makes it even better. So this is honky and and let me see.
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Kevin Wysher obviously. Yeah, thanks. So honky McGoo and Kevin Wysher, thanks very much for taking the initiative here again.
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And I actually quite enjoyed it last year because of the fact I didn't need to do anything.
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Yeah, it was a good thing. I joined in briefly and had a little chat with Clot 2,
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is that correct? And yeah, it's cool. So yes, there's a new podcast, haven't listened to it.
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Yes, it's called Libert Lounge. Libert Lounge is a podcast where we casually discuss various
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topics involving user freedom, crossing free software, free culture, network hosting, etc, etc, etc.
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So you might want to give them a try. The link is in the show notes.
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|
Do you want to take the next one? Yes, excuse me, internet archive, who as you know,
|
|
we upload all our shows, current episodes, as they become available to the internet archive at archive.org.
|
|
And we are also in the process of uploading some of the older shows. So I think we have something
|
|
like 1,830, approximately on there now. So still a way to go. But anyway, so we're very, very keen
|
|
that the internet archive service keeps going. I'm sure many people are. So I just wanted to raise
|
|
the point that they're currently having a fundraising exercise, which they tend to do at this time
|
|
of year, every year. And as last year, donations that are made are currently being matched by a
|
|
generous supporter. So anything you donate will be doubled. So that would be great. So now is
|
|
the time to do it. Do recurring donations also get doubled? I don't know. It didn't say on there,
|
|
on there, on the news site. If you just go to the main archive.org site, you get a page that shows
|
|
a series of information, which I just sort of paraphrase into the notes here. And it doesn't say
|
|
how that works. Okay. And it has been Thanksgiving in America. And I would just like to say thank you
|
|
very much to Dave, especially for all the work that he does here in HBR. But in addition to being
|
|
a very good friend and getting me through a very dark period over the last few months. Without him,
|
|
I think life would have been a lot tougher. So thank you very much, Dave. Thank you.
|
|
Well, you're welcome. So I mentioned the tags and summaries. Please do just to keep
|
|
harping on. I hope it's not getting too boring. Just to say that we've added 23 or we've added
|
|
two 23 shows, which were without tags and or summaries. And so we're gradually whittling the
|
|
number down, but we've always opened for contribution. So if you'd like to contribute,
|
|
there's a link here to go to it. And I had to do that. Yeah. And as I said, I wanted to
|
|
do some start working on some of the wiki so that we can split out. They work logically.
|
|
But unfortunately, I found that time to, well, previously I hadn't had the energy for
|
|
to be honest. But now I'm getting a little bit a little bit more back on my feet and
|
|
I'll see if I can maybe do that on the train going into work or whatever. Do a little bit every day.
|
|
Very good. Very good. Yep. Yep. I've just as an an aside really, we need to be moving ahead with
|
|
our ideas for a replacement database and things got stuck about a year ago. And actually been
|
|
trying to resurrect things in the past couple of weeks. So we'll we'll try and put some
|
|
material out there that we can get comments on in the not too distant future,
|
|
within the next month maybe. Yeah, we should actually, if I know where they're there, they're there.
|
|
If we can talk on telegram or one of those places above that and maybe chat on
|
|
mumble because that is a better way to get me to focus on stuff. Just have a quick chat about
|
|
us and then draw diagram and maybe yeah, we'll try doing that. Yeah. Yeah. The one of the issues that
|
|
makes that transition a little complex is that we really want to include the previous shows from
|
|
today with the techie. Yep. So there's 300 of those to add to the database and sort of
|
|
meld them into the the structure of the HBR shows as well. So there's a sort of continuous
|
|
but precisely how to do that is not completely clear that this needs to be discussion.
|
|
And also some of the holes from there. There's only half thing in the hole. So they need to get
|
|
added back to the. And yeah, I've got various, various bees in my bonnet, which is probably dead.
|
|
But anyway, about making sure that if the show has multiple hosts that we recognize them as
|
|
individual hosts and all that sort of stuff. And also the HBR community news we should have
|
|
both of us down this whole site, maybe not. Well, yeah, personally, I would quite like to see
|
|
that because we've often had other people along to join in with the with the process. Yeah,
|
|
it'd be really nice to recognize them. Cool. Yeah, well, okay, cool. Yeah.
|
|
We should and we should publish these discussions as well, I think, because that's why I want to
|
|
record some of them. So that get people thinking about it as they go along. And hopefully,
|
|
and then if there are experts in that field, because I don't claim to be an expert in everything,
|
|
but I do have a feeling for how, how things work and what I've seen because I think,
|
|
yeah, even even this month, there's been a lot of problems with people filling out the forms.
|
|
And you might think that's new users, our new users, I think. No, let's work coming in.
|
|
New hosts, but it's also old hosts and myself as well, I'll submit a show and then all of a sudden,
|
|
why, why has this happened? And this, why did I fill that tag out? Why did I miss that?
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I sent in the show within the past month where I, yeah, I just accidentally hit
|
|
the return key and it says, oh, you finished then, that's fine. I was going to upload the,
|
|
oh, no. So yes, it's not, I mean, this is the nature of form, and sometimes it's quite hard to,
|
|
especially could get cleverer or and put JavaScript-y thing to catch all that, but we don't
|
|
want to do that, you know, so it's to, yeah, anyway, it's not that difficult. And the results of stuff
|
|
like requests that people have wanted to do is a common one is, oh, I messed up my show,
|
|
can I, can I upload a new version of the audio to which the answer should be? Yes, of course you can,
|
|
but we can't do that. Well, we can't do that, but at a particular point in time, also,
|
|
you're not going to be allowed to do that because at what point does it become posted,
|
|
because you release it to us under the CC by a say or whatever license, and then at what point
|
|
is it hours? And okay, you can upload a new version, but yeah, so it's, it gets complex.
|
|
Yeah, it gets complex, but these are interesting discussions that I think people should also hear
|
|
because it's interesting. Okay, I will, I will go out to the family and continue celebrating
|
|
Puke Year's Advent. Yes, Dutch people, I know it's the Saturday, and it should be on the Wednesday,
|
|
that's what we do, so that the kids have time to advertise, and yes, I know they're all too big,
|
|
but that doesn't matter, since it lives on here. Yeah, why not? Why not? Exactly. Okay, guys,
|
|
tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Echor Public Radio.
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You've been listening to Echor Public Radio at Echor Public Radio.org. We are a community podcast
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|
network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Echor Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
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and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the Creative Commons,
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Attribution, ShareLife, 3.0 license.
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