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501 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3611
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Title: HPR3611: HPR Community News for May 2022
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3611/hpr3611.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:10:54
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3611 from Monday the 6th of June 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, HPR Community News from May 2022.
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It is part of the series HPR Community News.
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It is the 190th show of HPR Volunteers and is about 56 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, HPR Volunteers talk about shows released and comments posted in May 2022.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
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Radio.
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This is HPR Community News from May 2022 and joining me today is…
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Hello Dave Morris here.
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So, Hacker Public Radio's community podcast that relies on shows being submitted by members
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of the HPR Community A.K.A.U. or anybody else who knows something interesting to talk about
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that you think might be of interest to hackers.
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And the HPR Community News, the HPR Generators, Dave and myself, come out of our
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classes, our HPR Generators classes and we'll give you a rundown of what's been going on
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since you were here last month and as part of that we'll be going through all the shows
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and we'll be going through all the comments and that's pretty much that.
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And passing over to you, Dave, to introduce new hosts that have joined this month.
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Yes, we have one new host this month who has the wonderful handle of Lurking Pryon.
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I think that's where he pronounces it, but yeah, I call it a Pryon, anyway.
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And he has already several shows in the future feed and they are all excellent.
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So much so that I've already used them on two occasions in anger against other people.
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Wow, Lurking Pryon says that.
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Yes, they are brilliant, yeah, I'm really enjoying them.
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So the first show that we're going to review is 3586 from Monday,
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the second of May 2022 and that was the HPR Community News Show, which is this show.
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And just as a reminder, if you wish to join, you can always do so.
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We tend to record it on the first Saturday, the Saturday before the first Monday of the month.
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That's a bit complicated and we tend to do it around in the afternoon, Saturday afternoon,
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so the way of time to process it for Sunday. Anybody can join, but it's probably best if you've
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listened to most of not all of the shows so that you can give some positive feedback on that.
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And there's an email that goes out, the Monday before the Saturday we do
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from me saying the show's coming and here's the stuff and you can look at the notes and all that
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good stuff. So there you go. And in last one show, we were saying that it was quiet on the lists
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and Brian and Ohio said, Jinx, you spoke too soon about the mail list being quiet.
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So, smiley face. Well, Winky face, to be honest. Yes, it was kind of busy on the,
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that's that's the thing with the HBR mailing list. If you go to the about page, you'll see that
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under govern section that we more or less make a lot of decisions with community.
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We'll be talking more about that on Wednesday because we're actually short of shows. So Dave and I
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have decided to move some of the more topical feedback to the show that's going to be not tomorrow
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but the day after tomorrow. So we'll be focusing on some policy changes and some changes to the way
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we handle the queue in that show just a bit of a teaser. So the following day, we had, I talk
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about my home router, the UEM UDM from Ubiquity. And from listening on the internet webs, I think
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this router is kind of equivalent to us, equivalent to the US, to what the Fritzbox is here to Europe.
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Yeah, I don't know how to compare them because I don't know either of them, but this is the
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unified dream machine, which is what UDM stands for from Ubiquity, which I know that Ubiquity
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routers are well thought up, though they're not easy to set up by all accounts.
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And as ever, Operator, what includes a link to the IP tables that is easy.
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Which is awesome. Absolutely. Yes. On this website under a directory called Stuff.
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Yep, that's it. That is. That's the place for it. Absolutely. Yeah. That's my final answer to this.
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I've got a house called that, I think. I've got a five megabyte text file called to do that text.
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Yes. Yep. Yeah. Says something about something. I'm not sure what though.
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So the following day, we had the Linux in-laws. And the text to speech lady is, I thought of a
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brilliant name for her Henrietta. Henrietta, that's what we're going to call her from now on. I reckon.
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I don't even got a better, better, better suggestions for her name, but I think it Henrietta.
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Henrietta Patricia Riley. There's a, there's one go back to the day. So
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yes, kind of butchers that calls it tries to spell it as a word. Yeah. Yeah. It's weird.
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So I don't see. You'd have thought it would default to reading out the latest numbers and stuff.
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There you go. Yep. And that's, that's gone down to another few bytes. Why to do that text file?
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Wow. Yes. That's a, that's a whole, whole nightmare.
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Anyway, in this one, the lads were talking about booting. And I found quite some interesting
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show actually, as has mentioned later, Dan did a show on this, but it was nice to get the
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update on how things have changed since Dan Mochka did that. Yeah. Yeah. No, it's a system D and
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stuff. It's an interesting subject. So yeah, we could have, we could definitely do with more
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information about this at some point, if anybody cared to provide it. And cyber grew,
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said the Unix philosophy, your understanding of the Unix philosophy is missing,
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what many considers is an important caveat. As summarized by Solos, Unix is a collection of
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programs that each do one thing only and do it well. System D is a grab bag of lots of functionality
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and it does not do any of them particularly well. Hence why people say that system D is not
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the Unix philosophy. I agree that the old style init system had a lot of issues and needed to be
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replaced. Sick. However, I do not agree that system D is the solution actually that should be
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because I'm reading a fix that in my head. It said replaces. I digress, I digress. I would have
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preferred a properly designed, layered modular init system instead of the all-in-one solution
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of system D. That is a bare metal server used to run containers would have the same root level
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modules, but different application specific modules as a GUI-based tablet. System D was designed
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for a GUI-based system and is over-cale-slashing appropriate for back-end servers running Docker.
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Anyways, another good show and stop sign your stop short. I think you are up to a double digit
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number of listeners by now. End of comment. The latter is responded to that in one of their shows.
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So the next comment was from Clinton Roy who we haven't heard from for a while I believe.
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Debian system D he says, I'm writing this comment hot so you may well cover this in the rest of
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the show. I think the major drama with Debian and system D is the merged Slash user stuff which
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being on who you ask is either an existential crisis. I've done the same thing or a mild wrinkle
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in package management. Debian has not switched over to system D resolved yet either.
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Yeah. Anyway, I had to double-take that one. System D resolved.
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Oh, system D resolved D. Okay. Okay. I don't even know what resolved D is obviously.
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Not look something that's allowed system D, okay. All right, yeah. I tend not to follow these
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things as much as I used to when I was working. I don't follow them Dave until they
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throw something in my way that I need to follow them. Yes. Yeah, good to see Clinton back
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live and well. And yes, ecstasyntic crisis or a mild wrinkle basically describes my reaction to
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everything and it can it varies depending on how much sleep I've got. Oh yeah. Oh yeah.
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Okay. Anyway, Brian and Ohio, out of your depth, it's sad that you call you show
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us a call back to the Linux in-laws. Fabian Churchill seemed to do a lot of research on the topic
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he discussed and was furniture. And you don't know what groups stands for shows your lack of
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preparation. You could have listened to Dan Moshko's gray series on bootloaders done on HBR
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and be better off. Okay. Yes. Nice positive feedback there.
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Yes. Yes. He was referring to Linux outlaws, wasn't he rather? Yeah, exactly.
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Yeah. But anyway, yeah. Yeah. Because that's how I read it in my mind there. Okay, fine.
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Yeah. Okay. Love the next series by Archer 72. The triple distilled malt whiskey of HBR
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is Archer 72. No doubt it would turn out to be a T-Total or
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no, no, that'd keep going on about that. Okay. This was a it's possibly going to be a series
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started by that other Scottish bloke. What's his name? Mike Nalu. Yes. There's only two of them.
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Very small country, you know. Yeah, exactly. I don't know what a big for this track. Anyway,
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headsets. Yeah, about different microphones such as around the house and how good they are or
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otherwise. Yeah, that's interesting actually. I'd never occurred to me to record a show using
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a pair of headphones, Bluetooth earbud things like this. Yeah, it depends on whether you,
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your phone is capable of recording off them, doesn't it? I don't, I tried it but it doesn't seem
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to work. I can't get it to record anything into any app that I'm running. I think it's a
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great, great series. If people have a can do that, various different recordings from your various
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different things around your house, it will give us a lot of interesting feedback as to what
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works on HPR and what doesn't. Yeah. You then you have exact like scientific examples of,
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well, you know, from recording to publishing, this is what it is and yeah, these expensive microphones
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might sound better to you, but by the time it comes out on the HPR, it's, it's, you know,
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point to spend a lot of money. Yeah, yeah. It certainly, I certainly find it really interesting.
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I could learn a lot from it. Sure. For most of his samples, I felt were fine. The
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tags was probably baited in his head against the wall, listening to it, but I was able to
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completely understand all the readings of the BSD Bible there. So, yep. Yep.
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So next one, the directory command, more on DAS. It's time for the DIR command and this is part
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of a hookah's never-to-old series on DAS, which is gaining a lot of interest from people. So,
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nobody particularly commented on this one, but it is the series itself has been getting a lot of
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positive feedback. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, it's, it's really good. I do remember that command on
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DOS. I'm sure I've said this too many times that I tried to avoid DOS as much as I could,
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but yeah, DIR had got some quite, quite fun capabilities.
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So, the following day we had a review of flashlights by GWP and I was outside when I was
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listening to this and unable to write down what lights he had gotten because I did actually want
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to refer back to them and put links in. That's what I'd like to do. So, north to south to do that again.
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Yeah, my notes to myself was, I couldn't work out what he was saying, probably because I was doing
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something else at the time, you know how it is. And yeah, it would have been nice to have had a list
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to go and poke around with them on Amazon or whatever and see if there are things that you would
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want to own yourself, you know. Oh, I am my father and indeed I both love flashlights for some
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strange reason. I can, you know, you could just guarantee birthday present for the animals,
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get them a flashlight or batteries for a said flashlight. What would be, and they'd just seem
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to always disappear flashlights, I don't understand it. I've got one of those night core ones,
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just the little one you put on a key channel and just keep it in my pocket. But a big clive talked
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about and the clicky one there. Yeah, you press the button twice in rapid succession, you get an
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incredibly bright light, especially at night. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, show, show, okay, move it on,
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move it on. Okay, I'll be taking a picture. One minute, show zero day. Okay.
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And the next day, we had a show from Nightwise who's come back after COVID with a quick overview
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of three months with the Surface Pro X. And this is from Wikipedia, a two in one detachable
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tablet computer developed from Microsoft. And Robert says, fine show until. Is it your turn or my turn
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to do the, I think it's mine actually. Yeah, go for it. Yep. So Robert says fine show until dot dot dot.
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I was, I was enjoying the show until the rant about the year of the Linux desktop. Do you think
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chasing the major platforms will magically bring the year of Linux desktop because it won't.
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What it does is it provides ammunition for employers to insist employees can use Microsoft or Apple.
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What is the problem here with non mainstream distributors that gets you so annoyed? So what if they
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don't run the major platforms, they're not forcing you to run them. Why do you not want them to
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exist so much? Monoculture is bad in nature and it's bad in tech. Feel free to run what you want.
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But stop lecturing everyone else about their choices. What was that? That was the year of the Linux
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desktop. I won't listen to these all three in the one go. So he did go on about that. Okay. Next.
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Home office mouse shoulder and also hotkey scripts. This can only be by operator based on the
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text. I talk about my issues and solutions for desktop ergonomics. So this is actually quite good.
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Yeah, this was links to bits and pieces as well. Yeah, yeah, some good links there.
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I would, yeah, the whole business about sitting at a desk and getting sore shoulder because of
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rotate the cuff problems and those other things that people get from sitting, hunched up at
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keyboards and I certainly do. It's all stuff that we should be aware of and guiding against
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whatever. So yeah, yeah, it's an important topic and just so happened. My daughter who's moved
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away to Dundee now has brought herself up what she thought was an ergonomic chair for her desk.
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She tends to work from home most of the time and goes into the office occasionally and it's
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not ergonomic chair at all. She finds she's brought by the junk really. So you know, it's a hot topic
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in this family. Getting a chair that supports you well, gets you in your position, gets your arms
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at the right level of your keyboard and doesn't mess up your shoulder or whatever. It's really a key
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issue. Yeah, and they're, yeah. So actually good tips there and there's a few bits and pieces in
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there that I was thinking of adding to my own setup, which I have in my to-do text file to do a
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show on but it ain't actually finished yet. So therefore I can't do a show on. That's my excuse
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and I'm sticking with it. Yeah, and it's it's good though. Yeah, I haven't followed the these links
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up but I will do because there's some, there's things like a good mouse and that sort of stuff is
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all really important. A peely wally. What the hell is a peely wally dove? There's a there's a glossary,
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not indexed. It's a Scottish word meaning pale or one or there is a glossary. Yes. Of course,
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of course. What do you mean? So it's yeah, it's it's about Scottish language and stuff.
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Yeah, sorry for coughing guys. No doubt I won't edit that out of my apologies to everybody who's
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ears got plastered. So yeah, it's some it's it's it's a word. I always get wrong and I get
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laughed at for being an Englishman trying to speak Scots and but it's it's a it's a good and
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valuable word. Indeed, indeed, indeed. But there are four common staves. Shall I read the first?
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Grind on Ohio. Great show. Glad to hear you guys are still game trying to picture which one of you
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is Jack and which one is Victor. Love the banter. Keep it up. Jack on Victor.
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Yeah, yeah, I had to ask for translation. I have no idea but yeah, it's it's a TV show of some kind.
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Okay, okay. A visa says Pascal. You just can't should I do that one because you're going to
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Oh, I think so much to to to come. Yeah, okay, go. Visa said Pascal, your discussion,
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Berlin Pascal, which was marketed as Delphi, had you may be interested to know that it lives on
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was sort of in the Lazarus IDE, which is backward compatible with Delphi code. It's still under
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very active development. Take a look at their website. I believe that the false language on
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Vax harder in as much as there was one was Fortram rather than Pascal. I rather enjoyed my years
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using the Vax cluster. You were rock solid. They were rock solid reliable in my experience.
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And I'll never forget the boot cases follow of the huge orange folders containing the printed manuals.
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So I didn't put my full name, but anyway, I made the next comment, which was to Brian. Thanks,
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Brian. Glad you enjoyed the show. We both have fun doing these and there's an audience that gets
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pleasure from them as well. And to visa regarding Pascal, I've tinkered with Lazarus a long time ago
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and actually wrote a simple program to query postgres database. I keep meaning to get deeper into
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it but haven't yet. I'm surprised to hear that Vax Fortram was the recommended language.
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We took delivery of a two-node cluster, both 8700s I think in 1987. This came with a fair bit of
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training in Reading and West Gordon in Manchester, two places where digital equipment had
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offices and stuff. And we had some consultants available to us to get the started doing the stuff
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we needed to do. The cluster came with Vax VMS version four dot something I think.
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Not 100% certain of that. One of the consultants recommended deck Pascal for our system
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level projects and wrote us some example code to get us up and running. That's when I got the
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impression that Pascal was the most complete language at the time, other than the low-level stuff
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bliss, which was their sort of assembly thing or sea level thing, which we hadn't bought.
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We did use Fortram too and I drew the short story and ended up teaching it to various students.
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We ran service courses in the early days. Just as an aside one of the then digital consultants
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lived a few doors away from me. I tried to get him to record a chat with me about the deck times
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but I haven't convinced him yet. Ah, the manuals. I remember someone telling me,
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Dave, your manuals have arrived and I went to the loading bay to find an entire palette of
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them waiting there. They were really good though. Wow. How big was this palette? Yeah, it was maybe about
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where the normal size footprint palette but it was about three foot high, maybe something like that
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of manuals all shrink wrapped and you know together so they were all banded together.
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But yeah, you got a lot of manuals. You needed a library to you know,
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place with lots and lots of bookshelves. Exactly, yeah. They were the days, Dave.
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Indeed, indeed. They were good manuals, so really good. Yeah. I used to take the manuals
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from when I started work. I used to take the manuals home. I lived across the road anyway
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in the form of factory that I was working at and just read them. I was a little aware and I was
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pre-inter that times there was no library. This is the morning stuff that you had to read.
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Yep, I certainly did the same. And the orange manuals were constructed so that they had ring
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bind. There's something like three or four rings to hold the pages in and they were a weird size
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but you could open the folder and then it had a fold running horizontally which you flex back and
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then the thing would stand up on your desk. Do you remember that? Did you see those?
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No, no. That was the early days. They stopped doing them a few years after we'd got this system
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in 87. So it didn't last into the 90s. I don't think anyway, but I thought that was a brilliant idea.
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Why isn't everybody doing that? Expense.
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Profit, shareholders, yes. Yeah, bugger there. Yeah, it really annoyed me when they started
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to ship in CDs instead of real money. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely. Okay, moving on. First show
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from Lactin Brown and he explains where that name comes from. Awesome. Not awesome if you
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become a pride in your head. I mean, I'm sure digressing. Focus, focus. I am sure I changed my
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password last pilot episode, change your password. Good advice, leave feedback, be gentle and he puts
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it or not, but yeah, we should be a little bit more gentle people. Thank you. No comments. Yes,
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but a good show. Good, good show. I like this. And I don't disagree with him, which is high
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praise indeed from me. Yes, yes. Speaking of some of the else who I would literally love to go up
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and kiss on both cheeks is be easy. Extractable text tables and images from the duck x file using
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Python. Verily, I say to the this is copied and pasted and kept in mind to do that text file
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for that day when it is needed. Amen. Yeah, oh, it's excellent stuff. Excellent. I know that
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to be easy does a lot of this stuff. We chatted about it when we were doing Auckland and things.
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And yeah, it's remarkably stressful. Actually, when you look at it, it's quite nice.
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It's like, I could read it out now and it just makes sense. This actually sounds like
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English. Yeah. Yeah. No, it's it's excellent. My my sons into this as well.
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His job, he, he, it was discovered by the business people in the place he works,
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that he could take an Excel spreadsheet and turn it into some some other format, which they
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had great difficulty in doing. And so they started queuing up to giving these things to convert
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till his boss said, I don't think that's what you're here for. So yeah, I get it. So I don't know
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whether the business guys are going to learn Python as a consequence of what's going to happen,
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interesting though, interesting. Yeah, very much. Oh, that's, that's when you start getting a lot
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of them in work, then you put a little internal server in and you'll have a job that submits this
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and then they can achieve it. That's yeah, that's what I did. Yes, yes, yes, that would be fun.
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That would be fun. But anyway, yeah, it just shows what you can do anyway. Fantastic.
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Lurking Python, good idea, very hunting. Tracing my security walls to the source of the good idea,
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very, very hunting. Now, to know what very hunting was, means something completely different in my
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head, which is fine too, particularly this month. But no, it was a good idea. Apparently,
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very hunting is where you go tracing down the person who is whatever. I'm going to, I'm going to
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actually look this up. Yep, see if search is on. What is very hunting? In the novella,
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fairy 1869, the child protect, the captain Jack discovers a nest of three fairies in a tree.
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Ah, this is what you call it. I'm a rabbit holder. Do you have helped me?
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I'm not sure, I can. Peter Pan, is that it? Fairy hunting, does it come from there?
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Okay, he's going to have to do a show explaining what the hell fairy hunting is.
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In the episode, I would, I would guess, I would guess so. I don't know.
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Yeah, I've just taken half an hour out of there all day, but now we're looking at
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very hunting. Anyway, so, so definitely required and what the hell fairy hunting is.
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And all forms, fine. No problem. We can handle it. But in this case, he was trying to track down
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the people who come up with ideas and then get security in the beginning of a project
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rather than later and worked out quite well, brilliant advice for everybody. Kevin O'Brien says,
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great, my turn or yours. It's yours. I did my own one or something. Yeah. Kevin O'Brien,
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great show. I love the show. And I'm going, I'm looking forward to more. I was a 90 project manager
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and at one time I was working at a hospital where the IT department implicitly viewed his role as,
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we are here to stop you from making mistakes. Naturally, the rest of the hospital view them as
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the enemy. And as a result, I noticed the individual departments took to setting up their own
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servers outside of the IT department. So on an effect, the IT department was so focused on security
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that they achieved insecurity. Oh, yes, I can imagine that. Yeah, large organizations would
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tend to do that. So, Lurking Prime says, in response, thank you. Thanks for the comments. It makes
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sad every time we hear about IT departments and or security teams doing things like that.
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We're supposed to be facilitators and enablers for the people who make the money for the company.
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Thank you for listening. And I think you like future shows. I have planned. Super.
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So, Slackware 15, a 32-bit operating system from day one, the pros of using Slackware 32-bit
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operating systems from Zenflotor 2, who has, I don't know actually if he has come down from the
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tree to record this. I'm now imagining a tree house somewhere with fiber internet and all sorts
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of power going up to it. Very, very good show on Slackware. Really enjoyable to hear. Yeah, yeah,
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I learned a lot from from that. It was an excellent, really, really high quality show. And indeed,
|
|
you mentioned the word Slackware and it brings the commenters out in droves.
|
|
Bitten says, my turn in your turn. It's yours. Yeah. Yeah, I have the memory of a goldfish.
|
|
Goldfishes are gone. No, you don't. Or is it far better? All dashes win-amp skins. Hey,
|
|
you know, you can change to win-amp like skins in audacious to make it look more like XMMS in the
|
|
audacious settings. Linux Daddy says 32-bit Linux great radio cast on Slackware and its history.
|
|
I got my first Slackware with a book and two CD ROM disks at version 3.2 with kernel 2.0.2.9.
|
|
The anti-X Linux distribution has a current 32-bit version as well.
|
|
And Brian in the Ohio says, Gritio, another Gritio, how about a podcast?
|
|
And how and what do you listen to on internet radio streams? Keep up the good work,
|
|
XMMS work. Cool. Windigo says intrigued about Slackware. I've never used Slackware,
|
|
but I've often heard about it. I have a 32-bit Dell Mini 9, maybe doing some distro helping soon.
|
|
Also, you mentioned that you had proprietary wireless cards that required a Windows driver with a
|
|
software that adapted it to be usable in Linux. Could you be thinking of Endis Rapper? It gives a
|
|
link. I remember using it back in the day, but it looks like it only supports drivers up to Windows
|
|
XP. Either way, thanks for the interesting episode. Cool. But very next day in real terms, not in
|
|
show-pasting terms, Linux in laws did also a Slackware from a user's perspective,
|
|
a discussion with a longtime Slackware user about the oldest Linux distro still alive.
|
|
And there's one comment, and it's from Brian in Ohio who says, what?
|
|
Lots of excellent question marks out here. This guy doesn't do Slackware. How can he have a
|
|
user perspective? I should interview tattoo or Zen Floder to get a user's perspective on Slackware.
|
|
Listen to the previous HDR by the aforementioned Zen Floder on the Alive and Well Slackware 15.
|
|
One last thing, dependency management is available if you use Slackbills to add third-party software.
|
|
You must add the dependencies yourself. Listen to GNU World Order for a better explanation.
|
|
These guys need to listen to HDR, not just use it as a no-cost place to host them mediocre
|
|
content. Now, Brian, go sit in the corner. Come on. Think about what you've done. It's not nice.
|
|
It is funny, though, that the schedule of the show right after Zen Floder is like,
|
|
she's the excellent customer. I was like, wow, did we love to have a show yesterday?
|
|
This was possible. And I'm also, I also have eight hours of tattoo show where he's going through
|
|
every package on Slackware, and I don't think this is actually correct what to say.
|
|
But that's fine. We're all allowed to have one bad day, I guess.
|
|
Someone who never has a bad day, Dave, digitizing photos. How to digitize old bread slides
|
|
inductives? Yes. Kevin or Brian puts away his camper and gives us some very, very useful.
|
|
This is very practical stuff because I have this ahead of me for the family photos.
|
|
And I'm not looking forward to it, Dave. I have to tell you.
|
|
No, I have a similar issue. I did have a flatbed scanner years and years ago, but it got borrowed
|
|
and then seemed to vanish as they do in some sort of osmotic process. But anyway,
|
|
so I bought a lot of slides and I bought a slide scanner, which will also do negatives,
|
|
but it's not very good. I think the flatbed scanner was well.
|
|
It's so damned expensive now. This was like 60, 70 pounds when I bought it.
|
|
Now they want 200 quid for anything worth having. Yeah, I had a, I got a, I bought a scanner
|
|
and it was like trying to find one archival level. So I got one and it's over in my parent's house,
|
|
my mother's house. And the only thing I do, I have one here as well, part of a multi-functional
|
|
printer system thing. I think I tend to show on this where I've got a read switch on it.
|
|
So when you shut the lid, it automatically sends a, it clicks off a batch of files to scan default
|
|
settings and stuff like that. So I need to do that over there and also have the time to do.
|
|
Yeah, I've got a, got a printer with the scanner in it, which is actually quite reasonable,
|
|
actually, when you, yeah, yeah. So I should maybe look at doing something with that at some point.
|
|
This, okay, next show, the worst, your worst car you ever had. In the 80s, I think,
|
|
when you bought a real door to the car, I really am liking the series. I'm actually thinking of
|
|
doing my own others off. It's a great topic, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah, it is. And now, especially
|
|
that I don't have a car, my wife has a car, I don't, but my wife is a rental for work.
|
|
So was there any comments on that? There were not. No, not sure. Yeah, anyway, it's,
|
|
it's, I'm glad I got it off my chest. That's the main thing. Exactly.
|
|
And hacker stories from April, 2022, origin stories and trouble in school from operator. Wow.
|
|
Windigo said, the best kind of correct your story about erasing and restoring
|
|
partition table information was the perfect cherry on top of this episode. And an excellent,
|
|
excellent example of being air quotes technically correct. Thanks for this episode. These are always
|
|
quite entertaining. This one, if anyone's interested in getting into security is a required listening
|
|
folks required listening. Yeah, yeah, I wouldn't disagree with that. Wow. It was like when I was
|
|
putting out the, the daily, the daily update on mustard on, it was like, yeah, this red like
|
|
in 80s hacker movie, what it was, it was in 80s, somebody's life in the 80s. Definitely a good show.
|
|
Yeah, definitely. And lurking, Brian again, with who the heck is evil, Steve, part one,
|
|
security as a person problem, and who's actually attacking us, evil, Steve, I like this idea of
|
|
you know, imagining somebody behind us. It's a good way of focusing the mind on the actual problems.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. A lot of which is, is a people problem. I just put it in that way at some point.
|
|
As opposed to a sort of technical thing, it's people, people being silly or something. Yeah, cool,
|
|
very good. So the next one was everything you wanted to know about pecs, which is pipe.
|
|
And I've listened to all these episodes, they're from stark finish, the real it. Just we're
|
|
taking this project and we're doing it. And you know, he asked the question, is this of interest
|
|
tigers? And after rebuilding, remodeling our house, I have come to the conclusion that a house is
|
|
particularly a modern house is a machine. And it's a very big machine, but you have to view it
|
|
like a machine. When we, for our holidays, when we were younger, we stayed in a medieval village
|
|
type thing, you know, where. And we were living in houses, modern houses there, but that's
|
|
that's by the way, but the downstairs they would tell you of what the living conditions were. And
|
|
you know, they were just essentially shelter, but modern houses with their central heating,
|
|
with their electrical systems, network systems, solar panels, outside chargers, they're essentially
|
|
machines that if you don't maintain them, they will, yeah, fall apart. So I'm going to learn
|
|
story short, waffling over. We need to essentially have more shows about houses and maintenance.
|
|
Yes, it is of interest. Thank you. Absolutely, absolutely. I'm very glad that he came on board
|
|
to do these. Yeah, it's really, really good. And it's my turn to do the comments. So we've got one from
|
|
Lurking Prion, who said, made my heart happy. I started out as an MM, I'm sure what that means,
|
|
in the Navy, tried to look at all the sweets. And this episode was right up my alley.
|
|
Many days playing with industrial and residential plumbing, in quotes, and more than my fair share
|
|
of playing with a torch. No, it isn't really on fire yet. Pecs is awesome. It makes life a lot better
|
|
and extra manifolds are a necessity if you plan on doing any substantial upgrades,
|
|
brackets, bathroom in the future. Thank you. And I look forward to hearing more.
|
|
Yes, very good. Very good. I watch YouTube thingies.
|
|
One where too much, probably one where guy is getting his house remodeled in the States
|
|
when it's so dry, I think. And he's getting a heating system. No, actually, no.
|
|
This is about the guy's name. I've got more his channel's called, but he's getting, as he
|
|
he and his builder guy working on stuff, they've got a guy fitting hot water heating system under
|
|
the floor above their heads. And he's using pecs, which fits into sort of slotted doodads
|
|
that goes zigzagging up and down through the through the joists and on and on to warm the room
|
|
above. And the stuff he's using is beautiful. It's really, I mean, the actual look of how it is
|
|
as a material and how flexible it is, how strong it is, and actually looks quite nice too,
|
|
this is sort of red color stuff. So yeah, it's fascinating. I've never I've never paid much
|
|
attention to it in this country. I'm sure you can buy it, but not going out looking for it to be
|
|
honest. So yeah, it's things to learn here. Indeed, the views quite a bit of plex and the remodeling
|
|
here in the backroom. So yeah, it's the stuff to use. I've still got quite a lot of copper
|
|
in my house when I had my new boiler put in, they ran copper up to up to it for some things and
|
|
some plastic pipe as well, I don't know whether that was pecs, but yeah, but copper roads over time
|
|
and which I didn't fully appreciate. Anyway, interesting stuff. So next day we had an Aspari,
|
|
see what you did there? Boom boom, use of a 13 year old hardware. Using you guessed it,
|
|
slackware and an old notebook. This is Archer 72 with a short and sweet episode beautifully
|
|
documented on upgrading his notebook. Yes, very jealous of that battery. Those Aspire ones were
|
|
the definitely the best form factor for commuting. Yeah, yeah, they look good, don't they? Yeah,
|
|
they look more substantial than things like the Asus Triple EPC and stuff like that, which is
|
|
tiny in the incapacitation. Still a usable thing, but yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it's crazy as Rachel, thanks for sharing your experience. I have a similarly aged
|
|
ThinkPad Harder, which I use. Are you good? So the next day, 10 proves mathematically that
|
|
programming is not easier using maths and I rushed this show out and because we were short of
|
|
more about that on Wednesday. And I forgot to, I missed an entire paragraph of my comments.
|
|
Did you add back in again? No, no, I didn't. I basically, this was the text which I read,
|
|
and then you can't do both of those things. Yeah, so the ability to think logically, which
|
|
is what math is, is a comment that I had a problem with and this assumes that math is the only
|
|
field where the ability to think logically exists. Math is a subset of logical thinking and not
|
|
the other way around. I can think of hundreds of occupations that require logical thinking that
|
|
do not require maths. It would be difficult to argue with this point as it could be argued,
|
|
as most people are exposed to counting no matter the level of literacy they have to have access to.
|
|
So let us refer to studies, which with crows that shows that they can think logically,
|
|
despite any math knowledge, again proving my point.
|
|
So, I think it's my turn to do the comments. Kevin O'Brien says,
|
|
not like me, the end of each show a lady with a lovely voice says
|
|
that the episode was made by quotes a listener like you. Today's episode definitively disproves
|
|
that because it was clearly made by someone not at all like me. Excellent. I had already clarified
|
|
because I think I'm almost serious enough that he wrote that and he was not serious. I don't even
|
|
serious about that. He's fine. You missed the time. No, don't you? Yeah, you missed the time.
|
|
Chief, what have I done to pass them off? Does he love maths so much?
|
|
However, this show definitely was not me trying to poke all the mathematicians out there to do
|
|
counter-shows and to prove me wrong, not at all. No, no. I could anybody think that,
|
|
despite being saying it sometimes in the show. Adieu. And yes, why we're having a show on
|
|
Wednesday, Dave, is the following show, The Best Eggs in the World, which is an emergency show.
|
|
And it's from Polky and it's been in the queue since 2011. And it's about the best eggs in the
|
|
world. And the show is absolutely fine. And I was melt-watering at us, although I was thinking,
|
|
oh, that's a lot of work for breakfast. I don't mind the people a lot of work as long as the
|
|
Polky is doing the work. So, there you go. Yeah, it's interesting. I've seen this set there waiting
|
|
for an emergency for many, many years, as you say. And I was fascinated to actually hear
|
|
me, could have listened to it otherwise, but it seemed like cheating, so I didn't. Yeah, so yeah,
|
|
it was, it sounds, sounds really nice. I don't know what my teeth are, actually. But the only
|
|
thing, I shouldn't even comment really, but garlic powder is the thing I've never, ever used.
|
|
No, no, I've never, never needed to because, but I'm sure there's a really good reason. I'd love
|
|
to know the logic, the cooking expertise I'm using, such a thing. I tend to avoid stuff that's
|
|
that's pre-made of that sort anyway, but that's just just my, all sort of garlic cloves. It's so
|
|
easy anyway, they keep, and you just have them with you. We have to keep them with the onions,
|
|
and then squeeze them through the thing in your fresh garlic as much as little as you want.
|
|
Yes, but anyway, so that was interesting. Very interesting.
|
|
What's the news? Yeah, that was this. We had, you did the last one with Miss Cummins.
|
|
Do we cover that? Yeah, with a monocultural stuff, etc.
|
|
We just did that one, yeah, yeah. I just put it there in case we miss it,
|
|
for some reason or that. I don't know why we would, but just don't praise us.
|
|
Yes, so we've got five comments and two on previous shows. This is about Lee's talking,
|
|
local talking newspaper from April, and Dave Morris, this was El Musso, with a correction,
|
|
Dave Morris, to correct your comment on the community, use something in, is it like,
|
|
clear the row? Clear the row. Good Lord. How do you get clear the row from that?
|
|
CLI-TH should be clear. E-R is E-R, and O-E is, oh, clear the row.
|
|
He's smartly gay. If you just look at your in Scotland and look at the slap about the face.
|
|
CLI-TH is also award CLI-TH. How many words do you know that begin CLI-TH,
|
|
that is pronounced CLI-TH? As a referative to my me-assume English teacher one time.
|
|
So how many verbs in the English language are irregular? Well, about half of them.
|
|
Well, then they're not really irregular, aren't they?
|
|
Same irregular, really, I guess. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know language is crap.
|
|
I mean, it's really difficult stuff. It's quite entertaining and amusing and stuff, but anyway,
|
|
that's how you got a battling English episode. So, well, hurry up, we have another short
|
|
report. So I said back to El Masor, thank you for the correction. I'm embarrassed to admit
|
|
to admit that I was a student in Manchester for about five years, then worked at Lancaster University
|
|
and other five, so both in Lancaster for the benefit of the non-English and wasn't sure about
|
|
the location of Clither O. Not a mistake, I'll make again. Excellent. On freedom of speech in
|
|
open-source part two by some guy in the internet, Kevin O'Brien says open-source versus free
|
|
software. And Kevin says, I think it can be useful to distinguish between open-source and free
|
|
software when you address this issue. Free software respects the four freedoms as published by
|
|
free software foundation. And one thing I recall being discussed there is the idea that you can't
|
|
stop certain users such as the military from using free software. The DPL specifies the only
|
|
requirement for legally using free software and any user who respects those freedoms is legally
|
|
licensed to use this offer. So, some guy on the internet says the freedom to advertise. Kevin
|
|
O'Brien, thank you for your reply. I agree. Open-source and freedom respecting software is usually
|
|
a joint effort, but in this argument we can use more perspective. The open-source is only one element,
|
|
but the free nature of the software and its community must be considered when discussing
|
|
the actions of community and the usage of its software. If companies in the US are considered
|
|
people, respect and follow the four freedoms, then the two should be able to promote their
|
|
versions of the software. Or do you disagree? Kevin says, I'm pretty basic on this. If they follow
|
|
the four freedoms, it's free software. If they include advertising, then someone else can focus
|
|
and remove the advertising. All perfectly legal. Yeah, no argument here. No, no, I'll put.
|
|
Yeah, so we've had comments. Let's see what was on the May thread. That meant it's so busy.
|
|
Policy changes discussed on this month's community news, which was during the last month's
|
|
episode. Dave knows some policy changes tags. Modification of a tag is not going
|
|
process, so it can be modified, host, name or handle series. Shall we cover this on Wednesday as well?
|
|
Yeah, we could do that, yeah. Yeah, okay, we're going to cover some of these because they're
|
|
they go to basically relate to what isn't what causes problems for the HFIR project when you
|
|
pause to show. Okay, and we want to keep the community news relatively lighthearted.
|
|
Okay, so anything else, Dave? Any other business? All the shores on the archive. Talk to us about that.
|
|
Yes, yes, yes, yes. It took me a while to find the tab and go back to it.
|
|
My brain is so slow these days. Right, so last episode, last community news episode, I was talking about
|
|
re-uploading various shows in range from a 712429 and to talk about it in the show that came out in
|
|
early May. And so I'm just sort of making progress with this and what I've done in the past month is
|
|
271 re-uploads leaving. I'm trying to do five a day, if I can, a little thing that pops up and says,
|
|
oh, yeah, do them. And then this 1,288 yet to do. So I actually did 131 last month. So I don't know
|
|
why I need to tell you this, but I'm just writing this as statistics. No, so yeah, yep, yep.
|
|
So we're slowly inching towards, we're also using up more displays as a consequence,
|
|
because we're making transcoded copies of all of the the audio. So every show you go to eventually
|
|
on the internet archive will have all its different versions. If you happen to like the
|
|
opus version, you can find it there with the tags, et cetera, et cetera. That was the point of the
|
|
yeah, they do transcode the shows if we don't, but what they don't do is copy the tags over. So
|
|
that's why we do the transcoding for them indeed. So yeah, that just does the background. You might
|
|
be wondering why we're bothering this. And since we've done the change in the workflow,
|
|
I haven't gotten rid of the shows from the hard disk because I wanted to make sure
|
|
nothing got broken in the process. So now I've updated the script to tidy that out.
|
|
There's a little bit of coordination that Dave and I needed to do to make sure we can lose anything
|
|
during that process. Yep, but we pretty much got that in hand now, I think. So yeah,
|
|
cool. And the other thing I wanted to say was finally the free culture podcast website,
|
|
the HGTPS thing has been fixed finally. So if you're feel free to recommend the free culture
|
|
podcasts.org and we will accept anything that's free culture podcasts and who are not embarrassed
|
|
about having us talk to them by awesome in Dave about the quality of their XML feeds. So
|
|
yeah, yes indeed. Looking forward to it. Yep, super. Okay, that's it. And see you on Wednesday
|
|
for the next show and tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
By the way, we need shows, people, so record shows. So then thank you. Bye.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. Today's show was
|
|
contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
|
you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
|
|
kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our sings.net. On the
|
|
Sadois status, today's show is released on their creative comments, attribution 4.0 international
|
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license.
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