- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
592 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
592 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3879
|
|
Title: HPR3879: HPR at Hillend
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3879/hpr3879.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:13:56
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3879 for Thursday the 15th of June 2023.
|
|
Today's show is entitled HPR at Hill End.
|
|
It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 46 minutes long.
|
|
It carries an explicit flag.
|
|
The summary is Mr. X and Dave Morris have lunch and record a chat.
|
|
Hello everybody and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
This is another one in the chat session series between myself and Mr. X. Mr. X is like
|
|
Hello everybody, we are all well.
|
|
I just had a lovely meal of us here, scamping chips and some peas that was our honey sweet
|
|
cheats today and you had?
|
|
I had fish and chips.
|
|
It was a pretty good food.
|
|
It was good.
|
|
Originally we were just going to have a light brunch when we came here but we were tempted
|
|
by the menu and we went for it so it was very nice.
|
|
So we got a list of things that we want to touch upon so we will have a go up there.
|
|
Of course.
|
|
I'm talking about chatting the first thing on the list.
|
|
Yes, well I put chat GPT on the list because it's pretty much a hot topic.
|
|
I'm not sure that I have a huge lot to say about it except that I'm not actually used
|
|
it per se.
|
|
My son's heavily into it because that's his area of work working for the bank that he
|
|
works for.
|
|
But I know that you miss the acts of you being using it a lot a bit, not a huge amount
|
|
but it is quite impressive but we've actually, I've gone over to the dark side and it was
|
|
more, I got an offer that I couldn't really refuse to speak and I've now got an iPhone
|
|
to offer it for about a year or something like that and of course you can link that.
|
|
There's like shortcuts that you can link to chat GPT and you can ask it to respond
|
|
them and what not.
|
|
I've been using it for various things, one of the things we go dog walks and what not
|
|
and I might say to you know, tell me the history of such and such you know and for example
|
|
we were at Muscleboro Harbour and I was an area local to hear and asked what's the history
|
|
of time of the history of Muscleboro Harbour and it started with a spiel you know and Muscleboro
|
|
Harbour was one of the earliest oldest Harbards in Scotland and the 17th century was used
|
|
for blah, blah, blah, blah and then developed into this and blah, blah, blah, blah.
|
|
It was like having a virtual guided tour of Muscleboro, that's as fast as it is.
|
|
You know, we've used it in various places we've been to, it doesn't seem to know very
|
|
much about the setting though, I did try it one more time.
|
|
Given that it has to go and find this stuff and he's probably a bit out of date with all this
|
|
information, doesn't it because I don't know when it snapshots where we don't.
|
|
There was a 20 or one or something like that, I mean, just one thing, something like that you know.
|
|
This is the place we've just had lunch at is quite an old place I think, isn't it?
|
|
It's physically old but and it's been around for a fair number of years in my knowledge.
|
|
Yeah, it's quite handy because obviously you like to take your fuller companion with you
|
|
so that's all I know, and it's pleased to drop off after you've been a nice walk at the
|
|
Helen ski slope over there. We're in a sort of quite popular walking area and skig,
|
|
we're near the ski slope. Yeah, as we've been supposed to slope, yeah, yeah.
|
|
But yeah, I mean, I've done for fun, tried it, I asked a couple of questions right up
|
|
a python script to do such and such and came back with the root python script for various things
|
|
and I tried and it's quite impressive what it can do. But I think on one of my upcoming shows
|
|
I gave links to, there was a TED talk where the inventor of the thing basically talked about the
|
|
history of it and how it came about and whatnot, so it's got worth a watch.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I've not done that myself yet but I definitely need to research a bit more
|
|
come to understand it a bit more. I mean, there's lots of talk about it being a worrying move towards
|
|
AI but it still think GPD is the thing. Maybe the thinking behind artificial intelligence
|
|
potentially has problems but I'm not sure that they're very clear at the moment.
|
|
Yeah, that's a set, well, I think the the inventor of a second of the chapter name,
|
|
but he basically said, you know, the way he saw and I don't know whether it's necessary
|
|
valid or not, but he was saying, well, there's no point peering off forever in case it does
|
|
something bad, you know, you basically just keep an eye on it and if something goes wrong,
|
|
then you're you're active. It's better that you start to sooner and keep a tablet rather than
|
|
keeping it under lock. Yes, and then suddenly this super duper thing comes out and I've got no
|
|
control of it sort of thing. So that was halal argument, but whether that, yeah, I don't I don't know.
|
|
I've heard those sorts of arguments too that, you know, it needs to be monitored and considered
|
|
carefully, but I mean, it's going to happen whether we want it to or not, so it's good to do it
|
|
or in the light of day and watch what's happening. There was a video I was showing my mother last night
|
|
actually and it was there's an app you can get it's called Annie, I think it's called Annie and
|
|
or call Annie and it's available on on I don't know if it's available on Android, but it's available on
|
|
there's probably some or ones on Android, but it's available on Apple and Apple Store and it
|
|
basically get an avatar and it the head moves and blinks and whatnot and there was a video
|
|
that chap speaking to it and it's it spawns much quicker than I don't know how to do it, but it
|
|
spawns pretty quick and so it sounds quite fluent and the chap was just having a conversation,
|
|
you know, what do you like? Oh, I've got hobbies, hobbies, all I play games, what games do you play?
|
|
Well, I play these kind of games. Do you like these kind of games? Yeah, I quite like these kind of
|
|
games. How do you find them? It's like a two-way conversation. I mean, it was just astounding,
|
|
you know, it's very natural. Yes, yes, yes, yeah, but it's an impressive engine which is filled
|
|
with human knowledge and also human modes of thinking and speaking. So it's not too surprising.
|
|
Considering that the original Eliza, the thing written in Lisp way back in the 1970s or before,
|
|
convinced a lot of people that it was sent in, that they were talking to a real person.
|
|
This is way, way, way more convincing than that. It's not too surprising that we're
|
|
easily convinced by it, you know. Yeah, yeah. So, yeah, it certainly was. I'll play with
|
|
definitely. Yeah, yeah, yeah. My only worry is that bothers me for the future is how it could
|
|
be subverted to spread misinformation. Oh, absolutely. Yeah, because you get on mass,
|
|
like, huge amounts of information that's all rubbish and it's fun, fun enough. It's slightly
|
|
cut, maybe because it controversial in your viewpoint, but my father-in-law, a member of my family,
|
|
it's had a view about the population and it's a commonly held view, certain countries having
|
|
a large population and near to blame, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I have given them before reasons
|
|
why it's not as black and white as that. And of course, I was showing on this chat GBD thing and
|
|
I said, oh, well, look, there are talks about population. Why are you asking that? I'll do that
|
|
then. So, just what would you want to say? Why is it when they talk about a capitalist climate
|
|
issue? Why did they never bring up a population? And it came up with a several point thing about why
|
|
population is not really the most important reason. And by the time it's, oh, that's, oh, you
|
|
can see that. So, it convinced them. I couldn't convince them, but chat GBD was now able to convince
|
|
or yeah, he said, yeah, probably just knew what the force was good, but hopefully that was
|
|
that was proper information. Yeah, people love it. Yeah, yeah. I mean, when I was asking about
|
|
Massabot, for example, it could have been a Lord of all rubbish. It may have been all this
|
|
harbour and, yeah, you've got to check these. Yeah, absolutely. So, thank you. Putting too much
|
|
belief into it is a dangerous thing. So, yeah, but that's the future. So, we'll leave that
|
|
topic, I guess. It's going to come up again no day. You were mentioning your use of audacity,
|
|
you have any problems with it? So, I was asking, first of all, what the fourth version was,
|
|
I knew there was a fourth version, and I know there was slight concern in some quarters about
|
|
having seen data and all that. And that, these as I tend to be a bit of a pragmatist,
|
|
and I don't just know, bother too much about it. I knew it was quite a lot, so I just
|
|
carried on using audacity. And obviously, things certainly changed over time, and they've changed
|
|
the file format that audacity uses and other bits and pieces. And what I've been finding recently
|
|
is that at some point during the last couple of shows, it's been mixing the show down into one flat
|
|
track, generally almost at the end of the process. So, I'll lose my project, which,
|
|
thankfully, I'm at the end, so it doesn't matter, but it's kind of annoying. So, that's the first
|
|
thing that I've kind of worked at. It's not, it's not, I'm not quite sure why it's doing this, but
|
|
I seem to have lost my project on the other flat track, which I know can't move and sit,
|
|
you know, they can't change things, which is annoying. And then, what's the other thing now?
|
|
So, I'm going to ask you what you used. Oh, that was it. So, I noticed that a number of my
|
|
shows, maybe the last couple have been a bit distorted, but hot, you know, as if the audio's a bit
|
|
on a loud side. And I thought, hmm, it's just something to do with this audacity thing. And I had
|
|
to listen to my, well, listen to the MP3, I generally had an MP3 and just try it, listen to it
|
|
through first. And then, once I'm happy, I write a flat out, which I don't review, and I send it
|
|
to HPR. And after a second, when I went back and I listened to MP3 and it seemed okay,
|
|
and I listened to the flat, which I sent to HPR, and it was also okay. So, I can't understand why
|
|
well, last couple of shows have been a bit distorted. So, I don't know if there's been
|
|
different leveling or something has happened recently. Yeah, it's hard for me to comment, I think,
|
|
because I'm probably on a different version to you, because I run devian testing.
|
|
Right. So, I'm on devian bookworm at the moment, and all of the stuff that comes with it,
|
|
bookworm's not officially released yet. So, I seem to be on an audacity 3.2.4,
|
|
which you may not be. But I did notice the changes. It now seems to be doing more work to
|
|
keep the state of what you're doing. So, if things crash that you can get back to them more easily,
|
|
I think. Because it seems to be writing a temporary file while it's running. I tend to use audacity
|
|
in one monitor and have dolphin open in the other one, right? Just because it's easy to see all the
|
|
files that belong to what I'm doing. And so, I noticed that their files pop in up, and then they
|
|
vanish as I shut it down and stuff. So, there is that.
|
|
Something to do with that, that's maybe combining the project. But I still don't know why it's
|
|
also, and it's not like, because I saved the number, obviously, when I'm creating a project,
|
|
I must save it multiple times. And I can't remember when I generate the flag or the MPT,
|
|
but at some point, it flattens the file, and I lose the project. I don't see that, but that's because
|
|
as I start up the thing, I wrote to you that I use my zoom H2N, which is what we're recording on now.
|
|
And it tends to produce a fairly low level. I'm not sure if I've got the gain wrong or something
|
|
on it, but it doesn't pick up everything that's been said very clearly. So, one of the first things
|
|
I do is to noise reduce it, then I amplify it, and then I merge the audio into mono.
|
|
But there's a zoom recording there, doesn't it?
|
|
Yeah, you can see it's got the left and right.
|
|
Yeah, I just recorded mono stuff, things. So, yeah.
|
|
So, there's not, and then at the end, I export to Flak.
|
|
But you might only have one track anyway. I tend to have two tracks cause, well, I historically started,
|
|
I historically added my theme tuney bit at the beginning, which I don't think anyone really
|
|
does anymore, but I've just never removed it. And so, therefore, I need the two tracks so I can
|
|
blend it in. And as I said, the last two shows this flattened it out.
|
|
Yeah. So, as you say, I only have one track. I'm confusing track and mono stereo.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, yeah. Not the last ones, but it's not quite too true.
|
|
Unless you have multiple tracks, you won't see that.
|
|
Yeah, I don't think I've had to do that much in recent times.
|
|
I've done that where I've merged other people's bits and bits from other
|
|
different shows and things, but I haven't done that recently.
|
|
But what about the starting thing, you know, it seems to be fine, as far as I can.
|
|
I know I've had issues with the volume control, been a bit sensitive, the recording level,
|
|
been a bit sensitive, and the volume setting in Ubuntu.
|
|
But as I see the fact that it's, and I assumed I've set the volume too high,
|
|
then we're not sent it back at this point. I don't want to get to the bottom of that.
|
|
I'd expect a bit more of that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's changed.
|
|
We can talk offline about this. I'm happy to try stuff out if that would help you too.
|
|
Maybe to drop it a bit more, give us a bit more headdreams so that it doesn't
|
|
just go with that, and I'll be with you.
|
|
Yeah, and I said, when I was writing to you about this, I tried tenacity, but I couldn't see
|
|
what advantage it had over audacity and it seemed that all the fuss about audacity,
|
|
monitoring stuff seemed to vanish. I don't think it was quite as...
|
|
A bit of a half-t, a bit of a fail format with the tenacity.
|
|
It's now saves it in a different format, because it used to create a folder,
|
|
a separate data file. I think it was a whole series of data files in the folder,
|
|
but it's now just one file.
|
|
I'll still get the multi-files.
|
|
No, I just got one file on that, so.
|
|
Maybe we'll next see me upgrade. You'll get that, maybe.
|
|
Strange and magical things going on here.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
Okay, well we'll come back to that one if needs to be another point.
|
|
What was next subject?
|
|
We were going to talk about some sort of COVID-related thing with this guy called Dr. John Campbell.
|
|
Dr. John Campbell, aye, aye.
|
|
Because you were asking me.
|
|
My mother was actually asking me, would you think that that's as well?
|
|
I said, I haven't really been lasting time watching them very much recently.
|
|
So Dr. John Campbell, you're with him, would be explained.
|
|
Well, he's a YouTuber, and he has been producing YouTube stuff quite a long time.
|
|
He's a nurse educator, and he's got a doctorate of some kind in education for nursing.
|
|
And he's done quite a lot of YouTube stuff relating to that subject.
|
|
Yeah, and I'm teaching nurses stuff.
|
|
I can't remember I came across him before you mentioned it to me.
|
|
I may have done, and I think you actually recommended them to other people as well.
|
|
Yeah, and there was a lot of use flintest and stuff he was giving to you today at the beginning of the year.
|
|
He was doing some really great shows almost on a daily basis,
|
|
where he was looking at the state of knowledge on COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2 and stuff.
|
|
And, you know, the spread of the disease and explaining what viruses weren't explaining about vaccine.
|
|
He seemed to be producing some amazing stuff, yeah.
|
|
Amazingly high quality stuff.
|
|
I definitely recommended him at that particular point.
|
|
But then he seems to have gone off the rails strangely enough.
|
|
And he, as time went on, I'm not sure exactly when he started doing this,
|
|
but he was quite keen on the idea of using either Mectin,
|
|
which has been pretty much categorically proved not to be effective in regard to.
|
|
I mean, people do take either Mectin for parasites.
|
|
It's a recommended thing.
|
|
I think the site could use, you actually sent me a link to a chat who debunks things.
|
|
And he said in that video, which I watched this morning,
|
|
that at that point, because he would be looking at the view counts of John's videos.
|
|
And he had shot up at that point.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
And he had said it, it was bubbling a lot.
|
|
So he's been working.
|
|
That was very instantly.
|
|
He showed a video of him when he was much younger.
|
|
And the numbers of views were been low for a long time.
|
|
And then Covid struck.
|
|
And he got a huge upsurge.
|
|
And obviously, if you start this,
|
|
the implication was he may have been making about money from this.
|
|
And then, of course, it dropped a lot.
|
|
And then this thing picked up again.
|
|
And maybe whether that's going to do with it.
|
|
Well, yes, certainly the comments about it.
|
|
And there have been lots of comments from the world of science and
|
|
biology and stuff saying that this guy is milking the system.
|
|
And he's not being honest.
|
|
Basically, he's gone well off the rails.
|
|
And he was pushing Ivermectin.
|
|
He was pushing Vitamin D.
|
|
I'm still not quite clear where that stands.
|
|
I don't see any particular evidence that that helps.
|
|
And although it's good to be taking Vitamin D,
|
|
especially if you live in the north as we do during the winter.
|
|
Right in the sun.
|
|
A bit more, maybe.
|
|
But he also had a thing about excess deaths,
|
|
which is another one of these conspiracy.
|
|
That's one of the things that my mother picked up on, which had been worse.
|
|
And if you think of that,
|
|
I said, well, I haven't been watching it.
|
|
But I mean, the point I was making without looking at it at all,
|
|
is it even if there's some link to some degree,
|
|
the point is that the vaccination has saved far, far more lives
|
|
than it could possibly have in any way affected.
|
|
And so, yeah, it's,
|
|
yeah, I've never got one yet.
|
|
I guess we'll put some links into this other YouTube channel called
|
|
Debunk, The Funk with Dr. Wilson,
|
|
who's a molecular biologist and does some pretty,
|
|
pretty powerful stuff.
|
|
And he has done several shows on why John Campbell is wrong.
|
|
So we'll put that in the notes and you can maybe go and have a look.
|
|
Well, I'll watch it.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
And John really enjoyed the match.
|
|
Yeah, he's doing some really good work.
|
|
I think he's a very interesting guy to listen to.
|
|
I was going to, I was just about to watch the one about face masks
|
|
because I've just recently heard something on the local,
|
|
I think it was BBC Radio Scotland and they were,
|
|
they sometimes bring in people that,
|
|
they don't challenge them and they've clearly got agendas and you think,
|
|
you know, it's obviously a face mask is going to have an impact.
|
|
To some degree, you know, I suppose a thing is that Covid has become more and more transmissible
|
|
and that's a thing, it's so transmissible.
|
|
It's, yeah, yeah, the transmissibility has, I don't know how much it's varied,
|
|
it's certainly airborne and it's been transmissible to quite an incredible degree.
|
|
Although not in the way that we were, we were led to believe,
|
|
at least the guess is worse than it would, you could easily pick it up off,
|
|
off surfaces and stuff, stuff about washing your vegetables and your milk.
|
|
But I mean, it's definitely born from the supermarket was, you know,
|
|
it was a good idea at the time, but it doesn't prove to be particular,
|
|
yeah, particularly true, but airborne spread is definitely happening, you know,
|
|
big time. So it's, yeah, it's, it's been fascinating watching it.
|
|
I think it's because it's, it's, it's, it's, it's as a speed of a spread, it's a,
|
|
it's a, it's how quickly the person who's infected can then re-transmit it, is that
|
|
or what, what makes Covid so?
|
|
Yes, yes, I think so. I think if you have it and you're asymptomatic,
|
|
which is one possibility, yeah, but you can still spread it,
|
|
yeah, then anybody you're in contact with will.
|
|
And that's, and that's, it's not the deadliness of it, it's how fast it can transmit.
|
|
And that, and, and that's why anything you do to slow the increase is so important.
|
|
And that's why face masks and that stops overwhelming the health service.
|
|
And that's, that's the crux of it, isn't it, so.
|
|
And I mean, now things have changed because the majority of people have been vaccinated.
|
|
And therefore, if they get it, it doesn't prevent infection.
|
|
Having the vaccine does not prevent infection. It prevents diseases.
|
|
And that's what most vaccines do, you know, so it's still spreadable.
|
|
You could have it after being vaccinated, be, not even have symptoms,
|
|
or have mild symptoms, but you're still spreading the damn thing.
|
|
Yeah. And, you know, if anybody else who couldn't have a vaccine, say,
|
|
who's immunocompromised, gets it, then that could kill him.
|
|
Yeah. And we have, I have a member of the family who has made that choice.
|
|
And of course, I guess everyone who is a human nature that, if you have a belief,
|
|
if you see or hear something, it's ten things that I believe so much.
|
|
So, of course, they've been, say, watching GB news.
|
|
And of course, that's one of the debunking things that they can bring up a bit of GB news,
|
|
other things that they've been saying is just a choice.
|
|
There are many, many channels of misinformation, which, you know,
|
|
for all manner of reasons, for money at the bottom.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
The bottom line, I think, absolutely. Yeah, yes.
|
|
So, okay, so that was really just something that had come to light.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
And it really bothered me that somebody who I'd been admiring in his work he'd done,
|
|
although I'd actually stopped watching him for quite his last years,
|
|
sometimes, because he seemed to be talking, talking a hand degree of money.
|
|
This is the thing that, for my mother, asked me about it.
|
|
I said, well, I don't really know what to say.
|
|
I mean, I watched a little bits of it, but I actually spent a time dig into it.
|
|
It sounds plausible.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But on the other hand, I'm stuck.
|
|
Is she somebody who's built a degree of trust?
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
And I was thinking, well, even if it is, what I say to my mother at the time,
|
|
I said, even if this is a case, if some of these x-ays,
|
|
deaths, we're down to, which it doesn't prove a bit listening to somebody who knows,
|
|
who would have talked about that debunking person, but even if it was,
|
|
the number of people that it could possibly affect would be far smaller than the people
|
|
that it has saved.
|
|
And any education that you take has a risk.
|
|
Yeah, of course.
|
|
So, you think, well, what I'm, I'm a safer, you know,
|
|
walking off this plank of wood about 100-foot cliff,
|
|
or not better staying where I am, or you're better staying,
|
|
yes, it's all blue and obvious.
|
|
So, it's all through a better probability, you know,
|
|
whatever choices you make in life, you know.
|
|
But when the species are very bad at judging relative risk and things,
|
|
especially when things have got complicated,
|
|
they did with, you know, in terms of the science and all the other things that we've seen.
|
|
So, it's still a huge, huge, huge subject that's, you know,
|
|
information is being gathered about it all the time.
|
|
And, but the misunderstandings are still growing, I think,
|
|
because there's also tons and tons of misinformation getting spread.
|
|
Yes, I know.
|
|
It's a cherry picking, that's what the problem is.
|
|
I know, I know, it's very, very hard to, to follow.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Unless you're, you're sort of learning about the pros and cons,
|
|
understanding of virology, the understanding of immunology, et cetera, et cetera.
|
|
Which, you know, I try and do, but I must admit, I'm not really,
|
|
I'm pretty achieving that.
|
|
No, no, no, no.
|
|
So, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Okay, leave that one, man.
|
|
Yep, yep.
|
|
Yeah, the next thing is...
|
|
Well, I've got down here, Doctor Who, yeah, the same document we're both, we're both.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
So, it was really, but I made a note to, to, um,
|
|
the strikes here that I'd been to see the Doctor Who exhibition at the National Museum of Scotland in April.
|
|
It finished at the end of April, sadly, and, um,
|
|
I'd actually met up with, uh, with a friend and, and, uh, another,
|
|
who, a person who's also another HBR host, and that's Andrew Conway, McNallow,
|
|
and, uh, and a friend of his who'd come over from Glasgow, and we had a, we,
|
|
yeah, we, we, we booked.
|
|
It was a ticketed thing.
|
|
So, it was a cost money thing, although the museum was free, um, but, uh, it was,
|
|
it was amazing. I, I have seen Doctor Who since it started, because I'm older.
|
|
Yes, so you wouldn't have, you wouldn't have died behind the sofa when it came on,
|
|
and I was just being a bit puzzled at the time.
|
|
Oh, we hadn't got a sofa at that point at all.
|
|
It was hard up against the wall probably, but yeah, but, uh, I, I, I, I would have been of an age where
|
|
I'd have been quite scared of the, of the, the monsters and stuff.
|
|
Yeah, um, yeah, the dialects, particularly.
|
|
I think I, uh, started watching it around the, the, the John Pitt Wies of, um, and, uh, I,
|
|
I obviously really liked it then, and, uh, a bit of the Tom Baker as well, um, and then, like,
|
|
yourself, I could have, well, I actually, I think some of it got to, like, Silveston McCoy,
|
|
and all that sort of thing, and I kind of lost a bit of interest at that point, and, uh, me too,
|
|
me too, yeah.
|
|
And, and then, like you said, until I came back and then you were, you, you couldn't wait for it to come
|
|
back and, well, Silveston McCoy as a, as a comedian, I think it was great.
|
|
Yes, he, he, I, I wouldn't want to watch him a huge lot, but quite an amazing person,
|
|
but I didn't see him as Doctor Who, and somehow or other, the way, the direction he took Doctor Who
|
|
and just didn't appear, I just lost interest at that point.
|
|
So, uh, I think, I think really the, the, the trouble I have with some of these things is that,
|
|
the, the, the got to act, if, if the actor doesn't act in a way that you'd expect,
|
|
somebody to act in a certain situation, then the illusion's broken.
|
|
And I think that's what, yeah, he was, he was hamming it up as, as Silveston McCoy,
|
|
fair bit, seemed to me, but, uh, as many, because I'd seen him in, in other roles before,
|
|
I don't know how much was him and how much was me, but, uh, yeah, and then there was a,
|
|
a movie made of it with the, with the idea that, that, um, uh, there would be a, uh, spin-off
|
|
American-based thing that was, that was the hope, I think.
|
|
Right. Um, I forgot. Um, McGann, was it, uh, yeah, I think I've, I think we've seen that one as well.
|
|
Well, McGann? Yeah.
|
|
Which is actually quite good. I enjoyed watching that, but I think it was shown as a,
|
|
the run-up to, um, bringing back the, the Doctor Who TV series, because I remember seeing it
|
|
somewhat before that, I think coming, coming this order or something, it would be Doctor Who,
|
|
and before, before we do it, you're going to look at this movie.
|
|
I thought it was quite good, and my daughter was around, I think she was at university at that point,
|
|
and we used to sit and watch, we watched the, the movie and quite enjoyed it, and then when the
|
|
series came back, we, uh, we, we really enjoyed that, um, yeah, for a, for quite a few iterations of
|
|
the, of the Doctor, who was the first guy, um, who was it? All these hoovians, is that, is that
|
|
a cop who was, yeah, you know, of course, it's such a, yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember him saying something
|
|
like, um, it was, uh, Billy Piper was, was this companion, and he, and she said, how come you
|
|
got a northern accent? And he said, well, all planets have a north. It was something to
|
|
affect him. I might not have got word for word, but yeah, yeah, he, he didn't last all that long,
|
|
well, he did a fantastic job. He did, yes, I liked him, I must have met him. Yeah, I, I, I,
|
|
and then we had, um, tenant, uh, David Turner, yeah, yeah, um, was, was that next, yeah, and I,
|
|
I think we, we stopped around about Matt Smith, 2013, according to my notes here, um,
|
|
what's, what's quite funny, there's, there's, there's a, there's a, there's a colleague at work who
|
|
is a huge hoovian fan, and, uh, and of course, he must have followed the, all these sort of things
|
|
on, uh, and various forums and all that. And, uh, he said, you know, oh, there's, there's rumors
|
|
that they're going to, we're going to have a woman, if they have a woman, that's it, I'm just
|
|
on them, they can just stick it if they, if they have a, a female doctor, they can just,
|
|
no, they're deadly serious, and I can remember finding out, of course, that's, you know,
|
|
yes, I'm just, tucked them, they can go and stick it, you know, that was a funny thing.
|
|
I, I never was saying it about, the, the few, the few little bits I saw,
|
|
they look really good, yeah, I'm sure they could, I could, I could probably go back and watch
|
|
some of these again, actually, yeah, um, but, uh, yeah, going to the exhibition, it brought back
|
|
so many memories and stuff, you know, found that the three of us who were going round the,
|
|
the, the exhibition, we'd all been in, uh, to the doctor, who's stuff from, from the early stages,
|
|
depending on, on our different ages and stuff, and had watched it for a while, and then got a
|
|
little bit cheesed off, possibly because the writers had changed, or the showrunners had changed,
|
|
and, and, uh, you know, the themes and so forth had got crappier, or, you know, um, and then,
|
|
we'd maybe come back again when, when it restarted, and, and watched some of those and enjoyed them,
|
|
and then things have gone a little bit off, off the rails again, yeah, it's actually, that's just
|
|
exactly what happened to me, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but it's still, it's amazing, it's
|
|
lasted, yeah, and, and, but through this, that, this, uh, uh, uh, hoovian chap, I saw one of the,
|
|
so some of the, uh, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, I've never seen before,
|
|
so, and I've watched the very first episode of the doctor, you know, and, yeah, it's quite a,
|
|
quite a menacing character, and there's, there's like one episode where they pick up a, uh, a person,
|
|
and at one point, uh, uh, he's a, his, his assistant, uh, looks away, or someone else, and it's,
|
|
so they meet the, I can't exactly what happened, but basically, um, the doctor picks up a rock,
|
|
and you can see him thinking, that, that, the implications, I'm going to, I know how they get,
|
|
their mothers just bat them over the head with their rock, you know, and obviously they'd never
|
|
do such a thing in the, and, and, and, and later series is better than that, but it was a better,
|
|
a menacing character, you know, yeah, yes, yes, he was, he was, he, he, yes, the actual character that
|
|
he played was, was quite dangerous, seeming, and, and aloof, um, which, you know, he's not,
|
|
not a, an entirely subrosing thing for a, for a character who was an alien, and, uh, he's,
|
|
seems to be hanging out on the earth quite a lot and stuff. And then of course you've got the,
|
|
fantastic, uh, uh, soundtracks and stuff, you know, the, and, and what was her name? Was it
|
|
Delia, Delia Smith? Delia Smith, it was, it was, it was ready for it? Yeah, it's a workshop,
|
|
I still think some of these analog sounds, you can't beat, you know, and of course they,
|
|
the tar, was that not, the string from an old piano or something like that, and I had to re-verb
|
|
and, yeah, yeah, yeah, there was, there was all those tales about that stuff. And then it, they had,
|
|
they had like, many, many feet of tape running in the corridor, and they were sticking bets together,
|
|
to tie me up the sounds, stuff that's in loops and whatnot. Yeah, yeah, I was so, so taken with that,
|
|
I had a, I had a reel to reel tape recorder at that particular time, and I remember, uh, it was
|
|
um, quite a narrow gauge, some portable one, a German one, and I remember I had a splicing kit
|
|
with it, so you could, you could make tape loops, you know, rounded, and I shiny jam jar,
|
|
I remember trying to make, uh, loops, maybe my, um, one, my, my, my, my, by, by, by, by recording her
|
|
secretly, and then, and it's ready, it's ready. What's something like that? Well, we, we, we,
|
|
actually, I, I call it a work, he was a, he, he, he actually was in a band, I mean, as, as a lot of
|
|
people do, they sat on band, I know, they're myself, but he, um, so he, he, he'd gathered pieces of
|
|
equipment and fall over over the years and played the guitar and whatnot, and he, he gave me this
|
|
reverb unit, and then, so it was a big suitcase thing, and you left the lid on it, and it had a,
|
|
tape on it, it was running around the loop, and you could adjust gain and speed them, what not,
|
|
and you could, you could add effects, but it's all done using magnetic tape. It's quite, quite fast.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So it records, and then, there's, it plays around, and it changes speed
|
|
in the games, and, yeah, it's quite, quite something. That stuff was, it was amazing. Yeah,
|
|
it's, yeah, I never got heavily into it, but I did start sort of tinkering with it a little bit,
|
|
and that's, obviously, having this big suitcase little thing in your lap, that's, you know,
|
|
it, and it's very limited what it can do, but it, it sounds different from, from a, a digital reverb
|
|
unit, it's, it's, it's quite unique, sort of, sound to it, you know, but I don't, I didn't even
|
|
know such a thing I existed, you know, I'm guessing, I think the Beatles notes, I sort of,
|
|
did a lot of that sort of stuff, and one other was a thing on, on, it was a, it was a device,
|
|
which, um, um, strawberry fields, you know, the, um, the beginning of that, it's, uh,
|
|
Oh, you think of the, the, the melaton, melaton, yeah, and I had no idea what that was. I know,
|
|
I know, and then, and then I watched a video about it, I'd recommend people look at that,
|
|
and the melaton, yeah, and, and it's loops of tape that are maybe, yeah, my goodness,
|
|
complicated. So it's, there's some sort of mechanism that, you, you hit a key, and the tape
|
|
is sort of lifted up to the playhead. That's right. And, and play, please, yeah, a flip,
|
|
or whatever it is. Yes, it sounds, it doesn't sound like it sort of stitched together,
|
|
bits, no, it is all sort of quite seamless, isn't it? Yes, I, I know, I, I, I've always been fascinated
|
|
by musical instruments stuff. I do quite enjoy looking at that. There was a series on YouTube,
|
|
which was that there's a, uh, Swedish band called Vintergarten, which means Milky Way actually.
|
|
I think it's a vintage garden. I think it's Swedish for the Milky Way. Anyway, it's entirely
|
|
the same point, but they, they're a band, very innovative, um, and play really interesting music,
|
|
but the guy who, who leads it, um, uh, made a machine, which he called a marble machine,
|
|
which has got a, um, it, it, it, it, it became incredibly complicated, had a drum with pegs on it,
|
|
which were bits of Lego, and as the drum rotated, it did various things to the mechanism,
|
|
let marbles see down various channels, the channels, and then at the end of the channel, they dropped
|
|
onto a sort of xylophone, um, nine-brophone type thing, and also a guitar, and I think there was
|
|
a drum element to it as well. He did all that, and he's really heavily into it. He's still doing it,
|
|
I think he's still, he's come up, he's trying to work on marble machine three at the moment.
|
|
A huge engineering challenge, but he did a series where he was going around, um, there's a place
|
|
you tracked in, in, in the Netherlands, I think you tracked, where there's, um, a museum of mechanical
|
|
musical stuff, so he was going there, and doing an episode of every few weeks, uh, with the museum
|
|
stuff, but they were looking at these things and looking at the way they worked, and that sort of
|
|
stuff, found that fascinating, and I remember going to a fancy music museum, in fact two have
|
|
been to. There's one in Berlin, um, I can't remember where it is or what it's called, but it's
|
|
stuffed with very, very bizarre musical instruments, some of which are mechanical. There's also one
|
|
in Brussels, which is another musical museum, which I've just my nose in, because I'm always in
|
|
Brussels for them, and can't go, I don't know, yeah, one day I'd like to go and visit that.
|
|
Actually, there was, I know, I can't bother, there's a, oh well, I'm going to, I shouldn't even
|
|
start still, because I can't give you the facts. There's a museum somewhere rather that we're
|
|
going to, and a waste coast near where some relative state, and it's, it's a really local place,
|
|
and it's just stuffed with stuff, you know, it's got the gramophone, and, and, uh, and what, and it's
|
|
got a battle organ, so, uh, I had a, I had a go with a battle organ. It was amazing how much effort you
|
|
need to, to, to do these things, you know, and to try and keep the speed constant, it's really,
|
|
really difficult, but I thought, oh, it's quite unique, and how many people get a chance to play a
|
|
battle organ, but it only comes into this, this museum, if you happen to be there, and if this
|
|
feels a bit warden, because I've got a ton of people have played it, you know, yeah, it's quite,
|
|
quite amazing, so much this stuff out there, it's, it's, it's, it's, yeah, it's really good.
|
|
So 42 minutes in, yeah, shall we, um, shall we go on to the, the last item, or shall we skip that one?
|
|
Well, we've, we've been saying, when we've done these in the past, uh, we've got various things
|
|
that we could talk about in regard to YouTube. Um, and I suggested we don't talk about, um,
|
|
maybe one or two each, maybe just the one actually at this stage in the game. Did you want to,
|
|
do you want to do that? Yeah, we could do that. Um, yeah, yeah. I had a, um, we already mentioned one
|
|
really, so debunked, debunked Wilson, yeah, yeah, will, I will be adding to the list. Yeah.
|
|
But I tell you one channel that I have been watching that recently, that my son pointed me
|
|
to, which is called little Chinese everywhere. And it is a, a young lady who is, she is a,
|
|
she's got a ge, sorry, geography degree, human geography, I think. And she got it in Switzerland.
|
|
And in order, and she's from China, and she said she was going to go home from Switzerland
|
|
by, uh, doing, doing an overland trip. So she's going to mapped out the route to take across
|
|
Europe and into China from, uh, from Switzerland. Yeah. So I've forgotten all the places she's
|
|
been to, I particularly remember watching the one about Georgia, there was, there she did two or
|
|
three episodes in, um, in the, the country of Georgia, which is a pretty amazing place. Yeah.
|
|
And having experiences and it's just, if you like that sort of thing, if you interested in
|
|
the different countries, she was in Romania as well. And anyway, if you interested in the different
|
|
countries and the people and, you know, just durable in general, that is fascinating. I mean,
|
|
I mean, they, they debunked the funk thing, I watched a couple of those and really liked that.
|
|
So I'm always on the lookout for things to, to, to, to watch because I do sometimes work from home
|
|
and I might have a, a wee break and I see what a 15-minute half-hour break and I said, well,
|
|
what, what, what kind of watch sort of thing. And, uh, yeah, that, that, that's, that's something I'll
|
|
definitely add to my list and, and, and look forward to who, uh, to looking at, you know, it's, um,
|
|
there was, there was, there was, there was, there was, there was a odd, odd episode of
|
|
a started watching of, um, was a bald and some bank apps and all that. And then I, I think, yeah,
|
|
I think I found out that I think I saw another video where somebody said, you know, there might
|
|
be some controversy about who he is and some of these background. Yeah, I only watched one or two of
|
|
them, but maybe there's a lot of Chinese, uh, a lot of Chinese everywhere. It might be a very,
|
|
a substitute sort of thing and, uh, yeah. Well, she did get back to China because I'm,
|
|
I'm looking right from the beginning and then she's doing a, she's in,
|
|
her next project is to go over the entirety of China to every province and do and record her
|
|
visits there. So the one my son pointed me to was there's, um, a town in China near the,
|
|
the Yangtze River, um, where the, the town is built either side of a really narrow gorge.
|
|
Wow. So she was showing that, you know, there's lots of bridges going across and there's sort of
|
|
houses built with gaps underneath because the river rises from time to time and floods. Oh,
|
|
and, and yet people are living in, in this, this thing and it's all, it's all really
|
|
technologically quite, quite, quite good, uh, considering, you know, their compensating for,
|
|
for the, for all matters. But you should just, just look at it from the point of view of
|
|
for me, really. And amazing, amazing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You don't, I don't realize how much variety and,
|
|
strange, it's always a bit stuck in your bubble and, yeah, yeah. It's a huge big bottle, though.
|
|
And I definitely watched that. Absolutely. Check, check, if you look at some of them recent,
|
|
the more recent ones, have to see if you can find the, in fact, I should maybe recommend
|
|
that particular one as a starting point, unless, unless you, you're particularly keen to,
|
|
to, to, to, to follow up track through Europe. I've done that sort of thing before. I'll start
|
|
half with your, uh, I'll show, and one way to the end of it. Well, that was really goodness
|
|
up looking at the back. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I'll stop there. Have you got,
|
|
have you got anything you want to? Um, so there was, no, what did I have? I had a,
|
|
so there was one thing. Yeah. So there was a, um, a YouTube video there, again, just recently,
|
|
oh, I'm not going to watch because I've only had things to watch, which is silly because there's
|
|
so much to, the, what happens is you get a, a, a space of time to, a, a break-over, as you've
|
|
got, no, I've got so much time. So by the time you find something, you, you've, you've not got
|
|
anything to watch it. So, but there was a, a, a, a, Ron Matino, I think he's, is, M-A-T-T-I-N-O,
|
|
and he's, as they call it, deep dives into various topics. And I've only watched one or two
|
|
of these shows. Um, but the first one, and it was, it was one of these that was suggested to me by
|
|
YouTube. And, uh, and it's something I've never really, I think I've heard something mentioned
|
|
before, but never gave it any of your great thought. And it was about, you know, finding mobile,
|
|
private, mobile phone batteries, uh, have, um, tablets just, comfortable, not start.
|
|
Fides have three terminals in it. I think you've got a positive and negative,
|
|
fiding me the middle one. I'm thinking it'll just be sense or something like that,
|
|
voltage sense or something like that. It wasn't just quite sure what it was about.
|
|
We want it turns out that it is, um, my tablet will not turn on. I don't know what it's doing.
|
|
What it turns out to be is that, um, there's, um, a, a, a, a, a, electronic device called
|
|
a thermistor. And, uh, it, it uses a temperature and a, a resistance changes with respect to the
|
|
temperature. So it's used so that the phone can have an idea and monitor the temperature of the
|
|
battery pack. And so that is so that when you, it's charging, I think it's too hot, it backs off
|
|
and stops charging. Without that, you have catastrophic failures. And I think it's blow up.
|
|
So, of course, if you buy some knockoff Chinese, uh, battery, it turns out to put those, the
|
|
sensors in them. So yes. So, but I mean, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it, it goes into
|
|
in great detail. I thought that's, that's fascinating. I never knew that. You know, it showed you the
|
|
voltage from my, from my, uh, DVM and putting into a, a fridge and what's, you know, changing and all.
|
|
It showed fulling the phone by doing X Y and Z. And I thought, that's, that's fascinating.
|
|
That's what I got my monitor. The next one I've watched was about USB. I had no idea at all how
|
|
usb worked and well I knew it was a kind of seal connection but I didn't know
|
|
anything more than that that was fascinating I recommend that and the final one
|
|
I started watching was about the 555 timer but I never got to do that it was
|
|
quite complicated so yeah yeah but yeah well worth uh okay yeah well worth a
|
|
watch yeah so what was that called so that was a Ron Matino R-O-N-M-A-T-T-I-N-O
|
|
okay I must have missed oh yeah that was just got put on left I started in the end
|
|
our notes are the shared notes sort of accumulated quite a lot of stuff yeah it's a
|
|
bit of an issue made but yeah yeah it's hard to have to see I never chuck things are we I'm
|
|
really bad I just my days get worked oh yeah I have the same same problem but yeah okay that
|
|
that sounds really interesting I'm always fascinated to know more about about these types of things
|
|
yeah yeah so yeah okay good stuff so I think that's for what we add on now 50 oh that's
|
|
for me 50's probably ideal yeah yeah if we start another YouTube video we might
|
|
tend and that's each would bend up maybe going over the yeah yeah yeah yeah that's
|
|
probably we call it quits at that point yeah all right well that's been done thank you very much
|
|
put your whole enjoy there and until next time with all that's an nonsense so yes don't forget
|
|
to listen to and contribute to hacker public radio hi folks
|
|
you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work
|
|
today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording
|
|
or cast you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hosting for HBR has been
|
|
kindly provided by an honest host.com the internet archive and our sync.net on the Sadois status
|
|
today's show is released on our creative commons attribution 4.0 international license
|