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33 KiB
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368 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1139
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Title: HPR1139: The missing episode
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1139/hpr1139.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:42:03
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---
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Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. This is Mr. Gates. It's once again, and I had something
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that occurred to me. I got actually several different ideas for some projects coming along,
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I had a specific idea that came to me this weekend when I was doing some cleanup of things
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around the house. We've got some things going on where we're going to get some new flooring,
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and actually we've already bought the flooring and it's sitting in the basement of the house,
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and it's going to go in the second floor of the house. I need to clear out that safe so the
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carpet can be pulled up and the hardwood floors can be put down. This involves clearing out
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adventurous stuff in my man cave, my handshack, my evil scientist lab. I call it the pseudo studios,
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SUDO studios, pseudo studios. Anyway, even though that's not where I actually think of some,
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I think of a chef in a Honda, and so if I'm a big names in a Honda suite, well I'm in a Honda
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suite. I used to have a few broadcasts that I put out there, not just anything serious,
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but any kind of serious hosting that Mr. Gadget's technological Odyssey was one theoretical
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contest that I kind of did a few episodes around in various spots, most of which probably are out of
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this. I can't get to that audio anymore. Not that it was anything really great. Anyway,
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so I had this idea that I needed to, well I have this idea. I knew that I needed to actually
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get that area cleared out. Now, amongst these various subsidiary kinds of projects, which my wife
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is semi-retired and has time and up between doing a consulting job that she has. She still has
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some time to do these big projects, and then I am caught in the waste of the project, right,
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and well of the current associated here as to where the priorities lie sometimes. Well, we also
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had some needs for some storage kinds of issues that were happening in our garage because I haven't
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been able to park my car in garage for a couple of years now, and so I had some stuff out there
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that I needed to go through, and then in order to clear out my mancage, my mancage is on the
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second floor of the house. So theoretically, it's not really a cave because it's more like my wizard's
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tower. If I'm a techno wizard, which is one of the favorite characters, I think, of mysterious
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kinds of characters from Babylon 5, one of my favorite television shows of that very target rich
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high-five television show environment that existed back in the 90s, and 85, that was one of my favorites.
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In fact, I posted some stuff on Google Plus about some rotations from Babylon 5, and it really reminded me
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of how much I really like that show. And one of the mysterious kinds of characters that wandered
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through the Babylon 5 space station was the Texo mages, and they could do amazing kinds of things.
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They were kind of safely, almost, how to say this. They were kind of safely steamed on
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only not steamed on, you know, but they had, like, staff that would be a little sick of flattery
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type of things, but they didn't dress very steamed on me. They mostly dressed like, you know,
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they just, you know, they had roasts and stuff. Anyway, you'd get to see them very much, so they
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were a big mystery, that they could do some pretty, you know, amazing things that ostensibly
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just might maybe go under whatever, but there is technology involved, right? So, I have my
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wizard's tower up here, and along the wizard's tower, along with an empty room from the main room,
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that is a tower that leads up above the garage to a big storage area. It's not finished or anything,
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but it's not flooring. And so I have, between the actual room itself and the storage area out
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beyond, I have massive, massive piles of carp. It's an anagram. And I need to go through all this
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stuff, at least the stuff that's in the carpeted area, right? Because I need to move it all out of
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there, so the carpet can be pulled up from the wood flooring can be put down. If not, that
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wasn't up there. It's still a condition, but it gets a bit hot on the second floor of the house
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there, because it's all open. It's like a great room, and so this is kind of just off of
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a kind of balcony that looks over the living room space. And so all that air just rises up,
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it's hotter air, and so it gets a bit uncomfortable there, especially in the garage area,
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so I really can't do any serious work there. But it's a bit on temperatures in the Fahrenheit,
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the above 100, I can forget exactly what that is in your Celsius, but it's the high number.
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And not very pleasant, you know, we're talking about temperatures on the regular basis that
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are above your body temperature, and it's not the most pleasant thing to do. So like
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a giant sliding puzzle, only in 3D, you know, the slider puzzles you worked on when you were a
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kid, where there was, it was a grid of nine pieces, usually, although I suppose you could do this
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with a 16 piece or by four. But I remember the nine pieces was very vividly, maybe they were
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four before once, also, but there's one piece that isn't there, and that allows you to slide
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the little squares around. And if it ran a pattern, of course, you slide the squares around,
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until you arrange whatever the picture's supposed to look like, right? That's how you solve the puzzle.
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But instead of like pretty good together, like a tensile puzzle, you only have one move that you
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can make, well, two at any given time, right? Maybe three, depending on where the hole is and what
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you can slide into that hole. And you've always got to rearranging things, and then that changes
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the relationships, and eventually if you get that as you can make it into the picture.
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Well, this is kind of like a sliding puzzle, because there are things that are upstairs in the
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wizard's tower. There are also some older boxes of stuff that are downstairs in the basement area,
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and I need that floor space in order to move the stuff that I'm keeping out of the wizard's tower
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to move it down to the basement, right? So there's a hole that I need to create in the basement.
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So move the stuff out of the upstairs, but I'm not going to move everything out of the upstairs,
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because I am going to actually call through this, and very, very strictly barks the stuff.
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So I'm going to be very, very ruthless at my barding. Barding is a term that has come into
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youth amongst a certain number of my other piecaps in family. I do a lot of listening to a lot
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of different piecaps, and there's a kind of group of people that I listen to, and I don't want to
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say to anybody, but you know, I have a slider, and I use iOS devices and things like that as well
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as Android and Linux and all these kinds of things, and so there is a mostly Macintosh, in fact,
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her little catch line for the show is that it's got an ever-so-slite Macintosh bias,
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Allison Sheridan and the Mozilla cast by cast. It's more than flight, but it's kind of a joke,
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right, because she has a pair of herself-slite Macintosh bias. Well, she has a pretty,
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pretty strong Macintosh bias, and one of the people who continue to the show, and it's pretty
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hot to even the Macintosh industry, especially the international Macintosh piecaps in community,
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is Bart Bouchot, who is a Belgian, who happens to be living right now in Ireland.
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And it's a country to plug the internet, because you can have regular kind of communication
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with some of these people all over the world, and you know, when your piecaps listen,
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you know, lots about them, because it comes out there in the piecaps, and so you feel like,
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you know, they're kind of maybe not a friend, but they're at least a acquaintance, right?
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And Bart refers to, he has been a bit of a turn himself when he's a half-digital photographer.
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Very interesting digital photography. I would, you should actually try looking at some of
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those things that he has, because his photography is really quite beautiful. But, you know,
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when you're a digital photographer, unlike the film days of photography, and I may talk about my film
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photography past sometime on the project, or on the piecaps here, but the fact that it was still
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used to really freight everything, because you only have 36 pictures on the standard role of
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35 on your film, right? And you can, because you might need to get to, you know,
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develop. And so, yeah, it was really important, you might bracket that and take, you know, two or three
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shots, look slightly different exposures to make sure you've got it, because you only have that one
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chance, right? And you could just take it to brilliant pictures. And now, especially with a large
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capacity that we have on the memory cards and things like that, you tend to just take the
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brilliant pictures. And then, what do you do with all those? Well, March 7, and like, thank you
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for right, I don't do this now, mind you, but I agree with you. If you're in summer here,
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that you should really, really be very, very critical of those pictures when you're doing that
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first task on it. And you should throw away all the drops and only keep a tiny percentage of
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those pictures that are going to be worth any further effort. And then you use whatever best
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quality you're having. And I'm going to try to teach myself some gem along the way. And other
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kinds of open source tools. I don't really know Photoshop, so I don't have that disadvantage of having
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to resort to everything. And so I'm pursuing that from a photographer's perspective. I am not a
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visual artist, give you any way shape or form, but I can take a half-way view of photographs.
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Maybe even a pretty good photograph is on my game. And maybe even something that might be
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artistic in some way, but that's for a vererity. But I can at least participate in the visual arts
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through photography. So I'm not going to use the gem for actually drawing the any credit
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images. Even with a image manipulation program, I just, it's not my artistic talent, right? So,
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anyway, so before you ever do any processing further, you should really look at those hard
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and throw out a bunch of them. And only 20% of the further effort didn't do things that were
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really worth being effort. Well, I'm climbing on guarding my personal possessions here. And they
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mentioned previously on the podcast, but I'm attempting to get rid of a lot of the atoms that are
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in my life and keep the electrons. So anything that I have as a book, I'm really trying to get
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electronic copies of the book and magazines. I'm trying to get all electronic versions of the
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magazines and things like that. And so a lot of the things that are in the piles of cars,
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which is the panogram, the stairs in the basement area that I try to clear out are older magazines,
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some older books also. And so I found myself this weekend. Okay, we're coming around right to
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start a story. I found myself working the first, you know, booth on the slider puzzle to get
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everything out of my wizard's tower area. And some of that's going to involve guarding some of
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these things. I've got some projects up there, but I just know I'm never going to complete, you know?
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And some of them aren't even worth completing anymore. The technology is so old. And it's a
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funny thing. It's not old enough to really be cool and useful. The thing I love about radios,
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you probably already heard the amateur radio show. I mean, that got into the queue with all that kind
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of stuff, it was legible. And I am into the amateur radio and getting radio active again. And
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that's cool thing. Some of the old equipment in amateur radio is just as functional today as it
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ever was. And it's still useful, but keep getting equipment not so much, right? So a lot of these
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things are technological things from years ago that are just set up there in the piles of cars
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and need to be tossed, right? So I'm going to be throwing away a lot of that stuff. I actually
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went to a miniature version of this one. I did a move in my workplace to a new cubicle.
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And I made a conscious decision. I'm not just going to drag all this stuff that I've been carrying
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around since last millennium and haven't touched since last millennium. I'm actually going to throw
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this stuff away, or at least a major portion of it. And I did that in the process. We have some new
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people that are joining our group from another portion of the company where we decided to shut down
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that software development project. We were going to get into insurance kinds of things. And
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the decision was made that that didn't make sense from a business aspect to get into the more
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direct software within insurance business. The company I work for does a lot of work with
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insurance companies, but that's through a partner. So we'll continue to do that kind of business.
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But we're going to get much more active into the managing of accounts for insurance companies.
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And they made some adjustments to the business plans. I decided that that really didn't make sense.
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So those people then are looking for jobs within the company. Quite a few of them have come
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into our group because we have quite frankly have open reps and haven't really been able to find
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people who could fill those reps. If you're going to job a programmer and are in need of the job
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and want to meet the chance in the area or live with them, you know, job gets the chance of city,
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you still all have some of the corrects that are going to be coming up here. So
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one of these guys that's moved here and he's been on my 20 years around the company. I've
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seen him here and there he's all around the way. Don't really know him or anything. He's got
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like 15 or 20 boxes that got boxed up in his last place. And I'm thinking really, I mean,
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this stuff is stuff you've been dragging with you for years. You just need to let it go.
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You go. And that's kind of the idea here. Just let it go. So I'm going to bark some of that stuff
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up there, throw that away, combine things into boxes and things like this. So I've actually got
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three different areas that I've worked on here. I've got this basement area and I've got stuff
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out in the garage that I'm trying to, you know, get out of there and I've got the second story area.
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So to start making the hole essentially, I started out with that area down in the basement.
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And of course, I did this in the stupidest way possible. I didn't stay down in the basement
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in the night where it was nice and cool. No, I took that stuff out to the garage where it was
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still very hot. You lifted being 105 degrees outside the garage. It was still pretty dang
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hot in that garage and I did my sorting in there. Don't ask it. There's literally so little
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movement area down in that basement area that I'm working in that I literally could even get a
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trash roll and trash stand in there to throw this stuff away. So it's easier to carry those boxes
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up and get them there and they'll be more convenient for trash day, etc. etc. I was stupid, okay?
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Anyway, so here I am and I am going through these magazines and it just so happened that a bunch
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of these magazines and several of the books were from anywhere from, well, some of the books were
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definitely from my very early night trash day. So they would have been from back in the 90s.
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And a lot of the magazines were also from the 90s and in fact, I thought it was kind of
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funny because most of the magazines that I made no doubt and I was actually looking to see if
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there's anything worthwhile to try to look at that article or anything in here that was good
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and you were keeping the magazine because there was something useful for it within it. And most of
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them were from almost exactly 15 years ago because they were from 97, 98 right in that time frame.
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So we're talking about just about getting where they're from maybe 14 to 16 years ago. Now,
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when you think about the dog years that exist for technology, that was that's a huge amount of time.
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Possibly, you know, a lot of these things, there's just nothing in there that is we're
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traveling more to justify keeping it around. And so huge amounts of them went straight into the
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bit of the trash can. And so I'm debating now, I think probably that trash can since it's nothing
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with paper, I'm actually going to haul it over and stuff all that into the recycle.
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There's a recycle available here at my city and it'll take a while to get all those things,
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you know, into the bin. But I think that's probably what I'd have to do with all that to be a little bit more
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responsible for all this paper going into the system. So some of that were some old books and,
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you know, quite frankly, I've got a couple of books that I claim were on the bubble, but I know I'm
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going to eventually just throw them away and they mostly have some dental value that has some
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significance. You know anything about the history of some of these technologies, but not to be
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worth a few nutty or something, it's just a notable kind of thing. Early on, there was a
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particular Macintosh book that was really pivotal at the early days of Macintosh, and I have
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my copy of that. I'm going to throw it away eventually. You know how you get about these things,
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and you can't, you know, if there's a stuff like, you gotta let it go. How much technology do you have
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in your life like this? You just gotta let it go. My friend, Nightwise, is very good about this.
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Once I have technologies that can be effectively being used in this life, he finds somebody to buy it
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from him and uses that money to buy the next season technology. He's much better than I am in this
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regard. So here I am, and I'm looking through these magazines, see if there's anything worth
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as well. And a few of the magazines that are particularly of note, I was struck by the kind of
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articles that were in these magazines. Now, some of the magazines I had were nuts and bolts,
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which is still a magazine that exists, and it's pretty much through the years changed around
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to being a all about microcontrollers kind of magazine. It's very much into the building your own
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robots and microcontrollers and those kinds of things. And there were some proto-robotics kind of
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articles here, you know, the 15 years ago or so. But the other things I thought were of interest
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that were still in that some holds back then was there was a regular robots kind of oriented
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column, but you know, the controllers for that weren't as developed as they are now. And it was
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really in the kind of proto stage of getting into controllers and things like that. And then there
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was also a regular column about laser experimentation. So you could buy the laser, these would be tube
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lasers, not semiconductor lasers. And there are guys that were doing experiments with lasers
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enough about hobbyist kind of level that there was a column on it. There were columns on,
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there was column on amateur radio kinds of topics and things like that. I noticed that one of the
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guys that I talked about before, Don Lancaster, who was a major kind of person who was involved in
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early computers, very, very early computers, he wrote a column called resource bin for nuts and
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bolts back to it. And Don said interesting character. He was talking about what was his choice of
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computers at the time and his secondary computer because he had a pretty advanced published on
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demand kind of thing of his books that he had published in the years. And there's still
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enough interest in the books that he could still make money to even publish on demand.
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And he had a Macintosh, some current Macintosh at the time, or maybe not even a
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absolutely biggest invest, but a Macintosh that he used to or that. But his primary
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of the computers, the computer that he really loved, was he always had post-cripts. He started
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attacking post-cript way early. And this is not just music post-cript as a way to produce
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documents on a laser printer. This is using post-cript the computer language to actually do
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computation. He would see things into the post-cript because it was the equivalent of in today's world
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you've got this really cool graphics processor that's capable of all this number crunching.
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And so now we have programs that take advantage of the number crunching that's available
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through the graphics processor that is actually related to display graphics on the screen.
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Right, the holding at home and the study at home projects mostly use your graphics processor
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capabilities, right? Well, this would be the equivalent of that in the time frame. The graphics
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boards were not really there with the heavy capabilities of the number crunching, but your post-cript
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engine could do that in your laser printer. And he would actually do amazing things with post-cripts.
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I mean, he would end right post-cript stuff. You know, something else that Mark Bouchard
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always gets mad about is, you know, almost every week in the show, at least every week in
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the song, they have a security discussion about what's the latest security issues and things like that.
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And so, of course, since another week or maybe a fortnight has gone by, of course, there are new
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vulnerabilities that have been discovered in PDF, and Adobe has sent out a new PDF, you know,
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patch. So that's the vulnerability. And he just gets mad. He keeps on saying, and this is,
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it's like, it's a document format. Why does it have an aspect of being able to run a
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string of code like it's a programming language? Well, now, I swear I'm right on this. I haven't
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looked it up on Google, but I was there, and you know, I'm in an alternate reality or, you know,
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somebody correct me, but I swear that it's not always stand for portable document format.
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Initially, it's good for post script document format. It is a way to have a finalized version
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of a post script generated piece of code to generate your document, but it was a document format
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where it was all contained within the document format, and interpreting though that document
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had to include interpreting of the post script code that might be part of the document.
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Justly, you have a document format that involves, you know, an ability to interpret some code.
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Now, somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I remember that it was originally post script document
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format, and they rebranded it as portable document format so that people understood that it could
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be used not just on a post script printer, and for whatever reasons. They renamed it. They rebranded
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it, kind of like notice notes, which is in its fourth or fifth iteration of what it's to be used
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for. And I've lived through all these different, you know, oh, you use it for this, you use it for that.
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IBM is a brilliant, that rebranding the letters notes for whatever is the latest thing that they
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used to be. And so it was like that with the PDF format, the post script document format.
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So, you know, Lancaster was still writing a thing in there about sourcing parts, and a lot of
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its resource been in that era. So, you know, looking through the table of content to be
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kind of reminiscent here, right? And a lot of his things were about where do you get parts,
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where do you get data sheets, and how do you find out how to use this, that, the other kind of,
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you know, piece of equipment, or, you know, integrated circuits. Popular electronics and radio
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electronics, most still existed, okay? And, you know, there aren't any electronics magazines anymore
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that are independent kind of magazines, those are all gone by the wayside. But popular electronics
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and radio electronics both existed, admittedly radio electronics you would expect this, but both of
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them at the time had amateur radio kinds of issues in several of the columns that were involved,
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as well as various types of electronics. There was actually, it was either in popular or radio,
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I can't remember which, there was an article I noticed that was, you know, you may not
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need to use the TTL IC or, you know, any of the popular IC kinds of things you could use
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transistor logic to do certain types of things. So, there was argue about going back to the
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RIFOA of actually building transistor IC logic rather than using an IC for things. And there
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was still a lot of building. There was a lot of projects of, you could get these parts and put
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them together and get them in useful things. Now, and a lot of it revolved around, you know,
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some of the higher tech kinds of aspects of, you know, you're geeking this on, which included,
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you know, the whole aspect of the amateur radio kinds of communications and things like that.
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Now, turn the, you know, way back machine dial back forward again. And there was kind of an
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interim time there when that was really kind of the starting point of surface knot kind of
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things. In fact, I could remember just towards the end of the electronics magazine, there was a
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little bit of surface knot and they had tried to be some projects. But you know, that's just not
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as easy for at least normal human beings to get into, you know, it's not as easy to do the surface
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knot stuff as it is the other types of components. And it got to be a world of electronics that were
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more and more complex and capable of doing much more miraculous things. So get me wrong, right?
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To be a technical age, we actually have to have some pretty cool electronics to accomplish,
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you know, all these magic spells. And you can't just use transistors logic to do this anymore,
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right? It would be the size of your truck of your car or the boot of your car or whatever is your,
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you know, term for that thing that you can put, you know, luggage in, usually the back of the car, right?
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So all of these types of things were acquiring smaller and smaller and more and more
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miniaturized and we got away from the things that we could bake with our hands. And then about eight
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years ago or so, right? So we're talking 14, 13 years ago, we started less and less to have any kind
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of thing that we could bake with our own hands. A few guys got heavily into putting together parts to
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build their own computers, right? Some still to this day, right? Put together those parts for computers,
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but that's really a board that has all of that kind of stuff and you're just basically plugging in
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modules, right? To give it all work, right? Yeah, you're gluing down the cooler on the CPU and
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something like that, but it's not the same thing as really building it, you know, getting together
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with the parts and slaughtering and everything and all that kind of stuff. And I think people
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found that there was a sense of missing something there and mostly when I rarely came out with
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make magazine and the microcontroller started getting to be more and more capable that movement,
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I think comes out of that wanting to create something that I built this myself, right? Kind of
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aspect, that kind of joy that you get when you turn it on and you don't get the smoke, right?
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Because you can't let the magic smoke out of the other time. Sorry, the magic goes away. And
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that particular device does whatever it is that it's supposed to do. And gives you a feeling of
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accomplishment and gives you a rush and that was gone and I think that's what the maker kind of
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thing has brought back. And I encourage you to find something that you're interested in that allows
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you to have that kind of hands on with your electronics. There are a lot of the amateur radio
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guys talk about how it's too much of an appliance driven black box kind of thing and the newer
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radios are all just no one. I mean if you're lucky you might have a high level understanding of
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how the block diagram makes it be a functional radio. But you could no more get in there and
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|
repair it if anything went wrong because it's all a little tiny, you know, surface mountain
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kinds of electronics and things like that. And so that's why they like building these small
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radios that are maybe transmitters or even transmitters and receivers that they understand it
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and they can take it apart and put it back together and they can modify it and things like that.
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And but there's that, there's the micro-censualers that you can use for robotics or other kinds of
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things. The whole maker movement is rampant with all kinds of interesting ideas. There's some
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dyes here in town that are doing that will have this one really kind of crazy maker idea. I meant to
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talk about it from the maker fair. I met them when I was working at the maker fair here in
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Kansas City that we had and I'll send them so we can include them to show you how it's this.
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They're called the Kansas City air pirates. I think Casey air pirates is what they call their
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group and you know these quadcopters, okay? These little drone kinds of cocktails that had the
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four propellers. Well they were going to take AR as a company that commercially makes those,
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although at least a couple of the guys in the local NKC group make their own quadcopters,
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right? But the AR is a quadcopter that's commercially available and I have one myself that I
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buy a little bit. It's cheap problem is that it's got a limited size for the battery and so
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|
there's it's the constant thing with air craft, right? The constant thing is the size of the
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|
battery compared with the weight of the battery and it's a constant thing back and forth. And so
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|
they found a very interesting way to circumvent that and it's got application well beyond what
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|
just having a little model aircraft got a quad helicopter flying for a long period of time,
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|
right? In fact I think probably I will go ahead and just tease that as something that I will
|
|
talk about in the future podcast because it's a fascinating aspect and kind of relates to the
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|
whole get off this rock thing that I've talked about before. So find yourself something that allows
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you to get down into the electronics board. If the ball is actually soldering parts to a board,
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|
that's a good idea. I think you should try that at least to get a feeling for what it's like.
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|
And you can make some pretty interesting kinds of things with that capability, maybe not as complex
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|
as that computer that you have that's sitting on your desk, but you can build your own MP3 player.
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|
Did you know that? You can actually put together the parts you have an MP3 player to listen to things
|
|
like this podcast and I think probably it would advocate the abilities of MP3 as well as
|
|
other kinds of formats, right? It won't be as small as that little MP3 player that you
|
|
can buy from a commercial entity, but you can build it yourself and you can modify it. You can
|
|
get it to do different things in different ways. And that's really something that I've always,
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it's always been a big interest of mine electronics. It's what got me on this path of
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|
pursuing things for public electronics, which has then led me to my career in technology all these
|
|
years. And it's still a fast-made kind of thing. And in reality, there's all the possibilities you
|
|
ever had before, back when people were building these kinds of things, plus new possibilities here
|
|
in the modern day. And so this is just kind of a tour down the relay. Where we were 15 years ago,
|
|
think about this. It was still PowerPC, rather slow PowerPC based Macintosh machines. This was
|
|
still a time frame when, and I can remember this from some other things that were happening in my
|
|
professional career. Also, we were still talking about hard drives that were in the megabytes range,
|
|
more typically than the terabytes range. In fact, I think about 98 or so was when I went out to
|
|
one insurance customer on the west coast. I don't go to the west coast of the US nearly as much as
|
|
I go to the east coast just by the nature of where my clients usually are. But I was visiting a
|
|
customer out in the LA area, and they told me that they were not going to use the archival
|
|
service that most of our clients at the time would use, which involved a laser optical drive
|
|
for permanent storage. Oh no, they had a terabytes server, and they would just keep on adding
|
|
drives to their terabytes server and would never have to have any other type of archival service.
|
|
They were just going to save everything on that server. I walk around with the terabytes of data
|
|
in two or three USB sticks on me every day of my life.
|
|
Think about it. In 15 years, how far we come. It was just kind of a tour down River Elaine,
|
|
and got to be thinking about it, and it has some time to record this. If you're doing something
|
|
like this, or you've got something that you remember of the history of technology here,
|
|
take us on your own, you know, technology discussion here. What do you find when you
|
|
hook around them, some of that old stuff that you really should throw away? And let us know what
|
|
it was that got you interested in computers and in electronics and all that type of thing.
|
|
And what kind of things you're trying to do to revive some of that rekindle, so that initial
|
|
interest that you had in those kinds of procedures. So until then, this is a list of gadgets
|
|
kind of digging themselves out of the giant positive carp, and getting nostalgic a bit along the
|
|
way about some of these things that have passed by the wayside and how far we come.
|
|
And I look forward to talking to you next time about something else, maybe about the quadcopters
|
|
and more ideas on how to get off this rock. But until then, be careful out there on the
|
|
technological front here, because you never know when that big pile of stuff next to you might just
|
|
topple over if you try to just move one thing, and we'll talk to you later by now.
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