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168 KiB
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1935 lines
168 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2497
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Title: HPR2497: 2017-2018 New Years Eve show part 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2497/hpr2497.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:21:50
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---
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This is HBR Episode 2497 entitled HBR 2017 New Year's Eve Show Part 1.
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It is hosted by Maria Stokes and is about 220 minutes long and can in an explicit flag.
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The summary is Part 1 on the 6th annual HBR New Year show.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Okay, let's see what we have here.
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1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 6.
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So we have a 15-second delay between the live stream and they look as live stream, which is pretty good actually.
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We're looking at about 19 minutes left. That's 19 minutes.
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So I've just put a link up on the website to see how we can capture the stream.
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So I'm going to capture that over on that remote server.
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I'm also going to see if I can capture it here locally just one second.
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That sounds good.
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So I need to talk some because otherwise there will be nothing written to the stream when I do that.
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So if you want to talk, that would be absolutely awesome.
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I'm sick of it. I'm listening to myself.
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Sure, can I play music?
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Is that somewhere?
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Yeah, so long as it's great commons and you're legally licensed to do so, no problem.
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Okay, so I can just make up stuff and that works?
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Well, actually I recorded what I need to, so hold on one second.
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Yeah, okay.
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I'm going to go get some water and okay, that's fine.
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I'll be right back here.
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Yeah, that's fine, bye.
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Okay, I've got a remote safe going on over there.
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Okay, we're good.
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Hello,
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Kasper, there's a new one here.
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This is Gerald.
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I'm just doing some checks.
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Make sure the type is recording.
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How do I go here?
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Right, what do I do here?
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That looks about right.
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Gerald, get away from that.
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Oh god, yeah.
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Okay, so over there in the corner.
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Are you there, Ken?
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Yes, no.
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I'm a little too much out there.
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Kasper just wants to wish everybody
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at the holidays from the Alien Brothers podcast on
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Backup Public Radio.
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Oh yeah.
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If you're not listening to
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Hacker Public Radio, we don't know where you should go instead.
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You might be a better off dead.
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If you're not listening to the Hacker Public Radio.
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Where did all the hackers go?
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That's what I want to know.
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Being can't sit around here waiting for some hackers to join us.
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On this live stream of broadcasts now.
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Kasper just wants to wish everybody
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at the holidays from Alien Brothers on Backup Public Radio.
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Last stream, New Year's.
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A peaceful New Year's.
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And where are all the hackers?
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We need them to save us from the
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into a wet and ashy pie.
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Ashy pie can take one to his face.
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Oh yeah.
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Oh yeah.
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Another one for the next year.
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It's not another war and I ran.
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We understand how the burden's got to build their pipeline
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and I ran to the way.
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It's so great when the CIA is
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fun in the ISIS militants around the world.
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They're causing so much destruction.
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We don't like it.
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We're watching from out of space and we don't like it.
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The human race needs to
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oh blood from their mistakes
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Their mistakes
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have a junto
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Jail stay in the corner one minute. Oh, Roy. No, it looks like it'll just be you and
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me can pick it off. Yeah, no problem. No problem. I would say excellent. It to meet the
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mastermind. Could you just told all one second please? Yes. Honking McGoo and basically
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everybody else joining me on the stream live is Casper. Hi Casper. He's gone quite
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good now. Hello. Just you and me. Yep, just you and me. Just hanging out waiting for the
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rest of the hackers. Where are the hackers? They're supposed to be up late. Yeah, up late
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is a is a relative thing. Up early. Yes, exactly. So we've got the stream live and you can
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talk to us on team speak. So I just popped it into the scene now and I'll just do some
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publication around the Facebooks and the Twitter etc. etc. etc. Yeah, if you could also share
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in the chat so that we could get this out to other galaxies. Sure. So, dude, we were mentioning
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earlier. This is my thing. Actually, no, this is not my thing. HPR is not my thing. It was started.
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The original idea behind HPR came about on bin rev. Actually it was before bin rev. Radio
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free America way back in the day before podcasting was a thing and there were dudes who were doing
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porn freaking at the time and at the last one of their episodes, they mentioned hacker public radio
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and as a concept, then bin rev started as a project and twat tech started as a project and
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infanomicum started today with a techie and then two years into that they 300 episodes to be
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precise. We switched from today with a techie to hacker public radio with bin rev and that's
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there's been several admins and volunteers down to the years. I just happened to be myself and
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Dave tend to do the day-to-day stuff for the minute but no doubt we will we will move on and
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somebody else will take their thingy. And this show the new year show I think was originally an
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idea by Polky who is famous for the new year or for the book club and it's now been going for six
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years and that's pretty much it. So you tell us about the alien brothers. The alien brothers was a
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it was a thought experiment on a beach vacation and Reddiger who is not with me at this time
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he had the idea to do a quote-unquote podcast. I had not done anything of the sort before
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but I was I was open to that so yeah our first introductory episode was completely improvised.
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Everything was on the spot. We didn't even know what we were going to do or talk about and it's
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whether there's no topic or anything and due to well I guess Reddiger was a little reluctant to
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do any more and I pointed him to Clat 2's praise and from that I was able to pull his arm a
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little bit and try and get him get him involved so which I'm still trying to do. Yep cool keep
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on coming. So where are you are you allowed to tell us where you are physically? Your earthly presence.
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Yes sir. What time is on how about that? Have you touched down in?
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At this time we've taken earthly form around the DC metropolitan area, the belly of the beast
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as it's called here on earth and Reddiger is a little bit to the south, Casper is a little bit
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to the north but that's just where we we chose to tap in and beam on our earthly presence
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because we're on many different time zones and dimensions and planes of existence it gets really
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confusing. Tell me about it yes yes yes yeah we're going forwards backwards in time we're trying to
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you know we killed Hitler and then we're like oh no I made it okay and it's this whole thing
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you know it's like the butterfly effect and then this granddad comes to the live yeah yeah it's so
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and then there's the baby Hitler and then they went to New Schwabbenland and we're trying to fall
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in there and then we went through the journey to the center of the earth and then we came out
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the other side and given them the technology we gave them and oh it's it's a whole thing I'd
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really die and you know people say why didn't you go back and kill Hitler and then you go but
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I went back and killed Murphy come on what more do you want who's Murphy exactly yeah there's
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the you know war is a profitable thing so so what is your plan for today pray at me yeah you're
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going to be on for those 26 hours are you just going to not do that I'll be here for a bit
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my sleep schedule even aliens need to sleep so yeah so if you did the calculations or
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earthly presence that we're beaming it's about 5 a.m. and one of our one of my many earthly
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presences were they were laid off on November 28th quite unexpectedly that sucks yeah yeah but it
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doesn't we did not discuss that on any of the podcast so everybody's seeing it live for the first
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time here sometimes you get blessings in disguise so I've been working somewhere and it was not a good
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environment yeah and now I am out yeah and on to better things I didn't know the month of December was
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rough rough and I'm still my sleep schedule still suffering as a consequence because adrenaline
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on top of adrenaline on top of adrenaline wondering if I need to saw my house so when I was an
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interviewing ooh talking to recruiters doing things on the you know on the weekdays on the weekends
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I would be cleaning my house attempting to get it you know showroom ready so to speak uh
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yeah host doctor on the thing yeah yeah so it was a rough month but I'm glad to say at the end
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of December I got actually was had three offers and I was able to to pick the one that that I wanted
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to take that is great news yes congratulations congratulations actually IIT
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vice yeah ahoi mi hearties greetings garbigara
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arr a last we got the three two twos skull and bones the original points are
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yeah apparently most uh I heard about the the pirate thing why people talk like that
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and the first pirates in a turkey movie spoke like that so that's how all pirates spoke after that
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uh yeah because they were they're probably mostly of the Nordic they were from part of some part of
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England I forget what mostly like that oh London yeah it was there were pirate years there were
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quite a lot of them were sponsored by the English government to go out and re-capacán
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foreign trade and stuff they're the first empire or one of the for or yeah relative speaking
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on your plan sure they didn't cause yes I mean we can go back to uh yeah we we can back
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back back back back back I mean the Mesopotamia empire you know like and then you got like Alex
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the great and a whole fucked up of Chinese empire is going back a few k years few killer years
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I I guess to uh to put it into some sort of time frame when the firearms were coming about
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and British were on top of that and British are all too new comers even then
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yeah that's true I believe that was a Chinese invention quite so yeah we shouldn't have given
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them that either all these inventions all these technologies I don't know all this uh
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looks like a dystopia on your planet I don't know it weighs heavily on on Casper and Rettaker
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but we do what we can so Ken did you were you able to get the face books and the live tweets and
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the streams and the all the good stuff to send out to all the good hackers doing their part
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I guess Ken is actively doing that right now and he's probably just listening to us
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I like so Ken who doesn't vegan's bacon is the gateway meat
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apparently vegans don't like bacon
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like in one second second it up so pirate where are you pirating from
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Seattle Washington United States of America ah yes are you stationed at a naval base
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no I am not are you at a hotel near a naval base uh no I am not are you at a coffee shop
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I am in my little tiny apartment and what do you do for for that paper stuff I printed
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ah good so you're part of the fed
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not as such now so you have one of those really really high class uh I thought they only had
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those in South America there's printing machines no this one it's just uh just a couple of pieces of
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plates deal with a little bit of a hammering down to them oh I think there needs to be an episode
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regarding that all right I'm digging a hole here and I don't know how to give out
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it's okay it's okay we kid but we do uh yeah so uh yeah printing uh I happen to go to an
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electronics store uh and I saw that the 3d printers have arrived they're not quite at the cd
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burner level of price ability but I they are there in stores so that was encouraging
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they had a whole bunch of uh plastic to be melted he turned into other forms of plastic
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to be used for whatever purposes anyone deemed necessary what type of store was that like a
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micro-center ding ding ding exactly all right guys I'm back can you hear me no we can't
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excellent news like micro-center is one of those rare stores that they'll have anything from like
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a raspberry pie to a 3d printer to just like regular basic computer stuff yes and they've got all
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the nuts and bolts and screws and thumb screws and just it's a here in IT you know where to go
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and that is the place this is a place over in the Redmond it's uh the local place one store only
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place I need to go to I mean from according to their website they've got everything from uh
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super computer bits to vacuum tubes and switches and everything else oh sorry yeah no I
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I support any local stores there's a music store nearby where I live at this time in my earthly
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form and I always I go there so for instance the audio device that I'm recording on I could have
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ordered it off of Amazon however I didn't want to do that because they they have actual workers
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and they have employees there and I'd like to support local businesses so I uh you know so they
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were selling it for like 170 on Amazon is like 130 I was like yeah it's called 150 and is that
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is that cool but soon it'll just be us versus Jeff Bezos slash the man well for me if I buy Amazon
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I'm buying local uh no I mean I was fondling Amazon giant balls the other day
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anyway I could do with them so uh there goes our fondly safe reading
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nine minutes when it was air we that's what I say and seems apparent I'm just over there uh
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are there by Amazon headquarters down in South like Union there is a set of very large glass balls
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okay show another um
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all right what about the gold mineshax bull
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tax bull. Gotta get those. Or we could all just set a land and watch a nice Steven Spielberg movie.
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You could also start filling in the show notes, which will be available on
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there's a link on the website on the etherpad thing. So if you have any links for anything in
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your discussion, can you pop it in there because it's the biggest pain in the ass in the world
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to listen to 26 hours of a show and trying to get links from people who are semi-drunk.
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Not saying that anyone here is semi-drunk, but it's early yet.
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Where's this etherpad? Go to hackerpublicradio.org and look at the thing that says,
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keep notes here. How do, okay, keep notes here. Like to share links. Yeah, yeah.
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Amazon's giant glass balls. Thank you very much for that.
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We now have a link to that. And over on the right hand side, you can change the
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your color and put in your name so we know who has been editing off.
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All righty. Cool, thanks. Keep up to good work. I'm now going to tidy my room.
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Oh, is this okay? It already has the time zones put in. Yeah, I don't worry too much about
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that. Just kind of museum. And here is another link.
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timadate.com is multi-count on timer, which I'll pop into the mumble chat.
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And that's also the second link. And you can see where you are on the whole time thing.
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Is the live.linux logcast 8000 logcast live? Is that what we would post to the tweets and the
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and the faces and well, that's the stream. I'll, that's the stream. And I'll I'm currently making up a
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blurb that I'll go that's or that I'll go and you can send you those and then you can read
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thing in them. All right, continue talking. Don't mind me. Oh, and by the way, this show is released
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under the Creative Commons license and is marked as not it for work. Explain it for the explicit.
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Thank you. Yeah, although some people don't like the word explicit because explicit means you've
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gone into full detail, which is what we have done. Parental advisory. That works. But it's not so.
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Because as a parent, you, there are various different types of advice that you give to your kids.
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So basically rated in from which you're rated. Do your job. Listen to us. Don't put it on for
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people who don't think who you don't think you should be listening to it. Bacon is maximum rated
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H for hackers rated D for drunk. All right, I'm going to carry on. Keep talking back.
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All right, now we're going to carry on here. So we're talking about I am might have put away
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a fifth of from here in a couple of hours leading up to this. Oh, going deep. Well, there's
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a reason why I'm called pirate. Yeah, but even pirates need to need to put up the sales and plot
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courses, right? No, or are you just the the drunk and pirate at the bottom of the boat that everybody's
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defecating on? No, I make the boat go. You make the boat go. How is that so?
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So, as it happens, I actually also work on a boat. Like as it is. Yes. Is it a yellow set? That is so awesome.
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No, it's a steamship, the SS Virginia 5. It's a 95-year-old passenger ferry and it's
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prepared with a triple expansion steam engine. Very, very cool.
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That's a volunteer workers. It's your actual job because if it's your actual job, I'm going to stop
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you about the face. It's currently volunteer work, although, yeah, it's volunteer work.
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Does that make it any better? I think that might make it worse. What do we make it worse?
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I don't know. It's a job or if it's a volunteer. Dude, you get paid for it to do like your love.
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Well, I thought that once about software and then I kind of really hated rating code when I was
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into at work. Yeah, but did you get a chance to say, did you get a chance to code what you wanted to
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code? Yeah, I was on the kernel team at Red Hat. Oh, cool. Can you give me that? What's wrong with the
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kernel? Or should we be protecting you by taking your, taking your microphone away and leaving
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your keys on the desk? That type of thing. Good friends, don't like other friends go live in a live
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mic. How about you talk to us about your boat, dude? Well, I can say that it was built as the passenger
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ferry back in 1922. It did the Seattle Tacoma run by way of the west side of Vashon Island,
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making stops all along the way. Have you got a link for a passenger to the show notes? Yes.
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Yeah, keep going. Get on with it. Now, hard to type and paste at the same time. And truncate
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silence will remove all these silences, so don't worry about silence. Yeah, sorry about that,
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but what about the sound of silence? So I just dropped the link to the website in show notes.
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Cool. Thank you. So I work in the engineering department and basically my, well, my title is
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Fire and Watertender. I'm basically a fireman. And I assist the chief engineer with running the
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engine, running the boiler. That sort of thing. The steam engine is 113 years old. It produces
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400 horsepower, 200 RPM. It generates 40,000 foot pounds of torque per cylinder. It's a three-cylinder
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engine. So it's a three-cylinder triple expansion engine, which means that the steam goes into the
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first cylinder and pushes the piston. And then on the return stroke, the steam goes back out into
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the second cylinder, where it pushes that piston and goes back out into the third cylinder,
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pushes the piston. And then it goes into what's called a condenser, which is basically a metal tank
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with a bunch of tubes running through it. The steam goes in there and turns the tubes and we pump
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cold seawater through the tubes and that condenses the steam back to water. And it gets that water
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gets reused in the boiler. That's pretty cool. The engine has 45 manual lubrication points.
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And it has to be lubricated every 30 minutes and it's done while the engine is running.
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That's cray, cray. Takes about five minutes to do a full all around.
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So you deal with fire. It sounds, you know, a fire fighter?
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Oh no, there's a fire in the boiler to make steam.
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It's a lot of fuel off of cold.
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We burn diesel fuel. When the ship was built, it burned bunker sea, which is
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a very heavy fuel oil. It's basically one step up from tar and when it gets cold,
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it actually solidifies. You have to heat it up in order to pump it.
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Yeah. How did they, if you were starting off, how would you get it warm enough?
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Well, so the old boiler, we have a new boiler that was installed in 2001. These boilers wear out.
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Now, the old one, they would actually start off with a little bit of wood, just a few
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couple of cords of wood in the fire box. And they would heat it up enough to heat up the fuel
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oil and get that flowing. Cool. The amazing, the innovation that there was in the steam by the end.
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The engineering plant on there represents the absolute pinnacle of triple expansion steam technology.
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I'm just doing some posting on social media right now. You should do a few more shows on that,
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actually. I've considered it. Yeah, if you wouldn't mind, that would be great,
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because there were now officially started an engineering.
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What do you start at engineering? On the Hacker Public Radio, there's the option to do in
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depth series on things like Dave Morris has done a series on bash programming. And Kevin has
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done most recently, done a series on healthcare in the U.S. and previously on Libra Office.
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But then there are also open series that you can group together stuff if people have done things.
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Like we have a mental health series, people send in various different shows on that topic
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than we group it together. So it's been quite a few recently on engineering, doing cars,
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open the wing, modifying a hydraulic jack and that sort of thing. So yeah, they're proving popular,
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so go for it. So maybe I could talk through lighting the plant off. Maybe talk through
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absolutely doing a cruise on walk-around. You can talk to the other engineers and
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the other people involved in it. If nothing else, there's free publicity for them.
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Yeah, this could be something I could do here and once we start cruising again here in a few months.
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Do you sell for the winter then? Yeah. The lakes for Yezo, for what?
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No, every year we tear the entire engine room apart and inspect everything and then put
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all back together again and we do that in the winter. Hands are cold. Sometimes you have to dig
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around in the bilge. I mean everybody's got to dig around in the bilge at one point or another.
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Well, our bilge is oily. Every single drop of oil that goes on the engine winds up in the bilge.
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So it's like the trap? Is that by design? Yes. Is it recycled?
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Not, we don't do on-board recycling. We collect, we basically collect the bilge water,
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separate out the oil and then the clean water goes into the black water tank and gets pumped through
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the sewage system and the oil gets sent off to recycling center and see a yellow. I see, you see.
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It's special steam engine oil. I think it's something like $150 for a five gallon bucket.
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It's not cheap at all. Is this like a charity that you're running or how do you pay for it?
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Combinations of, well, memberships in the foundation, we're a nonprofit foundation. So memberships
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in the foundation, people will charter the ship. You know, they don't want to have their
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wedding on board or something like that. We do public cruises where we sell tickets throughout the
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year. And so that, well, covers our operational expenses pretty well. And capital expenses,
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like if say a bearing went bad on the engine, we get grant money to take care of things like that.
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From the government or whom? Different organizations. Government is one of them.
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Very nice, very nice. I did hear about some place in Scotland, I think it was,
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that it's a reservoir. And the only vehicles that are allowed to travel on is a steamship.
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Because it's totally, and this was the last thing I expected a steamship to be non-pluting.
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But it could be, like you say, that all the oil is gathered in the build.
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I don't know about a steamship being cleaner than a properly tuned and operating modern diesel
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engine. Now, if you have a, if you have a diesel engine that leads EPA tier 4 requirements,
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it's going to be phenomenally cleaner than a steamship.
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Does hacker public radio have a, a, a twitters?
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Yes, at HPR.
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Hello, Duke. Hello, gentlemen. Good models, sir. How are you doing with mine?
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I'm doing pretty good. This is my first time on the annual. And I just had a little note.
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I don't have a link for it. But on YouTube, there's a channel about a steam-powered machine shop.
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And it does have a few other steam-related stuff. Both full-scale and model steam.
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And somebody actually runs a steam shop with two steam engines for power.
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I just thought that this would be an interest. If people are interested in this subject,
|
|
I wanted to insert a note.
|
|
The net miner is inserting a note. Which nets are you mining?
|
|
Well, my grandfather was a cold miner and I'm on the internet.
|
|
Are you from West Virginia?
|
|
My dad was a very small town on Route 7.
|
|
I had the good fortune of opening up an office in Charleston, West Virginia,
|
|
which is deeper south than Charlestown, West Virginia. Big difference. I discovered.
|
|
Since I went there as a kid and I don't drive, I don't know the geography as much as I like.
|
|
But I know we were up near the chief river area, up in the corner between the pan and...
|
|
Yes, so that would be closer to Charlestown.
|
|
Yes, as I said, this is near Morgantown where the university is.
|
|
Yeah, that's all up near the panhandle where the college kids go, the Frostburg states.
|
|
And Frostburg is what the analogy was. Something like prison. It's really easy to get into,
|
|
but really hard to get out of. Because everybody parties up there. That's what aliens understand.
|
|
I don't know what the word on the street is.
|
|
It's kind of adjusting his setups.
|
|
Nope, I'm doing posting and basically being quiet and letting you guys talk, because there's
|
|
another 25 hours of this left. Yeah, no, it's just that, oh, okay, there it goes. Your lips were
|
|
highlighted and I didn't hear you, so I was wondering what was going on.
|
|
Oh, all right, sorry. No, I shall endeavor to do better, sir.
|
|
Has a father's of mining background origins. And so you're not familiar with the West Virginia
|
|
Territory, so do you mind if we ask where you're broadcasting from?
|
|
Well, I'm broadcasting from
|
|
strong Boston area. Oh, yeah. All right. So what do you up there in the Boston area?
|
|
Do you hang out with Matt Damon and the other guy?
|
|
No, actually, I'm disabled, and I do some computer stuff.
|
|
Um, he knows me.
|
|
Unky McGoo has been quiet.
|
|
Yeah, I think he's just set up the stream and logged in, so that he's alive and active.
|
|
I haven't heard him all morning. I'm the new here.
|
|
Now, when to do how do you hear about it, pure?
|
|
Uh, actually, that's a great, that's a great question.
|
|
Thank you very much. Oh, oh, well, yeah.
|
|
While I was at previous employment, which we had already discussed,
|
|
doing the day-to-day routine, mundane stuff, you look to broaden your horizons, expand your mind
|
|
a little bit, learn about different things. So initially, I was a big fan of
|
|
uh, some of the air wolf podcasts and improv and stuff like that. And then, uh, I was looking for
|
|
things related to IT. I was looking actually for good IT shows, but I couldn't find anything
|
|
that good. Uh, there's a, I forget what it is, but it's, it's, I guess, a bigger one.
|
|
And yeah, I didn't like that much at all, but I stumbled upon Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
And listened to a couple of those and I was like, oh, wow, people can upload their own stuff here.
|
|
So I think I had already known about it when, uh, Ruddiger and I had done our first
|
|
podcast. So I, I believe I had that in the back of my mind that, that it was a possibility
|
|
that it would maybe ask the standards. Oh, yeah, the standard is, is it of interest to Hacker's?
|
|
We define Hacker's, uh, there's more than two people. So you and Ruddiger would, uh,
|
|
would fulfill the requirements. There you go.
|
|
All right. Yep. Uh, so what was the stumbling upon just for my own interest?
|
|
Because, uh, it is of interest to me as, uh, in the role of keeping this thing alive.
|
|
How did I find? I, I was, uh, let go unexpectedly for my position. So I could not give you, uh,
|
|
a browser history and how I came about it. Exactly.
|
|
I just kind of, uh, was a Google or a BF, whatever, or, uh, was an iTunes or something.
|
|
No, definitely, definitely not, definitely not iTunes. Um, it was, I was probably looking for like
|
|
Hacker podcasts or Hacker something, uh, probably something along those lines,
|
|
something with a little bit more nits and grits than what they would cover on the shoes.
|
|
It brought to you by this and this and it, but so I was looking for something that would actually
|
|
be useful and not just, uh, there's just one that all they talk about is Apple stuff. They're like
|
|
Apple fanboys and, so I was looking for the, the real hackers, the ones running Gen 2, doing their
|
|
own, rolling their own. And I think, I think I found them very nice. That's how I found it.
|
|
I believe I was searching for Hacker podcast and I, I believe that, that gave me the correct
|
|
result that I was looking for. Yeah, that'll do it. Well, welcome aboard. That's all that's
|
|
I see what I did there. Welcome to fires.
|
|
Gerald, that'll have, all right, back to sleep. Yeah, so, uh, it seems like a common theme and,
|
|
and you'd brought this up earlier, Ken was, uh, mental illness and or addiction and or things relating
|
|
to burnout as, as pirate had potentially drink a fifth before joining the cast and then dropping
|
|
out. Yeah, but now in fairness, it is the Christmas time. So what people say Christmas time is
|
|
not necessarily representative of what they do during the rest of the year and also time zones
|
|
do tend to make things look worse than they are. You know what I mean? You could exactly,
|
|
but you're one party in the year and then you go, oh, I'll just join HPR because that's a great,
|
|
really good thing to do. Yeah, just put this out in here. No, absolutely, absolutely. But yes,
|
|
we, we, uh, we recommend moderation and all things except moderation. Yes. Uh, I would, I would
|
|
concur. I'm just taking the battery charger off a busted Sansa clip battery that I was in my wife's
|
|
and Sansa clip battery. Yes. You know, Sansa clips, they're like a little MP3 pair and they're so
|
|
hard to get now that the price has. Oh, I had one of those. I had one. I had a Sansa something
|
|
back before iPods. Yeah. So my, uh, whole batteries inside of those like sprawled up and poofed up.
|
|
So I don't know what I'm going to do with that. Send it to recycling, I guess. It's going to have to
|
|
be chemical recycling as well. Okay. Anyway, that's another thing. Yeah. This is what happens when I
|
|
start tidying my desk because when stuff goes wrong, they put it on my desk and then eventually I do
|
|
a tidy and start fixing some stuff. So yeah, I had a earlier Sansa, I haven't gone through the boxes
|
|
yet. I had to get the boxes up off the floors, got the vacuum going, and then I had some,
|
|
some jobs offers come in. So I was able to hit calls on that. But I had the cleaning.
|
|
No, I mean, it hasn't been this clean since before I moved in. So it's good.
|
|
Yeah, but I had a Sansa, I just, I just looked up Sansa clip and it looks like they'd copy
|
|
the iPod a little bit. They've gotten a little bit bigger. I had a really, really small one.
|
|
That was a little, a little bit smaller. That was many, many. That was about 2006.
|
|
Yeah. A lot of people will still use them. Yeah. They were great too. Yeah. I mean, you could run
|
|
forever and ever go to the gym with them. Yeah, yeah. The thing is, yeah, they've released
|
|
in the newer ones. You can't put rhythm box on it. The rhythm box was an open source,
|
|
is an open source firmware that you can put on them. And it's a free, free, liberal
|
|
open source. And a lot of people did that. But now the later ones that they have, they're a lot
|
|
cheaper, a lot less RAM. And the option to upgrade them is in there. So it's a bit sad, it's sad.
|
|
And also paying 175 euros for something. And when you can buy Android phone, you know,
|
|
a cheap Android phone just as a media player. So that's kind of what I did this time.
|
|
Understood. Understood. Glad to hear about other people doing some firmware changes. Some
|
|
always fun. It's exciting times when you get a ROM to work on your Android. And all right,
|
|
I thought the system, oh, no, I got to install Google Play. Yeah, exactly. But actually,
|
|
I've done my, my own phone, I've got Google Play, but for the kids, I download the apps on mine
|
|
and then copy it across to them. But mostly they're using stuff off after I'd. And which is a
|
|
free open source, like Google Play Store. Right. And it's actually quite good because I can,
|
|
I know that everything that's in there is vetted. So I just, yeah, install whatever you want from
|
|
over there. And if it breaks, well, then I'll just reinstall your phone. That is, I think, a good
|
|
example of parenting that you check what they, what they have, you can make sure that it's not
|
|
secretly recording them, like the, the Barbie dolls and all the weird stuff that's coming out.
|
|
Yeah, that's, that's a bit odd. But it's hard to know you can only do your best. So,
|
|
and then, you know, something like the Intel chip OS running Minix comes out when you think,
|
|
oh my god, what's going to happen now? How, how deep does the rabbit hole go?
|
|
Yeah, yeah, we did talk about that. And on that note, actually,
|
|
when I trip to Micra Center today, I was looking for, I had a computer from,
|
|
maybe 2009, right before they switched to the i3s and to the z7,
|
|
before they, I forget what the chipset was, I think 775 sockets. So I was, I was able to get a very,
|
|
very good quad core CPU and overclock it and do all that, but that was right before they had put
|
|
in the ME, all that, that good stuff. So that bit the dust, finally, it may be able to be repaired,
|
|
but even if it gets repaired, it's not going to be used in the way that it was. So, when I went to
|
|
Micra Center to get a computer to be used as a television streaming device, I needed, I needed to
|
|
get one that was HDCP compliant in the case that I would have the money to get a 4K television if
|
|
I wanted to do that. So, yeah, yeah, and so your options are limited. Yeah, that's that.
|
|
Yeah, that's it. That is it. I think the key is to have, yeah, have it so these devices can't get
|
|
to the internet. Right, hard power switches. So you want to just unplug it if you're not using it.
|
|
Yeah, but yeah, exactly no power, but it's hard to even know then because the reading they're
|
|
right up about somebody who bought a night light that could be controlled by somebody's mobile phone
|
|
and then they did a security breakdown of all the permissions and things that it's had,
|
|
which could be bad programming or just simply malicious program. I'm probably more inclined to
|
|
believe bad programming to be honest. One or the other, I mean, it bad programming leads to malicious
|
|
programming, which came first, the chicken. Yeah, exactly. So we're placing a battery here in
|
|
a near thermometer, CR-2032. Did you know what the CR-2232 where the number comes from?
|
|
As soon as we're here to be our own, we're supposed to be providing information.
|
|
Some science fiction thing? No, it's the measurements of the battery. Like, 18650 is the width
|
|
and the height. So the width of the thing is, let me say, really cool PCB, PCB measuring thing.
|
|
It's one second. Is that in millimeters? 20, uh, 20 millimeters, two centimeters across.
|
|
32 is 3.2 millimeters. So 2032 is 3.2 millimeters. So pretty cool. That's where the numbers come from.
|
|
Very cool. I, today I learned that all those 2032 batteries sold at RadioShack,
|
|
little did I know that they were, they were called that because of their measurements.
|
|
Yeah, those batteries. Oh, I felt so bad. It felt so, so evil selling those batteries. Oh,
|
|
why so? Well, batteries themselves cost 30 cents maybe. And we sold them for like three, four
|
|
dollars. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It has a little bit of a markup there, all right?
|
|
Just a little bit. I'm wondering, speaking of markups and planned obsolescence,
|
|
had that big Apple Fiasco, which everybody kind of knew already and whatever. And so Apple says,
|
|
oh, hey, hey, we want to be good to our people. We want to, you know, we want to do the right thing
|
|
here. So just stop on in and get a new battery for 30 dollars anytime you want. Yeah,
|
|
but in fairness, replacing it, if I had the choice of spending 30 dollars or spending your day
|
|
trying to undo an iPhone, if somebody would come in and just replace it for that, that I believe
|
|
is worth it. But what if they didn't use glue in the first place? Yeah, but, you know, they have,
|
|
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I know. They have. We could go on this for 20. How long we got?
|
|
We could go on at the whole time. We could. We could. Yeah. But don't want it.
|
|
No, you need to do it. I need to do it. I might.
|
|
So I put a link in the show notes there to a really cool thing that I got. If you're
|
|
anyway interested in electronics, it's a PCB ruler from 808 of roof. And it just gives you all
|
|
the little components and gives you physical sizes. So if you're planning to do some soldering or
|
|
whatever, or you want to know what the how large traces are or how big AWG gauges are, you can
|
|
look to this ruler. It's really cool. That is really cool. I will have to find out if my alien
|
|
father has one of those. He is of the transistor generation. I'm sorry. No, not the transistor.
|
|
I should say the vacuum tube generation. Oh, nice. He repairs our radios.
|
|
So just my father, is it happens? Oh, yeah. Well, how about that? We are contemporaries.
|
|
Or does that? Did you take offense? I'm sorry. Good gosh. No, it was just replacing the battery.
|
|
Yeah. Look, dude, we're both on a dude like we're both on the 24 hour show that's 26 hours.
|
|
And we're here talking junk on New Year. I think we can safely say we're contemporaries. Yes.
|
|
Okay. All right. And you are in a better a better place in on the blue marble.
|
|
I am living in a bus in which is a small town just outside, half an hour by train outside of Amsterdam.
|
|
Oh, lucky. Lucky you. Lucky you.
|
|
Boy, we had a back in the early alien days in alien high school. We had these Belgians come in
|
|
and invade our space camp. We learned how cool they were and be how uncool we were.
|
|
No, that's all everything's well over here when the American kids come in like they're the coolest thing
|
|
in the planet. So yeah. American kids, they just they don't even
|
|
uh again. I'm going to go grab a coffee. I'll do it back in the minutes.
|
|
All right. Net miner, are you with us?
|
|
Guys, if I'm not aware, I'm still under that other operating system.
|
|
What are you worried under now? Linux, uh, mostly Sparky. Sparky. That's going in the show
|
|
and it's forgotten to check that out. And why do you use Linux Sparky? What's the, uh, what's the draw?
|
|
Well, for one thing, they still support 32-bit, uh, flexibility. It has lots of installers,
|
|
including installers for things like web browsers, you know, I'm heavily into web browsing on my
|
|
systems. Uh, it's devian based, because why it still supports 32-bit. Uh, I have some 64-bit
|
|
machines and one old P4, which, uh, is, uh, is an old Dell machine that was really tricky to
|
|
install a new system on because it only boots from CD size media.
|
|
Uh, so you can't do a boot from a USB or thing else that?
|
|
Well, I was, I was having difficulties. Also, uh, even though it has a DVD drive, it won't boot
|
|
the DVDs. Ah, okay, okay, I see, I see. So it doesn't have the kernel components to
|
|
get the DVDs, run them, read them. Yeah, it doesn't have the bio stuff for, for the first,
|
|
you know, I mean, it will do DVDs once you get an intelligent system on board, but just
|
|
getting that first bootstrapping. Also, one of the things about is, uh, their command line installer,
|
|
which is a very small package will allow you to install a desktop, which means you can
|
|
use it to bootstrap to a full, whatever you want. By, you don't, you install that command line,
|
|
but, but after that, you can put a desktop on it and then start building up from there.
|
|
Nice, nice. So, so you like to do your own build?
|
|
Well, on machine, more modern machines, I like, you know, like everybody else, I like DVDs or,
|
|
or flash installs, but, uh, it worked out pretty good for me. I'm a refugee from Windows 7.
|
|
Yes, Lee, what did you not like about Windows 7? I mean, or what was there to like,
|
|
would be the counter-argument, but, uh, what was your main beef? Well, the main beef was that,
|
|
that they were pushing Windows 10 and I had a virus problem and I switched over to Linux to get
|
|
away from that. Yes, Linux is much like four-man's Apple, and that it's not susceptible to viruses,
|
|
as much as Windows seems to be built for almost. Well, I used, I for extended docs for many years.
|
|
In fact, there's a lot of like a new stuff was first under, under docs and then under
|
|
various versions of Windows. I see, I see. When I was just a young alien back in the day,
|
|
started off with a Amiga 2000 and you had to boot up off the floppy. And even though it had
|
|
the GUI, which was relatively new at that time, it still had a DOS side to it. So,
|
|
that was my first introduction to the command line, I guess you could say.
|
|
Well, back in the dawn of time, my introduction to computers was, uh, teletype
|
|
and our data storage was a high plate because that's where you put the paper tape.
|
|
Right, right. It's kind of like the IBM punch card version two.
|
|
Well, punch cards would have been faster. This was 10 characters per second.
|
|
Hello, can you hear me now? Yep. I wonder if that phrase is copyrighted.
|
|
Uh, yeah, I mean, if it was somebody's birthday, I was going to play the birthday song,
|
|
but that just opens me up to a whole can of worms. I can't play the birthday song anymore.
|
|
I guess, no, but that I crickets. Disney owns the birthday, happy birthday, a song.
|
|
And so, if you're ever, if you're ever to hear the birthday song in a movie or any media,
|
|
it is copyrighted and you have to pay Disney for that.
|
|
So, nobody play the birthday song, all right, because that is not a creative commons.
|
|
That's a fact I learned in the movie called the corporation. So, if no one's willing,
|
|
I'll just go on.
|
|
Yeah, oh, yeah. Didn't that live stream on? Yeah.
|
|
Net minor, can you give me a topic? Well, you have all kinds of topics.
|
|
So, well, first, for those of us who came in late, where is everybody?
|
|
You didn't miss anything. No one came on.
|
|
There was one other person that was there was pirate was on and then he went on. So,
|
|
I think we're waiting for the show to begin. So, this is the pre-show. This pre-gaming.
|
|
Have you ever listened to Linux log or August? Linux log or August?
|
|
Linux log, no, but I believe that's what is being run Linux log cast.
|
|
Yeah, that's where I and honky come from. And 5150 and a few others.
|
|
Any 1911s or 2600s? Pardon me, I don't get the reference.
|
|
There are Atari 2600s and then there was the pirate and group Razor 1911, big in the day.
|
|
Well, did you say 2600? Yeah, I'm familiar with the
|
|
phone speakers of that caliber. Ah, okay. So, you can get us to the secret FBI installation
|
|
where you can tap into any phone having a bit next style. I said, you got to remember, I am
|
|
I'm a dinosaur. I date from the dial up days. So, some of the stuff 2600 was was war dialing
|
|
and stuff like that. Ah, yes. Also, if you get, I think, a meagre stuff, I will recommend
|
|
on. Again, I do a lot of my stuff off YouTube. Terrible fire is doing a lot of YouTube videos on
|
|
various amiga and some Atari compatible upgrades, especially for the Amiga 500 running a 68, 30 or
|
|
68, 40, 68, 20. Yeah, that was at the Motorola chipset. Yes, the the higher end of virtual memory,
|
|
you know, full full both chipset replacing just the 68,000 on the base amiga.
|
|
Yeah, there's actually there's a great documentary. I'll see if I can find it maybe and put it in the
|
|
put in the show notes about the close of the 68,000 says here or 68K or whatever.
|
|
But there's a great documentary somewhere on the YouTube's about the closing of the Amiga factory
|
|
and like how how unfortunate it was for the Amiga to go away and that's why there's such a dedicated
|
|
fan base I think for the Amiga even today because it was so far ahead of its time.
|
|
When I was just a small alien, if you were to get computer software, you had to go to a place they
|
|
call Rockville and you don't want to go to Rockville but we had to. But there were only a number of
|
|
local stores that would sell software and they were all Amiga stores and the Amiga had a 24
|
|
bit, 24 bit graphics. I'm talking about an Amiga 2000 so that's a little bit more advanced but
|
|
I have one, it won't boot, it just gives me a red light but it was stationed in a garage
|
|
for probably about 20 years. I haven't pulled it apart and tried to put it back together but
|
|
no idea what kind of corrosion or what kind of credence might be living in the casings.
|
|
I'm not quite sure. But if you know the right people that are willing and able to work on them,
|
|
that would be great because I know you can just load an extension in a chrome and do it but
|
|
there's nothing like the real thing. Baby. Yeah as well. That also is a ancient advertising phrase.
|
|
Yeah. This is German documentary. I think I found the right one. I was looking for there.
|
|
Yeah and I don't support any advertising. I'm very adverse to any sorts of advertising.
|
|
I don't like it. That's one thing that I like about Agapopla Gradyo is that they're very short on
|
|
advertising but we would like to support an honest host and Josh who runs the site, keeps the
|
|
site live, keeps the stuff going. I just thought I'd plug that and I believe right now on Agapopla
|
|
Gradyo I believe there's a special I'm not mistaken. If you were to donate at this time you know
|
|
a one to three. I think somebody will triple your contribution which is very gracious of whoever
|
|
that that is. If you donate right now you do five dollars results in 20 dollars so it's a three to
|
|
one. Very generous if someone to donate. I know I will but I'll have to translate my galactic coin
|
|
into to ontanium and then put that into Bitcoin or Ethereum and then see if I can get it over to
|
|
them. So be a whole process. Yeah but that's cool. So you're familiar with the chipsets. Old
|
|
6800s the Motorola's. For me growing up as a kid I know that it was very beneficial to
|
|
have the Amiga because not only did I learn command line interface on the DAW side but I also had
|
|
a much better gaming system than anybody else did until I think the Sega Genesis came out.
|
|
It was better than the Nintendo and the Super Nintendo. The color I think it was actually better
|
|
because I would see the consoles come out and I'm like oh my old Amiga looks a little bit better
|
|
so I went back and looked into it and I believe it's 24 bit color schema which was way out of
|
|
its time. Again it was big with the creators, the musicians, video, that also gets into the hacking
|
|
that what do you call it? The demos. Apple for those people who couldn't afford Apple.
|
|
But Apple wasn't even there yet at that time. Yeah well I'm just saying it was you know
|
|
Oh so later on you could get a cheap Amiga because they went out of business rather than get
|
|
an Apple product that you're saying. I mean it filled that niche that everybody thinks that
|
|
creative is Apple. Right I just I remember growing up that when I go to alien school they'd have
|
|
these apples. They're these max as they used to call them or maybe they still add I don't know
|
|
I would just think I'm like wow these things like these things suck. They only take a five and a
|
|
quarter disc and it's like a green screen. Come on. I was like this is what what this why are we
|
|
donating box tops for this this outdated tech when at home I had I was playing flight simulators and
|
|
dungeons and dragons. Crazy RPG games and all sorts of stuff just didn't make sense to me.
|
|
All right. We also enjoyed the the feature where you could type something in and it would say
|
|
something. I don't I don't know if that's what what a radio head may have used on okay computer
|
|
but it's the same voice it's it's kind of the stereotypical voice of third computer to
|
|
if I can maybe load the Amiga console and see if it needs some voice pumping and
|
|
you know we're talking about micro center a little bit earlier. Great place.
|
|
A dangerous place for your wallet. Dangerous place for the wallet. Absolutely. Absolutely. You
|
|
do not want to go there with your wallet full when you want to you want to get in and get out
|
|
but that's that's true with any store. Definitely a skin. Get what you need. Get out.
|
|
Well for a lot of things that you're placed the late and amended radio shack.
|
|
Yes it has it has. In fact I've met some people that old managers go to a micro center and
|
|
they're like oh hey Dale how's it going hey it's be my manager. He's like oh hey how's it going
|
|
Casper kind of seeing you. Hey how are you doing now my wife like oh I'm sorry to hear that um
|
|
so yeah. It's a cheerful stuff dude. Yeah I know I know we good deep good deep yeah but you know
|
|
well that's what happened there was a mass migration of the radio shack employees at the time I
|
|
was joining radio shack there was a time when I was when I was a young alien. Okay guys. Okay so like
|
|
when I was a little alien you looked up to radio shack employees because they knew how to do
|
|
everything or anything you wanted and you always had this you had a respect for
|
|
radio shack employees so you could bring in something and say hey can I do this to this or
|
|
whatever and when I grew up I just happened to get a job there because I knew somebody that
|
|
worked there and uh at the time I joined they were definitely definitely transitioning from I guess
|
|
what was a sustainable commission based uh income stream for their employees to a not so sustainable
|
|
income stream for their employees and I was unfortunate because at the time I joined I was the
|
|
youngest uh when I left I was the oldest uh but maybe I just hung on too long there. Yeah I learned
|
|
a lot from the uh from the older older people there first got a lot of social skills was able to
|
|
talk to people I was actually quite afraid I was like oh I actually have to go out there and
|
|
didn't talk to people that come in the store. So it's good experience. I think everybody should
|
|
have to do retail at some point in their lives. I think that that should be a year course for everyone
|
|
just so if for nothing else that you treat retail employees with respect. Yeah well I spent
|
|
oh first eight years of my employment in running our servicing in seven basically at 7-11.
|
|
Oh okay okay and what was your experience there? I get you don't mind me asking. My experience there was
|
|
there um probably not broadcastable uh well one of the things that I ran into is uh I was working
|
|
360 days a year five hours a day so they didn't have to pay benefits. My dad did not consider that
|
|
full-time. Yeah so I guess I'm sensing some uh some family. Yeah well I got PTSD at home not
|
|
in the military. Also um about to turn in the century or in one of those early years I found out
|
|
that I had something called Ashburgers Syndrome. Really? So it would be said that you are on the
|
|
spectrum is what they call it? Yeah I used to have Ashburgers Syndrome until they changed the
|
|
definition. Yeah yeah there's there's DSMB fours and whatever it is yes they've changed the DSM
|
|
and now I no longer have Ashburgers even though that I haven't changed anything myself. I thought
|
|
it was a useful definition but the kids you know um of course since I was raised to 50s kids in the
|
|
sixties I've gone through a lot of uh no-one-placer changes uh like the generations of the word for
|
|
people of color. Right right Negro Black. Yeah I think we can probably uh yes I understand it's
|
|
you know yeah I was I was raised in the days of stewardesses of stewardesses instead of flight
|
|
attendance. Is that good? Yeah yeah yeah and when they're when there are actresses
|
|
so is everyone called an actor or an actress now I can't keep track? They're all called actors now.
|
|
Oh okay yeah I can't keep track of that stuff. I for my generation we would say a word that
|
|
is no longer uh kosher to say maybe even kosher is not gonna be okay to say soon but uh you
|
|
know to say somebody was stupid you can't say that anymore and especially embossed and I'm sure you're
|
|
you know exactly what I'm talking about um Jimmy. Oh clap too has entered he's joined us
|
|
graced us with his presence. Well welcome I've listened to your cast back along
|
|
nice to hear you live. We're waiting for Clevver. There we go. Hey there. Hey got to how you doing?
|
|
Pretty good. Happy new year everybody. Happy new year to you. We got a nut nut miner here with us.
|
|
Howdy nut miner over now. Nut miner's not really with us. Oh I'm here. I'm just on the side.
|
|
No I'm okay. Somebody's got to be in you know with so many chiefs you've got to have an
|
|
Indian or two. Cool cool. By the way has anyone heard of Peter 64?
|
|
Heard of him or heard from him. Heard from him lately. Um maybe a month ago I saw him on IRC.
|
|
I was I was talking to him a little bit. Gosh maybe two months ago now. Well if you get a chance
|
|
just say nut miner set hello and that's wishes and all. Next time I see him I will do that. He's
|
|
not on that that often lately. Yeah I mean I'm from Dev random in other places.
|
|
Cool yeah let them know. I'm from Dev Null.
|
|
Aren't we all? Actually I'm from Dev SR0 just to be different. Yeah. All right change it up a little
|
|
bit. That's cool. Yeah. What's been going on is you guys when did this call start anyway? I don't
|
|
even know like I forget when it actually started. We are an hour and a half into the fun.
|
|
Oh okay cool. Well I'm a what is it? What time is it right now? Whatever time it is right now
|
|
I think it's about yeah so it's 12 30 so I'm a half hour into 2018. Wow so a happy new year
|
|
do you clap too? Thank you. You don't have to applaud I didn't actually do anything it just
|
|
happens it just ticks over on its own. Really? Yeah yeah I didn't push it over or anything it
|
|
just happens. I thought you had to climb the the stair and get up there and move the the sun
|
|
and the moon and I thought I thought that was your own or your control. There is a there the main
|
|
event like the main New Year's event here in New Zealand happens at a place called the Sky Tower
|
|
in Auckland which is like I don't know a thousand miles away from well maybe not a thousand but
|
|
it's all the way at the tip of the North Island so I'm nowhere near that but yeah I've always
|
|
thought it was kind of funny that it is the Sky Tower because it's just it seems so important but I
|
|
think it's just a corporate tower that they call Sky Tower. It's like that's probably the tallest
|
|
thing in New Zealand but yeah they shoot fireworks off of it and that's that's what we do I guess
|
|
off the tip? Yeah actually yeah it's it yes it's it's kind of funny but and they show it for like
|
|
13 seconds on the TV it's like it's it's sort of a super tiny sort of sad version of the New
|
|
York ball dropping. Oh anything that happens outside of these United States aliens are fans of
|
|
so even if it's shooting just from the tip even though it might be a little awkward word
|
|
it's okay it's okay yeah I once ran into somebody who had a Kiwi sticker on his car he was
|
|
surprised to anyone in America who what that was. I really didn't get it until I moved here I
|
|
I thought Kiwi I thought they were talking about the Kiwi fruit and I didn't understand why they
|
|
called themselves Kiwis and it wasn't until I moved here that I learned that Kiwi is actually a bird
|
|
here and I guess they associate themselves with that bird because it's a very unique bird I'm
|
|
not really I'm still not really sure why they connect with that bird so much but but yeah I didn't
|
|
really understand until they moved here I was completely clueless. So can you I don't know if
|
|
this is this is fair game said but you said you're an X-pad don't have the X and so I was kind of
|
|
curious as to what led to the migration bigger and better things. Yeah so I was living most
|
|
recently in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania and my girlfriend was like hey we should move to New Zealand
|
|
and then I saw like just coincidentally like maybe a month later I saw a job posting at a movie
|
|
studio with credentials that basically matched exactly what I had accidentally sort of ended up
|
|
studying for like that weird mix of film and computers like I went to school for film but I got
|
|
into computers myself so I had like this this weird kind of like you know dual major sort of
|
|
thing going on I mean no not really but I mean I did and so it was just a perfect match so I
|
|
applied and then they yeah they they hired me and that's a care of all the paperwork I mean that's
|
|
the that's the big thing right if you're moving outside of the US or outside of any country I mean
|
|
you got to get your papers you know you have to have your work visa and all that other stuff so if
|
|
you get that you're you're good as gold and yeah actually speaking of that if you give me a second
|
|
here I need to grab my my phone there's another another alien brother not rotator but he might be
|
|
joining us on this plane so I'm gonna mute my mumble for a second cool that's exciting I wonder who
|
|
it is it's like a special guest star yeah one of the reasons why I remember Peter 64 so much is that
|
|
uh my mother and father came from farms yeah my grandfather was for the coal mine with my
|
|
dad ran a dairy farm when he was younger actually he created a dairy farm he was younger wow
|
|
turning 80 or 90 acres a week into a humming modern dairy operation uh between like World War
|
|
2 in Korea wow that's pretty amazing I mean I guess in theory it's not that amazing right you
|
|
just get a bunch of cattle and and keep them happy and then milk them but but to actually make it
|
|
profitable and like you know an actual sort of self-sustaining thing that's pretty amazing well
|
|
also he went to an agricultural high school which is to say he had basically the best technical
|
|
education for agriculture in his family and maybe in the area since a lot of farmers didn't go to
|
|
ag collagen uh right yeah yeah that makes sense and my other parent was from a farm in Maine and it
|
|
was still using um basically milk can technology so I've been exposed to both relatively modern
|
|
stuff and in very more traditional when my grandfather was alive they're even running
|
|
with uh unveiled hay wow that's crazy I didn't actually know there were I mean is there a lot of
|
|
farmland up in Maine I don't know a whole lot about Maine but I kind of strangely surprises me to
|
|
hear that there's farmland in Maine but I guess there has to be farmland practically everywhere well
|
|
there used to be the the farms have died off over the last 50 years yeah actually even where I live
|
|
in Massachusetts there used to be dairy farms only within a couple of miles of here I'm actually
|
|
going to be in Massachusetts later this uh well I guess now this month I'll be Boston though
|
|
are you going to be tried branded steak yeah no I'm hopefully not I'm going to stay away from Salem
|
|
yeah my uh yeah while I grew up on farmlands on vacations uh I'm actually a refugee from from the country
|
|
from New Zealand no from the country as in Hihaw country uh farm the doonies
|
|
civilization by the way I'm doing cross the banjo yeah the banjo line
|
|
yeah places places where uh parts unknown got gun control is a good stance
|
|
yes they're I heard a story from someone uh secondhand that was somewhere at a bar somewhere deep
|
|
in Virginia and they were shooting off machine guns and stuff and the guy was like hey he's like
|
|
aren't you worried about the the police showing opposite please we are the police
|
|
ha ha ha ha great yeah well in Massachusetts there was the machine gun shoot and they gave
|
|
some kid a mini uzi because it was small and cute killed himself now that's a weapon that's hard
|
|
for an adult to control uh criminal negligence now out in Arizona they had a machine gun shoot where
|
|
they had people shooting tripod mounted machine gun the thing about a tripod mounted machine gun
|
|
is it has a lot of stops and whatnot so that you can make certain that that it only can shoot down
|
|
range right so by using their brains and having proper adults of provision they were allowing
|
|
youngsters to fire far more powerful weapons in perfect safety I see so they were not negligent in that
|
|
case yeah I mean I lived I grew up in a house full of firearms but we we were taught
|
|
how to handle them or not handle them and uh we were perfectly safe and that's yes always good
|
|
yeah I mean that's one thing about like gun control the whole gun control debate that I never
|
|
hear a whole lot about which I mean I don't really pay that much attention to it lately but it's
|
|
just like sure there's gun control but like obviously there's automobile control right like if you
|
|
get a car you have to take a test and take a license and stuff and I mean has anyone really
|
|
sort of proposed that gun control control control could just kind of look more like that rather than
|
|
looking like the feds coming to your house and confiscating your guns like people are
|
|
seeming to be afraid of like why not just just kind of make it a little bit more official so
|
|
so that there is some semblance of education around the subject well because gun control
|
|
is largely limiting the risk to politicians well that the NRA as aliens understand it
|
|
but too I just put a link there and the thing oh yeah I see that's the at their pad if you
|
|
want to add notes as people are talking or whatever oh interesting and had asked that we do that
|
|
so he did not have to listen to 26 hours and that's a good idea yeah and if I had looked at that I
|
|
would have known that it was midnight or new years in your neck or your part of the blue marble
|
|
so uh yeah I just want to share that there I think Ken's uh cleaning his house and stuff
|
|
so I I wouldn't want to have to listen to 26 hours of this honestly uh yeah I
|
|
trying to get ready to do some show notes and that is not happening so well but that's
|
|
if that's a whole nother story so yeah show notes are horrible I mean they really are they're really
|
|
not they're very important no they're important darn darn darn darn I thought you weren't here
|
|
yeah exactly good authority that you were not here just because I have like gun discussions
|
|
doesn't mean I'm not here well um yes show notes are important they're just they're just it's so
|
|
difficult to do them half the time because it's like you've already spent all that time doing the
|
|
podcast and then you you're meant to do the the the notes and it's like I do it twice we will do
|
|
the show notes for you if you don't for anyone listening however how can I'm actively contributing
|
|
to the show notes I just wanted to talk to how can you do a show without show notes do you not
|
|
start doing the show notes or do you just talk off the cuff yeah I generally talk off the cuff um
|
|
yeah because I usually talk as I do what I'm talking about so it's it's kind of like I'm basically
|
|
just describing what I am doing which is I tend to give presentations no I yeah I mean I have my
|
|
head that I planned in it's a good place to plan yeah but as a wise person once said the
|
|
palest ink is better than the vast memory that is awfully wise no I do I totally plan on doing
|
|
show notes for for things and and I feel like I do eventually get around to it but it's just it
|
|
it's a different process for me you know if I'm gonna do a show note I tend to want to make it into
|
|
something that's like sort of publishable you know so it's it's the different step okay that's
|
|
a lot yeah I I tried to do a good a good show note but then I got like a beaten beaten like
|
|
like the dirty dog I am for my spans and my dives oh yeah yeah mark just use markdown I mean
|
|
get rid of the divs in the spans it's it's him out gotta you trolling me now do you not have
|
|
markdown a conversion I thought you accepted markdown yeah Dave Dave accepts markdown I have this
|
|
long-running argument with him that if people either send in text without formatting or HTML proper
|
|
HTML that doesn't have any crap in it they're talking about line items headers strong surfaces that's
|
|
it just basic HTML because at the end of the day it doesn't matter what you send it in into it's
|
|
going to end up as HTML 5 and the person who's going to do that if you don't do it then it's either
|
|
me or Dave is going to have to do it I didn't know that I thought you had some kind of conversion
|
|
thing going on but I mean surely markdown is better than structured text no not always we've received
|
|
in some absolutely god awful markdown and five dollars into it you just going all right yeah I'm
|
|
just going to copy and paste this and as plain text and start from there yeah okay I guess sometimes
|
|
it goes that's a problem sometimes it goes perfectly but there are so many variations of markdown
|
|
of mark that's what I was gonna say yeah so I'm thinking if somebody's capable it's like a barrier
|
|
if somebody's capable of figuring out org mode in emax then they're capable of doing
|
|
HTML basic HTML files okay so no one in particular
|
|
not to future not to future hpr hosts then never admit to knowing org mode and you're you can do
|
|
whatever you want I've just lost a battery I've been loving those read line things that Dave has
|
|
been posting though read line episodes amazing stuff actually there should be thank you
|
|
you want to be an emax podcast we can do an emax series on hpr I mean I did a start on emax
|
|
mini series but yeah someone could absolutely get through a whole year by just doing emax
|
|
episodes because I mean just open to emax wiki and read a page I mean it would be that simple
|
|
while we actually need them we spoke about this on the community news show which hasn't been
|
|
posted yet which I need to do is a git series because and I volunteered you for that
|
|
yeah I'd be happy to I actually have show notes for that oh show that's pretty written
|
|
written yeah yeah yeah they're they're they they exist I'm not I can't talk about the format
|
|
I just want to know if it was written yeah good good don't let's not let's not discuss no it's
|
|
actually yeah it's um it's in several formats it is written it is yep it's good to go okay hashtag
|
|
you owe me a show yeah I will um I will make a note of that and see what I can do
|
|
matter if I thought it was if it was so easy to get episodes from people by just asking
|
|
yeah who was that guy who did the um who read the articles from open source calm on Katie and
|
|
live uh what was his name I'm blanking on the name I feel horrible for blanking on the name
|
|
I had it there and it just escaped me as my mouth started working hola
|
|
he didn't want to eat it when I had all right we're two hours getting get ease get ease of course
|
|
yes just uh get ease yeah sorry get ease um if if if if if he wants to read more there there's a
|
|
whole git series that I could point him towards he did an amazing job and that he did great yeah
|
|
I feel guilty about asking him for that because in the amount of work he had to do in order to
|
|
reduce it oh wow 1.42 volts is that correct for a ag 10 battery we shall ask Wikipedia
|
|
doesn't sound yeah ask Wikipedia the internet knows everything yeah my first experience with
|
|
e-max was on pdp 11s at MIT wow that's pretty legit and uh yeah the only mouse in the
|
|
computer room had a tail and was considered vermin still are some parts well I was on night tvs
|
|
which were sort of a multi headed hercules in a pdp 11 so what's it called again
|
|
in in tv in tv what did you say night tvs there were a video system where you had multiple
|
|
graphical screens and keyboards but it was equivalent to basically what you see people would
|
|
think of as a hercules screen I'm sorry I don't know what a hercules screen is used to be a
|
|
or a graphical screen screen I do text screen but hercules allowed you to do graphics on it it was
|
|
one of the early pc uh particular blood your your text mode monitor and actually do some
|
|
graph two color graphics on it oh cool wow okay and night tv was doing that sort of thing off of
|
|
pdp 11 uh generation before originally used for a lot of uh AI stuff at MIT with a room filling
|
|
two six bit machines 36 bits wow that's insane I've heard of 36 bit machines I just I've never
|
|
never really understood why they existed I guess because they had four extra bits
|
|
well a lot of it was because for a long time characters were all uppercase and you only need
|
|
to six bits and thirty six bits okay wow I think I think we have a show I think we should
|
|
end the show here we just learned something I think that's the new year's show okay so
|
|
no we're not supposed to learn anything on the new year's show we're all supposed to be drunk and
|
|
oh yeah that's right darn it yeah well just wait till rhetoric gets on we'll see what happens
|
|
I just scored myself a yeah trip switch from an old toy I'm doing the traditional new years
|
|
tidy up the back room because I'm stuck out here because of the show so I'm going through all the
|
|
stuff that I have to the kids have broken down through well not broken but have broken through the
|
|
years and there's a revolving toy that has a spring loaded trip switch so I'm gonna use that in
|
|
the project later on so in the show notes I looked up Hercules computer stuff and I think the
|
|
first link I put in there is not the right one I think the second one might be the right one and
|
|
talks about Hercules incorporated in World War two in NATO and rocket fuel commercial gun I don't
|
|
know 1950s I think it's the second one you're looking at Hercules computer technology
|
|
they had a graphics support remember the first one from VGA and then you could buy Hercules card
|
|
and we had a few of them not around for really high-end stuff okay so it was the first one and not
|
|
the second one correct but the first one is the one that I was the first one it looks like it's
|
|
more apropos to the discussion I mean knowing nothing having just learned about it but I mean
|
|
the first one have pictures of graphics cards so there you go oh oh oh I would oh today I learned
|
|
that my first graphics card was a Hercules oh that's fancy how did you recognize it
|
|
because under Hercules thriller 3d th blah blah blah blah it says rendition
|
|
of airtight v 2200 agp megabyte sg ram the rendition of airtight was we had a 486 66 megahertz
|
|
when the windows 3.1 was still around and when quake came out it was built around it always comes
|
|
back to quake no it doesn't always come back to quake that's true it always comes back to doom
|
|
that's the one I'm thinking of wait but then but then then it goes back to Wolfenstein and then
|
|
then you know where that goes right every conversation yeah right that's that that's the old uh yeah
|
|
I mean it has to yeah right so we just we just completed the podcast I guess we can go home now
|
|
all right see ya all right kids already huh what one of the interesting things we had back
|
|
as dinosaur is over at building 20 god rest you know it was a temporary building but only lasted
|
|
from world war two to the turn of the century was uh they they had on this big computer some IBM
|
|
I guess seven or nine track tape drives and they said the difference between IBM tape
|
|
drives and digital equipment tape drives which digital was the one who made the big 36-bit machine
|
|
did if an IBM tape drive fell off the truck you'd have a bottle if a digital tape drive fell
|
|
off the truck you'd have a pile of plastic yeah so the IBM stuff was built to last
|
|
it was built slightly heavier than a tank yeah I went to uh when the computer museum was in
|
|
Boston I went to it with the IBM field service engineer which is IBM speak for computer
|
|
repairman and he would go up to a solder and pull the skins off because that's what he did every day
|
|
punch card solder yeah yeah yeah he joined IBM when IBM business machines had a lot more gears
|
|
than renders yeah okay I was doing a little bit of wikipedia research on why I did not know that
|
|
the rendition had anything to do with the hercules chipset and I'm not don't quite sure um the
|
|
2200 which was rend renditions was offered on several cards which was a hercules
|
|
hercules thriller 3d offered an agpnpc i but at that time there were like in video was
|
|
I just knew it was a rendition chipset so but yeah I knew that diamond had one that also
|
|
wasn't as always good anyway yeah remember the diamonds vaguely yeah back when you'd go into
|
|
a computer store and you'd see like they had just gotten 3d like the pixel I think it was uh
|
|
was the fighting game yeah remember what it was yeah I don't know it wasn't really into gaming
|
|
back then or graphics are we are we talking Duke Nukem oh that could be Duke Nukem was was definitely a
|
|
a bump to the the the doom engine it gave you the jumping ability and the flying ability
|
|
that that was a good game engine which spawned many other games I uh like the uh energizer buddy
|
|
mod for Nukem it's been so long uh I would dial up with with other aliens at the time and play
|
|
Duke Nukem I didn't know that it was multiplayer I feel like this ether pad is an hour off
|
|
because I signed on oh no I'm mistreating the timestamps nevermind oh no it is confusing me
|
|
because it's it says greetings to New Zealand twice on the ether pad which doesn't make a whole
|
|
lot of sense well what we're using is a template that k5 talks came up with I think um maybe about
|
|
three years ago now okay it's just it says yeah for some reason it says greetings New Zealand
|
|
chat of islands and New Zealand oh New Zealand chat of islands okay I didn't know there was a
|
|
difference between chat of islands and New Zealand chat of islands nevermind sorry about that
|
|
it's always mysterious when someone sort of disappears off of mumble it's like well have they
|
|
forgot to press their talk to speak button or have they just walked away the van Allen belt is
|
|
always interfering with our transmissions that's what it is yeah yeah it's tough and and for you
|
|
on on the terrestrial blue marble you've you've got as I understand it optical cables under seas
|
|
that are then split and then go into data centers and then split back out so you never know what
|
|
the kind of shenanigans are going on there it's it's kind of amazing like the fact that we we
|
|
that yeah that is actually cable laid across the ocean that just seems unbelievable to me
|
|
I got one of the treasures I have here buried somewhere is a book from 1991
|
|
where somebody actually did what they call an internet travel log and he went around the world
|
|
talking to various people who were making the internet connections oh nice at the time you could
|
|
actually tell where things went and the amount of finagling and you know backdoor side door
|
|
stuff that was going on with the internet was was was amazing especially since that was before
|
|
the internet was was open to common data standards that is to say business business stuff could
|
|
only go over these wire over these cables and academic stuff could go over that stuff and military
|
|
stuff had to go over here and you know which one goes to westworld I guess we'll just have to find out
|
|
I haven't actually seen that show I I know it's a big thing but I haven't seen it I mean
|
|
I haven't even seen the movie upon which it was based I guess yeah I didn't see the movie but
|
|
I always meant to aliens understand that the technology that DARPA has is potentially 50 years ahead
|
|
of what you may be aware of DARPA or Google it just depends on which alphabet yeah just rearrange
|
|
the alphabet when you own the alphabet I mean what else are you going to what more can you own numbers
|
|
are numbers part of the alphabet I guess not I think arguably not Roman numerals are
|
|
but they've got Google IO there you go so I think that covers that yeah it's then I
|
|
clad to we'll probably get into it at some point but the increasing I guess the increasing
|
|
definition of fascism right yeah yeah is that all you're going to give me is it
|
|
no I thought you were going to say more so I wasn't going to interrupt but yeah no I think that's
|
|
I think it's kind of dangerous to increase the definition too much but but maybe you mean the
|
|
the way that it that it manifests itself rather than what we than how we name it the interesting
|
|
thing is I was I was hanging out with some some contemporary aliens history majors mind you
|
|
uh and I said can anybody give me the definition of fascism no nobody could give me the
|
|
definition of fascism I was just befuddled I could not believe that history majors didn't know
|
|
what the definition of fascism is is that because they didn't want to pin it down or because they
|
|
just hadn't really thought about it before no they just they were like oh that's just when it's
|
|
to total control of and you can't do what you want oh yeah yeah yeah like it was just it's like oh
|
|
that's not these right no always goes back to that right but they're they're missing a step
|
|
up to a big step which is it's it's the the marriage of corporations and government oh see I
|
|
hadn't thought of that either yeah that's a really good qualifier because yeah I was thinking of
|
|
the nationalism aspect of it uh no no yeah see that yeah and no it was and with with Nazis you
|
|
talk about the the socialist uh they they called themselves socialist but that was really just
|
|
correct the you know he actually infiltrated the party it was the the elites uh funded the rise of
|
|
of the right and uh if if you read in so basically what they were afraid of was socialism
|
|
communism from Russia and you're right yeah yeah and so they didn't care which how how yeah yeah
|
|
it's such a it's so funny too that that they would that that they were so I mean I guess they
|
|
were against everyone but I mean yeah they were very against sort of Russian communism and
|
|
and yet they called themselves a socialist party and it's just like what what's really the difference
|
|
between those two things anyway so why would you be so hostile to to communism right yeah it was
|
|
just a trick yeah because yeah because they weren't yeah yeah yeah but people fall for it man they
|
|
fall you call yourself one thing and even if you act completely opposite people are like well he
|
|
said he was such and such you know like well he said he was a Christian but you know he's doing
|
|
this thing but he said it he said it yeah it's just so yeah labels labels labels are super powerful
|
|
as silly as that seems wait wait a minute guys okay you're missing the vote entirely okay the
|
|
original fascists were not German they were Italian yeah no I don't think I don't think I was
|
|
think I was saying the original fascists were German I I mean I'm even wondering if they were
|
|
originally like Italian there's probably a precedence before that I would sort of imagine
|
|
were you talking about like really a lot of fascists oh no what do you mean fascism the symbol
|
|
of the fascism or the original Roman definition where it comes from the Latin is a bundle of sticks
|
|
it is supposedly a unification of power so that if we all work together that's where they got
|
|
the socialist angle to it okay and the guy who had the fascist was the guy who was who was
|
|
applying the unified power of the people he was the puppet master just like the head of the
|
|
communist party is you know communism is a very democratic ideal but we just help we just select
|
|
who can do the voting and it ends up with one guy running things anyone yeah there's yeah there's
|
|
lots of different ways to split it up you're absolutely right the origin was from the 1920 Italian
|
|
fascismo from fasciso bundle political group so it's yeah it's a very broad definition
|
|
but there's there's still that that element of deceit right I mean it's like oh we're
|
|
going to band together we're going to do this there's going to be one unified front or there's
|
|
going to be one unified champion and and it ends up I mean that is what it is but I mean it's
|
|
all for for completely it's like putting a feel good sort of message on on something that's
|
|
basically completely exclusionary and oppressive government yeah pretty much yeah once I was here
|
|
on Hacker Pope a radio you're tuning in two hours and 13 minutes in welcome yeah it's good
|
|
that you're remembering to do the the station identifiers you know at the top of the hour or whatever
|
|
do it again it's important yeah it's important do it again or two hours into the New Year's Eve
|
|
broadcast but if uh if IT doesn't work out if it doesn't work out then I'll be coming to you live
|
|
on a car commercial on your radio station it's a labor day sale it has to be local though you
|
|
have to do it local radio because that's where I mean that's they really just let you lose then
|
|
you know you just be as over the top as you could possibly be saw good man saw good man
|
|
if you don't get the reference I will put it in the notes you'll have to I'll have to yeah
|
|
it's uh uh have you heard of the show breaking bad I've heard of it but never seen it um so breaking
|
|
bad was a big hit and uh they did a spin-off uh Vince Gilligan did a spin-off that focused on
|
|
just the lawyer and how he it's it was kind of a prequel to breaking bad and how this lawyer came
|
|
about and his name is Saul Goodman okay and he got from it's it's all good man Saul good man so
|
|
but he just he just made up this character on the spot before he was trying to make money to
|
|
do I I can't remember exactly what the plot was but it was a local TV you know he had all this
|
|
airtime and he was trying to but he couldn't use the airtime for some reason or another so he was
|
|
using the airtime to sell the airtime he's like do you want to be broadcast live you know on
|
|
that's all right you know so he created this character to to sell it yeah that's actually funny
|
|
because uh here in New Zealand they're I mean maybe it's still in the states but I don't I don't
|
|
think it was in the states anymore but here in New Zealand like at late late at night like 1 a.m.
|
|
2 a.m. and that time frame the the TV stations will actually go off the air and they'll just like
|
|
well some of them will just run nothing which really puzzles me but other ones will still run
|
|
those crazy infomercials and it's just so weird to see that now where or they're like are you
|
|
home are you smoking is your name clattu yeah pretty much yeah and you're like what what me how do you
|
|
know they're talking to me yeah it's just it feels like we should surely we have a history a
|
|
collection of media that we could just press play on you know like to surely we don't need to run
|
|
this this subpar quality of media even if it is late at night like just I don't know Mr.
|
|
Adry runs would be better than infomercials infomercials i'm gonna pay money and keep the stations alive
|
|
that's why we like to support Josh from an honest host if you contribute now you'll get a 3-to-1
|
|
donation so if you contribute $5 your total contribution will be $20 to the internet archive
|
|
yes and also throw some cash towards Josh who's hosting the hpr website oh yes i'm
|
|
i'm sorry i conflated the two yeah those two do we have prices we could offer people we we
|
|
should offer the that's what this hpr new years if you think should be is a pledge drive pledge drive
|
|
for the hackers i can offer a prize become rich and famous by putting your
|
|
for becoming a new to nationally renowned podcaster improve your CV i'll play a song for
|
|
for whoever donates first i'll just i will i will go out to coffee with whoever donates if they are
|
|
in Boston from January 24th to the 30th i think is when i'm there and it has to be in the evening
|
|
when i'm when i'm not working and within walking distance of my hotel oh yeah okay so
|
|
two conditions applied yeah that's what we put in yeah that we would put that in fine print where
|
|
this an actual pledge drive okay yeah because really in the fine print it's like hey you
|
|
guys are all getting played here yeah yeah always you're scratching that ticket there's nothing
|
|
behind yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah we we know what's going on that's why we tune in to
|
|
hacker public radio so i'll just give it a little taste a little taste of the oh nice little tune
|
|
so i'm in the house
|
|
we're on hacker public radio we don't know where to go on this
|
|
section that we're doing right here
|
|
that's very clear we don't know where to go from here on
|
|
hacker public radio but if you donate now today we'll give away our sun for free and
|
|
we'll fly away back to our home base on planets
|
|
that one's for free so are you two guys that was really awesome actually thank you what's up
|
|
again you're gonna say something do you forget it immediately are you two guys like alien like
|
|
members of an affiliated alien fleece or something we can't talk about it yeah we couldn't
|
|
yeah couldn't confirm or deny that and if we did we'd have to do things destroy planet destroy planet
|
|
we'd have to this one you fool we'd have to press the big red button not the one that brings you
|
|
the coke the one that does the other thing genuinely that was a stroke genius from i really
|
|
handle my heart from the people of earth thank whoever was come up with that idea because you know
|
|
i don't want to offend anyone but i would much prefer a big red button in that office to be get me a
|
|
coke over let's annihilate the planet but you don't want to get a mixed up now do you i think if
|
|
they went to the trouble of making a big red button that gets the guy a coke they have hidden the
|
|
other one somewhere where he can't get us well they from what Wikipedia says he carries a football
|
|
or somebody carries the football for them or some i believe is it just me or is android mtp just
|
|
the greatest crappiest protocol ever invented mtp in general i why are you qualifying it with
|
|
android am i is it different from normal mtp well i've had to use it here on android so
|
|
and it is just terrible terrible terrible terrible terrible protocol yeah no it is terrible i think i
|
|
had a there was a line of video cameras i think that for a while that would only mount mtp and it was
|
|
the absolute worst i mean i'm talking like early 2000s probably and yeah i try to avoid it at all
|
|
cost that's why the kde connect i don't know if you've seen that or if you yeah that's that usually
|
|
works pretty well for me i don't i think i don't know if it uses mtp because i i think i just
|
|
send myself stuff oh maybe it's over blue tooth because it it's on my laptop yeah probably
|
|
what it is it is truly terrible i've ended up having to put a hotspot on yeah a hotspot on and then
|
|
put an ssh client and go sshfs because it doesn't it doesn't automatically refresh even the
|
|
stuff on your on your i'll create a directory and i can see it's i can connect on my phone i can
|
|
see it i can connect with the android tools i can see it but it doesn't appear and then you reboot
|
|
and then a kind of appears wow and also i don't understand why they don't want people to access
|
|
their their files i don't i do not understand the logic of that if you're going to do it then
|
|
you know sftp seems to be able to handle it why can't you use a protocol that works
|
|
yeah yeah yeah i don't know i don't know either anyway i'm planning on doing a show whenever i
|
|
guess it maybe i don't the show maybe that's it that's all i need to talk about because i don't
|
|
think that counts did you ever expand the file system on android to include the sd card
|
|
um i don't know i have i have a mobile from work right now and it has an sd card and it's
|
|
sort of i can access the sd card from from the phone is that what you mean like i didn't do
|
|
anything it just yeah there are like two options that you can initially use it as a
|
|
an sd card that you can put in and take out or you can extend the internal
|
|
oh i see where your system now i call that happens when they were doing that that they would do
|
|
something like um lvm or something yeah sure because i said you know big warning as soon as
|
|
as soon as you do this you can't you know the world is going to end it's only ever going to work
|
|
on this phone blah blah blah okay so i went got a 64 gig card put it in there expanded and i
|
|
expected it to do that just thing that thing right yeah it would all be one big file system yeah
|
|
but turns out all they do is like they in they reformat it i think a ext4
|
|
don't know asterix not 100% sure and possibly encrypted in some way but their integration is
|
|
just a whole bunch of ugly sim links still oh wow so you have if you you you can't create or then
|
|
you have m mq mtp or whatever that protocol is that thing doesn't recognize the fact that if
|
|
you create it doesn't display the music folder for example so if you create so you're looking
|
|
in your you see a combined view you know a fictitious fake lying view of what's on your sd card
|
|
and then you make a directory but you can't make it because some simlink somewhere sees that that's
|
|
already on the internal sd card that's just a mess absolutely horrible yook oh that clears up a lot
|
|
i wrote ntp i was like what yeah yeah it's mtp yes you wouldn't know it unless you'd had to deal
|
|
with it really yeah i was like that's not a one two nine t8 tends to work for me okay the
|
|
the the date time protocol that that seems to be okay it's it's a that's a sure in itself i love
|
|
to get some of those guys on because they have there's a lot of duct tape involved in that protocol as
|
|
well oh yeah because you got satellites you got terrestrial stuff you got underwater stuff you got
|
|
radio and you got and the different eight bits and lower device high-ore device four big
|
|
computers all sorts of weird stuff that the libraries have to support i saw an interesting video
|
|
unless at one point now what i'm doing youtube back to i put a secret space documentary that i
|
|
think you should watch if you ever have the time i see it i see that you act it at it isn't that a geeky
|
|
response no i it's not too geeky for me but what i'm who am i to say i'm just an alien this isn't
|
|
even my real voice cool how many episodes have you how many episodes have you posted so far just
|
|
the two i mean i didn't need that to me yeah because i remember yeah okay i wasn't sure now there's
|
|
there's four that are two two have hit the feed right now i don't unlike some people i do not listen
|
|
in advance i wait for episodes to actually be released and it bugs me for the record bugs me when
|
|
people no you don't can i do you comment it you commented on something before i've only ever
|
|
broken my rule and that was the only time that i've done that has been when the a new feed list
|
|
came in and i needed to make sure that all the shows were in there's the only time i ever ever
|
|
done that and special dispensation was asked wasn't asked at me it was on the list i said i need to
|
|
download these i normally don't do oh that's right oh that's right oh i didn't expect that yeah yeah
|
|
you well you phrased it in a way that was can deliberately you know you were you were asking around
|
|
the question it was if i called trickery i have a trickery my art i was so tired doing that whole
|
|
thing and so scared because once you start messing with a feed that's got 32 gigabytes
|
|
yeah yeah yeah somebody sets up a portable wi-fi hotspot and then suddenly
|
|
i was 22 gigabytes yeah yeah okay so that's something for the new aliens here just
|
|
tapping in through the man Allen belt uh so we like to go on that when we're communicating with
|
|
the hackers on the public radios we we don't like to jump ahead to what's already been uh under review
|
|
or uh no we don't need anything oh whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa apparently we do not edit
|
|
we do not review we don't even listen to the shows until they come out to the feed very important
|
|
this is a peer to peer network anyone can post anything there is nobody reviewing anything on
|
|
this network that's deliberately why those of us who normally who are involved in this don't
|
|
listen to anything goes into the feed so if you want to say anything you say it we're not going to
|
|
drop you the only thing we do is check for spam uh okay see i i for me i would look at the calendar
|
|
and so i i had this miscommunication actually with my alien brother uh huh because he was saying
|
|
he was like oh why are we gonna i was trying to get him to do one uh what is now last night uh but
|
|
he he was uh still recovering from from his job and he was like why are we gonna do another one
|
|
when we've got so much we still have to you know produce and post and i was like no no no we've
|
|
got four out of five up there um we really hurt i think we've done six now yeah we know we
|
|
so we we have six i believe uh and the fifth one is is completed it just hasn't been posted i was
|
|
trying to get Rutiger to do the show notes so that he could have Ken beat him um for the
|
|
with the the spans and the divs oh man that was just bad you're you're making out like that was
|
|
they possibly the second worst uh show notes that we have ever received
|
|
only second worst come on man guys can you do better than that what was it with all the
|
|
spans and the divs and the things uh it's like something uh the only thing i've seen worse was when
|
|
somebody did their show notes in uh Microsoft Word and then did the next book back in the day
|
|
oh yeah oh god okay so to be clear i've i've been pulling a lot of weight trying to pull Rutiger's
|
|
arm he's he's an older arguably wiser alien and i've been trying to pull him along here and uh
|
|
originally he was doing the production post production uh because he had done podcasts before
|
|
and due to circumstances etc uh the production part was put on me so for four um
|
|
um i don't i can't keep track uh like i said this last last month's been a little uh time yeah time
|
|
space dimensions are all blurred um but the thing is it's okay i know also just for the record bad
|
|
show notes are still better than no show notes so of the two people here who are most annoyed with
|
|
you would be number two i am of course gesting clatoon no worries although you did have show notes
|
|
in there they just were what would have been interesting would be to get your history you know
|
|
your bash history as you were doing us yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah that's that would be something
|
|
i reckon you're annoyed now i can tell no i guess i guess i guess i kind of i guess i kind of
|
|
oh time time space dimensions are all blurred um um but the thing is that was so that was very um
|
|
that was funny because we just heard yeah we just heard in say times face was blurred again
|
|
that was really brilliant i'm telling you i know you don't believe me it's true no can i think i
|
|
just i don't know that i agree i guess when i want when i show notes to me should be
|
|
really really helpful because i'm afraid i guess i i just like putting stuff out on the internet
|
|
that that's kind of sloppy and like oh this is you know because i don't want people to go to
|
|
those show notes and think okay i'm going to follow these and then not get from point a to point
|
|
b yeah exactly so yeah i don't know i know you're you are a course right you are a course right but
|
|
it's it it i'm i'm kind of spoiled because of davis show notes and uh yeah yeah with their with
|
|
their series an arc it's like oh yeah yeah i think those guys are planning on wrapping that up
|
|
into a book at the end of the whole thing yeah and that's the thing i think eventually the stuff
|
|
that i talk about i kind of in my head i'm gonna like write an article or a series of articles
|
|
whatever blog posts whatever and so in my mind i'm like well this is the audio version
|
|
and and i'll get the written version out in some other some other place in once it's ready so yeah
|
|
cool oh we can always go back and link to it yeah i'm one of your your chain so to speak
|
|
yeah two point three volts that's definitely dead okay yes korean i was just going to say you know
|
|
i really missed from hacker public radio is fox fire does anyone remember fox fire i used
|
|
fire fox now he was this great this great host who used to do really kind of rambling and sort of
|
|
almost avant-garde episodes which which actually the alien brothers kind of reminded me of when i
|
|
heard when i heard the first alien brothers episode i was like this is like fox fire stuff
|
|
because yeah we were the host was it back in the twit days twit days no no no i mean maybe
|
|
but i mean he was he was in the early hundreds uh in in hacker public radio as well and then he
|
|
i sent him an email and was like fox fire you are the best host ever and then from that point on
|
|
he never you never released another episode so i kind of yeah i'm not sure i kind of i yeah i'm
|
|
going through the complete episode guide we don't have a a presumed to him is it uh yeah
|
|
don't have them on the complete episode guide we've they called comments
|
|
we'll have it on the horse actually uh look over in the left bar of mumble uh ken i just posted a
|
|
sample episode you are probably one one one selling his yeah his his name is weird it's i could be
|
|
saying it wrong it is but it's not how you it's not it's not how it sounds it's not fox fire it's
|
|
for fox for fox fire as in you all the guy fox yeah fire from days of your
|
|
yeah yeah yeah wow this is going back well yeah like i say it was a while ago
|
|
so yeah used to do this old hack that was awesome oh that's right that's right i forgot about that
|
|
series yeah yeah absolutely awesome yeah he's he's gone he's gone well the emails right there
|
|
send them an email but well i told you what happened last time i sent you an email no i met you
|
|
have you sent them an email now we got to turn it back on yeah flip that bit again what happened
|
|
he stopped releasing after i emailed them to tell him he was my favorite host of all time he's
|
|
he he's been stopped releasing episodes well we to be honest uh i guess the the belt got him again
|
|
oh no no sorry i was listening to the uh it's reading the stuff that comes up and the thing
|
|
right yeah i can probably turn that off text to speech yeah okay there we go it's old very quick
|
|
yeah i think that's for it's for gamers right like people who aren't looking at their mumble as
|
|
they use it i think i mean that that would be great because there are people that like to record
|
|
shows and there's people that like to listen to shows and maybe people you know that is a good way
|
|
that it could be split somehow where there could be some kind of submission you know where you
|
|
would allow and see that that's the other thing is that once you submit to hacker public radio
|
|
and you submit the show and with show notes that's it there's no way to go back and change anything so
|
|
yeah you know he's email us and we'll do it okay yeah i mean i think in an ideal like if we have
|
|
endless resources i think yeah the author of show notes could then go back in and edit them manually
|
|
but i mean he's talking about it completely what's that what we do have a plan there's a plan
|
|
in place for a long time to do this and we're actually a lot closer now than we will be you know
|
|
originally we asked for the your pgp key for to do that okay and with your pgp key then we would
|
|
know that you were the person who we emailed because that's beautiful yeah that's beautiful you
|
|
were going however now we're looking at moving away from the database on the back end and going to
|
|
well moving away from everything being a php my sql lamp stack and just being a flat
|
|
a postgres database on the back end given by git or whatever and then we just push flat files out
|
|
and then if a if a file or a host so then if you submit a show we we will post that show but we
|
|
would also update your page and pretty much everything else would remain the same and interesting
|
|
there's no reason why we couldn't like have show notes submitted via like git lab or whatever so
|
|
there's where you put your show notes or are you submitting your show notes via the thing and then
|
|
the appear in git lab and then you do a pull request back to update them that's really
|
|
so lots of options but regardless if you send us updates we will put them in no problem we do that
|
|
all the time cool good to know hashtag try not to overstress us either that's i guess that's the
|
|
that's my fear you know like adding little things like oh i forgot to paste this url in or
|
|
something i just i feel really silly trying to email you guys because your your time is a little
|
|
bit more valuable than just doing little things like that so yeah no that's okay well what we might
|
|
agree is if you just post them in the comments and just yeah if you're the host and then say please
|
|
update the show notes then we won't even post that as a comment we'll just update the show notes oh yeah
|
|
that that works it's going up at two hours and 40 minutes into the podcast you're here with
|
|
gasper can clad too we got net miner all those songs a bit professional now i want to bring
|
|
down the tone here who's rw a is this a real person who's that a stream he's an infiltrator uh
|
|
he's this he's the sapu and going back to pgp keys where is a sange oh yeah no one's ever really
|
|
heard from him lately huh maybe he's on i don't know he he was and a good thank you in the
|
|
yesterday i have to go and give the kids a toy that i just fixed back in a bit oh nice i thought
|
|
you were breaking toys but no no they they collect during the year and then i that's on that's
|
|
coach there just go through all the stuff that's called for i am julie and the sange that's that's
|
|
that's good for i've got to go feed him he's in the basement get that bring out the game
|
|
oh what movie oh that was in reservoir dogs that was no that was pulp fiction pulp fiction yeah
|
|
pulp fiction there we go rda is a real purse i don't believe it who said that rda oh okay i believe it
|
|
now from the city of Atlanta Georgia USA oh cool okay all right confirm all right i read that
|
|
comment somebody put it but he's a bad funny i was just missing about hey Gerald shot it all right okay
|
|
yeah uh so let's see where is a sange where in the world it was linked to the Atlanta um potentially
|
|
the airport shut down so um i saw something interesting about Thomas Drake was wearing a q pen
|
|
well on some documentary on Netflix uh that somebody posted in their thing hmm maybe that's q
|
|
there are neither here nor there but you are here with us two hours and 42 minutes into the
|
|
heck of public radio podcast one zero one one one zero to you uh so are we supposed to welcome some
|
|
no i guess not we have to wait for the hour to tick over for that who's next
|
|
Russia what's what's the r in or what is rda stand for or can you divulge that information
|
|
so my initials of my name first name rich parry g okay i i thought you were like something with
|
|
an attitude i was really wanting it to be that as well maybe it is rich with an attitude
|
|
that has yet to be seen well could be just the old guy with an attitude uh speaking to that dummy
|
|
who only likes to communicate via text which is okay because anonymity
|
|
anonymity is a part of being hacker and i'm able to do this just because this is just a
|
|
you know physical incarnation of my alien spiritual body here through the van Allen belt
|
|
but uh it was his russia ties confirmed i if you're referring to mainstream media
|
|
russia this russia that i i wouldn't believe any of it i i mean i don't i don't know what what are
|
|
others opinions yeah i don't i i don't know what ties he's talking about really i mean what exactly
|
|
is that like what ties like he's in collusion with them or something i mean i know that they
|
|
uh yeah oil regress with attitude maybe yeah uh so yeah russia has a lot of oil um i know that
|
|
Assange and the legal team uh Sarah Harrison they worked with russia when snowden was in
|
|
Hong Kong um so i i know that they they were trying to find countries to get him to but then
|
|
it ended up he went to russia but there wasn't any any collusion as far as i know
|
|
but unless you're listening to mainstream media family doesn't cotton so he can't speak i don't
|
|
know what cotton means is it like you're i mean i far down south in the states i don't think he's
|
|
in the south i i know him but i don't think he's in the south is where does he means to look
|
|
like and to be similar is that something you've heard or you're just doing that from context
|
|
like i mean is that a saying or is that's what i know it means to come up against
|
|
oh okay next to i had not heard that one before okay so uh speaking to what uh dummy just said
|
|
there so they've uh they're painting everything with russia this russia that uh i guess
|
|
this is a russia russia discussion uh the new McCarthyism so if you are critical of democratic party
|
|
or politics or anything uh your russian i guess and julienessange to take to cotton is to take to
|
|
okay i i got it because it sticks and yeah um yeah i i don't i don't buy any of it uh
|
|
were told that he's still in the aquedorian embassy one would maybe think but again we're going
|
|
back to pgp keys he hasn't released anything and then there was that twitter outage at the same time
|
|
there was the huge police build up around the embassy uh as far as russia collusion i i think
|
|
that's just another democratic talking point to say oh well wiki leaks you know hacked the democratic
|
|
servers which i think anybody with technical knowledge would understand that um anyone would
|
|
understand that the files and the the copy rates which the files if you're going to do a forensic
|
|
investigation is anybody with any security background would would do to find out about it you'd
|
|
see that oh it it was actually copied at from a usb drive there's no way that that could be hacked
|
|
or you know that the files um and so see more herch had the had the dig um and he was recorded
|
|
secretly about this and then he he has never said that he didn't say this um but now we're talking
|
|
about Seth rich and then you're getting into people that get killed and they call it a robbery
|
|
yet no wallet or money was taken and you're so you don't want to get killed yourself
|
|
don't talk bad about killery Hillary huh now i'm on the list
|
|
junior no and also leave tattoo server alone hi i'm back
|
|
jeez please don't don't mess with my server no that's the last thing we need
|
|
how's it going should be upgraded i've got a new uh pie here if you want one
|
|
oh really yeah like a pie three oh wow do you have a pie three you can send me over the image
|
|
for if we can do an upgrade i don't have a pie three um but i i don't think it needs an upgrade anyway
|
|
okay everything working out is that where you're doing the open thingy tunnel um yes i think i
|
|
did do the client on that one good anyways good to referring to VPN open VPN yeah
|
|
yeah tattoo just done a series of shows with pathetic show notes and what may have mentioned it
|
|
yeah no i i i didn't see the the show notes in there
|
|
it's a fine battery there's enough to be able to jump off to something
|
|
i didn't know it was going to get typed up honestly that one is is significant enough i think
|
|
to to truly type it up and make it a good a good thing to put on the internet because i
|
|
i honestly i used to tear my hair out trying to get on that subject yeah it's horrible
|
|
we read out from the comment time it uh it really is just you go to somewhere and it's either
|
|
you do this you take this button and it works or right you make and then you assert and then you
|
|
you know the optional god it's just i just can't stand i can't stand the way people write
|
|
instructions on the internet i mean it's great that the internet is there and that people can put
|
|
instructions on the internet is just every time i find instructions they're horrible it's just
|
|
so aggravating it's almost as if someone didn't write them up correctly i think they're badly done
|
|
by and large they don't do all the steps or they go full and we start to one plus one is equal to
|
|
two and and that follows that two plus two is equal to three and then you know it's a simple step
|
|
to go forward to the square root of 74 pi times f with the function of minimine what the hell
|
|
yeah exactly yeah yeah yeah yeah also two plus two is not three it's four it's five it's five
|
|
it's five i meant five sorry how do the thief baby is Brian connecting Brian has connected
|
|
we're we're nine minutes away from a russia new year a russian vision that again right
|
|
cool maybe snowden will join because he's you know he's joined pretty much every other uh
|
|
hey so uh that is attention i really do not want on the network thank you yeah really snowden
|
|
attention i don't tell any any attention from that that sort of area thank you we need to say
|
|
Brian yeah hey Brian yeah that we're great for Microsoft right security through obscurity right
|
|
absolutely yeah that's so let's just do that oh Brian has no microphone that's what that's why
|
|
he is not responding oh sorry Brian so okay Brian i will speak i will write i will read anything that
|
|
you type into the mumble text box wait a minute upon prior clearance i'm not anything i'm not
|
|
gonna just read off anything i have a rumor it's not it's not a good one from what can
|
|
and can blame i just saw lots of opportunities there yeah yeah that could have that could have
|
|
admitted it left my mouth i yeah i realized what i'd said yeah so you work in it oh okay okay
|
|
you say no more okay movie industry plus computer industry plus New Zealand equals Lord of the
|
|
Rings yeah yeah awesome awesome i mean it's the it's scenic hang out with wizards and smoke with them i
|
|
guess there was there there is production happening uh up north as well on other stuff um i think
|
|
even game now game of thrones i think it's just the digital stuff but i mean there are other
|
|
shows anyway that that happen up north but yeah pretty much if you're in production work you're you're
|
|
doing a hobbit stuff i guess not anymore but you were certain aliens may also have an insider
|
|
in other entertainment industries that may or may not have heard about certain things before certain
|
|
things came you'll wide stream so can you make it any more excuse i'm pretty clear on what he's
|
|
talking about yeah if you know you know if you don't yeah i mean if you don't yeah like there's
|
|
certain things in the entertainment industry that everybody knows and all you have to do is know
|
|
one person that that and you're like and you know the whole thing it and that's that's all i can say
|
|
i got to take a break you guys talk talk talk about me and how horrible i am and how i'm derailing
|
|
everything here what wrong away you knew you're only as i'm a surety really as as i leave six minutes
|
|
before we hit russia we'll be right back here on haka public radio please donate to josh i don't
|
|
know this host be back in a bit i would like to thank you in person for something oh no problem
|
|
oh wait for what yes you should always ask for what when you were talking the one of your
|
|
shores about mattes and that mattes is just analog computing that was oh yeah yeah found
|
|
i just suddenly lost my fear for mattes at that in that particular second is when i lost my fear
|
|
for mattes thank you wow okay yeah cool i think that was when one of the gaming episodes wasn't
|
|
yeah yeah yeah oh that's so cool um yeah it's fun because i've been doing a lot of
|
|
mattes for for studying for the ham radio which i don't have time to do but okay i'm still browsing
|
|
around and it was scaring me a lot and then i just okay well actually a lot of this stuff is just
|
|
formulas and formulas are just computer programs and here's a rule okay that makes sense
|
|
yeah the thing that taught me that was a class that i was taking at work on three on 3d
|
|
3d matrix math or something for for 3d modeling and stuff and like you wouldn't think that that would
|
|
encourage me at all in mattes but but seeing them like the teacher sort of write the equations
|
|
on the board and then and then plug in values it was just such an an eye opener for me because i
|
|
thought that that's just that's a that's a function like that's a computer function only my computer is
|
|
my brain and as long as i follow these rules it'll all work out into the right answer which somehow
|
|
i always screwed up but anyway let's not dwell on that part no no no and this is exactly why i got
|
|
into computers because i don't trust myself with uh you already heard my one plus one or whatever
|
|
i did i did it right that yeah yes i i can't trust myself so therefore i sit down in a right
|
|
computer and i verify that the formulas correct and i have somebody check it and then i can check
|
|
all the values not just some and that was actually stood to me because then i noticed copy and
|
|
pastors that all the people have met because yeah well you know i can trust my brain well 99% of
|
|
the time you can whereas i can't trust my brain 70% of the time so i check everything however that's
|
|
by the by and matrices was something that i did really enjoy when i was earning one of the few things
|
|
that i could get my head around yeah i'm gonna have to revisit that topic i didn't really
|
|
quite get what was being taught in the course that i took but but i i i feel like that was
|
|
partly the the the method of of teaching the course i didn't feel yeah i think i need to
|
|
in a teacher you can be looking or you can be all lucky yeah i mean like the teacher was really good
|
|
but but he he offloaded a bunch of the lessons on to fellow students which is a weird way to teach
|
|
a class um and so you you ended up getting sort of incorrect information that he would then amend at
|
|
the end of the session and it was just really confusing oh dear that's that's typical in states
|
|
in that the professors never there it's always a teaching assistant um so that strikes me
|
|
is very odd that i i yeah exactly i've heard it from from people in the states that the the
|
|
professors are never there uh they're in their their higher frat bro fraternity uh also called
|
|
academic academia uh smoking their pipes and you know saying how great their papers were and
|
|
everything um then having their t a's actually teach now you just uh i can just see John
|
|
called blowing himself out there trying to uh respond one of our hosts is a university professor
|
|
and from his shows i think he's very much involved in the class and in the the the one percent class
|
|
of professors and their academia could very well be could very well be getting paid by uh
|
|
foundations and carnigees and Rothschild just one second i got it brother that the child is here
|
|
that i need to deal with i mean i i kind of yeah i i avoid higher education but if if someone's
|
|
going to give me a free class i will i will always take a free class and that that after dropping
|
|
out initially all the classes that i've taken since have been paid by someone else so
|
|
i don't know sometimes i've wasted my time i guess but free knowledge i don't know it's worth it
|
|
i'm glad you dropped out and tuned in here on it for the radio oh wait oh my gosh is it
|
|
is it new year in russia yet let's do a time check here oh there it is
|
|
rushes now in 2018 yep there it was they beat us again darn it and by us i mean the us the us yeah
|
|
they didn't beat new zeland no but it's new zeland oh but i baked new zeland oh six
|
|
here at of a corny barnette no she's from the mainland there and from australia i i appreciate her
|
|
her music i think she's good oh okay yeah i don't really get a whole lot of australian music um over
|
|
here lately it's it's mainly i think everything is basically just everyone imports from america
|
|
it's just like non-stop local stuff is very hard to find unless you look for it so it's mostly American
|
|
yeah like a lot of american music i was really sort of disappointed i'm really sorry to hear that
|
|
yeah kin is there a local scene uh where you are like or do they import a lot of culture from america
|
|
yeah it's becoming more and more um there are quite a lot of techno comes from here um oh right that's
|
|
kind of almost the birthplace of techno in a way it actually is and you know what i found out why
|
|
that was because philips uh did um a lot of the initial chips for it and they promoted a lot of it
|
|
a lot of uh that's a lot of people down in nine to have them got into the scene and then
|
|
a spread into germany and around so it's still a big thing and of course we got a lot of um
|
|
um i think in every country in arland zoolia there's a lot of local music that would be
|
|
uh very specific as in i think a lot of probably offend a lot of dutch people but i'm
|
|
equally going to offend a lot of Irish people with the sentence afterwards there's a lot of
|
|
guys who do you know they uh you get quite a lot of umpa umpa music around the winter for
|
|
skiing time but you also get uh dutch music tends to be very formally starting off slow and then
|
|
building up and building up and into a crescendo and then orchestra yeah it's like as if somebody's
|
|
just plugged in a a formula it's kind of irritating and then Irish music not they Irish music like the
|
|
youtube's and the stuff that actually gets out but there there's a north a lot of country music
|
|
country and western music in arland that you know people would never have heard of from people who
|
|
have never been to america and you know they'll start off i was born in bread in texas when i never
|
|
left cabin and i've not the wrong with country and western music both
|
|
got them hacker radio blues oh yeah you can feel it
|
|
blues country Elvis so i need to go in a few minutes to have dinner
|
|
so okay are you gonna leave us unsupervised do you trust do you trust them
|
|
yes is this whole thing has nothing to do with me thank you very much
|
|
i can't have to shoot down the idea of being like the owner of hpr like at least once at least
|
|
now he's twice a week right every hour exactly some people think three minutes on the hour you
|
|
will hear Ken saying he's not the main contribute yeah I could really a lot was uh I don't
|
|
enough mean administrator oh no i'm not the administrator either that's Josh
|
|
but not the one with the big stick for the dibs in the spans yeah that'd be me
|
|
a coordinate you are kind of yeah i don't know what term actually i was going to say
|
|
coordinator but even that's a little bit more than using yeah i guess volunteer is the
|
|
the right word for it or dear leader say in what goes on other than what other people the same say
|
|
as everybody else um i probably will have more of an opinion but if i'm doing that i tend to do it
|
|
from here's the opinion as an admin and here's my own personal opinion which is not always clear to
|
|
people either so i found the best not to actually have an opinion that says hustle okay i've got to go
|
|
for dinner enjoy my i completely missed the end of that but he said his opinion was not clear and then
|
|
like he said something what what happened i think he said that he has no opinion which is an opinion
|
|
no it's a statement depends on your opinion
|
|
yeah wax and philosophical here on heck a public radio five minutes past russian new years
|
|
so uh what's what's new what's what's the word on the street what's going down it's
|
|
going down in the orgs and the the in it in it d's and the system d's and what's what's the lowdown
|
|
i think the the lowdown is that a lot of people don't have microphones on their computers
|
|
that's what i'm getting from people signing in rw a has a microphone but he was it or i
|
|
know that's not dummy is he's got cotton mouth something and rw a is where he was here one time rw a
|
|
uses his microphone judiciously yes unlike Casper here on a hydropole degree i mean i guess yeah
|
|
as long as you keep talking like in terms of radio i guess that's really the main thing
|
|
yeah you don't want the dead air berry that is various you don't you don't want those
|
|
we got to keep it live got to keep it streaming got to keep it flowing what it's all about
|
|
absolutely the cast cast the pods tasty pods cast them out one by one country after country
|
|
oh boy what's next ice norfolk iceland kinkston no no no i'm sorry norfolk island kinkston i don't
|
|
know norfolk island i have probably heard of kinkston i'm trying to picture what that is
|
|
kinkston done done by jamega beach boy pretty sure it's not that kinkston
|
|
gaw well maybe we shouldn't look it up person yeah okay apparently it's a small pacific island located
|
|
between australia and new zeland oh you think i would have heard of it or something but yeah
|
|
well if there's no movies being produced there then you are forgiven well you know i mean
|
|
people do travel for um holiday to all those little islands sort of in the pacific but i never
|
|
hear about norfolk island i hear about fiji a lot i hear about vando actu which i'd never even
|
|
heard of before so there's a couple that that have come to light since moving here but norfolk
|
|
island is not one of them must not have a good tourist industry or maybe it's owned by lariela
|
|
listen could be yeah or zuckerberg yeah maybe it's a new vassal state
|
|
well that's the new thing right is the um those independent countries that are just floating
|
|
you know i guess oil rigs or whatever where they microstates that's what they call them microstates
|
|
i was happy to hear that trump has lifted the band on offshore oil drilling yeah absolutely
|
|
let the oil gas let the oil flow down the river in the water that's drink rocket fuels
|
|
what you're drinking now all the way to pennsylvania on the pad with the fracking yeah
|
|
it's fracking let's fracking the pads fracking the pads fracking now it's fracking awesome yeah
|
|
all right so kletzoo me and you uh i've got a penciled in for january 5th or
|
|
january 6th your time is that right uh sounds likely it could be i'm sorry i meant
|
|
on the one zero zero five nine delta fox trot whiskey tango i got you penciled in on that
|
|
okay um i'm just looking at a calendar trying to figure out if i actually i'm out of double
|
|
book to myself i'll have to email you or email someone else to to change that at two minutes past
|
|
the hour we've learned that kletzoo isn't high demand for the cast and high demand no it's just
|
|
i'm really bad at scheduling it's all what did i give you a time for that did i propose a time
|
|
uh you gave me i think we we're discussing time zones and i mean i can appear
|
|
you know in any time zone at any time in any physical form date that you wish but it's just a matter
|
|
of your time time i will i will most likely email you with better details when i'm when i'm actually
|
|
somewhat concentrating on the subject okay well we'll take that offline uh or
|
|
exactly offline offline offline online and yet on a different channel a different channel
|
|
there you go yeah different protocol um yeah so oil workers um no offense to oil workers uh
|
|
i want oil workers to be safe um and oil is an important part of our industry um i'm not sure
|
|
that it has to be necessarily uh pressure doesn't have to be like by the by by sort of definition
|
|
of what is necessary i'm pretty sure it's not necessary i'm pretty sure it's a finite resource
|
|
that is going the way of the dinosaur pun intended uh i mean that's the thing a humans are so
|
|
ingenious we can do all kinds of things and we still can't like get past our oil addiction i'm just
|
|
i'm really confused by this it's it's because the the money involved and yeah i guess it's not
|
|
an oil addiction it's it's the addiction to all the the money that already exists in oil it's
|
|
the contract addiction yeah yeah um and there's there's hesitance to change uh if you look at
|
|
Germany as a great example they've gone to solar um almost i think they overtake i mean sometimes
|
|
they're like out producing um if you look in australia i think there was just a thing with their
|
|
wind turbines uh we're able to kick in in like 20 milliseconds or there was some new
|
|
breaking record i'll put it in the show notes here um but tesla's a big battery factor battery
|
|
farm out there uh was able something happened maybe some alpha beds took down some other alpha
|
|
beds in australia and then but tesla's wind turbine batteries were able to kick in and
|
|
interesting had not heard about that yeah yeah i'll i'll bring it up bring it up i'm kind of
|
|
interested or i'm kind of surprised i mean yuland does a lot of hydro um power because
|
|
we've got a lot of water here um but i mean here in wellington at least we have so much wind
|
|
and i'm really sort of constantly surprised that we don't have more turbines i mean there is
|
|
a turbine that i can see from my my window but but i mean i would just expect to see fields and
|
|
fields of turbines because the north oles and southerlies coming off of the ocean i mean the wind
|
|
is just really powerful here experience pain yes those that are resistant to change are doomed to
|
|
perish but the pain is great enough yeah it's i mean the pain is great are we not feeling the pain
|
|
are not are they're not refugees fleeing countries because of this thing that scientists
|
|
call climate change yeah people don't really acknowledge that that's why people are
|
|
feeling pain though well yeah but it's it's just to further the agenda right of of the oil
|
|
the oil the penguin the big penguin with the uh i think haliburden has a lot of investment
|
|
in oil already so we'll have to get batman to take out the penguin hang him by the by his
|
|
bootstraps over the the boiling acid whatever yeah we are just now feeling the pain i believe is
|
|
what yeah very yeah see that's the alien mind yeah just you and just go into that i was going
|
|
forward in time you go backwards forwards i mean i i know how this whole podcast is gonna go i just
|
|
you know i'm just participating just so you know it's whatever yes uh which is this change
|
|
linux gaming great example thank you i'm actually glad you brought that up that can get us
|
|
out of the out of the oil out of the muck in the sludge and back into some some geeky topics um
|
|
when i was going through a career oh not a career change but a job change um i'd
|
|
needed my one degree and was getting another degree and uh i kind of self-imposed a challenge to
|
|
myself um i had a friend uh yeah oh actually that might be a good podcast is how to get these
|
|
windows guys off of windows and on to linux for gaming um that was something that was a barrier
|
|
that i ran into um yeah i mean that's that's a great point because you you have to get you know
|
|
you got to deal with the drivers and i think the only thing i was able to get running game-wise was
|
|
like postal something uh that was built really i although isn't steam now steam but that's a
|
|
enough steam so i mean steam is on linux and then there's a bunch of games that you can get via
|
|
steam that run on linux but then steam is the game people want i don't know but yeah but then
|
|
steam's a closed source thing and two so it's another proprietary okay but this is okay so
|
|
i've i've often thought and i've i've yeah game the whole game issue for me has has often been
|
|
something that i've i've thought about probably too much um but like games being open source i'm not
|
|
sure how much i really care about games being open source while while the knowledge contained
|
|
within a within the programming of a game is important um the data output of a game is basically
|
|
the same no matter what the user right i mean i i think of games as being more like an appliance
|
|
you know it's like not really uh it is software it is a program but i mean it's it's not something
|
|
that's like the the end result of my game is the exact same as everyone else's game you know it's
|
|
it's always basically the same input and output does the source really matter to me i'm not convinced
|
|
that it does so you're saying you're making a philosophical argument against gaming
|
|
no i'm i'm not sure what i'm doing but i'm i'm trying to make a philosophical i'm trying to make
|
|
it more of an argument against gaming and needing to be open source yeah for me to feel comfortable
|
|
with it and all of this is kind of all theoretical for me anyway because i don't you're not a game
|
|
game right i don't really game that much i mean i do in the analog world but i don't really
|
|
video game that much um so i feel like i'm probably not speaking fairly i mean the the thing
|
|
about gaming that should be open source i think is for for cultural purposes right because
|
|
people i mean you were just talking about quake and doom and duke nukam and stuff like this so
|
|
people people know these games and they feel attached to those games and those games become a
|
|
representation of a time in their life yes it's nostalgic so if those things go away then that's
|
|
unfair to that's that's their culture that is now being wrapped up in closed source and i don't
|
|
approve of that so i think eventually games should be opened so it's simply to preserve the culture
|
|
of them as as they all are eventually i mean you can run your doom i mean so there's the argument
|
|
there that you just you'll just have to wait 10 years or so yeah for someone to like emulate
|
|
the platform upon which they run and i mean i'm kind of even then and and even then it might
|
|
still be like i mean take nintendo for example uh you know you can't act me i think legally
|
|
do any uh emulation intent i mean they might have a sanctioned app or so i i i don't keep up
|
|
with that but you know yeah and that bugs me yeah the fact that i mean that if well i'm
|
|
that's i guess getting into the whole copyright issue but yeah i mean there's just the fact that
|
|
oh you're not allowed to emulate this but we're all going to turn a blind eye and there's
|
|
going to be this huge gray area where we're all like we know that it's happening and we know that
|
|
it's okay but technically it's illegal it's just so stupid it's like at some point we just all
|
|
have to agree it's okay now but yeah that goes to money yeah yeah but you mean it's stupid because
|
|
they're not even making money up for this stuff you know like if i emulate i don't know super mario
|
|
brother is one right now you know it's not like they're selling it anywhere else as far as i know
|
|
i mean i know that they're selling mario brother things but you know like it's just i don't know it's
|
|
so stupid i mean disney's i i think the biggest example um because after 50 years things are
|
|
supposed to enter the public domain in the states i believe yeah i think 70 but whatever yeah
|
|
yeah but so the mouse should be in the public domain yeah that that constantly sort of
|
|
amazes me how they keep getting that loophole but i mean they're they're huge they're disney they
|
|
are absolutely i mean i think people failed to see how to to realize just how big disney is at
|
|
this point you know with everything that they i mean basically all entertainment is disney at this
|
|
point i think it's going to be between amazon and disney yeah yeah i think that those are the two
|
|
that will be left in the end it'll be me clattu versus uh disney and and uh amazon amazon yeah that's
|
|
that's the post apocalypse right there yep you heard it here first well we'll technically have
|
|
d o d d dummy but um he won't be able to speak to us he'll he'll just be texting us so
|
|
yeah i mean i prefer to rage against the machine uh if if i were to do anything but that's what
|
|
again we uh we had a pirate on here earlier i'm not were you here for the pirate
|
|
no i've missed the pirate uh he did yeah he was only on briefly i think it was at the end of his
|
|
of his shift on the ship uh so he had he had he was he uh yeah he was kind of a rumble mumble but he
|
|
was talking about uh steam engines and and you can look up in the show notes it's like oh that's
|
|
handsome handsome pirate yep yeah so yeah i know him yeah so he he was on for a little bit um i think
|
|
he was talking about kind of the the alienation uh that one gets what um if you're when you're so
|
|
involved in uterus and the matrix if you know are you irl or afk yeah yeah that's that is a really
|
|
good point i i guess i don't really most of my social interaction is over the computer so i really
|
|
don't differentiate that much but at the same time i do know that you would use afk you would use afk
|
|
i guess so yeah yeah if have you watched uh the pirate bay afk afk new no shounen coming at you
|
|
that i believe uh are you familiar with the movie easy writer oh yeah okay uh i've heard some alien
|
|
uh of others of other uh generations refer to that as the movie of their their generation um i
|
|
would say that aliens of of next generations would uh consider the pirate bay afk uh as the the
|
|
movie of of our alien generation and it's yeah it's i mean it's free i i thought it's a great example
|
|
of how films can be produced uh from like kick starters and stuff like that i think that's a great
|
|
a great thing um but yeah the whole movie was produced from a kick starter because everybody loves
|
|
the bay so people chipped in with their bitcoins and whatnot and so a guy made made a movie and he
|
|
followed the guys around and uh and i will say no more because you got to watch the movie here
|
|
okay cool yeah i've i've opened it in a tab and everybody knows what that means
|
|
that's tabular totally tabular dude yeah eventually i might i might actually watch it
|
|
yeah you really should i mean i don't know you i think you've put in like three different
|
|
three minutes you know three hour long videos that i'm supposed to watch but oh yeah so yeah
|
|
yeah uh i'll talk to you in on 2019 uh yeah yeah exactly yeah yeah when once we caught up see
|
|
that's the thing with aliens we we can watch everything concurrently actually it's just uploaded to
|
|
our minds so we don't need to yeah yeah it's not really a problem it's oh it's it's an advantage
|
|
Brian Brian says super feedback on oh wait what's he talking about super feedback on the laptop
|
|
must have taken a fall to many i'll need to go swipe a phone device and phone is in quotes i'm not
|
|
really sure he doesn't want to use the eyes no eyes oh okay i got you i think yeah it could be it could be
|
|
it's not it's it's not a dumb phone no it's a smart phone it's a smart phone it's with a dumb operator
|
|
no no could be i don't know the operator no i no i was just i was just a joke just a joke off the cuff
|
|
no i was no that's something that uh that i've discussed with other generations of uh generations
|
|
above generations that they see people in today's society you know uh this was actually mentioned
|
|
on some social uh medias that you know what if imagine that there was a drug that made people
|
|
look at their hands all the time and it was it was like overtaking the nation and there's this
|
|
like huge problem right imagine if that was a drug well i mean that's essentially what smart phones
|
|
you know are yeah i can't stand the term smart phone it's just such a horrible term it's just a
|
|
stupid term you know like why is it well it's better and i don't understand i think they use that
|
|
term because uh the japanese uh when they first invented it they called it a hand job so that didn't
|
|
translate well that doesn't translate well yeah yeah yeah it's unfortunate no no we left
|
|
dipped out how was dinner dinner was excellent excellent because it's the one meal that the kids
|
|
actually eat all of them they all eat stuff but not necessarily the same stuff yeah yeah you
|
|
you know you get what you can you take what you can get eat the small minutes there yeah yeah
|
|
yeah exactly right i'm gonna go have a coffee i assure you approve i do do we i do go look up
|
|
cloutous shows is it like uh how to uh mainline coffee
|
|
yes that's exactly what they are far off of free base and coffee beans and uh yeah i think we
|
|
have a series on coffee don't i have beverages or at least i yeah i think i think possibly it sounds
|
|
right okay i would say i would say i would say a bug i would speaking to dad dummy i i would call
|
|
him bugs or insects that that's what i would call thumbs it just bugs and terminals are to use
|
|
the terminal terminal we're talking about airplanes are we talking about a movie with Tom Hanks
|
|
talking about manline home to why they were talking about or why they did call terminals terminals
|
|
i mean terminal is the end of something so i get that but i mean i would think that client
|
|
or workstation or something like that would be more logical i i didn't see what was wrong with
|
|
hand job i mean it doesn't everybody like that yeah yeah i mean i thought that was fine although
|
|
it's not good because you can't give the yes smart bugs smart bugs yeah that's that i mean why not
|
|
definitely smart bugs smart bugs oh jeez you look up Gerald turn on 830 yeah yeah in the morning oh hey
|
|
nope no that's not the time that's not the time where we cross into north folk islands no we did that
|
|
already i think we we must be coming up on i think didn't we i think this is Australia and
|
|
Australia yeah i think broken ho smart bugs smart bugs i like that i'll put that in there
|
|
right seed yeah yeah yeah smart phone to smart bugs uh if you remember in the matrix first thing
|
|
they got to do to get neo out is they got to squash that bug right because that's the plant
|
|
they got it they got to kill it but they can rip them out i've actually never seen those movies
|
|
any of them i'm i don't there's no need to show no those
|
|
terminal velocity i think that was actually a movie neuromancer is worth a read though
|
|
neuromancer i've heard of it i've not read it is that one by Gibson or is that the one by the other
|
|
guy Stevenson or did i make both of those names up Gibson you got it yeah i don't think i've ever
|
|
read anything by him i've read something by the other guy and was really not impressed and it
|
|
kind of turned me off of cyberpunk for a long time uh and then i got back into it once i found shadow
|
|
run um also think it deserves an honorable mention because uh reddiger offered me the book but i
|
|
was all already i already had the book offered to me and already owned it uh was uh cryptonomicon
|
|
oh yeah yeah i've heard of that one as well i think the one i i read was snow crash
|
|
it's all coming back to me now snow crash i did not didn't didn't really like it but maybe
|
|
i was just not in the right place for it maybe i need to go back and read more of this stuff
|
|
yeah cryptonomicon that's i've talked to many many many a geek and
|
|
they all say that uh that they've all been oh have you read crypton oh my god you kind of
|
|
be cryptonomicon but it was prophetic in in many ways because it was written before a lot of those
|
|
exact things happened that they talked about in the book so it was probably written by out of
|
|
the fellow alien like a travel through time space uh right hey pegwall i mean mr.
|
|
whirly hey claw two how's it going pretty good i've been here sooner but uh i was focused on
|
|
beating bloodborne so that's a game i presume yes yes have you were dark souls oh yeah yeah okay
|
|
i i played but like one of them for a little bit i'm not much in the gaming and i don't game
|
|
anymore that's how i got my start but i i don't need that anymore i picked up dark souls not
|
|
knowing what it was back uh for ps3 and i sat down and started playing it and i just couldn't
|
|
understand why i kept dying and and i kept playing and i kept playing because i thought well it's
|
|
probably just me so i just kept playing and i kept playing and playing and finally i had to stop
|
|
for the evening and i i kind of looked up what it was on on the internet and yeah i was like okay
|
|
this is a this is a thing this is this is an experience that i'm having so yeah
|
|
it was good i had fun memories of it but boy was it yeah it lives up to its reputation
|
|
i i'd never played a dark souls game before this one and uh i started out and the first enemy
|
|
i saw is like well if it's half dead already i'ma punch it no it murdered the crap out of me
|
|
oh we lost glad too it's okay we we've had some interruptions here and there i had some
|
|
Van Allen belt radiation radioactive waves that interrupted my my transmission
|
|
earlier so yeah sure the Van Allen radiation belt is where ups routes all of my packages through
|
|
it's the quickest way yeah DHL on the other hand they go through the center of the earth
|
|
DHL enjoy getting your packages in two weeks yeah yeah there's a whole thing with DHL i
|
|
i actually saw uh in on the blue marble there was a DHL in the states wait weren't they
|
|
not allowed to operate anymore because of some kind of uh import export thing that shouldn't
|
|
have been going on or say i don't know um i have no but the last time i had to use them
|
|
i'd ordered camera flashes off of amazon and it took two and a half weeks to get to my house
|
|
yeah i'm sure there's a good acronym someone can make up for DHL like does hate letters or
|
|
something i don't know the dead letter office that's not for ddh hell like oh hell
|
|
don't have it molested perfect yeah yeah all right we're checking in and eight
|
|
earned a machine three hours and thirty seven minutes into the cast here
|
|
and it's how we're doing it keeping it strong keeping alive by two got intercepted
|
|
but mr roly is here tell us tell us something that we tell us please extoll extoll
|
|
virtues and wisdom pannas oh jeez man i don't really have much right now
|
|
can you speak for your broadcasting your transmissions from or where you maybe
|
|
um anyone that listens to the lunatics link texia will know that i uh hot in the diana and uh
|
|
um thirty one yeah been been uh doing lunatics podcasts for like a decade now
|
|
no nice nice so your season your season yeah i guess in the in the linux world i've as my career is
|
|
going this way or that way it's it's ebbed and flowed as to whether i'm working on linux or
|
|
proprietary software so yeah i was starting to say earlier i'd at one point uh i'd imposed a
|
|
challenge because i i'd come from a windows background but i had a very good friend that
|
|
was extolling the virtues of you butu he's like oh it's great it's great it's great um and so i
|
|
tried that out and that was my first what i wanted to be able to do was to do everything i did with
|
|
the pc where with a windows uh with linux and with you butu it it makes it oh now especially it makes
|
|
it very easy but back in 2004 or 2003 it wasn't as easy so you you had to get a little bit uh you
|
|
know get a little bit into the code to do some things even just like to get the mouse to work or
|
|
but yeah so where do you see the linux uh i mean most of the devices on the interwebs are all
|
|
running linux or some derivation of uh where's it going next well if uh if things are to be
|
|
believed you know what with quantum computing then that'll be the next big hurdle i think
|
|
say don't ask me about quantum computing because i don't know anything about it
|
|
i looked into it once uh made no sense to me it's so at the the theory as i understand it
|
|
is that it is a way of computing where it's not just a one or a zero but you can have it being
|
|
both at the same time or it's it that's really i like that explanation uh yeah so it's not necessarily
|
|
binary yeah it it it's a whole different animal uh and the other thing as it as it goes to
|
|
encryption is that the reason quantum computing is is on the horizon is because they're working on
|
|
types of uh devices where if well that that's the whole underlying mechanics of quantum computing
|
|
is is that if if it's observed then it changes so there's like no way to change it i again i don't
|
|
i'm i'm not a math scientist i don't i don't understand these things uh but that's essentially if
|
|
if i could boil it down yes it's not a one or a zero you can have like any kind of combination
|
|
it's crazy but that makes it really easy to crack every any type of encryption that's in one
|
|
of the zero is it's just like hey yeah ultimately it's either one of those two values
|
|
yeah so yeah yeah so it took with a quantum uh computer it's like forget about it and encryption
|
|
is is not even you know it's invalid um it makes sense yeah yeah it's kind of sad though i really like
|
|
the idea that everything can be broken down into binary decisions you know like
|
|
not just in computing but in real life like oh i can i do if i can just crack this code of
|
|
of reality either a one or a zero there's security there you're going to drive yourself insane
|
|
yeah i can't do that there's no you're like oh everything's black and or white yeah yeah it's
|
|
completely not true yeah yeah but if you if you get you got to step up you got to get more afk time
|
|
the mic yeah yeah what are we talking about quantum computing and or uh the reality oh dear
|
|
i'd say did i just want to show no no no i'm reading d o d d d dummies the comments
|
|
quite i'm not the only one that can that can't pronounce his name there's no way to pronounce that
|
|
yeah i wish he would thank you i think he does that on purpose at this point
|
|
because he'd be a did the dummy to try to rip up and then announce it exactly guys also he did
|
|
pronounce it properly one time on one of his shows yeah it was uh back on the original unix thing
|
|
i cannot remember you know what i have done though is uh and nobody's actually noticed this i have
|
|
taken the intro of all the hosts and every host has got a specific web file that they pronounce
|
|
their name and if you go to the hpr main website the very first page you will see a thing that says
|
|
meet the team have you ever played that i think i tried you're talking about that the web file or
|
|
the the file right up at the top of the main page yeah the one that's underneath the paint
|
|
meet the team please and then please tell about taking the show i think i did try to play that
|
|
once and it didn't play so then i gave up and never went back up to it d o d d dummy that's
|
|
ridiculous that's a good team adding orders claw two have you ever went back and listened to like
|
|
some of the first things you were on or did oh good gosh now i did that a while back actually nobody
|
|
should do that ever a great and uh it was the some of the early episodes of linux cranks
|
|
and i'm listening to it i'm like i didn't recognize my own voice like i'm sitting there i was like
|
|
who is that person with the strange is not quite southern accent who is this person
|
|
then i'm listening more and i i heard myself and or no i think it was peter go hey peggy and i said yes
|
|
and again i was like oh where did i get that accent from
|
|
why don't i'm like mr wear a little lee i'll work with this already
|
|
it's just the uh the name i've been going by everywhere else online it's uh it's more of my
|
|
public kind of thing you know not just the linux community kind of name
|
|
wouldn't have anything to do with the site uh the dan pull up with him
|
|
oh jeez oh i don't know about that kim found one
|
|
my god my god okay sorry carry on yes go go go wait we have to say hi to shadow
|
|
maybe shadow doesn't have a microphone on his computer this is basically the evening
|
|
of no one having a microphone on their computer what's this evening thing you were talking about
|
|
oh early morning sorry mid afternoon surely i was wondering how to practically force
|
|
everybody to go to u tc yeah well me and uh Taj and um and pokey and x100 one we're talking about
|
|
that on a dev u random show yeah i heard and i don't even think it's u tc that we need i just
|
|
think it's just a standard i like it's it's a number at at a certain point of the rotation of
|
|
the globe and we all use that number and if we don't want to lose our numbers then we could use
|
|
something else we could use a letter it should match the numbers at all it should be banana time
|
|
it's uh what's banana i don't know like they like the chinese it's the year of the monkey it's just
|
|
i think yeah yeah okay yeah sure i'll go with that i'll go with that yeah yeah yeah it's alpha
|
|
follow closely by beta yeah yeah pinging now not even necessarily in any order
|
|
yeah it's weird why is your early texting now your your microphone works you can speak
|
|
because i don't want to interrupt your ejada awesome oh please do i interrupt to do
|
|
look ken fallen you're a beautiful human being i dare not do such a thing no ken fallen is my
|
|
online persona that i very carefully honed if you knew me in real life you realize what a dickhead i
|
|
i stand by my statement no comment no comment no is there a hey cazper can you paste in that
|
|
ether pad link so that new people can go there if they want to where where are we going uh to that
|
|
ether pad uh like uh that you gave me earlier yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah it's on the main page
|
|
i would be our i think it's on every page of hbr if you go just to make things easy and accessible
|
|
i'm sorry i just step away for a minute rick and morty had broken the space time continuum again
|
|
so i i i had to lay i had to lay down the wall again i just thought they didn't do time
|
|
stuff it was just dimensions no well it's it depends on here you ask it's complicated it is it's
|
|
complex as long as they don't go into the time you want me space stuff there's many levels of levels
|
|
okay need to vote should i do the arning or should i scan some books you're called scan scan
|
|
can scan question yeah question for ken who who is not the leader here or the moderator he just
|
|
he just uses tone balloon two yes he's he's he's he's he's he's the head volunteer no i think it was
|
|
i stay there where everybody took a step back but yes what's the
|
|
yeah uh so do you go the distance or are you are you doing all 20
|
|
good god no you're mental including um it's also a no i'm going to drop off very shortly as soon as
|
|
more americans come on and they can uh take it from there um americans yep those who are not
|
|
up at five o'clock in the morning those who are normal time and going to carry through and then in
|
|
the morning i will go for a full eight hour sleep and then i will join back on again tomorrow morning
|
|
and close out the show so who's going to moderate in your absence who's going to be our dear leader
|
|
good god anyway arning or uh scanning guys what is it scanning i my vote scanning
|
|
i print the books before scanning that that was brion sorry i don't take credit for that i was just
|
|
reading it out chat where are you where are you are you in america or are you somewhere else i'm in
|
|
california oh my gosh nice okay excellent what time is it there early riser it is 551 right now
|
|
oh yeah mental people seriously mental i'm not going to stay up for super long i just popped in
|
|
say hi hi everybody's doing let's let's not let's not call people mental that's that's that's
|
|
micro aggression i do apologize sorry about that are you getting off of workshop or you did you
|
|
just literally wake up to say hi and then then you're going to go back to bed um i woke up not necessarily
|
|
just say hi but uh i was in michigan for a week so my sleep schedule is all messed up yeah yeah
|
|
Okay. By the way, I'm Josh. If people associate my username with who I am, we did not. And we were just,
|
|
we were just telling people, wait, which Josh? Oh, no, it's toast. Oh, no, it's toast. Oh,
|
|
Josh, we were just, we were just telling people about an hour ago to donate money to you.
|
|
Yes, we're doing a fundraising drive. We're doing, yeah, we were trying to offer up awards and
|
|
stuff, but we couldn't really think of anything. But we're working on it, man. I'll do your
|
|
money. Yeah, provided that you send him all of the stuff via mail and pay postage. No
|
|
spans or dives. We're coming up with lots of small print fine print that people are going to have
|
|
to read before you're after giving money to you. But the upfront offerings are going to sound great.
|
|
Well, and the whole concept behind it was, I mean, they can sign up for a hosting plan and get
|
|
something awesome that way. Yeah, that would support the show. And that would be for interested.
|
|
How much would a hosting plan with an honest toast? So we re-structured some of our plans a few
|
|
years ago and our basic share plan. And I'll get into why the prices went up here in a second.
|
|
I actually have to look them up. I think the lowest one's 1249 now per month.
|
|
Yeah, per month. So when we first started, we were trying to be the cheapest guys on the block
|
|
because, oh, hey, everybody's just looking for a cheap host. But what we found is most people
|
|
when they saw the prices are like, there's got something wrong with this. They can't be only
|
|
$5 a month, especially in California. That's some high price. Well, globally, I mean, we do stuff
|
|
all over the world. But we typically got a kind of pushback of, well, I don't understand how can
|
|
you do this for $5 a month. And the big thing for us was we weren't doing unlimited. And if
|
|
I ever get a wild hair and decide to do a show again, which I will, don't worry, Ken.
|
|
You get a free card from me. It has to be said all the time, I bug you behind the scenes.
|
|
But unlimited doesn't exist. All you guys probably realize this, but your major hosting companies
|
|
go off and advertise unlimited storage unlimited, memory, all these things that just crap you can't do.
|
|
It's not possible. So that was kind of where the honest piece came in is like, okay, we're going
|
|
to be up front with you and be like, you pay us this amount of money, you're going to get this
|
|
amount of resources. So there's no surprise. Oh, you've been suspended for high resource usage.
|
|
It's the best policy, someone to say. Yeah, yeah. That actually was our slogan for a little while.
|
|
I mean, we've been around since 2014 now. So we're coming up on four years.
|
|
How's the business model? I like it. Yeah. Since we restructured and redid our plans and
|
|
redid the site, we've seen probably in this last year a 300 percent growth. Oh, cool.
|
|
Good. I'm very glad. So it's definitely going in the right direction. We're starting to see
|
|
some larger clients take notice, especially since we're not afraid to do things with AWS as well.
|
|
Yeah, that's a big drive. So say somebody wants to have a redundant copy of their site.
|
|
We can actually set up virtual servers that will then replicate to AWS. Oh, nice.
|
|
And we manage the whole thing so they don't have to deal with any of the support issues or trying
|
|
to figure out how to manage the server. So it's a complete, we manage everything in-house for them.
|
|
And if something should happen, they have that failover back up into AWS. Although we've been
|
|
very lucky and some of our security measures have helped us kind of fly under the radar for a lot
|
|
of attacks. Unfortunately, you guys seem to run around with a big bulls eye on your back time.
|
|
Hello, hacker name. Thank you very much. It's horrible. Yeah, God. That is, yeah.
|
|
Also, even if you're going up to somebody, hey, I really like to do a show and web of what's your
|
|
website. Yeah. Yeah. It's a HPR. I don't know if you're ready.
|
|
Right. And it's the security logs that get from your server are just holy smokes.
|
|
Some of the craziness that I've seen, specifically like they tried to do SQL injections all the
|
|
damn time. Yeah. So I think I counted it as like a party every second or so or every minute there's
|
|
about 20. Wow. Yeah. That sounds about right. So you're under constant DDoS is what it sounds
|
|
like. Yeah. You guys were, yeah, with the scripts I've written specifically for HPR and with the
|
|
new web application firewall that we've installed, it's definitely helped significantly minimize the
|
|
workload that's had to been had to be done by the server. Thank you, sir. It really was not funny
|
|
there for a while. Josh, last three months has been. No, it was it was bad for me. I wake up and there was
|
|
something else wrong. And then I contact you and then yeah, it was it was legitimately depressing
|
|
to hear. It was just depressing. Yeah. Yeah. If I remember correctly, that's about the time that the
|
|
alien brothers came on. Sorry about that guys. They don't want to hear the truth. And if you got
|
|
the target on your back, you're saying, you know, you might be saying the truth. Sorry.
|
|
Oh, and Josh, the upload thing is a there's a single quote in the file name. Yeah, I saw you post
|
|
that back and I was like, it will drop box sanitize it. And that's why I didn't have the error.
|
|
Can I download it through Dropbox? It went right right up. No problems. I was like, maybe the
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permissions change. I did work. It doesn't make sense. It should have ran just fine before, but okay.
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Yeah, exactly. I was bit my head against the wall. Why is it working? Then I tried to file a
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little size bigger and then another one smaller and then okay, but apparently this is the thing.
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And it's been I see pulse about to go back to 2001. So I rather than just trying to fix it,
|
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I told Kevin Toplow to get him without the backslash. I think to fix that, we may just want to go
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off and sanitize. I mean, that's that's typically the safest method. No problem doing that.
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But the problem is that what the way they say to do that is you pull in the array and you do move
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to whatever. And when I do that, that was called by the upload folder, but it's not even getting
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that far. So something's stopping up before it even gets that far. Oh, you know, it's probably
|
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killing it is the web application firewall. Yeah, could be because that would look like an injection.
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Yes, very nice. Excellent. Well done, Kevin.
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So I don't mind telling people like to not do shitty comments on your
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I do everything underscore if I need any punctuation. Yeah, exactly. And I don't think there's
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any shame in selling people that that's the policy. That's that's a point that should be underscored.
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Very good. But no, I, uh, yeah, I think I'll do that with the 403R,
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please, we've noticed this. If you're trying to do this, then, uh, please rename your file.
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I'm trying to press the back. Sounds good. Yeah, I'll do that. Don't leave the, leave the firewall
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as it is. Yep. Okay. Case closed. Anybody would like to donate to Josh at an honest host?
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I will dedicate studio time recording or song place on. I'll be here. I like that the shared
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hosting comes with FFN big installed. Like, that's one of the points of, of, of the plan.
|
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FFN big installed. Like, FFN big is great. I love it. You know, we had some people that were just like,
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hey, you know, we moved from this host. They didn't have it installed or they had it installed.
|
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They upgraded as it wasn't installed anymore. I know why there was a real simple script you could use
|
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on cento six. It doesn't work on cento seven. Uh, natively, you have to go and fix some stuff.
|
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It's at system D. Yeah. It's at system D and a couple, uh, dependencies. I don't think
|
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translate it over a while, but we got working. Have you moved up to, uh, to, uh, I can't think of it.
|
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Of course, the secure system D stuff, SE, SE, import, yes. So for our shared servers,
|
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we are limited by what C panel supports. Uh, there was a point in time where I was like, oh,
|
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I'm going to write my own control panel. And it's going to be amazing. It's going to do all the stuff.
|
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But there's two things working against me. One is time. Yep. I, I work my butt off, uh,
|
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for various things. And so having extra time is not always, uh, an option. And then the other
|
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thing is is C panel's kind of the industry standard. So unless you have something that makes it
|
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very similar, uh, users will complain because it's not even if it's better. That is funny. That's
|
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really funny to me to hear people comfortable in C panel because I'm never comfortable in C panel
|
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myself. But I, yeah, it's funny to people that that's the defacto now. Yeah. It's, it's way better
|
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than Plex. There are Plex, not Plex. Plex I use for streaming my movies. Uh, Plex is, uh,
|
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I run into some really hardcore fans of it. And I'm just like, why? It's so poorly written
|
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in, doesn't manage stuff properly. But that, that's another tangent.
|
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I don't mind C panel. Like, I'm, I'm used to it now. What I cannot stand a web host.
|
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Oh, we're going to have C panel, but we're going to put our own little design spin on it.
|
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Oh, my gosh. Yeah. Like a, like, go daddy, for example.
|
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Like, you get used to standard C panel and then you go, well, where is everything? Why?
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Yeah. How would you do this? Well, it's a beauty of GUI's, right? I mean, someone
|
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moves a button on you and you're, you're, you're stuck for like three hours. Yeah. It's,
|
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and what frustrates me about that is they don't update with the latest, uh, release.
|
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So there's actually a really nice new layout with C panel that actually makes more sense
|
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than the old version. And it's a new modern look. But I know what you're talking about with
|
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they're still using the previous generations theme. And it just, it looks old. It looks like garbage.
|
|
Yeah. I'm pretty sure that a, um, dream host did their own version of it. And, uh, you'll find
|
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things in the weirdest spaces. Like, uh, there's one lidable just says goodies. Just
|
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share for like things that, you know, should be under like security.
|
|
Yeah. So go to, you're not going to, uh, dream host actually, uh, build their own control panel.
|
|
They don't use, uh, centers or any red hat based the last side checked. Um, most of their stuff
|
|
is Debian based and everything's clustered. Dream host is absolutely on my shit list.
|
|
Yeah. They, they've been really slight downhill. Yeah. They've gone, they, I was going to say,
|
|
they've really kind of fallen out of favor. I remember at one point they were, they were like,
|
|
really kind of, I don't know, they seemed pretty solid. Um, I mean, I never used them, but I mean,
|
|
from, from reports that I got from other people, they seem to satisfied. And lately, I just hear
|
|
all kinds of complaints about it. Yeah. They've run into a lot of issues, uh, stemming from all
|
|
part of it is, is their support team's gotten cocky. It's no longer customer first focus. It's, uh,
|
|
you're stupid. You don't know what you're doing. And we're not going to help you. Uh, the other
|
|
thing that they've run into, uh, on and off is they get their entire mail server blacklisted.
|
|
They're outgoing mail. So, and because of how they set it up, uh, one cluster getting blacklisted,
|
|
means everybody gets black. Means like 20 some odd servers get posted. Yeah. That's bad.
|
|
It's gotten so bad to the point where they now recommend their customers set up, like Google apps
|
|
for, yeah, but yeah, that's so funny when, when places just are just like, you know what? Just,
|
|
just use Gmail. Just, just do that. It's like, no, that's not what, that's not the answer. Like,
|
|
I know that you think that's the answer, but that is not their right answer.
|
|
It's like, no, that's why I bought a domain so I could have an email address. Yeah, exactly,
|
|
exactly. At that dome, but I had a, a coconut install with Dreamhost, which is KOK EN. It's a
|
|
CMS pretty much just for photographers. And it works fantastically. And every time they would
|
|
update something, it would just neatly break my install, like to the point where I'd have to
|
|
delete everything, reupload everything. And then I'd go, hey, why is this broken now? They'd go,
|
|
oh, I don't know. Hang on, let us look. Oh, we get a lot of PHP errors. And that's pretty much
|
|
all they would tell me. And I'm like, they're like, oh, well, maybe you set it up wrong. I'm like,
|
|
the install has been there for months. It was working just fine.
|
|
You're going, well, did you set the ownership right? I'm like, yes, like the, the install script
|
|
had to be 755, I think it was. Are you sure? I'm like, yes, I'm sure. I'm sure there's, you
|
|
can go and look at some logs to see what I've done. I think that's probably a good argument.
|
|
Well, for not using Dreamhost, but also for like containerization, I guess. I mean, that's
|
|
probably a classic case of why you would do. Put that into a container. Docker. Yep.
|
|
Oh, see, I'm one of those people that's not huge on Docker, mostly because I'm a
|
|
muskled VM guy. I mean, yeah, I'm not really into it either, but it's there. And I think that
|
|
that use case would be, I mean, I guess, as I said, the right answer probably is just not to
|
|
use Dreamhost because they're obviously screwing around in your space, you know, but to protect
|
|
that from from someone changing stuff from underneath you. Yeah. Either I guess like Josh says
|
|
a VM or a container. It's the problem with what Dreamhost does specifically on that sense is
|
|
they're making changes in that, notifying people. And I would almost wonder if they're not
|
|
making changes like their PHP version and messing stuff up, or they're not installing the same
|
|
modules when they're upgrading. And I've seen them do some really like what the hell are you
|
|
doing guys? Because it reflects bad. I mean, I trained for a while there. I was working for
|
|
another hosting company. I'm not going to mention them just because I'll respect. But
|
|
it's a bad practice. Yeah. Dreamhost calls. Sorry, Josh, I'm going to interrupt you just to say
|
|
Happy New Year, Brisbane, Portmores B and Guam and some others. Go ahead.
|
|
Oh, well, happy New Year to them, but Dreamhost actually was poaching my staff. And so they
|
|
legitimately, anytime I got somebody that was trained up and was taking phone calls, maybe three
|
|
weeks later, I'd get a note saying that these were the last two weeks. And I find out that they're
|
|
over at Dreamhost because hostels were willing to pay them more money. That's pretty bad.
|
|
That's why I got to do the old Apple, Microsoft, you know, signs some stupid agreement that you
|
|
said. It's not illegal. That's illegal in some cases. I mean, businesses try to respect it,
|
|
but you can't enforce it in California. Well, Glad to and I find all business disrespectful,
|
|
but that's a whole another thing. Except in honest. Except in honest, because they're honest.
|
|
Yeah. We try. Definitely, definitely try. So what you guys are saying is they're so honest,
|
|
we don't have to seize the means of production. Correct. Right. Right. We won't have to
|
|
nationalize their resources. The host I went with. I'm sorry, Josh. I'm very sorry for saying
|
|
this, but I went with in motion because they were like, hey, we fully support Coke and so do we
|
|
actually. Yeah. I just found a new web host. There you go. All right. All right. We got our first
|
|
contribution for sale. Yeah. Yeah. I'm familiar with in motion. I'm not a big fan because they
|
|
don't keep their stuff necessarily up to date. That's that's one of the security practices that we do
|
|
is we maintain all the servers. We actually notify customers in advance like, hey, we're going to be
|
|
dropping support for this version of PHP. Come. Blah. I think we're actually dropping support for
|
|
the day. Yeah. That's cool. I could do it. I've somehow skated by for years and not actually paid
|
|
for hosting. I just keep getting free plans. So I don't know. It's kind of kind of difficult to
|
|
compete with zero dollar hosting. Yeah. Unfortunately. I totally get zero dollar hosting is nice.
|
|
Yeah, but there becomes a point where you need if you're running a business, there's no way I would
|
|
recommend. Oh, my gosh. Yeah. No, I wouldn't. Yeah. No, I wouldn't do that. Yeah. I wouldn't.
|
|
I've learned. I have learned, yeah, that lesson, the hard way, not necessarily for hosting,
|
|
but just for infrastructure, you know, like I used to just love that I could revive old computers
|
|
and stuff like that. And just a nightmare to put something that actually matters on anything,
|
|
but you know, the most reliable thing that you can put it on. It's just I've definitely learned
|
|
some lessons. An honest host is a reliable host. That's right. We definitely try.
|
|
Well, that's what counts. Yeah, well, it's more than just trying though. I mean, you have a huge
|
|
proof of concept in hacker public radio because the stuff you do for HPR is absolutely amazing. It's
|
|
just it blows my mind. The fact that the way that you deal with issues when they arise and just
|
|
the fact that the site is still online, I mean, it's just unbelievable. Well, it's definitely not
|
|
a single man job because Ken and Dave both have helped him mentally with that. So it's definitely
|
|
just it's not just me, but you appreciate the praise and everything like that. I don't like
|
|
when stuff has to go offline for whatever information. In the last year, we have had 245 different
|
|
conversations, Josh. And that's going down from 133 last year to 122 in 2015, 2014 was 76. So we're
|
|
really getting this year. If I'm looking at the graph, it's gone for tiny, it's just like a vertical
|
|
line up at about 30 degrees. And then 2017 just springs up because of all the issues we've had.
|
|
Yeah, well, I think we worked them out. I think we worked through quite a bit of them.
|
|
We're approaching that we're thinking of big extinction. So yeah, go ahead. Things are heating up,
|
|
you know, you got to get ready. The sixth extinction is upon us. You're trying to get more of those
|
|
conspiracy theorists to attack the site. No, no, I'm sorry. To be honest, I'll just put it in the
|
|
show. But it's been an interesting year. We still have a lot of work to do. We're going to,
|
|
I think we want, we mentioned it on the community news show last night, which you won't hear
|
|
until tomorrow, which reminds me I need to post that now. But also going to a flat file, just
|
|
basic HTML website will probably help as well. There's no database, no risk of SQL injection.
|
|
If we do have any PHP pages, then they should be on a separate PHP,
|
|
DOS hacker, public radio, dot org or somewhere that we can restrict it down, stuff like that.
|
|
I imagine that'll help immensely because I mean, people, if if something sees that there is
|
|
an opportunity or something sees that they think that there's an opportunity for SQL injection,
|
|
then then it's going to bombard the server with attempts. No matter how stupid it is to attempt,
|
|
it's still going to happen. Yeah. Front a lot. I'm don't know if many of you guys are familiar with
|
|
him. He, he's a prime example of you leave it up there long enough to get hacked. Yeah, I'm
|
|
seeing that. Yeah, he, a couple of years ago, now, geez, he got owned because he was rocking
|
|
an old version of a PHP, BB2. There we go. And I mean, the time down the code was from before
|
|
I graduated high school. Wow. Yeah. And because of how he built his site off of it, he can update
|
|
the core. So he literally was just hanging out there with his ass in the wind. And God love him.
|
|
You know, I know him personally, he's a great guy. It was just like, you need to do something quick
|
|
because I can't patch all these holes. I only have so many fingers and there's a lot more cracks
|
|
than there are fingers. And that gives a bigger attack surface for your business as a whole,
|
|
correct? Well, I keep. So each PR front a lot, bin rev, all you guys are on is separate VM.
|
|
So you guys don't necessarily impact directly to my clients. And I did that intentionally just
|
|
because if there was an issue, I didn't want one causing a problem for the other. Yeah, totally.
|
|
But there you go, guys. Yeah. Good design from a good post. Yep. Yep. Yep.
|
|
Keep an audience separate groups separate is a good idea. But he got owned in just a horrible way.
|
|
Guy essentially did a database dump and got all the users and passwords. Ouch. Ouch.
|
|
That's really bad. And then to make it worse, this was coded back in 2003 when nobody
|
|
was thinking about hashing passwords. So all the passwords, yeah, all the passwords are plain.
|
|
So they're unsalted. Completely plain text. And this guy posted all the users, all the passwords
|
|
up on paste bin. Thankfully, he did on cool dudes. Oh, and he messaged front right before he did
|
|
that. He's like, oh, I'm going to do this. I'm such a lead hacker. It's like, dude, you compromised
|
|
a 13-year-old, 14-year-old PHP platform. You're not a lead hacker. I think the, yeah, there's
|
|
like this weird sort of, it's just sort of, I guess it's like graffiti in the bad way. You know,
|
|
it's just like, it's there and you're the one who had, who just got it there at the right time.
|
|
And so that looks like an accomplishment to you. And so now you're missing, yeah, you know,
|
|
and somehow you're missing like the fact that there's such, there's so much else out there that
|
|
you could do to prove your worth, you know, but you do this one thing and you're like, look at me,
|
|
I'm so cool. Yeah, and what you do is you email the admin and as has happened to us dumb
|
|
through the years, we have had emails from people going, this page is vulnerable to this.
|
|
And then you thank that person and they know that you know that they know, you know, that to me is
|
|
like the mark of a irrespectable way to, I've found yourself, this is not an invite, by the way,
|
|
for anybody who's attacking websites, the cold white hats. Yes, if there are people out there who
|
|
do want to do that sort of thing, we can arrange for you to have a copy of the website that you can
|
|
do it. Please don't waste resources. We're doing it on the list. We've had people who've
|
|
noticed stuff. We've had people ignore the stuff and emailed us and we fixed it. So that's the
|
|
way to do it. Responsible disclosure. Full disclosure. That that was just a plug for the emailing list.
|
|
Gotcha. Gotcha. Okay. Yeah, but from that front went off and redid his site, his site's flat
|
|
HTML and I don't know how many people actually know this, but France background is actually in web
|
|
design. That was his, that was his day job before he became granddad of nerd core hip hop.
|
|
That actually, that's quite nice. I do often wonder like a lot of the nerd core people,
|
|
like how many of them actually know as much as they claim to know sort of what's the first,
|
|
what's nerd core and then secondly, we have a nerd core virgin. Oh my gosh. And and dare I ask
|
|
what what do we, nerd core hip hop, oh, the dare, dare I ask. I mean, it's for everyone, but
|
|
but yeah, it's like, I guess it's rap about the IT industry, essentially. Well, anything nerdy.
|
|
So it's not just IT. Yeah, that's true, because there's like into what Chris or whatever it does.
|
|
And see guys that stuff. Yeah. Star Wars front does tabletop games. You've got mega-rand,
|
|
who does nostalgic older video games. Okay. All right. All right. Sorry. I was familiar with
|
|
the genre. I just had not heard it labeled as such. Yeah. Yeah. That's all right. Yeah, that's
|
|
cool. I'm not really a fan myself, but it's just because I don't really like that style of music.
|
|
It's not really about the people. I mean, dual cores. They're, I've met them several times,
|
|
and they're super cool. I just don't listen to that music. Hey, yeah, actually, I'm just looking
|
|
it up. I was familiar with a lot of these, a lot of these people like two skinny jays way back
|
|
in the days. Yeah. So I'm familiar with some of these. Okay. Okay. You get your points back.
|
|
You get your geek points back. It's a new, the miracle.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday,
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Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is, Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicant
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today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up
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