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638 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2521
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Title: HPR2521: HPR Community News for March 2018
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2521/hpr2521.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:44:18
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---
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This is HBR episode 2521 entitled HBR Community News for March 2018 and is part of the series
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HBR Community News. It is posted by HBR volunteers and is about 65 minutes long and carries an
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explicit flag. The summary is HBR volunteers talk about shows released and comment posted
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in March 2018. 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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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and welcome to another edition of Hacker Public Radio
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Community News for March 2018, where HBR volunteers talk about shows released and commented
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posted in March 2018. Joining me tonight is, hello Dave Morris here again, always bad penny,
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always turning up. Glad to have you Dave. Would you like to just to tell people what the show is about
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is Hacker Public Radio's Community podcast where you the listener can submit shows to be heard
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by other members of the community and we're doing the show slightly earlier because I've had a very
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busy weekend and Dave has kindly reached two hours earlier, which is fantastic. Sorry for everybody
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who wanted to join the show, but there you go. Yes, I think David Whitman said something to the fact
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that he's always wanted to join someone of these. I hope this isn't the one way he's trying to
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to join in. Do you want to welcome our new hosts? Yes, we have one new host this month and it is
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the remora, which is a pretty great name, I think. Remora is a type of fish because I've got
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biological background, but it's a good name for a person or for a fish. I thought it was a character
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in a movie, we shall have to investigate it later on, I guess. Well, yeah, my biological head says
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it's one of those fish that you find attached to the underside of sharks. It's got a strange
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sucker thing on the top of its head that can stick to other fish and divers as well apparently.
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So yeah, cool, but it probably is a movie character as well, for all I know, I don't know. Okay,
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our first show was by Mr. X tuning around the high frequency 40 meter band. In this
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episode, I give an example of what sort of things you can expect to hear on the HF band and
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this is a show that I've been requesting for some time. Yes, yes, yes, some great notes actually,
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I enjoyed that. The only thing is a little bit more in the way of explanation might have helped me.
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Anyway, probably you were you were way ahead of not all I had no clue what was going on,
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but I thought it was more a soundscape episode than anything else. It's just nice to hear. Yeah,
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yeah, it was cool. It was very cool. There was a comment on this one, I think, wasn't it? Yeah,
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go for it. Scroll, scroll. Yes, Michael says, great show. I love the idea of tuning around and
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simply demonstrating what you can hear. However, I would suggest to add a bit more commentary to make
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it more meaningful to those who do not already know what they're listening to. Let me add that the
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Morse code, CW signal in both cases was a French station, F5IN, calling a CQDX, a general call
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for far away stations. In the first bit and just finishing a transmission in a contact in the
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second one, when Tom DF2BO described his antenna setup, this left me mouthgaming. Yeah,
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Jaggies is at two elements on 18 meter, 35 megahertz and three elements on 40 meter, seven megahertz.
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These are monsters way beyond what any normal amateur will be able to put up just an amazing
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configuration that almost makes me drool when thinking about this is the kind of background
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information that makes sense to add to put your deal in context. Regardless, Michael, I mixed
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extra slides saying, hi, Michael, many thanks for the comments. Glad you enjoyed this show and
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you're a public correct that a bit of commentary might have been a good idea. There were a couple of
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reasons why it shows not to add any commentary first. It made the podcast easier to make, but the real
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reason was that I was trying to create a bit of the mystery for people who had never heard the
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strange sounds you find when tuning around the amateur radio hf band, which I thought might be the
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case for a large portion of the audience. When it was a young boy, I remember listening to all the
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second world war valve receivers that I occasionally had access to and was fascinated by the strange
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sounds and voices, having no idea what I was listening to. I thought initially giving no
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explanation would create more intrigue for those who had never heard hf before. And if there were
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interest that grouped them, then they could look at some shunals. I'd probably be adding some
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commentary next time I do it. Yes, many thanks for deciphering the Morse code to cw and yes,
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that was an incredible setup of the DF2BO had. Certainly breeds my half-wave dipole
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flung in the loft. Absolutely awesome. I remember the reason I am so intrigued by amateur radios
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for this very reason that while studying at night, I had a shortwave radio receiver and would
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hear tune around and hear the Morse code and radio piece in harmony from the Soviet block at
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the time. Yes, I certainly did that until I had a valve radio with shortwave on it and used to listen
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to a lot of stuff, just sort of searching up and down the van, trying to find interesting things to
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listen to. Don't remember much, but what I heard though. Yeah, exactly. I always wanted to know what
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the Morse code, what exactly they were saying. Of course, now you could probably just
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hook up a device that will translate it for you, but that kind of is cheating. I think yes.
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Anyway, the following day we had a hook up with his podcast recommendations. This is the third
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in the series. Some nice shows in here. Quite a lot of them. These I'm already subscribed to as well.
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Yeah, me too. And Steve said, how in the world my question is, how many hours a day do you spend
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listening to podcasts? And are there many hours in the day? And are there that many hours in the day?
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Thanks for the episodes. Quite a list. Well, yeah, yeah, it's I think who could possibly do what I do
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and just having headphones on all day long listening to exactly and probably speeding them up a bit
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as well. Well, I know he does that. Yeah, yeah, he's mentioned it in the first. So the community
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news show we had I posted two comments, one with the link to the book, my wife's book and the
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other. And she's decided to write the second book in Dutch before due to the translation, but I
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can't influence her in any way, given up trying. And the other comment is that the pipe character
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can be escaped using the upper sand octotorb space one two four semicolon. That was more to myself.
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Yes, yes, it works. It works. Yes, I was impressed. There was no space after the actual
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octopop mind you. Yes, yeah, all of those. I had to put them in all the ways that were
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escaping. Yeah, we just made an yesterday pope symbol, yeah. Yes, and yeah, Clinton Roy had a
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comment where he said, thank you, tricky bastards, he said, no idea. I'm not not a clue what
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that was about. That's the middle of summer, getting too much sun down there in Australia, I reckon.
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Placky says refleem market or yard sale or a garage sale. And maybe that video from
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if you go to YouTube, it's an MC front a lot stoop sale. Did you happen to listen to that? I didn't,
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I didn't, I completely forgot. I warned, warned anybody who listens to that video. It will get
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into your head and you'll be going around seeing it for a week. Do you see it? I don't know,
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sir. I'm a Brooklyn. Where I come from. I must do that. It sounded like fun. No, I'm always prepared
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to extend my knowledge of things. But yeah, yeah, yeah, there's a stranger there's so many names
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of the same thing. Yeah, well, pretty cool, pretty cool. And the following day, which would have
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been a Tuesday, I guess, volume of thought by lost and Bronx attempt to measure how the volume
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of his own thoughts and basically he figures that unwanted music is minus 30 dB and then this trail
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of thought starts to derail. I actually need to do this. It's an interesting concept.
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Yeah, it's also the type of music though, isn't it? I mean, I can listen to, well, I don't know,
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I've not done, he's obviously thought this through quite carefully and experimented, so
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that certain types of music distract me at whatever level. Yeah, I know what I've said as well,
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I get distracted by by beeps and peeps and phone ringing and you know, people not answering
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the phone and you know, that, that, uh, bongs from incoming messages and what's up and stuff
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like that. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Anyway, when did you go other comment? Do you want to read us
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or shall I? Yeah, yep. Two comments says when to go. Firstly, after hearing the title of this
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episode, I thought you were going to be discussing how much three-dimensional space your thoughts took
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up. That's not something I've ever considered before. That's a nice comment. Secondly, when you
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actually discussed the loudness of your own thoughts and what types of sounds successfully could you
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to lose track of them? It was also something I've never considered. Well done, so well done.
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There we go. Now a whole, a whole scientific branch will open up as a result of this.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, there's, I can think of some experiments you could do in psychology lab, you know.
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So the following day, we had Dave, the love bug, telling us about his 10-year journey into podcasting,
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which was extremely interesting. Yeah, he's strange how things will come along and how. Yeah,
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he's very busy. He does a lot of podcasting, does Dave. He certainly does. He's had a long history of
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doing this type of stuff, doesn't he? Yeah, and he has a, he's achieved a very professional
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style of quality to it or even though he doesn't make his money that way, but it's a very high quality
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stuff. Indeed. Clinton Roy says, wow, what a great story. I'm not into music podcasts at all,
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though, it can't speed them up slightly, but this was a fascinating look behind the scenes of a
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professional. Yes, and I think professional would be an appropriate term. Yeah, Dave replies,
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really wow, he says, thanks, Clinton. I'm really glad you enjoyed the episode. The last 10 years
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really been a blast and I can see many more podcasting years ahead. I've had a few people call me
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professional. And once that isn't strictly true, I'd be lying if I said I wouldn't want to be.
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Yeah, cool. And the following day, an intro to get with pen and paper. And this actually
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tattoo introduces gifts using pen and paper. And this actually made me read their rebooting
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speech since the thump thump. Right. You know, a professional would actually cut that out,
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but I'm not going to bother an intro to get with pen and paper. This actually made me
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I have a one of these items that I need to recommend a good course to people, ideally, for free
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in work. And this is something I've recommended to them. Simply because it explains very,
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very eloquently how to what get is all about brilliant really for once burnt at on my head,
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what get is all about. Yes, yes. And there's the voice of experience that you can tell
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tattoos worked in collaborative environments and stuff where a good knowledge of this is
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important for him and his colleagues and so on and so forth. So, you know, I tend to use get
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just locally a lot of the time. So yeah, it's it's a really useful insight for me as well.
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So yeah, excellent. So the power of GNU Reline, part three by Dave, this is now a series I see
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software library that provides line editing, bloody value value. Yes, it is, it is, but it is actually
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very, who do thought Dave? Who do thought you could have got a series out of this?
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Well, I was surprised to be honest and I started. I thought I'd maybe get one show out of it,
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but it's definitely going to be going to be another one at very least. Yeah, I was having a chat
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with my son about this because he's given me a keyboard, which has got an 80 mega in it,
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which is programmable. But I was just saying to him, well, what would you actually program into it?
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And really, you could you could do things like add key sequences to switch media or on and off
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or something like that. But when you look at what Readline can do, you wouldn't really bother.
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You know, so it's, it's actually got Duddy, a shitty presence.
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No, no, he agreed. He agreed. He just got me socks like everybody else.
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Now, he had a wonderful time. It's an old IBM model.
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Oh, he got me started on those horrible, horrible things.
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I had it in the attic and he said, oh, can I have that? And I said, yeah, and then I got it back
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again with it all completely refurbished in a programmable doodad in it. And you can you can put
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different software into it and talk about macros and things to it and so on. Back to
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Lost and Bronx, I sure went with those keyboards. My decibel level is zero if not positive 10.
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I can hear them a mile off. I wouldn't actually use this with anybody else in the house. So
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my daughter's here just briefly, but she has headphones in all the time. So she knows she's
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not bothered by it. But I think anybody else in the house would be slapping me in the back of the
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head. Who was it? That's a, oh, all of a second door to door geek has one of these. Yes,
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door to door geek has one of these. And he was saying yes, when he starts typing away all the
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desks around him become vacant. So maybe that is a reason to get on.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I can imagine that. Anyway, Jan says, some lines of support.
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Hi Dave, thanks a lot for your effort. If a machine is under heavy load and therefore
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kind of not responsive anymore, that real line magic comes in handy. Same goes for slow
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links between user terminals and remote machines. No, good point, good point. And Clinton Roy says
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current command, I was not aware of the comment, I'm sorry, comment command, he says, can't read
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today. I was not aware that the comments slash D comment commands, they might be useful. I'm
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making a right pig's ear this summer. I was not aware of, yeah, anyway, it's nothing wrong with
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the sentence. It's old and the person who's read my head is broken, I'm afraid. And for anyone
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worried that I'm going to slag off your show, don't Dave, Dave is one of the most professional
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podcasters out there, but even even the best of them fun balls sometimes. Okay, Klacky says a big
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long thing. So brace yourself, everyone. Surprisingly useful. I went in thinking, blah,
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readline, it's like C controller, controller, controller, some kill and yank, what's to learn,
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but it was Dave and somehow there was a three-farter. So maybe there's something useful in there.
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Wow, I was so wrong about knowing everything there was to know about readline. I didn't know how
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useful the capitalization things are. Control T, I'd already knew about, but I think the most
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useful for when you have press control C by mistake, but M, B, meta B and meta F, oh my god,
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which two are those, Dave, quickly, quickly. You don't expect me to remember. It's back, it's
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backwards and forwards, but it wouldn't. Yeah, it's pretty cool. I have needed these for years. I
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usually hop around with control left, control right, but there, but when you're one marsh, one
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T-mox, and one pseudo down, usually all the arrow, King Colts of God, and it's all misery.
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Now with meta B and meta F, my life quality has drastically improved. Actually, I might burn
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those two into my memory. Anyway, back to his comment. Also interesting to know that the
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args thing is for, I've been vaguely aware that as it's easy to trigger by mistake, but I think
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I will use it more now that I've been taught what exactly it does. Maybe for counting the length
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of a gist commit message, for example, you want to know, we want a 60 character max commit
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length meta six space zero space control B. After you type the message, we'll show you how much
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you're around that limit. Yeah, good point. Good point. Thanks, Dave. As always, a great contribution
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even for those of us who may think we already know everything. Well, that's awesome. That's a
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lovely comment. That's awesome. So I said thanks to everybody. Thanks to Jan,
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Clinton, Roy, and Clarky. Glad you're finding the series useful. I've known to readline's
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existence for years, and there were some features that might be useful, but I'd never spent the time
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to find out what it could do. I'm most surprised at the amount of work that's gone into this library
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and the great features it offers. I expect to be able to get another couple of shows from it before
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I'm finished, and there's scope for others to contribute to if they work out cool things to do
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with it. Fantastic. Fantastic. Okay. The following day, we had built your own Lisp, a book review,
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learn, see, programming, while building a Lisp. And for those who don't know, Lisp, Lisp
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is a moving language with long history and a distinctive full syntax prefix notation originally
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specified in 1958. Lisp is the second oldest highly loving programming language in widespread use
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today that I didn't know. This was an interesting show. This is fascinating. Yes. Yes. I am oddly,
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there was a guy I knew when I was a student in Manchester who was a computer scientist who was
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building a Lisp writing it using Algo on the on the mainframe there. And I couldn't, I just
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couldn't understand why he would want to do that. But after thinking about it, it's quite an
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impressive feat. And I'm fascinated to read more into this one actually when I get some time.
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Very, I mean, very niche, but also cool. It's also cool to start off with a, you know,
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something that you're interested in and follow through that that way of thinking.
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Yeah. Yeah. It comes from the computer science department at Edinburgh University.
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So it's got to be good to pass it to my son because he wants to go and do a degree there.
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We can. So cool. The following day, this, I don't know, was this a soundscape on or was it a
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functioning programming or a package? Oh, it's all the one. Wisdom shows, they're clacky.
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Where he was walking through America and talking about functional programming. He had me worry
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there for a minute with copyrighted music in the background. Ooh, dear, dear, my heart skipped a
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beat. So racket two innings, has he, he now was working full time on this? Is that correct?
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Yeah. Yeah. That's what I understood anyway. So yeah, he's, he's, he's living the dream.
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Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. I must admit that it went 90% over my head, but yeah,
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I was very cool. And I was in the stress sphere a little bit above you, to be honest,
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or actually below looking up at your calls. No, I kind of got what you were saying, but I,
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I have not needed this niche as yet, but no doubt we will come across somebody who will say,
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yes, I know somebody who's done a whole series of shows on that. Cool. The next one was also a
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throw-off by Lost and Bronx. They're common. Do we, oh, sorry, common. Do we want to,
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it's a bit of a, no, we're going to do it. We're going to do it clacky, typo. Larger than I thought
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was a nastrix. Yes. And then I said, because I tried to look for these things when I'm processing
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the notes. And I think these were, I can't remember if they were HTML, probably. I'm also surprised
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that you don't have, you haven't sent me a port port towards the explanation like you did with
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whether or whether or mother. Actually, you, you need to do a show of all of those together and
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just put them on one, on one as an episode out. Just, well, I started, I started to think about
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an episode where, because I see people writing then and then mixing them up and putting apostrophes
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before S's where they're not needed and all that stuff. And I'm just, I'm just afraid I'm going
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to turn into a monster, you know, a grand, a grammarian monster that will bear down on everybody and
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kick them. I already nagged my kids and they, yeah, I was a loader. So, yeah, I have, I have
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something sort of started, but I've been wary of becoming that, that hated person at points
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at everybody's mistakes. But anyway, I, I, this, this dialogue was really like it pointing out
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a problem where he thought that simply putting it in the comments would be sufficient. And I took
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that to be a request to change it. So I changed it, which then made him come back and go, ah,
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right. I thought it would have been enough to just leave it like that, but you went and
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changed it so that means my comments now redundant blah, blah, blah. Of course, this is stupid.
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So, so there were three comments there to, to know great about it, otherwise, that, to, to
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have an interesting chat about it. So I'll, I'll maybe skip over the contents and leave it at that.
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And like I said, you got word from Stuart with the link and fractal in it has an account
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that I've spoken something. A node won't have an info dot RKT. It's one fractal, one package.
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And the nodes are pointing out internally within that package. For more amount, all this means
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what a fractal is more and more look forward to an interview with Stuart whenever we get that
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in order. Pretty cool. And then plackies respond them with a correction to you saying that's
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a correction to the correction. No, I didn't misspeak anything. I just misunderstood each other.
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Sorry for the comment. Okay, fine. So yeah, yeah, chapter of accident. So is the term used
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to still interesting. So false profits, which, ah, called personalities may affect space
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exploration. I was not expecting this to go the way it went, but, ah, but it was pretty,
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pretty good. And the comments were interesting. Do you want to read the first one? Yes, it's quite
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a quite a long one. Um, that's why I knew you just. Clackie says, you are right to worry, but
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Musk isn't the only one. He's the one who got the further and has the grandest master plan.
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We don't forget about Bezos and Branson and their space venture. So I don't think we're pinning our
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hopes on one man, but my answer revealed something else. We're still pinning our hopes on great men
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as in the great men theory of history. Musk, Bezos and, um, Branson aren't geniuses in the sense
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that they're science in engineering, all this stuff when nobody else could. They're just hiring
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the people who do. Still, I think people forning over Musk is awesome because it means people are
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pinning their hopes on research, engineering, onto entrepreneurship, because that's what he symbolises.
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And hustling the money and funneling it in the right direction isn't nothing either.
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It's far better than people who are marrying people who literally don't contribute anything,
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or who are contributing negatively to furthering the knowledge and power of the human race,
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like David Avocado Wolf, Dr. Oz or Gwyneth Paltrow. Okay, so we're not at the mercy of a single
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man, but we are at the mercy of three men. No, don't forget about China and India and old space
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travelers, Japan and ESA. ESA, I should say, and even Russia. They're also further into space than
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Bezos and, or Branson, and on some axes further than Musk. I'm not overly worried. Humanity will
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get our eggs in the second basket before the century is over. That's a great comment. Yeah,
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unfortunately, there was too many mans in that from my liking, but does reflect the fact that there
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are, yeah, it does reflect the hashtag me too thing, I guess, that's the majority of millionaires
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are men. Oh, I'm afraid so, yes, yes, this, although we can do that at this stage in the game.
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And also, even Russia comment, fairness, Russia have been carrying the space program
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for the last 10 to 15 years, guys. So, yes, yes, yes, how, who is supplying the international
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space station? So, yes, I know they're all on. Phalania, lost in Bronx says, I agree with you,
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bought. I think China is our biggest chance of competition in the long run, but they are
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moving quickly. That may change, I hope it does. I also believe that the commercialization of space
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is the only real future it can possibly have. If people can't at least hope for a better life out
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there, they won't bother. China may be a big player here too, since there's no problem sponsoring
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large-scale commercial venture. Looking at from that point of view though, business people like
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Mosque and others may turn out to be our last best chance for humanity after all. Surely,
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I sure wouldn't mind being wrong. Now, with that said, there was a very interesting
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discussion from Wendover Productions about this very thing, and while the first part is
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a bit of a company sponsorship video, the latter half goes into exactly this long-term goals and
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why governments need to get involved. So, that's worth a watch. I would like to also comment as well
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that the China space program has been very slow, but it's been incredibly meticulous,
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and that the goals that are set seem to be set with a achievable project deadline in place
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so far, they seem to be meeting their goals. So, I wouldn't rule them out either,
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as a means to guess, do you speak? Yes, yes, yes. I'm not sure which is most important at the moment,
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|
whether it's getting people into space. I mean, that was the point of this discussion,
|
|
didn't it? Or whether it's also doing space science, like there are plans to go to the possible
|
|
life-bearing moons of Jupiter and stuff? Yeah, I think it's, I think, Nostrum Bronx
|
|
goal is to get us there at least some of us off the planet so that there is a chance that the
|
|
human race itself will continue, because don't forget folks, we are on a spaceship. We are traveling
|
|
to space right now, and yeah, yeah, I really think if everybody viewed the world like this,
|
|
we might go a little bit easier on it. Oh, absolutely, yeah, yeah, that's partly one of the criteria
|
|
that should be part of this discussion, that to be rushing off the planet. I don't actually mean
|
|
that, but if that's the priority over making sure that the existing terraformed place that we
|
|
already have is worth looking after rather than rushing off to terraform somewhere else.
|
|
Is, you know, the balance needs to be, needs to be. I think to be quite carefully. Yeah, I think
|
|
we need to do both. It's very simple, we need to do both. The following day was audiobook 16
|
|
matchers rules, and I don't know what it is, and then realized that it actually read the
|
|
earquotes yesterday before. And God, Poki didn't like this one. Oh, dear. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
|
|
and I think 150 didn't quite get the whole concept of non-spoilers before the spoiler of it.
|
|
Yeah, oh, the picture they painted wasn't particularly attractive on it. The note I made to
|
|
myself was maybe give this one a miss. Actually, I really, really enjoyed this book when it came out.
|
|
I really did. I, yes, was bugged by some of the things like the lights, the doorsticks,
|
|
and the control thing, the Poki was on it off, but I left it off because it was such an interesting
|
|
world that was built. It was a nice, comfortable world. It was a comfortable read. So, yeah.
|
|
Okay. Okay. Well, I'll maybe give it a, give it a shot. My cue at books at the moment is quite
|
|
long, but it's even on there. I would rush out to read it, but it's not, yes, everything Poki says
|
|
is correct, but it was still, you know, it's still past the time in my book. Chentron Roy says,
|
|
interesting. This was an interesting discussion, maybe because of the disagreements,
|
|
also, thank you for the audio notes. Which is cool. Yeah, some good notes. Yeah, I did. I liked the
|
|
discussion on this one, especially when I didn't, you know, had my, I had listened to it and
|
|
was, hadn't my own opinions of it as well. Yeah, the thing that I miss out with is I've not listened
|
|
to these things. I mean, the original idea was that you get a chance to listen before you heard
|
|
the show and that sort of the timings or got messed up unfortunately, but yeah, I think I might
|
|
have appreciated it more if I'd, if I'd heard it. But still, good, good series. I'm enjoying it
|
|
very much. The following day, we had Privacy and Security by Ahuka explaining the Diffy,
|
|
Hellman, Miracle Key Exchange, and it was nice that he took the time out to credit Miracle
|
|
there as well, and did a very good job at explaining how this works in audio.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, this was excellent. It sort of passed me by a little bit, but it's the thing
|
|
with podcasts, isn't it? It's really something that's complex, it's hard to absorb when you're
|
|
doing the washing up or whatever else, cleaning the cats tray or something, but not both at the same
|
|
time. But I just realised what I'd said. It's very cool. No, the dishwasher is real.
|
|
I did go number on the Scottish RSPCA is.
|
|
I did scrub that cat again, but Kevin's website is an excellent source of further reading.
|
|
That's really important to note because I tend not to do that as much as I should and
|
|
I did go looking at this one and I'm going to come back to it and it's excellent. And the maths
|
|
was interesting because I just sort of caught the edge of what he was talking about and it's just what
|
|
my son's been doing in his maths course just now. He's trying to do a caused
|
|
fam for doing a computer science degree and he was doing modulo stuff just at the moment.
|
|
I'm sure he could put it better than I can. So relevant, all relevant, all important.
|
|
Yeah, and there's an excellent Khan Academy video that describes the mechanics of that using
|
|
a clock and a piece of rope that you wind around the clock to get the numbers and also they use
|
|
mixing two colors of paint. So you take you pick a color and then you mix your secret color
|
|
with the shared color from the other side and by mixing them together, it's easy to mix them
|
|
together but it's very difficult to unmix them. So that was the analogy he used. If you have
|
|
the benefit of sight, checking the Khan Academy videos for that is probably a good thing.
|
|
Yeah, that's good. Good hint. Thank you. And a response to episode two, four, nine, six,
|
|
busy going even one more up on my list of cool people who are doing stuff I asked them to do,
|
|
basically responding which tools to tools. And this was the PI identification script,
|
|
something that I need to run on the network urgently, Dave, urgently. Yes, yes. He did point
|
|
out a deficiency in it, which I hadn't really thought about. It was one of those scripts that
|
|
you write and you think, oh, that's great. It works. It does the thing and then you think, oh,
|
|
somebody else might like it and you don't completely think the thing through and say, but what if
|
|
I usually do that, but I didn't in this case. So it was good to go a point of shared
|
|
collaboration. Yeah. It's what you wanted to do and if it can be extended to do something else
|
|
by somebody else, then pretty cool. So I shall update my GitHub copy at some point in the near
|
|
future. But yeah, the way that Beasy was using it was brilliant. I really enjoyed listening to what
|
|
you said. Make it cool. And armed with our knowledge of how to pull the how Git works with
|
|
posted notes, and to extend his series on introduction to Git, where he is describing
|
|
remotes and origins and all that sort of stuff. Very good. Get remote. And it became a lot
|
|
clearer to me what the word origin is and other remotes and local is. I'm not saying that I'm
|
|
getting it entirely, which I should because I do this stuff every day, but at the same time,
|
|
I'll hike with everything else. You know a few commands and then you just repeat them over and
|
|
over again and hoping that it won't break. Well, quite. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's a bit like using
|
|
them or something like that. You know enough to be to survive with it, but not enough to be
|
|
traveled with it. Exactly. So this yeah, I the note I made to myself was go over this again with
|
|
a bit of paper and make some notes. So yes, yes. I need notes. I need things written down a bit of
|
|
paper. So it's the only way writing makes it go in my head. Otherwise, it doesn't go in very well.
|
|
So the following day, we had why I choose aperture first. And this is David Whitman encourages you
|
|
to choose aperture as the most important setting in your camera. And yes, still happen how to show
|
|
about the dogs. Dave, have you noticed? He did give a sense. I think he's teasing us now. He's teasing
|
|
us with it. I did have a quick look at one of the, but it's not impossible to have a quick look.
|
|
No, that's right. Each thing is about two gigabytes of photos and stuff, but I did have a
|
|
peek at some of them and some magnificent dogs that I'd like to know more about. But this is good.
|
|
More camera stuff would be would be very, very good, I think. Again, there's a lot of other
|
|
things I don't have a camera at all now. The camera I had I tried to fix this. And it's now in the
|
|
fix me box pretty soon going into the hack me box. I have several actually, but some of them in my
|
|
son's left overs because he says, I don't really like this or under here much. Do you want it?
|
|
I said, okay, then. And so yeah, Michael pulled thirds and things like that. But the same argument
|
|
applies to these. Imagine David's got some some pretty impressive cameras, but you know, just the
|
|
little portable point of click ones so you can still get quite sophisticated with.
|
|
Question though, why don't we have more camera stuff on this network?
|
|
That's what I don't know. I don't know. There's a lot of signs involved in it. And you know,
|
|
you'd have thought this would be a great community to be getting more into this. But yes,
|
|
but like I'm ready to tell you, ask people for it and bog them enough. They don't think that
|
|
that's something of interest to hackers. And yes, it is. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I would certainly vote
|
|
for more. Absolutely. The following day, we had electronic calculator kit. And my bill talks about
|
|
building a $16 electronic calculator kit, which is now part of the new hobby electronic series.
|
|
Yes. Yeah. Good. You went mad this month on the series making series.
|
|
Well, it's yeah, there was a bunch of series that needed to be made, I think. So, indeed.
|
|
So the love bug said, blind fit. I haven't even listened to the episode yet, but I've just ordered
|
|
myself one of these calculator kits from Amazon. And my bill says, enjoy the kit, Dave. I warn about
|
|
a few small pitfalls I ran into building it, hope it saves you the same trouble. And the love
|
|
bug says, done undusted, bought it, built it. Surprisingly straightforward, thanks to A,
|
|
to have your advice bill and B, the links you couldn't get to work fine for me. And they had a
|
|
pretty picture, pretty detailed picture guide. It's a bit clicky, says my wife,
|
|
so all the more reason to use it. Oh, that's not nice. And here's a PG 13 of the calculator
|
|
in action. And he says, I managed to break my GMG instance without even knowing about just
|
|
my next project, perhaps. What's GMG? I have no idea. I don't know what he's talking about,
|
|
green man, green mountain gills. But it's some global mediation group. I bet a Bangladesh
|
|
airline. It's the picture's good, though. He made it, he made it say an interesting number.
|
|
So yeah, it looks, it looks really cool, actually. Not a thing I would, I would, I would buy for
|
|
myself. But the next room hidden in a drawer is one, which I was going to give to my son,
|
|
just to amuse him as his birthday next week. And he's of a nature, he doesn't want things for his
|
|
birthday. And I thought, I'll just buy it for him and see whether he, he'll probably make it in
|
|
about 10 minutes, because he's pretty good with this. Though the case build looks a bit fiddly.
|
|
But yeah, very cool. It looks, it looks quite useful. Not just a calculator, but it can also do
|
|
stuff with the color codes on. That's how it seemed like. I'm going to start to use that.
|
|
That's also going to do. Yeah, exactly, exactly. So yeah, it looks like it's going to be fun.
|
|
So the New Year's Eve show part two, part year. Listen to it. It was cool. It was weird,
|
|
weird, relaxed, laid back sort of thing. It was, yeah, yeah, it was, it was good. I enjoyed,
|
|
I'm enjoying these more this year, more than I have in the past, to be honest with you.
|
|
It was, it was good. There were some good topics. I know you're having a chance.
|
|
CM Hobbes promised me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Waiting with Baited Breath for those, absolutely.
|
|
I advise him to stop doing physical penetration testing in the States. That doesn't sound like a lot of
|
|
fun. No, it doesn't. Far too much fun. Gerald heard me talking on this.
|
|
Gerald comes from Stains in the UK, which is not far from where I was born in Stains is in
|
|
Middlesex, I believe. So he heard somebody with a, with a sort, bit of a land and accent sort of
|
|
thing. He said, I've got about 20 different accents now because I've moved around the country
|
|
in this one every 10 minutes as you move around this country. So anyway, so he didn't actually appear
|
|
on the, on the recording though. I was expecting to hear him speaking. Oh, anyway. Thank you, Gerald,
|
|
anyway. Clacky, Markdown Shawnauts. Can, tattoo and can were discussing the merits on Markdown
|
|
and the horrible, horribleness of multitudes of Markdown flavors. Here's what I do from my Shawnauts.
|
|
I write on hashify.me markdown on the left live render text on the right so you can easily click
|
|
control links to check them when I mark text on the right right click choose choose selection
|
|
sources and Firefox. It opens up a new tab where the source is almost correctly marked and I'm
|
|
putting the emphasis on almost myself. I mark it, copy then paste and the Shawnauts text box
|
|
in five as the text type. So, eminently sensible. Yes, except it's got dip tags in there,
|
|
Clacky. Yes, it does and you send them to us and then we need to purge them, purge the dip tags,
|
|
Clacky. I didn't say I never knew. It's fine. The method I used can produce dip tags. I try not
|
|
to do it that way. Yes, don't give me started on dip tags. Introduction to giz branching.
|
|
Oh yeah, another, another Clacky one and good actually, very good. It makes sense, especially
|
|
some of the comments people have made to me going you do realize that you just a little bit merged
|
|
to master from the dev thing. Okay, thank you very much. That was bad, wasn't it?
|
|
Yeah, yeah. Well, as I said earlier on, I use Git in a similar way to the way you use RCS,
|
|
which was the thing we all used back in the day. That was like a single user type thing and I'm
|
|
still doing something like that with Git or is shared obviously. But what Clacky is saying here
|
|
is effectively telling me how to use it properly, which is brilliant. Kind of the whole point
|
|
of the service actually. Well, quite. Yes, yes. But how do you know that you're using it
|
|
improperly until somebody starts pointing me to that? Oh, I think you can figure that out if you
|
|
use it. It depends on some websites somewhere and you have no clue what it's doing,
|
|
then you're probably using it incorrectly. If you're working with a team and the team you're
|
|
going, no, don't do that, then you're using it properly. Yes, I'm not really doing that yet
|
|
to any great extent, but there's still some important lessons we learned here.
|
|
Mike Ray says, great podcast. I've been using Git for a few years now, but there is something
|
|
new even for a season Git user in this series. It's a subject that needed clarity because a lot
|
|
of stuff, a lot of the online stuff of our Git is complex and confusing. More please and more
|
|
about the kind of DevOps related stuff and more server config and admin. Couldn't agree more,
|
|
Mike? Well, don't keep it coming flat too. Yeah, naturally said. An operator is producing some
|
|
very nice shows lately. This one was on a DIY CC TV securities using, I think, Internet,
|
|
Power Over it, IP security cameras, Power Over Ethernet cameras, and basically a
|
|
hodgepodge of stuff to give them a lot of control over what you can do. It's pretty cool.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. The impressive setup he's got there. Really? Quite something.
|
|
Yeah, and some videos as well to go along with. Yeah, I didn't have them. It's been a busy, busy
|
|
month, but I will. They look really cool. You did need a beefy PC to be able to do this, though.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, that's the trouble, isn't it? I've been tempted to do this. I know other people
|
|
who've got into this. There's people in the local log that are in, have given talks on doing this,
|
|
but I don't have a tremendous need. I do have a Raspberry Pi zero with a camera attached to it
|
|
that stuck to a window here, but that might do. Yeah, well, yeah, it's just taking court
|
|
rarely snapshots at the moment, just to see the way the weather's going and things.
|
|
There's a device you can buy from one of the British companies called the Pi Hut,
|
|
which onto which you can mount a Pi zero with a camera, and then it's got two suction cups
|
|
you can stick to the inside of a window. Yeah, it seems other than the Pi magazine. Yeah,
|
|
so I've got one of those and it's zero W, so it sends me pictures wirelessly every 15 minutes,
|
|
but it's not like this. This is something that's got most attention to, then
|
|
then, you know, taking, taking videos and stuff. So, yeah, interesting area to be working in.
|
|
So, Mindra is a pretty cool thing. I've said it all once, but again, my need is not that great.
|
|
Basically, I don't have any crap worth stealing, so there you go. What a
|
|
no iPads here. Some old Raspberry Pi is, if you want.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, same here, really. And the neighborhood watch is pretty good. We're also
|
|
tightly packed together in these Edinburgh states, so everybody can see what everybody else is doing
|
|
anyway. And the following day, we had Steve Sainter with Converting My Laptop to do a boot,
|
|
and this was an excellent one because it built on a previous episode by Mongo Episode 2, 3,
|
|
0, 5. And yeah, you know, I was thinking about this. I was thinking this is brilliant.
|
|
If you ever do need to go and put windows back on a PC and how you can basically go about it.
|
|
And then I realize Autodesk Fusion 360, that is becoming such an important piece of software.
|
|
And we don't have something in the free and open source community to tackle it, you know.
|
|
And I think we're always behind the game. You know, there's always going to be, we get a
|
|
top quality video editor. You know, there is a, people say, oh, I can't move to windows.
|
|
I have to stay on windows because of Photoshop. And then eventually the game is good enough to do
|
|
you know, compensate for that. And then they go, oh, I can't go and move because of video editing.
|
|
And then we go, well, you know, you got a keen life and you got a splendor of what more do you want.
|
|
And then there's always something else. There's always something else coming up that isn't
|
|
available. And it just gets a bit tiring after 20 years of, when will there ever be a day where,
|
|
you know, this is this. You don't need windows for run stuff.
|
|
Well, absolutely, absolutely. I've just been having that conversation with people that I think
|
|
are sort of really fancy getting into 3D printing, but I wanted to be able to have a totally
|
|
Linux solution to it. And basically, I'm on a loser. It's not going to be because if I want to
|
|
actually design something that I need something like Fusion 360 to do it. How is that even possible
|
|
when, you know, that all open source maker community is like, this is exactly what we can just,
|
|
get a bit tired after a while. I really don't know. It's the, yeah, I want to go and talk to the
|
|
the guys at the hack lab. There's an open day coming up. Okay. Next month, so I'm going to go
|
|
and ask them what their advice would be for buying a, yeah, bring a microphone.
|
|
Yeah. I might just do that. They might be up for having a way we chat about those things and
|
|
recording it. So see what I can do. The Ramona builds a character on the edge of empire. And this
|
|
was a bit choppy, buddy. An excellent job at rescuing audio. Anybody having a problem with the audio
|
|
in here should remember the golden words, and I should read them. Verly, I say to the, if it's
|
|
audible, it's good enough. And this was, this was audible. Yeah. But think about this was, I,
|
|
I'm still missing a little bit about the, a little bit about the, what the dice is, the dice do,
|
|
you know, I really think we need somebody, and I'm trying to line that up with, um,
|
|
tattoo and lost from Bronx to do an episode on, you know, completely novice, like, no idea of what,
|
|
what, that there are, what type of dice there are, where, where to actually start. But I need,
|
|
thanks. I'm sorry for the audio was so bad. I was forced to use Bluetooth headphones because
|
|
audacity would not take audio from my USB headset. Yeah. Nobody's going to slag you off for the audio
|
|
because, anyway, any, any audio is better than no audio. That's what we're saying.
|
|
Yes. Yes. He did get there. So we'll pound him for that. Yeah. The, the, the dice business
|
|
thing is something I don't fully understand. Right. So I've said, said before my daughter's
|
|
into it and she's got a bag full of multi-sided 12, 20, whatever it's cited, things made out of
|
|
steel or whatever. Don't you drop them on my table? No. And, but, uh, it's, it's, why don't you record
|
|
a show? Why don't you record a show, Dave? And why don't you record a show? I keep trying to talk
|
|
or into doing shows with me, but she's, uh, she claims she's on one. Yeah. She's done
|
|
well. Yeah. And I turn off a Wi-Fi and then you'll find that her attention will come back.
|
|
And she, she claims she's got a degree to do this, this year's, all right. Yeah. She's, uh,
|
|
well, it just excuses. I know. I know. But, uh, yeah, we'll, we'll actually know to be fair. She did say,
|
|
um, maybe somebody'd be interested to hear what I've been doing in my dissertation for my degree.
|
|
Cool. So she's been out in Canada watching hummingbirds for, uh, several weeks. So maybe that,
|
|
I don't know. It's not really hackery, but there's, there's interesting things to be heard there.
|
|
Maybe we'll do that. Kevin, again, with his Diffie Hellman forward secrecy stuff. This one I'd
|
|
heard about and was a bit familiar with it, but this one did actually help me
|
|
clarify exactly why it's, uh, and I like the way you, you dropped that perfect from forward
|
|
suit. I like this. Pretty good. Good children. Yeah. Yeah. Kevin, Kevin chugs out these
|
|
shields that we need. You know, well, that was any fanfare whatsoever and just the right there.
|
|
Oh, absolutely. Yeah. Sorry. Yeah. Okay. Okay.
|
|
I think we know who we're doing. But no, it's, uh, it, uh, real gems that we, we're
|
|
gained from, uh, who are always, uh, some excellent stuff. So yeah, it's, and there's, uh,
|
|
there's a whole stack of them just sort of dropped into the future. We don't, we don't think anything
|
|
obvious. You know, all of a sudden, he gets, uh, he gets an idea into his head to completely
|
|
explain this entire thing and he records them and he uploads them and yeah, job done. Cool.
|
|
Yeah. Okay. So what else have we got on the ticket there? Note to volunteers, comments marked
|
|
in green were read in the last comment show and should be ignored in this one. Thanks, Dave.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. Of course. I mean, come on. Oh, you must really, really hate me. There you go.
|
|
Anyways, the first comment was by myself, uh, on that, uh, on the round table show that, uh,
|
|
was a disaster and there hasn't been a round table since, obviously, because I ruined it for
|
|
everybody. And this is a waveform site that describes how wind forms are, um, put together. So
|
|
when I find things related to this show, I put it back here as a comment onto, onto. Now, cool.
|
|
Dave, uh, sorry, Mr X replied to a comment of you that you had on, or he's your stuff I bought
|
|
as a recent amateur radio rally and you had commented was I envy the fines and he says,
|
|
or do you want to read that one out? I'll read it. Yeah. Yeah. Um, says hi, Dave. I'm not surprised.
|
|
You didn't know about this as there are not many amateur radio rallies held in these parts.
|
|
I only know about it because I was a long time, a long time ago, a member of the Corkenzi
|
|
and Port Seaton amateur radio club. This event is a mini radio rally. It originally went under
|
|
the title of Jump Night, but it's since gone up market. It's held at Corken. I can't speak to
|
|
me. Corkenzi and Port Seaton Community Centre, usually around the beginning of August. I've been
|
|
going there for a number of years and now best bit about it is meeting up with old friends and
|
|
sampling some of the homemade food. On the hall, I usually end up with very little. I just
|
|
have to be lucky this year. So that's great. So thank you, Mr X. I never wrote back to say thanks,
|
|
but it's Corkenzi and Port Seaton is sort of to the, on the coast, to the north of Edinburgh.
|
|
So not very far away from where I live. 10, 12 miles maybe. Oh nice. You should be able to go.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. I certainly like to go and just snoop around. It's something like this just to see
|
|
what's going on. Meet Mr X one time maybe. And common to quib mues show life without Google.
|
|
And it was by Draco metallium. And if that isn't an awesome name, I don't know what is.
|
|
No more emails on my phone. Thanks. I had not realized that I really didn't need the Gmail app.
|
|
Most of the time it was just annoying. I am almost always in front of a computer. So I would have to
|
|
find out about the new email a few seconds later. And for some reason the spell checker doesn't
|
|
work if you update it. You have just freed me and my wrath.
|
|
Excellent. Nice comment. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was interesting. Life without Google.
|
|
Indeed. And that brings us to the kind awkward, which I'm going to read for both Dave,
|
|
much to your embarrassment.
|
|
Tatoo says, I'd like to publicly thank Be Easy and Dave Morris for their amazing series
|
|
on Alk. Too long didn't read. I learned Alk from their HBO series and have used it every day
|
|
this week. It has changed my life long version. I have to confess that I've been,
|
|
I've had the O'Reilly set an Alk book on my bookshelf for five years. In fact,
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it's one of maybe six books I brought with me from the US June, New Zealand when I move.
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Try to read it several times, got basically nowhere. And yet at least once a fortnight,
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see what he did there. I encounter some situation that will make me think, I bet this would be
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really easy with Alk. I really, I should really learn Alk. Still, no dice. This has gone on for
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at least five years. On Monday of this week, however, I had to write a vitally important script for
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work. I knew this script was a perfect case for Alk. So I downloaded the Alk series, followed
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along and by the end of the day, I'd written my script and yesterday I wrote a conversion script
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for some RPG resources I had lying around for the past year, waiting for manual conversion to
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duck book. I've been using Alk every day this week and don't see myself putting it aside
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ever. Thanks for your series, guys. It's improved my Linux experience, which I was pretty sure
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had already reached a pinnacle. Nope, it just keeps getting better. I all, all, all to HBR,
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cue the outro. Now, Dave, that is what makes you get up in the morning, huh?
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Well, that absolutely made my, my year. At least, yes, if not, my whole time with HBR,
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shout out to Be Easy as well. Absolutely awesome series. I've said it before and I'll say it again,
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it's awesome series. Yeah, yeah, I'm so glad that we've managed to, to convey stuff that's
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useful to people and yeah, long may it continue. And we're episode 10 is currently in the queue,
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so there's more, there's more. In fact, it's a big subject we could be going on with this for
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a while yet. Absolutely, everybody, we're learning a lot as we go along. So we'll keep going
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for as long as we as we possibly can. I know Be Easy's thinking about episode 11 at the moment,
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he was telling me. So we're not, we're not, we're not fast. We started off quicker than we are now,
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but we're trying to keep it just chugging along, you know, so because we have lives as well.
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Yeah, exactly. So I sent a mail to the list about a time capsule countdown electronics project
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for a school. So I was asking for help from my brother and I know who was doing a,
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a his and our teacher to school and was doing it wanted to do a time capsule containing 12 years
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of stuff belonging to the kids. Now, as it turns out, you didn't have the time to do any of this
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because very quickly became apparent that finding a power supply that would last for 12 years
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was a bit of a thing. A lot of the conversation actually happened directly off the list.
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And some people sent me very good links. And I've contacted the companies James sent me a link
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for 20-year batteries. I've contacted the mask asking them in general if they want to come on and
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do a show describing these batteries and how they keep them going for 10 years for like meter readings
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and and whatsoever. Because it turns out your normal batteries will disappear after two years.
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So not very good. No, continuous use. So we'll see how that goes. But I really think it's a
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cool project. He says regardless, he will, it might be something that'll do somewhere else,
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I don't know the school that'll later date. So yeah, it's a great, great project. That's
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happy fascinated to hear more about it. Yeah, it seems like one of your really into dragging
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the most power out of something. How, how would you achieve it? I mean, the thing does,
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the actual, if you had a regular power supply, what it's doing is not going to be
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that fantastically difficult, you know, power on an Arduino and display a page of text saying what
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the day is, what the countdown's going to be, and you know, a message for the day from somebody,
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would be a cool thing. But how, how to get 12 years of, or possibly even longer, of power out
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out of that thing. Very, very cool to set yourself the goal. We'll see. Do you want to read
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Dave's one, Dave? Yes, this is from Dave Lee and the love bug. And he says, this is merely a
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suggestion, but one that affects me directly, could we have a phonetic version of the host's
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given name available within our host profile? My given name in HPR is the love bug pronounced
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of bug, but he speaks for an answer as the love is the most spectacular mangling.
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This is me speaking here, which isn't quite read at all as intended. I've noticed the other
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host who's given name gets totally put through the mince about he speak, not naming names, but a certain
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northwest England correspondent who's given name is almost a sentence. Anyway, is there enough demand
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to request that a change is made, or is this simply a case of suck it up, Dave? So, yeah,
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suck it up, Dave. Or, yeah, we should do that with eSpeak with no spaces in it, and then that would
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be great. Yes, so we could do that. We could do phonetics, but then again, yeah, it's one
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field in the database. I did experiment with this briefly, because I was giggling over it with
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my kids in the room, and they said, what is it, Dave? What is it? And I told them what it was,
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and then showed how if you put spaces in between the love bug, then it says it really well.
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So, you know, and the NY bill doesn't come out as any bill anymore and stuff like that.
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Murrish it. That is that, yeah, that's not just a case of spaces, I think, but the sensible answer is
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that one could have a database filled with this in that was read by eSpeak, and then you could,
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you could, you could, yeah, not in the current, never in the current database perhaps, but
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no, no, we could do that, yeah, there's no problem, but it's doable. But you have to understand
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that the reason you read the course names, Dave, is because I butcher them, anyway,
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even if they're written properly. So, I don't mind facilitating this technically,
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but even if we did do this, might the phonetic strings that I would come up with for eSpeak,
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speak them would also be wrong. Yes, yes, it needs to be crowdsourced or
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so by the owner of the name or what to the point, I guess. So, yeah, but technically it should
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be pretty simple. I personally think we should do this. Yeah, and the other alternative is that we
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is that we take the person's name as an audiophile, because we have that,
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yeah, yeah, that's another way of doing it. That's also a nice idea. Although that is also,
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I have a lot of them, which is, so it would be like, today's show is by,
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hello, HPR, my name is Bob. Yeah, so a lot of editing will be involved there, so yeah,
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maybe it might be better. Just get an eSpeak to do it right, would be fun, yeah, yeah. I mean,
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I just discovered you could say the love bug with the northern accent, if you do, put the right
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parameters to eSpeak. So, you know, there's a lot of flex to do that. We're not going to do that,
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although now, every time you have dropped ducks on the love bug again,
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but anyway, he could have a different phonetic spelling for the holes. That'll show him.
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Okay, and then we had the HPR community news. How was the and the other business Dave?
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Hang on, changing gear here. So really, it was just to say there were three new series,
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but we've already really covered them, but they're in the notes for a future reference.
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The other thing was my usual feel about tags and summaries. Windigo was very kind to send in
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some updates in the past month, and I spent a bit of time fiddling around with the thing and
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added some more. So we've managed to achieve a maximum of a record of adding 40 more missing tags
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and all summaries to show in the past month. And the other thing was that the summary page
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has been smuttened up a bit as well. The one where you can go and look for things that need work,
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and there's a list of all the tags at the end. I mentioned that last month, but I added an index
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to it. And in discussion with Windigo, he suggested using some CSS to turn it into columns,
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which I followed up and did. So it just looks slightly prettier and it's easier to find things
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if you're thinking of adding a tag. I can't see if it's been used already and in what context if you
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want to. So cool, here we go. All right, that's it Dave. Thank you very much for joining and
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apologies to anybody who's going to be waiting in an hour for this show, but I'm really just so tired,
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I need to go to bed. And tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Join us now and share the software. You'll be free hackers. You'll be free.
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