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1231 lines
91 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4306
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Title: HPR4306: HPR Community News for January 2025
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4306/hpr4306.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:48:14
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4306 from Monday the 3rd of February 2025.
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Today's show is entitled HBR Community News for January 2025.
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It is part of the series HBR Community News.
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It is hosted by HBR volunteers and is about 106 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Kevi, Eskody, and can talk about shows released and comments posted in
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January 2025.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
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Radio.
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Today's episode is HBR Community News for January 2025.
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So happy new year to everybody.
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Joining me today is Kevi from Scotland.
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Hello hello.
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So after getting fired at the end of last year, I was put back for this year.
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Great stuff.
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We were desperate, Kevi, we were desperate.
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Well clearly, if you brought me back, you must be desperate.
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Yeah.
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Well, the requirements for the co-host is apparently must be brought living in Scotland.
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So here we go.
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So for those of you who don't know, Hacker Public Radio is a community podcast that this
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year will be running for 20 years, believe it or not, 20 years.
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We are a community, which means all the shows are contributed by random people very much,
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in fact, identical to the people who you see in the mirror in the morning.
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Yes, you.
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So if you have had trouble fulfilling your new year's resolutions for previous years,
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there's a real simple one that you can do.
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And that is take one hour in the coming year, one hour, recording a show for HBR.
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Here's how it goes.
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You go to your phone or your laptop or your device.
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If you don't have a device for recording, please email admin at hackerpublicradio.org.
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And we have a network, a network of people around the world who will see that a recording
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device makes its way to you.
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One said recording device, press record, ideally, we have highest pitch rate or whatever
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that you can get highest, the best format that you can get and go, hello, my name is,
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into your name.
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I got into tech, blah, blah, blah, and here's my story.
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Continue to talk.
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Keep it to around half an hour or something, press stop, go to the web page and upload it.
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As a new host, you pick the first available slot on the upload page, first available slot,
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enter your email address, send you an email, click on that link, fill in the form, give
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us an idea about your name, your handle and all that sort of stuff.
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And then you attach the file and that's it.
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You submitted your show.
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You have completed your New Year's resolutions for 2025.
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You have completed your bucket list.
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You have become a podcaster and your name will go down in the, in the annals on the internet
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archive when they're dusting over the researchers from alien lands come to dust off the internet
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archives, they will find your disk and your episode will be the last remaining, the only
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link that human civilization existed.
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Think about it.
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And the best of those doesn't matter how impressive their brushes are, it won't be able
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to wipe that out.
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So it is there for all time.
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There for all time.
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Excellent.
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Are we selling this a bit too much perhaps?
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It will be possibly, but that's a way, hey, we're going to start positive.
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It's only going to go down in the lane anyway, so it will start positive.
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Any of you, this show that you're listening to is where the janitors and there are quite
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a few of us now.
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The janitors get together to chat about and this show is actually not only to dentures,
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but anybody who listens to the HVRS broadcast and basically can provide constructive feedback
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on the episodes and gives you an idea of what's going on in the background.
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And we're delighted to say that Dave has been, Dave Morris has been rowing this for years
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and he is handing that over to some guy in the internet who stepped forward who is going
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to do the show notes and all the ranging of time zones so that I don't have to send out
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an email then send out a correcting email and a correcting email because I just can't
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deal with time zones.
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So that is good news.
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Other good news, Kevin, if you can take that is that we do have a new host this month.
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Absolutely.
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Yes, always great to get new hosts, but this month we've got Iota who released episode
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4296 crafting interpreters.
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Cool.
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Great stuff.
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And there was some good feedback on that on the mastodons as well on the HVRS.
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So in this show what we do is we want it to make sure that everybody gets some feedback
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on their episodes.
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This is particularly important.
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This is the currency by which we pay our hosts because they're not going to pay it any
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other way I can guarantee you that.
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What?
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Do you tell me my checks not in the post that's terrible?
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0.00, you can 100% increase this year.
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So we will go through some of the episodes, all of the episodes in fact and basically give
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you our experiences with them.
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So shall we start with episode 4283 and that was released on the first of January 2025
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and it was totally bone repair.
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This was by Mr. X and it was an episode where he had a walking his dog and he's got a
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thing for a little bone-shaped thing which I imagine is on the collar of his or on the
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chain where he keeps the doggy bags.
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And if you're archiving this from the future, humans had pets and when those pets did
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poopies, the humans had to pick up the poopies from the pets and put them in the bags.
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Yes.
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Okay.
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Yes, that is actually totally true and just for a bit of context, a totally in Scotland
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is usually some form, if you hear something totally, it's usually some form of connection
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to said poopies.
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Well now, I'm glad you're here.
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That's why we give you the bonus this year.
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And this show was one of the first shows that I put through the new, what you see is
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what you get editor and the absolute heart attack because when I looked at the show notes,
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the file was attached as a UU encoded data stream.
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So the three images that are in there, UU encoded data stream.
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So I spent hours upon hours going through this episode, not because there's anything
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wrong with the episode, far from it is because we changed the workflow and it's starting
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to get better now.
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And we've had to change the workflow because previously Dave was doing one part of that
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and then I was doing the other part.
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But now what's trying to do is get it all into the one thing and add a lot more QA.
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We have a lot of QA control that we do on it and I will be doing a show about that in
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the future.
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But that was this.
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So let's go back to the show itself.
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Basically he did a running repair on us and good listen show at us.
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Absolutely.
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Actually it was good to see you know and I weren't where we've kind of gone a bit
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through our way.
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You know when something breaks it's just all it's cheap, you know, throw it away.
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It's nice to see some people actually repairing stuff because then the day we took you
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okay it might be cheap but we don't need stuff ending up in landfill.
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So the yeah it was nice to see that and it was also nice as well to see the fact that
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we tried the first one and the first.
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It kind of held for a wee while but then he said he knew himself.
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It wouldn't hold regularly so we had to go back.
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So problem solved.
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You've got everything you need for a good life lesson in this.
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Yeah, very good.
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I echo that sentiment.
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So great and nice to see the images because I would know if you were to hear I wouldn't
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have a Q except for the fact that the word trolley seems to be multiple spellings and
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also definitions, many other meanings I was unaware of until now around Scotland is
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a local term for the act or product of defecation.
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Yeah, but don't say it like that nobody's calling nobody to understand you.
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Yeah.
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Joby.
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I exactly.
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So I've picking up your joby wee hash.
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Exactly.
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Now the following day we had a show by myself which was with my HBR hat on.
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The HBR developer information, a set of project principles for those wishing to contribute
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code to the HBR project and the reason I did this is because HBR is dedicated to sharing
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knowledge and it's not your typical software development project where the goal of the project
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is the software, the goal of the software developed on HBR is actually just to make sure
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that the shows are going out so we and we're such a long term project.
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So like 20, 40, 20, 45 would be like, you know, another 20 years from now, 20 years of
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a project, 20 years from now, what tools and utilities that we're using now will still
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be around on 20, 45, these are the things that we as a HBR project need to think about.
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So it's important I don't want people to have to join the project expecting one thing
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and then it turns out to be something completely different.
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So for that reason I wrote down all of these basically items of what we do and how we
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do it.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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I know you gave us certainly a thought a bit of feedback, it's not feeding back, it's
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some information, let's see, a bit of information there and yeah, actually I thought you explained
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it pretty well, you know, it's the, you know, you can't be filing on when you developments
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just because they're the thing of the time and then find out in a, you know, a couple
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of years time, they're no longer maintained, oh, we can't even do anything with this.
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Yeah, guarantee it will sport will end prior to you going on vacation or you know, so
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yeah, that's a, that's a thing.
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So the following day, no comments are not because, yeah, would be interesting to get some
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comments on that, but yeah, following day, what's on my podcast player, which was a emergency
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show, again, and what, for people who are not aware, if you're joining HBR for the first
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time, what we have is we give people the option to put into the main queue so you can pick
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your own slot, put more shows in, leave them two days, two weeks, so put in the show, jump
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forward two weeks in the queue, put in your next show, et cetera.
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If you're new, put it in straight away, but we also have the reserve queue for days where
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the slots are not filled up, so some weeks, we might have four slots filled and then we
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put in a reserve show and that's fine, but we want to make sure that we keep the reserve
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queue quite full, and we also want people to contribute shows, so that's a big thing,
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just contributing shows, so great.
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About this show, this was another, no surprises from Houga, or podcasts that he likes,
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anything jump out at you there?
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Yeah, just, what actually I liked about was just the fact that he went on and about
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the year, and you know, the timing as to what it is, because it was a reserve queue, obviously,
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and just the fact that he was reminding himself as well as his listeners, that people
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commented about how many shows he listens to, over all the times they've heard, and he's
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saying, yeah, but remember, I don't listen to every single one from the times I first
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started recording HPR, because, you know, air interest change, even our tastes change,
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you know what I mean, what I like now isn't the same as what I was listening to, let's
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say, 10 years ago.
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There we have it.
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Yeah, exactly.
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Yeah, and it's good actually to have these, if nothing else, as just for a bit of your
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own memories, you know, because, I mean, when I think about it, it got me thinking about
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some of the podcasts that I listened to, and I actually fired up an old home folder that
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I've seen quite a few of those, and I was looking at my G-Podder stats, and I'm going,
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I'd forgotten them at half of these podcasts, they don't exist anymore, but, you know,
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it's something I hadn't even thought about in years.
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Yeah, and if people want to go looking at their old media players, we're looking for, stay
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with a techie episode 66 is missing.
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If you have a copy of that, that would be gold to have.
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Oh, yes, absolutely.
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And who knows?
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Maybe somebody listening might have that stored somewhere on an old hard drive, something
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like that.
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Absolutely.
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But, yeah, I mean, the hookahs current podcasts, they do tend to be sent to run one of three
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things, our theme is to run.
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At the moment, yeah.
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We'll have to.
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Yes, at the moment.
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We'll have to wait until next year to see if that changes.
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I mean, absolutely.
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Although, I'm actually going to give him a call out.
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He's gone over a lot of the doctor who, and I have to confess, it's never something
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I'll show you to.
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He's actually got me going right the way back to the very start episode one, and I'm
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even listening through the shows which were lost, but they have the sound track, and
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they're still like every three seconds kind of changing.
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So I've gotten right back into the very start.
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I have a tone on the list to do that very, very thing myself, very same thing myself.
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Oh, cool.
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Good.
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Yeah, funny.
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One piece of advice I'd give though, if you want to do that, to the listeners as well,
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is don't go to like to the BBCI player or somewhere.
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I'm just hit play because they have big gaps in them.
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So find what I've got is I'm going to be like Wikipedia, all the list up.
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And then I'm finding the missing ones and like on the internet, I can't even please
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just look at that because that's the only place you'll find.
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Yeah.
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We personally don't know everything anyway because where I can, I prefer it on physical
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media, if I can get it largely because then I can change the contrast to the colors and
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adjust the speed and you know, it's just a more pleasant experience using your own media
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control.
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Oh, absolutely.
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Absolutely.
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Okay, we'll move on.
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HVR Community News for 2024, which was last month's show where we had one comment from
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Kevin Dobryne and it was about a comment about Rita Med about the number of books that
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Kevin had.
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And he said, do you want to read this?
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Actually.
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Yep.
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Yes, I did have that many books.
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I did indeed have about 200 Asimov books at one time, but I have moved from dead tree
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books to ebooks now.
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I still have the science fiction books in the electronic form, but I have not replaced
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the far more numerous science fact books.
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But I created Asimov science fact books for turning me into a college professor, something
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I did for a number of years before I moved into IT.
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Cool.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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There.
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Yeah, Asimov is certainly one that gets mentioned quite a bit from a hook, isn't it?
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Yes, he has done a series on, I mean, what we were talking about was the science fiction
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series that he's doing and he is going through the golden grade of science fiction writers
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from the 50s and 60s.
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So Asimov was there and he's just finished that series and he's now moving on to Art
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City Clark.
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If you're following the future feed at least.
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Yep.
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It's a little more good start to listen to, excellent.
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So we had the next day, a chap called Kevin talking about scheduling recordings with
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Cron and FF MPEG, and as soon as I heard this, Kevin, I was going, oooh, that's not going
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to work.
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Are you going to trouble with that?
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Well, to be honest, actually, I was doing it for the hearing no.
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I wasn't actually thinking about letting it run continuously, which was the reason for
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the updated version, because I was thinking, wait a minute, when I go away from here, I
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don't go for a day or two.
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I go away for, you know, two, three weeks at a time.
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Exactly.
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Yeah.
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So it's amazing how much just what I thought was going to be a week and a throw away series
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ended up developing away, but I mean, this all came from playing localized music files
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on the command line and I got quite a bit of feedback from this.
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Yeah.
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This, I have, I think, I told you on Masterdown that I intend to write my own response to
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this and I have, but I kind of got distracted as well, doing other stuff, namely all the
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HVIRSAF.
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But maybe we should tell people what it is.
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So a good friend of the show, Dan Lynch, who we've interviewed more than once and a podcast
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for himself also has a weekly radio show, which is streamed live, and you wanted to
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basically catch that stream, which you did on the command line, and then you thought,
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hey, I'll chuck it into a cron job and have, you know, basically a recording that comes
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out every time.
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So you have one comment there, do you want to read that?
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Yes, that's, well, actually two comments, so with my own yet.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So I just pretend that I had, I mean, Dan's, the stream for Dan Lynch's, the radio station
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for Dan Lynch, operates from, I think it's, it's, it's some like, I don't want something
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like that.
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They have really quite obscure, they says in their stream, and it had quite a few characters,
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odd characters in that weren't just bladers or numbers.
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And of course, when I actually ran this, it semi-colon triggered an action from cron
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and it didn't do it.
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And I was like, oh, oh, Keisha, Keisha, forget that, that happened.
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So what I've just put down is the URL, long URL, stream from the command line, failed
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when using FFMPs, substitute this for, and it was, I just changed it for a tiny URL,
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I just put that thing into a tiny URL, put in the tiny URL, that worked fine.
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Perfect.
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And Henrik Herman says, inspiring episode, this was an inspiring episode, Kevi, it's
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a start, thought of when I can have to use it.
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As you said, the computer must be turned on in order to have a schedule recording to
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record.
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It got me thinking of the turnmux app for Linux Android-based phones.
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I have not tested it, but I think it might work to get this on the command line recording
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to work on the phone.
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Also the transistor app for Android phones was interesting.
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I like the app after my first trials.
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Well now, Kevi, if that is not a future episode, I, I, I insert with you, I, I, I, I, I, I,
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insert with you, statement here, because my, my, just went blank, my, my own hat.
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Heat my own hat, yes.
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Well, actually, I took legacy with that.
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The, and yeah, it's good to actually get feedback, because obviously, when you're going
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on command line stuff, it tends to be a bit more mighty, you might think people might
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hate this and turn off, but it's good to get feedback like that.
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So although I will say, I actually didn't do this one on my desktop, for that plain
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reason, it has to be on.
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So I just installed FFM pilgrim at one of my pies and stuck it on.
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So the, yeah, so it's just on a pie that's already on anyway.
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That's what I'd recommend.
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So otherwise, you're going to use up a heck of a lot of power.
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And look who's just joined the party.
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Some guy on the internet, some guy on the channel, free to talk, if you wish.
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What's it's not a requirement to be fair to, to be fair to him.
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He's actually been in since the start, but being very quiet.
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Very good.
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Very good.
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So, Kevin, but this has actually brought up a lot of future episodes for me, I think,
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relating to the best approaches to dealing with Chrome and, you know, time zones and emails
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and stuff like that.
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So I have, I have an episode and yes, I know I own myself a show.
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Fine.
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You've sent a card and you've sent it, you've sent it, you've sent it.
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There you go.
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The following day, we had, after much requesting us, Solas Spider, who joined us of large community
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member and a recent HPR scripture, works as God's pantry food bank and gave us 25
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years, I run down questions and answers, 25 years of his career.
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And I don't know about you, but I loved this episode.
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Well, actually, I loved it and I also felt like how depressing that this exists still
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in the world, but I still loved the episode.
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Absolutely.
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It was, I mean, it's very sad that something in this day, and this day and age, some
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like this is needed, especially when you think about this year, I'm out of free
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waste.
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I must be happening, especially in this half of the world, it's, but you know, it's,
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it's amazing.
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On a slight, a slight side note here, after releasing this episode, during the storm
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day, when we were off, Peter's volunteered to take people around a tour of the facility
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on a smartphone.
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And if you ever get the chance, ask him and do it, it was phenomenal.
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Honestly, it's, I, even from his descriptions of it, and I've spoken to him many times,
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I couldn't get over this year's size of it.
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It's huge.
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Unbelievable.
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Yeah, I mean, it's, it's definitely, and he was showing me like, even like the truck
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base.
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It was one or two.
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It's like eight or nine truck base there.
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I'm not a fool.
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And then he was showing me the fridge.
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Then he was walking through the freezer.
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I mean, this freezer, you know, we, we've got the idea of a chest freezer being big.
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You know, I, I'm pretty sure that this walking freezer is about the same size as probably
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the physical size of the technical department building in the school.
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Okay.
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Shall we do some of the comments, but this got a lot of comments.
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Oh, yeah.
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No surprise there, though.
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Malink says, God's food Patrick, really love the show.
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Thank you for all the work you do.
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And we've got one from Archer 72.
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Thank you for this show.
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Hi, Peter.
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Thank you for creating this show.
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I learned more than even the two times we conversion the hospital about this topic.
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I wondered if Europe and surrounding nations have similar causes.
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It would be interesting to think about that.
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Archer 72, aka Mark Rice.
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And Claudia M says, great episodes.
|
|
So this spider really enjoyed listening to this one on all the work that God's food
|
|
pantry does for the community and how you have been involved in it.
|
|
I know your, you've mentioned it to me and passing your master down.
|
|
So it was nice to hear all about it in detail.
|
|
Thanks again.
|
|
And then we had one by Kevin O'Brien, great show.
|
|
I really enjoyed hearing about God's pantry food bank.
|
|
My mother was involved in a food bank in a hometown of Skituet, Massachusetts.
|
|
I may have bitchered that sort of.
|
|
And even, and may even have been one of the people who started it.
|
|
I'm not sure since I hadn't moved out a few years before she did it.
|
|
Paul G says, great episode.
|
|
Thanks for sharing Peter.
|
|
When I hear a food bank, I think of operations in this neck of the wood.
|
|
So I am surprised and impressed to hear the size of God's pantry.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
I believe food banks and high levels of social benefits are a reflection of poor government
|
|
and perhaps wrong priorities.
|
|
However, they fulfill an essential service for people who find themselves in certain
|
|
circumstances where there are no longer able to support themselves.
|
|
Thank you for your selfless service to the community in which you live.
|
|
And Peter responded to all these appreciation.
|
|
Thank you so much to Malink, Archer 72, Claudio M, Kevin O'Brien and Paul J for your comments.
|
|
It's good to be appreciated for the work we do supply the need of our food insecure neighbors.
|
|
On Friday the 24th January 2025, Kebi was off work available and so I gave him a personal
|
|
virtual tour of our new food bank facility location by Telegram video.
|
|
If anyone wants a similar tour, please inform me.
|
|
It would have been helpful if I read that comment before I read mine.
|
|
But yes, I would highly recommend it.
|
|
Very worth having a look at really really something amazing.
|
|
And the following day we had a show by some guy on the internet, obviously a very weird
|
|
and strange person.
|
|
Get him talking.
|
|
I don't know what will he brought noodle kicking him screaming to the table.
|
|
I hope not.
|
|
It didn't seem like he was doing so.
|
|
And it was a talk about salty zombies gaming community seven days to die.
|
|
Not as a gamer, I really did enjoy this and I getting a lot of insight into the gaming
|
|
community when Scottie talks to his gamer friends.
|
|
You kind of get a feeling for what is allowed and what's not allowed in the gaming community.
|
|
That's I'm not a gamer, that's everybody knows very well.
|
|
Well, hello, Ken.
|
|
Hi, hello, Scotty.
|
|
Good to meet you.
|
|
Good to meet you.
|
|
Happy New Year from one of the minions here at HBR.
|
|
Yes, bowed out.
|
|
But that.
|
|
Well, yes, that show we had a lot of fun making and I'm glad you enjoyed it.
|
|
Yeah, it was really I really liked it as well.
|
|
I mean, I am one of a game.
|
|
I'll lose seven days to die and know what a game I've played.
|
|
But it was actually interesting.
|
|
What I liked the fact was just the attitude of you, like you say, so many people want
|
|
to save, you know, the kind of yes, we're cozy to zombie survival game, but we're cozy
|
|
and safe inside our base.
|
|
Whereas you guys were like, no, we want to play this properly.
|
|
We want to go more hardcore.
|
|
I like that.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
We're going to just some of these zombies attack you know, okay, not my thing, but you seem
|
|
to be doing it.
|
|
Yeah, we had a lot of fun trying to convince others to get involved with it and the surprise
|
|
on their face.
|
|
Well, we couldn't see their faces, but the attitude of their avatars when they arrived
|
|
at the location where they're supposed to be safe and comfortable.
|
|
That was the best of it all.
|
|
The panic, right?
|
|
You kind of feel it coming through the line.
|
|
I'm just picturing you should have had a guy they are already for with the dad's army
|
|
thing.
|
|
You know, Jonesy, don't panic, don't panic, don't panic, don't panic, don't panic,
|
|
don't panic.
|
|
I think that reference might be lost in our UK or US, possibly, possibly actually.
|
|
One of the note on that server though, I got into a bit of trouble recently.
|
|
I found a bug and the way we went about trying to, I guess, learn more about the bug so
|
|
that we can put in a ticket.
|
|
We went to the location where the bug was and of course, I found it, but then I created
|
|
sort of an issue.
|
|
The bug trapped me there.
|
|
So every time I log on it crashed the server.
|
|
Apparently, there were a couple of double doors up on this one POI.
|
|
That's a point of interest that I don't know how or why, but they just sort of spammed
|
|
open and shut.
|
|
If you go up on the roof of this POI and I'm assuming go anywhere near these doors where
|
|
they will activate this spamming behavior, it just crashes the server.
|
|
When I found it, I was trying to type in and form others, it crashed and now every time
|
|
I log back onto the server, I'm at that location so it continuously crashes and yeah, we created
|
|
a problem.
|
|
Oh, that's so good.
|
|
No, definitely not good.
|
|
You couldn't get to an admin to boot you out over the, are you responding in the same
|
|
place?
|
|
I'm continuously responding in the same place.
|
|
We contacted the admins and supposedly they rolled back the POI a few days or something
|
|
like that.
|
|
I'm not sure what the technique was, but apparently the issue happened in that backup that they
|
|
used so it was no good.
|
|
I'm told that my character got reset or something like that and then moved.
|
|
So hopefully I didn't lose all my personal stuff, but I'll try later on today and see
|
|
if there's a new development, but everybody on the discord, they're all giving me the
|
|
a little bit of grief over that.
|
|
Thanks, I'm young over there, but they're like, thanks Scotty for bringing down the house
|
|
on us again.
|
|
There's always one.
|
|
Trey says in the comments, say cheese, welcome, little, thank you for being on the podcast
|
|
to balance out some guy on the internet's insanity.
|
|
Now, what is the deal with all the cheese?
|
|
I thought Zombies did brings not cheese or are the allergic to slash repelled by cheese.
|
|
A particular type of cheese.
|
|
I have encountered some newberg cheese here that could drive off somebody hard for sure.
|
|
Thank you for such a cheesy episode, smiley face looking forward to the next one.
|
|
So there you go.
|
|
You heard it first from HPR, cheese, fiends, often as zombie invasions.
|
|
Good to know.
|
|
That's what I'll be telling my friends as I run the other way and saying, oh, you'll
|
|
be fine.
|
|
Here's some come there.
|
|
And more gaming stuff this time, the following day, playing Civilization 5, part 5, and this
|
|
is by Ahuka, who is going through computer strategy games.
|
|
This one basically talking about the idea of civics and how it's changed in a different
|
|
strategy in which to a different way to play Civilizations and a different approach to
|
|
take again, not being a gamer.
|
|
This was revealing to me about how you would do that and yeah, yeah, it's really good.
|
|
He was really thorough about this.
|
|
For anybody who's not really sure about it, it was essentially just think of like the first
|
|
one you do might be like the constitution of a country.
|
|
I mean, that's at the very early stages.
|
|
And then the next ones you do, it's, there is like a tech tree involved, but it's not
|
|
just about experience and earning points on local tech tree.
|
|
You have to do specific things.
|
|
So then like the instead of you can, you know, edit your constitution, but you've got
|
|
to unlock the parts to do it.
|
|
So it was really good.
|
|
And of course, as with a lot of these games, there's, there's effects, both positive and
|
|
negative.
|
|
You know, so for example, one that's coming off the top of my head, you know, if you
|
|
go for a military, like a style military control, then you're going to have discipline.
|
|
However, the neck and you know, things work more efficiently, but the knock on effects
|
|
are that you're going to have less happiness and your places are going to be, your place
|
|
is going to be more susceptible to uprising and rebels.
|
|
So like that kind of idea, yeah, that I love a hookah shows on civilization.
|
|
One of the things that if you're not a gamer, a lot of people think of it more linear.
|
|
You know, you have a path to go on and you just follow that path and you're hopefully
|
|
achieve success at the end of it.
|
|
What a hookah does is he points out all the different avenues that you can achieve success
|
|
and it's not just that meta gaming, like if you, if you are a gamer, you know what I'm
|
|
talking about, meta refers to his most effective technique available and what players would
|
|
do is min max that technique to achieve a victory, but it's an, it's a very weird way
|
|
of doing it.
|
|
A hookah's techniques, as he's explaining it is great for anyone who hasn't played the
|
|
game before, you're going to definitely enjoy it, even if you're not a gamer because in
|
|
the meta community, if you've ever heard someone talk about how they say, for instance,
|
|
have to go and capture this one character and bring them on your team because he has
|
|
these stats and then another guy who has these specific stats and that's going to gain
|
|
you access to this other, you know, region over here, et cetera.
|
|
That's kind of boring and it doesn't help you live the game.
|
|
You don't get immersed by that.
|
|
So if you listen to a hookah, you're going to get immersed and you're going to enjoy
|
|
the game.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
That's what I would recommend and I remember I wrote down on my notes was anybody who's
|
|
thinking about playing civilization for it.
|
|
I would say listen through to a hookah's series on it and you'll actually have already
|
|
before you even start playing, before you even click a mouse or anything, maybe before
|
|
you purchase a game, you're going to have an idea over, over, I like the idea, there's
|
|
a like the idea that you'll have a strategy built up rather than you're just sitting looking
|
|
going, um, what I do and that's one of the good things.
|
|
The guides aren't do this to win.
|
|
They are, you know, if you do this, you're going to have this consequences, you know,
|
|
not necessarily bad, but both bad and good.
|
|
So it allows you to have a strategy to your head so he's been really, he's been really
|
|
enjoyable.
|
|
I must admit, I really have enjoyed these.
|
|
Well, I'm glad that finally we have somebody here who understands games on his fear.
|
|
One thing I drew from it was that if you did buy this game, you could play it through
|
|
ones doing one strategy and then start again doing the next strategy and vice versa and
|
|
just keep going and keep going.
|
|
So you would get a lot more bang for your book, you know, essentially I've got five different
|
|
ways of playing the same game.
|
|
So I thought that was a, that was a good, a good way to get more value from money from
|
|
the game.
|
|
Yeah, that, that's fantastic with a lot of the older games that exists, a lot of the
|
|
newer games today.
|
|
They're trying to make it all these live services.
|
|
So where you don't get that replay ability because they want to build into micro transactions
|
|
and other things to try and ink what they call encourage you to spend more or whatever.
|
|
And then they claim that you have to spend more because they have to keep up the services
|
|
that require you to spend more.
|
|
So a hook is going over this game and as you've mentioned, the replay ability, I love older
|
|
games for that alone.
|
|
I've already won using brute force.
|
|
Now let me go back and try and win using diplomacy.
|
|
Yeah, absolutely.
|
|
And you know, they are such a depth that, you know, like you're saying, this is so any
|
|
of the other things.
|
|
Now, they're not interested in you playing a game, they're interested in you buying into
|
|
their series and all that problem that I see is, I'm going to see my own son, he now
|
|
and again does delve into things that I'm not so keen on.
|
|
But, you know, then he tells me, oh, no, they've shut down that community.
|
|
So the DLCs, which he paid for, which then turned out you had to join this community
|
|
to actually run no longer exists.
|
|
So you just wasted the money on the DLCs and don't even get me started on that nonsense.
|
|
And we look forward to your show on the topic in the future.
|
|
All right, guys, we've got to move on or we'll be stuck here all enjoyable though.
|
|
The following day, we had A.M. on the Nyquest prompt, which was another one by Lee and
|
|
another one that brought me, let's say, challenges to my upload script.
|
|
So what this was, very good because I also realized that Lee is studying for his amateur radio
|
|
license and anything that we can do to help you in this quest.
|
|
And I guarantee you that when I was studying for my foundation level, I was not defining
|
|
where forms in audacity, although it probably would have helped.
|
|
Yeah, I mean, this one sadly went a bit over my head.
|
|
And it's probably the same way you got lost in the last two game editions.
|
|
This one, I don't give it over my head.
|
|
But it was great to see him get involved in harm radio.
|
|
And also, I was just thinking this such encouragement for yourself.
|
|
I mean, he said that he did this after hearing you talk on the harm radio at Uncom.
|
|
So that's great to hear.
|
|
Yeah, this is good because I also used this, I submitted an article to the RSGB,
|
|
a Radio Society Agripperton, about like, during this, that's
|
|
Spectrum 24, and I'll count them hopefully.
|
|
They haven't got back to me yet.
|
|
Yeah, they seemed interested, but they haven't, I sent them the article here back, it was published.
|
|
But one of the things I did mention there was amateur radio guys should be going,
|
|
amateur radio clubs should go to freely open source events, because there's just a huge
|
|
potential pool of people who are interested in technical topics.
|
|
And oh, here's Ham Radio, new shiny thing that I can discover and play with and use.
|
|
But the show itself was actually quite good because it allowed you to see what's happening
|
|
with particular web forms and how you can combine two web forms together and what that actually
|
|
sounds like. And that's used all over the shop in radios, but it's also used in the telephone
|
|
network and all over the place, even on fiber optic cables and stuff. So nice show actually.
|
|
Well, and I really liked the way he did it in Audacity because not only can you see it with the
|
|
web form, but you can also hear it as well, which is important if you're doing a podcast, I guess.
|
|
Yes, that is true. And also it generated a couple of comments, one by a certain Mr Ken Fallon,
|
|
do you know who? Who said, new Ham news, new Ham news say, did I hear you saying that you're
|
|
going for the exam? Rachel, it explained a lot to me about the visualizations of web forms,
|
|
more of this type of thing. And this was followed by Paul J. Saint, thank you, highly great idea to
|
|
use Audacity to create the visualization. I have been playing with the frequencies in the
|
|
Nyquist prompt and like the appearance of the data displayed when using Maltzound, HSoS,
|
|
10,000 sound, HSoS, 200. Yeah, go check that out. You really want to quote that? Don't try and type that in.
|
|
This shows the envelope effect very clearly, I guess, with the frequency differences seen in
|
|
radio transmitters, receivers, this is even more pronounced, but I haven't tried to load these values
|
|
in. My other comment, beware, brackets enjoy, the functional programming rabbit hole. I started with
|
|
Clodger, then moved to Commonlisp and more recently a scheme, brackets, Guile, as well as using
|
|
Emaxlisp throughout. My use of the latter has improved significantly since I learned from the other
|
|
functional languages. Thanks for the show, Paul. And Paul, we look forward to episodes of each of those,
|
|
basic introduction to the 4i and do all of those. And Paul has also been served into the
|
|
Janichus channel. The Mupp of Office is winging his way to him as we speak. Oh, no, does he get his
|
|
initials on the mupp? Of course, ladies and gentlemen, with fine gold leaf.
|
|
Thanks. Do not do that on your mupps, guys. I'm not a janitor.
|
|
While you're here, pick up your mupp and follow me, say it again.
|
|
The following day, we had Firefox Adams. How to enhance the capabilities of Firefox, this is by
|
|
Rito. And it was a good episode because it's a good reminder that you can make stuff better
|
|
by adding in extensions. And I comment myself to this great tip, some great suggestions here.
|
|
And it's good to see that we have a huge overlap. I missed clear URL, but I installed it now. Can
|
|
I suggest consent or magic for the auto deny of consent forms? And I give a link.
|
|
And the next day, we had trade. Now let me start that again. And the next comment, we had trade.
|
|
Has it interpreted add-ons? Thank you for sharing this show. I very,
|
|
rarely install add-ons due to several being taken over by malicious actors. I will need to look
|
|
through the ones you and can recommend it. Scotty, do you want to do one, or? No. Sure. Yeah,
|
|
I've fished out my glasses just in case I got a... So I'm looking at Rito. That's it, Joe.
|
|
Starts with. Hi, Ken. Thank you for the reminder. It was my plan to mention in other shows of 2023,
|
|
of which to take some add-ons into my collection, these are, and it gives a couple of links there,
|
|
one from Ken and one from Archer. In regards to your suggestion of consent or magic,
|
|
in the settings of U-block origin, I haven't activated the cookie section. Or is it, wait,
|
|
is it haven't or have? I'm assuming have activated. Yeah. And he's talking about a couple of cookie
|
|
choices, easy list and ad guard. However, I use the chance to plug something new. Your local CDN,
|
|
it's a web browser extension that emulates consent delivery networks to improve the online privacy.
|
|
Some diagrams in the lower area of the website better understand localcdn.org. Cheers, Rito.
|
|
Yeah, I enjoyed this episode there, and I actually, I was thinking this probably
|
|
would be good if it would maybe even spawn a bunch of other episodes, because you know,
|
|
we all use different add-ons and things for a browser. And don't assume, of course, that everybody
|
|
knows about every other one. The only comment that I had, I'm having interested to have a look at
|
|
an answer for YouTube. I don't know that one. The biggest issue I've got with YouTube add-ons are
|
|
generally you've got to update them every day, because YouTube, Google just play whack-a-mole
|
|
with stuff. Any back ends to download and like that, they'll shut them down. So unless you're
|
|
willing to cut to update things daily, then I devoid YouTube plugins personally. And here,
|
|
some of his add-ons haven't been updated in a while, which would cause me a certain degree of
|
|
concern. Yeah, yeah, totally. Especially with something as important as your browser. There's
|
|
need to be updated, yeah. I should be more sure, because I haven't, I haven't, I don't really
|
|
understand what it does. So I sure that will be great to read over. Add it to the list.
|
|
Scotty, go ahead over. Yeah, the add-on thing is kind of funny. I recently, the other day started
|
|
learning some JavaScript script. I went on to, was it W3 schools, and that's where I'm learning it
|
|
from, because they talk about a lot of web standards and things of that nature. And I'm also
|
|
looking at Mozilla's documentation for building browser extensions. I'm only in the beginning
|
|
parts right now, because I'm still learning the language, so I haven't actually started constructing
|
|
other than the basic example that they give you in the beginning. I think it's called borderfire
|
|
or whatever. But yeah, so much of the web has turned to crap, and I think a lot of it is due to
|
|
JavaScript, but I want to be able to just tone that down with my own extension in some areas.
|
|
One of the places, pardon me, one of the places YouTube that you've mentioned earlier,
|
|
there's so much low-effort content being uploaded to the place. You have those people who,
|
|
they create channels that scrape, stack overflow, and then they just auto-generate millions of videos
|
|
based on that feed. And I want to be able to just have a simple extension that looks at how many
|
|
videos they have. If it's a number above, like, say, 10,000, just automatically remove them from
|
|
the feed, and maybe put them on a list or something so that way they never get loaded again,
|
|
but something simple. That would be interesting. And I would also be interested in your journey to
|
|
JavaScript, because it is something that I've told my list to learn and do. And now,
|
|
with the way you get it, there is some JavaScript entering my life. I was never a huge big fan of it,
|
|
but there are occasions where it is useful, I guess.
|
|
Yeah, so far, and this is the early days part of it. It does not appear to be difficult to actually
|
|
learn, like, to pick up on with the syntax, but, you know, actually using it's going to be a different
|
|
story. What I've learned on the W3 schools page, some of the examples that they give you are,
|
|
they talk about using the difference between cons and let for establishing a variable or an
|
|
identifier, whatever you want to call it. But when they then show you it in an example,
|
|
they revert back to using var for that global use. So I've noticed a couple of areas where they
|
|
kind of cheat to do the example from where they're teaching you. And I want to find a way to report
|
|
that. I'll include that in my journey, because it's also in my show notes, not my show notes,
|
|
but my local notes that I'm taking as I'm learning. Cool. And retail and self is joined.
|
|
It's a very out-of-the-world people we're talking about. So anyway, the next day we were talking,
|
|
he's just listening. Yes, you're going to have to tune in Monday, like everybody else to find out
|
|
what we said. So Henrik submitted a show on HTTRAC, which would be HTRAC website
|
|
copy or software. And he uses it to get a copy of his own website. I was actually, I commented,
|
|
great tip. I am shocked. I had not yet learned of this tool. I just took a snapshot of
|
|
free culture podcast and the work like a charm. Great suggestion. Thanks.
|
|
I absolutely love this show and want to start playing with it. But you know what really puts me
|
|
off, starting to play around with it is I don't want to end up risking spending a fortune on
|
|
drives, hard drives, because I could just see myself getting far too into this. You know, you
|
|
know, he's talking obviously about saving all the websites. And could you imagine like going to
|
|
somewhere like Jement or somebody like, oh, flip, that's huge. But it is, it actually is such a useful
|
|
tool. I've been using it for several other things, one of which might be the QA part of the HPR
|
|
website. So that when I post a show, I take a snapshot of what it looks like so that we can get
|
|
so that we have a copy of, okay, this is what the website is rendering for doing some of those
|
|
websites that just have loads of ads and crap on it. Just download the website and then read the
|
|
text from the local copy as opposed to the website. So I'm, I'm using it quite a lot. Haven't
|
|
often put anything together. But when I do, if it will be, there will be an episode maybe in 20
|
|
years time referring back to this one. I have to ask you, have you used Calibre's function
|
|
for this with the recipes? For two websites? Yes. Calibre as in the eReader function? Yes.
|
|
I have not, but that would be a good show. I have used what do you call it? The website automation
|
|
too. I can't find, I can't think of those. What's that? No, I didn't even know what did that,
|
|
but to be honest, I'm very basic in my Calibre being usage it is just purely like an ebook
|
|
organiser converter and readers. Celium, yes. I've used Celium quite a lot and also used
|
|
beautiful soup for Python. But there are that to your episodes list. There's Scotty.
|
|
Oh, the Calibre one? Please, yes. Okay. This is what happens on this show. You know, you just get
|
|
more and more episode requests as the longer you listen. The following day, we had scheduled all your
|
|
recordings from the command line, a bit of fine shooting by Kevin. It's not this glowing again.
|
|
Yeah, trying to, trying to scrape as much as possible out of every single episode.
|
|
Folks, this is why you need to come in. You need to start submission shows so we don't have to
|
|
listen to Kevin all the time. Absolutely. Yeah, this was actually in response to, hmm, I'm awake
|
|
quite of it. So I thought, yeah, I can't just, I know she thought, let's just have it, you know,
|
|
right over the old file. So well, that's two point and I'll record in the first one then if she's
|
|
going to be right over it. So yeah, so I just tweaked it a wee bit just so that the file names edited.
|
|
And of course, on the lemon show itself, I actually forgot that I percentage sign in
|
|
Cron actually has a separate function. So you've got to go and kill the function with a backslash.
|
|
So I, I actually did it and then realized I'm not re-recording the whole episode for that. So I was
|
|
very quickly messaging Ken to see edit these shoulders for me, please. No problem, no problem whatsoever.
|
|
But this did give me inspiration to do my own script, which isn't stable enough now to do a show
|
|
yet. So but when it is, I will. And I said, nice to see the progression. When I hear you say that
|
|
you have gone overwrite the file without specifying the dash-y option I thought I got disappointed
|
|
with that one myself a few times. I've written my own approach to this because who doesn't want to
|
|
hear Dan Lynch's pick and mix. Yes, I owe a show. Yes, although I do wish to point out other
|
|
recording things are available. Yeah, but what what what actually, what other things to record
|
|
are available. I think it was just a few people mentioned it, Dan posted a master on that he was
|
|
doing the show. And quite a few people, especially the other side of the pond, said, that's not
|
|
really very convenient. Where can we get it on catch up? And Dan looked and said, uh, we've no catch up.
|
|
Well, this is a good one because it makes you think about something else and it gave me some
|
|
topics where I have quite a lot of experience with FFMPEG after using it for the last 20 years or
|
|
15 years, more 20 years. On HPR, we do a lot of stuff with FFMPEG and we get burned. You know,
|
|
I come against a lot of the things, issues that you come across. So it was useful to make a show
|
|
on that sharing knowledge. And also I have, there are a few gotchas about using Chrome and tips
|
|
that I would like to share as well. So no harm to do to do a show on that. Absolutely. And the other
|
|
thing is if you especially haven't done anything in a while with Chrome, the annoying thing is a lot
|
|
of the documentation doesn't really focus on the, yeah, like those kind of odd details, let's say.
|
|
Exactly. Yeah. The gotchas. Yeah. Uh, quick, quick question for you. You're, I noticed your
|
|
file, well, not just a file name, the actual uh, directories as well, you use a camel case
|
|
and underscores. Is that, is that a typical thing? Is that just for the example?
|
|
Hey, give me a sec. I've actually closed that one. So bear mine. Two sex. Then I tend to use
|
|
underscores. Yes, that's just me. I, I say it will underscores. I don't like seeing, I think
|
|
half the problem is that's a personal thing purely because I'm dyslexic and I don't like seeing
|
|
big long lettering together if it's not a word. Oh, okay. Because when I saw the both the techniques,
|
|
both the, um, with the numbers, I see the, uh, for date for the date function there, you got the
|
|
underscores there in the camel case for the letterings. So I was just wondering what's your, uh,
|
|
what, what's your scheme there? No, that's just me. It's just, uh, like I said, one of the joys
|
|
it is like, see, I don't like see one big thing being read out of its note. I like
|
|
separating out either as an underscore or like I said, the capitals. So yeah, take a pick. I can
|
|
handle either but I can't handle one long word. Very good. There's the show. There's a series of
|
|
shows. Why you do stuff the way you do comma casing and underscores. I see myself that my preferences
|
|
changed over time and I can tell based on what I've used, have what period in my life it was
|
|
that I used that sort of format or it turned out to be less than optimal. So I changed it.
|
|
And speaking of stuff that I threw into the reserve queue, uh, three holiday hacks from 2023. So
|
|
this came out on the 17th of January 2025. So more or less a year afterwards. Uh, I replaced a
|
|
battery on a Sony 810 telephone. I replaced a fan on my oscilloscope and I changed the top of my
|
|
desk and I commented, uh, update after a year in the queue. We never know how long these shows are
|
|
going to be in the queue. This one took a year to come out. Not bad. Not good. Just an observation.
|
|
So here's an update on the process. The phone is still working fine as a backup device. Uh,
|
|
someone stole my free time. So I haven't had as much chance to use my regal. What it is,
|
|
a lot nicer to use when they do have time. And both desks are still going strong and I recommend
|
|
change to anyone. Yeah, I mean, I think that was one thing. I mean, it's good actually if you'd
|
|
update us will. But, uh, just things like if you have any, if you like kind of, uh, food doing
|
|
about, I would actually recommend everybody replace a screen, replace a battery on our old phone,
|
|
a broken phone because how many bathrooms just get dumped purely because the baths are knackered.
|
|
You know, and there's no reason for it. It's, it's more land full. You know, we don't need that.
|
|
Yeah. I'm, I'm not, I'm not somebody who's an extreme environmentalist, but it does bug me
|
|
that when people throw out things, when there's nothing wrong with them. Well, I'm Scottish,
|
|
and I know how much a pound is a pound. Well, we're not not. Exactly. Exactly. Play the
|
|
stereotype. Exactly. Um, yeah. And what offended me about this was that the guy, you know, I brought
|
|
it down to the guy to repair, and it was obvious he did nothing with it. And, you know, oh, I'll give
|
|
you a scrap value for the phone and hear by another phone brand new. It's just, uh, quite irritating,
|
|
but he lost a customer that day. Yeah, absolutely. And, and rightfully so as well, it's, uh, yeah,
|
|
like I said, this does bug me especially in the tech industry. It's broken just through what
|
|
I was, was cheap to buy a new one. Yeah, but okay, it's cheap. But how much actually has that
|
|
act this tiny reborder replacement that, uh, this part was you've replaced, you know, how much could
|
|
that save if you ever did this? Uh, one thing I'd like to add on to that, when great advice
|
|
asking others to, you know, just take a moment to repair a small thing. One of the things that
|
|
you want to include in there though is, uh, you want to research the tools you may need as well.
|
|
A lot of these devices have glue in them. And when you're attempting to take them apart,
|
|
like the newer phones, you may cause damage to another part trying to separate the case. So, uh,
|
|
you want to, I fix it has a lot of great videos that can help you learn, uh, what you're in for
|
|
before you just decide to rip it apart. Yeah, great tip. And I always look at the videos for,
|
|
and in this case, the whole screen popping off thing, uh, was solved by the expanding battery
|
|
for me. So I had nothing to do. But I am actually personally, and this is my own personal opinion here,
|
|
I'm glad to see a lot of the right to repair work that they, that they, John Deere farmers did in
|
|
the US and, uh, here in the, in the EU, um, that, that's starting to have some fruition that,
|
|
you know, manufacturers are being required to make devices repairable. And, uh, you know, I,
|
|
I have an episode in the two, I think, somewhere about repairing a washing machine. And you could
|
|
tell that they've deliberately put the circuit board at the back, at the bottom, right where the
|
|
water was most likely to come to if it ever did leak so that, you know, the machine will be
|
|
unrepairable versus devices where you do have to repair them. You can be absolutely sure that
|
|
everything we've been made as easy to repair as possible that they operation will spend. The minimum
|
|
amount of time come in, put in a magic key, open the thing, replace the circuit board and shut it.
|
|
If you, if you compare something like repairing a lift to repairing a washing machine, um,
|
|
it's just the whole design philosophy of, uh, engineering devices to be repaired or not to
|
|
repair. That's a rather good old plan obsolescence. Yep. Um, and the views of Ken Fallon do not necessarily
|
|
reflect the views of HBR, blah, blah, blah, blah. Crafting interpreters. This was new host Iota. And,
|
|
this was a, a great show I would never have thought to make a compiler myself. Um, but there you go.
|
|
Uh, thoughts. Yeah, I liked the fact that when he was speaking about it as well, you know, about
|
|
the book. I liked how he wasn't just talking about, you know, go get it from here. You know, he
|
|
pointed out books available freely, uh, or, you know, here's where you can buy it if you want to
|
|
support. And I actually thought that was a good point. You know, we had to, we know, okay, not
|
|
everybody's in a position where they can support, but, you know, support something where you can,
|
|
especially people up at the Everdon. And particularly if they make it available, uh, for you to,
|
|
to view, I personally would like creative commons, but, you know, each to their own, um, boss, uh,
|
|
it is good that they make it available that you can download, uh, or that you can go to the website
|
|
and read it. Fantastic. Speaking of which, I mentioned the, you mentioned the creative comments
|
|
license. What do you think about the, um, the good new public document license? It's pretty much
|
|
similar, but a lot more for both. And I'm not a lawyer or whatever, but I think there are
|
|
relative Wikipedia had us for, uh, ages, um, and then I think they switched to the creative
|
|
problems. So I, I don't know you, uh, Karen and, uh, Bradley did a episode on, on that one stage,
|
|
might be worth digging that out. On, uh, Ken, what is their, uh, what is their podcast called now?
|
|
It renamed it a few times. Karen Sadler and Bradley couldn't do a podcast. Free is a freedom
|
|
podcast as was. And it's got as was. No, the podcast formerly known as free is in freedom.
|
|
Oh, okay. Yeah. So, um, yeah, I'd love to hear, um, an introductory episode from my author, uh,
|
|
how they managed to, you know, get your writing interpreters, how they found HBR, etc, etc, etc.
|
|
That'd be cool. Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. What are you guys doing, um, Archer's coming?
|
|
I'll do it. First show by Archer 72. I order. Thank you for your first show submission.
|
|
It is an interesting subject, especially considering the code is meant to be portable.
|
|
I am lacking in this field, but it's a good subject and book. Or it is a good subject slash book
|
|
to put on my reading list, Archer 72. No, very good. So the next day we heard, let me tell you
|
|
about Fostem by Trolloculture. And I was not aware of the, um, Ostem, um, compatible, but, uh,
|
|
yeah, but there's so much happening in Brussels at Fostem. It is unbelievable. You're never going to,
|
|
you're never going to hit everything, but I do know if I'm going to Fostem to the neck or when
|
|
I'm going to Fostem the next time I will be, uh, trapped by the hacker space at, uh, at
|
|
in Brussels and grabbing some of the crates of beer that they were delivering. I saw on
|
|
Bastardon, uh, Trolloculture had. So cool. Yeah, I just do. I was listening to this and you know,
|
|
it was almost playing tears to the ice just. I wanted to know. We might have to arrange for you
|
|
to break a leg or something. So, uh, you're off school for all. Yeah, I don't. I'm going to just
|
|
just, uh, shake you just quite for my whole dissadzly, are they? Yeah, yeah. Highly or lowly because
|
|
it's always, it is one negative thing about it is always absolutely freezing there. And you see
|
|
Brussels at its absolute worst. So, but that's probably so that everybody goes inside and goes
|
|
to Fostem. It doesn't stay here from the sun. It's probably method to the madness. Yeah.
|
|
So Tray says, thank you for sharing. I love a good hacker conference and I am excited that this
|
|
one will be freely streamed as I am the other side of the world. Thanks for sharing. And Tray,
|
|
it is not only streamed, but you can go back and review all the episodes. I think I've said it
|
|
before that when they went during Corona times, when they went 100% online, that was the first time I
|
|
actually had the time to go to any of the talks at all. So, great stuff. And then the next comment was
|
|
my Paul Jay. Paul Jay rubbing it in there, rubbing it in, obviously.
|
|
It is indeed, isn't it? See you there. Hi, Troller Coaster. Thanks for the show.
|
|
I will be traveling to Brussels for my first Fostem this coming Friday. I didn't know about
|
|
of them. So, I have now registered for the forum slash events. I will, I will look at going to
|
|
bike night. Perhaps we'll meet who knows. Cool. And Troller Coaster, thank you for the comments.
|
|
Hey, Tray. Hope you'll, hope you'll enjoy the streams and recordings. Don't forget to set aside
|
|
two months of your time if you want to hear all the recordings. Paul Jay, hope to meet you at
|
|
Fostem. Good stuff. My apologies that the tiny human brought home some germs and now they're
|
|
all rough. The following day we had Solar Spider playing Blu-ray directly from Linux
|
|
and he found his own solution. DLC, make MKV, Blu-ray, Java plugin, FDK, AAC plugin option,
|
|
and make MKV. An Archer 72 says, make MKV basically. I also purchased
|
|
make MKV when it was still $50. Until that time, I would update the monthly KVS script by user
|
|
Arya and GitHub. See, HPR 1379. No, 3179. Thank you. Just like you're kicking in.
|
|
I was going to say I had to reread that twice. I'm going to wait a minute. I'm getting
|
|
that the right way, I don't think. 31. 79. There we go. Yeah, I thought this actually,
|
|
the fact that it was this awkward to play at Blu-ray, I thought was probably quite a reflection of
|
|
how little people play physical media now in computer. I mean, mine doesn't even have,
|
|
mine doesn't even have the option. My current case doesn't have the option for an optical drive
|
|
or fitted one because there's three fans in the very front of it. And in how I was thinking about
|
|
that, going, if they were kind of commonplace, this wouldn't be an issue. They would probably play
|
|
auto-play. But yeah, so there are still some people using Blu-ray and I don't ever think I've
|
|
owned a Blu-ray player if I'm imperfectly honest. I think I've seen a disc once, but never,
|
|
but now I'm never going down that road. Well, I do like owning my physical media as I said earlier.
|
|
So, if there was a more sustainable future option, I might go with that. Go ahead over.
|
|
I was just going to say I remember them being in the shops and things when you had Blu-ray and HD
|
|
DVD side by side when the war was on. And then it was funny, Blu-ray kind of won the wars kind of
|
|
thing, but then both vanished. You don't see them in shops anymore. Yeah. Well, I think a lot of
|
|
people like that convenience factor of the streaming platforms that is until they realize they don't
|
|
actually own it. You know, when they bump into that head, that when they bump their heads on that wall,
|
|
I think they'll try to go backward because things like vinyl are making a comeback. So eventually,
|
|
I think it'll make its way back around. People will want discs again and a good place to get your
|
|
disc drive from. Was it micro center? That's where I got mine from. Super cheap. It didn't even come
|
|
in like, I guess packaging, the usual packaging. It was just in a silicone wrapper stacked on the
|
|
floor and asked, yeah. And I asked a guy, I was like, oh, those like refurbished drives or anything.
|
|
He was like, no, those are brand new. That's just how they came. I was like, give me one. I'll take it.
|
|
You say? Yeah. So I have a blue ray in here and I used handbrake once when I tried to, you know,
|
|
I, because I have the drive, I wanted to use it. I went and found a disc. I think it was game of
|
|
thrones or something. I tried to rip it, ran into some of their DRM nonsense that were on there
|
|
and immediately gave up. I was like, this is why I don't watch anything. Yeah. I think that was
|
|
what handbrake, it was so good for DVDs. I took my entire DVD collection, put it handbrake,
|
|
put it on to two external drives. Well, make sure the backup. But, you know, you were seeing
|
|
about that streaming services. It's great when the action streaming services lose it. I've got
|
|
that on the disc. Anyway, it's also good for the internet. Just look at him to watch.
|
|
Yeah. Well, even if they don't go down, one of the problems that's happening now is they still
|
|
want to introduce commercials or ads into the product that you've so-called purchased already.
|
|
Yeah. Now, that's a warm hole we could easily go down. I think the show's getting long enough.
|
|
Yeah. And the thoughts and comments is made on this episode. Do not necessarily reflect views of
|
|
me or my employer. Just get that in there and get out of jail sauce. Thank you very much.
|
|
The following day. Do we not have comments? Do we? There was the one in there. I thought we read it.
|
|
Maybe. Yeah, we did. Arches 72. I also purchased
|
|
make him get. Yeah. Oh, sorry. Sorry. No, that's right. Yes, yes, we did read it. Sorry.
|
|
So, given that I on the days, this is on the 23rd building your own devian images from the pie.
|
|
This one we dusted off from the reserve to by D&T. And Rito said, firmware, it was about making your
|
|
own packages for a Raspberry Pi, which I thought was actually a nice topic. And he said,
|
|
was easy enough to do and give simple instructions for doing the same. So you would have your own
|
|
packages that you could install onto a Raspberry Pi, which would definitely be useful. Rito asked
|
|
the question, firmware blob, high D&T. I didn't know that. Thank you for the show question. So far,
|
|
as I know, Raspberry Pi still has a firmware blob. Did you get this via devian? Cheers, Rito.
|
|
And D&T responded with, hey, Rito, I believe so. There is a devian package called
|
|
raspy-firmware. And then he gives the URL for it. Side note since recording is, I've learned that
|
|
the graphical app Raspberry Pi Imager, again with link, can do some of the things I talked about here
|
|
such as adding an SSH key to the authorized keys file. And yes, I can confirm it because I use
|
|
Raspberry Pi Imager and it's one of the handy features. Yes, very good. One of the things that did
|
|
do go was break the script that I had for making download images, automating them. I will have to
|
|
revisit that when I have time, again, TM has some time, asterisk. Yeah, when you find some time,
|
|
please tell us where you're phone did exactly. Yeah, like so.
|
|
Isaac Hasmov, I robot was the next episode and this was of course, by Huka. And it was
|
|
and it was part of the science fiction fantasy series about Isaac Hasmov and his I robot series.
|
|
And I commented, say, I robot, I loved this series, this series of stories. And after rereading
|
|
them, I still love them despite the computer file episode why Azimov's laws of robotics don't work.
|
|
And on the next comment was by Stullvoid, great series. Thanks, Ahuka, for putting these out.
|
|
I'm thoroughly enjoying your rundown of sci-fi. I think my tastes aligned pretty much closely.
|
|
I've read most of Azimov at least and I'm still discovering new stuff to put on my reading list.
|
|
And from Kevin O'Brien, more to come. I'm glad you're enjoying the Azimov.
|
|
I have Arthur C. Clark coming up in later this year. So more Doctor Who and then Robert A. Helm
|
|
had Henlin. Okay, butchered that one properly. I started to think this series could last
|
|
until I'm putting it in a hole. I didn't want to read it because I thought that's what he was saying.
|
|
But till I'm putting it in a hole, till I'm putting it in a hole, which I hope will be far
|
|
for in the future. I am 73. So it's inside. And 73 from us, Kevin, put it all the hand
|
|
media. Yeah, when I got to that part, I thought one of my, you know, the brain governing
|
|
kicks in is like, well, wait, don't read that. And I was like, oh, it's fine. It's a who gets
|
|
should be fine. But the whole put in the home thing, I ran into a situation that the around here
|
|
in personal life, where they were talking about ageism recently. So that's why that kind of flagged
|
|
for me. Yeah. Well, if you want to feel young, join the amateur radio community.
|
|
Well, that's what all the hip and cool kids are doing these days. Yeah. Exactly. Exactly.
|
|
So on the 27th of January, episode 4301, widescreen, synth, e-bike, LED,
|
|
clock matrix, and jewelry making work to some of the topics that Lee was talking about, to which
|
|
I come as a wasting shows, whoa, great collection of topics, all of which could have been their own
|
|
shows, smiley face. And yes, I did spot the improvised, piercing reference when he was talking
|
|
about the earrings. And the following one is from Brian and Ohio. ABR dude, great show, especially
|
|
enjoyed the music. As for ABR dude, from the examples, save flash memory and raw binary format
|
|
to the file named C-colon-diagflash.bin. And then he's doing quite a few code, which I'm not going
|
|
to read, I could check yourselves from the show notes. ABR dude, done. Thank you. Of course, change
|
|
dash P to proper part and your dash C to the programmer type. Now, if that wasn't an episode in
|
|
itself, I don't know what would be. But the show itself was essential, let's face it. The first
|
|
one, the ultra wide monitor was, dude, look at the really cool monitor I have. I've got the coolest
|
|
monitor on the block, and I can't argue with that. It's number one. And we're treated to examples
|
|
of how cool it looks in in No Man's Sky and Skyrim. And some synth stuff should be a link,
|
|
if I'm not mistaken. It's not coming up as a link for somebody, but it is coming up as a link,
|
|
but it's not showing as a link. And then the Arduino clock, which is super cool. And the earring
|
|
making, which is also super cool. Yeah, absolutely. I enjoyed this whole episode. He did actually talk
|
|
about the problem with the Arduino coding. He'd lost the coding, but he had never reset the code
|
|
so he's basically got that on that forever. And he never won't take it off, otherwise he might lose
|
|
it completely. But yeah, that's one thing with microcontroller. She's surely in this day and age,
|
|
there should be a fairly easy way. I'm not saying that I'm not saying that he's Mr. Anisey. I'm
|
|
saying this day and age surely, there should be an easy way to pull the code off, especially when
|
|
it's your code. You would think so. You would, but it's probably, it probably seems easy to do
|
|
and all the hardware hackers out there are going, you know, you have no idea. So I got a question
|
|
about that for him if he wants to comment on it. When when gaming with a monitor that wide,
|
|
like I'm looking at the No Man sky that looks okay, but the Skyrim one, I'm imagining as you're
|
|
going through the world, like if you're in a very, you know, a game that has like a very short
|
|
time to kill. If you're doing first person shooters or anything like that, are you getting whiplash
|
|
looking from left the right to cover that span? Yeah, there's a reason that generally gaming
|
|
monitors kind of peak out, generally, 32 inches. You don't really want to have negatives.
|
|
Oh yeah. So the next day we had another one from the plan coming down with another gaming show.
|
|
I'm concerned now that HGAR is going to be overwrong by all the gamers. I see you were putting the
|
|
call out for so long so you guys are actually and now I'm complaining about it yet. So I have
|
|
been coming to this spam. When I saw thought that this was spam when I posted this, the link
|
|
provided brought me to a site that discussed the recent Trump election, both, and yes,
|
|
further investigation showed who it wasn't. And then I had no idea this type of game existed.
|
|
This is fascinating to get a walk through from our official HGAR or a gamer reviewer.
|
|
Yeah, I'd never heard of this for myself until he reviewed it, but he was showing me it and
|
|
what's brilliant is you don't have to just do the kind of reason. You can basically go back to
|
|
almost any election in the United States. I wouldn't refresh the page. It went like into
|
|
a very gentle and then somebody else and then, oh, okay, right, it's not bad. I just happened to
|
|
arrive at Trump versus what was the case? How does? Yeah. Yeah, so I didn't actually try it myself
|
|
after in face because I'm not really that into US politics to once it turned election thing,
|
|
but he was showing me it and yeah, it was quite a good game. Actually, after good face.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah, I'm spending as much time away from the election as possible at this point.
|
|
My master on feed looks like filtered politics, filtered politics, filtered politics, filtered politics.
|
|
So on the 29th, we have TIL, two things to do with firewall D. You can't use 10.0.0.0. If you restart
|
|
firewall D, you should restart the putman containers. So this is coming out of the reserve queue from
|
|
D&T and there was some feedback from maston with requests to people who could do networking
|
|
shows for us. You can't use the last block of this slash 24 metric. In fact, you can't use
|
|
the first and last any metric either, which is why the first one is for broadcast.
|
|
One is for broadcast and the other is network. So you can't use the first and last addresses
|
|
there reserved. Yeah, I did not know that until this show. So that was actually quite interesting.
|
|
I did not know that at all. I should. Yeah, I learned that a while back when I upgraded my home
|
|
network and did a show, I stumbled upon it. The first one is for the router and the second and the
|
|
last one is for broadcasting. I think doesn't your printer use that one a lot to annoy you?
|
|
No, no, no, they're both part of the IP protocol ranges. So they are used as communication channels
|
|
so that all it's the reserve channel where everybody is supposed to listen to in order to get
|
|
broadcast addresses. So one is broadcast and the other is network. I'll do a show on it or I'll
|
|
get somebody to do a show on it. Okay, as yet there were no comments on that. I expect them next
|
|
month and the following day we had a show by a hooker, travel pouches for cables. This was
|
|
again coming from the reserve show, reserve queue and kind of travels a lot or at least
|
|
did at the time and wanted something to organize all those cables is your real time saver.
|
|
And it's really nice. It was good. It was amazing because I was actually in the market for looking
|
|
at all of these kind of things and I thought which one which are good and it was funny because I was
|
|
like wow, that is amazing. This is come out now. Just up report and Tray found his existing cable case
|
|
has been exceeded. So he was also, he was in my travel collection of cable and power adapters
|
|
as exceeded the capacity of my existing case link provided and I am looking for a replacement.
|
|
So your recommendation looks like it will exceed my needs. Thank you. So there you go, two people.
|
|
The only thing that I would like to see action with this and is that both of those links are links to
|
|
a certain, a certain big website, very big website. I would river. Yes, named after a certain river.
|
|
Then I would actually like to propose that if you have got a computer kind of accessibility store
|
|
in your local area, you know, show them what you want and just say, right, can you get me something
|
|
like this? Give some, give some business to the wee guys. Exactly. Okay, the following day
|
|
and it was the last episode of the month of the 31st, which is actually today as we're recording
|
|
this, my weight and my biases, personal reflection on the ethics of AI in our society. Very
|
|
little to do, which is weight, a lot of us mentioned. And a good discussion about topics that
|
|
you should be thinking about when it comes to AI and trollocostals saying, well, this is,
|
|
you know, I'm getting on the soapbox basically talking about this, but I do think we have,
|
|
we have a responsibility as people to go, you know, hold your horses there on certain topics.
|
|
And, you know, not just go along with every trend, but I also heard a good today discussion
|
|
on class weekly where he said, I'm hoping for the AI bubble to burst soon so that we can get
|
|
down to all the useful stuff that it can take. Just as with the dot com bubble winner went away,
|
|
we got down to just using the internet as a tool and then we can use AI as a tool. So interesting.
|
|
Now with the bubble mentioned, I'm assuming that's the everyone's need to try and make a million
|
|
dollars off of it. If once that comes down there, we could try and actually actually use it as a tool.
|
|
Yeah, and we do use, you know, we do use it here in HPR. We do all the transcoding of the thing
|
|
with whisper from open AI are useful. There are uses for us, but you need to, as with everything else,
|
|
understand it and, you know, engage very well, as with any technology, I found it interesting when
|
|
I was researching that topic for the webcam presentation that, you know, wireless telecommunications at
|
|
the time, there were also like the wireless telecommunication bros out founding companies,
|
|
getting investments, building stuff in places where it could possibly work. You know, what goes
|
|
around comes around and I'm sure around the time of the permits in Egypt, you have permit bros
|
|
going, hey, you want to buy shares in my permit over here, you know, I've got a whole stack of
|
|
stuff in my quarry here. The original pyramid scheme. Exactly.
|
|
Goodness is something. Well, just while Ken's going to spray the bag out, no, I was just going to say,
|
|
I actually thought I'd really enjoyed this, although the only thing I didn't enjoy was a 55-minute
|
|
shoe on the day we're recording. This proved to be difficult to actually fit in, but I managed it
|
|
the... I did. I did actually like, I thought it was interesting when he started talking about,
|
|
you know, the negative effects, I mean, you see just now on the telly on that advertised,
|
|
is the, you know, people talking to AI and it's almost like it's a human, you know,
|
|
it's talking about the negative effects that can have on children, especially, and the thing is,
|
|
we don't even need AI for that. You know, we're talking about them building them up all the time and
|
|
saying everything's amazing. We're seeing this in our current time. The kids in the UK just now,
|
|
I can't recommend it anywhere else, but in the UK, they've been told everything's amazing,
|
|
and when they come to secondary, you're actually having to say to them, that's a pile of crap.
|
|
You've got to sweep start that and you've got to redo this in a different way, and they fall apart,
|
|
you know, they can't take any feedback. Okay, I'm not allowed quite to see it like I did there,
|
|
but you know, they don't have any way, because they've always been told, wow, they're amazing,
|
|
and everything we do is amazing. Yeah, yeah, and the thing is, you're actually, no, that's rubbish,
|
|
you have to restart that completely, and they can't handle it. It's almost like you're up against
|
|
what, that you say that the parent then gets contacted, because you've upset the kid,
|
|
and you've been done for bullying, and say, what? No, I'm giving constructive feedback.
|
|
And the thoughts of Kevin are not necessarily those of him. They definitely know it, and he's
|
|
he's really glad as well. I got one thing I wanted. Kevin, I have thoughts some day we should have
|
|
just a beer. Anyway, yes, go ahead over. I'm a little bit concerned with the use of it, and
|
|
I guess like a literature documentation that that area, I have seen some books that were like
|
|
completely generated with this stuff, and it is just nonsense. So when people use it, you should
|
|
use it to assist with work being done, not use it to do all of the work. Yeah, because it totally,
|
|
it is, it is a great tool, but they're just trying to replace actual humans doing the work, and
|
|
that's where the problem comes in. There was a, there's a lady that I listened to on YouTube. I
|
|
can't think of her name right now. The German lady, she explained a lot of the garbage white papers
|
|
that are being submitted by people who just gen up just complete nonsense. So they have a backlog
|
|
happening now, because these things, someone has to take the time to go through them and look at them
|
|
over, and people are just getting frustrated, not even, you know, great researchers being submitted
|
|
and being overlooked, because you have to filter through the nonsense to being gen up with these
|
|
language models. And the places like the current all milling lists are getting bugs of missions
|
|
generated by AI, people generated by AI and wasting their time as well. So anyway, it is, AI
|
|
is my major issue with it, was and continues to be same with Bitcoin, the environmental impacts
|
|
of just wasting, wasting all this completion power could be used for folding at home or
|
|
identifying diseases or all sorts of stuff could be used for something more useful than just
|
|
wasting, wasting energy, wasting the views of Kemphthalon do not necessarily represent those
|
|
of the three. Well, a lot of legal issues in this podcast, I think, for today.
|
|
Exactly. Anyway, the next day would be, no, no, yes, would be,
|
|
fish, but we have comments that we need to read that were, there were seven comments on four
|
|
previous shows. So if you nip to the episode page, which I'll paste through you,
|
|
scotty into the chat moment, took a lot longer than it should have. And we had a comment on
|
|
a hookah's 4070 show, which was aired on the 8th of March, Civilization 3. And it was a comment
|
|
by Red Orm. Thanks for your thoughtful podcast about a game franchise. I quickly became obsessed
|
|
after scoffering Civilization 2. Civilization 3 was for me a welcome upgrade and I spent many hours
|
|
playing it. I listened to all your Civilization 3 podcasts and they were great. I wouldn't comment
|
|
on them all for fear of raising a spam alert. Never stop, Peter. You're not far ahead.
|
|
On the, now we also have another comment on that episode by Kevin O'Brien. Thank you. I'm glad
|
|
you liked it. We serve addicts on many as I have discovered. And now Civilization 7 is going
|
|
to be released in just a few weeks. So this will continue unless I drop dead. And then we had a
|
|
comment on a hookah's The Golden Age, which was from the 29th of November 2024,
|
|
and from Moss Bliss on PenguCon. Scotty, are you in a position to read that?
|
|
Yes, I attempted to suggest myself as a guest to PenguCon 2024, but was told that I was too late
|
|
and should try again for 2025. Beginning both, being both a hold on, hold on. I'm holding down
|
|
control from my push to talk and it zoomed to page one second. Yeah. Being both a known filter
|
|
and a known Linux podcaster, both I and they both I and they thought I would be a perfect guest.
|
|
Sadly, for more recent contact with them, resulting in me being told that they were not sure
|
|
there would be even there would be even be a PenguCon in 2025. I'd look forward to hearing from
|
|
them in the future. What if you lie in days in there? Yeah. Well, Kevin says, sorry to fear it.
|
|
I think in hindsight, the COVID pandemic really hurt PenguCon. They had to cancel seven years
|
|
running for public health reasons and it cost them a lot of momentum. I was planning to attend
|
|
in 2024, but as it happened, I got sick, nothing serious and elected to stay home. Instead,
|
|
I'm not part of the team anymore, so I have no particular insight into where things maybe
|
|
headed. Can you do the on the wreck? Yep. And HPR 4274, the wreck I'm all right by Archers 72.
|
|
There was a comment by Annabelle with I don't know if you're going to keep the recording to
|
|
yourself or not. You were insanely lucky. You survived and you are stronger for it. I love you.
|
|
Talk soon, Annabelle. And that's Mark's niece. Oh, that's nice. Oh, yeah, I actually missed
|
|
that part. Yeah, Mark's niece. And Huka had to show Isaac has more of the foundation on the 27th
|
|
of December. Redone said, one of my favorite things about the foundation trilogy apart from the
|
|
scale and the brilliance of the story was the cover art by Chris Floss on the paperback editions
|
|
on sale in the UK. You could place all three from covers in order and have a bigger,
|
|
better picture. What I later learned was a trip tick. Look forward to your next podcast.
|
|
Kevin O'Brien with Thank You. I'm a huge fan of Asmalfe in over the years. I cannot
|
|
guess how many times I've read the original trilogy, but over 20 years, over 20 seems like a
|
|
plausible number. I plan to continue the series with more golden age SF and more doctor who,
|
|
and I don't imagine I will ever run out of material. That is that is I think it is for the shows
|
|
and the comments. And I'm just mosing over to the GitHub to have a look as see if we can get
|
|
another quick overview of what's been happening in the last month or so. So let's see.
|
|
Oh, we have adding developer environment setup instructions. This Paul J doing some cleanup work.
|
|
Roan has fixed the escape XML data in the comes feed. Paul J's corrected the startup.
|
|
I removed opus, sorry, added opus and removed speaks. So we no longer have speaks. If anybody
|
|
would like a speak feed restored, that's fine, but there is a cost in time and effort involved in
|
|
that. And we have now the opus feed. So there was two on that. We did some reorganization of the show,
|
|
show transcripts so that it is now not a separate section at the end of the episode.
|
|
It's up at the top. You can get a SRT file, which if you download most media players,
|
|
I'm put it in the same folder. It will play and you can have subtitles of what
|
|
whisper things will said in the episode. And we also have a text description which will form
|
|
the basis of another feed, which will be a text only feed if you're interested in that.
|
|
And the question to the community is, do you, is it of interest to also distribute the SRT files
|
|
with the episode or not? Or perhaps provide that as an option. That feedback will be appreciated
|
|
on that. We also renamed today with a techie so that it composes a new convention of three letters.
|
|
We linked to the episode in the comments of the sections. We updated some of the
|
|
hub scripts for the CDN stuff to allow the head method as well as the get. So web crawlers and bots
|
|
can just check to see if the file exists or they download it. That's quite good. We had a fix for
|
|
the reserve show confirming confirmation of missing stuff. We removed the base URL so that
|
|
episodes, images associated with episodes are in the same folder and just on a side note where
|
|
I started after the internet archive came back downloading and gathering together all the
|
|
media files, files that were uploaded, extension loads, images and all that stuff.
|
|
It's still in a state of flux but we're in the process of getting it all into one place so that
|
|
it can be replicated in some way. And this sort of stuff is not as obvious as the media files
|
|
because we know what they are and they're on the CCDN. So a community content delivery network
|
|
which is a network of mirrors supplied by community. So if you have a disk for two to four
|
|
terabytes and you have a fiber optic or always on connection and have spare bandwidth that you have
|
|
available. The amount of bandwidth it consumes is not that great and it's nicely spread over
|
|
the whole day as the world goes round. So there are very few peaks and throughs in it. Feel free
|
|
to join our network, send an email to admin at hackpublicradio.org. What we're missing though
|
|
is something in between where do we put all the images? Do we check them into the data repo?
|
|
In some cases we might have a video file associated with an episode and that's obviously too big.
|
|
So some questions there as to what the best course of action and role in this having a look at
|
|
that first. So just so that you know about that. We updated the developer information as well.
|
|
Let's see, do we have any open issues? I'm as well as that there have been many, many changes to
|
|
the processing script. What it is now producing an audit report so it generates a HTML file for
|
|
the janitor who's posting the shows which is me and gives spectrum way for audio links that you can
|
|
scroll across to see if the show is actually what it was about. With that I've spotted loads of
|
|
issues that I would normally have not spotted. For example, one of the episodes that was submitted
|
|
had a huge buzz at the end of the episode. That wasn't there at the beginning so I was able to spot
|
|
that visually and by scrolling across and I sent it off to audiophonic.com to get a fixed.
|
|
So what else? Yes. Let's see what the poll requests were. Let me see issues that we have. File,
|
|
we need to remove the show notes from the landing page and HPR. Speaking of that, I had
|
|
a request to open to have people help out with the main website and Jesra and Lee both
|
|
step forward to assist. Jesra is a little bit busy at the moment but we'll see the slamming
|
|
seasons over. We'll get back to us and Lee has put together his idea of what it should look like
|
|
and I put that on hobbypublicreviewer.org if you want to have a look at that and I post it also
|
|
into the matrix channel. There's a repo on the get repo page. We need to add the duration to the
|
|
GWT page today with a techie and it loads issues, comment free, not producing furthered HML
|
|
to filtering, we moved the fast down series which we did. We consolidated quite a lot of
|
|
series and fast down was still not around so we've consolidated that and just added fast down tags
|
|
to those episodes. Also, I had some time, I've decided to stop Doom scrolling and actually read
|
|
some of the magazines that I have on my way into work and I noticed that in back episodes we have
|
|
been referenced, HPR, has been referenced in both the Dutch and Veron, amateur radio
|
|
magazine and the British RSGB magazine, both of which are useful for getting a Wikipedia page
|
|
because it means we're going to print an actual news organization so that will allow people to
|
|
make our HPR page after 20 years. You still don't have a web page, you still don't have a Wikipedia
|
|
page, so anybody who has not submitted the show yet to HPR please create a HPR web page,
|
|
that will be a cool thing to do. Stuff I'm still looking for, yeah, that's sort of thing,
|
|
quite just with the, as I said, some guy in the internet has volunteered to help out with
|
|
the community news, that does not mean that you need to join the show every time, it is more
|
|
about getting the timing sorted and keeping track of it because sometimes I use track of it and
|
|
make mistakes, as you can see by having three fixes for a time in the mailing. And speaking of
|
|
the mailing list, we had the community news behind the scenes which we discussed in the last show,
|
|
we had a suggestion by AI7HC about a WIZWIG editor using ARIA libel tag which is a good suggestion.
|
|
Thank you, that is in my inbox and it's on the list of stuff to do as soon as I get the
|
|
internet archive thing, going and still working on the show upload process script as I said before
|
|
I went out on that wild tangent. We have quite a lot of things working now so that when I
|
|
or sync it up to the central location, the mirrors automatically pick it up, also the Dutch ones as
|
|
well as the US ones, we're making Dave and I are working on the internet archive stuff and that's
|
|
the next note I need to crack and it's a big one. So thank you AI7H3 for that. I sent a
|
|
suggestion asking people to use the WIZWIG editor because I had posted, I was going through the
|
|
backlog of shows and then of course just as soon as I posted it, every single show after that was
|
|
done properly so pretty much ignored me and I asked for proposals on the web design and I'm glad
|
|
to see that both Jessra and Lee responded to that call and hopefully we're making some, that will
|
|
result in some tickets for the guys who are working on the HDR generator code and we can get that
|
|
rolled out so that would be nice. It would be nice to have that done before our 20th anniversary
|
|
this year but that's in October so I think we're good. Then we had the community news announcement
|
|
that was it. How about which actually, of course, are we a bit of an issue this month?
|
|
Because for some reason after I actually had messaged yourself, I never got anything after that
|
|
now it's going to be panic. Yeah, this is why I don't, I shouldn't be doing that stuff. This is now
|
|
going to be some guy in the internet whenever we get up to speed. And as I say,
|
|
if you can talk to Dave and yourself, he has a format. He's currently generating a script
|
|
but we can generate it automatically either with Roans Code, our PHP script on the website or
|
|
the app script or something. It's essentially just the information coming from the database. So we
|
|
have access to the database and to quote our developer tools, we are by default, our data is
|
|
available. So let's get it in the easiest format we can so that we have that, the show notes ready
|
|
every month. And I also want to change it so that on the website, currently the way Dave has been
|
|
doing it, I'm just because we've been doing this for 15 years and things move on. He has been
|
|
booking every year the shows for the next year in the databases. That's the only way we had to
|
|
reserve it. What I'd like to do is just do that in code with the PHP thing so that it prevents people
|
|
from submitting a show on the first Monday of the month unless you happen to be a HPR volunteer's
|
|
email address. So specifically, it's reserved for that email address.
|
|
And then we can just post it like a regular show and I can process it like a regular show as well.
|
|
And that's all I got to say about that. So there have been anything on the some going
|
|
internet and Archers 72 are, I don't know, nannies on the matrix channel. Has there been anything
|
|
interesting happening over there? Mostly been the same old conversation that I've been hoping
|
|
things would pick up a bit more now that the holiday is over with, but yeah, nothing new.
|
|
So tell people what matrix channel is and what you can expect, because I mean we're already
|
|
two hours into this thing. So matrix is a wonderful playground for ideas. And when you head on over
|
|
to the Hacker Public Radio's matrix channel, you can use a, we call it matrix. That's the protocol,
|
|
I believe, but the application that you'll probably be using is element. There are others,
|
|
excuse me, the throw thing. There are the applications that allow you to access it. And we do have a
|
|
link in the notes I'm assuming for the HPR matrix channel. Yeah, the bottom and the bottom
|
|
of those links. Yeah. Okay. So once you join, obviously, you can hang out with everybody. I'm
|
|
always there annoying people just throwing things out there asking for help whenever I get bogged
|
|
down. We have a great time. You're free to express your ideas. You have an idea for a show.
|
|
Definitely just toss it around, interact with the community. And we can help you out with
|
|
doing your shows as well. Great place to be. Join us if you can. Cool stuff. And you're on the
|
|
Discord channel, I believe, Kevin. You're on the Discord. Telegram. Telegram. I was going to
|
|
just call for quite a while. Right. Yeah. I'm on the Telegram channel. And yet it's actually
|
|
gotten fairly active recently. It was kind of dormant for quite a while, which wasn't a lot
|
|
happening. But recently, conversation has sparked up. And it's not that we've gained that many
|
|
new users. It's we've gained a lot more active users. So it's a small group there. But the one
|
|
good thing about it is it seems to be whenever people are posting about it, it does seem to generate
|
|
a weak conversation. So yeah, if I don't go to search up a hacker public radio and the links,
|
|
of course, on the website itself. Cool. So with that, thank you guys. Thank you all. And thanks
|
|
Rachel for dropping in. Scotie, thanks for coming at this awkward time for you guys. And
|
|
Kevin, thanks a million for joining. It's definitely nicer when there are more people and not just
|
|
be around to go on about stuff. Absolutely. I mean, people don't want to hear me
|
|
ranting on, don't want to hear just you ranting on either. You need some of us on the banter.
|
|
Okay. So tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker.
|
|
Public Radio.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how easy
|
|
it leads. Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
|
|
the internet archive and our syncs.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released
|
|
under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International License.
|