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184 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 429
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Title: HPR0429: She went back to Windows
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0429/hpr0429.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 20:22:33
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---
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3
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You're playing with my mind, baby
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Always keeping me up doing wrong
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I say you're playing with my mind, baby
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You're always keeping me up doing wrong
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I say you're playing with my mind, baby
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I can't say your life's on, baby
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But I can't see, I can't see nobody home
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Hello, this is Lost in Bronx
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I wasn't originally going to do an episode about this, but it's timely for me, so here goes
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My wife bought a new laptop for work, and it runs Vista
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We'd been a Linux only house for over a year, and hadn't found too many things we couldn't do on machines that didn't run Windows
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Oh, a few games, maybe, or having to wait for up-to-date flash support, that sort of thing, minor stuff
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Clearly it was a pleasure, just knowing there was no Microsoft in the house was something I took pride in, but no more
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She needed to run a proprietary application for work, for which there is no false equivalent that I could find, no active project anyway
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And she wanted a new machine that was all her own
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Well, this last part I can certainly understand because sharing a machine with the rest of the house can be a real drag after a while
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But this special app, which is Windows only of course, well, I couldn't get it up and running under wine
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And she was unwilling to try a virtual machine or to dual boot, so that was that
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I went through the options available, as I saw them at the time, and I mean they're simply worn on that it keep us a Linux house
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We actually had a couple heated discussions along the way, but see, I'm the free and open source software enthusiast here
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My seven year old, who is virulently anti-windows, don't know where he gets it, notwithstanding it's just me
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Mrs. Bronx doesn't care what she runs, so long as it runs what she wants, she's married to me, not to the free as in speech content
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As I've stated in other HPR episodes, FOSS is an inherently political statement, but only if you see it as FOSS
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If you just see it as software, like she does, then all it needs to do is to friggin' job at hand
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In fact, anything else gets in the way, I've seen her eyes glaze over enough times while I talk about software freedom to understand
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I mean I'm slow, but I get there, and I get that, it's boring, at least the way I talk about it apparently
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And she's stuck with me, and you know, it's just not her thing, I mean, whatever, no biggie
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And yet it was for me, at least for a while
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Now, this all came down a couple weeks ago, maybe a month, month and a half at the most, and the machine works fine
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It has a little trouble getting online with our wireless routers sometimes, but only sometimes
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Mostly it just works as that phrase goes, and it's reasonably fast for a two or three year old refurb unit of modest specs
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Can't complain about that, especially since I'm not the one running it, and I guess that's the point here
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It's not my machine, not my call
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For me, the freedom side of things, the superiority of the software side of things
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These trump most other concerns in computing
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If that proprietary application simply had to be used, and it was up to me, then I'd have gone another route
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VM, whatever I could figure out, and make easy to use
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But I came to FOSS in increments, I came to it by inches, not all at once
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I learned about the software, of course I'm still learning, and then I learned about the philosophies that drive it
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It struck a chord, and I continued reading, listening, and using stuff
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But there's no denying that much of it is pretty as so tarot
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It can be damnnably hard to wrap your head around, unless you're talking about practicalities
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You know, like open standards, vendor lock-in, etc.
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I don't blame the average computer user for not getting free and open source software
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We generally do a horrible job of selling it truth be told
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Now politicians, on the other hand, I do blame since they're getting paid to understand sometimes complex issues
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But that's episode fodder for another day
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Regular folks, I give a pass
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The philosophy of software freedom is bound up in elements of free speech, creativity, and reduced or non-existent monetary costs
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All of which are good
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But it's also composed of arcane terminology, sexism, attendancy towards social ineptitude, and computer-based criminality
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None of which are good
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And you can debate the accuracy of any one of the elements I've just mentioned till the crack of doom
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But the sad fact is, the user, new to free and open source software, is met at the door by all these things
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Or the accusation of them, and they don't engender love at first sight, even the good stuff
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It's a sea change in attitude
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And people, by and large, simply don't want new attitudes, it's work
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And learning how to use machines that increase in complexity exponentially as new tech is introduced
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Is more than just a pain in the ass, if not impossible
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I mean, keep in mind that HPR listeners are computer and technology enthusiasts
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For some it's a hobby, for others a passion, for some it's a career, and for others just a job, and for many I suspect it's a combination of these things
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Yet, FOSS, by and large, is our bag here, it's what we're into
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If we weren't, all of this, the tech, the applications, the philosophies, and politics, all of it would be as boring and impenetrable as hell
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They've not, find someone who's into something you don't like, something you know they know a lot about
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Ask them to talk to you about the underlying issues or philosophies involved, but not to stop when you start showing signs of drifting
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See how that feels, that's what Mrs. Bronx, and a whole whole lot of other people are enduring
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To them it's my numbing, and technical, and pick you into the point of inanity
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It's a soteric yet containing of irritating practicalities, in short it's not what they'd prefer to think about
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And if it sounds like I am a vista-apologist, remember I need peace in my home, in other words yeah, there comes a point when you have to live in the world
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And sometimes the realization that it isn't a world of your making or choosing is hard
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I liked having a Linux household, and that might happen for us again
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But I'm a little more pragmatic now, if we can get what we want done with Linux, then fine, if not well
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Nah, nah I can't do what I can't do this anymore, I'm talking drivel
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We had a Linux household, and now we don't, and that bugs the living crap out of me
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I am living in a world neither of my making or choosing, and I wish it were different
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Now that should be liberating, practicalities by and large, relieve one of the burden of choice
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I mean when your needs are imposed over, or trumping of your convictions, you can proceed with a clear conscience
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And yet, what can I have done differently when the decision isn't mine, where do my obligations lie?
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I can't be held accountable for Microsoft's shortcomings certainly, but is there more I could have done to make
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false alternatives more attractive or fundamental to Mrs. Brock's?
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And the only answer I can come to and continually return to is no, she just wants it to work
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Which is impossible to fault, and difficult to argue against
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Oh, advocates often try when confronted by this sort of statement, but I have never heard a free software argument
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that invalidates the need for ease and expediency
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Okay, money and security are good ones, but in our case the money wasn't an issue and the security seems manageable, so what else is there?
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I mean, especially now that it's a done deal, and she's happy with the machine and its software
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Looking for alternatives is just more false pedantry, even in my head
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Try as I might, I can think of no compelling reason at this time for her to switch
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Maybe someday, if and when her VISTA install begins to crawl, it could be examined again as an option, but for the foreseeable future
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The better solution appears to be the worse alternative
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The better solution appears to be the worse alternative
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The better solution appears to be the worse alternative
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The better solution appears to be the worse alternative
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The better solution appears to be the worse alternative
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Rick, baby, that's what I'm going to flip side you head
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I say to Rick, baby, that's what I'm going to flip side you head
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Yeah, you got me so worried, got me talking out of my head
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Yeah, you know I love it, and you know my love is true
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I'm bringing all this up for selfish reasons
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I don't have anyone in the real world that I can articulate this sentiment and perhaps argument too
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No one in my circle of acquaintances is a Linux or FOSS advocate, and increasingly I am one
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No, I don't shake the tambourine, I hate that shit, and I'm certainly not accomplished enough to even preach to the choir
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But it's important to me
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Now I'm not going to stand in front of the crowd on King Street and get mowed down for a cause
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I don't get me wrong, I'm infinitely glad some people were willing to be
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But I'm no zealot, use what works, right? That's me
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And yet it bothers me, pure and simple, I wanted to overcome the software issues
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And stay in the freer part of the computing spectrum, a little, little thing
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Without realizing it, free and open source software has come to matter
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And I'm not sure I can adequately express how rare and occurrence that has been in my life
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Things just generally don't, and don't ask me to qualify that
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In fact, I really don't think you should need me to since many of the smiles I've been treated to in my days have been vapid and expedient
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And doubtlessly, some of those were yours
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Now that's entirely okay because some of them were mine too
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To be alive is to be practical
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When you're not practical, you're that patriot guy that zealot bleeding in the street
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Forging a new world order perhaps, but maybe missing dinner tonight
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You're that asshole who used his ideals to bruise the heart in however small a way of one who cares
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Ideally, the one who cares for the most
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Now as Arthur Miller wrote denigratingly, the cats in that alley are practical
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But if you'll pardon my boarding house for each credence saying, it ain't me
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I'm not privileged, I am no one special
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I wasn't born to be special, I'm not Richard Stallman or one of his thralls
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Admire them how I may
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Now yes, this is a lot of justification for a simple and simple-minded drama
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But the plain fact is, all things accounted, there's nothing else to be done
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Vista, friggin Vista, but there it is
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Because there's a need, a cry in the proverbial dark, which Foss, as yet, hasn't answered
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Maybe someday it will, but will the call still be going out by then?
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Practicality being rooted in time and circumstance after all
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Will anyone care to create the one that we need?
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Does I'm telling you if I were to do it?
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If I were to take the time to create such a project myself
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Assuming, which I do not, it was even possible
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Man, oh man, a chevets, the very technology was written for, would be long obsolete
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Before it ever saw the light of day
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Now I'm just being practical here, but as you can see, it cuts both ways
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I don't die in the street maybe, but I'm not free
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And that's a crap place to be, that's a crap place for a lot of us to be
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Because I'm sure as hell not alone in this
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Many people who like or are interested or potentially could be interested in free and open source software
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Are shackled to proprietary solutions to relatively common problems
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Some of those are due to IT fear or ignorance, but I'm telling you a lot of them
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Two damn many are not
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The solutions simply don't exist in Foss
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As a movement, we have made incredible strides
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But we have a long way to go and anyone who thinks differently is kidding themselves
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Because my wife, Mrs. Bronx, who could give a rat-type pink ass about software freedom one way or the other
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Took a good hard look at every single Foss solution that I could dig up
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And what would be required to run them and judge them all on their own merits
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And that weird, meandering trail through free and open source software applications
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Eventually led to a closed, proprietary and very expensive product
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Running on Windows Vista
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Not heaven-honored, not by a long shot
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But after all, and in the end, the best of all possible worlds
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Law is so good like that
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Don't you do it
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Give me all you got like that
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Don't you do it
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My temperature shots so high
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Don't you do it
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My system is so light
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This has been lost in Bronx
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You can contact me at Lost in Bronx at gmail.com
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That's L-O-S-T-N-B-R-O-M-X at gmail
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Feel free to write and tell me just exactly how wrong I am
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And how important working through the challenges of free and open source software truly is
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Especially on projects and in professional environments that matter to the wider community
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Because you know, I think I could stand to hear that sort of stuff right about now
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Take care
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Thank you for listening to Hack or Public Radio
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HBR is sponsored by Carol.net
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So head on over to C-A-R-O.N-E-T for all of us need
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Thanks for watching
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You
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