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512 lines
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Episode: 1611
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Title: HPR1611: HPR Community News for September 2014
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1611/hpr1611.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:51:02
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---
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its Monday 6 October 2014. This is HBR Episode 1611 entitled HBR Community News for September
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2014, and is part of the series, HBR Community News. It is hosted by HBR Volunteers, and
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is about 58 minutes long. Feedback can be sent to admin at hackappublicradio.org, or
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by leaving a comment on this episode. The summary is,
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this episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting
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with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon, and you're listening to HBR Community News for September 2014.
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This is a monthly show that is done by volunteers within the HBR Community, and joining me tonight
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is Huka, and our normal co-host Dave is away having a wonderful time at AgCamp. So how you're
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doing today, Huka? A little bit of a cold, but other than that, doing fine.
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Excellent stuff. So how was your vacation? It was good. I was somehow the very first weekend of
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August was the Dublin Irish Festival. That's Dublin, Ohio, and the United States, Ken, but it's
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closest I'm going to get for now. And then the following beginning of September, it was
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another folk festival. So they were all good fun. So what happens as a Dublin Irish festival?
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A lot of Irish music and dancing and cultural stuff. So it's like three days of
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of geeking out on your Irishness, I guess. Excellent. So you like Irish music, do you?
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Oh, love Irish music. That's interesting. I talked to you offline about that some time.
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Anyways, back dragging us back to the point. Could you introduce the new hosts for this month, please?
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Well, it looks like we've got three of them. First is Steve Smethurst.
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The second is To be Frank. And the third is Go Fear.
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And we would like to welcome them to the network and look forward to hearing some fantastic shows.
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So without further ado, let's quickly mosey through some of the shows for last month starting with
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HBR community news for August 2014, which was a day when I won left stranded. So people went
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on vacations just as a bite by the body. This is an open show. We normally schedule around
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around 1600 UTC first the Saturday before the first Monday of the month, which seems to be
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very complicated. But if you want to do this at a different time, you want to get a group of people
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together and feel free to do that. That's absolutely no problem. All the show notes now are more or
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less automatically generated by a proscript as it is my intention to replace myself and everybody else
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here with proscripts if we could possibly do that. Yeah, more of the barrier. So the next day,
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we had beginners guide to the night sky three, a wee dot in the dark sky. And this is Andrew
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Conway from Tuxjam. And I do really enjoying his accent and I'm really enjoying this. It's nice
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to have somebody refer to the constellations and then have a scientific using them for scientific
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purposes. Oh, absolutely. I love this stuff. I get a lot of videos from NASA and the European
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like the European Southern Observatory and things like that. So I love it.
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I'm more more of these the better as far as I can say. Then we had the Ladies and Gentlemen
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of the HBR Audio Book Club going strong with down and out in the Magic Kingdom. And they have
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done really excellent job on the show notes. None made up continue. I can't stress how important
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the show notes are. Although they spoiler highlight three highlights seems like a good idea.
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Wood has presented me with problems on my tablets. So I'm a bit concerned about that but we can
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always link if you have spoilers. We can link to another page for spoilers. That's not a problem.
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Yeah, the only thing that occurs to me is why does it necessarily have to be audio book?
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I mean, if you're going to get a bunch of people together to discuss a book,
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could discuss any kind of book, couldn't you? You're good. But I guess the point here is
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where podcasts and people are not actually listening to podcasts will kind of lend
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themselves to other books as well or to other media in the podcast format.
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No, I understand that. I listen to so many podcasts. I don't have time for audio books.
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Yeah, I'm actually listening to thanks Dave Morris with his 4000 podcast thing. I'm listening
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to escape pods. A lot of those short fiction episodes which are really nice. You can turn
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yourself off for a half an hour. It's a podcast or my story and it's quick and really makes me
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remember the days when I read lots of short science fiction stories. But only that's by the
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to download some of the magic kingdom by Cory Doctor. This is one that I actually didn't read because
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I don't know some of Cory Doctorals stuff just never kind of floated my boat. Nothing
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intentional. The fall time sure is all mine, but I don't get it. I don't see just
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doesn't turn me on. So be it. Indeed. Indeed. But we did get the wonderful program from Mr. Gadgets.
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We did. Yes. Tell us about that. The Kansas City Maker Fair. Now I've met Mr. Gadgets at
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Ohio Linux Fest. I don't know whether I'm going to see him there this year. That's still several
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weeks away. But he's a wonderful fellow. And it was really nice hearing. I love hearing about
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Maker Fares just in general. I get some wonderful movement. I couldn't agree more. Love the concept
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myself. I find like the Maker Fares like the part in the Zen diagram where myself and my wife's
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interests meet. Yeah. And I think a lot of when you talk about Maker Fares you're talking about
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hardware stuff primarily. But that's a big part of where I think I worry about what's happening
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to the internet is as becoming a purely consumer medium and not a place where people get in and
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do things. Yeah, but there's still, yeah, I see your point, but there's still the, I was just
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showing the kids today, the, you know, the TCPIP who come to the shelf going right. That's the
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internet read that and you know how it works. So you can always, well, hopefully you can always
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go down. We shouldn't take over granted, but you can go down to the packet level and invent more
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stuff. Although that said, I do worry a little bit about how much stuff has been transferred over
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the HDDB protocol. And people seem to think that's the only port that exists is Port80.
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Yeah. Anyway, the following day we had the XFS file systems by JWP like these. They're short,
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they're punchy and they just give you enough information to watch. They're the aperitif of file
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systems. Oh, yeah, I love it. And you know, I guess the only question I have is the series over now
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because I was looking ahead and I'm not sure I see much coming up. Well, there is the 14,
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5, 6, 7, 8, 9. No, they're over. The better FS, the better FS was the last one and that was that
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was on the third. So next month will be the, the next month review will be discussing that one.
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Yeah. Okay, it's not like open office. You can drag it out forever. I'm afraid false
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file systems end at a particular point in time. Are you saying after two and a half years I'm
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dragging it out? No, no. Yes, yes, yes. The following day, ultimate cooking devices, like
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these ones, real world sort of stuff. And I actually went to all the links. You should go to the links
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in this because I had no idea what a Weber grill was, but then I quickly found out what it was.
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Your basic kettle grill. Yeah, exactly. Well, oddly enough, in Ireland, the word barbecue is
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synonymous for a rainy day. So the barbecue's tend to be an inspirational item as opposed to
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something you've actually. Anyway, open source news break, open CMS tools for making presentations,
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we can, we can project med. And this is part of the newscast series. And tell us what's going on in
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the, in the open source news.com. And I like what semiotic is doing here because, you know,
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the first few that he did was just, you know, real quick rundown in just a few minutes. But he's
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now invited someone else to come in and join him and they actually discuss some of this stuff,
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which I think makes it a lot more attractive. Yes, it's a bit like, yeah, putting something on
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a cracker. I'm using a lot of food analogies tonight. I have no idea why, but then yes,
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I miss your dinner. Yeah, no, no, I didn't. Far from us, in fact, I, no, I do, I did notice that
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on the, I like the direction in which it's going on. I hope he continues. It's a, it was a bit like,
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you know, the HBR community news, you have, you're essentially talking about shows as well.
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And if there's a few people on, then you can get a bit of a conversation going as well. So a lot
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less dry. Yeah. So part of the programming one-on-one series, why C++, go to it again,
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with the C++ programming language and why you should use it. Yeah, I don't have a lot to say
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because I'm not a programmer. I got a lot from this, to be honest. I did, I don't think I'd be
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running out and start programming C++, but this is a nice like foundation stone for a little bit
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background to the language. You don't feel as nervous going into it. It had me, I listened to the show
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when I was doing a little bit of googling and like an hour and a half later I was going, okay,
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I've got to stop now. I have find it hard enough and purl like so. But this is pretty cool.
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The next day we had Andrew Conway with a steam and wine with the Linux, how to coax windows
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only, steam game to work, under steam with GNU, slash the looks.
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I like that because I'm a, I do enjoy the occasional game and then I do have steam
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running on my Kabuntu box and I've got a number of Linux games but it was sort of interesting
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to think, okay, I wonder if I can get some of my older games that are windows only to run this way.
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How do you look? Oh, I have a chance. Yeah.
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And the following day, more financial functions with Mr. Huca.
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Indeed.
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More good repayment schedules. It's depressing that I need that one, but yes.
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Well, that was, you know, I was asked to do something about that by Pokey way back when I first
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started. So it's like a year and a half ago, he sent me an email saying, boy, it'd be really
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nice to have this. So I saved the email and decided this was a good way to work all of that in
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and show people how it's done. You know, it's one of those things that a lot of people probably
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have a use for and that's the main thing here. I can't document every single feature of Libra
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Office or, you know, the series would run into the next century. But if it's something that I think
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a lot of people would be interested in, I want to try and work it in. No, absolutely. So the
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following day, we had a amusing by Klatu about the word hack. And I liked this show in general,
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but I did have the, I think you've been a bit precious with the word hacker. I mean, what does it
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matter? And if somebody thinks that my hacker, all the better, then send an initial or you found
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a hack, then send an initial. Yes, I understand that you have a hack and it's a, that you didn't do
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yourself with somebody else's hack, but it's still a hack. But again, I guess that was his point also.
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Indeed. So love this one's first time, first time HPR host guides to EVA utilities are EVA from
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Spacewalk. And this is exactly, this is, I am this person in the cinema.
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And it's only actually, it was a, in 2001, they had a, they had a trick where, you know, he goes
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from the pod into the, he throws himself into the airlock. And in the new version of the
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battle started galactic and they did a very similar thing. And they were a lot worse off, although
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it was about the same amount of time. And I will wonder if he's doing it another show, which of those
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two scenes would have been more accurate. From what I've read, you know, you do have a minute or two
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before real serious problems start to happen. Yeah, that's, that's what I thought a lot, but now you
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blow on the show. He doesn't need to send it. Yes, he still needs to send it. He may not agree.
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Good. Oh, yeah, there you go. There you go. Yeah, you can stay out for ages. Not a problem.
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You know, have a smoke cigar. You'll be grand. You're the following day we had you with,
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I don't know if it's the following day, I should put in one to choose your weapons to hear, but
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anyways, you had privacy and security. And yeah, well, you know, the, we started off with
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a lot of stuff about email encryption, but you know, there's always so much you can say about that.
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So it seemed like it was time to move into some of the other areas. And yeah, I thought it was
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assaulting, hashing, quite good. And why you should, you have the whole, if the whole
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here's how it works, very, very clear. Nice. I liked it. Didn't have any comments, normally,
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with your shows, I deliberately try and find something just to annoy you, but nothing, nothing
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that annoys me in that way. Okay. Here's one that I was trying to organize for a long time
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with Ingmar Steiner from the Mary TTS project for any of you who heard us, was
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developer of the text-to-speech engine. And I really enjoyed doing this interview,
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which essentially consisted of me just shutting off a lesson, somebody who's far more
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learned than myself talk. And I loved this interview and I really hope you'll
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have Ingmar back on, because we tend to think about, okay, this is very necessary for people
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who have visual impairments, and it is. But I really think this is the way, at some point,
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we're all going to be interacting with computers. And these people are creating the future for us.
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Absolutely. Absolutely. And I just heard that a accessible computer, I'll try that again.
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I just heard that the Accessible Computing Foundation have moved away from Mary TTS,
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because it's for print was quite large, which I think we should have Jonathan Nidu on
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to tell us about that. Yeah, he may well have his reasons, but yeah, I'd like to definitely
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like to hear them, but regardless, I think it's an interesting system. And then we had the ZFS,
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which most BST people rave and rant about. Yeah, I'd like to them. Yeah, it seems to do a very
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good job, and although not for small systems, what I understand. Yeah, I'm not running BSD,
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so it doesn't look like I'm going to have any chance to try it soon. Well, you can install
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on Linux as old as there's a way to do that. Anyway, Clat2 introduced new web developers to Lamb,
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kind of a nice little episode again, that's Clat2 through and do appreciate those.
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We do indeed. I always love hearing from Clat2. I also subscribed to his new world order
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podcast. Yes, who doesn't? Yeah, and I think you take stuff for granted that people would know
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how to do this. So I think obviously he's had a reason where I can't imagine anyone paying
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or paying somebody else or downloading a set up alarm stack, easy utility when it is actually
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as easy as he makes it up. Indeed. Then we had another open source news break this time,
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data driven journalism, open source password management and open electronics. Good stuff.
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A lot of good stuff there. Very much. New host to be frank, which I love the name,
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how the handle is absolutely brilliant, gets to speak to Matthew Garrus and nice piece of editing,
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very professionally done, very impressed with this as the first time episode, as we said.
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Yeah, and Matthew Garrus, one of those people that I want to hear from, I really like being able to
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hear what he had to say. Absolutely. Got a chance to listen to one of his talks way back when he was
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a lad. Another another person that is way above my head. So the following day, we had a new host
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golfer. Is it golfer? Of course, golfer, yes. And this is his required how I got into Linux
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episode from zero to one cool stuff. Yep. And we're always welcoming a new host. We love to hear
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from these people. We have plenty of slots for anyone who wants to record a show. Oh, yes,
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we do more about that and then the following day, descriptor statistics and how we can make
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basic measurements about a population. And I was thinking about this. Yeah, I did a lot of this
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stuff when I was back when I was a natural engineer. And I was taking it to myself. You know,
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a lot, this is a prime example of an HPR episode where a lot of people are just going to go
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follow the way. But there's going to be one person sometime, you know, the night before
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a exam. And we'll download this episode and we'll get down on his or her knees and thank the gods
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for the internet. Yeah, well, I must admit, it was this one and the one after it, where I talk
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about inferential statistics. It may be a little indulgent on my part because I used to teach
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statistics. I actually enjoy this kind of thing. And some people may remember episode I did some
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months back about how to understand polls where I brought in the statistics behind public opinion
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polling. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I love that episode. So feel free to indulge yourself as often as you
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like. But I think the main thing I wanted to get across here is that for a lot of the stuff that you
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that where you might want to use statistics, Libra Office Calc is all you need. You know, I remember
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when when I first started teaching this stuff, I had to buy a statistical package and use that to
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teach. And I wouldn't have to do that now. I could just take Libra Office Calc in there and
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it's got everything I need. Yeah, things have come on. Things have come on a lot as I've lost my time
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one moment. So I hope you're going to do more of these. You should definitely don't be anyone,
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don't anyone be afraid about indulging their own passions here in the HPR because I guarantee you
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people interested. And so keep these ones common, please. Oh, yeah. And there's more. I think I've
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got about six more episodes in Calc that I have written. I just need to record. But I'm not sure
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my voice would hold out very well right now. So maybe next weekend. Yeah, keep them common because
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you're supplying the backbone of stuff that keeps the network open rather. Don't forget that. Yeah,
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and then I'm already pulling together material to swing into impress, which is the slide deck
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program. Okay, the following day we had how to VNC talk, plateau talks about how to get VNC open
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running. And during this episode, plateau mentions that VNC is secure. It is not. It is not a secure
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method to connect to other systems at all. A protocol itself is not secure and it is not
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secure by virtue of the fact that it is. It only uses a username and not a password and
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better yes, not a client shared keys like SSH does. So if you are doing connections on VNC,
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you must and should run it over a SSH or a VPN connection. Yeah. And you know, to be the
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take away there is just security is really hard. I don't think people always appreciate just,
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you know, you look at stuff like we just had the whole shell shock thing of various vulnerabilities
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and bash that have been there for 20 years, you know, because no one happened to think about it.
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Yeah, exactly. And at times change, I don't think people expected it to be used as far as it has,
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VNC, their excuse was that it was on the local network and they always said that you should
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secure tunnel. Your secure sends it over secure tunnel. Now, there are some versions that do use
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encryption 1010, but I always send it to your secure tunnel. I think that too was sending
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it over secure tunnel. He was doing tunneling in via an SSH port and coming off the local host.
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In which case the attack factor is very, very much minimized. So if you configure it that way,
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then yes, it is secure. But otherwise, if you're just connecting to have a listening on the public
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port and then connect via that, then it's susceptible to a brute force attack. And frankly,
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you know, he's usually pretty smart about all this stuff. So it's quite possible that in the back
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of his mind, he knew that's how he was doing it and he just didn't explicitly say that. Yeah.
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Okay, but you warned, you warned. Migrating from Truple to Nikola.
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Nikola. Nikola. This is cool. This is a nice, a nice short thing with the scripts available
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publicly. Very, very cool. Yeah. Short sweet to the point, I think. Oh, absolutely.
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That was the last one for this month, as it happened. So pretty cool all around. We
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quite a bit of comments going on this one, this month. And it started with an episode, a comment
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on an episode from last, from last December, actually, the 13th, the 13th of the 12th. And it was
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related to how we use Linux and it was created and given comments about Kaldav for Android and
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such. That was pretty cool. Then we had a comment on episode 1458, which was free culture and
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open source animation by CT, which is also back in September 2014, the ninth, actually.
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And Siphon, S-Y-N-F-I-N, I was glad to comment on that. I think. I think. Oh,
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Lord. Thanks for being here. Oh, simply yes. Siphon, S-Y-N-F-I-N-F-I-N. And yeah.
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Anyway, this is, this is why I also have to succeed. Anyway, that is an 2D animation program,
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which is pretty cool. And Cloud2 set me a little tutorial that a friend of his did on one of the
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magazines sent me a link to it. So if you happen to come across that, it's absolutely excellent.
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then we had a comments to my episode or sorry not my episode but the many many many
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too many data relationships by Mike Ray 1569 and we get into a discussion about how to deal
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with tags and to be honest I'm not overly impressed with the answers really because
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they're a very complicated stuff and I don't like I don't like complications
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unfortunately and stuck in there I don't know if he got it there was a comment by Borgu
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as well which I must say I did kind of agree with and I don't like to be negative about shows but
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believe me this is bad I hear that he's like comment about that so if Mike wants to address that
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he can always do that as well that was the whole topic mostly went over my head I'm not a DBA
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yeah and I don't think I I will ever be um they might come I got a quick shout-outs
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of a thank you for beginners guide to the night sky and I can't stress enough how
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chuffed you feel as a as a podcaster when somebody just drops you an email even if it's a
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one-liner or sends you a thing in Skype or or not Skype but Twitter or puts a comment on the
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episode just a little bit of feedback somebody out there is listening one of the thousands of people
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who download those show listen to the show I thought it was cool that makes it a little worthwhile
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oh absolutely I've I've gotten some wonderful email responses they're actually it is it is the
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currency of which podcasters survive it has to be said then we had a two small comments relating to
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they down and out in the magic kingdom correct spelling of kiss me kiss me kiss me yep and we had
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50 150 with a link to the haunted mansion for safe but it said facade I believe the sad I should know
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that just give me one second so a comment on the XFS file system we had Jonathan talking about
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why Daniel Robbins creator of Gen 2 recommends it so when you're reading that feedback on the ultimate
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cooking device and was left by more this more dancing the best GPA I found a light a charcoal
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and my charcoal and chimney has been to use either newspaper or paper towels yeah that's
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I've used watered up newspaper myself I've used petrol yep and then comments from UNV about the
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episode on Gordiola's episode on C++ programming and saying how useful some of the stuff was
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on the wine and learning episode lots of comments UNV free like new and Andrew Conway all commented
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relating to ways to introduce kids to linux and recommend UNV recommends do do linux which for some
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reason the link need to fix the link on that there's an open spades alternative by free as in
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Gadoo and gives you a link to that and Andrew Conway is just give some comments back on that
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episode we had on tattoos episode about hacking we had me making the point that's here on hacker
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public radio have we been exposed a little bit more than most to the general mass media's interpretation
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of the name hacker so to me I'm more than happy that if somebody I know puts a paper clip with a
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piece of soda tape on the wall and thinks it's useful and thinks they're a hacker that to me is
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all the better because it reinforces more the the other end of the scale as opposed to the evil bad
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nasty people and they also have Michael coming in with a comment sorry I got you off go ahead
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I yeah I to be a hacker is just someone who wants to get the job done and will use whatever is
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handy to get it done absolutely yeah and yep absolutely but my issue is for all the people's
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interpretation of that is is is it better that people think that they are a hacker is a
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better that the public thinks a hacker is somebody who's evil and will essentially is the cracker
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aspect or do they think it's some lame cheap way to do something you know two ends of the extreme
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two ends of the scale and I think we're so far the side the route so far down the end of the
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scale to the cracker end that it's no harm to bring it a little bit closer and make more accessible
|
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to people then we had two comments on your episode one was by gig sphere and it's helped his
|
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understanding particularly talking about salted hashes and hashing algorithms can't say more
|
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than not really the whole point of the episode I think that's what I was trying to do and we had
|
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some comments on the Ingmer Steiner interview which lots of people lend lend me dear did you
|
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uh did you listen to that episode the whole way through to the other voices at the end I did
|
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indeed and uh sorry go on I some of them sounded a little bit better than the voice that is doing
|
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the uh automated summaries on hpr I wondered if you were thinking about using some of that well
|
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funny you should mention that yes just as soon as a Java program work and come out of the woodwork
|
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and uh download the simple application that Ingmer was talking about and uh make it so that I can
|
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use the same functionality as e-speak but with uh using mary tts please somebody get in touch with me
|
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I'm sure if a Java programmer could do this do it in 20 minutes then we can put that up on the
|
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on their website fixes on their wiki and then have something like that available for people
|
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to download and ideally if we get it into um the repels as well so that it's it's a wrapper for
|
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mary tts it would install and you could go I don't know uh mary speak blah echo something into mary
|
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speak and then it comes out on a wildfire like yeah just and then dash v like uh the e-speak
|
|
languages that you can pick the voice and uh but you don't have to make it your own tom's your first
|
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yep so volunteers please step forward this will of course uh relieve you of your one show
|
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or contribution a year especially after you record a show telling us how you do
|
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but lots of people express an interest into that and uh yeah keep it coming how to install the lamp
|
|
we had um tts you see tts how would you read that tts you see i think i do you mentioned you'd like
|
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to have more stuff on virtual machines testing software and server applications by the point
|
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plateau is uh going to um record something about that which is actually brilliant really so uh keep
|
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a bugging host for oh that was a brilliant episode but uh did you think of this so that way i
|
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will get more shows and then when i get new shows and you get more shows and and then we had
|
|
Christopher and Hobbs giving a high five to um gofer on his episode so that was the comments for
|
|
this month good month for comments yeah not bad at all not bad at all they're all available if you
|
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press the letter p on the main website so speaking of other things we had um on the news
|
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i had a fantastic idea of doing live stream from upcoming events based on uh did i talk about
|
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this last month based on uh assign the on air sound type thing i do i don't remember that
|
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so uh yeah basically a wine bottle um holder with an on air sound just put the light inside it
|
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and then start recording and then i was thinking yeah perhaps we can uh we can stream and stuff
|
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from from events so i have uh not had a lot of time to do a lot of stuff this month but the
|
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discussion on that was interesting and continue then how we would do it and if people were going to
|
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or offer it then um we had Dave Morris with the sad news that they're working going to be able to
|
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have another camp at table and then uh Rebecca and Philip uh coronal normal you burrow and Philip
|
|
coronal come forward and rally the troops and as we speak in the bowels of oxford in the UK
|
|
there is a h gr table currently manned by four strapping young men and the picture of those will
|
|
be in the show no good i'll look forward to hearing your shows yeah so do i they've got uh
|
|
Philip um while we talk about the next month but he already has done some excellent interviews
|
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at the link and look and uh he's got a new zoom recorder so i don't think anyone will save
|
|
um so i put out the call for fostm 2015 if people were going to go what did they be interested in
|
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doing a table and the thing about fostm is that you really do need somebody there they say two
|
|
people minimum on the table 24 seven are you know for the entire show and really you do need that
|
|
because there's so many people going through even when it's quiet and in other events there are
|
|
so many people there that they can't get into the talks so then they go around to the to the vendor
|
|
boot or to the boots um so you really need people to be around at all times so uh nobody has
|
|
basically very few people events that call not enough to be able to support that so what i'm
|
|
thinking of doing now is uh contacting other podcasters uh not only in europe but uh mainly around
|
|
europe but around the world because i was thinking then of um doing a uh fost podcasting booth so
|
|
just to promote other shows and uh all the basically shows on the links linked up net and the other
|
|
shows that um are in davinoise and little two for uh checking podcasts and it would be great then
|
|
if we could have some of other shows listeners uh or um hosts available for particular periods of
|
|
time at the table then it wouldn't just be a hbr table would be a podcasting in general and
|
|
we could uh maybe make that work what do you think of that as an idea i like it thinking outside the
|
|
box a little bit here there you go then we had a uh alpha geeks podcast and you podcast that uh i
|
|
that was mentioned in episode 1591 and some questions uh mobile recording devices and uh people
|
|
have zoom or recommend in zooms um he dav morris has a son has a task come dr zero seven mark two
|
|
she'll probably put a few of these up on the website actually yeah i it's always good to have
|
|
that information available and of course the old standby my i i did one with a sands a clip that uh
|
|
i just attached to my car you would be amazed at how many of the interviews that i've done
|
|
that have ended up coming from a sands a clip um which was my comment on on this thing is just
|
|
record with whatever you have no uh any recording is better than no recording if you've got a
|
|
a camera with you record a video and we can extract the audio if you've got a phone on you
|
|
just uh record on the phone if you don't have that then uh dial the hbr number and press record
|
|
yes it's going to cost you uh both uh um yeah um go get on to mumble if you've got an internet
|
|
connection uh sons a clip basically everything and anything it's like the digital clock virtually everything
|
|
that has um speaker and a microphone and this can now record audio so gasses uh don't be too worried
|
|
about if you've got a brilliant recorder use it you don't use what you have yep so then i had the
|
|
very depressing use that's it's been 25 days since anyone uploaded a show and uh thankfully
|
|
we're out of the out of the black for next week which is you know scary and the discussion was more
|
|
centering on and uh it was more centering on how do we solve this you know chart tooth um together
|
|
we have no shows we make call for shows people send in shows there's a big bunch then people
|
|
relax a lot and then we don't have any shows coming in again and then we put a call out for shows
|
|
so how you do it is you record shows in a bunch and then you space them out over time which i
|
|
think is a brilliant idea um and i'd like people to start doing that more than than dumping shows
|
|
i'd like to have two weeks in the queue which we don't have right now both um there are lots of
|
|
guys going to aug camp so i'm i'm not that concerned about if we'll be able to fill up uh the week
|
|
that you hear this has just been filled by mi bill and in cease is secus and then after that we
|
|
you can expect some aug camp episodes but i'd like people to just you know put it in your calendar
|
|
put a recurring appointment if you if you think you can do one show a year then put a recurring
|
|
appointment then do you know one show a year in your birthday or something and if you can if you
|
|
have a new year's resolution you want to do more than that then put in a recurring appointment in
|
|
your calendar and uh you don't have to stick to it obviously but uh be nice to get them in you can
|
|
always you know sit down record um a wedgie shows like in in one go and then space them out over time
|
|
it's uh you know we like to space them out over a two week period because if you you know you could
|
|
theoretically put all your shows out on one one's half to the other because scheduling is now done by
|
|
the people who upload the shows you go to the calendar page you pick the date you want and you
|
|
you put them in um but uh uh hookah you just uh record your shows and you pick the dates that you want
|
|
yeah and the way this uh the way that I had done this I it started with the Libra office series and
|
|
um I thought well I could crank out one of those about every two weeks uh and I've pretty much stuck
|
|
to that except when something comes along like I know in January there's going to be this
|
|
gap because the new years shows I just got to run for like two weeks by themselves uh and it was
|
|
just fine I have no problem with that um and then the security and privacy thing um which I know
|
|
that one was started by you Ken because we were doing the community news and you said yeah I
|
|
really need someone to tackle this and I was like well I guess if no one else gets to it I will
|
|
absolutely yeah uh and no one else got to it so I did and what I did is I made a commitment that
|
|
I would get out a show once a month uh so to me the the thing that that I I think helps is to make
|
|
a commitment and you know do it on whatever schedule works for you um so if this is worked
|
|
reasonably well for me now I'm doing a lot more shows than most people uh but it's stuff that I'm
|
|
really interested in doing so that's not really a problem uh if if you can only do like you say one
|
|
show a year or once a quarter or whatever it is make the commitment and and just start doing it um
|
|
and I think very often a good way to do it is to you know pick a big topic that you really like
|
|
and then just break it down into small pieces absolutely um and that's that's very much what I've
|
|
done you know Libra office is a huge thing but I just take a little piece of it every two weeks
|
|
and say all right I'm going to spend 15 minutes looking at this little piece um and and I think I
|
|
probably 15 or 20 minutes on average for those shows the thing to remember though uh well one
|
|
point about that is you're making the commitment to yourself I don't need to know about your plans
|
|
to make shows uh and the reason I don't need to know is I hear a lot of I get a lot of uh things
|
|
in from people going I'm going to record the show I'll have it to you in a week and then in a
|
|
week or two somebody else you know the river email me going oh I got delayed and so the show's not
|
|
coming to come in you know I have this saying a show isn't a show until it's a show and it's a show
|
|
when it gets uploaded to the FTP server I life gets in your way sometimes I have a I have a whole
|
|
goal shows that are ready to be edited they're not edited yet when I get time will be edited uh
|
|
when we need them they'll be they'll be there so make the commitment to yourself and just send them in
|
|
but uh yep that's pretty much it and if you don't like hearing a hookah or anyone else on the
|
|
network the absolute best way guarantee to get them off the network is to record more shows and
|
|
get your friends to record more shows and then there'll be no snots uh no slots available for a hookah
|
|
or on the other side um that that's right I can't program anything unless there's blank slots there
|
|
there you go and I think a lot of the stuff with HPR is um you ask the question and everybody takes
|
|
one step back so you end up doing it that's pretty much how I how I ended up um doing the
|
|
community news and the the administration and that sort of stuff so there you go it in it
|
|
it's rocket science now it isn't and the thing that uh if it's holding anyone back you might
|
|
think well I'm interested in this but who else is and uh you know on paper why would anyone want
|
|
a series on Libra office but I can tell you I've gotten great feedback from it um there are a lot
|
|
of people and I mean what's our average download now can three thousand to show something like that
|
|
um and you know and I keep getting comments from people um and you know sometimes I mean I got
|
|
an email from Allison Chacon who I respect immensely thanking me for one of my shows and it's like
|
|
oh well that's cool because you know a couple of months ago in Linux format I read this long interview
|
|
with her so oh that's cool yeah I mean she's really big into the automotive uh software and stuff
|
|
like that um and you know I sort of knew about her and it was like oh she liked one of my shows
|
|
um and and I get lots of uh comments from people um you know sometimes it's emails sometimes it's
|
|
comments on the hpr site sometimes it's on google plus because that's where I tend to hang out
|
|
um so I know there's people out there doing it that are you know listening to these shows and enjoying it
|
|
um so you know even if if you don't think there's a huge audience you might be surprised
|
|
uh I can guarantee you actually will be so okay back to the um because if you ask me it
|
|
is no point asking me if somebody's gonna be interested in because I am interested in in these
|
|
shows there hasn't been literally there has not been a show on hpr that I have not listened to
|
|
and tend to and that I've not enjoyed on some level um some of them especially when people are
|
|
trying to uh to stretch the definition of what's interest to hackers that gets me definitely interested
|
|
so um just a quick note here from Patrick Daley the next uh which is Pokey to you and the next hpr
|
|
audiobook club we recorded on the 14th of October at seven pm centrally us time seven pm
|
|
central us time and the book is the call of some word that I can pronounce by pH Lovecraft
|
|
the call of Holano pistis into the chat for you ok maybe you can read it for me i would call it
|
|
katulu uh it's hp lovecraft it's a real classic in the horror genre i will love reading this
|
|
well okay but it really you know uh lovecraft um have you read this one um i've read some of
|
|
his i i i don't know if i've read all of that but um you know this the the award that is given to
|
|
fantasy writers um is called the Lovecraft award so okay fair enough yeah probably
|
|
tell just something right there yeah i'm not a big fan of the whole horror genre i have to i have to
|
|
admit i get too drawn in and then yes i'm a big scaredy cat what can i say um 5150 wrote in to say
|
|
they intro and outro clips what is the word on the intro enough for clips and i like a smart
|
|
gift that i am replied that everything is fine for me when an actual fact i think was in my bill
|
|
took the liberty of pointing out so that no things were not right since the server move
|
|
file based browsing so you know going to a directory that doesn't have an indexed us whatever
|
|
it requires you can't just browse up and down the directory and i was using that so i fixed that
|
|
on my humble apologies goes to 5150 for um my complacent attitude towards his book reports
|
|
you mean we weren't supposed to be browsing through all the files well i thought it was a useful
|
|
feature my point of view with uh with hbr is there's nothing on the website that is that isn't
|
|
public you know everything well i mean you probably don't want uh yeah the the web server
|
|
that's the web server you don't want to use for spam or whatever but uh so uh it was fine but
|
|
Josh is uh with an honest host calm has different views on the world and i'm very glad to have them
|
|
because i feel a lot safer as well so uh that was a pretty cool move
|
|
handy hello yeah you're still there okay um but there has been a few questions about the new
|
|
theme music and we have updated the theme and they just to give you a quick summary again
|
|
the intro and outro are now two separate files they don't contain any um mentions from anyone so
|
|
if you have the intro and outro now the idea is that if there's a change of sponsor or the one
|
|
to change the sponsor message for any reason that we don't need to redistribute that to all the host
|
|
you can continue to use the same one it's unlikely that we'll add any new text and if we do it's
|
|
not the end of the world we just wait for them to close through the system basically it's me being
|
|
lazy i don't want to have to read download all the shows edit the edit everything and re-upload them
|
|
again so that's pretty much the the purpose for having that they so the the shows are now
|
|
met out of six different parts five five required the first one is thanking the hosting provider
|
|
which will be mentioned to anonymoushost.com for those that are on the hgur website or archive.org
|
|
for those that are going over there you don't need to add those that will be added automatically
|
|
the show summary is taken from say.php on the hgur website and it is uh you know it's that speaking
|
|
voice that says it is blah blah blah today show is entitled blah blah blah and the duration is
|
|
um have you have you been enjoying that or not has it has it been useful to you?
|
|
you know it doesn't do anything for me particularly but you know i'm not opposed to it
|
|
i i must say i get up in the morning and i'm walking down at six a.m. down to the train station
|
|
it's good to know what day it is yeah okay so that's a different set of problems again
|
|
there you go there you go and then we have they so that will be added mostly automatically by they
|
|
by the by the server you can choose to edit if you wish but you have to kind of stick to the template
|
|
then we have the hbur intro music which you can download if you choose not to put that in
|
|
that's fine if you choose to put it in that's also find the show this is the most important thing
|
|
this is the one that you need to do long as you like only topic of this is you like the audio
|
|
quality doesn't have to be brilliant but it does have to be audible and of interest hackers and not
|
|
spam basically then the outro music can be downloaded if you have your own outro music you can do it
|
|
and the text must be according to what's been agreed and that's on the it's on the back
|
|
that's written there as well and then we have the epilogue for people whose names begin with
|
|
pokey so the last few that i recorded and uploaded i just uploaded the show itself i didn't
|
|
tack anything on to it because it sort of it sounded like well we're still changing things
|
|
and it was like fine put anything on it you want yeah that's the mix is a lot easier for me but
|
|
what i'll probably will do is try to get sucks to do a little bit of fade over so that you know
|
|
the intro is fading down and the show itself is starting up because a lot of people like that so
|
|
it's a little bit subtler so i'll try and work on that but it is my preference
|
|
that people just upload the shows because it makes it a lot cleaner or around yeah
|
|
well we're at 58 minutes i don't know what it's going to be when i try to say it silence but
|
|
i don't have anything much else to say except i'm getting lots of tweets from people who are
|
|
a company hit you all i hit you all well that's not very nice well in a sort of very friendly sort of
|
|
way obviously so i'm really annoyed i couldn't get over to that i'm going to add a little announcement
|
|
here because i've got this platform and why not and that is the the the con that i'm involved with
|
|
now panguacan our call for talks is now open so if you go to panguacan.org you can submit something
|
|
you know you kind of have to be in the general area of the midwestern united states for this to
|
|
make sense but just trying to get the word out to people that we're looking for it and i
|
|
i handle all of the technology track so if you if you send me anything halfway decent looking
|
|
as a proposal there's a very good chance i'm going to accept it do you want to do a separate interview
|
|
on that yeah we can do that or i can just record something how do you want to do it
|
|
to be better it's getting a bit late here tonight need to spend some quality time with my wife
|
|
okay fine i'll record something and get that up to you probably in the next couple of days
|
|
will we be having will we hpr be having a table presence at that convention or do you do tables
|
|
i cannot staff the table because i'm running this technology track i don't know who from the hpr
|
|
community is thinking of coming to this so at the moment i'm not aware of anything is are there
|
|
tables yeah there are tables and would hpr fit into your type of tables it would be slightly different
|
|
i don't mind being slightly different the thing about panguacan that you want to bear in mind is
|
|
it's both science fiction and technology so people who are interested so you might be right next to
|
|
you know someone doing geek jewelry or you know someone selling books or whatever sounds like my
|
|
credit my kind of crowd yes very much anybody going give us a shout please and we'll see that
|
|
the booth kiss gets to you and that you have everything that you need to make it a fantastic event
|
|
yeah and i'll get that show out to you in the next few days okay cool well you know what to do
|
|
just upload it to the thingy and oh i do indeed so no so there then i don't need to thank you which
|
|
is always always always good thing anyway fast join us now and share the soccer folks you'll be free
|
|
hackers you'll be free by the way did you notice that one of those voices was an rms voice
|
|
no i didn't they have deliberately they made a rms voice it doesn't sound it doesn't sound
|
|
how bad actually yeah you're referring to the one that was pasted in on all of the new year shows
|
|
yeah that's the one if you by the way if people have preferences for one of those voices do drop
|
|
me a line about it and don't forget i am looking for a java somebody who has done any java at all
|
|
i don't think it's very difficult for money says so if somebody has done any java at all could
|
|
you give us a shout and see how we can make that merry same thing okay tune in tomorrow for another
|
|
exciting episode all hacker public radio you've been listening to hacker public radio at
|
|
hackerpublicradio.org we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday
|
|
Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by an hbr listener like
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yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out
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how easy it really is hacker public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
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infonomicant computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com if you have
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comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record
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commons attribution share a light 3.0 license
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