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100 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
100 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1849
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Title: HPR1849: LinuxLugCast Episode-004 Outtakes
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1849/hpr1849.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:06:47
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---
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This in HPR episode 1,849 entitled Linux Logcast episode 0-0-4 out of takes, it is hosted
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by Kevin Wischer and is about 9 minutes long, the summary is, pre-show and after show
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banter that does not get published through our normal feeds.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com, get 15% discount on all shared
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Hello all, this is Kay Wischer from the Linux Logcast podcast.
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I'm submitting our show out takes for episode number 4 for HPR community.
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If you've heard the previous three episodes here on HPR, it's the same format, you'll
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hear our normal outro music, the first part of the show where we're getting things ready
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and bantering, then you'll hear the intro outro music again, you'll hear the end part
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of the full recording and then you'll hear the outro music again and so without further
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ado, here we go.
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Just so you know, I've started recording.
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Yeah I noticed that, you think I should start recording also or you think yours is reliable
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enough that we don't need a second one?
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Couldn't hurt.
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Okay, I'll start then.
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That sucks.
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We're toleranceless tonight.
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Yeah, I think he knows about it.
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We've got other things going on, don't know.
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I've enjoyed having them in the last couple of shows.
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Yeah, it's nice to have somebody that we're not just talking to ourselves, you're right
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about that.
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I know I think it'd be the first one when we had Tony Beemiss and a dude man on.
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Right.
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Hey, I meant to ask you, are you going to Nelson this year?
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I'll be there right now tomorrow morning.
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You know, Bruce and Jonathan were on the pod nuts meetup the latest episode and Bruce expressed
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a lot of gratitude for your volunteering work at the last one.
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Yeah, but if you remember actually listening to the Linux basics episode we did right after
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it, I didn't really do anything.
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I actually just kind of hung back and because I didn't know anybody really, I just kind
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of hung back and I stayed out of people's way.
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I mean, I introduced myself to Bruce because I actually had some interaction with Bruce
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before, but I actually didn't help last year.
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I plan on getting there early this year to actually try and help and now that they called
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me out on it, I'm really going to have to go up there early and help.
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I'm like crap, what the hell you doing saying that I didn't do crap last year.
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You know, I, from a couple of times, I've kind of complained about it not seeming to be
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any contact information on the NELF website, but it turns out, Jay Lindsay pointed it out
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to me today that there's actually an icon up at the top of the homepage that is an email
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contact link and I didn't, I didn't notice it partly because it's all Facebook, Twitter,
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things like that, but also that the, the icon that displays in Firefox is very late gray
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on white and I had to stare at it for a moment to notice, oh yeah, that's an on, that's an envelope
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and when I mouseed over it, I saw that it was a mail-to link, so I was suitably corrected.
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Yeah, I should probably actually figure out where exactly I'm going tomorrow.
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I know, I know whereabouts, I just, you know, I know I need to, for me, I got to drive up the
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brain tree and then I got to take the teon and tour to Boston and I think they said it was like
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Coply Center, something like that and I think Coply Center is the stop in between
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MIT and where they did it last year in Cambridge, so I think I know where I'm going, but I should
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probably actually figure it out. I have no idea how to get around Boston, I was, I've been in Boston,
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I went to Boston once in my whole life and that was back in the late 60s or early 70s for like two
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days. It's not a bad place. I really don't remember much about it to be honest and I would be
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completely lost if I had to try and find my way around anywhere there. I've been there a lot
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and I'd still probably be lost trying to find my own way around. I have a general idea and that's
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about it, sadly I know how to go to, how to go to Fenway and that's really about it, oh and maybe
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South Station and Logan, so I can know how to get out of there. During your two days there, did you
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go to Fenway at all or go buy it or see it or anything? No, I'm trying to remember if I remember
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anything. I went to Fenol Hall, is that how you say it? Is that the pronunciation? Fenol? Fenol.
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Fenol Hall, right. So if you give any more thought to what type of desktop environment you want to
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run if what Mayor or Wailand take over? No, when I thought about it, it seems to be that either
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KDE or Enlightenment are going to be what I choose between. I've followed some of the activity,
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the announcements about Enlightenment through the different blogs that the project runs
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and it seems like E19 is going to have some Wailand support. I believe KDE's window manager
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is going to have Wailand support, I might be wrong about that and both of them are pretty configurable,
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so I might be able to carry over the preferences that I have right now. It's just a matter of learning
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that what the jargon is for KDE or for Enlightenment and setting them up. I haven't spent any time
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lately within the past couple of weeks fooling around with either KDE or Enlightenment, so I don't
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have any more experience or more familiarity with how those things operate. But I expect that it's
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not anything that's going to be needed even within a year or two, maybe after two years, it'll
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get to a point where X is not supported really anymore and everybody's going to have to be migrated
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to Wailand, so it's not a real urgent thing, it's just a thing that at some point I'm really going
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to have to deal with. Well, 50 can back me up that Enlightenment is a wonderful desktop.
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I can't at that. I'm not using on anything currently, but I have used it quite well. No, I guess
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scratch that. I do have it on my netbook, so and yeah, I think I still usually come back to
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LHD, but...
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And I stopped recording.
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How do you think that went? I think it went pretty well.
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Yeah, I wish I'd had a topic I was more prepared on, but I think I was looking for solutions in
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a place that they didn't exist. Well, that's that's mostly how I learn. You know, I do the wrong
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thing and then somebody points me in a different direction or I figure out that, hey, that's not the
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that's not the path to follow. Try something else. And
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you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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