- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
836 lines
75 KiB
Plaintext
836 lines
75 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2611
|
|
Title: HPR2611: HPR Community News for July 2018
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2611/hpr2611.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:36:50
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR Episode 2611 entitled HBR Community News for July 2018 and is part of the series
|
|
HBR Community News. It is posted by HBR Volunteers and is about 84 minutes long and can
|
|
remain a explicit flag. The summary is HBR Volunteers talk about shows released and comment
|
|
posted in July 2018. This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An honest host.com.
|
|
Hi everybody. My name is Ken Phalan and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
|
|
Radio. This is Community News for July 2018. Joining me tonight is either Dave Morris here as
|
|
usual. Hi Dave. How are you? I'm good. I'm good. I guess we need to do the standard
|
|
we're having a heatwave here in Europe. All the windows are open and there's going to be a lot of
|
|
noise around. Yes, yes. You beat me to it. There's a flock of seagulls outside my house. So if
|
|
you hear strange noises, it's them fairly enough. My kids are outside. All righty. So this is the
|
|
Community News show which for anyone joining this month and there may be people joining this month
|
|
following the review that's just been done. Hacker Public Radio is a community podcast, Dave. Do
|
|
you want to give an explanation as to what a community podcast is? Well, it's a podcast where episodes
|
|
are produced on a regular basis every weekday and they are contributed by the community and when
|
|
you contribute something, you become a host and we hope you will then continue to do more.
|
|
And who exactly is the community, Dave? Well, the community is hackers. We're hacking is the old
|
|
sense, the original sense, meaning people who like to modify things to make them work better
|
|
and generally improve them rather than the derogatory term that's used in the media these days
|
|
and we try, we welcome hackers to come and contribute and to aim for those like themselves
|
|
to fellow hackers. But really, the range of things that you can talk about on HPR is huge.
|
|
Yes, limited by your own imagination. And if you are put off by the fact that you don't think
|
|
yourself to be a hacker, the qualifications are actually just look up my ironing board show and
|
|
ask yourself, can I do better than that? So, yes, yes, good. That's a good yardstick, I think.
|
|
I'm lowering the bar so you don't have to. So it was pleasant. Do you want to talk about that review
|
|
that was done, Dave? Yes, yes. Well, I hadn't got it on the agenda or anything for today,
|
|
because I'd only seen it a few hours ago. There's a review that is covering the top 25
|
|
podcast with Linux emphasis and the site I don't have in front of me. Do you recall what the site
|
|
is called? We can make sure it's in the show notes afterwards. I do. I happen in the, if you go
|
|
to the HPR website and you go to the above page, about PHP, and in the press, I've added it there.
|
|
It's the Linux, it's part of the Linux links site, Linux links.com. And it's a review of Hacker
|
|
Public Radio podcast from the hacker community. So we came out 20, what was that? 21st, I think.
|
|
And the verdict is, this is definitely the hardest podcast to give a reliable rating.
|
|
Sampling 50 shows is a bit like visiting GitHub and picking 15 random repositories.
|
|
There's no quality control. There are some gems, but there's content which is uninteresting or
|
|
frankly pure garbage. See my earning board show. That's much how Hacker Public Radio works.
|
|
Shows from tattoo, bash scripting from Dave Morris, and many others are worth a listen
|
|
for Linux enthusiasts. If you're not sure where to start, check out their in-depth series section.
|
|
Which is kind of cool. Yeah, yeah. That's not bad at all, I think. Top of the fair.
|
|
Top of the fair. Yeah, yeah. There's some truth in it. There is occasionally stuff which is
|
|
maybe not the best, but I'm not sure I call it garbage necessarily, but.
|
|
Thanks, Steve. But still, yes, yes. There's a variety of qualities.
|
|
I think the three hour snoring session would even be that one was top.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, and intended to be so, I believe.
|
|
Yes, I think that was a certain jokingness to that one.
|
|
Indeed. Anyway, the hacker public radio, if you don't know what sure to pick,
|
|
then pick this one and we run down through a list of all the shows that have been
|
|
on the network in the last month or so. And some people, even regular people,
|
|
hold some of the network themselves, use that as a way to filter out, go back and make sure
|
|
that they didn't miss anything. We, of course, listen to all the episodes because they're all,
|
|
I've yet to come across a show that was, that was not of, is some interest to me on some level.
|
|
Yeah, I agree with that. Yes, indeed. There's always some element of it or
|
|
somebody you know or it's like to know a little bit about the circumstances of it or whatever,
|
|
even if the content is not the thing you would go for, you know, normal. Exactly.
|
|
Exactly. So, if you do decide to do a show, if you've been thinking about podcasting and Europe,
|
|
obviously, if you're coming via the review on the mix links, then yeah, you could yourself
|
|
become a podcaster by simply recording a show about your technical background. That's a fairly,
|
|
fairly common introductory show here on HBR. And then you can move on to what's in your toolkit,
|
|
also good one. And then based on the feedback from those, you will get a big long list,
|
|
big long list from me, Dave, about interesting shows that I would like to hear about.
|
|
Yeah, so that's a good way to start. So, let's, without further ado, let's go back to show,
|
|
2586. And that was the previous community news show for last month.
|
|
But before you do that, we often look to see if we've had any new hosts.
|
|
Well, we haven't had new hosts in a while, Dave. We have not had new hosts for some considerable time,
|
|
but this particular one we have. So, Philip has joined us, and we'll be hearing about his show
|
|
in a little while. So, well done. Thank you for coming on board. And I had to, I had
|
|
had to add Philip directly to the database because the CMS has broken. So, oh, yes, yes, we need
|
|
to work on that one, I think. Yeah, let's write that down for any other business as he
|
|
wants to annoy Dave that I didn't tell you about that for your business section.
|
|
Okay, so the community news show for last month, there were no comments. So, the following day,
|
|
we had a 2587, which was cleaning out your digital gutters, which was nightwise,
|
|
having a quick chat while cleaning out his gutters. As his home, I thought this was a quite
|
|
interesting take. And again, one of these soundscape episodes, I thought. Yes, I enjoyed that.
|
|
I knew that. I hope he wasn't going to do the thing where he pretends to fall off the ladder
|
|
with the sickening scream and the thought, no, he didn't show up. Thank goodness.
|
|
Well, the nights, the lives are out tonight, Dave. Now that you've been, nobody would do that,
|
|
nobody would do that. Now that you've been reviewed special mention in the review sections,
|
|
yeah, yeah, yeah, put back your head. No, but it was, there was an interesting show. Yeah,
|
|
it's just put sleeve it, actually. He's actually done a one or two of these. So, let's continue on.
|
|
Just give me one second. So, the next episode was from Tagutor Auto, I think. Better than how?
|
|
Tuterto, I think it's how you like to say. How nice to say. I went back and listened to his
|
|
introduction, Dave. And that is the closest I could get you speak to say it. Okay. Anyway,
|
|
yeah, miniature painting. This is a, this is a thing that I thought only existed in,
|
|
in detective series where they find a broken miniature crushed in the corner and then they're
|
|
able to piece together who exactly did the murder. Yeah, it's, it's not a thing you hear about
|
|
much these days. Imagine people who are still doing it, but not making a big thing of it. But,
|
|
no, it's, it's a fascinating thing. I've never had a particular desire to, I've never had
|
|
the coordination to do this. And these are really intricate paintings. Oh, yes.
|
|
Oh, and I've seen some of his pictures on Gnu Social where he posted stuff about it. And I
|
|
wish he'd put some into this, this episode because they're wonderful. They're beautiful. They're
|
|
really, really cleverly done. So, yeah, it was, the show really lit up for me. I learned a lot
|
|
from what he was saying. And Tlatou says, painting miniatures, I see amazing painted minis
|
|
at my local hobby shop. And it always makes me want to get into creative deuramas and battlefeels
|
|
for games. But I don't feel like I have the time, money or space for, tanks for letting me live
|
|
a curiously through your hobby in this episode. Very good. Good point. Yes. D-O-D-D dummy says,
|
|
wonder no more. I've seen lots of miniatures in the past and wonder what goes on in the mind of
|
|
those who paint them. Now, I know. Thanks for the insight. Great enough. Yeah. That's one of
|
|
the interest hackers and we didn't even know we'd be interested. No, no, no, no. Well, one of the things
|
|
that Tlatou said about this was he uses a substance called Gesso as a base as a primer. And that's the
|
|
thing you can get easily in art shops. And that resulted in a discussion with those who do a lot of
|
|
model painting in this house who have moved to using it as the base. This is handmade resin
|
|
things that get made here. And yes, I have asked them, would they please do an HPR on them? I
|
|
haven't managed to talk them into it yet. Thank you. So the next day we had saving money,
|
|
a response to Tlatou's personal finance series. And I love these response episodes. And Tlatou says,
|
|
basically, Tlatou has done a series on personal finance and John gives some information about a 403B
|
|
tech shelter bonds, US savings bonds and guitar makers. That was a very interesting episode actually
|
|
from John. You get the more color about his background. Yes, indeed. And yeah, it's actually quite
|
|
amazing because I'm having that whole, I consider John to be a friend, having never met him,
|
|
having no idea about his background or his policies or political views. You know, but I would
|
|
always consider, yeah, I've got some friends in the US. And you know, if I'm ever passing, I would
|
|
definitely drop in and visit him. Yet, I know absolutely nothing about the man's background or
|
|
or essentially any of the people on the network who I consider my friends. And yet, I know nothing
|
|
about them. Strange that, I guess. Yes, yes. It's one of the modern strangeness, isn't it, that you
|
|
you can know and communicate with people and not actually know them in the same sense that you
|
|
would have done back in the day, like meeting somebody in the pub on a regular basis or something.
|
|
Well, then on the other hand, you know, you could know more about somebody than their neighbors
|
|
or their school friends because they've never shared the fact that they're into model painting
|
|
or never shared the fact that they like antique fans or, you know, stuff like that. Yeah, so
|
|
anyway, Tatoo says, thanks for the furthering this discussion. You make some really great points.
|
|
Thanks for taking this discussion further. I've been interested in hearing about more people's
|
|
experiences with saving money too because I don't think there's just one right answer or arguably
|
|
the obligation or ability to save it all if somebody wants to argue. The morality is interesting
|
|
to me too, as it seems the only way to grow money requires either contributing to something
|
|
doesn't actually want to support or taking advantages of others. Basically, this is one huge topic
|
|
and it's one that's getting more interesting, the more I hear other people talk about it.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, good point. John Culp replies the suburban option.
|
|
Thanks for the comment, Tatoo. I'd like to hear more discussion about this too,
|
|
especially any argument about whether saving money is really necessary or not. I have at
|
|
least one colleague at work who rides his bike 4.5 miles each way and has for the last 20 some years
|
|
and he says that he doesn't save for retirement because his retirement plan is to get hit by a
|
|
suburban on the road. I think he's only half-kidder. I have said many times my retirement plan is to
|
|
take somebody out and then just go to prison for a while because you get, you know, free healthcare
|
|
and spreadsheet. Yes, exactly. And well, admittedly in the Netherlands where the prison system is,
|
|
you know, is catered to rehabilitation and training and such. Yes, yes, there's many varieties of
|
|
that prison life around the world indeed. And that would be a show on itself. I actually
|
|
like to hear somebody who has prison experiences that would be of interest to hackers, either
|
|
having served sometime or being involved in the prison system or works in the prison systems.
|
|
Yeah, indeed. Really interesting. Yes, Tony Hughes, Akka, 28-1-1-0-2, blowing a PC power supply.
|
|
Oh, yes, who has not done that? That faint smell of ozone. Never actually done that, but something
|
|
similar, yes. Yeah, yeah. Tatoo says, switches and mains, I've never really seen an on-off switch
|
|
in the electrical circuit until I came to New Zealand. Here every outlet has a dedicated power switch
|
|
so that you can plug into a device and then power it on. It's really useful. In the USA, I think the
|
|
only way to simulate this is to use power strips or something like a research protector. Other times
|
|
just a splitter, which often have switches on them. That's become a thing I've noticed in Ireland
|
|
as well. A lot of them have switches. Yeah, yeah. When I was a kid, the UK plug standard was
|
|
different, or at least it was in older houses. It was not uncommon to find sockets that had no
|
|
power switch on, but the standards for the electrical standards for these things
|
|
gone up really a long way since then. It's quite strict in the UK compared to many other
|
|
countries I think. Possibly New Zealand and Canada are similar because of derived standards,
|
|
but it makes damn good sense. Pulling or pushing a plug into a socket is so easy to
|
|
get short circuits or arcing, or it's a more arcing than anything else I think. That will
|
|
really do damage to stuff. Right. The following day, NY Bill,
|
|
they repairs my kit. The kits that keeps taking and taking. This guy had me very worried for
|
|
sending me the bill for a new microscope. Just to give people the background to this, right?
|
|
NY Bill suggested that you get we get electronic kits. So I got this electronic kit and during
|
|
the New Year show, which is a 24-hour show, actually 26-hour show, which we split up, which
|
|
honky splits up for us. Thank you very much. And releases later on. It's a live event,
|
|
so if you're around the New Year's, you can participate. So this is my first attempt at soldering,
|
|
and I met a dog's dinner of it. I don't know if it blew or broke that one of the legs of one of
|
|
this. I think you've cooked it more than anything else. Yeah. I've applied too much heat to it.
|
|
Thank you. Anyways, in my defense, it's tiny. Oh hell, yeah, yeah, absolutely. I've been very
|
|
wary of doing this because my eyesight is not so good these days. Yeah. So I sent this over to
|
|
NY Bill, which cost money, which cost like about 10 times more than the unit itself, and then he
|
|
sent, he fixed it and sent it back, which cost more than the unit itself, and he bought a microscope
|
|
as well. Oh yeah, I bought a soldering kit in the first place to do this and light and all sorts
|
|
of stuff. So it was about two or three hundred euros to get this. And I don't know how much he
|
|
said his microscope was going to be. I don't recall what he said. It wouldn't have been cheap,
|
|
though. It's had me very scared, very, very scared. Well, I first saw his comments about this.
|
|
Wow, Ken's really generous. Hang on. He's a bit of a wind up going on here.
|
|
Well, yeah, I was very worried. But no, very nice of him. He sent it back. He color bridges
|
|
was on my right here on my desk. That's wonderful. Cool stuff. Yeah. It was a fascinating show to
|
|
see his analysis. So here is analysis of what was going on and what he did to it and stuff,
|
|
and his pictures as well were great. Yeah. And also, what I really wanted from this was
|
|
was to find out not so much what was wrong with it, but how he would go about troubleshooting
|
|
an electronic issue. I know if it's a computer program, I know I put in some watch statements,
|
|
and I know the procedure for debugging something like that. Or if it's a natural issue,
|
|
I know the procedure for debugging it. But I found that after I had this done, I had no clue
|
|
where to start. And it was really nice to to hear him troubleshooting the issue. And that's
|
|
that was really cool. Also, it was also was very tough to have somebody to send off a thing
|
|
knowing that you failed publicly on the 24-hour show. And now somebody's going to potentially
|
|
embarrass you by by identifying your faults. But on the other hand, I've had to tell myself if
|
|
you don't open yourself up to failure, then how can you ever improve? Absolutely. Absolutely.
|
|
I had a conversation with then my bill several years ago. I'd got a circuit from the 2600 people.
|
|
It was the badge that was used for one of the the hope conferences. I bought one of their calendars
|
|
and they got one of them. But it was not populated. And I was saying to him,
|
|
do you think I could actually rebuild this into the state that it would have been if I'd gone to
|
|
the conference? And he said, don't even try. Because it was all it was all SMD stuff,
|
|
you know, really, really, really tiny. There's a lot of things on it too. Don't even try.
|
|
So I took his advice and didn't. I'm intrigued to see that both you and he are delving into that
|
|
that sort of thing. Yeah, but there's no choice really. I moral of the story of you're buying a kit
|
|
if you're new to soldering and you're buying a kit trying to avoid SMB complements. It's very
|
|
difficult to do now. Sometimes you can pay a little extra more, a little extra more. That's not
|
|
an English sentence or a little more. A little more extra perhaps. A little more. A little more.
|
|
Later. Later. And you can get the kits with them already on and just to do the through hold
|
|
components. But it was, I really enjoyed putting it together. I know it was great to get it back.
|
|
I know how I have the one that I bought complete, which is now on my project board.
|
|
And I've got this one and I've got a kit still in there with the SMB components off.
|
|
The next new year, I'll put the other one together with the through hold components.
|
|
Anyway, enough about this. Following on, the next day was a tech talk with Alesson.
|
|
Very interesting. Siegflop and Alesson. Uberly's Hacker Force. And all sorts of stuff about Ruby,
|
|
US design and all sorts of cool things. Yeah, it was most interesting to listen to it. I found
|
|
the these are two very bright people. It's great to hear them. And yeah, Alesson is a Ruby developer,
|
|
which is very impressive and is thinking about operating systems in Ruby. I think it's what she
|
|
was saying. I'd like to hear more about that in the future. I think if I walked into the room,
|
|
the average IQ would lower considerably. Well, same here. Same here. I feel the same way.
|
|
Anyway, it's really good to listen into that conversation. That was great.
|
|
Now, this one I'm going to butcher as is my... How about you do this one, Dave? Thank you very much.
|
|
So this is to Turtle again. That's how I think it said, but you might disagree.
|
|
And he's talking about a game called Debellis Antiquitatus. Sounds about right,
|
|
just that's exactly what I was talking about. So yes, I'm not quite sure what that means.
|
|
It sounds like it's sort of Latin, doesn't it? It means the beautiful... The Wars of Antiquity.
|
|
Bellis, you'd think, would be something like Beauty or something. The Wars of Antiquity.
|
|
Okay. Wikipedia can't be wrong. Right, right. So learn something every day. But yeah,
|
|
so it's more painting of soldiers and things and talking about the game.
|
|
And the unofficial guide to DBA, which I thought was Database Administration, but...
|
|
Yeah, yeah. There you go. Could have sworn there was a comment about this. Maybe it's on the
|
|
further later episode. I think they were all on the first, weren't they? And I don't recall
|
|
they're being one on this, but... Okay, yeah, okay. So the first show, Newcomer and Water Topper,
|
|
NMTUI, the network manager, terminal user interface by Philip. Welcome, Philip.
|
|
A something I didn't actually expect to... Didn't expect to... Didn't know about?
|
|
Grigial, lovely. Yeah, this is actually quite an interesting facility. I've actually found
|
|
a YouTube thing about it and it's one of these terminal-based things with... So it uses terminal
|
|
graphics and stuff to display the menus. And it looks really, really, very, very good and
|
|
easy thing to use. Encursus stuff is actually very good. I was thinking of a show on NCDU,
|
|
which was a tip from the Ubuntu UK podcast, who pipped us to the post for the number one best podcast,
|
|
Dave. Yeah, yeah, I know it's that. Yes, I also heard that they talk about that and went looking
|
|
for it and checked it out. Absolutely, excellent. Yes, yes. So actually, if you have any other
|
|
recommendations for NCursus stuff, it would be cool, because NCursus and Screen and
|
|
all laptop or whatever, and you've got yourself a very powerful GUI. You can do some quite
|
|
quite smart things with it. I have used it. No, I mean, I wrote something for it. There was
|
|
a menu system for our students that they could change their password on the on the mail server,
|
|
on the mail system. So I don't know why we decided to do it that way, but we put other things that
|
|
you logged into the main university mail server and you could change your mail password in the days
|
|
when we didn't have unified passwords. And it was pretty, pretty easy to do and worked,
|
|
worked remarkably well. Yeah, cool. Love it. Clatu said, nice first episode, great episode,
|
|
loved your use case and the walkthrough of using the tool. Also, I tried NMTUI out for myself,
|
|
and it's actually quite useful. Network configuration, configuration is such a bother, and
|
|
that's so nice to have an easy button with these tools, like these, and still don't depend on
|
|
Xorg, Willander, whatever. And point Philip was responding to Clatu's show in the first place,
|
|
who did a prompted that discussion, prompted him to do this show. Yeah, good stuff.
|
|
Doing exactly what you say on the tin, you hear something and you comment back.
|
|
Tony aka new laptop, Bargamin, Tony H1212, or aka I come on and Tom's Ken with all these cheap laptops
|
|
that I buy. He got some good deals. He does. He does have his advantages. Three laptops,
|
|
and each one, he didn't say how much they cost, but you say they were under 160 bands each.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. It's as much as he filled with laptops. Yeah, I don't. Yeah, I don't. He said it would fetch,
|
|
even today they fetch $166 in good order for the likes of eBay, so I don't know what he paid for them.
|
|
He'd say something like I didn't pay as much as that, or I paid less than that. So yeah, so he'd
|
|
definitely got some bargains there. Cool. Yeah. And the following day, we had battling with English.
|
|
Yes. Some people just can't let it go, Dave, can they? They just can't let it go. The then and the
|
|
then. I must say I never had a problem with the then and the then for once. It's surprising how
|
|
many people confuse them though. I don't know what it is. If it's the spell checkers that offer the
|
|
wrong one, you know how annoying spell checking can be, but you'd have thought there was
|
|
enough knowledge of grammar and those things that it wouldn't offer you then when you needed Dan.
|
|
It seems to be quite common. Yeah, it's difficult with the context. Remember, you were with me for that
|
|
in Fostam, the first talk two years or three years ago, on spell checking and the context of
|
|
spell checking. That was difficult. Okay, Tlachi says there's a lot of comments, so let's go through them.
|
|
Great series. This is such a great series. I can honestly say that having spoken fairly poor
|
|
English for my entire life, I hate that was. That was proper English, by the way.
|
|
Proper. Just to just to get that right. Very proper English. Yes, that's that's that's an important
|
|
statement. Yeah, thank you. Important different different differences, the word of all the
|
|
languages poised to serve as a global language. There could not be one more undeserving
|
|
than an augmentation of German. Please, Tlachi, what the hell are you doing to me? All right,
|
|
then an augmentation of Germanic forced through a filter of Latin. It's inconsistent, confusing,
|
|
over complex, and yes, as insufficient, see the free software struggle for a lack of
|
|
abject term for free as an example. I really wish a sensible constructed language would be
|
|
adopted in English as place. Anyway, no series, although your efforts are surely in vain because
|
|
English will never make sense. I like that. That's a great one. But English has never meant to
|
|
make sense. No, no. I heard in our time podcast about that. We'll do the mention up before.
|
|
I don't recall now. We were back when I was living in the UK actually, and they were saying that
|
|
the language just developed because of the trade around London, and it was just pigeon
|
|
a pigeon language that was used on shipping vessels, and then it just became into fashion that people
|
|
started using it more widely. At the time, within English itself, there were a lot more dialects,
|
|
there were a lot more dialects in Dutch, German, and French, so with all the traders coming together
|
|
around London, they used a lot and shared a lot of the words together. That sounds possible,
|
|
I haven't heard that one. Certainly as a kid, I moved from London to Norfolk. Norfolk was a very
|
|
remote county way on the east side of England, which is 100 miles away from London. It's nothing,
|
|
but it's a big distance in English terms. The difference in the language, totally through me,
|
|
people don't, they use different sentence structures, they use different words,
|
|
and there's dialect really, but the difference is a massive, because it was an isolated place
|
|
that stuck with a lot of ancient terms, and some of the Norman, French, still there, and so on and so forth.
|
|
Really through me, and it's an indication of how weird English is that it's, you can go all over
|
|
the place and find those sorts of differences in the local dialects, so yeah, I'm listening to
|
|
that IoT thing, by the way, so I'm doing it again, okay, did Morris says, you want me to do that one?
|
|
Is English really so bad? There's no doubt, in my mind anyway, that English is weird and difficult,
|
|
annoying at times, and illogical, perhaps because I was a bad student at school in my teens,
|
|
I've never properly understood the whole issue of grammar, parsing sentences,
|
|
parsing participles, and all of that stuff. However, I've always had a fascination with words,
|
|
their meanings, and their origins, and I think it's English that has led to that interest.
|
|
Other languages also have their problems, I learned French at school, as I did a few years as an
|
|
adult too, I never got to grips with the genders of nouns. Why is a table of the furniture variety
|
|
feminine, for example? How is it possible to remember of more? I still enjoy attempting to speak
|
|
French, nevertheless. You point to the deficiencies of English with regard to the meaning of free.
|
|
Absolutely, that's a shortcoming. However, many other languages have their own ideas,
|
|
synchres. I worked at a university with a campus in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,
|
|
Bahasa, Malaysia, the local language is a very different grammar compared to English,
|
|
and there's a reference to Wikipedia page about the grammar. For some aspects of it,
|
|
I remember having conversations with Malay speakers suggesting in English way of expressing a thing,
|
|
to be told that that was pretty much impossible in their language. It's led me to believe that
|
|
English might be more subtle, but perhaps on the other hand, it's more suitable for
|
|
circumlocution, evasion, and indirectness. At school, my French teacher was also an advocate
|
|
of Esperanto. I wonder if that sort of language was what you had in mind in English. I don't know
|
|
enough about it. Oh, yes. It's been a bit hard to judge. Yes, I think it was. But I wonder if
|
|
structured language can really be as rich as a, quote, natural, evolved language,
|
|
even with all its clutter and detritus. Thanks for your comments. They really got me thinking.
|
|
And I think I've already done an episode on the pre-software free thing, so I can look that up.
|
|
Hipster says, thank you so much. I'm pleased you responded with the
|
|
etch. What was that? Ecumenical etymological. That's the bunny. That would be an ecumenical matter.
|
|
Etymonological, what Dave said, for some reason, knowing that kind of history really brings things
|
|
alive for me. I am enjoying the series. Yes, me too. I hope that at the later days,
|
|
there might be a connection to regular grammar and regular language. I've always been
|
|
fascinated by the connection between Norm Chomsky's linguistic work and the simultaneous
|
|
development of the lives as MIT. Both endeavors being obsessed with recursion. Oh, is that a show
|
|
waiting to happen? Hipster. Yeah, sounds like it. So, you want to do the next one? I'll do the next
|
|
to my own one. Yeah. BJB says, the ownership of apostrophe, I love hearing about the ownership
|
|
form of apostrophe, is really another example of contraction. Yeah, thanks for that, actually.
|
|
That was very interesting. Just on the general, very interesting. Sure. Yes, yes. I sort of vaguely
|
|
knew that there was something like that behind it, but I haven't ever really dug deep enough to
|
|
find it, and I was really pleased I had, because it sort of makes more sense. At least it's a good
|
|
way to remember it, even if it's not in a hundred percent true. I think it is true, just in case.
|
|
Yeah, so I get people, but the language, sorry, go on. No, no, it's gone. And look, we've got
|
|
people that the language evolves, because last week I spent some considerable time in a back-and-time
|
|
in a middle ages, and they were talking modern Dutch, and during this we got to read some
|
|
older Dutch, and language does evolve over time. So yeah, the whole time traveler thing should all
|
|
would all need to pretend that they're from a different, that there are tourists from a different
|
|
country. Ideally, if you're invading the world, what you do is you would take the form of a human,
|
|
and you would pretend to be from another country, and you would be looking at your interactive
|
|
communication device the whole time. So if you see anybody looking like that, you can know for sure
|
|
about their aliens. I'm sure that works, absolutely. So I said in regards to Hipster's comments,
|
|
I'm fascinated by etymology. I learned a lot of spelling and pronunciation by understanding
|
|
word origins as a youngster, and spend a favorite of time looking stuff up in addiction to find
|
|
etymological information. I will try and share some of the historical context as I go for certain.
|
|
I studied what was being called comparative psychology. I don't know. It's just a hell of a big
|
|
seagull if that was what it was. It sounded like somebody had been murdered in the back. It's hard
|
|
to tell when you got headphones on. Anyway, the police were all arrived on the scene.
|
|
But they say this is a quiet area. This is the sort of university ghetto, I feel like,
|
|
but sorry to strange noise. I studied what was being called comparative psychology at university,
|
|
and this involved looking at some of Tromsky's work. I wouldn't say I was very familiar with it
|
|
now 40 plus years later, but I'm prepared to have another look. I expect these shows will become
|
|
a series soon, and you will be very welcome to contribute to it. You are welcome to contribute
|
|
now. You see what he did there? See where professionals we are. Yes, yes. I had to play that
|
|
particular card, and then I commented on BGB's comment saying, rebe ownership of postraphy.
|
|
I hadn't quite looked at it like that, but you are right. I like looking for logicality in language.
|
|
Sometimes it's a vain search, as I'm sure Klaatu would say, but a fair bit seems to conform
|
|
to somebody's idea of logic. Nobody disagreed, so I've got to write. That's what I trouble
|
|
with most of my life as somebody's idea of logic. Yes, it's fitting your own brain to
|
|
that view of it. Yes, the following day, how to fix a remote control with buttons that don't work.
|
|
I'm actually glad that John did this. I did an episode about using an IR camera,
|
|
sorry, using a regular digital camera to see IR pulses from a remote control, and he also mentioned,
|
|
and I mentioned it in the first show, that just because your remote control doesn't emit
|
|
infrared for all of the buttons doesn't mean your remote control is broken, it could be emitting
|
|
on radio frequency, so what two buttons, the volume one and the on-off button will
|
|
more or less be guaranteed to be infrared as well. Cool, but this is good, actually.
|
|
You just took the whole thing apart, cleaned it and put it back together again, which is nice.
|
|
Yeah, given that these things have a rubber pad over a bunch of contacts,
|
|
then that seemed to seem like a pretty good idea, because a certain amount of
|
|
map will accumulate inside them one day. Yeah, hipster again, how to fix a remote.
|
|
Thanks for the podcast. I've run into the same problem once I cleaned my remote about three times
|
|
it was done. The gunk and the remote that gets into the circuit board is generally some kind of
|
|
silicon lubricant or solvent. Apparently, the buttons pads have to be cooped after they may
|
|
med to get all the silicon gunk out, and most manufacturers don't bother any longer.
|
|
They assume that you will only use the remote for a year or two before losing it,
|
|
or you'll just buy a new one. The actual physical art of pressing the button pushes
|
|
the gazillion gunk out of the pad, and thanks for the guitar pick trick, it's quite good as all.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, if you've got those in your house, that would be a great one.
|
|
Otherwise, you have to go and buy a whole manner of spudges and strange devices for
|
|
gardening cases. Yeah, I actually got a case from, do you look
|
|
extreme or somewhere like that? Banggood or somewhere? Really, really, very useful kit.
|
|
I've got some of the, I think, stuff for doing that. Yeah, similar to that.
|
|
Similar to that. Yeah, yeah, it's very good. The following day, we had calculating planetary
|
|
orbits in Haskell, and I got to tell you, I got Turo Turo Turo, who we are butching,
|
|
who I'm butchering his name. I was, this was a toffee. This was a toffee for me largely because
|
|
this, the only reason this, some of this medsense is because I have done some shadow calculation
|
|
work recently, and that medsense to me, but I liked it. I like the show a lot. Yeah, I'm so glad
|
|
he did this. I discovered that I don't fully understand what he's talking about. Either from
|
|
the Haskell point of view, or I didn't completely follow the, the ways he was doing this. So I'm
|
|
sure if I spent enough time in it, I could get a little bit clearer. But Haskell is such a strange
|
|
language, and it's, it's something that I feel out to at least have some, some, some idea of,
|
|
does he say in this one, suggest that you learn, no, he didn't mention it as a link in his,
|
|
in this particular one, but Haskell, there's a site called Learn Newer Haskell, which gives you
|
|
an introduction to, to Haskell. I'm sure he's mentioned this at some, in some context.
|
|
Yeah, I may have done in the past, but so I've started following that very, very slowly.
|
|
So it's a, it's a great example of this type of functional language, I believe.
|
|
It's, it seems readable to me, just looking at it. But he's also got great links in the show and
|
|
all it's guys. So if you're following along with the show and found it a bit much, click on some
|
|
of the links and it really helped me understand what he was saying in the show. Yeah, it's a brilliant show,
|
|
it's really, really well done and the links are so, so helpful. And again, I think he is orbiting
|
|
as a player and slightly higher than mine. So, you know, but that's what I'm doing here, Dave. I'm,
|
|
I, I can't be the one who's, you know, Ken's got his brilliant show there, you know what I mean?
|
|
I have to be the one to lower the bar. I'm taking this hit for you guys.
|
|
Speaking of which, the next day, fitting a 3.5 millimeter adapter to a Bluetooth receiver,
|
|
where I take a set of earphones and I make something that has the security team in the airport
|
|
looking at me nervously as I walk around. But it's actually quite good because you can,
|
|
it functions as a, a form receiver as well. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Now, it's a, it's a great idea.
|
|
I like it very much. I think I would have used a bit more heat shrink than you did to hold it
|
|
together. I would do my, and I'd probably wanted a 3D print of thing, but, well, actually, it's just me.
|
|
After recording the show, I thought to myself, this has got to be available somewhere on the internet.
|
|
I found one, I went to Amazon and found one for a 10 bucks total, you know,
|
|
printed case and all the rest. So I might do a review of that. Oh, that would be interesting.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It is an excellent thing. I haven't quite reached the point where I need
|
|
such a thing. I'm not using my phone or any phone to listen to podcasts because I've got a stack
|
|
of these MP3 players, as you well know, because I've gone on about it very late. But, yeah,
|
|
the time will come. Yeah, but I'm, mine do get a lot of punishment because I'm on,
|
|
yeah, my three-hour commute and I'm jumping from here to there and putting on my rucksack and
|
|
taking it off and throwing them in the corner and they get washed and also, so there's a life cycle
|
|
with mine. I'm still, did you like my show notes where they're patent pending your books?
|
|
Do they have copyrights? Oh, yes, yes, excellent stuff. It's still working. It's still working.
|
|
And I bought the book Motherload by David Collins Rivera, a broken-down gunbook stuck in space.
|
|
And what that has got to do with the earbuds is it's also available as an excellent audio
|
|
podcast or actually it's more like an audio theater production. So by the book, listen to the
|
|
podcast audio book. Yep, seconded by me, yes. And comments from CM Hobbs. Great plan. Love the
|
|
episode. Can wish I'd have thought before I purchase this Teotronics TTBA0. I like my little
|
|
device, but I prefer the DIY. And then he goes on to say, my rockbox sensor device is still alive
|
|
with my dad's bit the dust. I'm hoping mine keeps going though. I am often using my Android phone
|
|
through this adapter these days. So actually, yeah, he's got a, he's got a nice little, looks like a
|
|
nice adapter. Yeah, I want to do a, I want to live with this for a while and then just do a quick
|
|
show sometime we're short of shows on my experiences using Bluetooth and this as a way versus, you know,
|
|
a sunset lip. Anyway, moving on, just boring people to that. And the following day was a special
|
|
episode on 2600 Blue Rocks and freaking celebrating our history as hackers. And we go back to the
|
|
all-school freak America show playing episode one. And episode 99 was the first mention of Hacker
|
|
a public radio. There you go. Yeah, good stuff. Now that it was a fascinating thing to hear,
|
|
I've not, I've not listened to many of these. I think I might have listened to some of the later
|
|
ones, but I had never listened to number one of that, that particular show. And it's a very different
|
|
world. Yeah, describing. It's a historically, if you're listening to podcasts, it is definitely
|
|
worth your while going back and downloading them. There are only 100 episodes. So it's not that
|
|
if you're an advert podcast listener, it's definitely well worth going back because there's the
|
|
different, some things have changed so much and some things remain exactly the same. And the whole
|
|
a lot of the hopes that they had, unfortunately, never attempted fruition, you know, today for
|
|
and also you hear things like Facebook being introduced and Twitter starting, I hope, and
|
|
you know, stuff like that is kind of cool. Yeah, yeah. Is that your phone interfering there, Ken,
|
|
did you hear that? No, I didn't, I didn't. Okay. I don't think it was mine, mine's the way
|
|
the other side of the room. Sorry about that. Okay. A preva. As we share here in Hacker Public
|
|
Radio, annual audio is better than no audio. And it happens is the audio tends to pick up the sort
|
|
of phone connecting with the base station noises, isn't it? So did you want me to do the comment?
|
|
Oh, sorry. No, far ahead. I was just going to distract you with the, did you know that the
|
|
monitor the mains home and they can tell when audio and where audio was recorded, did you know that?
|
|
Wow. That's scary. That's scary. Every country has its own in the power grid, it's 60 hertz,
|
|
but you know, your physical power stations all over the place, so it changes slightly, goes
|
|
faster and slower and up and down and stuff like that. And you can tell then at what time a
|
|
recording was made, because you will always be able to get some sort of mains home from the
|
|
background, regardless, even now, on this recording. So there you go. That's, that's a horrible
|
|
thought. This is me just in the process of saying no, thank you very much to a, to a smart meter
|
|
being installed. Thank you for pressing me to install the smart meter. Probably the time will come
|
|
when I can't do, but this is one of those that phones home every whenever it feels like it and
|
|
reports your electricity usage, but it can monitor you as well. I think monitor a lot of that, you know.
|
|
One of the interviews that we did was to, you know, more benign users would be to check them
|
|
on old folks that would be less intrusive. You know, the coffee, you have a spike in the morning
|
|
between 930 and, you know, 9 and 930 and it's the coffee maker going on and you have a spike in
|
|
water usage at 10 because, you know, the daily cycle is going through. So, yeah, I could see that.
|
|
It's, it's, yeah, it's good in some respects, but to, mostly not. Yeah. Anyway,
|
|
again, I'm distracting you. You want to get back to your dinner or whatever. I'm good, I'm good.
|
|
One of the, when I was interviewing a, a foster, one of the guys were from a, was from an
|
|
electrical company here in the Netherlands, and that's been imposed by the EU. And here in the
|
|
Netherlands, you, the smart meter is a common, you can't object to them, but you can force that they
|
|
don't be active, that they're not actively so. We'll see how it goes. Oh, okay, okay. Yeah,
|
|
it's going to build a faraday cage in mind. Yeah, I'm a cupboard where the meter was going to go.
|
|
That's what I'm going to do as well, Dave. It seemed a little excessive, you know, all the
|
|
wire netting and stuff in there. But, yeah, it's, yes. The, just on the subject of things being
|
|
monitored over power, did you see all the stuff about how some guy doing time testing across
|
|
optical fiber across the world was detected, strange changes in the signal, which were caused
|
|
by an earthquake. So it's turning into a new way of detecting earthquakes across the globe
|
|
by the effects they have on, on optical fiber under the sea. And it means you can monitor stuff
|
|
where there are no geological, or what you would call it, the things, the things that monitor the
|
|
size, the size monitors is the word, yes, yes, yes. You can't put them, you can't put them
|
|
at the bottom of the Marianas trench. Not with that a lot of difficulties, but you can run cables
|
|
through it, so therefore you can determine things about earthquakes all over the planet using this,
|
|
I don't think it's reached that stage yet, but certainly it's something they're working on.
|
|
Excellent, I love that. Cool stuff. Yes, that is cool stuff. That is stuff that is of interest to
|
|
hackers, Dave. It is, it is, yes, yes, if only I knew more about it. I could do a show,
|
|
and the definition of hackers, somebody listening to hacker public radio. Indeed. And my bill says,
|
|
ha, I won't be hearing this until tomorrow, driving to work, but it's fitting that it happened
|
|
to come out during the hackers on planet earth conference. Yes, yes, it is, very cool, very cool.
|
|
Yes, yes, it, he was, he and his wife, I think, go to, um, hope, and have learned how to do
|
|
luck picking and other cool stuff. So, yes, I'm jealous. Yeah, exactly.
|
|
Liverpool Maker Fest, an interview with Chris Dell, and this is Tony, who, uh, I would,
|
|
I'd love to go into this as well, and those edgy blocks look really cool. Yeah,
|
|
yeah, edgy blocks is a thing where you can, like, it's like a scratch to scratch, but in part of them,
|
|
isn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, this sounded great. I, I followed those links and I was having a good
|
|
look around. I think it said, is it on a pick chip based circuit? That's the one, yeah. Yeah, yeah,
|
|
which is, which is nice and cheap. Yeah, very right. And you can use it for IoT applications,
|
|
my notes say. So, very cool. Yeah. To find out more. Here's all the, all the boxes for me,
|
|
I must say, the hardware, the, uh, electronics, the Python. Yeah. Here's your quick tips with
|
|
upper edge of throwing away shows, throwing them away, Dave. What can we do? What can we do?
|
|
Oh dear. Anyway, Spyder Oak backups, DR trekking and hiking, uh, all three individually would have
|
|
been three individually good shows, but no, if I choose to waste them on one show. Um, but that
|
|
whole Spyder Oak backup thing, it's kind of, yeah, I've been considering the concept of, you know,
|
|
whether you pay for one of these services or whether you buy a large disk yourself and add it to a pool.
|
|
So that's sort of thing I'm very interested in. Somebody out there has experience with what I'm
|
|
trying to, you know, where I'm coming from. Either personal pools are more a shared bit torrent type
|
|
pool or not bit torrent, but more like a, a bit coiny type. Yep. Yep. I see the need. Don't have
|
|
anything like that. And just rely on local, local stuff, which is not entirely wise, but no, um,
|
|
because what I have been doing is, uh, what I've been considering is a Raspberry Pi. I think I've
|
|
spoken about this before. And I've never really had the, because it takes so much time, actually,
|
|
to do Raspberry Pi, uh, that you would buy, uh, with a default image, um, and then ship you a drive,
|
|
which, um, you would be able to access and then mount the encrypted partition over an SSH tunnel.
|
|
So even though your data is stored in a remote hostile location, nothing can be retrieved from
|
|
that data because you don't have access to any of the keys and vice versa, then you ship yours
|
|
to the remote location. That's kind of where I'm coming from. Yep. Yep. It, uh, it was a thing that,
|
|
we used to do between the university I worked for and another university, we used to hold each other's
|
|
backups. And, uh, I don't know that we went to enormous lengths to secure them that we did. We did
|
|
do that, but it was, it was more of a, um, sort of gentleman's agreement. Yeah. Okay,
|
|
some comments on this. Nick Burns, uh, from Hipster, enjoyed the podcast. I find it to be very
|
|
frustrating, asking technical questions. Oh, I'm sorry. Did I just jump? You, you just jumped to
|
|
just six or three, I think. So he gave a tip using a paper, paper towel to remove, uh,
|
|
travel coffee mug seal stuff. And around about, let me Google that for you. Yeah, that,
|
|
that was, um, an interesting, not so much the, the, the seal removal, though, uh, um, which I'm
|
|
sure is great if you have one of those. But, uh, the technical question business is, uh, is quite,
|
|
uh, quite a subject, um, about people asking other people for, for help and advice and that,
|
|
that type of thing. And how you should, how, how they should deal with it and how you should
|
|
do it. That's, that's a big subject and quite an interesting one. And worthy of a show, I think,
|
|
because I, I was thinking of replying to that. I have quite a bit to say about that. And I was
|
|
thinking, replying is, replying to the comments, replying here or doing the separate episode.
|
|
So we'll see what happens. Hipster says, Nick Burns, enjoyed the podcast. I find it to be very
|
|
frustrating, asking technical questions because a lot of guys want to humiliate people who ask
|
|
them questions like Nick Burns. And I find that these guys often don't actually answer the question
|
|
because they aren't listening. They're just listening until they hear a keyword and then they go
|
|
into a rant. Yeah. Yeah. Nick Burns is a character in some American show. No, unfortunately not.
|
|
Apparently, I didn't know who he was until I, uh, Wikipedia, and he has a university professor,
|
|
lecturer and former American diplomat is currently blah, blah, blah, blah. Oh, I assumed he was
|
|
like the bastard operator from hell or some such person. No, no, it's a real, a real person. Okay.
|
|
Obviously, acting apart. Nothing. B-O-F-H. Yes. Anyway, uh, D-O-D-D dummy says, related to
|
|
humiliation. There are lots of issues with how we ask and answer questions, but related
|
|
to humiliation specifically. What makes me really sad is when someone tells me they don't want
|
|
to answer the question because the person or people they will be asking humiliate. One of the
|
|
reasons I will not publish the asks goes name if they don't want me to. This seems like a weak
|
|
person, but I've had managers tell me that the look down on people, they look down on people
|
|
who don't know things. So I understand the hesitation to ask questions in an unfriendly environment.
|
|
There's a lot to learn and we might all be better off if we realize
|
|
person has skills, maybe not in the same area you do. Yes. Good point. Yeah, yeah. I'm definitely on
|
|
that bundle I can thank you. I have to admit that there was a tendency in my early days of working
|
|
in IT to be a bit arrogant in that respect, but I soon discovered that that that was a really,
|
|
really stupid and immature thing to do, and I never did it again. But in fact, I went the
|
|
opposite direction and tried to be that person who could be approached to ask whatever question
|
|
you wanted, because I quite enjoy teaching and it was a good teaching opportunity. I find this
|
|
very important to when I was interviewing people, I would always, regardless of the quality of
|
|
the canvas, I would always push the questions, keep pushing and pushing and pushing to the point
|
|
where they didn't know the answer, they couldn't. And in some cases, there were people so qualified
|
|
that they couldn't possibly know the answer. So I asked them something specific about
|
|
how you would interact in our company, you know, so they definitely couldn't answer the question.
|
|
And it was just to get to them to the point where they couldn't possibly know the answer
|
|
and how they would then approach the the embarrassment of not knowing the answer to the question.
|
|
And it's very simple. I don't know the answer. I couldn't possibly, I don't know the answer,
|
|
but I imagine it would be this and that's what I was looking for. And I tell you, some candidates,
|
|
some very qualified candidates got eliminated because they simply could not ask, they could not
|
|
just admit that they didn't know. And some entry-level candidates were going, well, you know, I don't
|
|
know, but this is what I guess and they got the guess completely wrong, but the logic at least was
|
|
these people are interested in knowing how to solve this issue. Yes, yes. And I have that
|
|
issue now where you just cannot possibly know everything. It's just silly to expect to know
|
|
everything. It's just mind-boggling. And I know people who are struggling with the fact that
|
|
they're finding it very difficult to say, I don't know, and I need help. And they're stuck with that.
|
|
It's very, very difficult thing to get out of. But yeah, just like with me with this and my
|
|
building, it's tough. It is harder thing to say, I don't know. To be honest, if a manager ever said
|
|
to me, you don't know something, yeah, big deal. No, I can find 50 things you don't know about.
|
|
Yes, yes, indeed, indeed. No, an environment that makes you feel small because you don't know
|
|
an answer. When you're probably there, you've been hard at certain, you have acquired the skills
|
|
which allow you to find out is an extremely toxic environment. Absolutely. You should be looking
|
|
to get out of it. That's it. That's it. That said, I did have a, when I had people
|
|
working from, or not working from, or just in the same team, I did, and there were new hires.
|
|
I had this concept that my time isn't cheap either. Yeah, so if I'm going to explain something to you,
|
|
I give them all a blue book. So everybody in the facility knew everybody was all
|
|
coming around with a blue book or learning stuff. So, okay, if you didn't know, if I'd explain
|
|
something to you, how does DNS work? Okay, I'll show you how DNS work. Where's your blue book?
|
|
Okay, I'll write down your blue book. Okay, and then I would ask some questions randomly at
|
|
lunchtime. Okay, what's, how does DNS work? I'm blah, blah, blah. And if they had the blue book,
|
|
they could refer to the blue book. If they didn't have the blue book with them, then they had to answer.
|
|
And you would get punished if it didn't know the question. That's very good. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
It's, we all, the team I was in, we all got a copy of a book called Dr. Linux. Have you ever seen that?
|
|
It's a great, great, great, wonderful, great book. I don't know whether it's still in print.
|
|
Big, big, big book with lots of, with many very, very thin paper pages that tries to cover
|
|
everything about Linux from from front to back and tries to at least give you the starting point
|
|
for a lot of, a lot of stuff. If you're looking to answer questions like that.
|
|
No, not, not because somebody asked you that and she's walking down the corridor,
|
|
but it is because you need to know it to solve some problem or understand the thing.
|
|
No, that was, that was more like a thing with the guys so that they will go back and get their
|
|
book and then you'll learn the stuff. And some of them wouldn't have the book and then they
|
|
wouldn't know the stuff. Yeah, great. I do have a rule though. One thing that doesn't know me
|
|
is somebody coming up asking the same question over and over and over again when I've explained
|
|
to them. So that if somebody comes up and asks me a question and I give an answer, that's fine.
|
|
If they come up the second time, when I ask the same question, then perhaps I haven't done a
|
|
good enough job explaining it to them whereby I will make an effort to go into detail and
|
|
ensuring that they know what I'm asking. And then the third time I really start losing interest
|
|
in the person because you're wasting, you're not only wasting my time, but you're,
|
|
yeah, you're just wasting everybody's time. That's not to say if somebody comes up for clarifications
|
|
on the same thing. Well, I've done this and on this system, it worked, but on this system,
|
|
it didn't work. That's absolutely fine. I consider that to be a new question or an extension of
|
|
what, how do I do this or I forgot how to do this is also fine or I'm locked out and I can't
|
|
get to my blue book. That's also fine. Well, somebody just been rather lazy, really doesn't
|
|
know me because you're wasting somebody else's time who's probably costing the company more
|
|
than you are, you know what I mean? Oh, yes. Oh, yes, yes. I used to work in the university's
|
|
different, of course, but we used to run a help desk, which was manned by us lot and we took
|
|
we were on a road and yeah, and so you certainly learned how to deal with all the
|
|
management of different queries and problems and sometimes they were same person I
|
|
and asking the same question. And you might lose these relations a little bit with that type of
|
|
thing. I, sorry, I don't complete a lot of tangent here. Sorry, everybody who's listening to this,
|
|
but I can't help but tell this story when I was on the on the help desk. We had the everybody
|
|
and everybody in the department was on the help desk, including the help desk manager.
|
|
And she was, she was cycling to the road and I used to love being on the week after her
|
|
because, you know, if somebody rang up, yeah, I'm some middle manager somewhere and I want to say,
|
|
I don't know how to change the printer and the toner cartridge. So I'm bringing you out of
|
|
office hours blah, blah, blah, blah. Wow, she would go ballistic. What are you doing? Where's my
|
|
people's time calling this? Hold on, I'm going to put on your manager. Stay there.
|
|
Greg calls their manager at home. I'm there more well for and have them justify why they're
|
|
why they're wasting everybody's time. Brilliant. You used to love them.
|
|
Yes, yeah, anyway. Yeah, that sounds, sounds like some good anecdotes they should be making
|
|
the show of it again. Yeah, too late now, I wish to just completely wasted Dave.
|
|
Okay, Brenda says people who waste my time by trying to find the answer for me, I totally agree.
|
|
And another thing is that is annoying is when you ask a question and the person doesn't know the
|
|
answer, but either tells you a bunch of generalities that anyone would know or tries to find out the
|
|
answer while they're standing there, then you go back to your desk, look yourself. What I would like
|
|
is a quick answer, but if it's I don't know or even I don't know off the top of my head,
|
|
they could throw in some keywords into a search if they think it might help.
|
|
Yeah, fair enough. So, quick answers, she's a good handle, says, I failed to do this and I'm sorry,
|
|
Brenda, that is annoying. What I've tried to remember is to do is to ask in the format of,
|
|
don't spend time on this, but do you know off the top of your head? But recently I asked someone
|
|
a question I'd already spent a lot of time researching and it appears that I couldn't do
|
|
what I wanted to do. But as I said, if I think something should be possible, I think this is
|
|
D-O-D-D dummy, actually, it didn't put his name in. If I think if things should be possible,
|
|
I won't let them know, remain. So, and remain so, and we'll ask again every few months,
|
|
even if it's a no now, things changed quickly. Anyway, I've got to add off the top of your head,
|
|
and I'm afraid one to two hours might have been spent searching for me to return the first bit of
|
|
text my research for being revealed. It's also bad about that slip of the tongue. It was D-O-D-D dummy,
|
|
actually. No, I get that. Well, sometimes I get asked a question that's actually really interesting,
|
|
and you go, Kroki, I don't know, the answer to that, it seems a lot of obvious. And then I usually
|
|
end up looking for hours and then asking you on telegram. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know. I used to
|
|
try and be the person that the last point of question was working. Yeah, the last line was so,
|
|
so I'd say if you really start coming asking, I'll see, I might have an answer. I used to get all the
|
|
regular expression questions. I still do my business. I still do nothing is changed.
|
|
Yeah, anyway. I enjoyed it. Okay, sorry, I felt that whole story didn't add anything to this
|
|
conversation, but okay, I thought it wasn't this. Anyway, asking questions, yeah. Yeah, maybe it's
|
|
a cultural thing. Some cultures do not want to feel small for not asking questions. Oh, the whole
|
|
losing face business is definitely a thing, but there's the confusion thing about that. I've
|
|
forgotten just for a moment, but I'm sure I've tried it out before. Something about he
|
|
asked the question may look a fool for a moment, but he who fails to ask that question is a fool
|
|
forever. That's something, something along those lines. And I think that's a very good, very good
|
|
point. Yeah, I've always encouraged the kids to go, you know, task questions ago, I don't know that,
|
|
but it's a really good question. I'm going to go find out for you or dance. Then, unfortunately,
|
|
that triggered a whole series of them coming up, but really, really, really difficult questions
|
|
that I spent weeks trying to figure out. And then you go, here's the answer. Yeah, I know,
|
|
we saw it on the BBC, you know, on CDs to the program. Thank you. We can read Wikipedia too.
|
|
Okay, well, no, that was great, Joe. Great, Joe, for, and you wouldn't have thought that would
|
|
have been something that would trigger a lot of interesting conversation. No, I think it's
|
|
a lot of people had experience of, so it's an excellent thing to be, to be talking about.
|
|
Should there's more mileage in that too? The next one, John called refurbishes a fan.
|
|
I had never seen one of these, never heard of one of these. It is the coolest thing I have ever
|
|
seen. Yeah, well, Ditto here, I've never heard one over. And isn't it great? What a wonderful
|
|
design. Yeah, you've got to see this flicker photographs, guys. Absolutely gorgeous. And he
|
|
restored it perfectly. Well, I mean, not perfectly, but sorry, John, you didn't replace all the
|
|
lead, but it looks gorgeous. It does. It looks really excellent. Yeah, cool thing. I was puzzling
|
|
over when I first saw it. Why is it a hasic fan? Because hasic means things like a cushion or a
|
|
small seat or something like that. Well, I don't know whether you actually supposed to sit on it,
|
|
but it looks like a thing you would sit on. It's probably unwise to do so, but I think it's because
|
|
it looks like a small stool that it's called a hasic fan. Yeah, different times they'll do.
|
|
Oh, I know, definitely. It's your knee disadvantage. It would be the cable dangling across the floor,
|
|
I guess. Yeah, yeah. So maybe in those days, because when I was a kid, it was common for people to
|
|
do their ironing in the in the living room or the front room or something, and they connect the
|
|
iron to the light socket. Yeah, exactly. It's just a deadly thing to do, but you know, you could
|
|
imagine one of these running off a light socket. Oh, yeah. And you meant our our fridge at home
|
|
ran for years off a audio cable or no, a telephone cable, telephone wire cable. Oh my god.
|
|
And as far as I know, it could still be like that. Any fingers crossed. Yeah,
|
|
excellent. Love this. Really enjoy this show. The eyes have a div. My history with vision issues
|
|
and how I have dealt with them. How is this man a lie? He doesn't like what a story. Yeah, yeah.
|
|
Hoka, he has, I don't know. He must have a filing cabinet all to himself and his doctor's
|
|
office almost a girl. Yeah, yeah, quite a tale. It's I wasn't expecting him to give us so much
|
|
information about his own health, but I think it's an excellent thing to do. I very much admire it.
|
|
Sorry, that that came across wrong. That's a bit like a plus one to when somebody pulls something
|
|
on, you know, I've been to a funeral plus one. Yeah, no, that's not what I meant. Thank you for
|
|
sharing us what I mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I think it requires a certain amount of courage,
|
|
too. And I'm mainly courage is strong, but but I think it does. So thank you very much for
|
|
having done that. And I posted before I on the day I posted the show. I see what you did there.
|
|
See vision eyes, get it? Yes, yes. Okay. Okay. Okay. So yes, Clinton Roy says,
|
|
Yausers. That's Australian expression. Yikes. I really don't have much to say. I used to run
|
|
away as a kid to get treats from the store next door. No trains nearby, though. And with the, yeah,
|
|
the story of little, no, guys, if you haven't heard his episode, it's all on listen to. It's working
|
|
out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's quite quite amazing. And speaking of somebody who has had their
|
|
own special medical journey and interview with Dan Lynch, absolutely thrilled to see him back
|
|
in the community again. Yeah, I know that I was delighted to see that this was coming up.
|
|
Just listen to it today, actually. And yeah, he sounds so so much healthier than he was. And yeah,
|
|
he sounds to be very energetic and et cetera. So he's had a hell of a time of it, but he seems
|
|
to be well, well on the mind. He's an organizer of this Liverpool Make Fest, which seems to be
|
|
quite a thing to be to be involved with. He's just one of these guys who is there, you know,
|
|
Tony as well, you know, Tony Dan and Ness Pounder, you know, just pillars of the community,
|
|
basically. Yeah, I've heard that word. They're pillars of the community, but these guys are a pillar
|
|
of the community. Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Yeah, it's good to get to hear. Good to hear from them.
|
|
Very much. Okay, the last one for this month, processing. Yes, thank you, Tatoo. I spend literally
|
|
a half an hour trying to figure out what the hell was going wrong with the upload, only to find out
|
|
that he did it on purpose. That was a bit I liked the vest. Oh, there we go. What's wrong with this
|
|
thing? What is it? What is it still processing? I deleted the show. There's no reservation.
|
|
Hold on, let me check the log files. I can't find anything in the log files. Hold on,
|
|
the headers don't take. Hold on, their name is processing. Right. Very hilarious. I saw this coming
|
|
through is from the notes point of view. So it wasn't completely surprised though. I did do a double
|
|
take, but the fact that he said he'd done that in order to wind us up, I thought it was wonderful.
|
|
They'd be laugh a lot. Yeah, and I felt for it. But I would like to thank Tatoo for his excellent
|
|
show notes. He's really making a little massive effort to improve the quality of the show notes,
|
|
to the point where they're now approaching yours. Absolutely, yes, yes. One of the things about
|
|
the linuxlink.com site, doing reviews of podcasts, just they made a great emphasis on show notes.
|
|
There was one of the criteria for judging or reviewing or whatever, scoring perhaps.
|
|
And well, he won't be surprised to know I agree with that. Yeah, and also the podcast awards
|
|
use that as a criteria. Basically, everybody uses the show notes as a criteria, because the majority
|
|
of people don't listen to shows via the RSS feed. Apparently, that is not a thing anymore.
|
|
They read the show notes and then decide to listen to the show based on. Yeah,
|
|
accessibility point of view is why I like it so much, is that even if you have hearing
|
|
issues, you can still follow on with HQR because you've taken the time to at least boil down
|
|
the essence of what you're talking about on the show. So we're not excluding people. Yeah,
|
|
yeah, good show. I enjoyed this. I'd come across processing or processing as I would say,
|
|
years ago on a book show, you know, a book on it in the book shops, and I looked at it and thought,
|
|
yeah, yeah, I don't think I'll be using that for a while. Never have. But this put it in a different
|
|
light. It looks quite interesting. Yeah, it seems pretty cool. The portability to an application
|
|
in your form seems like a nice touch if you're into that. Yeah, yeah, definitely. Okay, Ski.
|
|
I think there's a comment. There's a comment. There is a comment. Yes, shall I do that one?
|
|
It's from Be Easy. It says, it seems like a great teaching tool. Thanks for this episode.
|
|
I've heard a processing, but never knew what it was or how it would be useful. I'll probably
|
|
turn to this after scratch for my kids. Yeah, yeah, Java doesn't really flood my board. I must say,
|
|
but there you go. That's just something of a subset of it. No, I think so. Yeah, it seems more
|
|
ordinary to yeah, yeah, like like it's essentially C or is it C++ that it's based on? So yeah,
|
|
it's it's a reasonable. It's a C-like type of language. So you know, it seems a reasonable
|
|
place to be working from. Okay, so that brings us to the end of shows, but the show isn't over.
|
|
See what I did there? The now we do comments that were submitted on shows older than this month's
|
|
shows. Does that make sense? Yeah. Okay, so episode 2519, the Remora Bill is a character in the
|
|
edge of the empire. And the comment was from platoon. Great walkthrough. Thanks for the episode.
|
|
I've heard of edge of the empire, but I've never played. I really like your character build
|
|
process. And this was a nice overview of how the characters work in system. Thanks. I think
|
|
exclamation mark. Cool. So the next one was 2558 to the comment on my show battling with English.
|
|
And somebody who calls himself the snitch says that jig is up Dave. I wonder who that could be.
|
|
Points to a link to a comic comic talking about. What we say again, it was now I've forgotten.
|
|
I did read the thing. It was now the the the the transmogrification of nouns. Yeah. Anyway,
|
|
I replied to that. Ha ha. Isn't that like that line from that Star Trek Wars film?
|
|
Leverage the Force Luke. No, I'm wrong. That's a verbification, I think. I point to how the
|
|
verbification of leverage is really, really stupid. Sorry. That's just one of my
|
|
ready for me to show on this. Yes, and you probably will.
|
|
Anyways, comment on Tony uses show Ubuntu Mate. There was a comment by JWP. Tony
|
|
JWP had commented about he's not using Mate at the moment. Tony says great little update. Thanks JWP.
|
|
I'm glad at least one listener found it useful. Having been using it for a couple of months now,
|
|
I can say I'm very impressed and have found a workaround for the USB utilities I use in mint.
|
|
I have installed mint 19 beta into virtual box and it seems very good. And once the stable
|
|
releases out, I will still be on still be my go-to distro for installing for family and friends
|
|
who are not really next gurus. Ubuntu Mate will probably remain on my midbox until the next
|
|
LTS cycle as I tried to keep that stable as possible and change OS on it as then frequently as
|
|
I can get away with. Why is words indeed? Indeed. So the next one is show 2583 random rant by
|
|
the dude. And Randy knows aka the knows 100 comments on the juiced penguin. And says John,
|
|
how weird that I pick a random podcast out with a lineup to listen to and find this one on
|
|
feedley. I didn't even see the juiced penguin in the title this morning when I started listening.
|
|
Heck, it's not even something that I think about these days. The juiced penguin was an idea
|
|
that I had and knew that I couldn't pull it off alone. The late great Lord D assisted me with
|
|
the original effort. Took a lot of time to find the music and Cloud2 assisted with offering up
|
|
some content for it also. I found that it was really time consuming and Terry F took over for a
|
|
period of time until it fizzled out. The main idea that I had was to get more old content out there
|
|
to help expand the awareness of the org format due to restrictions of the MP3 format and that
|
|
many MP3 players didn't support it. Today most people are listening to content on computers
|
|
or Android devices. Most are able to listen to the org format if they wish.
|
|
My old memory serves me right, even Mark Chudderworth had stopped worrying about the MP3 format
|
|
being a real problem, even though it's still a closed file format. Granted, it's not open,
|
|
but the threat of being sued doesn't seem likely after nothing happening after all of this time.
|
|
For what it's worth, when I am online, I'm easily found over on gpluskrandinose.com.
|
|
Also, over on mastodon.rox as Renault. Thanks for reminding me, some good times years ago
|
|
all hail the juiced penguin. Yeah, cool. And like he says, MP3 is not a real problem. The fan
|
|
hire, fan hire for institute, US patent on MP3 have expired. So the MP3 format is no longer
|
|
problematic in connection with free software. The only reason not to use MP3 these days are because
|
|
it's decades behind in collic evolution. For example, Opus is strictly better in every aspect
|
|
and in envelope evolution, Matroska has a better metadata and streaming cool. That is that for that,
|
|
I think they agree. It is. That's true. That's us, yes.
|
|
Melonious discussion. Oh, yeah, the Open Networking Summit. We will be official press
|
|
of the Open Network. And I need to reserve some slots for those. Yeah, yeah, that looks
|
|
like fun. So yeah, I hadn't quite twigged that it was in September. I don't know why I thought it was
|
|
obviously didn't read read read read read this with my brain switched on. But yeah,
|
|
that's going to be something most interesting. I'm sure. And Siegplot commented that the
|
|
explicit tag was on an episode we fixed probably just something in the audio, but see you go.
|
|
That's an issue actually, isn't it? It never occurred to me until it was too late that we should
|
|
have gone and fixed it there as well, but so sorry to all concerned. But yeah, if we want us to
|
|
do the site. Well, actually, I might leave that this show is going on. I might leave it to next
|
|
months at cars. They're going to be talking about just sparkles next and not going to be thinking
|
|
about. And actually, people can be thinking about that in the meantime about because we have
|
|
this issue, the single point of failure for entry to HPR is the HPR website. We can easily
|
|
publish to multiple locations. That's not really. But how do we get in shows and how do we give
|
|
host the ability to edit their show notes and all that stuff? And I was thinking we could do it
|
|
with Git. And you know, we have a GitHub, not GitHub, but GitLab. That's the money. GitLab
|
|
on HPR. So therefore, people could create their own accounts there, which you've got emails and
|
|
their own share keys. And then, you know, that's the authentication out of the way. And also,
|
|
the old anonymization will be out of the way because we don't know if you're a cat or a real person
|
|
or a matter of us, along with you're the same entity that created it. You could then go in,
|
|
we could then assign, I guess, privileges to hosts to edit their own hosts,
|
|
while if they created a show, then theoretically could give them some sort of permissions.
|
|
So I'm not an off of an expert on Git to be able to define how all this will work, but
|
|
for the Git experts of their and clacking, perhaps. Could you all think about how you would do that
|
|
on GitLab or some sort of Git whereby people could manage their own episodes. I don't know what
|
|
sort of pull requests checks we would need to prevent spam and all the rest of it, but other than that,
|
|
that's kind of where I was thinking, because then if it's in Git, we can pull it down and then
|
|
publish it as static HTML files around the place. What do you reckon, Dave? Yeah. Yeah, that sounds
|
|
like there's some possibilities there. I was just listening to the Sparkle Share episode today,
|
|
actually, and which thank you to Cladufer. It seemed like a really clear explanation of it.
|
|
Didn't have a lot of time to concentrate on it, but yeah. So it seems worth digging into to see whether
|
|
there would be possibilities there, which we can leave till next week to discuss.
|
|
Well, the next one takes about that. This is that it would be distributed, and that's,
|
|
you know, somebody could do a Git poll every day, and then they have all the information they need,
|
|
and then pull down from archive.org, theoretically, then we're distributed.
|
|
And that's kind of the goal that we want, and that could be the source, basically, is, you know,
|
|
Git is the source. We could wrap something around that that would do the database-y stuff,
|
|
which could take in from Git, I don't know. I don't know how to do this. I'm just
|
|
leaving it open to people listening. That's kind of where we're going.
|
|
Given that terms, Sparkle Share is dependent on the Git hook stuff, and how much else could be.
|
|
I don't think Sparkle Share is really necessary, because, you know, we can put in Git hooks that
|
|
we don't want pauses on the thing, you know, we can SCP as our R sync as our plot creates a
|
|
torrent file, or whatever we choose to distribute it. So just the discussion about Sparkle Share
|
|
had me thinking about this, that I might be a way to do it, yeah.
|
|
That was what I meant, too, that there's lessons to be learned from how that works, and extrapolated
|
|
into some future HPR implementation. Yeah, if you have ports, send them in. That would be great.
|
|
Do it on the mailing list, or comments on this episode. There you go.
|
|
Have we done anything else? Any other business? You wanted to mention the CMS, and I was
|
|
going to mention the Tags project. You mentioned the Tags, because basically the CMS, that's what I
|
|
wanted to talk about. I just wanted to really do the CMS, and basically do it on GitHub or somewhere.
|
|
Yeah, okay. So just to say thank you to BJB for sending in a couple of tag updates to two shows
|
|
in the past month. I haven't had a chance to do any myself. I keep meaning to and not managing to
|
|
get to, but yeah, slowly, slowly, we're moving forward with that project. And I have a half written
|
|
PHP page for people to submiss their updates, but I haven't even told you about that.
|
|
Lucky, I didn't mention that there, or you'd be holding me to that.
|
|
Ah, making notes here. Yeah, they're afraid of that.
|
|
Lucky, okay. I think that's it. Right, with that, we will thank everybody for listening,
|
|
and if you met it this far, you're a real believer in the project. And tune in tomorrow for another
|
|
exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio. Oh, join us now, Wayne Chair. Let's all
|
|
be free. Hacker, you'll be free.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.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 HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a
|
|
podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio
|
|
was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club, and it's part of the
|
|
binary revolution at binwreff.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host
|
|
directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise
|
|
status, today's show is released under a creative comments, attribution, share a light,
|
|
freedom of life.
|