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1191 lines
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1191 lines
78 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3891
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Title: HPR3891: HPR Community News for June 2023
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3891/hpr3891.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:36:46
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3891 from Monday the 3rd of July 2023.
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Today's show is entitled HPR Community News for June 2023.
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It is part of the series HPR Community News.
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It is hosted by Rito Dave and Ken and is about an hour and a half in length.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, send in some shows instead of listening to talk about shows released
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and comments posted in June 2023.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
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Radio today.
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It's the Hacker Public Radio Community News for June 2023.
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Joining me today is all the way from Scotland.
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Hello, Dave Morris and all the way from somewhere else.
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From Switzerland, hello, this is Rito.
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Ah, I was calling you Retro last week or last month, the whole time.
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No worries.
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Rito, Rito?
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Yes, yeah.
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That's OK.
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Very good.
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Yes, this is Hacker Public Radio where I've been buttering names for the last 17 years.
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It struck me this month, Dave.
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This is where I normally introduce what community news is and what the HPR podcast is.
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And it is becoming more evident to me that I need to go out or we as community, which
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usually means me, needs to go out and be interviewed on some of the other shows and stuff,
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because there's a misunderstanding or it's not 100% clear what Hacker Public Radio is.
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So I will briefly try and describe what it is.
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We are a podcast that releases shows every weekday, Monday, through Friday.
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People might know that.
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That's kind of obvious.
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We also release under Creative Commons license, CC by SA, by Creative Commons by attribution
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share like as a preference, although you can choose when you're uploading, which brings
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me to the second point.
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Hacker Public Radio is a community podcast, which means that no one person owns this, determines
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dictates what it is or is responsible for it, but that also means that everybody as a community
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is taking ownership to promote and help out the podcast, if that makes sense.
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It's a very difficult concept to put down.
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If you have thoughts on that, I'd like to hear what you feel both of you, Dave, as a relatively
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new cover and Rito, as a really new cover, tips.
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I don't think I ever had any difficulties with the concept, it's a vehicle for putting
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out a podcast every day and lots of people contribute to it.
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It's like a, like a, then it's user group, or that type of thing, or a bar camp, or things
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like that, where people come up with things that they have created just shortly before and
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present them to the rest of the community.
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Yeah, I was trying to explain this to a chap and work and podcasting is very hot, you
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know, hot at the moment loads of people are into it, so I imagine we're getting an
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influx of people who have expectations of what a podcast is.
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So I'll go over to Rito and find out what you think.
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Yeah, when you were talking now about it, it came to my mind what you last time told
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when you were at, was that, for, for stem, for stem, yeah, yeah.
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Where you explain to them or how you get along with basically zero moderation and everybody
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was totally surprised that you, that it would get along like that and that people would
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take over some responsibility for what they are doing.
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But then it also came to my mind to the large discussion about Linux in-laws and, yeah,
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how then the people on the mailing list, which I haven't joined by now, but maybe I'm
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I will in the future, how this was discussed there and the outcome.
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So it's kind of self-regulation and, well, with you, with you, Dave and can take care
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of it.
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But I don't know how much time you spend on it, but from as an outsider, I think it works
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quite well.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Well, this month has been loony notes the amount of time that we've, we've all spent
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on it.
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It's been, it's been something else.
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However, I think actually, Dave, it struck me that we need to do an episode zero and
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that's permanently in the feed that when that, when anybody joins the feed, they get episode
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zero as their, as their first episode and we can go back and explain, hi, you have just
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subscribed to Agar Public Radio.
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Here's the whole list of all the stuff that's been going on.
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So I will file a bug on that.
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It sounds like a good idea, though, yeah, something, and also some written material as well, but
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yeah, that's in the mic, but yeah, but we probably need to make the paths to the documentation
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as clear as possible.
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I think they've improved a lot lately, but you know, things that say you should read this
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before you to get a full understanding of what it is, what we do.
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Yeah.
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No, no, no.
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Now as Dave was, was, was mentioned about the writing down on the website.
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I remember, I don't know, two or three years ago where I had exchanges with you when I
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started to read all the texts through on the website and didn't understand everything
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properly, but then you made some corrections on it and so on.
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Yeah.
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And it's getting a lot easier now.
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I mean, as a project, you add bits and pieces and stuff and over the last month, probably
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as well, talk about it now, Dave.
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We've been moving off the server that we've been on for while we've been running on a
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lab stack, which is a Linux Apache MySQL stack using control panel in the background.
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And Josh and that one of our hosts, but also the person who pays from an honest host.com
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pays for the server, wanted to move us off that plan and a lot of the stuff we were
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using.
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And we could basically downsize, downsize a lot of that.
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In addition, a lot of the other projects, for example, BinRav has come to an end, which
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is very, very sad thing and I've asked Stank to get together a wrap up show with all the
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holes from that project and basically release a show here on HPR, you know, commemorating
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the great work that was done by the BinRav community.
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That's funny.
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Go ahead.
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What does that mean that the switch or the idea to go on a static website was somehow initiated
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by an honest host.com?
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No.
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Well, we were going to do it at some point TM and then this came up and then it seemed
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like the logical time to do it because what actually happened then is when we moved
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to the new server, it had a new version of PHP, which was several major releases and hundreds
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of minor releases updated.
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The same with the MySQL database, went from MySQL to MariaDB, jumped huge amounts of versions
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as did all the pearl tools, as did everything in the background, so everything changed.
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So we just couldn't take the code anyway and don't put up onto the website.
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So that was the perfect time to make the switch over.
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Which we have done.
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All right.
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Great.
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With a huge aspect.
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So the last month has been, I get up in the morning, find out what bugs have been
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found during the night, go to work, deal with issues of work, come home, plug in, deal
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with as many bugs from HPR, go to bed, get up in the morning and rinse and repeat for
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the last basically a month and a half now, did.
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Yep.
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Yep.
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And we're still not finished.
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Sounds like a lot of stress.
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Yeah, it's just never ending.
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But it is getting better.
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The static website having the ability to control what is a lot better.
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But then we're noticing things like all the way that the workflow that we had in place
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that was based on a central hub has kind of got out the window.
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We had checks as well to make sure that the audio was on the HPR server that was the primary
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location.
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But now the primary location is actually the Internet Archive, so that means obviously
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then before we release that to the future feeds, we need to make sure the shows are posted
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on the Internet Archive, so that changes the order in which we do stuff.
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But it also meant that we could quickly, the code, all those static site code is available.
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The PHP code, I've been going through it, it's a lot cleaner now than it was and that
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is also going to be released when I get the chance.
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When we have the few last remaining major issues out of the way, then I'll be posting that
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up to the HPR website as well so that we have everything, all the PHP code, all the configurations.
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The only thing you won't have is the passwords from the credential file.
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You will have the format of the credential file, but you won't have the actual passwords.
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What you'll have all the data, everything to be able to download to run your own sites.
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So this means you made it to do all these updates from MySQL to MariaDB and the newest
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PHP to get it up and running again.
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Yeah.
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It's great.
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Yeah, then the static site generator just as an example, the last export it didn't work
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because of the version changes, so there's been hundreds of bug fixes, which little things.
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Then the links on the all the old redirects from ID, app.php, question mark, ID episodes,
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ID equals 1, 2, 3, 4 needs to redirect to the static site pages and that led to infinite
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loops and all sorts of stuff, but more or less got most of them.
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Dave is still working on.
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We still need to figure out the best way to deal with the structure of our additional
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media in a show and Dave and some guy in the Internet are working on that.
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I'm going to help out once I get the time.
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Additional media, pictures, pictures and some people send in scripts or additional documentation.
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Pictures most commonly though, so yeah, traditionally the pictures sat beside the audio on the
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server, but now the audio is away on the archive, so we're trying to work out what's the
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best route for getting to the pictures and that type of thing.
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Sounds difficult also if you have a future move in mind or a search to bring that piece
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then back together again.
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Well, and also if people want to take a copy of the whole site and whatever, which is a
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future view, then they don't want absolute URLs in there most of the time, so I don't
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know whether we quite how we're going to handle that.
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I don't think we can have completely transparent relative URLs for example everywhere, but whether
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we can export things in such a way that we strip them out, I don't know, lots of discussion
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needed.
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So there's the idea is that we're going to, you can have the level we're at now, which
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is you pretty much get everything if you just subscribe to the full feed and then you
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subscribe to the comments, you get all the discussion there and then you follow along
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on the mail list, you get everything there, so that's pretty much HDR, so you got the
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full whack.
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What we want to do is we want to be able to have it so that you can or sync whenever there's
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a change, we'll have an RSS feed that will update, which will tell you that you decided
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has been modified, and you can use that as a trigger to our sync from our sync server.
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That will download all the files onto your local disk, now of course there's those issues
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about that.
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Are you going to be hosting all the media?
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Are you going to be pointing to the internet archive as we do?
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Or are you going to host the media like I will in my fiber connection, and the reason
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I will be hosting the media is that we have it in two different places, so for some people
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that might want to or sync everything and some people might just want to or sync everything
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with references to the media, then you live.
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You offer both options, this is and makes it then more complicated, but our sync sounds
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very nice, I mean the function of our sync is really handy.
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Exactly, and then on top of that, what we want to be able to do is have it so that you
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can run the code yourself, so that you can download, go to get, check out all the stuff that
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you need, so right now there's the PHP, there's the static site generator part, which can
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generate the, pull this down the database, generates the static site, but then we also
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have stuff like images and host profiles and stuff like that that also need to be replicated
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down, so that's, if we have the static site generation stuff, we've got the static content,
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like the how-tos for mumble, etc, that sort of stuff, plus then we've got the stuff that
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can only be done centrally at this moment, which is what we're calling the hub.hacker.bqredio.org,
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which it'll be the really cut down version of the PHP site sufficient to do the comments,
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sufficient to do the show uploads, and then the rest, that you'll be able to download
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as well, that you could have your own hub, but that's more for if you find a bug and you
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want to improve it in a traditional sense, because we're only going to ever host that
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in one location at this point.
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Kind of a development environment. Exactly, exactly. But right now, if you notice anything
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with the HPR website, you can open a bug, so that's on our GitLab instance or a GT instance,
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so that's actually a big help as well. The thought of a multi-master HPR is a bit
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scarier, I don't like that. A lot of this is just thoughts and there's so much work
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to do. There's a huge amount of work to do, but Dave and I have had to remind each other
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that we've done a huge amount of work in the last one. The fact that the website's still
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up, that you're still getting shows every day, is a testimony to the work role has done
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and in turn, I stay with myself busy as well. Yeah, well done. Thank you. However, because
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we're busy with that, so also some good news is that we have the reserve queue, and in
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the reserve queue, that's basically you saying to us, you don't care when it comes out.
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If you do care when it comes out, you can also post it as normal into the regular show,
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but we would really could do with topping up the reserve queue, which was formally known
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as the emergency queue, and shows that go in there, what we'll do is we'll use them to
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slot them into the vacancies as they come up. So if you could do that, that would be excellent.
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Thank you very much. Any comments on that? No, just them. I kind of second you. I was
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looking at the evening at the calendar, and yeah, it looked empty. Yeah, it looks. Yeah,
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it does, because we've had two hosts pumping in shows into the queue, and Archer 72 is moving,
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so he doesn't have a time to record them. And some guy in the internet is posting every
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two weeks. So everybody else needs to step up, and we'd greater people could send in shows
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that would be absolutely awesome, because this is a good project, and one show a year,
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that's it. That's all we're asking from the host. So I'm not, I mean, we could, any of
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the regular hosts feel free at any time to send stuff into the emergency reserve queue.
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That's great, but for regular hosts, please come on for people who haven't submitted
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a show this year, and you can use Andy's definition of a year you like. So long as it's
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not more than 365 days, then, yeah, please send an initial. Okay, Dave, back to, I was just
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just being the, the human robot sending, sending an email out, sorry. Back to, what is this?
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This is the HBR community news, normally this takes about two seconds, but this is the HBR
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community news for June 20, 23. This is where the janitors and whoever else joins to discuss
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what has been happening in the last month, and actually we've been doing that, which is
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basically the server move has been occupying a huge amount of our time. And if you go to
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the about page and go to governance, you'll see how HBR is, is covered. And it is essentially,
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if you're part of the community, you're part of the community, you represent HPR. So that's,
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that's your goal. Should be number one, get other people to start submitting shows priority
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number one, priority number two, submit some shows yourself. And then priority number three
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is anything else that you can do to help us out. That would be great. So, Dave, can you introduce,
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go ahead or? Okay, can I have a quick question? Well, back to the server move and so on,
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signing up as a new user or as a new host does, does work. Yes, right now at the moment, we're
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having a smidgen of an issue with the, with the emailing. We have two major problems
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right at this moment. One is that the email for the commenting system, with commenting systems,
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fine, actually, the email that we use for the commenting, which is working, and the email that
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we're using for the, for the submitting shows is being blocked by Google. And I know why the
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account, the correct account has been configured by Ron. But I just need to set it up. The other
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thing is that, so what we're doing is, if you don't immediately guess a mail coming in,
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it gets copied, your mail gets by default always copied to the admins anyway. So what we do is
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we're just going forward that on to you directly to make sure that you get the link.
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So bear with us as we work on that. This is the human robot Dave mentioned before, I guess.
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That's us, we're the human robot, yes. Yes, I'm a bit distracted because being a robot and a
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human at the same time can, can, can get to you. So if I wasn't recording this show right now,
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I would be fixing that issue about the mail because I've just sent out a call for shows and we're
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getting in people responding. So, but we need to record this because we need to keep shows coming
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into the queue and this one needs to go out as well. And then the other thing is the mail list
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is working and that's, I know that Ron has installed it, but I don't know what the status of it is,
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it was on for a while and resulted in the server and not responding very well. So I've asked Josh
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to have a look. If Ron seems to be unavailable at the moment for the last while I hope,
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everything is okay with him, I'm actually getting a bit worried now at this stage.
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Normally he's, he's quite active and I haven't seen him in over a week and a half.
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So if anyone has word, I'd, any news I'd like to hear if everything is okay.
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But I mean, we'll carry on. It's, it's, the HBO stuff is, is a hobby. It doesn't feel like that
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right at the moment, but it is a hobby. So, we'll carry on. So, what did I answer the question or not?
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Yeah, brilliant.
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Dave, this is where you introduce the new horse. Yes, and well, it's that
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deafening sounds time again, I'm afraid and we don't have any new hosts.
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Wow, wow, wow. Okay, so people, priority number one, HBR, get other hosts involved.
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Prior to number two, we're not talking about listeners now. Host, get hosts involved.
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If you listen to other podcasts out there, where you think HBR could be promoted,
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can you please send me the contact information for the other podcasts or other things or other
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places, where I or somebody else can go and represent HBR and go, hi, this is HBR, this is what we're
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doing. This is the project blah, blah, blah. So we need to start getting a little bit more into
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people's faces as well. If you're going to, if there are events coming up, like Linux Fest or whatever
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that you know about HBR that are barcams or are events, then can you please try and organize
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that HBR is represented in some way at that event, whether it's you giving a five minute
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lightning talk, whether it's organizing a booth anywhere in the, in the extreme, we will assist you
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with getting stickers and all that good stuff together, yeah. So we need to do a little bit
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of the old promotion, get more holes in. And also, if people are going back listening to the old shows,
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can you fire off an email to the old hosts that you haven't heard in a while, say I was listening
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to your show, I really missed your episodes. Do you have a follow up on this? I'd love to hear
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about it. Here's the link, yeah. Sounds good. Okay, let's go through all the shows. In the last
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month, starting with episode 3869, which of course was a five minute war game by Klatu.
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It's some, yes, okay, it's an interesting concept, something that I would never have thought of.
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I think Klatu is describing sort of making games from things on his desk, and entertaining
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himself during boring times, by that means, which is great. I would probably sit and do the
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one on a paper, but you know, it takes all sorts. No, you should be fixing all these bugs we have
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open on HPR here. I'm trying, but I'm waiting on you. We're both thinking it.
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Yeah, that was a good show. It reminded me very much of no surprise. My son, who was on Klatu's
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one of Klatu's weekly games. So the following day we had Ahuka wrapping it up there in Texas
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before heading home to Michigan. I really, I really feel I'm benefiting from this
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RC trip around America without actually getting all the mosquitoes and venomous snakes, etc.
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I was curious when he mentioned about the truck and that the vehicle is quite long, and so I went
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on his flicker account as he offers the links and went through many pictures there
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and was searching for that truck, and after a while I found it. And it's really a large...
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Yeah, it was what I had in my head at all. It's like a pickup truck with a huge big trailer
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thing stuck at the back. No one's bigger. Yes, only an American skill of it. It's huge.
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I took my kids. I think I've said this before to America in 2011, and we went sort of around
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California and stuff, Yosemitean. There were loads of RVs, some like that, but others which were
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just sort of extremely long things about the size of a bus or a coach or something. Which couldn't
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get down some roads and they had to stop in certain places and catch local transport to go places.
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Yeah, it was a completely different world as far as we were concerned. Car parks, where there were
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ordinary sized cars, parking spaces, RV spaces and truck spaces and so forth, which were about
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third, bigger, whatever. It was just a totally different view. Now as you mentioned it,
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this is like this bus, and because the bus is too big, they have at the back they tell
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a pickup truck with them or something like that. But anyhow, as mentioned it, if a hook
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comes along that's top picker nearby, maybe he can a little bit tell a little bit about the
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truck or why he has chosen such a, this version of a truck would be quite interesting. I don't know
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how long or how difficult it is to tow such a trailer he is putting on it. If it needs such a
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big truck or if it is also a little bit a fable of him to have fun to drive the truck, I don't know,
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it was just a little bit curious about it. I think you covered that and if you go back and listen
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the first few episodes, but I didn't quite grasp at that point what type of truck it was. I think
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that's more than my ignorance of American terminology for stuff. Are you thinking at the beginning
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of this travel series? Yeah, exactly. If you go back and have a real listen to some of those,
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he describes taking a lot of the yard and hitting the underestimate in the corner and I think
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a mirror fell off or something. Oh, I got those. This is when he did the review in the end as well,
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he mentioned about it that not being in a hurry would be very beneficial. Yeah, quite an
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adventure though. It is fascinating to listen to, I find. Yeah. So the next day we had,
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the next day would be a Monday obviously because community news and we have one comment on that.
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Dave, do you want to read that one? Yeah, yeah. Dave, the link works.
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Sorry people. I don't know why it wouldn't work. At the top of the page,
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she can press the number of comments and it jumps down and I go, oh, this is going to work or
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it's going to redirect somewhere wrong. It's awesome. I have also been there. No, that's different.
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It can't be right. Oh, it works. That's great. So this was the continuation of the conversation
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from originally from MacTroniac and with Rato and he says, HBR3816, high rate Rato,
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spot welding looks like an excellent way to connect new cells. I remember one video where
|
|
someone used a couple of car batteries and a momentary switch and got really nice results.
|
|
Whereas these are already used cells, they will fail more quickly. I've had to replace the cell
|
|
three times recently from the 20 cell battery that I've been using about a year. The spot welding
|
|
is harder to take apart. They come that way in factory-made batteries and you have to pull or cut
|
|
them off, which usually leaves some metal still attached. This reason it's better to use sold-up
|
|
for all the cells in my opinion. That's for safety. I'm tempted to clamp my sold-iron to a cell
|
|
and leave it on maximum heat for five minutes to see what happens. Probably nothing spectacular.
|
|
Only heat for about 10 seconds or so max because I don't want to damage its capacity. The metal
|
|
of the cell itself acts as a kind of heat sink so it doesn't get as hot as a small component would
|
|
and sold-iron is a built-in melt solder. I've done over 100 solders on to bare cells without
|
|
mishap or loss in capacity. The main danger is cutting yourself while taking apart a battery pack.
|
|
The conductor strips a thin and very sharp when you cut them. Other hazards are shorting
|
|
stuff out with your metal cutter and seeing bright sparks. I once punctured one of the flat cells by
|
|
accident and it started to get hot and smoke and smell awful. I can't see that happening
|
|
with 18650s. Fair enough. Was that? Who left that comment? That was Megatroniac because we mentioned
|
|
the show that it had been commented on by Reito on the community news. Ah perfect. That makes sense.
|
|
Good to see. That's good. That was the only comment on that episode and I note here to myself
|
|
that the first next are looking very small. So I need to open a bug about that. Yeah I know
|
|
just notice that too. So yes, something's not closed to tag. I don't know. The small of, I don't
|
|
know. Yeah. It's just as we've been saying before, it's paper cuts. So just go out and then
|
|
carry on. Yeah and it's been in fairness. This thing has been running for 17 years and it's been
|
|
duct tape every single thing. And we are now getting to these issues and we're getting to fix it
|
|
and if somebody lugs a bug report, you know, we can fix it and close it and you know, that's cool.
|
|
So the next show was some guy in the internet updates with replies. Talks about the on-on news
|
|
and a few replies to shows Kevin O'Brien has come on Twitch. I really want to put
|
|
a
|
|
Retro. Please change your handle.
|
|
I'm thinking about. Retro. Can you hear me? Yeah, can you hear me?
|
|
Yes. Retro. Shall I read it? Yes, please. By Kevin O'Brien, I'm glad you're enjoying my shows.
|
|
I didn't go into a lot of detail on the older shows but I can assure I'm going into more detail
|
|
as the series goes on. Super. So this was Kevin O'Brien. So there's actually a hookah who left.
|
|
Yeah, and he mentioned. So something guy in the internet mentioned that he was following along
|
|
with the civilization too. Oh, these were civilization too. All right.
|
|
Yeah. So that's all makes perfect sense now, you see.
|
|
I think this show from Scotty was he was he read really deep into the
|
|
the sun flare. Was it this one or do I mix it up? No, we're here in yesterday. I saw a solar
|
|
I saw a solar flare. I was really how to say I was thinking about it. I mean, I cannot change it.
|
|
I cannot do anything about it. I would never really care about a solar flare to be honest.
|
|
Yes. Bonsby. Yeah. I do sympathise but it is quite fascinating and also a little bit scary
|
|
because you know, one day that as they say we could be hit with one that just happens to come
|
|
in the right direction at the wrong time and it will wipe out a lot of electrical grid and
|
|
see no chance at it well. No, there's a there's a so a debunking video recently by a
|
|
electronic engineer. I'll have to dump it out and he goes they have built in they know this
|
|
is going to happen and they've it's already built in for other reasons into the network that it
|
|
will it should not cascade down the electricity network. That said, I'm interested in solar
|
|
fry. It's from the point of view. It's very big part of the amateur radio licensing. So
|
|
people it interferes with the both. There's an ionosphere and a trotosphere. But
|
|
it's amazing. I pass my exam at all. Anyway, it interferes with the sky and means you can have
|
|
greater hops or less hops. Propagation is better or worse depending. Oh, interesting. Didn't
|
|
think about you guys on the on the amateur radio. Yeah, I haven't actually made any contacts as
|
|
yes with my license. So I would use me as reference but there you go. Okay. And then he interesting
|
|
is Scotty is about he's very much on the secure side also very very much on the secure side.
|
|
He says I think he's using just one firefox extension that he trust. That's probably not
|
|
not about it. I guess I'm on the other side right now because since you guys made the two shows,
|
|
I have increased a lot. Good. I've tried to hit a balance but yeah, I do appreciate what you
|
|
saying that just slapping these things into your browser without do care and attention is
|
|
extremely unwise. So good for that. Unfortunately, as all if the plug-in is not maintained,
|
|
then even though it may work, it continues on on and on. Even though it's not working and the
|
|
version increases, it may become incompatible and no longer will even load. Yeah, and another thing
|
|
I'm doing is as you say about the development. I look if there is a GitHub repository or likewise
|
|
on how many versions there were in the past if somebody's working on it. If it somehow sounds
|
|
legit, then legit. Okay, next day next town instance updating which was by Tojet and it was
|
|
an excellent companion to his previous episode which was if you're 3, 2, 9, 7 and I see that the
|
|
link in the show notes points to the over making all of that points. It's going to be a lot of those.
|
|
Well, actually, those are okay because they already redirect with redirecting but I have
|
|
already a bug open that I need to go through all the bodies of the show notes from the DigiPace
|
|
and fix all of these and probably no harm to just check every single link that still works and
|
|
go back to the internet archive if not. Yeah, I just clicked on that one just to see what would
|
|
happen and it's fine and it gets me to the show. Oh man, on the requested topics thing,
|
|
if there's anybody out there who knows how, I mean, really knows how moddery rise to the patchy
|
|
works, please do a series. I'm not talking about a show, I'm talking about a series. Here's how
|
|
you get the thing to work because to me, it's like voodoo. It sometimes rejects his work, sometimes
|
|
at all. It's, you've got to read the documentation in my new detail just going by the little bit I
|
|
did to help out and that because at different stages, different parts of the URL being forwarded
|
|
to the regular expression engine and unless you've read that you'll only see this bit in such
|
|
and such a case, it's not obvious at all. And the bits, it doesn't, it parses as not
|
|
linearly from top to bottom, it parses the whole thing and then acts on the whole thing. So an
|
|
entire block, mice, the first line of a block might refer to a variable that's to find four lines
|
|
below. It's, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's fun. And then you copy and paste two lines on one of the
|
|
marks and the other one doesn't and there's no reason why. One needs a slash in front of the
|
|
dot and the next one doesn't. It's bizarre. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Is it, do you need all the functions of
|
|
the Apache or is the Apache a little bit too much for the, for the need? Well, we need it now because
|
|
we need to, a, that's what we have, b, that's what works with the PHP and things set up that we have.
|
|
And we also need all these rewrites because there are 17 years of references, web links from other
|
|
places that point into HP or we want them to be able to redirect. So if somebody's got their own
|
|
personal website that points to I'm a HBR host on, uh, at, uh, PHP, host of PHP, question mark,
|
|
ID equals 30 would be mine. And we want that to redirect to correspondents for such 30.html or
|
|
whatever it is. Okay, I see. I was just thinking about because I'm the Apache is the large one.
|
|
There is another one called Hayawatta web server, which is from a guy in the Netherlands, I think,
|
|
a security guy. And, um, this is a simple web server, uh, very secure, very fast. And, uh,
|
|
that was just an, uh, my, my thought about it, whether you need all the functionality and this drives
|
|
you crazy in the end or, you know, like on the, on the, on the HBR one is itself we do, but if we
|
|
start mirroring this out, then the, you know, when you are syncing the whole lot in the morning
|
|
and you pointed at your own web server, that is designed that should work with any web server
|
|
engine X or anything. Um, internet, uh, was a Microsoft one, internet explorer, I, yes. So that should
|
|
work just on any web server. So all right. And also we take what we get. So that's what we were given.
|
|
So that's what we're using. Next day, anyway, this episode, it was actually quite good because,
|
|
the update of the, um, next cloud application is, is an interesting thing that needs to happen.
|
|
I have borked my next cloud, uh, instance, and I can't get it back. So I have to start from scratch.
|
|
And, and he has a nice concept, right? Because he writes in a alternate directory. So, and it does
|
|
it during the night. So he could switch back and forth. Yeah. Yeah. That's a good idea. Yeah.
|
|
That's a good idea. Okay. The following day, we had the second to last New Year show. And again,
|
|
shout out to, uh, some guy in the internet and, um, of course, uh, HB Lovecraft, of course,
|
|
for doing the excellent, excellent show notes brilliant. I'm only partway through this one. I have
|
|
to have to admit this has been a busy month. But the, the bit I heard was talking about old computing
|
|
methods and techniques and hardware and protocols and stuff like that. Yeah. I'm looking forward
|
|
to continuing, but I'm not a chance to do it yet. So, when I read token ring, it reminds me about
|
|
rebooting the computer because of your last network connection. Yeah. That's such a pain.
|
|
token ring was all the rage at one point when I was working in computing. We never ran it at
|
|
university. I worked at, but quite a number of the did around the UK and, and, and I think
|
|
they came to hate it. I quite a lot. I agree. So the following day, we had parlance Linux season one
|
|
episode seven, just sticky bit. And this was a one of the podcasts that, uh, come up with us
|
|
during Fostem and the free culture podcast. So we had a debate about how to post the show and
|
|
we had several different options. One was that we posted as is and provide the transcript,
|
|
which we did. The other option was that we would have the episode playing in the left here.
|
|
And then the right here, you would hear the narration. And the other option was that we would
|
|
narrate the translated text. So this is, this is what we thought I don't know. In fact,
|
|
if you've listened to it, it was only, only quite short five minutes. I certainly listened to it,
|
|
but I only got about one percent of what I was saying. I haven't got around to looking at the,
|
|
the text, the transcript yet. But it was, it was nice. I quite enjoy listening to, to French,
|
|
I don't necessarily understand enough of it. Same, same. I started and, but then I, then I gave up.
|
|
But you say there is a transcript in English, you mean? Yep. The transcript turned into English.
|
|
Which, which is it in the show, the transcript where you have texts? Is it some,
|
|
so if you go to the episode page, so which is hikeopopigradio.org,
|
|
forward slash apps, forward slash HPR, 3, 8, 7, 5, forward slash. In text.html.
|
|
It'll do the index.html if you don't. And then you have text webVTT or subrib,
|
|
so those, if you download the STR file and you post the audio into the same directory,
|
|
and then you play the audio with something like it. I don't know if you'll see supports it,
|
|
but if you use MPV, then it will automatically pick up the subtitles, and then as they're talking,
|
|
the translated text will be on the screen for you. So is it in English then? Yep.
|
|
Oh, okay. Okay. You have this. All right. Yeah. What do you think of doing when I'm not
|
|
fixing bugs on the history? I'm sorry.
|
|
Yes. Does it explain how to do that, anyway? I know you just did.
|
|
Yes, it does. The line was for a model tiny language and blah, blah, blah.
|
|
And it just, it just pumped it out. And I was, I was shocked to find that it just automatically
|
|
translated it. Oh, this is French. And yeah, okay, I'll translate it in English for you. Boom.
|
|
It's an English. But what about how to listen to your audio while viewing the subtitles?
|
|
Do we need instructions for that? I just give you them, Dave. No, you dig.
|
|
It's just transient. It's going in one ear and out the other. Yeah. Well, people tell me,
|
|
I tell them, yeah, but you recorded the show. Yeah, but you can't expect me to go back and listen.
|
|
Yes, it's on the how-to page. You can't expect me to read that. It's on the front page of
|
|
the website. Oh, well, I never read that. Yeah. No, but, but, but you don't want me to send a
|
|
freaking telegram. But I think partway down that list would be, yes, have every on the show
|
|
that I'm fine. Yes, a little bug, but you do need it written down. It's certainly a paragraph,
|
|
if I would have heard. And not the, not the, you have to do it just once and you could link
|
|
to it then. I mean, at the moment, it says show transcript automatically generated using whisper.
|
|
And then it says the text and so on. But now, as you said, if there is somewhere, how to,
|
|
how to, I'll put it in there about page and I'll put it in there with the transcript.
|
|
You just need to add it to the footery thing at the end of the page and the next static
|
|
site update will spread it around the entire. Right. It's a lot of you know, and fix that.
|
|
Or do you know, we're just making the priority. We just get, when I can the point that something
|
|
anyway, I will shut up now. You're not making friends here, Dave. I'll go and see you next.
|
|
All right. Recording an episode for Hack-Up-A-Gradio,
|
|
sharing my experience as a first-time contributor. So this was the second show, I think.
|
|
Correct. Can you pronounce that? Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
Yeah. Even the Rihuna? Yeah, that's him. Rihuna key. He says Rihuna key.
|
|
Rihuna key? That's it. Yeah. Might say that, but what I pronounce will be completely different.
|
|
So yeah, this is good feedback because you know, after 17 years, you kind of forget stuff.
|
|
I wanted to give him two feedbacks, but my mobile was not just right next to me. One was an
|
|
interesting one from Klaatu, where he explains about the spectrogram in Audacity. Yeah.
|
|
And this is number 3698, where I was too lazy about leaving a comment, I just tell you.
|
|
And the other one is a number 3673, recording for Hack-Up-A-Gradio from 2022.
|
|
I think this was where the guy went into different headsets or phones. He used and how to use
|
|
an equalizer and such. I kept it in my playing queue. It was quite interesting.
|
|
That's Lyle. Was it Lyle? No, you wouldn't know that. Okay. I think it's Lyle, because he
|
|
gets so annoyed at me saying send in any audio. So he did a little series on how to start off and
|
|
get the best, even with poor audio and stuff. So very interesting. He then did after just two. I
|
|
was looking forward for a more, but then he then did after two. And it was really great. I mean,
|
|
he really knows his way around in the audio, I think. Can you post those links to this show, please?
|
|
Sure. I will. Just about that before I leave the comment on Riyunuki's message. I have to put
|
|
just a couple letters at the bottom in it. It doesn't matter how many. It just needs above 20.
|
|
Exactly. All right. It was just a thing which annoyed me why I haven't done it.
|
|
Hold on. Will you be able to comment? Do we fix that book? I don't think that's fixed.
|
|
We've been getting comments. So what's still what's broken?
|
|
Older comments. We get comments on the last, if it's in the last two weeks. I'll just show it.
|
|
Yeah. And older shows. Yeah. I don't know. I don't think so, because I wouldn't even know where to
|
|
begin. I'll fix that, but I'll have to first mail list and they and they robots the text robots email.
|
|
And just just as an aside, you mentioned robots. Mistrikes managed to send in his show.
|
|
Okay. Yeah, but if it's only when he's on Google mail. Yeah. But then again, I had to respond to him.
|
|
I know. We'll see. To come back to Riyuno Kiz show, he is also asking while he's recording a
|
|
dozen audacity. Hello. Sorry. I left a button when I pushed on the wheel. He was speaking about
|
|
recording on audacity. And I think there is also Todd Norris his solo cost, which makes most of the
|
|
work for you. I think it is even easier than audacity. And then maybe Dave or you can, I don't know.
|
|
He says at the end, adding metadata. Now I also add metadata to the recording. Warp is
|
|
offers comments for that. You can compare it to ID3 text for MP3 files. I don't know. Are these
|
|
taken over when you when you when you take the file to archive the door against such? Well, here's
|
|
the thing. We don't oddly enough trust anybody, because we take in audio from anyone on the internet.
|
|
And as you know, there are lots and nice people out there, but you're also only 200 milliseconds
|
|
away from every creep on the world. So we have a very robust approach to everything on HBO.
|
|
I my default assumption is when you're uploading stuff that you're trying to hack our website.
|
|
This is not a challenge to anybody. Yeah. Please feel free to record shows about your black
|
|
actually activity, but do not do it on HBO. If you do, tell us about it. Yeah. Thank you.
|
|
So what we do is we take in the audio and we convert it to raw pulse PCM files, pulse code
|
|
modulation. No format, no metadata associated with it. However, a good friend of mine called Dave
|
|
Morris has written an application called fixed tags where we pump in the metadata you upload
|
|
when you type in the show form. And we add that as metadata to all the media files, including
|
|
all including speaks, including MP3, including we have all of them get the new metadata based on
|
|
what you submitted when you sent in your show notes, which is why it's very important to submit
|
|
your show notes in the correct format. So you can save yourself and maintaining IDs,
|
|
three texts, but don't give me the two strip them out. Don't bother with strip them out. All right.
|
|
Chapter marks on the other hand, we could do chapter marks, but what's the point because
|
|
we have the intro, we've got the outro, and then we've got random in between. So you know,
|
|
I've got a last show I did was on the command. It's basically a five minute show.
|
|
Does it make sense to put chapter marks in? Don't know. And of course not. Yeah, I was also thinking,
|
|
I mean, every show we're both 30 minutes, you can think about it, but how many shows are above
|
|
30 minutes? Yeah, and then you should be doing a series. So your chapter mark one is episode one,
|
|
chapter mark two is episode two in your series. So yeah, fair enough. Not saying that I won't
|
|
support them, but also you have to think think a little bit along about what we are as a project.
|
|
If you want to do a show about chapter marks, feel free to do so. If you want to do a one-off
|
|
episode where you want to work with us on putting chapter marks into a show, work with us,
|
|
that's fine as well, but that's going to take work on our part because we will need to manually
|
|
do each of the steps that we then later will need to automate. Now, if you send in a show,
|
|
the first practical thing I'm thinking about is then the intro and outro are of different lengths.
|
|
So if you have chapter mark set for one minute and 30 seconds, when we add the intro, assuming
|
|
it's one minute, that's going to need to be changed for one minute, 30 seconds to two minutes,
|
|
30 seconds. And we're going to need to do that on the wildfile. We're going to need to find
|
|
those out to do that on the flack file, on the MP3 file, on the amorbus file and all the rest of them.
|
|
So you have the dynamic intro and this would move the... Exactly. Yeah, makes sense. And apart from that,
|
|
as you are still in the server move, I guess it makes sense not to do anything like that at the moment.
|
|
Yeah, no, I'm open to it. That's not an issue. We have had people send in by oral recordings and by
|
|
default, we whack everything to model. And that's another thing, actually, that way why we do that.
|
|
I work on the assumption that everybody knows why we do stuff, but if I have to explain everything,
|
|
then in all sort of meetings, we have a three hour HPR community show, which should have chapter marks.
|
|
Skip to when it stops waffling about this topic.
|
|
Why are we going to model it? I guess this is interesting to know what's behind the scenes.
|
|
Why are we going to model is because... No, one will make sense. Otherwise, it drives
|
|
crazy when you have a headset. So yeah, that's one reason, but also people operate machinery and
|
|
have one earbudded. So they're in a work environment and they're listening in one ear to a podcast,
|
|
and then the other ear, they're actively listening to the work situation. People on public transport
|
|
do that as well. I do that when I'm on the train. I listen to one ear to show and then I'll listen to
|
|
situation awareness around me. And also some people have are hard of hearing, so they can adjust us.
|
|
And also, starting off, bandwidth was expensive. Sending down an MP3 file was an expensive thing.
|
|
It took 15 minutes and dial up and people were measured. So why send down...
|
|
If we could just remove one channel, it turned a 15 minutes download into a 7 minute download,
|
|
and that was cost saving for people. Yeah, sure. Should we raise the maps? Perhaps, yeah, perhaps.
|
|
Are we gonna? Doesn't the server remove stuff? And then you would have to... I mean, it's not
|
|
really stereo if you have the same on both channels. Yeah, and some people don't send in
|
|
stereo, send in mono. I've had a podcast come in recently, particularly back in the twat days,
|
|
it was all sorts of... Today with a techie, it's a predecessor to HPR, and there's like 17 years ago,
|
|
all those audio was weird out. Some of them had... One of those shows was taking a cheap
|
|
headset and turning it into a microphone, which technically you can do, but it turned it.
|
|
And I thought all that was over us, but then I had to look at one of the shows that came in
|
|
in the last week or so, and it was recorded on the left channel only, and in the last six months,
|
|
I had a show in where there was a DC offset on the left channel, and the right channel was fine.
|
|
So, weird, weird stuff. So, as part of the upload process, we know... I mentioned it today before,
|
|
and that we're automating a lot of the stuff, but the more we automate, the more stuff we find
|
|
that we have to fix, because you can automate to a certain point, but then there is a point
|
|
about a humanist faster. Well, no, it's not that. It's like, I had automated it, and I assumed
|
|
everything, and now I automated it, and I take the spectrum analysis out and I look at it,
|
|
and then I listen to the show for quality control purposes. I scrub forward and back,
|
|
particularly if it's a new host, I'm checking for spam, and I tend to do that as well
|
|
after if a new host is sending in a lot of shows, then it can also be a spammer is trying to
|
|
make us normalized to the fact that they're sending in stuff that we'll just submit it.
|
|
So, I also go back, and if anything sounds suspicious, I'll give it a more thorough
|
|
view, but on every show I look at the spectrum, listen to the audio quality, and do that at
|
|
various different stages through it. So, I end up spotting mistakes, which is good, because
|
|
it's not hitting the feed, but it means that the automated workflow is becoming...
|
|
Has someone been kicked around more? Well, it is there, it's just...
|
|
I stopped the automation because something's gone wrong.
|
|
All right, and I think Dave, you have the same as well.
|
|
Oh, absolutely. We tried to work towards the automation of incoming show notes,
|
|
because they come in all manner of different forms, and trying to write something which
|
|
would recognize what show notes were written in, and then do clever things.
|
|
But I should just give it up. I do have a thing that says this doesn't look like HTML,
|
|
even though they said it is, and I spot that. But it needs me to be driving it, you know,
|
|
same issue. Which is fine. We do what I would love. All you need to do is send in once
|
|
your year. We'll do it for free. But just as we talk about, is it on the upload page,
|
|
what is the preferred format for the show notes? Yeah, apart from text.
|
|
Yeah, we might actually get rid of that, because what's the point?
|
|
If nobody follows. Yeah, that's what one point we were asking the format for the audio
|
|
that you upload. Now I don't care. I'll just take anything, and we'll see. That's on the list as well.
|
|
First things first, get the robot, the text, robots as HBR working, get the mail list working,
|
|
fix all these bugs that we found, and then we'll look at that. Sure. Shall we go to the next show?
|
|
Please, God, chapter mark here. Keep as sexy audio for you. This was good.
|
|
Oh, hold on. Did we, did we read the comment on some guy on the internet? Did I do?
|
|
Sorry, yeah, I did it. I'll wait you. So the next one is, no, it's done. It's everything fine.
|
|
Next one is keep as sexy audio review. Excellent. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
|
|
And there were no comments on that, but he had me very worried because I used keep as sexy,
|
|
and apparently it's just when you're exporting your data. Yeah, which version can, it's important,
|
|
which version you use, he mentioned the version slowly and exactly several times in the show.
|
|
This is the 275, which is the fixed one. I'm running version 275, and of course I checked that while I
|
|
was on the bus, one earbudding, so did I. So now I've just checked this. I'm feeling a lot more,
|
|
I was worried there for a quick second. Thanks. You're not, you're not helping. Why have you joined
|
|
this show. I knew Dave. What version do you run of keypress? I seem to have 274.
|
|
Debian or maybe Dante, are you doing? I'm running Kebun too. Debian testing should be keep me
|
|
well up to date, but maybe there are updates that I haven't applied yet. Yeah, but it's only when
|
|
When you're exporting, so when you're exporting your database, it doesn't ask for your
|
|
two-factuals.
|
|
No, now you make something up.
|
|
This is the latest show of him.
|
|
This is where he goes through the security review, and the other one you go with for the
|
|
CVE.
|
|
Yeah, that's awesome.
|
|
Which is coming later.
|
|
I'll shut up.
|
|
Carry on.
|
|
No, I think it was a really great show he did here.
|
|
He kept some tension to it.
|
|
Are we on the safe side or not?
|
|
He did a great job on that show.
|
|
Again.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Very detailed and some brilliant notes.
|
|
I'm always impressed with these.
|
|
He is absolute gold to HPR.
|
|
Okay, perfect.
|
|
We need more some guy on the internet on the network that is for sure.
|
|
Going there, Linux commands together information about your system.
|
|
And this was from JWP, and I think it's my turn for the comments.
|
|
It's from FOKY.
|
|
FOKY, even.
|
|
FOKY is somebody else.
|
|
One command to get them all.
|
|
Very interesting.
|
|
I will save this in a folder of HPR shows I will listen to again, but everyday use this
|
|
is one of the commands that gives me all the information I want, and the command is
|
|
INXI.
|
|
Never heard of it.
|
|
A show, FOKY, about INXI would be excellent.
|
|
And this is where Dave goes, oh, FOKY, I already did a show on this.
|
|
No, I don't know these things.
|
|
I went, oh, I've never heard of that as you just did.
|
|
So I went and looked in the repo, and there it was, so I installed it, and it's actually
|
|
really nice.
|
|
It's quite a fun thing.
|
|
I'm really played with it much, but it definitely looks good.
|
|
INXI?
|
|
You installed?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, but you have to install it.
|
|
It doesn't come usually with your distribution.
|
|
I usually use LSHW just to get an overview of my system.
|
|
Again, you need to install it.
|
|
LSHW.
|
|
LSHW.
|
|
And yes, I did.
|
|
The hardware thingy.
|
|
What about the, he has on the list here, which are not familiar to me, is USB utils and
|
|
PCI utils.
|
|
Have you ever?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
And are they any, I don't know, do you really need it?
|
|
I mean, I have LSHW, I see whether device is recognized or not.
|
|
And just, well, yeah, I didn't look into those, I don't think I have them.
|
|
And some of these things come in as bundles, don't they?
|
|
And the name doesn't tell you necessarily what's in them.
|
|
I think I've probably dismissed them as being that type of package.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know.
|
|
I think LSHW is part of USB utils, or that was my assumption.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I need to drill down properly and be sure.
|
|
I guess I should check those comments here as well.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Interesting.
|
|
Everybody has a different approach to get around the system.
|
|
There is not just one way to roam.
|
|
Yeah, it's, I just checked, LSB, LS, USB is part of the USB utils package.
|
|
So I already use those.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
I tend to be using NeoFetch quite a lot.
|
|
What does that do?
|
|
Sorry, my key, the key was pressing started to do with anything.
|
|
Yeah, it's just a thing that people like to display on their desktop, or in a window
|
|
or whatever.
|
|
It does a summary of various factors about your machine, and it does it in a pleasant
|
|
way that with the logo of the operating system that you're using, you'll see it a lot
|
|
if you go and look at the sites that show people's desktops and things.
|
|
Yes, it reminds me about Conkey.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I think.
|
|
It's often the other side of the desk from one of those, yeah, yeah.
|
|
But it's just an updating thing like Conkeys, but it's just a useful thing.
|
|
I sometimes, I forget what model of CPU I have, you know.
|
|
It's an i7, but it's years old, so it's one with a small number at the end.
|
|
It's just useful just to go and have a look to the moments of what it is.
|
|
Absolutely.
|
|
Yeah, true.
|
|
I find myself sometimes, I have no clue what kind of graphic card I have inside as long
|
|
as it works.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
But the day you might come where they say, well, this is not going to be supported anymore.
|
|
So you could be going, oh, I'm safe, I'm safe.
|
|
Yes, exactly.
|
|
And shall we go to the next show from Dave and Mr. X, I think.
|
|
Yes, please.
|
|
Two creepy, two creepy uncles sitting in the car park.
|
|
This is special, sir.
|
|
I'm going to wear that at the end of this series and absolutely definitely cool.
|
|
What is it if, how do you say that in English?
|
|
If some detectives sitting in a street and just all day long, that's what they are.
|
|
Two cool carps, you know, star skied hutch, I think next time we're going to hire a white
|
|
van and to the wagon, that would be, that would be a lot of special stuff.
|
|
It's not good for the audio Dave, Dave, I've heard that some people really, it is really
|
|
recommended to do a recording inside the audio, inside the car, because you have a lot
|
|
of stuff around it, which helps.
|
|
It does help quite well.
|
|
I put my microphone, my Zoom H2N on the dashboard area and we just talk into that.
|
|
Actually, I've got a boom arm recently that I can fit to my steering wheel, would you
|
|
believe?
|
|
I was wondering about that.
|
|
So you have one microphone on a, and then you record it on your mobile or how do you
|
|
do that?
|
|
No, no, I have a Zoom recorder, which records to an SD card and it mounts on a tripod mount
|
|
and I have one of these rip off Chinese manfrotto arm things that you can fit tripod devices
|
|
or lights or whatever to think.
|
|
So there's got a clamp on it, I clamp it to my steering wheel and let's get in between
|
|
this.
|
|
Oh, well, it probably also looks suspicious, but it works, anyway, it's fun.
|
|
So I'll read the comment to this one.
|
|
Yeah, go through it.
|
|
And it's from Kevin O'Brien and he says, Dr. Campbell, he says, I've also started tuning
|
|
out Dr. John Campbell and many of the reasons you mentioned, but excess deaths is indeed
|
|
illegitimate issue because of various reasons you cannot rely on death certificates and such
|
|
as a measure and such as a measure of the cause of death.
|
|
So yeah, I'm sure that's right.
|
|
I think that we're probably pointing to the conspiracies that have come out of that fact
|
|
more than the fact that death certificates are not necessarily as detailed as you might
|
|
want in terms of statistics that, you know, this person died from pneumonia, but they
|
|
had pneumonia because they had COVID.
|
|
And it is logged as a pneumonia, but it was actually created, it was a situation created
|
|
by the COVID-19 disease, you know, those sorts of things, I'm not really following this
|
|
up to any great extent, but there's certainly lots of conspiracies around this.
|
|
Oh, yeah, it's not dangerous at all.
|
|
Look, this guy died of pneumonia, it wasn't COVID at all.
|
|
Those sorts of arguments have been, I've certainly heard.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
And the man himself had an episode the following day, installing Google Nest Thermostat.
|
|
So he actually added an addendum a bit after installation, I noticed that the AC would
|
|
turn on, but not no cold came out.
|
|
So I called a professional, he verified that I installed the thermostat correctly, but
|
|
I've got to turn the breaker back on for the condenser unit.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
We've all been there.
|
|
Have we all been there?
|
|
He is.
|
|
He's not working.
|
|
Go and check.
|
|
No breakers.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
There is no power.
|
|
Oh, man, the number of hours.
|
|
But it was interesting, I had today, when I went through the show notes, I had a look
|
|
how such a Nest Thermostat looks like.
|
|
I had no clue about it.
|
|
Yeah, I saw a big cloud, broke, tore down on, and yeah, they're interesting.
|
|
Well, I mean, it's basically a remote control switch, because you're not changing your thermostat.
|
|
You're just adding a little bit more smart stoot.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And I know that people here were buying them three or four of them in different zones
|
|
in their house, but the way Dutch houses are built, there is no zone.
|
|
There is one zone and everything is open.
|
|
So, you know, it's basically, you turn it on, turn it off according to a, yeah, fine.
|
|
Whatever it's, it's a remote control switch is what I think it to be.
|
|
That's fine.
|
|
The next one was X-plane VAT Simulator 2022 from the operator operator.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And operator, yeah, he, you know, this is a flight simulator and he's got a whole
|
|
go scripts about setting it up and playing with it and all people who really get into
|
|
these flight simulator things and car simulations and stuff.
|
|
So not something I'm into, but yes, good information here.
|
|
If one, if any of our listeners are hopefully contributors are into it, then here's all
|
|
the information you need.
|
|
But how to say, I mean, I mean, I mean, nowhere doing things like that.
|
|
But the one I always hear is the Microsoft flight simulator, which is by the way developed
|
|
in, in France, as far as I know, by a large team.
|
|
Have you ever heard of this X-plane 11?
|
|
I was the first time I've heard about it.
|
|
Or is this just a plug-in or such?
|
|
No, X-plane 11 is a flight simulator.
|
|
I did look that up and made a note about it, but that's the end of my knowledge.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So I guess we are all not user of such a hardware.
|
|
I think we've revealed our ignorance very well.
|
|
Yes, yes.
|
|
Sorry operator.
|
|
It includes a universal platform, Mac, Windows, and Linux, worldwide scenery, 11 high quality
|
|
aircraft with immersive 3D copies, free internet, optations for all versions of 11.xx, including
|
|
airport improvements, when you purchase a digital download edition and receive a confirmation
|
|
email with a private key, and it is available for the measly price of $29.99.
|
|
That's cheap, I guess, compared to Microsoft flight simulator.
|
|
I have no reference one way or another.
|
|
It's not something that I am into.
|
|
It's just $29, I mean, I guess.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's within the bounds of busking if you're, if you're, it's not a lot to have, but it's
|
|
a lot to want.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
That's what my mother says, and she was very right.
|
|
It's very profound, yes indeed.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And usually when I remember that, I'm in the not a lot to want zone, I'm going, anyway.
|
|
Next one is from Platoon, alternatives to the CD command, I guess.
|
|
I was sleeping when that was running because when I was looking through the, through the
|
|
text, through the show notes, I couldn't remember hearing it and I thought I have to listen
|
|
to it again.
|
|
Did you guys follow up on that?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
No, I heard it and I listened to it and rewinded several times because any time Platoon does
|
|
one of these shows, it's going to be interesting and different.
|
|
And I was going, CD, why would you be doing anything different to CD?
|
|
And then it's not necessarily CD, it's the usage of CD.
|
|
So you know, for, for example, that you set a big, long directory, you know, my work
|
|
git repo.
|
|
So you might says WG or equals path to my work, Rick Gipo, and then you can go CD, dollar,
|
|
WGP and get to it directly, and then various tips about, this is kind of shortcut that
|
|
you mentioned out to a certain directory, you know?
|
|
Yeah, just how you can navigate the file system quicker, rather than having to CD space home,
|
|
D-I-L-S, CD-TEM, L-S, CD work, L-S, CD project for L-S, CD, you know, notes that you
|
|
would have, you know, shorter ways of going into that.
|
|
So you could use the history command and then go, you know, CD and that entire path is listed
|
|
there under line three.
|
|
So you can go, exclamation mark three, enter, and it'll jump to it.
|
|
He also gets the set option, dash S, auto CD, which allows you just to type TEMP.
|
|
And if it's not a command, it'll assume you want to CD into that directory.
|
|
All right, then I have to dive into it because it's worth listening.
|
|
Folderize, when I reorganized, I thought, I was at some point where I thought I do reorganizing
|
|
it, and then I thought, I don't have to find that out myself, there were other smart
|
|
people who already did that.
|
|
And there is the seven folder order structure.
|
|
They say a human can easily remember a seven deep.
|
|
Then you only go seven to seven to seven, three times.
|
|
And if you calculate that or multiply those, you get quite deep in it.
|
|
And well, you can extend it if you want to do that anyway.
|
|
And so I was wondering how this one gets along.
|
|
But what also came to me, well, came in my mind was, I use a software called HSTR, this
|
|
is like if you hit on your keyboard, control, and R, you usually get into the, you can find
|
|
out what is in your history file of the bash.
|
|
But HSTR is like on Stereoid.
|
|
You really get, you can search, you can have favorites in it, and so on, and it makes
|
|
life so much easier.
|
|
So I, yeah, and if you hit CD, by the way, you don't need any tilde behind it.
|
|
If you hit CD, you're just going to your home directory.
|
|
That's it.
|
|
Okay, stop wasting shows here on the community news, go record this, you can put this one
|
|
into two, then we have two shows at least.
|
|
Yeah, go do that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
I also do that.
|
|
That's the thing I don't do.
|
|
I was listening to this, and I've been to most, visited most of the things that Clancy
|
|
was talking about, because I started on Unix, various Unix's, Sanos, Ultrix, ASPU X and
|
|
so on, and that was all there was, which is great.
|
|
But now, and I did a show on this, I'm using a thing called Zoxide or Zoxide or Zoxide,
|
|
which keeps a history, which keeps a record of all the places I've been, and ranks them
|
|
according to a number of visits.
|
|
And it's got a fuzzy findry inside type Z, which is the shortcut off to it, an alias,
|
|
I think, and just put in the last component, and even a piece of the last component of
|
|
the path.
|
|
And it gets me there.
|
|
Or if it can't get me, though, because it's ambiguous, it'll say, you mean this and all
|
|
that one, and so forth.
|
|
I wanted to try that one, now that you mentioned it, I remember your show.
|
|
I don't need any of these other methods, I feel.
|
|
I mean, the history is it's old, it's slugging off.
|
|
Clancy, show me.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
No, we're just talking about opportunities.
|
|
These are valid and entirely wonderful.
|
|
I use push the impop div all the time, though, because I'm in a directory, and I've got
|
|
sub-directories, so I don't want to do a change directory to those directors.
|
|
Push D will get me there.
|
|
I do the thing like set a correct simling or something in there, which is always, I always
|
|
get confused about how it makes sim links in a sub-directorie from the parent directory
|
|
or several layers above.
|
|
So I go into it, push D into it, make the sim link, then pop D out of it, and I carry
|
|
on as before.
|
|
That's, I do that a lot.
|
|
But you're not just going to CD space dash, we'll bring it back to the previous directory.
|
|
Sure, sure, sure, but push the impop div, I could be in the middle of doing the thing
|
|
and go, oh shit, I should go in that one, and I do a push D to the other one, and then
|
|
I pop D back to where I came from twice, and I'm back there.
|
|
I like the stack, the stack features of it.
|
|
I did a show on this.
|
|
I know.
|
|
I told you, you poop, food, you said, why would anybody want to use that?
|
|
Yeah, because by the time you're in the pop D directory, but you have to push D, so
|
|
you're screwed.
|
|
Oh yeah, yeah, if you get there with that, if you get me in the wrong order or anything
|
|
like that, then you definitely do do, but as a concept, I think it's a nice one.
|
|
So I've flawed that one.
|
|
I'm going to move on to our emergency show, which we are running out of, we will have
|
|
no more emergency show, by the end of this week.
|
|
How to demonstrate the power of condensing steam by microwave, and I was going, okay?
|
|
But this is actually a cool one, and I did not know that this is used in steam trains
|
|
to do the initial wind movement thing.
|
|
Neither did I.
|
|
Neither did I.
|
|
I was surprised.
|
|
I was always thought, I thought it is about pressure.
|
|
I was like, yeah, absolutely cool, more shows than steam engines.
|
|
Yeah, I've heard people mention aspects of this, because there's something to do with
|
|
the air that goes through the coal and then heats the water, as Mike was saying.
|
|
But I'd heard people mention this, I didn't actually realise what they were talking about
|
|
until I heard this, and it's amazing, yeah.
|
|
More, more, please, more.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
The following day we had the last New Year show, to which Kevin O'Brien commented, pin
|
|
story.
|
|
I love the discussion of password and pins.
|
|
I have a story about that.
|
|
My first degree is in history, so when I set up a particular pin, I took the date from
|
|
a historical event because no one would guess that.
|
|
Most a year later, I had a forehead slap moment when I realised the four digits also matched
|
|
my wife's birthday.
|
|
Oops.
|
|
Oh, gosh.
|
|
But I'm really listening to that one because I flew over the notes and I had a lot of stuff
|
|
in it that was of interest for me, and I think this one is really a nice one.
|
|
It's really worth listening to it.
|
|
They have some really nice chats in that one.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It's cool.
|
|
And the notes really help.
|
|
Where was I in this?
|
|
If you are, I mean the long shows, it really helps just orientate yourself from the whole
|
|
thing.
|
|
I haven't actually heard this one yet, because of HBR, it's okay, I can add your comments
|
|
to it so that we can cover it on them, but because of that book, you better do that
|
|
with the next four or five days.
|
|
That's looking for a tear in here, these are great.
|
|
Next one is again a French version, I guess, huh?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
The episode of Papa Manchaud Podcasts, I met with the veterinarian of the library.
|
|
You said that very well.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
Of course, Wist, don't you get to learn French and German or something?
|
|
We should, but I guess reading plus minus is everything that's left.
|
|
This was one where I had to refer to the translation text, which didn't do as good a job.
|
|
And I've noticed that it repeats the line sometimes, but sometimes that's because they've
|
|
stopped talking for a period of time, and there's music or something else.
|
|
And then it keeps repeating the same line over and over again until the start talking.
|
|
One of the, I don't know if they were a mumble or something.
|
|
One of the contributors had an echo when he spoke.
|
|
I wondered if the echo was giving Wist for a headache.
|
|
Yeah, it gave me a headache.
|
|
But I need to…
|
|
This one was quite followable because we're talking about PHP and security and stuff.
|
|
Less security, dealer PHP, I'm not criticising, please don't think I'm pulling the piss
|
|
out of your accent.
|
|
I'm making the point that it was possible to follow along, because…
|
|
There's a lot of English words in A19, that's what I'm saying.
|
|
Yeah, I've found the same.
|
|
I listened to it all the way through just because it was quite nice to hear a bit of French
|
|
again, and I'm just desperately trying to understand it, which I, you know, my learning
|
|
of French goes back a good 50 years or more, so yeah.
|
|
So the next show was another one by operator, and it was about a lightsaber customisation
|
|
with the new pixel profile things.
|
|
Listen to you guys, based on the title, what did you expect?
|
|
Zing, oh no.
|
|
I thought he was going to cut his leg off, but I think…
|
|
So I listened to it, and while he mentioned it, I would tell me if it's wrong, I mean,
|
|
I'm not an English, but he mentioned that he will put in some links where you could
|
|
look at it and what it looks like.
|
|
Now I'm not sure, did he really do that?
|
|
Is it this new pixel?
|
|
Yeah, the working working in the future feed, but they are just downloading it now for
|
|
that very reason.
|
|
Okay, then I have to look at it again.
|
|
Oh, is this thing on the wall that you put on the wall, I guess?
|
|
No, it's a lightsaber, you know, and it extends and it lights up.
|
|
It's the real thing.
|
|
But Neopixel is that a trade name for?
|
|
No, Neopixel is RGB LEDs?
|
|
Yeah, from the… I think that's from the Wattlabs, the LED with the fingernails.
|
|
Yeah, it is.
|
|
Yeah, it is.
|
|
Yeah, it is.
|
|
That's it.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
All the product, the reason I say she's the LED with the fingernails is all you could
|
|
tell, like if the product has got, you know, for scale reference, somebody's holding
|
|
it at the hand, and then she's got lovely designs on her fingernails, sometimes.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, she's amazing.
|
|
But yeah, I've actually bought Neopixel's in the past, I've got a Neopixel ring.
|
|
I still haven't found to use for it, but it's really fun to play with.
|
|
Yeah, people put them on the camera, so around the lens, so you can get a light, but
|
|
who has cameras, he says, I don't know.
|
|
So, yes.
|
|
That was a good show.
|
|
I liked it.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
It shows tend to be very pull-up chair, this is what I happen to be doing right now.
|
|
The next one was from Tatoo, on Sunday, 27th, and it's a command that you should know
|
|
for new cloud events, and I pity some of these guys who come from Windows and all of
|
|
a sudden they've got all this CLI stuff to do, and everything's a bash script, and, you
|
|
know, looking at some of the Kubernetes stuff, you just go, right, so what they're doing
|
|
is you check out from gate, and then you run a bash script, you put it into a docker container,
|
|
it pulls down via curl, it goes, and you go, it's duct taped together, but yeah, fine,
|
|
it works.
|
|
I added the show notes with links to all the things I see.
|
|
Yeah, I see that, that's very good.
|
|
Very well done, but even sometimes if you know the comments, my MP3 player was well corrupted
|
|
itself while playing an MP3 file, and I tried to, it mounted this read only, and I wanted
|
|
to change that, and then the command line is really handy, because it wrote to me, look,
|
|
I'm not going to change anything here, it is read only, and I wanted to switch it from
|
|
read only to read and write, and it said, I'm not going to do that, you can be pseudo,
|
|
you can be whatever you want, I'm not going to do that.
|
|
And finally, the DOS file system check, DOS FSCK, I had to run it through all the menus
|
|
that is coming along, and it was, thank God, finally able to fix it.
|
|
So what I want to say, not always just, it is not always just enough, but it helps
|
|
you as it gives you more information than a, would you say a graphical interface, most
|
|
probably where it was just telling you, it doesn't work.
|
|
Ah yeah, I get to point to get to point to, you get someone for at least, yeah.
|
|
So that was a good show actually, I am adding that to a little compendium of stuff for
|
|
the cloud, I've been DevOps guys at work, as a good here, use this, the other day I
|
|
give him, I give one of the guys a link to tattoos, get using post-it notes, sure, which
|
|
I actually have on my list, if somebody could do a video to associate with that, so listen
|
|
to get using post-it notes.
|
|
And as tattoo is talking, follow along with the post-it notes and just video that and we
|
|
can upload that along with the git, along with that episode post-it by tattoo.
|
|
Okay, and this is the one, and the next day was the key pass XC, CVE, which I felt wasn't
|
|
that big a deal, but how is that about that?
|
|
Well, thank God it is not really a big of a deal.
|
|
Yes, I was worried.
|
|
But on the other hand, was I really, cause, you know, in order to get access to my key
|
|
pass XC, you need to be on my machine, and I'm going to be a lot more worried than...
|
|
I agree.
|
|
Well, it's good that he had to, I mean, it was very nice, I mean, at the beginning of the
|
|
monfit holders, I basically, how safe it is, just a couple of weeks later.
|
|
Yeah, there was good service from Scuddy.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
And then the following day was my show on proving that you can learn something from
|
|
people who use Macs about the COM command, C-O-M-M, which is...
|
|
Thank you for that.
|
|
Because my file browser in KDE, I have the function to compare files.
|
|
But just lately, I had a situation where I had the files in different folders that I wanted
|
|
to compare.
|
|
But they had the same name, so I didn't want to, I was just lazy, you know.
|
|
Yeah, and I guess with this function, you can put the folder, not what you call the directory,
|
|
structure in it, and it would be able to compare it as well, even if they are not in the
|
|
same folder or not.
|
|
You can compare two text files, so you can pipe the, you know, the list of files into
|
|
text file 1 and pipe the list of files into text file 2, and then that's it's job done.
|
|
You need to sort them though, if that's the key part of this needs to be sorted.
|
|
But in that case, what you're trying to do after my experiences of the last month, you're
|
|
looking for KDeerStat3, KDIRStat3, and that will compare directories for you and files
|
|
inside them.
|
|
Check every file and tell you what files are missing from a directory, show you if they're
|
|
the same or not, if they're not the same, then you can click on them and see what the
|
|
differences are, and you can merge them as well.
|
|
Did you say KDeer or is this KDE?
|
|
Yep.
|
|
KDIRStat3, KDIRStat3.
|
|
And this is the directories' rupture to compare, it's a smidgin ugly, the UI, but if you're
|
|
in a situation where you need to do that, that's the situation you will accept ugly.
|
|
Sounds good, it's good to know, it's such a tool or really any.
|
|
Now, if you're comparing two directories with a whole goal of big media files in it,
|
|
it can take a while because it does an MD5 somewhere, something comparison.
|
|
Yeah, or I had a situation where I have an external device on USB, and I had this directorie
|
|
rupture on my computer, and I had to make sure that it is exactly the same on the other
|
|
side.
|
|
Yeah, it's good for that.
|
|
It gives you a lot of confidence, two directories are identical and you get that pop-up.
|
|
And if warm, fuzzy feeling inside.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay, the last show for people who met it this far, I applaud you and asked the question,
|
|
why didn't you record a show while you were listening to this?
|
|
You seriously could have recorded a show in the amount of time that you've wasted listening
|
|
to us.
|
|
I mean, it's not.
|
|
It doesn't look like you're saying anything important here, all this information is available.
|
|
So you're saying use the community and use it as a clock, just to time your show recording,
|
|
yes.
|
|
In fact, you've recorded a series in the amount of time we've spoken on this show.
|
|
You're not wrong.
|
|
Oh, I think you're here to be sure.
|
|
Okay, episode three is nine zero, and I see the bug has taken out next, which is probably
|
|
a good thing.
|
|
But at least now I know that we have come to the end of the shows for this month.
|
|
And this one was lessons learned by Hookah on the trip.
|
|
So that was actually, yeah, it's good to sit down and think about stuff.
|
|
What could you have done better?
|
|
Normally I go, oh, cringe, cringe.
|
|
Why did I say that?
|
|
Why did I do that?
|
|
That's my life.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I should never think of that again.
|
|
I should never think about it.
|
|
Yeah, he had a good, he made a good point there.
|
|
He said as an engineer, well, not only as an engineer in some companies, they say you
|
|
have at the end of a project, you have to do this, it's a review thing, although nobody
|
|
will ever read it.
|
|
He's very honest about it.
|
|
But then he says, just doing it, pardon me?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You know, nobody ever reads it, but yeah, I had to chuckle when he said that, but even
|
|
doing it, he says has an effect for the people involved into the project, well, for whatever,
|
|
maybe the next project they do together or not, that's a good point.
|
|
Yeah, that is a good point, actually.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
That was it for the shows.
|
|
Is there anything else we can't go through the mail list because the mail list archives
|
|
are done?
|
|
No.
|
|
There's no missing, there's no previous comments to read, and we've already put a cause of
|
|
the bug that we can't put the list on.
|
|
I don't think it was, it wasn't deliberate, obviously, but please, please, honestly, it
|
|
was not.
|
|
But we also had an AOB about stuff that we've already talked about, so I would say there's
|
|
nothing else to do, really.
|
|
Let's see, still work to the main database has been moved, static size has been written
|
|
by Ron has been used to generate the new website with a few exceptions.
|
|
Remaining direynamic features show common-centric that are provided by PHP interface, which
|
|
needs to be open-sourced.
|
|
Outstanding issues of the mail and the servers at the moment, show submissions need manual
|
|
and intervention from the janitors, and the HPR or mail list is not working at the moment.
|
|
The way in which new shows have been processed, we had to change, so containing pictures
|
|
is not just worked out properly, and we need to talk about that because, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, but I think we're closer than when I've been aware.
|
|
And the thing about it now is that we're now maintaining an asset database, so if we need
|
|
to have a different thing for the internet archive versus the HPR website versus dual
|
|
bubs, PHP or Mirror, that we can't, I prefer not to, but, and one of the things about
|
|
the other thing is I also wanted so that somebody can double-click on the index.html file
|
|
in the root, and the entire website will work at least, you know, the static parts of
|
|
it will work.
|
|
So, you know, if you click on the H for host, H and H for public radio now goes to host.
|
|
Thanks to whoever did that, there was a bug request, and they should get credit.
|
|
I can't remember who it was.
|
|
Yeah, so that should work on your local file system, ideally, if we can.
|
|
Maybe for the next community news, we should do a quick look through the events and the
|
|
issues on the repo, because the show is obviously too short as it is.
|
|
Well, yeah, yeah, we think about another, and make sure half an hour, we do, we just
|
|
round it off nicely.
|
|
I feel like some of us have gone, yes, another four-hour show from HPR, great.
|
|
I could maybe pull together a summary or something like that.
|
|
Yeah, I was hoping that the RSS feeds are a bit funky.
|
|
For me at least, I found that in Thunderbird, they don't work, they fail silently, but if
|
|
I log in somehow, then they work.
|
|
So you need to be logged in in order to get the RSS feeds, which is a bit weird, in Thunderbird
|
|
at least.
|
|
All right, I've not seen that one, but I'm not gone looking particular with me.
|
|
Yeah, and I don't want to be reminded of all the open bugs, because...
|
|
I'm so glad you did.
|
|
We should close some, I think we can close some, but we...
|
|
Yeah, I'm sorry.
|
|
I'll tell you about that.
|
|
I'm sorry, I don't trust you, Curial.
|
|
Just to say that we, there are some that probably could be closed.
|
|
And if there's things that follow on from them, then maybe it should be made into new bugs
|
|
or...
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
... or something like that.
|
|
And we also need to move them from the HPR generator stuff to the main website and
|
|
then only open them.
|
|
And maybe we're currently opening bugs and ROMs, HPR generator one, for stuff that doesn't
|
|
even have anything to do with the RSS feeds at this moment is, you know, the upload process
|
|
is all PHP, so there's nothing to do with ROMs, good work, it's my crappy bugs.
|
|
So maybe we should move the bug reporting to that, and I had hoped somebody was going
|
|
to be able to help me out with a about page, but they're not going to be able to do it
|
|
because the pay is too low.
|
|
I mean, yeah, I couldn't be low, I really couldn't.
|
|
Oh, it's a hundred times more than what I'm getting, as I said, there you go.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, and Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how
|
|
easy it really is.
|
|
Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and
|
|
our syncs.net.
|
|
On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
|
|
License.
|