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1595 lines
49 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 844
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Title: HPR0844: The Flying Handbag
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0844/hpr0844.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:28:21
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---
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What's the sound?
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Okay.
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C'mon.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Hello.
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Hi.
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We're at Dr.
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Guadalajan Beach troubles.
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This is a dick-launcher room.
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It's not a big room.
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It's not a big room.
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They can see you.
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No, it's not.
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They see you outside of that.
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It's dicking down.
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It's too much to look at.
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I did take that before, a bit like Dick and Dom.
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That's a tasty one, I'm drawing on the top.
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That is recording by my wife.
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Oh, is it?
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That's what I'll be able to show you.
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The following podcast was recorded a bar camp by Paul.
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On October the 15th 2011, ladies and gentlemen, we present the flying handbag.
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And no, we don't know what it's about either.
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Alright, what are we doing?
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Absolutely no idea.
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Let's go around first and say who's here.
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I'm Dan Lynch, hello.
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I'm Pete.
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I'm Dan.
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Another Dan.
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Wesley.
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Vice-pounder.
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Me.
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I'm Tony Hughes.
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Michael's almost known as Heed.
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Heed.
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Is that from the film?
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Do you know the film I'm talking about?
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What's the name?
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No, you do.
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What's the name?
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Mike Mayasfilm?
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It's so good content.
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You don't know the Mike Mayasfilm.
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So, I'm Mike, an axe murderer, it's cool.
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Are you know what I'm talking about?
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He's got his guy in it.
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He's got a big man.
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He's got a big Heed.
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And the last one that he came from,
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turned up to a new workplace.
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You've got a big head.
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Massive Heed.
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The Coin of Heed.
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Well get over it for like,
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you just put up with it,
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it's a bit of an average.
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Like the dad keeps giving him abuse
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because it's like he's saying,
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get me a sandwich if you can't haul ya.
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You're getting откranium?
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Oh, you can put up with it.
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Beasley is and it wouldn't rip some off a bit.
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Yeah so we're!
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So we were at Platte For Lucky and Brenda
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was in the Black Fool хозяfolk
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aa and was only at 10 we just questioned out.
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He was a vacemaker.
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are they gold and bag bar, gold?
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Yeah, they're gold and toilets?
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Heads boon.
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Gold and black tiles.
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Black tiles?
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Toilets?
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Doesn't show any stains.
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I think it's black tile woodshew stains.
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That's the experience, isn't it?
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It's an interactive item.
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I think they've got black silkshoots.
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How do you know?
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You invest here.
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Yeah, so yeah, we're here at Barcan Blackpool and I'll tell you why.
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me just like everyone go around and talk about what your favourite thing you've seen
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or done so far is. I'll kick off if you want, or if you want. I found the guy's name
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he talked very quietly, but the guy who did the Connect with Arduino and Little Mini
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Hellcock, I think quite cool, although Aaron pointed out that it looks like he's doing
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an nazi salute. Which I thought was quite interesting, but that was really cool, but
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we all sat there waiting the whole session for him to go like that and make the thing
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move. We talked for about half an hour and he couldn't really hear him. Can you do
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the action against it? Well, it's really well. It does, doesn't it?
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Can you do that? Can you raise your arm up?
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Yes, there you go. For the benefit of the listener, I'm raising my arm.
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It's raising his left arm. Yeah, that's it.
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That's it. Yeah, there you go. So what's your favourite thing you've seen so far?
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I think to be perfectly honest with you, because I'll sit in with you with the web thing.
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Oh, yeah, web development. I quite enjoyed that. And it also lights the guy that was doing
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the programming. I'm terrible with my memory.
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Alan, was it? Yeah, it had the steam with the pole.
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Yeah, I thought that was quite good. But as per usual, these sorts of things, you know,
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I just enjoyed having a chat with people because we have managed to have a chat with some new
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people that I didn't know. So that's been quite cool.
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Definitely. Right? Other dance?
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Yeah, so from my perspective, the error message is quite a fun session.
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So you might have come from obviously with words of the title, was it?
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Or in the sing club? Sing club? Yeah, it was pretty old-school stuff,
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but it's been quite funny being behind enemy lines.
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Yeah.
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Because when you point out that certain contributors, some of you may know,
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Dan works for Microsoft, so that's not me.
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We have not done something.
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I am wearing a wire to take that.
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For the record. Yeah, yeah.
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I don't quite understand why he's got all his money to pay for coffees and shit.
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He's slipping up and in the coffee.
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He's re-feeting coffees.
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See, this is where I was when you record by the toilet, so just get in there with the bar,
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just like that.
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Let's watch your favourite things over.
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And today, what I've enjoyed the most is the generosity of everyone involved.
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They've given up time, money, products, everything, just made the day of success.
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That's the shop answer, your proper thoughts.
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For us, that erred message.
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Talk to my own and not back on blackboard.
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Enjoy the erromessage.
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We're coming from a long time PC user.
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It's good to see older erromessages like Sinclair Spectrum,
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which is something everyone can experience of.
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I was always a Commodore guy.
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Yeah, I was a Commodore 64.
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Commodore 64.
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Commodore 16, I add.
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We had a ZX81, so I'm a Spectrum.
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I made a Commodore 64, and we used to go around there to play a game called Airborne Ranger.
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That was about the most exciting game.
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There was a Transformers game that I thought was amazing, and was a killer.
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Oh, there's Alexa.
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I think Nunequan had a nice presentation.
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And all she could get there was just trying to go around, hit the button, and then transform.
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It turned into a car, or a car, and I'm back into a robot.
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Oh, it's pretty cool.
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Sorry, Les.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, good.
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Sorry, so here's the toilet.
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I'm going to chat.
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Yeah, that's all right.
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How's it going?
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Because I'm going to kind of interview you a bit now.
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Because you're kind of involved in the whole organisation, so how's it going for you?
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It's gone really well.
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155 people confirmed that we're coming today.
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And from looking out from here.
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We've not been many people after that.
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We've not been many.
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How does that compare to previous years?
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One 20 last year, and about 40 to 50 years previous.
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So I think it's gone really well.
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Interesting thing for me is I was here last year.
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And although there may have been last people last year, the people here this year are different.
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They're not all the same people.
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Okay, some of the same people here.
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But there's quite a lot who are different this year, so it's almost like expanding more.
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Because if all that, if it didn't just the same group of people plus a few more, that'd be quite different.
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Even better.
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There's quite a lot of them the first time.
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Yeah, that's a lot of them.
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Brilliant.
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Yeah, I love that.
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That's my bag that is I love that.
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So new people, new faces.
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Yeah.
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But you've also seen talks that have been conducted today by children.
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Yes.
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10 or 12 of you are all loved out there.
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Do you talk on programme events?
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Of course.
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Can't say anything about somebody.
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They've got older than children.
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Mentlations.
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It's terrible.
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So what's it saying about Blackpool?
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From a true origin.
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They just said recently that Blackpool, do you see the survey?
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Blackpool's got the most expensive accommodation in the country.
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Relative to income here.
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The cost of living in Blackpool is higher in turn than anywhere else.
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I do not see even as it's castle.
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Yeah, as it's castle.
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The fire at the cannons.
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Cool. So, Tony, what's your favourite thing so far?
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Waking him up at court past seven this morning.
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Oh, that's it.
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Can we take that?
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We have to roll out a window to be the risk.
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Rock him on the door.
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Yes.
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No, I think my favourite.
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As usual, I never get to any of the talks at least.
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Because I ended up talking to so many people.
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Like you said, just talking to people.
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Networking.
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Talking to people who don't know what a bar comes about.
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Comfort people.
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Hey!
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That's it for us.
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Comfort people.
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It drives me stuck.
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Comfort people.
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I think that's that fella's helicopter again.
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He's out there going.
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He's not turning.
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No, he's not turning.
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I'm turning off.
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That was really cool.
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Are you doing that?
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Thank you very much.
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That was quite funny.
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Anyway, that helicopter, Sorky, is still going.
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I know that's what he's saying.
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So, talking to you, pretty cool.
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Yeah.
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Me, pretty?
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Yeah.
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It's time.
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Actually, I didn't know you were about that.
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You can't have at least you.
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I didn't know you were about that.
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You can't have at least you.
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I think it's for the trackways.
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It's a lot of people.
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A lot of people.
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Yeah.
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Sorky, you know, we've had sort of cut into your time.
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As I said earlier, you know,
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there's just that many people there.
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You know, I try to do talks and meet people,
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and Matt, who you all know, I mean,
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he didn't even get to see a single talk,
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because he spent all his time socializing.
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Socializing.
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Socializing.
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Yeah, networking.
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Yeah, networking.
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And like you say,
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and the thing he's about,
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like, OK, especially, is, you know, there's,
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there's only so much time.
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And if you spend half an hour talking to that person
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and now I'm talking to this one,
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you're bound to be somebody.
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So yeah, it's a real shame.
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So yeah, I'm glad to meet you.
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Yeah.
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The other thing.
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Ubuntu 1110.
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Oh, yes.
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Just successfully installed it on my ASA response.
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Right.
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It'll make it job.
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Early impressions.
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Early impressions.
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Actually, a bit more impressed than 11.4.
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Because it wasn't quite as tweaked,
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but it seems to be all right in the moment.
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The fact that Unity actually works now.
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Yeah.
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It does look improved.
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Yeah.
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John, the nice guy was showing me on his,
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he's got only laptop.
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Yeah.
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1110.
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And he was showing me the new changes to Unity.
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And it does look good,
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but I still can't stand that universal menu.
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That's the only thing I really, really don't like about Unity,
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so that's stupid.
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That's what I'm thinking.
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That's things.
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I'm just installed on a computer for a friend.
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And basically, I've turned the unit off
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for the boom back on the normal desktop.
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That's the first time I wouldn't use that.
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And it's in the case of, well, keep them on note,
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and at least they've got some sort of...
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Unfortunately, 1110.
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You have not got that option.
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No, you're not really.
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No, no, no.
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You've got it by default.
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Yeah.
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No, no, no.
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So you're going to be able to...
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I'm going to be able to...
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I'm going to be able to...
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Using the bungee, sorry.
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Using the bungee or extra bungee.
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What's under the other...
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That's kind of a bungee doing in a tablet space, then, for...
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Well, basically, the Unity interface will be what...
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Yeah, there's going to be for tablets.
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It will be going on touch, then.
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Yeah.
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So what do you have, you've got any OEM providers
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or that are going to be signed up for...
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Well, you really just get information now.
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I haven't personally got any...
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No, I've not.
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Just like...
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Yeah, now this...
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You're not changing it, don't you?
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Yeah, well, canonical...
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The adult of it comes with a hand.
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Yeah, I bought a Dell laptop with a bungee on it.
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My Dell mini-10 came with a bungee on it, yeah.
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But I bought it specifically that model from Dell
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because it came with a bungee,
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because I wanted to support the whole idea of it.
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I bought it because it was cheap.
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There you go.
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And then you've got a real zid in bed.
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You've got a real zid in bed.
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That's not real zid in bed.
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Sounds healthy.
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All right, I'll have that.
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In that case, we should be selling loads, if people...
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I don't...
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But the trouble is, we see that...
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I mean, you've got a good thing there.
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I mean, that is our mindset.
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That's not a Windows user's mindset.
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A Windows user's mindset.
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No, I mean, as soft as this.
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Well, as soft as it says, I don't think a Windows user
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would look at an Ubuntu machine and go,
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I can wipe that and stick Windows on.
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Yeah.
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Because we all know that people have got licenses at home
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and whatever, and they can't do it.
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And yet, we, on the flip side of that,
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we're quite happy to do it.
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We'll go, well, I've gone ahead, Windows 7 Starter thing.
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And I'll wipe that and I'll put Ubuntu on over there.
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Yeah, but you've got in the average person in the street
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going to a computer store.
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We're going to want an operating system on there.
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And what's unfortunate with Windows, is that enough?
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I think that probably in computer stores,
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I'll give you an example of PC world.
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They're incentivized as a business to sell.
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Yeah, so you...
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Actually, I'll wipe up on that.
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Windows, you know...
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There's no one there in Ubuntu that's saying...
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Yeah, there's Ubuntu, you know?
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Yes.
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Where it's dangerous, girls?
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Yeah, that's another 20% of that.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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And that's where I'm going to sell.
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Yeah, yeah.
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I'm not showing it.
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I mean, you know, I...
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I never hide that at all.
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I mean, that's always a bottom line.
|
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But we're at the same level.
|
||
But you've got in the PC world,
|
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they're going to try and sell you the most expensive PC kit.
|
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God, yeah.
|
||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||
Especially the Uncommissioned.
|
||
What are you going to use it for?
|
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You're going to use it for serving the weapon,
|
||
doing a bit of photo, I'd say.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And so you want a little just to...
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Oh, oh, oh.
|
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Just to just to quickly cut, you know.
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I mean, Dan and I,
|
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and that's Dan from Microsoft today.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
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Microsoft.
|
||
Microsoft.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, we've had this conversation,
|
||
and I'm serious, and I think I've said this before,
|
||
it is an absolutely brilliant game to play.
|
||
Going to PC world.
|
||
Stan next to one of the South people,
|
||
but do not say a word.
|
||
You spoil it.
|
||
If you say anything,
|
||
you stand there and listen.
|
||
You will laugh all afternoon.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
But then you've got a bite of tongue to you.
|
||
Well, you've got a bite of tongue to put to you.
|
||
You've got a bite of tongue to put to you.
|
||
You've got a bite of tongue to put to you.
|
||
You've got a bite of tongue to you.
|
||
It was really fun because I was speaking to Dan last weekend,
|
||
and he said, God, he said,
|
||
I won't say what he did,
|
||
but he went into PC world.
|
||
And he said, you know how he said,
|
||
I was listening to him, you're right.
|
||
And I said, I know, I said,
|
||
it's great into time,
|
||
and to just stand there and listen.
|
||
So they sell to me.
|
||
After the session set,
|
||
they tell people it's unbelievable.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And she tells the person,
|
||
got more compute experience in that sense.
|
||
I'm sure I'm going to set something up.
|
||
So you've got to listen to a bite of tongue to them.
|
||
You turn it on.
|
||
You do what you need to do.
|
||
You turn it on.
|
||
But how he said that, you see,
|
||
I mean, I'm just as good as that.
|
||
So, because that's what I do.
|
||
But I went into, like,
|
||
he said, well, you're right there.
|
||
Oops.
|
||
And a couple of years ago it was.
|
||
And I was looking for a turn to cartridge
|
||
for the laser printer.
|
||
And a little bit of the laser.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And I couldn't see him.
|
||
So I went up to one of the assistants.
|
||
And she told me to the end,
|
||
you had to cartridge it.
|
||
I'd specifically said,
|
||
have you got to turn to cartridge it?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And she told me to the end,
|
||
get cartridge it.
|
||
I bought an EPC a couple of years ago
|
||
from PC world.
|
||
And as we were buying it,
|
||
it's this couple talking about the EPCs next to me.
|
||
And salesman goes,
|
||
oh yeah, yeah.
|
||
Those EPCs,
|
||
they were on some of them called
|
||
linux.
|
||
You can't get word on that.
|
||
Oh, right.
|
||
When you go and jump on his head,
|
||
you go, funny girl.
|
||
Right.
|
||
How bloody can't it send in?
|
||
Oh, I want to send in an email.
|
||
We can use Linux.
|
||
Do you mean they can't sell you word for that?
|
||
No.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Well, that's what it means.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, you're coming on to another tangent there.
|
||
I mean, what do a lot of shooters need?
|
||
They don't need a lot really.
|
||
There's something to send me now.
|
||
A bit of a bit of writing.
|
||
And that's it, really.
|
||
Look at the Chrome box.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
That's all online.
|
||
You can do whatever you want to.
|
||
That's what I was told.
|
||
So, it's from a Ubuntu.
|
||
It's like a Ubuntu.
|
||
I think it runs Chrome.
|
||
It's like a full screen, doesn't it?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Let's just show it to a 600.
|
||
You've got a new Kindle.
|
||
Have you not read the review of one of the guys
|
||
better than he's at it?
|
||
And he's actually going to leave you a bit.
|
||
How he found it?
|
||
And stuff like that.
|
||
No, I've not read that.
|
||
It's a scratch,
|
||
because you said he got it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
You've got to send it out to him.
|
||
Is it right?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Use it for a couple weeks.
|
||
Maybe that's also going to get usage.
|
||
He says.
|
||
Normally, you have pre-locked on what you can do.
|
||
But these ones.
|
||
And if the button is switched.
|
||
But if you develop a mode.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And you can do what you want with it.
|
||
He says, it was awesome.
|
||
You've got used to working with it.
|
||
So, one night when his internet went down.
|
||
And all sort of.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
You've got to do it here.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
He's like, well.
|
||
He says.
|
||
Hardware.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
If you're a Google user, you know,
|
||
heavily use Gmail and the docs and stuff.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Then it's a great tool for you.
|
||
And then the internet goes down your book.
|
||
Yeah, your book.
|
||
Some things on it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I thought Chrome OS had given you the ability to save stuff
|
||
to hard drive.
|
||
If you wanted to.
|
||
I would hope so.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
You can't.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
If you wanted to.
|
||
I would hope so.
|
||
You can't.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I thought I'd heard that.
|
||
A friend of mine used one recently, the Chromebook,
|
||
because they've got one in the Doze Liverpool office,
|
||
because there's one of the Google employees there.
|
||
And this is Larry.
|
||
He said to me, I was borrowing his laptop or something
|
||
to do a thing that I needed to run a project or something.
|
||
And I said to him, well, I've got a spare laptop here
|
||
if you need to use it.
|
||
And he said, oh, no, it's OK.
|
||
We've got a Chromebook in the office.
|
||
I'll work on that.
|
||
And then about an hour later, I get a phone call.
|
||
Right.
|
||
There's Chromebook shite.
|
||
Can I have that?
|
||
That's right.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
All right.
|
||
Well, I'll do Google that going for the main target
|
||
is the average person.
|
||
That's what's going on.
|
||
It's fine as a concern.
|
||
It's a low-cap Facebook.
|
||
Well, they're also going into enterprise market as well.
|
||
They're trying to get skills and businesses.
|
||
You said, OK.
|
||
It was a month.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Well, three-year contracts.
|
||
But you get full hybrid support on all the things.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And schools will get $20.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So in that environment, then, yeah.
|
||
Because in the contract, you're on the network that way.
|
||
And people are not the same.
|
||
True.
|
||
Other than that, it's going to be big.
|
||
Well, they've got the cloud as well, Google, too.
|
||
As you say, in PC World, Apple or Microsoft or whatever,
|
||
we'll give the sales money.
|
||
I think Google's got the money to say,
|
||
you sell some Chromebooks.
|
||
I'll give you a copy.
|
||
One of my customers, do you know how to use that?
|
||
Right.
|
||
I think they've got users.
|
||
Gmail users.
|
||
Remain nameless.
|
||
Google apps, is it?
|
||
Or just Gmail.
|
||
They use Gmail, but they use Google app.
|
||
It's a bit of a convoluted kind of process.
|
||
They're good going on in there.
|
||
Look at the SharePoint Google sites.
|
||
Right.
|
||
Office 2010 and Google apps.
|
||
It's a bit of a mixed bag, really.
|
||
And one thing I've learned with them is Google.
|
||
As much as I've met it, they're not really the enterprise
|
||
ready organization they say they are.
|
||
Because they've not got the support to back that all of that stuff up.
|
||
And I'll give you an example.
|
||
I was talking with Pete.
|
||
They need Gmail to access their, sorry,
|
||
they need Chrome to access their Gmail offline.
|
||
The functionality.
|
||
And they was told.
|
||
Now, I couldn't find this anywhere on the internet because I looked.
|
||
But they were told that they had to be on the latest stable release
|
||
of Chrome to be supported.
|
||
Right.
|
||
Now, they have a release every six weeks, don't they?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So what that means now is they've got a management of all then pushing Chrome
|
||
out of all of their devices every six weeks
|
||
to stay in supported,
|
||
the supportability lifecycle.
|
||
And that was that to them.
|
||
Not very difficult to digest, you know.
|
||
A lot of enterprises said the same about Firefox, aren't they?
|
||
Right.
|
||
We're doing that.
|
||
We're doing that.
|
||
We're doing that.
|
||
We're doing that.
|
||
We're doing that.
|
||
That's great for the consumer market to say, yeah, every six weeks,
|
||
you're getting the features.
|
||
We're there for the enterprise.
|
||
But what one said about the product?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
But they were going to actually bring that.
|
||
Yeah. The ones who've changed it to monthly release.
|
||
That's quite impossible.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, we discussed that on CDTRS there.
|
||
I mean, that's exactly what we discussed on our last episode
|
||
and the fact that the release seems to be coming more and more
|
||
and more regular, which I'm totally against.
|
||
I mean, I didn't explain myself well enough on that.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, actually, it's a rolling update.
|
||
Yeah. Well, this is what I said.
|
||
Well, I should have really done.
|
||
I sort of blurred the lines really between releases and updates,
|
||
which I shouldn't have done, because what I was saying,
|
||
really, I think you should be having six already.
|
||
I mean, even a 12 month release on the device.
|
||
Yeah, I so.
|
||
Properly.
|
||
But you've got your normal updates coming out.
|
||
Sorry.
|
||
Oh, I'm going to say service pack.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Every 12 months is the latest thing.
|
||
Oh, correct.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So short of that time.
|
||
Or we go the other way, and we just go to a rolling release,
|
||
which, but then again, this wouldn't,
|
||
then you would have a problem, most of these admins
|
||
in a business environment will probably have a,
|
||
in a sense, a problem with that,
|
||
because they'd have to basically run two servers.
|
||
They'd have to run a production server and a testing server.
|
||
Well, I've been doing it.
|
||
I mean, three or four environments.
|
||
Most of the SMEs don't, man.
|
||
But, you know, I'm struggling to get my main strategy.
|
||
Most of the SMEs are buying a server,
|
||
and they're going to have two.
|
||
I mean, we are, we work, we are an interact.
|
||
I mean, I've sort of semi-discussed it with you down,
|
||
but like, we're finding lots of them there,
|
||
are going to have to virtualize that,
|
||
actually, simply because it's a cost save.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
But the ones to be NHSN,
|
||
almost, they want a system that can be installed
|
||
and stay on there for four or five years.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's a mean to them.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Because they don't want all that.
|
||
They're coming around every single year.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
There's lots of good other bad contracts.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
All government.
|
||
Come on in.
|
||
Instead of sitting.
|
||
You're going, you will have a minimum spot for this.
|
||
Anything that they want that you do and want,
|
||
but you've got a minimum spot this.
|
||
I want to be NHSN in 2005.
|
||
And then we still running Windows 2000.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
That does surprise me.
|
||
No, but they're winning.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
The only thing I want to point out is that
|
||
they're growing a business application.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And it's going to be supportable on different platforms.
|
||
I know you've got a lot of internet.
|
||
It's an instant call back for everything else.
|
||
86, until next 16.
|
||
Even Microsoft want to now buy that.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's still pushed.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's that much infrastructure built on that.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
The kind of thing.
|
||
It costs them too much to be right.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
An XP as well.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, that will go in 2014.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
We need to go into that side, I can see.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
We need to go into it, if you'd like.
|
||
We need to go into that side.
|
||
It's certainly something important.
|
||
On one big roll.
|
||
And then some stuff.
|
||
That's very important.
|
||
What would you do?
|
||
It's definitely important.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Of the support, anyway.
|
||
One big open site, yes.
|
||
There was remind of our Facebook.
|
||
Well.
|
||
It was kind of clever.
|
||
Well, definitely.
|
||
But from a few Para etwas,
|
||
they mean what does it do show to you now?
|
||
Okay.
|
||
The guy said to me, he said he's definitely got XP on it, isn't it?
|
||
No, I mean, yeah, anyway, because I want X7 shit.
|
||
No, he's definitely got XP on it, isn't it?
|
||
So I mean, I'm still selling now in 2011.
|
||
I'm still selling Baishunis and laptops with XP product.
|
||
Yeah, I think people are using it.
|
||
Linux has started to learn from it.
|
||
Maybe the ordinary user doesn't want to change it.
|
||
Yeah, most people have a good point.
|
||
That's a really valid point.
|
||
Maybe it's on this point of view now.
|
||
All the current people who are using XP now
|
||
is what they've got time and school.
|
||
So that's what we know now.
|
||
So now Windows 7 and 8 get into the school,
|
||
which I've got the issues with myself.
|
||
That them kids are learning that.
|
||
My time there in the workforce.
|
||
That'll be.
|
||
Oh, Windows 8.
|
||
What you see, there's two valid points there.
|
||
I mean, just to explain on what you've just said there,
|
||
I mean, that's quite a valid point in the sense that,
|
||
maybe is that something that should be looked at of just having
|
||
a stable release and concentrating on date
|
||
and what have you for it,
|
||
rather than keep messing around every six or 12 months.
|
||
Would it be a valid course to say I don't know?
|
||
And you're quite right as well.
|
||
We've, I mean, I know some schools do,
|
||
but not a lot of schools teach Linux.
|
||
But there's another thing.
|
||
Should, yeah.
|
||
For example, my nephew is being given the time
|
||
so forth he's going to be on the next year,
|
||
and he's from a case of our institution, Microsoft Word.
|
||
Right.
|
||
That's the 19th.
|
||
Yeah, what is it?
|
||
Why does it?
|
||
That's the National Curriculum.
|
||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||
Why does he need to know Microsoft Word at 7 when he can be
|
||
introducing a word processor?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Let's just, let me text editor as well.
|
||
So, you know, I think once you get the basis of the word
|
||
processor, you know, whether it been word or the
|
||
lever office or whether it be whatever,
|
||
he can make his own mind.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's got to be about principles and the principles of using it
|
||
rather than the actual specific.
|
||
This is how you use word, whatever.
|
||
I think the problem is air education system,
|
||
certainly as far as I'm concerned here in the UK,
|
||
to a certain extent, if you hear me out,
|
||
that they should have turned out robots.
|
||
And what I mean by that is they will go,
|
||
there you go, there's a Windows and Box,
|
||
and this is Microsoft Office.
|
||
So, that's how you use word,
|
||
and that's how you use Excel.
|
||
So, that robot can leave the factory
|
||
and can go into an employment environment and use that product.
|
||
But that's what the university is saying at the moment,
|
||
when they get students come in to do computer science
|
||
and to do IT,
|
||
that they don't, all they know is Microsoft.
|
||
Correct.
|
||
They don't know a broad range of technology
|
||
and I remember my girls at primary school going in
|
||
down to sleep, sleep, and down to sleep to school.
|
||
And going in and one of the teachers there sort of going,
|
||
oh my god, this new thing keeps school out in the office
|
||
and the girls weren't even using that for years.
|
||
And he was like, oh, what?
|
||
And of course, some others were like, what's this?
|
||
And they did, I mean, I've been in a couple of cities
|
||
and going to cities.
|
||
No, I can't see a problem why they can't.
|
||
I do have work, I can't understand why schools can't
|
||
do stuff.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Expertise as well.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
There's plenty of expertise on the market.
|
||
You know, when we go home,
|
||
it's a school, if it even has IT support,
|
||
a lot of it, push it out.
|
||
But does it's going to have one to people?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So if you're saying, well, okay, I need a Windows
|
||
and a Microsoft expert boss, I'll need someone
|
||
who's savvy with Linux Unix, whatever.
|
||
You know, it's a very difficult kind of position
|
||
to fill in the skills, but exactly.
|
||
Exactly.
|
||
So there won't, though, they'll always stick
|
||
to the cost of effective.
|
||
And then on the pay licence.
|
||
He's all over the world.
|
||
I can't just subsidise quite heavily.
|
||
I'll always pay.
|
||
I can't make those things.
|
||
Go to hell and go to hell and go to hell and go to hell.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Just agree with what it's saying.
|
||
That's it.
|
||
Just have fun with the source.
|
||
That's it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's a, yeah, it's going to be a...
|
||
You got to be honest, I see how we know it.
|
||
I mean, I don't know if any of you,
|
||
I've been done certainly.
|
||
But I don't know if any of you guys saw,
|
||
post-laced late last night on G+, and apparently,
|
||
Leigh Roberts now is going to be compatible
|
||
on Android, Mac.
|
||
Oh yeah, the cross-buck out of front.
|
||
Oh, on Android as well, that'd be good.
|
||
Now that is something that that promotes.
|
||
And we all know that Pete's got funny views on open sales
|
||
and then it's and then winders have got nice, whatever.
|
||
But I promote cross-bucketability in the sense
|
||
that I take the view
|
||
that I don't see that you require any more of a skill set
|
||
to put Firefox on a Windows box than having IE9.
|
||
You don't require any more of such a skill set
|
||
to have Leigh Roberts on there as you've got open office.
|
||
So I take a sort of almost like a passive view of it.
|
||
I don't, I'm not, I would like to see a Linux box in any outro,
|
||
but I'm quite happy to take the passive path
|
||
and do a creepy scenario.
|
||
But I've always said, I don't want to see Microsoft go anyway.
|
||
Yeah, never ever.
|
||
But I think that really choice is what it's all about.
|
||
Yeah, that was the old choice.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Projects, philosophy, weren't they?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
If you're not going to get people to change platform,
|
||
at least if you choice, I think as well.
|
||
I listen to a podcast recently of Windows on, I mean, obviously.
|
||
And it did a really nice tribute to Steve Jobs
|
||
and for the record, I mean, all Microsoft offices
|
||
had their Microsoft, like, half-max,
|
||
eight of them all week worldwide.
|
||
Respecting the one thing Steve Jobs said.
|
||
Yeah, one thing that Steve Jobs says,
|
||
and I thought it was quite admirable, he says,
|
||
happened this was years ago before I parted on Apple's releases,
|
||
one from the notion that Apple must go their head is bruised
|
||
to succeed Microsoft has to lose.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
They need to go away from that notion
|
||
and to be fair to them, you know, they look where they are.
|
||
But Microsoft bailed Apple out at one time.
|
||
A deep ill gate, such a poor plan.
|
||
In 1990s, you needed the competition there.
|
||
Yeah, well, you know, it's various views of them.
|
||
But we all do, but I've always remembered that anyway,
|
||
as far as I'm concerned, we need competition
|
||
because honestly, you know, you will get bad code
|
||
as coming in, slopping us.
|
||
We will have nothing to bench,
|
||
I mean, I've said this before,
|
||
so I'm just going over all ground again,
|
||
but we'll have nothing to benchmark against them.
|
||
That's what I always push for.
|
||
And I don't care what Microsoft does or mech does
|
||
or whatever you're doing, it seems good, right?
|
||
If you look at any monopoly,
|
||
they usually turn out to be chite in the end,
|
||
you know, the quality goes down.
|
||
Oh, yeah.
|
||
I mean, I'm talking about, you look at like BT
|
||
and people like that.
|
||
I mean, how many of us have had a angry kind of confrontation
|
||
with BT over them being shit, doesn't it?
|
||
And the post office and stuff like that.
|
||
What's that recently?
|
||
You need competition.
|
||
On a failure and then time network went down.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, the car to the average.
|
||
The average in us was that.
|
||
I mean, area because it's that.
|
||
A little fire in, I think it was solio.
|
||
Mm-hmm.
|
||
And half of the UK went down.
|
||
Was it half?
|
||
I think I had 30%.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Well, it was nearly half, nearly half.
|
||
But what I find interesting about that,
|
||
going up a slightly off the piece, supposedly,
|
||
email was invented in the event of a nuclear war,
|
||
so that we could still have a way to communicate.
|
||
But we have one small fire in solio and half.
|
||
It comes to a risk.
|
||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||
If you got a network designed for free,
|
||
then yeah, it could root around the problem.
|
||
Obviously, they've messed up somewhere in the design.
|
||
I think it's just, you know what?
|
||
Let's be frank.
|
||
I mean, you know what I'm saying, success is clear.
|
||
Obviously, we've been 95 and 99.
|
||
And I do take the position for granted.
|
||
You know, you really do.
|
||
And that's why I think, you know,
|
||
we're just slightly really spoken in.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I mean, he was playing very, very, very good.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And this is just a clear one.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
As I say, I mean, that, you know,
|
||
just to re-retro at the point,
|
||
I just, I cannot understand why he's a skulls,
|
||
universities or whatever.
|
||
Or not at least in stalling alternative browsers
|
||
and in stalling packages.
|
||
You've never seen those three?
|
||
To me that's a big trick.
|
||
I'm happy with that.
|
||
It can't be easy.
|
||
My ability to talk to them.
|
||
If you're actually on a computer that ordinary students could access.
|
||
It was more in the labs.
|
||
Yes, yeah.
|
||
Because if you got in a school,
|
||
where you've also got internet explorer and Firefox thing,
|
||
that's two browsers you've got control,
|
||
where at least if you're on the internet explorer,
|
||
and if you lock that down,
|
||
there's some little diamonds going and doing stuff.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Most of the labs run through a proxy anyway.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
You know.
|
||
But I mean, to me,
|
||
that's my happy victory.
|
||
I know others would like to see.
|
||
They'd like to see news reports like,
|
||
yeah, I don't know.
|
||
The Italian government has taken on 800,000 new bunch of boxes
|
||
for the police folks.
|
||
Well, yeah, this code.
|
||
But our more interesting if you turn around and say it's like,
|
||
yeah, they've decided to use a little bit of a profits.
|
||
I mean, a little bit of profits or something.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Because, you know, I think,
|
||
I think that's the solution.
|
||
That's the solution.
|
||
The solution.
|
||
I think.
|
||
Oh, Joe.
|
||
You're not sounding now, are you?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
One careful owner.
|
||
The one careful owner.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I would have been used.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Grazie.
|
||
I've got a question.
|
||
Go and max relief roughies in all the roughies.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
What did, you know, be the time for the open office brand
|
||
to be allowed to be that to die off?
|
||
So everyone sees the monthly roughies now,
|
||
and you've just mentioned the area one.
|
||
Yes.
|
||
It's going to cost platforms.
|
||
But what you've got to remember there, it is that,
|
||
to a certain extent, you're talking about two separate markets
|
||
because obviously, open office now is going into the,
|
||
for a little bit, the paid format, isn't it?
|
||
And labour is still being used by our own source.
|
||
I would love to see labour office become the dominant product.
|
||
But you've got to remember that obviously,
|
||
open office has got the backing of some.
|
||
So...
|
||
Would it actually be a bit awful?
|
||
Oracle.
|
||
Sorry, Oracle.
|
||
Not Oracle.
|
||
Maybe that is what we were talking about.
|
||
Oracle.
|
||
Oracle.
|
||
Oracle.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Oracle has said the novel to us.
|
||
Yes, it is.
|
||
Oracle's not at an office.
|
||
But it should be completely.
|
||
But open office did have a commercial round.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It used to have the,
|
||
a whole star office.
|
||
The star office.
|
||
Our office is a good product, you know.
|
||
I used that.
|
||
I used that.
|
||
Did I lose it?
|
||
I liked it time.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Ducky time, yeah.
|
||
We're not supposed to hate it.
|
||
No.
|
||
I think, um, I mean...
|
||
I was there.
|
||
We were out there.
|
||
We were out there.
|
||
I was there.
|
||
I used that star office.
|
||
That's coming back to our conversation.
|
||
I used to be a rubbish.
|
||
I remember we used key balls and bolts.
|
||
I remember when we...
|
||
We used key balls and bolts.
|
||
I remember Star Office.
|
||
I remember it.
|
||
But I think the thing now is,
|
||
I was quite annoyed when...
|
||
Not annoyed, that's a bit of a strong word.
|
||
But I was quite, you know,
|
||
upset when they forked open office and made lever office
|
||
just from a point of view
|
||
that we were just getting to the point where
|
||
some of the general public knew what open office was
|
||
and then we were going to change the name.
|
||
And now nobody's got it.
|
||
We've gone back to square one.
|
||
And now we've got to go and tell everyone what lever it is.
|
||
That seems to be the rules of the game, though.
|
||
Yeah, but...
|
||
The kind of one outside of the non-experiency says,
|
||
oh, I need to get a free office program.
|
||
Open office.
|
||
Yeah, they don't still do.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
But it's taken 10 years to get to the point where people know
|
||
what open office is and go,
|
||
you've got open office.
|
||
So it's been easy on you.
|
||
But what about the tarot?
|
||
She's good, perhaps.
|
||
Yeah, well, that's it.
|
||
Yeah, I like that.
|
||
That's what you end up.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's forked off of this for wine.
|
||
Yeah, it just seems good.
|
||
The weekend father, right?
|
||
He said, right.
|
||
He said, uh, it does seem like you've got a copy of
|
||
Office Surrounder, yeah.
|
||
That's a...
|
||
No, I haven't, but why?
|
||
He said, basically, I'm trying to do something,
|
||
but a drinking club is part of.
|
||
A drinking club?
|
||
Yeah, it sounds like a good club.
|
||
That's a good club.
|
||
That's a good club.
|
||
All right.
|
||
He said, well, it's...
|
||
No, the password.
|
||
The office is being out of giving.
|
||
It's not working no more.
|
||
So it's a right.
|
||
So basically, you have a demo version,
|
||
and obviously he's running out.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So you've got a copy of it.
|
||
No.
|
||
But maybe it's this lever office.
|
||
It's pretty much the same from your point of view.
|
||
Go and install it.
|
||
On that week, we're going out.
|
||
He came down over there yesterday.
|
||
It's been awesome.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's free.
|
||
Yeah, it's free.
|
||
But I approve of you, Dan Lynch.
|
||
You know, that's a valid point.
|
||
It's such a valid point.
|
||
Yeah, I got really upset when that happened.
|
||
But from another point of view, I found out since...
|
||
I'm not involved in the lever office development
|
||
or open office development.
|
||
But I found out that...
|
||
So, although it was under the CCDL
|
||
and it was open source and the rest of it,
|
||
Sun still exerted quite a strong influence over open office
|
||
and a lot of the developers were frustrated.
|
||
The ones who didn't work for Sun were frustrated
|
||
because they couldn't get things done.
|
||
Because Sun would kind of find ways of saying no.
|
||
You know, if they didn't like what they were doing.
|
||
And now, lever office is kind of accelerating in development
|
||
because there isn't a big company going...
|
||
No.
|
||
Yeah, it's actually a true kind of open project.
|
||
But to hopefully to redress what you were saying about
|
||
is taking ten years for open office to get to the fore.
|
||
Maybe with the new ability of lever office being on Android
|
||
and what you...
|
||
Maybe that...
|
||
Because we all know that there's explosion of Android answers.
|
||
This is huge.
|
||
So maybe it'll only take five years.
|
||
Maybe.
|
||
Maybe not even that.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
At a certain point, no.
|
||
Where does it become a problem for Google?
|
||
That they're trying to push Google Docs and all these other things.
|
||
And they're going to get to a point where they go hang on.
|
||
We don't want this lever office stuff.
|
||
Because that's competing with our product.
|
||
Well, I've been thinking about that myself in actual fact.
|
||
I mean, with the greatest wooden world,
|
||
how much longer is Google going to be prepared to have
|
||
far for these apps?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
That's true.
|
||
Because there's loads of apps now.
|
||
I mean, it's just going to compete for their business.
|
||
And it's all very well to wave the community flag
|
||
and compete.
|
||
Just put both hands up and did the little finger explanation.
|
||
That's a bit of a podcast.
|
||
But it's all very well to have this community attitude.
|
||
But there is a bottom line to be met.
|
||
And the bottom line is, well, you know,
|
||
we've got a free application that's basing.
|
||
It's doing the same with the application that we want to charge for.
|
||
And we've got the power to do it.
|
||
So let's kill that out.
|
||
Is that a train set?
|
||
Yeah, it's that train.
|
||
Correct.
|
||
I mean, I like that set.
|
||
I like that set.
|
||
It's that train set.
|
||
We'll play over here.
|
||
We like it.
|
||
How are we doing for time?
|
||
Sometimes.
|
||
Not a problem for battery life is.
|
||
Okay.
|
||
Well, this one's going to die as well.
|
||
So very quickly.
|
||
I've got a question for everyone.
|
||
I have quite an interesting experience, isn't it?
|
||
We're talking about office sweeps.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
We're talking about office sweeps.
|
||
Does anybody know what a dot pages file is?
|
||
A dot pages extension?
|
||
Oh, no.
|
||
Yes, that's it.
|
||
Is that a smacking?
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
There you go.
|
||
I didn't know that.
|
||
I was writing an article for some publication.
|
||
And I sent it to them.
|
||
And they sent it back.
|
||
I sent it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I'm going like.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
It's like.
|
||
I'm going like.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I'm going like.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I'm going like.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So yeah.
|
||
I was writing an article for this editor.
|
||
That's got that.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And I sent it to her.
|
||
And I sent it in.
|
||
I converted it to dock dock.
|
||
Because I knew if I sent it to her, no.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
She'd go, what the hell is this?
|
||
But I wrote it.
|
||
You know, we can offer a sort of labor officer to say.
|
||
And I sent it to her.
|
||
And then she sent it back to me.
|
||
And said, I've made some amendments.
|
||
And there was this file attached to court with so and so dock pages.
|
||
And it wasn't opening Google Docs, which I found interesting.
|
||
Oh, it was opening Google Docs.
|
||
But it wouldn't be exported to any other format.
|
||
All right.
|
||
I got it downloaded.
|
||
It opened it in open office.
|
||
Sorry, labor officer.
|
||
Keep it in there.
|
||
So yeah.
|
||
It goes back to the branding.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And I can't.
|
||
That had trouble with it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And I thought to myself, why?
|
||
You know, after all these years of like before, against Microsoft,
|
||
and we don't want a different thing, we want a standard format.
|
||
Are we letting Apple get away with doing all this as well?
|
||
Well, this is it.
|
||
I mean, that's, I mean, you know, you know, my feelings.
|
||
And it's, you know, it's like, isn't it?
|
||
I mean, it's easy target.
|
||
It's Microsoft really.
|
||
But as I've said, I've said, I've said, oh, it is as well.
|
||
You know, there's this Mac.
|
||
And it's good.
|
||
Well, I mean, you know, Google's not a nice company.
|
||
No.
|
||
No, no, no.
|
||
They're not sweet.
|
||
It's all very well.
|
||
They're not.
|
||
They'll be able.
|
||
Well.
|
||
That's me and you, bullet-through, I don't know.
|
||
You've come for the interview.
|
||
I'm sorry.
|
||
Come here.
|
||
It's open and can't do.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
So.
|
||
You've got to leave the literature.
|
||
Well, if you did a recording of Blackpork, you could just play it back to you.
|
||
You know.
|
||
I mean, don't be evil.
|
||
Or don't get caught.
|
||
But yeah.
|
||
Well, that's the, yeah.
|
||
So, you know, I mean, I see, I see very,
|
||
like you so.
|
||
Very few complaints about Apple formats.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Well, something else I've noticed is, you know, the EU brought in this law that all new phones
|
||
are to have a microSD slot on them.
|
||
Oh, for charges.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
I saw a thing being to get rid of all the different charges.
|
||
Yeah, which is fantastic.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
Which phone hasn't.
|
||
The iPhone.
|
||
And they're just allowed to get away with it.
|
||
Yeah.
|
||
And nobody's challenging them.
|
||
Because I can now move to wireless charging.
|
||
I don't think that's what I've been.
|
||
I don't think that's what I've been.
|
||
I don't think you have to do it.
|
||
Really?
|
||
No.
|
||
I think they can let them go.
|
||
No, they can.
|
||
Because they've got iPhones and they can do this.
|
||
I'm saying you will have it.
|
||
It's just a good life time.
|
||
And everyone's gone fine.
|
||
Hmm.
|
||
What's hard because it makes sense.
|
||
So I think the basic point here is standards are good.
|
||
I think whatever platform you use.
|
||
It would be saying, be at Windows, Mac, Linux, I don't know if I can be a Steve.
|
||
Whatever you want.
|
||
Having some kind of standards where I can send you a file and you know what it is,
|
||
and your programs could be created.
|
||
Yeah, it's the most important thing
|
||
It's perhaps that tribal thing then everyone's going to go well my tribe doesn't want to do it
|
||
I want to do it this way. Yeah, but you can't oh
|
||
I mean, you know, we have I mean we have standards in place for
|
||
For most things where you you know for the where yeah, whatever. I mean, you know to be honest with me, but he
|
||
maybe
|
||
maybe
|
||
The open source community needs to
|
||
Take a little step down and accept
|
||
A standard that is being set
|
||
I won't say by Microsoft, but based on now that comes. Yeah, that comes by some of the else
|
||
Yeah, that comes from someone else rather than from our community
|
||
Because we're all very big on going what are the issues of how you should do it?
|
||
Actually, and maybe we should eat a bit of humble pie and go okay for enough
|
||
We'll accept that standard
|
||
And I don't know what to teach so as per you can keep standards, but open them up so you can go right
|
||
This is a document file. It's on translate since I
|
||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, well, that's been tried, doesn't it, but it hasn't really worked that well
|
||
Quite a field though. Would you want your competitors to know that you've managed to figure out an easier way to compress the data within the file
|
||
You know they can use it
|
||
Talking about file formats. I don't send a
|
||
Um, Microsoft the works document
|
||
I got quite pissed off. Yes, they haven't sent me this file and I posted it on twitter
|
||
Just been sent to dot pages file didn't know what it was and then somebody some smart alley replied to me
|
||
Oh, it's the new WPS
|
||
So since since those keeps looking and
|
||
All right, so um anybody got any points they want to make before we go
|
||
My favorite part since I was on that. Oh, sorry
|
||
It's because you stuck behind me and I can't see you no matter
|
||
I see you've been speeding the auction and the
|
||
Requins the
|
||
He's affluent southerners. They've paid a nine quid. They're all right. I had to pay nine quid
|
||
The fella wouldn't said he didn't know what bark and
|
||
I won't step it. Yeah, you'll bury you in the
|
||
I think that you asked him did he accept the hub catch
|
||
I won't step on your point here, but yeah, basically what happens you're supposed to tell the people at the car park
|
||
That you come in for bark and blackpool and you get in for three pounds
|
||
So I drove up and I said to the guy since I hold geezer with a clipboard
|
||
I'm here for bark and blackpool and he looked at me all funny
|
||
So I said do you know what that is and he went no the only thing I know is it's 9 times
|
||
I'm parking he made
|
||
The do you not know why?
|
||
So sorry, yeah, your favorite thing
|
||
All right, okay, so that was you've everything
|
||
I didn't realize we got to that. I thought we were okay cool. So
|
||
Anybody else got a final word? Do you want to step in?
|
||
No, other than that, you know, if ever you consistently chubbish one of these events come along because they're great fun
|
||
Yes
|
||
If isn't like why you live start one
|
||
Yeah, I can be as big or as small as you want, doesn't it?
|
||
Yeah, definitely and I think the the mixture of the crowd I know we've kind of said this already
|
||
But the mixture of people in the crowd is really cool as people doing like um
|
||
I don't know like textile type stuff like
|
||
So in stuff the people making cakes or doing something with one of those things
|
||
QR code cakes. There you go QR code cakes and there's people doing I think that's really cool
|
||
Self advertising cakes
|
||
It is actually, yeah
|
||
And while we're up to it, plug for a camp to be in Blackpool
|
||
It should be in the heart of England
|
||
It should be in the heart of England
|
||
I know, I'm in the heart of England
|
||
I'm actually quite like to go back to the Maltese if you want to
|
||
Would you?
|
||
A lot of people said the same
|
||
Yeah, I like to go back to the Maltese
|
||
I know, I think like I mean obviously it's a whiter whiter whiter
|
||
But I think we'll come to it
|
||
But I think we'll come to it, yeah
|
||
I don't think we'll do a camping next time
|
||
No, no
|
||
That was an extreme assault
|
||
No, Kevver, I do feel bad
|
||
Kevver for me was an experience
|
||
I had you and Matt had some spider problems
|
||
A lot of us had to go and sort spider out
|
||
where YouTube was sort of saying good
|
||
Yeah, two grown men staying in here while he's more
|
||
He's what I felt to come and
|
||
And they do some special stuff
|
||
Oh wait
|
||
That's it, it's a new millennium
|
||
You know, the opportunities
|
||
That's quite a bonus big
|
||
Why are you looking at my wife like that when she was rolling on your tent?
|
||
I wanted it, it was something to say
|
||
What?
|
||
Yeah, there was a group
|
||
They were
|
||
I can't say because he's here, he's still in the role
|
||
It's really bad
|
||
Right, the best of us to get a tent
|
||
If he claps it, he gets one through one
|
||
And he gets all the air out
|
||
He can fold it up
|
||
So that's about an hour
|
||
You get, so I want to roll on the tent
|
||
And it gets all the air out
|
||
But I think about an hour and a half
|
||
Actually, these two try to put it down
|
||
So, these six bloats stood in a semi-circle watching
|
||
A woman in her pajamas
|
||
Wow
|
||
Roll on these tents
|
||
And all of us making out that
|
||
We're not watching you really
|
||
Yeah, I'm kind of told
|
||
Sorry, next time I'm on a Ditzurf in Rochelle
|
||
That's the time, is it?
|
||
Well, there is an extra fair too
|
||
You need to wait for valentines day
|
||
Because he's working well beyond
|
||
Ah, excellent
|
||
Yeah, probably so
|
||
She's sort of transfigured
|
||
But I'll walk on it
|
||
Yeah, well she won't get away with it
|
||
We did a...
|
||
I made her a promise that Ockham...
|
||
She natural fact
|
||
Hasn't used linox yet
|
||
Oh, yeah, she hasn't used it
|
||
They mean, but she hasn't used it from
|
||
Setting it up type of...
|
||
Oh, I see
|
||
Yeah, yeah
|
||
She'll have to use Firefox
|
||
So what we said to her Ockham was right
|
||
We'll give you six months to
|
||
In a sense, try and yourself out
|
||
And then what we'll do is whatever you want
|
||
And do almost like a from...
|
||
What did we call it?
|
||
A central and especially
|
||
From the capital
|
||
From a title, from a title noob to that
|
||
I've also got an idea
|
||
And also part of the deal was
|
||
To do a presentation
|
||
Yeah, right
|
||
That's really good idea
|
||
Yeah, yeah
|
||
Yeah, Ockham
|
||
So we'd record and
|
||
And we could... well
|
||
It was going to be about hype, bro
|
||
But I thought it was quite cool
|
||
So we've all seen each other from one home
|
||
And you know, Valentine's Day
|
||
So I would say
|
||
We'll do it
|
||
We'll do it on Valentine's Day
|
||
It's going to give you a watch out
|
||
Which is sitting next to you
|
||
You old romantic
|
||
Yeah, some of you
|
||
We'll do it on Valentine's and then...
|
||
Yeah, I love I've got you some CDs
|
||
In store lap, bro
|
||
So we're cosulating a lot of subonso
|
||
Yeah, you can get you...
|
||
Yeah, get you
|
||
And if you can do a presentation of Ockham, which is really good
|
||
That's it, yeah, that's a title
|
||
All right, and so I reckon we should all just quickly say goodbye
|
||
In the, you know, go around
|
||
So I'm going to say goodbye
|
||
From me
|
||
Goodbye from Dan
|
||
Goodbye from everyone
|
||
It's goodbye from him
|
||
Goodbye as well
|
||
Goodbye from Dan
|
||
There you go, that's it for the...
|
||
What we're going to call us
|
||
The Flying Hambag Toilet Castle
|
||
That's got a good moral because we're like, you lose
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
So we'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you when we find another toilet to hand in
|
||
We'll see you with applause
|
||
Turn this light off
|
||
Turn it off
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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||
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|
||
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|
||
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||
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|
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
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