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169 lines
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169 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1736
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Title: HPR1736: How I run my small business using Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1736/hpr1736.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:25:49
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---
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This in HPR episode 1,736 entitled, How I Run My Small Business Using Linux.
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It is posted my first time post-beginning and is about 19 minutes long.
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The summary is, How I Use Linux For My Business.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code, HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody, I'm just going to go through some of what I use to run my small business.
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This is my first podcast for Hacker Public Radio and so far it seems like it's going to
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be too easy to do and I'll probably do some more after this.
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After seeing how low the queue is and how much I enjoy the show and maybe thinking that
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I might have one or two things to be able to add, I decided to make a couple of podcasts,
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so here's number one and it has to do with how I use Linux to run my small business.
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I'm going to go over a little bit about the hardware I use, the applications I use and
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just in general how I make it work.
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First of all, I'm not going to say this is the best way, I'm always open to other ways
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and the list if you want to comment and give me some other application tips, I'm always
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willing to learn.
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I've only been using Linux for about two years now, maybe three, and ever since I got
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into it I was like, well that's it, that's all I want to do.
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When does this off all my computers in the house now?
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That's how the type of impression I got, just not just from the type of applications
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and how good they are but also the freedom that you get with it and not just the free
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of cost but also the actual how you can change everything and learn how to make everything
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work.
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I've learned a lot about how computers work and it's actually made me a lot more marketable
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as a consultant.
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So like I was saying a little bit about my business, I'm a consultant, I work for different
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types of companies in laboratory space, biopharmatics, quality systems management, project management
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for laboratory information systems, making some servers, all types of stuff, I'm trying
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to do a lot of different things and now try to have a really breath of knowledge.
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And so I started my own business and I said I'm going to run the whole thing on Linux
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so how am I going to do that?
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So a little bit about the hardware that I have, I have a System76 Gallagher Ultra Pro
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from about two years ago, I guess a year and a half ago.
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I also use a Signology Detection DS213J and I use that as the back and for my syncing
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and to host some file shares for some clients and you know they have an Android phone and
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I run my whole business you know through my System76, my Synology NAS and my LGG.
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But some of the applications I use, I only right now use two pieces of proprietary software
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which are the Synology Cloud Station which is one of the companion applications that come
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with the NAS itself to sync my applications, sync a lot of my documents and stuff.
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And I was using BitTorrent Sync for a while instead of Synology Cloud Station but with 2.0s
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release, I've now come back to Synology so I'm like well if I'm going to be using something
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proprietary I might as well use something that's heavily integrated into the system already
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I'm already using that has a native Linux client that works really well, it's integrated
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into NARLIST into THUNAR and into I haven't tried it in KDE but I'm pretty sure it works
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in KDE as well.
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So the second proprietary piece of software uses a wireframe sketcher, it's called wireframe
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sketcher and allows me to make mockups for different applications that I might be working
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on or that I might be creating as a part of a team.
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And I've also used Balsamic, they also have a client but it relies on Adobe Air and I
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didn't want to have to install Adobe Air since Adobe stopped supporting Linux and there's
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only a 32-bit client that works and I've put it on a 32-bit system and it works but
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I'd rather have something that was native on the 64-bit for Linux and that's cross-platform
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and so it runs on top of Java so that works just fine.
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For free software I use a lot of things, first of all I write almost all my documentation
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and markdown first so I might change it from that format to other formats including
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for my website but I use markdown for a lot of things so I also use a pan doc which
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is a way to transform files of one type to another so I use it for markdown a lot so to
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go from markdown to HTML and markdown to doc or docx or ODT or to go from other way around
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to bring stuff over to markdown from other formats.
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I also use discount which is a markdown to HTML command line tool as well.
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I use both Firefox and Chrome or Chromium for browsing the web and there's a lot of web
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applications that I use I'm not really going to go into right now.
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I use GVim and also just use regular Vim on the command line to do most of my text editing.
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I was using a root pad for a while but now I've gone back to just GVim because it's
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a lot more flexible in terms of you know once you start to get into the Vim way of doing
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things you start to miss it when you're not in that program.
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I usually wear office to open office documents I usually don't write anything in a labor
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office.
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I will every once in a while sometimes for like spreadsheets and stuff all right stuff
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in a labor office but any of my work processing I just do in GVim.
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I also use planner which is a native project management software and I've dabbled in a
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couple other ones but this is the one I use for my own when I make my own projects some
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other ones I use to open up other like when people send me stuff that's in Microsoft
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format but when I'm making my own projects I use planner.
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I use hamster which is to do not really to do this maker it's more of a way to record
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the time that you spend on different tasks is the way I build my clients I use it kind
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of as a time sheet I used to do that TXT which is my actual to do less maker for that
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and it's a command line tool there's also app windows there's all types of apps for mobile
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devices and for all the different platforms and I use it to manage my to do less I use
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a new cache for my accounting virtual box for a lot of stuff to spin up windows applications
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so I do a lot of stuff with .NET and you know some enterprise i.e. dependent application
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development and configuration so I always like to have a couple servers to spin up for
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that if you don't know about modern i.e. modern i.e. is a way and that Microsoft provides
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so you can just get a 90-day trial for windows and i.e. so that you can do development in
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that environment so when it expires you just make a new one it's not a big deal I also
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use Thunderbird for email so i manage my personal and work email through that and I've tried
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to use Gary and that works just fine but I like to use a nickname and the stationary plugins
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for Thunderbird which make it so that my it's more of like a robust system so a nickname
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for being able to I don't really use the encryption that much but I use it to digitally sign
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important documents that I don't that I want people to know that this is the authentic
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version of the email and the stationary plugin to send out professional looking emails
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I use California and I think that's by the same people who make Shotwell I use that as
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my calendar app and it has looks really nice it's really simple and it can import ICS files
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that accompany a lot of those invites that you get and it works just very well I chose
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that over Thunderbird's plugin because I think the GUI is better not that the Thunderbird
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version doesn't work I just like it better on the command line I also have a couple of
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apps I use I use Ranger a lot and I was using midnight commander but I've kind of switched
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to Ranger because I can look at all my text files real time and just switch through them
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because I keep all my notes in markdown so Ranger is a command line file manager which
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has live previews using I think uses either links or W3M as I can as a way to view your
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different files that you look at so it's it's very handy if we if we haven't used Ranger
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I highly suggest it I use a couple of things on the command line like I said Pandoc discount
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to do that TXT I use a lot on the command line too but there's also a plugin for different
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systems right now my current setup is Ubuntu 1404 I just switch back to this from Ubuntu
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GNOME because I just miss Unity sorry everyone hates Unity I don't hate it I find it really
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productive but right to to each his own other some other programs I use I use meld pair
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documents and I command line sometimes I just use diff or I'll use vim diff when I'm in
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vim but meld is a nice way to compare two documents in a visual manner and a gooey and also
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allows you to actually do three I think it'll let you look at three documents at the same time
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and also look at directories and see changes in directories as well so if you if you use R
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sinkers I'm like that and you want to look at stuff you can use meld to do that too for backups
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I'd do back a couple different ways to have different backs in different places so with my lgg2
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it came with a 50 gigabyte free storage on box.com so I use Dropbox for a lot of my personal stuff
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but I mean I use box for my business to be able to host certain files for some of my clients
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since I had that free 50 gig and also I use it to I use deja dup because deja dup has a
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ability to the sink through web dev and so I use boxes web dev availability to
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leave some a couple of backups I do a weekly backup to box and it's just you know like I said it's
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web dev and so it's a client side encrypted before it's sent I use system back daily on a local
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external hard drive and I also use rsync because I have an encrypted partition and I back up
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that can crypton partition using rsync on another encrypted partition that I keep in a safe
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so all my important documents are backed up that way and I don't even keep an encrypted copy
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anywhere on the internet that's the majority I want to use I also use it's
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technically it's it's gpl license it's a l2p l2tp ipc ipsec VPN client
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one of my clients actually more than one use cisco routers and have like a maraki
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vpn server and I use this l2tp ipsec VPN client to connect to it they had a ppa and it
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for a forward when I tried to install for the first time so I just went to launch pad and found
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it and found the dot dev and downloaded it and installed and works just fine I can connect
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just fine it's kind of disappointing that it doesn't you know but that's the thing that you
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end up getting when you are using a bunch of sometimes sometimes things stop being maintained
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and there isn't a 1410 version so that's why that's the other reason why I came back to unity
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because I already had to go back to 1404 so I said when we go back to 1404 and go back to
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unity at the same time so that's the majority of what I use on a daily basis for what I do for work
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I really enjoy using Linux for for work and I whenever I get a chance when I'm in in front of
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customers always if I don't bring up Linux in particular there's there's usually a situation
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where they're having a problem with one of their vendors and it's a lot of times has to do with
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being able to access their data when they want to or being able to to customize or configure
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the system in ways that they don't necessarily support and when it's not supported they just
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don't let it happen at all and it's locked down and I'll usually try to put in a little jab about
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you know this is why you don't use proprietary software which is why actually it has rubbed off
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a little bit I have had people use take some of my suggestions and use a couple of other things
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I like to use or that I've discovered in my in my day to day so you know I'm not the biggest
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diehard you know Richard Stalman follower and and and zealot but I do promote free software
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wherever I go not only for its cost effectiveness but also because you know it does the job
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just as well if not better than its proprietary counterparts a lot of times and you know it can
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be your daily driver and run your complete business I do I have no reason to do anything else I
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have a couple of droplets of digital ocean which are you know Linux based that I do syncing to my
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and you know learning all this stuff has allowed me to be able to troubleshoot
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uh things that I would have never had an opportunity to be able to even know anything about
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and so learning Linux on the desktop has helped me learn Linux in the server space
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so that's uh going to conclude my first podcast so thanks everyone for listening
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if you uh stuck around for the whole thing I appreciate it and uh I'll see you on the next one bye
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org
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