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1812 lines
137 KiB
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1812 lines
137 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2565
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Title: HPR2565: 2017-2018 New Years Eve show part 7
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2565/hpr2565.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 05:51:29
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,565 entitled HBR 2017 New Year's Eve Show Part 7.
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It is hosted by Merrius Creative Commons Works and is about 178 minutes long and can in an explicit flag.
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The summary is Part 7 on the 6th annual HBR New Year show.
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This is the last one.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honest Host.com.
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Amazing to see all this stuff that I did was using in college just becoming affordable
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so it's really cool.
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I just engraved some acrylic signs with my fix car via the day.
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Turned up pretty good.
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What you put on them?
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I was making some signs for clocks so you know how you see newsrooms with a clock and a city name under them.
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Yeah so basically a little sign so I reverse cut the city name into a piece of acrylic and then that gets mounted on standoffs.
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It looks like glass when you polish it.
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Very nice.
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And then I also painted the letters with black paint from the other side so it looks like the black is inset into the acrylic.
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And then I painted it with black paint from the other side.
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And then I painted it with black paint from the other side.
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And then I painted it with black paint from the other side.
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27 kilo ohms is not a standard value.
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2.7 kilo ohms.
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Yeah 2.7K that's normal.
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No, 27K.
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Yeah that sounds unusual.
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I'm going to hubby-hour.com forward slash electronics forward slash resistor calculator link in the show notes.
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But only as we continue on.
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Well that's a useful little schematic about the different colors again.
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Yeah and the calculator is even better.
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Yes folks I am cheating thank you very much.
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I didn't think there was anything cool cheating these days.
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I thought it was research.
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That's what I call it when I go on YouTube to do it to look at a tear down video before I start knocking about with a new laptop that won't strip down.
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I always found that kind of strange in exams that especially in engineering exams that you would need to know the formulas.
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And they would always refer to a manual because to just make sure that they get the formula correct.
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I don't understand why just give me the book.
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Yeah like of the formulas.
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Like yourself Ken I started off in engineering and if we were starting to cut a thread there was no way you'd start on the lathe without having a check with your thread meter in your book and everything.
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Absolutely yeah and better yet ask somebody who's still looking for course.
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So yeah it's always strange when you come to an exam and you're not allowed to do all that.
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I don't know I ask him questions I see so many people afraid to ask questions and work.
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You know what does it matter?
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Everybody makes mistakes sometimes just ask a bloody question.
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Before you had to be asking the question then he's sitting there like a noona thinking you're doing something when you're just stood frozen.
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Yeah.
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I think these guys people have lost all they've got this fear of seeming stupid because they don't know what they're doing but until you've done it the first time.
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You're never going to know what you're doing.
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Exactly.
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And that was the thing I used to do when I was interviewing people.
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I would continue on asking questions until I got to a point where you reach the limit of the knowledge and then it wasn't that I was that concerned about where the limit of the knowledge was because you know everybody has different things.
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It's just what what do they do when they get to a point where they don't know a thing.
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And you know sometimes you come up with someone who is so experienced but you give them a question that could only be related to if you were working in our factory or in our industry which they're working.
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And then you know they start bluffing you know okay I don't want to be working with this person.
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Thank you very much.
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Yeah.
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Just a good answer to that question is well I don't know because that's industry specific but I imagine that.
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That's a perfectly valid.
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Yeah.
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Oh I don't know but I might know a man who does.
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Exactly.
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Even if each Mr. Google.
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Mr. Google.
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You only need to be one Wikipedia search ahead of everybody else.
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I heard a rumor of a chap who put up a hotspot in the meeting once with consultants.
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And you know had a squid proxy and then was as things were being mentioned by the consultancy companies manager or team that the consultants were Google or going to Wikipedia.
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But that's what they told us.
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Very impressive guys very impressive.
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Brown brown black black brown which I'm reacting without looking is one one zero hundred on.
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One hundred and ten oh.
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Where are you putting a hundred ten oh.
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No or because it's a one K.
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I'm going to say the lowest one I see is 220.
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This thing is measuring one K.
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I want to get one K from that.
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Is the last color brown or black?
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A red.
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I bet the brown is red.
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No they're all exactly the same color brown.
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There's three browns and two blacks.
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So it's either brown, brown, black, black or black or brown, black, black, brown, brown.
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You know what you need is an LED light.
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I do have one sorry yes.
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The big magnifying glass.
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This is one K.
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So brown black black brown brown.
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Okay now the question is do I have one K here?
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Yeah two of them right there just above the little habitable place.
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So tell me this Ken if you have two resistors the same value and you twist both their ends together in parallel.
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What happens to the resistance?
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Divided by two.
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Very good.
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And thank you for publicly closing me in front of 14,000 people.
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I got to make sure you put them in the right direction remember.
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It doesn't matter I still have you down as doing that bit scope thing you can pretend to be an actor as much as you like.
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I know what you're trying to do.
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I'm thinking if I if you give me wrong information here that I want ask you to do the bit scope tutorial.
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I'm pressing and try.
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Well life just says cool in there.
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I don't completely don't think it's cool but I'm just on the humorous type thing.
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No of course not.
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Long suffering.
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Ken is your good lady ever done a show?
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Yes she has.
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She's on every single show.
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She's the intro and outro girl.
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But she's also done several shows and she is working on a series.
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But that sounds cool.
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Yes it is actually.
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I had the surprise in the background so she knows about this series.
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Yes she does know about this series because we've been working on this thing for the last two bloody years.
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It started as a request for a article.
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It was a roundtable request by lost and Bronx.
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And then she said all right I'll write something about that and then it turned into all right I'll write a little booklet about that.
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This is going to be more of blog posts and then it's the first of a three part.
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So the first book is already written.
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Well may I say that the lady certainly improves the audience quality?
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She improves more than that that's for sure.
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She improves the quality of my life.
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The audio quality is only part of that that we're allowed to enjoy.
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She cooks good too.
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There's three kids away past the form of entertainment.
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Yes but it would get called on the flight over to Boston.
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No reason you can't jump over here.
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Red, red, black, black, brown.
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And the brown is way over so I'm guessing it's red, red, black, black which will be.
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220, 220 ohms.
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Yep 220 ohms.
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Another thing you can do is just look at all the resistor spots on your board and say which one does this seem closest to?
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You could do that.
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And kind of figure out what it should be from that set.
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But we have a 26 hour after show to pull up with interesting content.
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Got a top right hand corner.
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It seems to be bridging the first pane of the, it's going from the ground to the first pane of the monitor.
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One little LCD screen.
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Only four more to go guys.
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No you can't talk about something else.
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There's no reason to be waiting on my resistor.
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This is just something I happen to be doing while the show is going on.
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Yes, we were wondering about the availability of single women in Europe.
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Well, I presume the invitation to suffer what would have said.
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I know this young lady who would love to meet a dashing gentleman from boss.
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I could go there with the whole Amsterdam thing, but.
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There are plenty of available people here for every taste.
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Brown, grey, black, orange, brown, which comes out of 180k.
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Brown, grey, what?
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Brown, grey, black, orange, brown, brown, grey, black, orange, brown.
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It comes in around 180k.
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Yeah, I see one there.
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180 or 1.8?
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1.8.
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I don't see a 1.2 in the board.
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I see a 180 down at the bottom plus to the terminal pins, like a PWM logo.
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When we interrupt a usual broadcasting for an announcement, that's we are coming up to, I believe, the last time zoom.
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I'm not even sure where that is, but the American smell, we became the first few years back.
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I saw the whole article about that.
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So can we take over and tell us where the last time to actually is, because I have no idea.
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Well, it's so the next time zone to go in 48 seconds is midway.
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And the last one is Baker Island, which is an hour from now.
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So all of you staying up for three at the end of the HBO show.
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You have another hour of this torture.
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But yeah, there's another hour.
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Oh, I see there's one there already.
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Yeah.
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So who else is a 3D printer?
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Not that I have a 3D.
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I don't have one either, but they're not as cool as they want to.
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Because they're more mainstream now anyway.
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Things being not cool usually means they're cheaper, which usually means I start getting interested.
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Well, yeah, I see a point.
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And turn these flashing up a lot.
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I see a new mistake with the client.
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This 20 probably is about to say lots of stuff and things.
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No, every time I mention that, I'll be hot in for a show.
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You're always angling for shows, Ken.
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Yep, that's me.
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We've got 280 fresh slots just come available.
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In one hour's time, there'll be 280 free slots available for your audio pleasure.
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Not to mention the 280 that will be the year after that and the 200.
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Hi.
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What was your favorite show of the year, guys?
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And you don't have to mention, you know, obviously it was they how to modify an ironing board.
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Your second favorite show.
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You laugh, you laugh, but as soon as I've done this board here, we're doing ironing with Ken.
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So yeah, you prepared.
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I think my favorite show and it is one of mine.
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But the other reason this one of mine is because I was actually alive to do it.
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And it's the show that I did post after I had my stroke.
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Yes, that was about surviving the stroke.
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That was a sobering show, I must say, having strokes in my whole family.
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But there's so many good shows.
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It's really hard over a 12-month period to remember.
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You know, you'll get one that jumps out at a time and then within a couple of weeks is another one that jumps out.
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I've been liking the tabletop gaming D&D stuff.
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Yeah, that is pretty new and interesting.
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I wasn't expecting that to be a whole series, actually.
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But I think the best show is a probably a trick question.
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The best show is the one that solves the problem that you're working on at that particular point in time.
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Which is why we often get comments and shows that are three, four years old.
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Yeah, because someone will go hunting around in the archive looking for a solution.
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Bit like you do on YouTube.
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2.2K.
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I've just been watching a bit of the video of the actual tester.
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Looks quite nice.
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A little bit of kit, actually.
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I saw that there were some guys that came with the three Surface Mount components soldered on.
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I would strongly advise that if you had not done any soldering at all.
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Because when you're starting, when you're building a PCB, you have to start with the smallest components and work your way up.
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Yeah.
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So you, by definition, start with the most difficult one.
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I think you can also buy them preassembles in the world.
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Does anyone watch the Pirates, the bilge tank from Pyramironi?
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No, you're going to live?
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Yeah, I can find you one.
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Give you a couple of seconds and I'll get you all.
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They have a regular weekly show during the where they obviously,
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it's part of their sales team as well, but it shows new things that they've got for sale.
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But occasionally they do tutorials on how to solder and you know, assemble some of the kits that they do.
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So it's quite good.
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Oh, nice.
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Let me, yeah.
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I've got them favorited.
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I've got them find them.
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There we go.
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Nope, just disobey it.
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No, you got it.
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No, it's in there.
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It's still there.
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I got rid of my one.
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You got really yours, did you?
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Anyone get a new cool kit this year?
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And yes, you know where this is going.
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No, I didn't get anything for Christmas, but I went out to the auction a few weeks ago and picked up myself a nice little setting them.
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I three tower.
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That's a nice little bit kit.
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I like that auction thing that's going on beside you.
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I really am very jealous of that auction house.
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Yeah, they were selling.
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They were selling some SSDs.
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Some 128.
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Sandeys sculptures.
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I managed to pick them up for 32 quid each.
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Oh, nice.
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They're about 50 quid.
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50, 60 quid or so much.
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So I've got a few of them.
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But it's amazing how, you know, useful, you know, four and five year old kits still is these days.
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Absolutely, yeah.
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I could say a little like three tower with, I've just stuck the SSD in it.
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It's got, I think it's four gig around.
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I might have upgrade it.
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No, I think it's four gig around.
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But it flies along.
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Absolutely flies along.
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I think you're a bit behind the video, Ken.
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He's got ease attached to an oscilloscope.
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Har, har, har.
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My defense, he did fast forward.
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By the time we don't truncate sidelines everybody, we go, Ken is really horseing through that thing.
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I could do a blue beat rather than go on.
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Here's one I met.
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Are you good?
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Have you got another one?
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Great assembled.
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Sometimes I wish I will.
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I may have to buy one pre assembled if this doesn't work out.
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A hundred pay turns out to be.
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Do you ever get any of these kits that were missing components?
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What are you missing?
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Did you ever get any kits that were missing components?
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No, the stuff I build usually have to source your own parts.
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I've got so many boxes of that stuff I can find what I need usually.
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It's actually so cheap now.
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I've got loads and loads of resistors and masters and stuff.
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Which is actually why I want to put this together.
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The bad thing is when you take stuff apart and you have extra stuff.
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Put that together.
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Yeah, but so long as it works, it doesn't matter.
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I learned that as an early age.
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As long as it continues to work, it doesn't matter when you spare parts you have.
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You just made it more efficient.
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Yeah, that sounds like when you pull in the laptop apart and you put it all back together and you still got a ham to the screws left.
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At that point you take it and you shake it and if it's fine then you just make it more efficient.
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Now you got a lighter laptop.
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And then from mechanical engineering terms, that's something that you get used to.
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You know, it's like electronic engineers who don't after a while don't worry about the order of the resistors.
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Mechanical engineers very quickly get used to the yeah, few extra components, no big deal.
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And approach I would hold my surgeon doesn't have by the way.
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It's not so much the bits left over.
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It's the bits that they can't find afterwards.
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It's like you're up.
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I like that surgeon who got caught for a laser engraving, his initials and people's livers.
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Yeah, that was a ring.
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Well, one part to me was going, yes, that's a ring.
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And on the other hand, I was thinking, if you had asked me before I'd, dude, can the laser caught your initials on your liver?
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I go, well, okay.
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Go for it.
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That sounds cool.
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I think they sound you can.
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Well, I did not say the series supernatural.
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No, no.
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Actually, the initials are fine.
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It's when he has to put the creative commons reference on that.
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Well, killed by free sulfur.
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Sorry, what was that series?
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Supernatural.
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It's a TV show.
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So it's these two brothers that go around chasing supernatural monsters.
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And, you know, in this universe, there's, you know, demons and angels and monsters and spells and all this stuff.
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And so they have certain symbols they put on stuff to keep the bad spirits out of this, that or the other.
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Well, they have these tattoos that keep them from being possessed by certain things.
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And at one point in the series, one of the angels basically tattoos on their bones, whatever this symbol is, it's supposed to keep them from being infected by something.
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And they've just reminded me of that of, you know, you're going to tattoo, you're going to laser engrave something on your liver.
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Well, these guys had that in the series.
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Maybe that's where he got the idea.
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And the last one should be a hundred and seventy ohm.
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Well, that's twenty K.
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I don't know.
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Okay, great.
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The measure is twenty K.
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Well, we learned this can still hasn't a clue how this thing works.
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That is no way that is red.
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It looks violent.
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Red, black, black.
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This is why you just can't trust these color blends, balance from these key presisters.
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They just have no.
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This red is nowhere like that all the red.
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It's pink.
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Well, I find whatever measure of it.
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Soldering iron on.
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Don't all talk of ones.
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It's just fascinating listening to your concentration, Ken.
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Zombie fighters all indeed.
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I did get a new soldier and that was a good move.
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This is twenty five dollar one you were talking about on the review show.
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How have you even heard that?
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That was only posted yesterday.
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Yeah, so I listened to it last night after it was posted.
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I just went on the web and listened to it.
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It never some ceases to surprise me that people listen to the community news shows.
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I just want to listen to you slaggers all off you say, Ken, because we're not giving enough
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shows. That's what it is.
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A foreign domestic is in there.
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Sometimes I'll miss a bit of feedback or something on one of the shows.
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I don't like most people.
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I don't listen to every show.
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So sometimes just getting a little synopsis of some of the shows is quite good.
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Yeah, exactly.
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So I think we're repeating all your subsystems.
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I think we're going to recommend it as the series to subscribe to if they're 70,
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if the rate of shows coming in are sometimes a little bit too much for some people.
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Yeah, it's a bit like a monthly guide, isn't it?
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Yeah, exactly monthly digest that would be good.
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And then if you, if through listening to that, you think, or I might go and actually listen to the full show on that one.
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Have you ever done so?
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I have.
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Yes.
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Occasionally.
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I thought, oh, I missed a good one there.
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The title didn't really speak up to what it was about.
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Because sometimes the titles can be a bit dry and I think I'm not particularly interested in that.
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So I don't, but I totally bother downloading it.
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What do other folks think?
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I've gone back and relistened the stuff that I hear on the synopsis show.
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Or remind me about it and I'll go back and make a comment.
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Yeah, that's the other thing.
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Sometimes you'll listen to a show and you think, I need to comment on that show.
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And then you just forget all about it.
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And then you get reminded, you get reminded about it when you, when you listen to the review show at the beginning of each month.
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Cool.
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I'm sold right now just as a bad way.
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Oh, components getting fixed to the board.
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Bored beyond all recognition.
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I don't know if due to a magnifying glass is a good thing or bad thing because now all my soldiers are trapped.
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At least she got some to join.
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Now that we're on Monday, I can say this obscene thing.
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Why a rap?
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Yes.
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For those that don't know what you're on about, first go back and listen to the Paula guidance confusion one and then do a show.
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Can you still get wire up?
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Man, I'm regretting doing that.
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Let's try a slightly thinner soldier.
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Yes, but
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gentlemen, would any of you know what a standard image used to test image compression software was?
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No, I don't.
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It was a famous image scanned from a certain gentleman's magazine who is founder passed away just recently.
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Oh, yeah, this is on the Apollo thing to use that.
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Got a link to the show notes or will that cause us our clean title?
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I have actually seen that or a similar image used at the AI lab when they were doing some stuff with an 8086 system.
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Where was that again?
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Takes where MIT?
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Back from the 8086 with a hot chip.
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You need to do a few shows and those were serious.
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What was the pace of software that we were using for compression?
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Well, they were testing a new algorithm came by and they used this standard image.
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Right.
|
|
Now, the fact that it was scanned and probably not registered with the original copyright holder might have been a problem.
|
|
But then again, this was back in the last century and things were a lot looser then.
|
|
BBC had that picture of a girl.
|
|
It was the daughter of the guy who just went home and got his daughter and brought her in and took a picture and then used that.
|
|
Is that the young lady that sat in the test card?
|
|
I was at the BBC training one time often.
|
|
Would would would lawn I think and they have the original there or had at least.
|
|
That was the best week of my life was one.
|
|
Anyone ever gets a chance to do training at their DVB training is absolutely one week of pure technical porn.
|
|
That's what it was.
|
|
It was the best.
|
|
The best slides were presented the presenters were.
|
|
If you ever wanted an example of how to put a thing together, it was just absolutely awesome.
|
|
Because a lot of costs really sticky out bits now.
|
|
I need to get a new pair of snips.
|
|
And my bill, this has cost me a lot of money, dude.
|
|
Actually.
|
|
The US Air Force air guard actually made not a vanguard brewer airport was flying F 101.
|
|
I saw proof that the air guard.
|
|
Not a follow was was the real moon shot.
|
|
Well, there was a moon shot in the back seat of an F 101.
|
|
Which makes a phone booth seem like Buckingham Palace.
|
|
I was in a truck that calculated a jet fighter.
|
|
So that's when I was a movie high school kid.
|
|
More recently about the turn of the century, I was behind a horse in cart.
|
|
Hard me a horse and carries downtown boss.
|
|
Surprisingly, both of them were going about the same speed.
|
|
I'm making an absolute hams of this.
|
|
Very good.
|
|
Preparing it for the show on how do you solder work?
|
|
Yeah, I'm lowering the bar on Ken console with this crap.
|
|
You can solder better.
|
|
I'm going to be very shocked if this thing actually works when we're finished.
|
|
When will that be this time next year?
|
|
We shall see you in the future.
|
|
Okay, silence.
|
|
I keep telling you if you just shut up, then it wouldn't look so bad for me.
|
|
Whose idea was to consider it live or there?
|
|
This is the only time I get to work on the truck to the back room once a year.
|
|
This new soldering door does actually make it a lot easier, especially with the small tips.
|
|
So you can do a review of the soldering iron, then.
|
|
I think Dave already did one.
|
|
He has the same back out as he.
|
|
I know what you're doing.
|
|
All right.
|
|
We're into the last half hour camp down.
|
|
Yes, the last half hour.
|
|
It's a race against time.
|
|
We'll finish his component tester.
|
|
And if this is a tattoo or a PD game, it will be tuned in tomorrow.
|
|
Let's stop it right there, shall we?
|
|
One of these half an hour times.
|
|
I mean half past times over the end, it seems.
|
|
25 minutes.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
And spoiler.
|
|
There's no way there's going to be finished in 25 minutes.
|
|
Just no towel.
|
|
Can you, this point is all.
|
|
It's starting to sound like my wife again.
|
|
So it reminds me of a good hacker friend of mine.
|
|
Howard Gus Grayden.
|
|
Haven't heard from him in years.
|
|
He had about a dozen kids.
|
|
Three years enough for me.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
I was going to say that's a glutton to punishment.
|
|
Well, his wife was a little short thing.
|
|
And one of his friends at English friends said that small woman, large family,
|
|
just laughed.
|
|
And Murphy laughed louder, I think.
|
|
He was always teased about people should get a hobby or change it.
|
|
Best man I haven't seen in years.
|
|
My hands are starting to shake now.
|
|
That's brilliant.
|
|
Same for you.
|
|
I think if everything this board is going to be a perfect example of all the ways you can do solder.
|
|
I'm just coming to look at this link to the supernatural that we're just talking about that TV show.
|
|
And away it looks like a revamp of buffy.
|
|
The whole genre of that stuff.
|
|
The title of the Hollywood formula.
|
|
Something new and different with a good track record.
|
|
Correct.
|
|
Is anyone else like me?
|
|
Doesn't like all the reboots of some of the classic movies?
|
|
Well, the John Wayne classic that they rebooted a couple of years ago.
|
|
Oh, I can't think of the name of it now.
|
|
But they seem to keep rehashing old classic movies and doing poor jobs on.
|
|
Star Trek first start.
|
|
But now I'd have to disagree with you.
|
|
No, Star Trek rebooting a Star Trek was.
|
|
But they completely missed the whole point of Gene Rodden's stories.
|
|
They turned it into Star Wars when they did action.
|
|
Where Gene Roddenbury was all about the stories.
|
|
It's the same thing with the Orville verses. Have you seen the Orville little?
|
|
No, I'm TV series.
|
|
Well, we're watching the Orville.
|
|
That is taking the stories and just doing them like stories.
|
|
Basically.
|
|
Star Trek.
|
|
The next generation without any mention of Star Trek.
|
|
So how does that work?
|
|
It works by going well.
|
|
They messed up Star Trek so much that here's another universe that is similar.
|
|
Well, it is completely different.
|
|
Right, but it's got good stories.
|
|
So it's like Star Trek.
|
|
It is more Star Trek than Star Trek, actually.
|
|
So going away from Star Trek, what do you think of the reboot of Star Wars?
|
|
There was only ever one Star Wars movie and that was the first one.
|
|
And then everything else was a way to make money.
|
|
I have yet to be dissuaded by that argument.
|
|
I must admit, the original classic is still an original classic.
|
|
Absolutely, everything else.
|
|
And if you look at it from the point of view of merchandising everything after that was just an opportunity to fill the screen with something and merchandise.
|
|
Sorry, guys. Sorry all the Star Wars people out there, but we all know it's true.
|
|
Not that I have opinions on anything.
|
|
Now, I often thought it's a pity they never made a second Blade Runner.
|
|
Or, yes, or a second Highlander.
|
|
In my universe, there's only one Highlander and one Blade Runner.
|
|
Although I haven't seen the second Blade Runner.
|
|
And one matrix, to be honest.
|
|
The problem with Blade Runner is that the director rehashed it so many times.
|
|
I lost track.
|
|
Oh, well, we see original movie.
|
|
Yeah, it's hard to find it as well.
|
|
Yeah, you need to search for trailer or cinema theater edition.
|
|
Thanks.
|
|
Platoon mentioned at one point theater edition.
|
|
And then you get it.
|
|
Personally, I think it was always meant to have the, you know, the 1940s.
|
|
Yeah, this tall blonde walks past my window type dialogue.
|
|
Because if you look at the director's course, there are suspicious delays as he talks back in conversation.
|
|
Hmm.
|
|
I just remembered the John Wayne movie.
|
|
I was thinking about true grit.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
Did they rebuild that?
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
They read that a few years ago.
|
|
And I don't know why.
|
|
Why they bothered.
|
|
Because they're reaching.
|
|
Well, the originals just such a classic.
|
|
I don't see.
|
|
See why?
|
|
Why you want a bother?
|
|
Remaking it.
|
|
Apart from money.
|
|
Because that's what makes you back there.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I am used to really enjoy going to the cinema, but since it's turned into a computer game.
|
|
I think the best moment where that, where I saw, you know, Pearl Harbor.
|
|
And it followed the bomb down at that moment.
|
|
I realized, yeah, movie going to the movies now is just watching a computer game.
|
|
And you can get better graphics by watching a computer game.
|
|
Then it just completely takes me out of the movie.
|
|
The whole 3D rendering stuff.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
If you can't.
|
|
If your cinema, if your cinematic experience is.
|
|
Oh, I look, just go watch history buffs.
|
|
The YouTube channel.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That basically explains it.
|
|
I do it far better than me.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Pasting it in now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Basically, for me, cinema, going to the cinema is about the story.
|
|
And the CGI stuff just completely takes me out of it.
|
|
And if you want to watch one where that's, have a watch of his review of the Napoleon movie.
|
|
And you'll see one of me.
|
|
No, it's not Napoleon.
|
|
It's called Waterloo, I think.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Is that joining?
|
|
It's not one of the good things to be asking.
|
|
I can't imagine.
|
|
I'll call him in a toothbrush, you say.
|
|
Be more than that.
|
|
I'm still not finished.
|
|
I'm so sorry, Mr. X.
|
|
I have ruined this board.
|
|
I've ordered one of those cheap microscopes as if I have to spend some of money on this thing already.
|
|
But I will put in some, some photos of this and whenever at some point.
|
|
This is brutal.
|
|
There is particularly bad.
|
|
Still it looks nice and off from the front.
|
|
What next?
|
|
Cup of coffee?
|
|
I'm just don't stop in my tea.
|
|
Yeah, we've got five minutes for a cup of coffee and then we're going to go to the cinema.
|
|
Yeah, we've got five minutes for a cup of coffee and then we can pause this thing down.
|
|
Till this time next you.
|
|
Back in a bit.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Yep, this is coming towards an end in about eight minutes, I guess.
|
|
Everybody is disappearing there as well.
|
|
No, I'm still here Sebastian.
|
|
I was wondering who are you for real.
|
|
Tony Hughes, I've done a few shows.
|
|
Over the last couple of years.
|
|
I live in Northwest of the UK in town called Blackpool.
|
|
On the coast.
|
|
Yeah, very Blackpool.
|
|
Have you been any of me talking?
|
|
I'm doing stuff.
|
|
I've been talking.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I've been talking more.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
For a few years I've worked with Les on the crew on camp.
|
|
Oh, you won the crew.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Like what's internal so I would have node.
|
|
I probably partly seen you or somewhere on there but I don't think everybody at that thing anyway.
|
|
Was an ear.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And you can and you go to these things and then you get people came like, I, I ate.
|
|
Hello.
|
|
the chance you but okay yeah yeah I haven't been to I've come for the last couple of events
|
|
didn't make it to Canterbury this year. No but there's another one now as well it seems as
|
|
actually the three-nose event now as well. All right when's that going to be on? I didn't know.
|
|
Yeah yeah that was that was good. It's actually near me as well for a change just sort of
|
|
very near me my local city you know sort of having to go off to Canterbury or Brussels or
|
|
Fosland which I'll be doing again which I'll be doing again in a few weeks but you know you'll
|
|
always travel somewhere else usually for these things and then three-nose live popped up in Bristol
|
|
this year. They've crystal wants to do events or they got some funding I think for this now as well
|
|
or sponsorship or whatever but yeah so that'll be in Bristol again next year but we'll crash with
|
|
bonfire like weekend. Oh right okay but that was that was actually quite good it had people you
|
|
know it has some it was very vague it to begin with what would really happen because this talks
|
|
in come up for ages and the stands all the rest of it but then it came but then it got quite a
|
|
few good speakers in there like Karen Sandler and Deb Nicholson and some there are a few other
|
|
ones as well and there's the Debian developer and there was a seasonal website it was
|
|
been quite good speakers. The stands were the stand actually. The stands was all right
|
|
that's made people mostly going for the speeches like you do for these things. Yeah very nice
|
|
three-node well the page three-node t-shirt very very very nice. The three-one was not that good but
|
|
but yeah that's something else for these conferences isn't it it's all about the t-shirt isn't it
|
|
because I've got so many of them now I really do because I've been doing Brussels and you know since 2012
|
|
as well and and then every old camp since 2012 once being on as well and I've bought a few online as
|
|
well you know you get all these t-shirts didn't you? Yeah I've never made it to anything outside the UK
|
|
I've only ever made it to UK event. I would say that Brussels I would say Fosdom is worth going to
|
|
definitely it's it's oh yeah that's that's the biggest one in Europe it's amazing it's like
|
|
how it's world for this kind of stuff really but I'll see things like old camp are much smaller
|
|
yeah and three-node live but you know like those events about 300 people at most something like
|
|
Brussels and the other hand but talking over 5,000 people every year. The record is more like it's 12
|
|
eight to 12 thousand people yeah it's massive. How much is it to go to Fosdom there? Of course
|
|
zero you just walk in. Oh right okay that's why they're only going to have a ticket so yeah you just
|
|
walk it wow but obviously you have to get there which is going to cost you you have to stay somewhere
|
|
which is going to cost you and you know yeah yes it's the most expensive free conference I've ever
|
|
built. Well why it's all the t-shirts and stuff or just staying common good commendations enough.
|
|
Yeah there was a time when I fancy that actually going over to America so one of the big Linux
|
|
conferences over there but I'm not sure I fancy going over there at the moment. Well I think
|
|
something like Libra Planet would be probably worth going to that's the free software foundation
|
|
event or whatever but yeah America's a little bit far from the UK isn't it an expensive to get to
|
|
or and so on. Yeah for those of you following along I'm putting in the transistors now
|
|
in the case of reading them and putting them into the road slot. You've got two and a half minutes
|
|
again you better crack down. Yeah if you could just shut up then I could just add them in the
|
|
you should get over to Brussels Tony if you can make it because I mean Fosdom is an experience
|
|
it's definitely worth having when you're to this stuff as I'm talking with a degree with being as
|
|
well because he's been absolutely it's not going to happen this year. Well you want to plan
|
|
it but if you can get over it is really just amazing to see life where the default is your normal
|
|
that doesn't happen to go ahead. Yeah well yeah basically yeah yeah you're hanging out with
|
|
technical people for the most part. I mean they do have a saying that if you've got a wife or
|
|
or something like that and they're not into computers what you can do as well is you can put them
|
|
on the spouses and partners talk because I've been valuing that for years as well where they
|
|
instead of going to the talks they go around looking at Brussels and stuff with a tour guide
|
|
and it's free as well for that I believe so. That sounds cool. I don't know about the wife not
|
|
being technical I'm not technical after this. Although I'll tell you something it was just a
|
|
little bit funny in a way so when I went the very first time in 2012 I've never been
|
|
training these different source conferences when you think like that so I believe I've been
|
|
traveling the board and stuff from my family not my own yeah either. I mean I've done Brussels
|
|
on my own every year since but I actually went on my older brother first year. 20 seconds and
|
|
took yeah and to fuzz them and he I parked them on to the spouses and partners tour because he's
|
|
not thought he's not gonna like want to go around down the talks and stuff but he after the first
|
|
day it was like no no bother gives the talks and I was like really well then was it that bad
|
|
and you'd be working in the primary school at the same time as well so lots of women yeah
|
|
and your show is officially over in five seconds ago yeah about 12 seconds ago
|
|
well it was a heat it was all crazy stuff and I'm going to continue on putting in this
|
|
transistor because we don't adhere to arbitrary time zones here
|
|
well we aren't having enough for show yeah this is the start of the after show
|
|
I guess it is then um after show ever we're 42 seconds into the after show
|
|
the HBR New Year show is officially over but we're still going 46 minutes in
|
|
no dear you thought I'd stop Tony you thought I'd stop
|
|
you know to listen to your show is that you'd think that you were a nice person
|
|
ah well that's just a front on a scan yeah that's just a front
|
|
yep I suffer from the same thing people think I'm a nice guy
|
|
okay transistors in anyone got any tips on how not to kill
|
|
registers when you're soldering them be careful
|
|
how do you even got any useful suggestions I would explain calling call the socket
|
|
yeah a few of them coming up shortly
|
|
I do believe that I've seen sockets for transistors as well
|
|
actually what's really weird is to see a thick film
|
|
solid state device and realize that that's what your dad had for typing
|
|
breathing on worked on thick film devices with IBM for a while one summer
|
|
okay soldering solder is where I'm set up before can you please do some of these shows
|
|
because this type of show I would listen to for hours yeah just reminiscing all about old hardware
|
|
and stuff so just start at your yeah when you first about your dad and then your entire career
|
|
spending maybe a show per year how about that so can we we can't say what I'll take that
|
|
under advisement I think I think I got some time open next December
|
|
but it's two shades or two shades well you need the most important time to fill is actually the
|
|
new year's show because I know I didn't fill it this year so I'll have to
|
|
that the show does not count as a show everybody knows this
|
|
except for my sister build yes yes leafy go in the head wait a minute that
|
|
hi since I've been sitting here and listening to something or other although then again
|
|
I'm coming from Linux log podcast so if that comes to the show this does
|
|
yeah I really enjoy that show actually well my good boy if you can you know we're available twice
|
|
a month you know the directions wrong times yeah exactly mid-level nice unfortunately
|
|
okay so when are you gonna put on time Ken when are you gonna put up the new year's show and I
|
|
also get to show I'm wondering well I'm not putting up the new year's show at all that's
|
|
hunky stepped forward for that one I will do it nobody else is gonna do it but yeah
|
|
I pay to you if it's got the way it's always oh yes good well happy new year folks I think I'm
|
|
gonna step out and crash or do something creative you could always make a PCB we could do it together like
|
|
yeah I think I'm gonna go Ken so good luck with the rest of the soldering
|
|
god and yeah hopefully we might bump into each other I might call Tom Camp if it's available
|
|
this year yeah hopefully try to bump into your old camp I'll bring my recorder anyway
|
|
and said enjoy foster him yeah yeah yeah oh you're not going this time are you I mean you're there
|
|
no no no sir I am well as you say it's yeah nearer doesn't actually mean cheaper cheaper
|
|
well well maybe but that's probably on a bit doesn't it I mean trains maybe a little bit
|
|
cheaper than going on a plane for example from Amsterdam from Holland but yeah it's
|
|
lots of hotels and all that still so final happy new year to all in Hacker Public Radio land
|
|
and see you down the road sometime well said sir well said all the rest bye bye see you Tony
|
|
see you in that minor and that's pretty much the end I guess really officially yeah I'll stick on here
|
|
if anyone joins then I'll be more than happy to chat but yeah there should be old camp
|
|
well where we assume so after what they can't what they kind of say at the end every year and
|
|
there's also a free node event now which I don't know if you even knew about yeah I did uh
|
|
good um yeah I was considering going to that but funds the last was a good man what did you say
|
|
a minute ago I missed some that was a good over no no there was something else you said but what was
|
|
that at the end you said you're thinking of going to it but something uh I was thinking funds
|
|
money cash financial strapped no not and not having enough financial resources to do
|
|
oh right yeah well this time it was I don't really have a problem as such because it's in my nearby
|
|
city for a change you know so that's great just get a bus down get a bus back stay in the place
|
|
you know but because normally you have to go off to like Brussels or Liverpool or you know
|
|
somewhere else far away yeah but that's that's on next year oh well this year I can say now
|
|
2018 that's that'll be on this year as well and it's quite good um the uh bomb finite weekend
|
|
the better had like some good speakers they had Karen Sandler Deb Nicholson some I mean
|
|
saw on the website really but some Debby and Guy believe there were the stand um
|
|
for people like Popeye there as well do you need a brand new stand but I was doing one for the
|
|
one two had a stand yes yeah we we had a stand as well in our Linux user group because we are
|
|
the local what I insisted on that we should talk to you have a stand so did a little speech thing
|
|
as well be a bit embarrassing otherwise unless you're on turf like you don't but yeah
|
|
factly where meant to be does Linux use a group so it was like uh yeah we should probably have a
|
|
stand there really so I got so got two people's helpers although it was a little bit disappointing
|
|
running stands there because at least when I we were there to be found on us were there
|
|
nine hundred percent of the time but look it wasn't like fuzz then where you know people really do
|
|
influx and go all over the stands and you stand stand stand stand stand stand here it's like
|
|
they come around the stands a bit but they really are there for talks most sorry I mean it
|
|
showed it everywhere so that's those are how it goes with these small events doesn't it
|
|
sort of old camp and I need about three hundred people ever but yeah it was a shame it was a shame
|
|
it was they went like that in a way but it was good to do that and it was very nice to it was
|
|
actually in Bristol for a change instead of going off somewhere else like I just said sorry the
|
|
layers in between them soldering as we go to no that's cool but you all always realize that
|
|
even if it's a small thing and you know there's not that much traffic you still can have that
|
|
impact for your project you know so always good thing yeah the other thing is I mean Bristol
|
|
generally is quite a nice city in England it's you know it's got nightlife it's got
|
|
it's got tourist attractions it's got my sister is it oh you got sister okay well yeah have you
|
|
been to see being Bristol ever yourself no it happens but she lives there with her kids and stuff
|
|
but yeah it's quite a nice city it's quite safe and all the rest of it generally speaking for
|
|
most part although some parts are slightly a bit more run down and all this you know more homeless
|
|
people and so on all that kind of stuff and I went up I took somebody to a and I know on
|
|
nine four or a few years I took him up to a vegan cafe up up up up there and got a little bit
|
|
scared up there because of you know you can like you really see the change of everything stuff
|
|
and yeah but um what's interesting at later on is how I hear about these Americans would come over
|
|
from you know the various places in America and how they were just talking how safe it was how
|
|
they've been down all the dodgy alleys late at night it sounded like and obviously nothing
|
|
happened you know that's that really shows a difference and some of them were saying how like one
|
|
guy it was his first time outside of America as well and he was like he was like oh Bristol is
|
|
yeah and Bristol is sort of it seems to amazing compared to what I've come from sort of thing it's
|
|
so safe it's so this so that and he was like oh he's so lucky to kind of live around here and
|
|
I thought it was very interesting because it really showed the difference um you just you know
|
|
just showed so the difference and that that was great as well I thought yeah but you have to
|
|
remember that America's a massive big place and what goes in one place does not necessarily go
|
|
on the other I mean I've been to places in the states where everybody's door is open then
|
|
they know everybody in the neighborhood and you know small towns well well yeah well yeah
|
|
this guy come from places where they've gone a begun issue and so on really it also sounds like
|
|
you know one of those places again they would argue there's no such thing as a gun issue
|
|
anyway anyway enough about guns I'm sure that's been covered in detail on the while I was asleep
|
|
well putting in the no putting in the ceramic capacitors for those of you following along
|
|
cool yeah they probably told you probably talked about that over yeah but I'm just saying in general
|
|
I'm a bit but yeah and um do you know where all comes gonna be I have no idea
|
|
however I expect it's going to be somewhere in England that's not really that's how it's not
|
|
because it's not gonna be up in Scotland very unlikely and it's probably not gonna end up in
|
|
Wales although someone like Cardiff I think you could put an old camp to be honest it's not too bad
|
|
but yeah it's gonna be in England too well the thought and hopefully a bit more south so it's
|
|
nearer to me but that depends a little bit even with the south because of how it's done
|
|
could even count because I mean southwest Bristol and then Canterbury's so good for hours
|
|
away that south east Tony was mentally mentioning north east oh north east could be that's
|
|
where he said he was from wasn't it there that pull he said that pulls quite far from most people I
|
|
think everything's really some sir if you're from the I guess it's very close
|
|
with us the trains have got going up again that's why I had it is amazing how
|
|
relaxing this doing the sport is reminds me of have you ever put a leg or set together
|
|
when we're doing what board did you say yeah I've done Lego but that's been that's me a long time
|
|
I've been putting a kiss together a electronics tester kit as recommended by NY Bill and one of the
|
|
shows and he challenged me to do one of these kits so I bought it and I have been now assembling it
|
|
for the last year on three hours seems like it started yesterday afternoon positive is quite
|
|
relaxing anyway yeah yeah you ever remember the feeling the feeling that you get while doing
|
|
it similar to putting a Lego kit together something like that not so much because I was a kid last
|
|
did back out but remember back you have no memory of being young you poor thing
|
|
I tell you what you do you go down and buy a Lego kit or an airfix airfix kit and put it together
|
|
relive your youth you could be doing that in between the talks at the stands and you can say
|
|
why are we doing this ah I'm glad you asked it's all to do with electronics but you're putting a
|
|
Lego kit together ah that's what you think I'm practicing for electronics okay officially lost
|
|
to there thank you there was a big thing there was a big travel suitcase sort of I remember from
|
|
it in 1990s when I was a kid you know that that would have lots and lots of old Lego in it
|
|
lots of old Lego pieces and there would be like a paper and more sort of thing and my brother and
|
|
my brother would sometimes go in there and play with Lego so yeah I do have a memory of Lego
|
|
and and have you seen a Lego movie or something like that was one the subject of Lego I hadn't
|
|
seen it but it was stuff like that more recently as well have you ever done airfix kids stuff like
|
|
that you know aeroplanes sticking them together from plastic bits and gluing them together
|
|
not really I'm not done not really that hard where well that's not really hard where but you know
|
|
yeah I know much of this stuff I usually ended up with a big pile of glued plastic at the end
|
|
but still it's enjoyable to do the results may not be perfect but still enjoyable to do
|
|
that said I did live in the middle of nowhere so entertainment was was very restrictive
|
|
yeah well yeah I mean it's all changed well now that now entertainment is basically
|
|
electronic devices I'm talking people in general here you know they're like book the books get
|
|
read but you know it's mostly phones and stuff now that's what happy friends say themselves
|
|
and TV and game consoles and it's so it's how things change over the years a bit
|
|
action man or all these toys that people used to play with it's not really it's not really
|
|
played with as much in general there's I mean a shop still sell toys but it's not it's kind of
|
|
one out of it it depends never really played with action man there was a bit after my time why
|
|
have I some money left over capacitors that's a question there's not bound up bound up bound up
|
|
don't panic everyone don't panic and I didn't play with an action man either but you know
|
|
there was stuff like that and I was thinking of it and I'll see there's still Barbie around
|
|
for the girls and that but and the boys there you go Barbie doll honey can't that you play with
|
|
yeah the kid don't see it I don't personally see a lot of difference over the marketing between an
|
|
action figure and a Barbie doll you know if you take Ken apart strip and down and take action
|
|
man apart on the stream though what this gave you left it marketing and gender stereotyping
|
|
well yeah well yeah well to an extent but yeah it's an action figure not a doll
|
|
then this terrier yeah gender stereotype final that's all part of it that said when my son did
|
|
dress up as a fairy when he was younger I was concerned about about you know that you would
|
|
be picked on on teased but to be honest not really it was cool as a fairy with a sword seems
|
|
absolutely fine to me so have I put these in now no one of four one of four and there's one
|
|
that one of two yep cool tip to everybody following along I should have probably done the
|
|
pastors the ceramic path you did the ceramic pastors first as they're a bit smaller than they
|
|
transistors but you live in there anyway yes gender stereotyping gender a bit of a different subject
|
|
but but I mean yeah a lot of stuff is based on gender we're clothing as well and just in general
|
|
if that's how it should be or not that is in the debate because people are people at the end of
|
|
the day aren't they but a lot of it society is gender this gender that so I think here a lot of
|
|
was in the Dutch news where they went around and priced you know a haircut for man was cheaper
|
|
than the equivalent haircut for women and shampoo bottles with exactly the same ingredients were
|
|
or priced that was a price difference based on gender but yeah I guess that's just more
|
|
of a thing but yeah political now shortly but on this network there are only two types of people
|
|
well I should have said one zero types of people but it doesn't really work in audio hackers and those
|
|
who have people who've done a show and people who have yet to do a show I will not be posing
|
|
that little bit while I'm soldering so do you hang on do you know why going to what you just
|
|
said or they don't really care don't tell me you haven't done a show after all these years
|
|
I only I only came on the new year show a few years back because it was popped up now it was
|
|
fissile web or golden who mentioned it someone I thought that might be let's see what that that's
|
|
about and then you're part of the HPR New Year tradition now we can't go on without you
|
|
doesn't mean I've done this show though no no tinted and I've also ready told you I think even in
|
|
person have we met in person I'm not sure I think we have actually I think we did because I was up
|
|
there we've definitely passed each other because I've been asked for stem and I've been
|
|
interested in stands where you've been you might have passed me or something I know you'd like
|
|
interviewed in the middle of the midget time but that wasn't me as an example now I would have known
|
|
if it was in fairness I would have known if it was you and third but yes you could do a show
|
|
in magia I've often told I've even told you before not have to do somebody can well here like
|
|
we're now having a show about me filling in resistors on a PCB that nobody can see seriously
|
|
people who listen to anything not really interested in magia as much as I was a few years back
|
|
what is that but what about top can you say um well I mean that should be enough
|
|
probably personal to extend well yeah probably more personal really plus I feel that it doesn't
|
|
um I mean there's lots lots of distros and this one great it carries on the whole magick
|
|
rendering with legacy and it's all volunteer project democratic um voting on host either teams
|
|
all the rest of it but at the same time I personally feel that it doesn't um actually in the
|
|
bait in certain ways it doesn't really in the bait it just it's just one of those distros that
|
|
takes up stream from the most part um rebrand rebrands it puts in some changes and keeps its
|
|
old tools alive some of them need updating like the installer could really do with an update I mean
|
|
the one that really gets me in the installer and the example it's really a little thing to be
|
|
fair but it does show this old software that could do with an update actually because um even now
|
|
all the years later it's still it still mentions you could slide here that's just one example but
|
|
but it just doesn't usually people actually can can actually work on the installer I think there
|
|
aren't that many actual developers who have the technical knowledge actually work on the installer
|
|
properly and what I remember um but yeah so it yeah it's just I mean it releases and it comes out
|
|
of the new versions and I've got a laptop I'm trying to set up again um kind of bullet back with
|
|
a new motherboard and hard disk and that I was going to put a bunch of on it um and I had probably
|
|
this one 16.04 and that then I was going to put my GIF up five on to it as well but to be honest I'm
|
|
also mostly using um mobile phones now or or tablets or possibly mini PCs or I will be once
|
|
if I'll have GPD pocket probably set up but then that's as well okay all of those are very good
|
|
as well you know so there's the desktop and the laptop it's like I don't really need one
|
|
personally for I'm doing most of the time but I'm actually working in tech as well so you know
|
|
like yeah I do remember the music or what you work on I'm actually working it as well but that's
|
|
that's okay I'm going to call it a night guys have a new year and can I'll uh think about doing a
|
|
bit scope bit jello it was thank you very much for all the help it was genuinely helpful or even
|
|
though you were trying you're very welcome yeah to have a think about that because it would be uh
|
|
a nice one you got your Arduino because we can put the cord up and then people can follow along um
|
|
because I remember when I did my engineering degree that we were sure the synoscopes and really
|
|
just went over my head I had no context at the time for what I was doing yes I was able to
|
|
fill do the exam and stuff but I didn't really understand why I was doing it right cool all right
|
|
have a good night talk to you live long and prosper okay night happy new year
|
|
dang the whole happy new year forgot about that also the other thing actually we're talking about
|
|
working or let's let's I mean I talk linux open source this kind of stuff I've noticed as well
|
|
is that quite simply if you want to actually work with linux open source and I'm talking about
|
|
something good with it as well it's going to give you a good wage and you know I think generally
|
|
speaking you have to be quite technical you have to not necessarily a computer science degree
|
|
but you know you've got really no technical stuff and then oh yeah there's stuff you can do
|
|
because every now and again on the Linux user group for example I've seen it in the last you know
|
|
a few years when I've been on the every now and again the emails come along and it's like hey there's
|
|
a there's a job going in this company in Bristol and and it's going to give you all this money per year
|
|
and we need to know this and that and I look at those every now and again I think yes in a different
|
|
life I I would have done that possibly or I could have you know to have done that because I would have
|
|
done to university and I would have had my computer science degree and I would have done this
|
|
and that but you know that didn't happen so I so so now I don't end up doing that basically well can
|
|
I stop you there because somebody who has employed people and occasionally has asked for recommend
|
|
people there is one thing that every employer is looking for and I'm talking about the engineers
|
|
here and the EEV blog did a very good way back a few years ago topic on this it is not about
|
|
how many degrees you have yes you'll need that in order to get into the past the HR department
|
|
and all the rest it's not about what you can do it's about your enthusiasm and your ability to learn
|
|
these are the two things that will always make you an outstanding candidate and I would always
|
|
recommend somebody yes this person has got and there have been cases where we have hired people
|
|
where somebody has got a master's degree and a thing and we have hired the less qualified person
|
|
or the person without a degree but has some experience and it's all come down to enthusiasm at the end
|
|
of the day and if you're not working in a company that appreciates enthusiasm in their employees
|
|
you already want to be working there either that's all I got to say about well well well well yeah
|
|
I mean that's some extent that's true actually with tech as well that you may not actually have
|
|
that computer science degree or whatever it is but you may have actually self taught yourself at home a lot
|
|
and then you can be like look I actually did this website or I worked on this project I did this
|
|
I did that you can kind of show that you've done that. That's what you're equivalent to me when they say
|
|
blah blah blah degree or equivalent and a lot of times if you go in and you apply to the job and you
|
|
say look I'd love to do it into you I understand them not qualified for it but I really appreciate
|
|
just having a look around your place having a talk with you and maybe there's work experience
|
|
that to be had or maybe there's whatever you can definitely get your foot in the door people are
|
|
because it is so much easier to help somebody out no matter how slow they are at learning it is
|
|
just so much easier to help somebody else is willing to learn God it's yeah you have no idea
|
|
possibly also this is something else just turn up what I imagine that did I see clucky so so far
|
|
we got sea prompt honking the boom mr. Jackson nerd or Makodi operator are there Ross
|
|
new and steambot only of course everybody except yeah I think everybody is new to accept us
|
|
except for the bots well let's see the Americans who are you doing here well they
|
|
you know they've had them year now so they are either some are probably very drunk right now
|
|
you know the early hours in the morning or they have possibly collapsed somewhere and got some sleep
|
|
and that's probably basically it and that's why they're not they're not on at the moment
|
|
I mean said although actually it's not that early is it seven something in New York yeah but for
|
|
these people yeah but uh different all the bands and whether they've got a day off or whether they're
|
|
going to oh I wonder is this going to your show going to start I remember how one year I kept
|
|
it going for good was it 16 hours afterwards remember that yeah I was very impressed with that
|
|
and it was mostly me as well because it only appeared in some of you popped on and we did it again
|
|
then then they carried on then I got went went sleep as well and then I think it went on a good
|
|
free hour or something after that as well well I'm going to keep it going until I have this transistor
|
|
tester put together and then I'm going to stop well I'm going to be less involved and right now I
|
|
have all the surface bone components in all the resistors in all the transistors in all the
|
|
ceramic capacitors and I think I'll do the electric capacitors which are polarized so we're
|
|
going to be careful about that ha ha yes anyway you said you were impressed they kept going so long
|
|
you generally I wasn't sure that way yes well okay actually he's carried on for so long something
|
|
I was like to the new show is slightly different to your regular HBR thing and I was in the
|
|
beginning I was a little bit yeah I'm thinking it's a quote waste of shows on court but it
|
|
doesn't it actually builds community so that's Kevin pointed out that so yeah it's a it's a different
|
|
beast and once my brain was able to accept that and I and also the fact that I'm not actually
|
|
responsible for posting it or showing it and we had a I had a thing where would be posted
|
|
immediately afterwards but people don't seem to mind if it comes out in April or February or
|
|
whatever so yeah chill out man chillax I do actually think that it should come out as soon as possible
|
|
personally after I thought Jen Jen me speaking then I strongly recommend I will send you the files
|
|
and you could edit it especially yeah I know especially the channels so they who shut up I know
|
|
there's like a lot editing and the show notes and stuff to do as well so it's not quite as simple
|
|
as just putting out straight away no it is not there's a lot of work involved and I'm so glad
|
|
that Hunky has agreed to do it or if he hasn't I mean we will we will do it but it's I tend to be
|
|
a little bit more brutal that I'll just split the whole thing up four hours in I mean the show
|
|
notes is that you just info and put more stuff in the show notes and then release it yeah well
|
|
this year the show notes have been brilliant I think down to Casper from the England Brothers
|
|
podcast I think it's done a lot of show notes so that makes it a lot easier and a lot nicer
|
|
yeah this Casper who's been on he's been brilliant because he's been putting music into the show
|
|
at times as well yes which was actually quite nice with his guitar and stuff but he's an
|
|
illegal alien he has you know he earned his alien brother from not of this world he's not on
|
|
I know he's not on this thing anymore but I'll not even in here in the
|
|
so the long lead of the capacitor is the positive but I didn't hear some of his stuff but I believe
|
|
he did a Ken song or something like that well I'm sure he'll hear it later on you'll listen
|
|
when he when he listen through he did like a this is what happened when Ken is not his song if I'm
|
|
correctly that I think Ken could be a song board you know just oh you owe me a show why don't you
|
|
do a show about that oh I didn't hear you doing a show about that I very nearly post my capacitor
|
|
in the wrong way wrong there that's because you're distracting I hear the BBC are going to
|
|
lock up their website without that you can't get in without a post called or without a license
|
|
number or I did not hear that but I'll be okay not the news website just go up there no just
|
|
no per well they mean that the whole you know the UK is what the TV license which is basically
|
|
to fund the BBC so yeah yeah it seems reasonable but unfortunately there's no option to pay for
|
|
that license outside of the country that would be nice well well true but that weighs around
|
|
that outside to be outside the country still get a bomb not really meant to do that but you know
|
|
well on the other hand a lot of cable networks carry the BBC so you know you could say oh well
|
|
you're not meant to do that but Norwegian TV make it make conscious efforts to make everything
|
|
that they produce they release it under a creative commons license with the idea that they're
|
|
spreading Norwegian culture so you know you could argue that as a service to the British Empire or
|
|
the British people that you would release the British programmes to the masses well I didn't
|
|
have that in the Norwegian thing that's interesting and the BBC has what it's got you know shows like
|
|
Doctor Who that I'm really going to that best meant you know it's meant to be really popular
|
|
and just because of the spot where it doesn't mean it can't be free I'm playing devil's advocate here
|
|
slightly but yeah and top gear used to be really popular I think about that as well but it's
|
|
spent money as well and did you follow up top here not really I mean what I've watched so it's
|
|
here and there and I've got into that properly what's to read the comeback series for a bit as well
|
|
around Amazon has many people moved to Amazon to watch it I assume that quite a few people probably
|
|
did they go and get Amazon to watch actually but now all these other shows as well so you know
|
|
there's so much TV in the UK can watch on TV and so on on these things truth truth of course if
|
|
you had a satellite dish and we're living somewhere that could pick up the signals they're all
|
|
unencrypted free to air so there you go but that would probably be breaking the law or something
|
|
well yes so I moved into this flat and had to obviously sort the TV license stuff out but yeah
|
|
I mean you could just the the satellite dish will just pick up whatever anyway but they know if
|
|
you're not watching it or apparently you're not watching it with TV license yeah basically I think
|
|
they don't put database of every house in the country and then subtract people who pay their
|
|
license from that and then work their way from there and there's no way to tell now if you're
|
|
watching TV or not back in the day you would be able to pick up the signal the frequencies
|
|
of the CRT I was asked in so many and worked to do a show about that but you ran away screaming
|
|
okay what's next I think the crystal the crystal I will put it in the crystal
|
|
my wife's looking at me she said the wife come on earlier or did it all for a bit before I
|
|
always out used in the background what I had to do she's just in the background teasing the slugging
|
|
she get your wife to come on to the show at some stage she will be on at some stage and we
|
|
will be sick and tired of hearing her on this project both yes yes dear whenever we get
|
|
her finished you bring your kids on this year as well it seems remember you date and I missed that
|
|
no that happened no guys yeah they're busy playing something I'll see if they can come on believe me
|
|
we've got lots of time because I've got this nowhere near finish this so you don't have to stay on
|
|
I will just continue waffling here and then it'll seem like them no no no I'm a I'm a bit bored
|
|
anyways oh thank you very much no I meant I'm not doing anything as such today there's no plans
|
|
I should have actually put in this crystal first because it's a lot lower down on the component
|
|
that's next to it that's pins are a little bit bent so we shall see and also the guy mentioned
|
|
when he was doing the video that we should really have the crystals up a bit because the tin case
|
|
can short with the pads and so we'll see how we go here okay pads are straightened and it's
|
|
some sort of tweezers yes I have to buy tweezers as well of course because yeah I thought I had
|
|
to buy another headset maybe but then yes I think you do well maybe I do I didn't know how good
|
|
is this coming out or not I don't know it's fine it was brutal there earlier on when you had the
|
|
back on the back feed was going to what you got that sort yeah because they're because those
|
|
no headphones in yeah but I was going yeah but well I was going to I thought okay HPR show I want
|
|
to use probably my laptop again I want to set my Linux up on that laptop the four hands or
|
|
as well be it sitting there and Windows again on though because I did that before I remember doing
|
|
that I sort of stood for my laptop and it was like hey when I moved to a new flat have I got my
|
|
headsets and I thought this like a good two a month or so ago you know I was like how have I got my
|
|
headset so I looked around for a headset of course like you do and it's like oh um I think it's
|
|
actually at the other house I don't have it here so like right I'm guessing I'm going to have to
|
|
check the other day around Christmas time you know for that and I'm like well I can have to buy
|
|
new headsets I guess I was like right I can buy one off I'll go and have it delivered down the
|
|
road to the august down there that's what I was going to do but I was going to get as there anyway
|
|
get food and so on you know they do and and I thought like oh actually I could probably buy one
|
|
in as the as there's like a super marketer oh yeah you don't have them in island do you
|
|
well I know what an as is because I it's like um but there are people yeah it's like who wouldn't
|
|
know one and as does well maybe they know Walmart is and and it's like the equivalent of Walmart
|
|
basically but in the UK it's called as during the UK it's not Walmart but it's actually the same
|
|
parent company I think Walmart own as there as well yeah it's weird uh so it's basically as
|
|
it's basically Walmart but in the UK we were the different name and probably maybe a bit smaller but
|
|
but yeah I went so I went to Nazareth the get and um I looked at the headset section
|
|
they had a nice little leak from the snow the night day before in the ceiling whatever that was
|
|
and it's like gaming headsets are 30 something pounds and I thought right yeah I expect to pay
|
|
about 30 pounds for this actually but I looked around a bit and there was some other headsets
|
|
and it said PC headset and it was about seven pounds which is quite cheap but I thought
|
|
that it's as there isn't it polar warry and so I thought that's probably what I want actually
|
|
all that I can save some money here actually so I bought I bought the uh that headset and then here
|
|
I am on uh you know was it denied before this was made before you know you're sure yeah yeah
|
|
something like that and I've actually opened it up take the plastic you know you just says is
|
|
get rid of the plastic and guess what I found out tell me well I was hoping to buy a USB headset
|
|
you know the USB headset that you they use plans all over like the cheap in well it's just like
|
|
it yeah it's this yeah I think it's the old model style isn't it the port yeah the audio jack
|
|
the ports the you know that the other way of doing it isn't it and that's all well my laptop
|
|
polys isn't even have these ports on it let's check that and yep there's no ports for that on
|
|
there so there you go I suppose that's what cheap means then huh but just say PC headset you know
|
|
I'm sure a lot of people could have made the same mistake you just you still just think it's
|
|
going to be USB don't you how much was that what did that cost you it was quite cheap there was
|
|
feels about seven pounds still expensive for a USB headset for like you know it wasn't it wasn't
|
|
USB it was a it was with the yeah even a thingy headset I would say that's quite expensive if you go
|
|
to the action here you can pick them up or you are three or four euros I don't know if that's
|
|
well I don't know if that's fully expensive but you know generally speaking if you buy a
|
|
and a headset and any of these the shops as the carries PC world or any of this stuff you probably
|
|
talking about 30 quid usually for for a good enough one really so I thought compared to that
|
|
that's actually cheaper but I find that doesn't have the normal USB on it oh dear right I'm doing
|
|
chip holder it's a bit tired naturally that plumble works on and plumble free although you have to
|
|
drag me into the room like a really good knock connect myself just trying to drag myself in for
|
|
some reason yeah but still you know that's an important thing and then so here's a good one
|
|
actually so yeah I was setting up the laptop as I mentioned I believe so yeah you know you do
|
|
the windows first because that's always troubles I'm sure you know your updates take ages we
|
|
go's wrong possibly all the all that but so yeah you had this new motherboard put back to windows
|
|
8.1 by the yeah HP or their partner company you really could sense since it off actually so I did
|
|
all that upgrading it back to windows 10 which stuck ages because you know it's windows and did
|
|
the updates there again all this stuff and then I was like the night I'm doing other stuff as
|
|
well so the night I'm down okay I can put Linux on here now I think and so I'm trying to do it
|
|
again on the like two nights or night before the new year shopping to us and so I'm so I put
|
|
burnt down the the burnt news 16.04.3 ISO I pull it on to a USB stick it's a sheba 32gb USB
|
|
is eight that's meant to be new from curries PC well actually but anyway I pull it on there
|
|
and I burnt it and there was few issues with that one or something they quite work correctly
|
|
I had to be a partition I used another USB stick I mean it wouldn't it's the first one that didn't
|
|
install isn't put everything on from the ISO properly the second one did but um when I load
|
|
up I had to use unit boot and I tried that as well but I load it up and I got grub coming up
|
|
from the USB stick but but when I try and load up a bunch of it's going black screen and it won't
|
|
go any further basically I'm wondering why that is I mean I disable school boot on the laptop
|
|
I'm thinking if I need to disable something else like fast boot because I'm or something like that
|
|
because I didn't think I did that this time I don't know if it's you know I didn't want my problem
|
|
it's quite oh how to know where to try that I think it's in the past disable fast boot as well
|
|
well I was looking around the BIOS maybe I need to do that but you know you want this knowing
|
|
when you can't install limits isn't it because of some silly reason but you still work fine
|
|
on that laptop no problem so I'm wondering what I'm doing wrong this time yeah
|
|
yeah it's hard to know with those BIOS because every computer is going to be different you know
|
|
yeah maybe it's just fast boot but I think I'll have to try again later one really because you know
|
|
I don't want to be sitting there with windows 10 and that's it no way not on that laptop
|
|
um and I'm I'm generally thinking actually that with my gpd pocket my ultra mini pc one of them
|
|
whatever that I might just actually do it now I'm just actually let delete windows and be
|
|
talking about because do you have a link for that gpd pocket thing you pop that in the shoelace
|
|
you can uh well you can buy it I'm sorry if you could do that that will be handy or not you're
|
|
on your phone yeah okay hold on a second yeah good point let me see gpd pocket gulf papa delta
|
|
yeah yeah gpd pocket that's and another device they will be setting up and I would recommend
|
|
anybody who who think who wants a small door things they are cool I I really lost it after one
|
|
of those one of the guys on work was gonna buy one yes I got I got the gpd xd
|
|
with um extra space because of when I sort of crowdfunded that I mean they'd already sold it with
|
|
less space I've got the gpd win as well uh which uh the windows 10 didn't last very long on that
|
|
before I kind of corrupted it because of actually there's a bug in the factory set so I did the
|
|
factories and it basically corrupted it or something and it's seven dollar people as well
|
|
so the dp pocket I now she was okay on dp pocket in the factory set a lot myself out of windows
|
|
but I know there's a way to get around that but I'm going to basically be um taking pointy
|
|
actual gpd version of a bunch who won 16.041 to dp pocket later on sometime because they actually
|
|
went was crowdfunded well I'm gonna say last year now 2017 when it was funded last year 2017
|
|
uh they you need to uh you need to give it a few times what's that the year the year the last year
|
|
was 2017 this year is 2018 it won't be just but yes uh so when I crowdfunded it last year 2017
|
|
uh they uh I'm sorry I didn't crowdfunded I didn't have money to do it at the time so I got
|
|
later on I got some extra money but anyway they they were they were they were crowdfunding it
|
|
giving it two options the windows 10 preinstalled or the Ubuntu then at 16.04 it's a dp version
|
|
how well it's slightly different so it has to it's not a standard Ubuntu it's slightly customised
|
|
and stuff uh and um I got and it said later on they were pleased with the sort of term wire
|
|
to the community for the Ubuntu and also windows so you could if you got so you could switch over
|
|
to other other one basically and so to after this the only now the only sell the windows version
|
|
anywhere that any one who said anywhere that sells it only sells the windows version
|
|
wise that I don't know I guess they've just sort of given up on the Ubuntu one or all it's because
|
|
you can put it on yourself anyway you know you've got the one that came preinstalled windows by mine
|
|
and also that apparently the dp version of Ubuntu isn't as good because of how because I
|
|
they've done it I've read somewhere but there's also a community doing like there's a 17.04
|
|
version under the community there's a 17.10 version being worked on I believe there's even things
|
|
like mates uh sorry mint mint there's a mint version not unofficial there's a I think it's
|
|
manager or linux where it's called mangero ma n j a r o yeah mangero is a nice based
|
|
Linux distribution there's that under the community as well so what I'm basically going to do
|
|
is I'm going to when you put the Ubuntu dpd version on it will wipe out windows anyway it will take
|
|
up the whole hard disk and that's that there's no option to change that I've read somewhere that's
|
|
so I'll put that on try it out first uh uh if you don't want to abuse her over the usb but I'll
|
|
put it on try it out first and then I'll probably be like okay this is quite nice and this is good
|
|
but yeah I might I may just stop grades to the community versions of 17.04 there's a lot of
|
|
videos on youtube like sort of how you do it and stuff it's some very very good youtube videos of
|
|
it strikes and and then apparently with community versions you can do a bit of windows actually
|
|
but I may or may not do that depends I'm just a bit I'm just a bit frustrated with windows again
|
|
you know I've just been doing stuff with a laptop things not quite going right away with the
|
|
update so even has a weird issue where on that HP laptop it was not um logging in for a while
|
|
poppill is getting a blue screen the death I was getting it was getting really slow and it became
|
|
okay uh you know windows is the hassle and for me I'm sure you know I'm talking about
|
|
you know after you run windows for 15 years now but you have what haven't been running it
|
|
had not because you know it's a hassle yeah yeah I mean uh you don't need to yeah I presume so but
|
|
I would probably have the same problems if I was installing BSD or Solaris or something else
|
|
I don't know and now and now I know I think no I think generally Linux is actually much more
|
|
reliable in that sense because windows it you know is you've got the issue with the updates and then
|
|
then in a reboot and then it's also going to potentially get viruses a lot easier not what it's
|
|
going to be but viruses a lot easier that's another that's a side point but as we all know who
|
|
are going to be listening to this uh that you know Linux generally works better it's more
|
|
reliable it's more stable it's more it's got better performance it you know it's generally works
|
|
better technically it works a lot better so obviously obviously certain programs can be lacking
|
|
for at times it can be windows web before but that's a side issue what did you say
|
|
just ordering a new lady but all your arguments could equally be made by Windows you know it's
|
|
by a large the only argument that can be made for Linux is that it's free and opens our
|
|
software well you know the counterargument can be made look at the heartbeat bug look at all the
|
|
things that have come out there's been a lot more targets on Linux recently than
|
|
so with the windows windows has done an amazing amount to make their software secure in the last
|
|
period of time you can't argue well well it might be a bit more secure now but it's still going
|
|
to get viruses easier or that although windows isn't completely bad or not everything and that's
|
|
actually kind of showing by something like reactOS when you think about it the kind of open source
|
|
and the windows or whatever that it's meant well you know it's meaning the health of so long but
|
|
how does that one have you yes I've interviewed them twice at Boston yeah yeah true they're
|
|
stunned there the last two years and it's kind of funny though well not funny but I remember going
|
|
to that stand that was them I believe it was last year or maybe this year that was 2017 or 2016
|
|
last year either way yeah yeah yeah or the one before you know and I went around there and it's like
|
|
oh cool yeah okay raptor s cool we got a stand and all that yeah yeah I've tried that on the
|
|
worksheet and I know in the ballot for years and and he was trying to show Microsoft Word running
|
|
in reactOS really like working properly and things like that and it's they've got laptop to test
|
|
the program and so I went on to the computer and I was like hang on a minute this is basically
|
|
crashing right away and it's like oh yeah let let let let just fix that up a bit but yeah I mean
|
|
it's a nice idea otherwise because it or would be if only it could run more windows program
|
|
it shares a lot of code we're winding apparently now do it or to an extent but you know if it could
|
|
happen if you could run lots of windows program these are in wine and well not hit and miss but
|
|
I mean just generally it works 1990 you know most stuff just works and same with some like
|
|
raptor s and I think that would be good but neither of those things are quite there yet for that
|
|
yeah but they're also always going to be chasing the chasing moving targets so
|
|
but it's actually they're always chasing moving targets as well because when it changes
|
|
but I think the windows Linux thing the battle is over at this point the war is over there's a few
|
|
battles left to fight but essentially Linux as well for now and then some well well it's one you
|
|
can say Linux is I would say that Linux has one pretty much every other technical area that matters
|
|
you know super computers or servers the robotics the NASA the all that kind of stuff the mobile
|
|
phone even if you include Android underneath that and it's definitely one the mobile phone and
|
|
tablet as well or enough so but obviously there's that one area where it doesn't lack and I'm sure
|
|
you know what I'm about to say without you saying it but I will say it is that one area where it doesn't
|
|
hasn't one for various reasons and that is of course the desktop computer the standard laptop
|
|
or desktop which is my point no I disagree you have more Chromebooks been pushed out every year
|
|
they're all Linux kernels and then you are seeing that on the desktops especially where I work
|
|
where there's quite a lot of developers that there tend to be running other macOS or Linux so
|
|
some of them are using version of windows but the point is the battleground that we have been
|
|
fighting so long for so the desktop is becoming more and more niche as time goes on as you say
|
|
yourself you're you're now recording this on the mobile device all the people who I was trying
|
|
who I was trying to convince my family to use various desktops or whatever they've all switched to
|
|
moving Samsung Galaxy tabs so they're all running the mix but you also have to think about that
|
|
and most of the people don't care what platform they're using they mostly just care about
|
|
the the applications that they're using because even even in the Linux world like most of us
|
|
will run anything from Ubuntu Debian and Arch Linux to you know Red Hat, RPM based
|
|
distro they're all relatively different and they all have their own things a granite Linux is
|
|
the underlying thing but it's it's all it's all completely different the way those systems run
|
|
but it's you know it they don't and most people don't care they just want their apps to be able
|
|
to get them as fast as possible and get them running and then you have people who don't care
|
|
at all what the underlying pinning is who just want to run their apps and most of the people who
|
|
usually they got windows with their computer and then they have the applications that they need or
|
|
want and then that's the end of it no one really cares about what the underlying system is except
|
|
for us because we care about you know how things get done and we want to try to get them done
|
|
the way we want them to get done we are the niche people that's but because we want to go that
|
|
extra mile learn the way computers and systems work you know we we we're the people who who fight
|
|
for for Linux I mean there's no but there's no reason to I never understood the fight for the desktop
|
|
because who cares you know like like you're it's it's we we're using this because it works for us
|
|
and if they want to use that and it works for them well I do care because well I do care when
|
|
it comes to me personal because when I went to work and they I said guys that would prefer to
|
|
use in Linux desktop and they said okay use whatever you want so long as you can do your job okay
|
|
that's fine and that's what I do I used in the next desktop doesn't affect me if there's any problem
|
|
with the software I need to fix it and I'll fix that on my own time if I can't so yeah everything's
|
|
homecadorian you I just the only differentiation the arguments for running Linux personal windows
|
|
versus Mac is kind of what you're familiar with it's your own personal preference but the
|
|
differentiation between all of them it is not that they're well got a good security model or bad
|
|
security model or the software or whatever because you're going to have bugs in every software
|
|
every piece of software the only differentiation between this piece of software and the other
|
|
piece of software is the license under which it was released that is the difference and it's
|
|
and the more I think about it the more important that becomes that that is the difference a
|
|
differentiation and that's all I have to say about that really it's yeah yeah and I definitely
|
|
can't argue against that it's for sure with with me it's mostly just workflow and I really don't have
|
|
have the patience anymore to deal with Microsoft's licensing which is the biggest reason why I got
|
|
into Linux is I don't want to deal with all of like I had no problem paying for Microsoft I had no
|
|
problem I purchased I've purchased a Windows XP you know Windows seven license both seven is where
|
|
I draw the line I bought a family license so I can put it on my wife my my mother-in-law's computer
|
|
that my wife's computer and I'm used it for for help another people out because I'm not gonna get
|
|
to I'm not gonna win that battle with them so I don't even I don't even bother trying so it with
|
|
with me the biggest thing though it's you know it's it's it's different obviously from person to
|
|
with you it's the licensing with me it's just workflow I've gotten to a point where I can if I
|
|
can put a machine up I don't care what the backpinnings are and put enlightenment on it I'm happy
|
|
as a clan yeah but my point is if you look back here you're saying the reason you're doing
|
|
this workflow I could argue with you any number of engineers where I work that they've got a workflow
|
|
based on their operating system or based on the system that they've developed and for them that's
|
|
a valid an argument to use windows as a valid an argument to use Linux or as valid the argument to
|
|
use BSD it's bought the thing that bites them in the boss is is the thing the tattoo mentions is
|
|
where they suddenly change it and that is that at that point where the license kicks in because
|
|
it's at that point the project X is forked off and people continue to develop an operation whatever
|
|
and you can continue to maintain your workflow whereas other people are then forced to adapt
|
|
and here is a point that if I had gotten on probably at an earlier moment I would have
|
|
loved to talk more about and if you listen to Linux look cast I've probably
|
|
brought up several several several times as the battle for the 32 bit what the hell is going on
|
|
that everyone's dropping support for 32 bits great just the other guys it's the epoch is coming
|
|
the end of time but it's it's not like it's not like there's anything wrong with 32 bit it's not
|
|
like 32 bits like broken why why are you dropping support for 32 bits because time's running out
|
|
but we need that we need bigger numbers but there's still 32 bit machines out there why not just
|
|
leave it leave support for it but I did the other day find a fork of arch Linux called arch Linux 32
|
|
so other people are you know keep in the hope alive I don't think anybody has forked a bun to
|
|
yet but I'm I'm slowly just migrating all my systems to Debian systems because I feel like
|
|
Debian is going to be reliable and keeping with 32. My head's been full out there a little bit but
|
|
okay so yeah the 30 bit thing I mean the old thing actually with Linux one the old thing
|
|
the classic line would be this actually Linux works much better with all the hardware all
|
|
the next brief life into all the hardware that was like you know the classic selling line in the past
|
|
and the bad one if you don't mind me say so well possibly but that but you know I'm trying to say
|
|
but obviously with the 32 bit being dropped by a lot of district you can understand
|
|
you're in extent why you want to do it or I can understand definitely is somebody who actually does
|
|
I said I'm not as interesting material but I do actually still I'm still on the various
|
|
mailing list so I get the I see various emails here and there about what's going on the packaging
|
|
and the quality assurance and the all that all that kind of stuff so when you follow a distro
|
|
like be it magia be it a bun to be it whatever you actually follow a distribution close to
|
|
enough on its mailing list like I've been doing with magia for last year's now you know that
|
|
actually there's a lot of there's a lot of effort there's a lot of time it takes a lot of
|
|
people to actually make this stuff happen so you have to package stuff you have to support stuff
|
|
you have to do quality assurance to make sure what actually works and is is is okay for the public
|
|
and all the rest of it so you have to test ISO and in case magia I mean they were tested they'd
|
|
still do test all the ISO manually there's no automatic testing here it's done on the small
|
|
quality assurance team alpha one alpha two alpha three alpha for all this but alpha one two
|
|
beta one two but there's all the internal ISO testing as well and the updates of test is all
|
|
tested by people manually and so you can kind of see some of the ISOs to get dropped recently but
|
|
last two years because it's like do we need it back in just two seconds slightly different example
|
|
but it was like do we need a loan or a KDE in 62 bit and 64 bit now when it was like well
|
|
then KDE has got a bit more bloated now so we're doing a seasonal drop we'll drop the ICDs
|
|
but we'll have this XFCE also we can look on the ISO itself but that's one example but
|
|
but yes because suddenly an XFCE ISO appeared into the mix instead because that would work better
|
|
with all the hardware so that's what that was done but what I was going to say is 32 bit and 64
|
|
bit I think that yeah generally speaking 32 bit should still be supported I would say underlinux
|
|
because there are actually quite a lot of 32 bit machines out there still like you you said
|
|
I don't know whether the name is but on the other hand that you can sort of understand why
|
|
they kind of want to drop these distributions these versions with architecture now because you
|
|
know it's like well it's 2018 now actually it's you know 2020 and it's like a lot of these old
|
|
computers that need really do need 32 bit are potentially going to not really be working properly
|
|
in say four five years although here's the thing my mum's gone all up to from 2005 which is
|
|
only 32 bit and oh yes that runs well would don't look still I need to update that actually
|
|
but so it's to do with the kind of the future as well it's in the effort and the work and it's like
|
|
if only a few people use it in 32 bit is it worth still having ISOs it's still worth
|
|
supporting that that architectural or if there's only just a few thousand you know it's just
|
|
a kind of debate as well but I think because it's still not still there will be distributions that
|
|
still support 32 bit for a long time to come regardless of all of this just like a bit like
|
|
just like there are some distributions that refuse to go with a time to go with system D because
|
|
they want to use the old thing you know you see what I'm saying yeah but you're talking about
|
|
like fork projects versus you know major distributions that have a great deal more backing
|
|
I mean like I said there's there's an arch Linux 32 but you know how long you had to basically
|
|
sit there across your fingers and hope that this team of arch Linux 32 are still going to keep
|
|
going keep pushing forward with their project you know and that's and that's going to be true
|
|
with with anybody else who works a project you know if I don't know I think if more people were
|
|
more vested in this maybe they could have changed their minds or swayed or something I don't know
|
|
maybe they're just going to maybe this the major projects are going to do what they're going to do
|
|
with that space as well but well yeah but I mean okay magia yeah that's that's not but you know
|
|
that's what I was talking about as well but actually even the major project something like
|
|
about let's take a bunch who has you know a great prime example of what we're talking about really
|
|
yes the bunch who are now we're going to drop 32 but I read somewhere and you might think
|
|
a bunch who's got most of desktop Linux users why why are they dropping 32 bit there's
|
|
bound to be low the people still using 32 bit above you and they're probably are but on the other
|
|
hand a bunch who is or conical I mean a bunch who is a bunch who itself desktop version does not
|
|
make conical money really or not enough so they can't drop it of course because they can't because
|
|
that's like the base of other things as well it's like they could they could drop the
|
|
abundantly phone and the and all that stuff but they're dropping 32 yeah yeah they're in the fact
|
|
that they're dropping it is going to mean that's all their derivatives which is in the fricking
|
|
hundreds I think well I might might be over speaking there but you know the many many derivatives
|
|
are all they have to drop it too well possibly but I think what I'm trying to say as well is
|
|
they're dropping it probably partly really because making ISOs 1432 bit there's no money in that
|
|
you know as a company as a conical there's no money for start to just do that and also even as
|
|
a community that's just loads of more testing work and quality assurance and all the rest of it
|
|
and and they're probably thinking well we're going to have to drop it some say just a bit like the
|
|
old you know the Windows XP argument the whole Microsoft were going to drop support in 2010 but then
|
|
they decided that they would extend it by four years probably because Vista hadn't taken off
|
|
off enough and and stuff like that as well really but they they tell the enterprises we're going to
|
|
you're going to have to drop we're going to have to drop XP support and we can't keep it supported
|
|
forever and that's basically the same with this 32 bit argument or any of these distribution
|
|
projects I mean a lot of districts have closed down there's been a lot of past
|
|
districts that have closed down for various reasons but it's not just that but you can't it's
|
|
you know it makes it difficult to support the older hardware the older things as it as time goes on
|
|
it can do and that's I think as well which is partly why they're dropping 32 bit I think some of
|
|
these yeah but the argument against that is they already a lot of the distals have already got
|
|
32 bit testing workflows in place that are rock solid over the years but but it caused you
|
|
sure and it's testing and like I was talking about it you just you have to test all this stuff
|
|
it's more worse yeah but it's automated they all pass up for magia but that's yeah but the
|
|
larger distals which are the ones who are dropping stuff have automated test flows don't they
|
|
open the Susa does all pop all pop yeah yeah partly automated I think at least but yeah
|
|
I'm sure it's all compiled automated but I'm sure they you know sending it out to people for
|
|
testing afterwards yeah and I do think I was being a bit besieged this year around about the
|
|
the epoch coming in 2038 but there's still enough hardware out there and people were supporting
|
|
a lot weirder architectures for a lot longer than i32 and i32 still around a lot of them
|
|
but I guess it's it's still all of my 32 bit systems still run just fine I mean they're like
|
|
I didn't know they're older hardware with like 4gbx RAM and you know dual core processors to like
|
|
like 2.5GHz dual core processors but you know what if I'm doing mostly desktop stuff like
|
|
using the web or even just smaller stuff like I had new audio editing on any of those machines
|
|
without any problem I'm not I'm not editing video but I have the edited video on some of my older
|
|
machines it's not great I was using open shot and open shot has been kind of flaky anyways but
|
|
it's it's still worked you know I mean but it's there's I can't see a valid reason to kill them
|
|
you know new and shiny the only the only valid reason I see is the 2038 thing and we could
|
|
start worrying about that in you know another 15 years right while considering all the all the
|
|
OSs have already been patched to deal with it so yeah baby they work well I missed something
|
|
it was a 2038 thing you know the Unix counts up every second since the first of January 1970 UTC
|
|
is epoch so that's how Unix keeps it's time at a particular point that's a 32 bit integer
|
|
and that overflows and that will happen that will happen on 3 14 0 7 in the morning of the 19th
|
|
of January 2038 which is a Tuesday what what Unix will it won't like it's anything that's a
|
|
five to go back to 1970 like everything does so if you ever see a file date with the 1970 0101
|
|
that's what happened the date hasn't been set so basically if you have a Raspberry Pi that doesn't
|
|
have an internet connection everything gets 1970 0's well I don't know if Raspberry Pi does do the
|
|
thing but they don't have a real time clock so yeah okay real time right okay finance yeah but okay
|
|
so if you chain one of these devices yourself to that date it's going to go back to 1970s when
|
|
we start there is it well it can't deal with anything bigger than 1970 that's the point the firmware
|
|
on the machine has got is only capable of dealing with a number and once that number reaches the
|
|
end it'll add a one and then it'll go back to zero zero zero zero zero one two three four remember
|
|
the Y2K yes I'm thinking yeah in this case it's a valid reason and we've got 38 years to deal with
|
|
it or less about 38 minus 17 18 now which makes it a lot easier we've got 20 years to deal with it
|
|
all the OS's operating systems have already been patched but it's at that point that the
|
|
32-bit chips become less useful not unusable it's just anything related to time keeping track of time
|
|
related to years would be an issue keeping track of time related to time since that button has been
|
|
pressed should not be about oh do you mean that you mean the chip itself so the hardware will
|
|
kind of run out yes exactly yeah and then you can't reset that clock because it'll be stuck
|
|
back on 1970 and that's it basically well you can set it from any time between 1970 up until
|
|
the first sorry the 19th of January 2023 that's another problem but anything outside that it could
|
|
be a problem you could always do the Microsoft hack on us and say well if it's closer to 19
|
|
split the difference if it's you know switch everything around the year 2000 and say well the
|
|
year 2000 then I'll I'll fudge it by adding so many days but that doesn't actually matter
|
|
they the point is if you look at an epic I don't know if if you look at epic computers now
|
|
they're still in use they still have a valid use it's just not they're not maintaining
|
|
date codes related to this is the year or if they are then you set it and it just goes
|
|
right since I was turned on I have started counting numbers and you tell me that I need to add
|
|
so many numbers to this date so you say it is the 1st of January 2018 and I've been turned on
|
|
and you set the date the 1st of January 2018 okay and now start counting and then you will be
|
|
happily able to count another 68 years without the winner problem I feel like I'm not explaining
|
|
this correctly well maybe I don't think I sort of understand but yeah and here's an internal
|
|
clock in a lot of these things and yeah when you like if you take your background yeah well what happens
|
|
to your what happens to your you have a clock on the wall with hands on it yeah yeah well yeah
|
|
I've got clocks here as well okay no no I'm just asking do you have an internal clock on the wall
|
|
at this minute so what happens I got I got I got well I got yeah I got 11.15 am five minutes
|
|
later the clock has run out yeah what do we do so the clock resets yeah it starts resetting
|
|
to 12 again yeah so we in our brains automatically adjust and we go ah the sun is out so it's 12 in
|
|
the afternoon so 12.01 means that's what the time is yeah problem is if you've got a like a
|
|
digital clock that doesn't have AM or PM on it and it says 12 you've got to ask yourself does this
|
|
clock do a AM or if it's 11.55 we don't know what's going to happen on that clock because it's 11
|
|
you know is it capable of displaying 12 up to 24 or 23.99 24 let's be honest you don't actually
|
|
know what's going to happen so with a 32 bit processor or 32 bit chip it's only capable of
|
|
counting up time to say midday yeah and then at that point do you mean like I'm using that
|
|
analogy here yeah I'm I'm I'm analogy but you sort of mean like in this case if if the if the clock
|
|
can actually show the zero zero zero zero with like midnight or if it can't show that because it's
|
|
going to go straight back to so the 11.59 59 there's no problem yeah on your display at 12.00 on
|
|
your analog clock it resets back to 12 hours before because it can only display 12 hours of
|
|
information yeah same thing happens with chips they're counting from a particular point in time
|
|
now if you have stopwatch they can only display 12 hours yeah that doesn't matter because somebody's
|
|
running around the somebody's running around the the track there yeah and you press the button
|
|
and it starts counting that doesn't matter so you have a you can regardless of what time of the
|
|
day it is you can still track that person running around the track yeah because you've got a stopwatch
|
|
you with me so they fact so long as that person doesn't run around the track longer than 12 hours
|
|
which is unlikely to happen yeah then you can happily continue to use stopwatches that can only
|
|
display 12 hours of information yeah yeah yeah okay now these clocks the 32 bit ones can only count
|
|
to a number up to what is the what is the next decimal number is 21 well it's one
|
|
by big number a 32 bit integer is assigned 32 bit integer why did it assign one is beyond me
|
|
um I didn't interrupt you but I just want to do uh I hear a lot of screaming upstairs so I've
|
|
been going to have to go back upstairs um I just want to say happy new year everybody um thank you
|
|
for everything thank for everybody it's helped this year thanks for putting this together it's
|
|
awesome well done you I I just love doing it and I love I I didn't get on this here as much as I
|
|
would like to but I just I love I love doing this every year so thank you for everybody I love
|
|
a lot more since you started taking over yeah yeah okay yeah the clock won't be able to show a
|
|
particular hour or whatever after the last out the last bit okay so it has to reset back in this
|
|
case it's not just it's not just as time as the year as well so it's going to go all the way back to
|
|
1970 which exactly I was saying but that's what happened also when you like you know you got a
|
|
battery that kind of yeah exactly and that's why it does that and that's exactly why it does
|
|
that chip but that's a problem so honky's point is like okay well we have another 20 years useful
|
|
life so these 32-bit chips can continue to operate for another 20 years without it would be
|
|
no problem yeah and even after that they can still continue to operate because saloon as you don't
|
|
care that it's 1970 what does it matter you know if your email comes in and it's 1971 you know that
|
|
it is 2036 plus a few days and you can always set the clock yeah yeah you can always reset the clock
|
|
possibly you'll probably be able to do a hack where after that time you could reset the clock
|
|
that will display correctly because you go yeah take into account they they they flip over which is
|
|
exactly what happens on all the XP machines or Windows 95 machines is that they said okay yeah
|
|
after this time we're just going to if the number flips over then you just add 50 to it and then
|
|
you're done yeah so you may not be able to use them as easily for doing a clock but you can still
|
|
use those chips for doing stopwatches for instance you use my analogy yeah it won't you won't
|
|
show the time properly unless you do a hack call ever we don't care anyway since 1971 I mean
|
|
I mean exactly so the argument is basically it's going to work properly until another 20 years or so
|
|
anyway so in that case let's keep 32 bit Linux going for another 20 years that's the argument wasn't
|
|
yeah yeah that's the argument it is a little bit premature but then you know you notice here with
|
|
Linux is that things go out in favor there will be a few people who will maintain something and then
|
|
later on something happens whereby suddenly it's really important that the code that those few
|
|
stragglers on are maintaining suddenly becomes really important like for instance the arm
|
|
people who have been maintaining arm are that all these small programs that have been running
|
|
have met the Raspberry Pi possible because xfc still exists and people go no we still have graphics
|
|
processors and we're switching to massive desktops and but these guys kept turning away
|
|
and turning away and turning away and keep maintaining their products maintaining their projects I
|
|
mean to say and then all of a sudden a whole industry develops as a result of it so yeah well
|
|
goes around comes around guys that is one thing that I've learned in in this short life of mine
|
|
well yeah well yeah some of the old stuff is still going definitely and then sometimes end up
|
|
getting used in something else something modern in a way really but you know what is modern that's
|
|
using old tech inside of it that's true yeah exactly good I can happen it happens all the time
|
|
that's what's happening in your Android it's what's happening in Arduino that's what's happening
|
|
in Raspberry Pi's so it's happening in routers well yet well yeah they take things they take an old
|
|
software part together and all the rest of it but the point is it's not all software it is maintained
|
|
software from an unpopular it's software that's become unpopular like the 32-bit stuff is not
|
|
old software it's as new software as the 64-bit stuff it's just it's not as popular it's not
|
|
maintained or wasm has maintained so these guys choose to maintain it is still you can still buy
|
|
go out and get a brand spanking you 32-bit operation system and you can take the source code for
|
|
on bulimic kernel and all the other software and you can still combine this for a 32-bit system
|
|
it's exactly as new well yeah well yeah of course you can the foods yeah then it's but yeah it's
|
|
like Marta is all around all that's to go on to living on and various things that are still
|
|
around to getting maintained the brand new touch on the UB ports that's a very different thing but
|
|
you know so I'm now putting on terminal blocks on this thing a skew but I'm not going to worry about
|
|
that that felt a little bit like a lecture sorry about that I know that's okay just tell
|
|
me to shut up lots of people do that I'll ask one question though because you were like in my
|
|
short life I held you anyway I have 49 now 49 physically 27 in my brain right okay and I've
|
|
um yeah 27 in my brain it's kind of the idea lead you're old enough to be taken seriously and
|
|
you're young enough to still be young and I'm still get excited with cool stuff that's the key
|
|
such as this soldering stuff talking to you this is cool stuff don't you think this is cool stuff
|
|
like we're living in the future seriously talking to me might not be so cool but no no
|
|
don't put yourself down dude this is always a pleasure the future um we we uh well fact and
|
|
thing actually we know we're living in the present and actually yeah I mean if you go back
|
|
sure if you're about to sort of do 90 if you go back in time machine and sort of be like something
|
|
right it actually actually go and watch the new demander that's a good point go seriously watch
|
|
take your kids and watch the new demander fencing it because there's a great bit there with the mobile
|
|
well no there maybe they'll find a two-scary they'll find the legal move you do scary so yeah
|
|
by any way what watch yourself weather but um it's a good bit there we're like a good bit or
|
|
mobile phones because he's like goes back in uh he's well that one I'm wondering if somebody
|
|
who um hasn't seen that weather they might be listening to this later on so I'll say there's a
|
|
line that's like oh mobile phones um is that something different in the future and um yeah it will
|
|
make sense why I mean if you watch your weather but um but yeah so yeah mobile phones were these big
|
|
whatever in the past in the 90s and so on and now look at it it's smartphones all over the place
|
|
sits people are basically like somebody says here early on HPR on the new issue people are
|
|
picked at these mobile phones a bit like drugs in a way or it would be drugs basically if it was
|
|
you know um and yeah mobile phones are so it's such a big thing now compared to what it was
|
|
yeah exactly I remember um um yeah I remember when having the first mobile phone and lots of people
|
|
saying oh what would you be doing you'd never be on the internet like that and now they're
|
|
completely what's happening and I'm I'm the one who is not on the internet as much as that
|
|
but every every year we go and stay in a in a historical village historical re-enactment
|
|
village and you can go as a guest and stay in the um they have a medieval area and you can stay up
|
|
there and last year I happened to be just working with a smith sitting there just listening basically
|
|
it's you know three-dimensional YouTube because if I'm at home I'd be watching the four
|
|
jean films on YouTube anyway but one of the guys was going yeah but it's uh it's uh we haven't
|
|
so busy now I think I was going no you don't it's like they had a lot harder and we have never had
|
|
as we ate time where we have been more uh more free time less things to worry about because we've
|
|
got food on demand we've got health we've got shelter we've got warmth um it's just an amazing
|
|
time that we live in and probably should remember that from time to time well it's too
|
|
some extent I know a lot of problems still well problems in that but um yes you are but remember
|
|
that a lot of these problems big though they and they are don't get me wrong there's
|
|
fucking lots of stuff that we could be doing better sorry for epping there and I do tend to get a
|
|
bit down about them myself but it's still a very very fortunate time to be living in yes we could
|
|
be cutting down on the carbon yes they don't get me started politically and all the stuff that we
|
|
could improve but what people say oh this is this is really a very difficult time that we're living in
|
|
yes it is but additionally we you're not depending on whether it's going to rain tomorrow to
|
|
determine whether your crops are going to fail or whether you're going to be able to feed your kids
|
|
for the next 12 months it's it's just completely different um different cattle
|
|
fish here in the first one I mean admittedly in other area other parts of the world these are
|
|
serious concerns to people well yeah and the homeless issue even in the world in very cities and
|
|
and very things but um well I wanted to say as well as we're talking about the time and sort of
|
|
that oh it's a great time now and and I've I mean I've been thinking about this myself here and
|
|
there you know more recently as well it's slightly into that you know I mean here we are on a
|
|
podcast you're in Holland's I'm in UK and we've had our American people on and all the rest of it
|
|
and you know if you go back to Paul the internet and so on and possibly Paul Phones a bit even
|
|
Paul they can have taken off of that as well but you know it would be such a big thing oh you can
|
|
suddenly pull some of your crops you're just highly Atlantic well I mean and and and and and now
|
|
it's like it's just no big it's like it's not a big deal because we just got this internet
|
|
thing and it's just like you know I'll see you all instant messaging email or or or pod all this
|
|
voice stuff or whatever or webcams even you know you can just you can just do it now on the on the
|
|
on the internet and people just kind of take it for granted now and for the most part you don't
|
|
really think that much about it now it's just like yeah I can talk to somebody from America
|
|
oh I can go on a webcam I can I can talk to them in text I can email them and you know that's
|
|
timed we're in now and also even the whole internet in itself I mean if you go back to when
|
|
the early you know the naughty is the early 2000 the end of the 90s and all that when the web was
|
|
only kind of just hitting off we've got dialed up and all the rest of it now we've got really fast
|
|
connection as a side point but now it's the again the websites you just go to Wikipedia and
|
|
they annoy you and ask you to donate and stuff and like emails tell me to donate you still
|
|
because I donated once but that's a side thing you know you just sort of take the web pages for
|
|
intrep for granted now you can just go on websites and it's just it's not quite as fun that once
|
|
was really an online gaming possibly as well it's like I don't really do that but again you can
|
|
just play game for people online and stuff whereas in the 90s it would have been more like oh
|
|
dial up connection oh also oh if I want to host a game and he said to say with my hardware
|
|
firewall and open my ports up or they can't connect to me and now it's just done better and
|
|
you know it's I think the signs have changed a lot in the last 20 years also in that in that
|
|
sense it's amazing really and if we could you know if we could live from ever or for that's
|
|
longer and you know then whatever you know it seems so much change probably over the years as well
|
|
more so than we're going to have to see but no it's gas I was in the hardware store the other day
|
|
and a lady walks in and puts the phone down on the counter and and then some guys starts talking
|
|
to the shop owner and showing them the exact thing the problem that they were having and
|
|
the shopkeeper was able to find the part based on you know somebody with a camera pointing
|
|
at the actual physical thing and you know that's just normal now it's gas yeah yeah yeah oh oh and
|
|
actually I'm I've decided well as little helping the older people with their computers or tablets
|
|
group which thing on Thursday morning that I've been going to at times recently because of why
|
|
I live now and stuff and even there it kind of shows that at times I sort of change or have
|
|
changed because even the like 40 plus a lot of the old you know 40 plus and pensioners and all
|
|
rest of it they are 40 pluses and thank you no no I said I said 40 plus first because it's a 40 plus
|
|
group just why I meant anybody sort of thought you were over I should have been looked there
|
|
but I'm trying to say and then I'm trying to say that even older people the pensioners as well
|
|
and all that you know are a lot of them actually using tablets and smartphones these days as well
|
|
some of them all so complete and others but it's sharing that even there that things are becoming
|
|
more relaxed I guess or more you know more like it's just a thing and it's people do it and
|
|
and you kind of and you think I've thought about this as well so the people who are like you know
|
|
20s and 30s and most but it's a teenage isn't even kids now it will the smartphones all the rest
|
|
of it it's like it's like what are we going to all be using in say when we're like pensioners or
|
|
whatever you know it's like what what all these devices and stuff and we're going to be using
|
|
you know it's like you can misimagine that and I don't think we have flying cars quite but
|
|
but you know yes we do they're called helicopters I don't understand why people don't get this
|
|
they're called helicopters well it's a car you sit in there and you drive it yeah it's just
|
|
hard to drive and very expensive but it is a flying car but they yeah but anyway I'm not like
|
|
tablets phones and all this kind of stuff it's like what are we going to have in the future but
|
|
when we are 70 or whatever what you know what's what's going to be there yeah good question
|
|
I hope there is a future yeah dinner is ready oh okay I'm going to have to pause this for a while
|
|
I'll I'll be back see you later yes that's see you next year happy new year if you're done
|
|
but well yeah well I'll put a leap on but I think people have missed you gone at the moment okay bye
|
|
that we'll see if we chat or not later but if not or whatever happy new year yeah you too
|
|
cool and I hope to meet up as one of the events maybe this year maybe the one in Bristol or
|
|
there's all campus but you know you're not doing Brussels so no no no no no no no this time okay talk to
|
|
you later bye yeah bye bye actually yes anybody just happened to be listening to this there's
|
|
around I guess not okay happy new year 2018 everyone gothnit or 20 oh actually Swedish yes
|
|
thinking okay I just speak Swedish so let's get this year right gothnit or chughi auton that's
|
|
that's what it isn't Swedish I'll hope that which is everyone now the after show is pretty much
|
|
over I think I must have to show in Swedish oh I'm not sure um after show oh anyway new year after
|
|
show when uh over young fool now the after show is over I think or pretty much with no Casper or
|
|
somebody like that to play some ending guitar music which um I will have to listen to on the actual
|
|
actor public radio uh new year show when it comes up because there's been bits here and there
|
|
that I heard and then couldn't hear and that'll be so we get um so yeah some people think it is
|
|
fun to chat to themselves on the podcast which they assume will be uh post-probably go up as well
|
|
as part of something however actually this is not as particularly fun and that is why for this
|
|
that's very for that reason as well I'm going to start doing this now although although
|
|
did I say talking to myself because actually I'm talking to you you have uh may end up actually
|
|
listening to this if anyone actually will right I'm back now I have people in the LCD screen
|
|
the potentiometer the power feed the actual clamp for the components and the header for the screen
|
|
I thought was they will put you much but maybe not them good god no this
|
|
not stop them until this transistor testers put together important differentiation there for
|
|
people listening put together is different from working very this thing is going to work
|
|
good morning from the morning she has a question now we've got my headset my phone's in
|
|
I'm not right now who was that who just joined yeah Claudio and just happy new year everyone
|
|
happy new year Claudio have I got my have I got my phones in or not can that's a question I don't know
|
|
so I was like that I was like that Claudio no you don't so far so it's funny uh we rang in the new year
|
|
I noticed that the time was going by real fast I was like it's already one hour passed
|
|
as 2018 2018's flying by like I can't believe so you're on the show last night obviously
|
|
so again you were on the show last night then I guess yeah I was on for a little bit just to wish
|
|
everyone a happy new year and my dad come over and there's just basically the small family get
|
|
together and uh rang in the new year and uh you know danced a bit we turned on some music and then
|
|
we we turned in for the night nice nice nice cool so when is Link's best when coming back
|
|
you have to ask chat about that one when are you forking off your own show
|
|
to Claudio and Michelle well one of my new years resolutions is to finally get my butt back on track
|
|
to recording episodes for HDR oh you tease yes I do but I'm I'm looking to make good
|
|
you know my name is there you go sir somebody send an insurance yeah absolutely yeah I've got the rest
|
|
of this week coffee is well before school starts up again so I'll have some time
|
|
right now I'm just waiting for the coffee to finish brewing and uh I'm going to go ahead
|
|
and go ahead and fix warm hot cup of coffee with my wife uh and uh enjoy what's enjoy 2018
|
|
good um your audio is chopping in and out at least for me just as a bite of my and I am currently
|
|
in the process of assembling for the last essentially 48 hours a transistor tester PCB
|
|
the one that um and my bill suggested I should put together so I will continue on being here
|
|
until this is done so yeah I was going to ask you if you can finish that actually
|
|
no no no no I just figured you were working hard on that one so I had to ask and as far as
|
|
the chop up in this you can thank comcast wire comcast to blame for that uh just because
|
|
well that's not good no I hear all the time from my kids so I might well join in the fun
|
|
so what what type and uh hold me I'm sure I heard before but they are all boys uh they're all
|
|
boys uh my eldest is 16 uh he should be graduating he's actually going to graduate a year early from
|
|
high school so he'll be graduating this year uh my middle one is 13 and my youngest will be 11
|
|
towards the end of this month cool and my stepson who's the eldest of the ball
|
|
he is 19 uh no my enough and I'm approaching that yeah
|
|
yeah every so often I'll uh come across all pictures of my sons and yeah I get on the nostalgic
|
|
yeah I like uh it drives my daughter crazy when I say you're this big you know I do
|
|
rub my hand over you know when there are my shoulder and stuff you know always be this big to me
|
|
yeah it's pretty much how it is small and big at the same time it's amazing amazing thing
|
|
fatherhood I don't think there's enough met up out of the fact they how important a thing it is
|
|
especially for me I've always felt that is an amazingly fulfilling thing just being a father
|
|
oh yeah absolutely yeah there are loads of well I always thought there were very few good songs
|
|
about being a father and those that the were were a little bit cringy like hey dude and stuff
|
|
yeah it is true for some reason I don't know why but I always think they're like country songs
|
|
yeah yeah I know what you mean but nothing wrong with country songs but just
|
|
no not at all as a matter of fact my life loves country my youngest likes country and you know
|
|
I'll listen now to that so I have to ask this chat who is not here what type of copy we've got
|
|
oh he would cringe at what I got it's not instant so at least it's that that's a good thing
|
|
hello this is the guy who just commented on the show saying that he misses a gas station coffee
|
|
no no no no gas station coffee for me I'll do McDonald's coffee but that's I think that's as far as I'll go
|
|
and to be honest taking it out of context which I'd never do um he was referring to the
|
|
nostalgia aspect as opposed to anything else I guess yeah coffee I'm having right now is
|
|
pretty much a supermarket brand coffee brand X I guess if you want to consider that
|
|
it's actually not too bad it does jump yeah I'm partial to brand X myself I have a cup of brand X
|
|
right in front of me and speak of which coffee is ready so I'm going to go ahead and take it in
|
|
all right and hope you guys have a good good time here recording in the happy 2018 yeah
|
|
same to you say hi to all though come likewise bye bye cheerio okay now I've got the power
|
|
cord a nine volt battery adapter and a cat memorable of those connectors are called any of power
|
|
connectors it's getting exciting now just the potentiometer the component holder and the screen to go
|
|
going to do the component holder I think yeah and I'm using a julian elect tip for doing this
|
|
and that is used blue tack or white tack in this case maybe to pull the component while
|
|
you solder it on the other side which is kind of cool it also stops the thing from
|
|
you will taste me around the press and I'm using an in my bill tip to put my project into a project
|
|
box which has got lots of little components so I've had all the resistors in various different pockets
|
|
and then I put blue tack on the top put the PCB on us and I can just attach the PCB and then move
|
|
the case itself around so that's what I'm doing it's good cool this is immensely satisfying
|
|
I'll say I hope it'll actually work at the end so that if you go could be getting
|
|
comfy as well let's see these component holder thing pins are absolutely slurped on upsolder
|
|
clean my tip every soldering and as mr x says apply heat to the base apply solder to
|
|
component withdraw solder withdraw and actually I should put a link to the show notes of that
|
|
episode fun you know all the top links for hbr is coming up as arcadadard
|
|
probably because google is downplaying the ssl stuff so anyway you need to work on that make
|
|
sure that the website is up and running in ssl also okay hcbs tls buying buying buying that
|
|
so the 24th of the 7th 2012 wow that's a while back just goes to show how long it takes me to get
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around for something okay let's start in and then the potentiometer so in the alignment I've been required
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just spent 10 seconds there trying to figure out why my soldering was from I think and then
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realized I turned off my soldering line okay that is the potentiometer in all that
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less all that is left now is the screen for did that I'm putting on some little risers that are
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the active little beach keeping the thing off your desk the PCB from shorting on your desk
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show them short some of them out it's very close yeah excuse me the one of the
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top version so now there are two risers from PCB and there's a no female headers so if I assemble
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the screen on there should be able to access to the PCB with the headers all over there and then
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I'll just screw in the PCB and then solder a lot more doll and I can't screw him fully yet because
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I'm going to leave some slack for the screen to stuff exciting stuff right is that is
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is it done okay tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of I could probably grade you
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no I won't do that to you I'll turn it on and see what happens right that was an enjoyable experience
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pushing this together however now I need to look at it and absolutely nothing happened
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it's not working I don't know am I bill will go grays now I can go troubleshooting but now I'm going
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no I just want the epic thing to work nope nothing that I did is good
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I'll check on the back here to see if there's any obvious things going on okay
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who's here hey this is mango I'm on got we've got three including ourselves yeah I just
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walk up and get a cup of coffee what time is it now I'm in Texas this is
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845 so you got to pass quite early to you well at laughter last night yeah I guess it's early
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I normally wake up a little earlier than this can I hurt your mumble and you still working on that
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thing yeah I finished it but it doesn't work it's that bad solder joint you were talking about last
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night there's been a few more of them since then what's the thing supposed to do is supposed to test
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just almost everything yeah pretty much it is supposed to like actually give you a value for
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resistors and capacitors and things yep and we'll tell you what a transistor is or diode or
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die echo whatever so I am actually in dire need of one but no that's good disappointing
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to say the least and I know I and my bill goes this great because now you can go troubleshooting
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you know that assumes that you know what you can troubleshoot no you don't want to troubleshoot
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you want it to work when you get a finish that exactly that that is exactly it yeah that doesn't
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make any sense at all especially test equipment you don't want to have to troubleshoot all right I
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don't even know where to begin to troubleshoot to be honest does it do anything at all nope that's
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good it could also be a dodgy screen you know so screen is this thing got logic it's got enough
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now it's a Arduino based device oh wow that's yes and easy that mean just got a post or something
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when you power it up and doesn't do that nothing well I guess that's the place to start that you're
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either this computer doesn't come up or the the screens bad
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well can I check either of those things
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now I've got a big pile of do on my hand yeah hashtag disappointed
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nice now if there was just something very obvious that I was missing look in and trace the voltages
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I don't know about voltages I mean if it's the the screens not there it's that's the kind of thing
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you replace what it's just saying to have HDMI something if you can just plug in a different screen
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no it's there's a link in the show notes to do to a guy putting the same video in and it's a
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little on board screen type thing now let's it pins on it good check and see if there's any
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current going over there when I do plug it in gotta be a thing I guess yeah and and you can
|
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check voltages I mean voltages aren't that hard to check but then you get you got to do you find
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your pins and figure out how to get your little contacts in there and things like that so
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|
on a lot of little stuff it's easier if you can plug in a different component that does the same
|
|
thing that way I would yeah I don't have that option right now yeah that's what you have to have
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okay I'm just looking at the PCB design 1 2 3 4 5
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6 7 7 also goes to 8 8 goes to ground so presumably pin 1 sorry pin 1 goes to ground
|
|
be a 22k resistor so presumably if there's voltage to get enough far if this current
|
|
get enough far voltage there's power getting that far then if I leave it on the first pin and then
|
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go to the next on the next on the next maybe something well let's just see show me yeah I suppose
|
|
you could measure voltage across that resistor what you're doing that I'd like to tell you how
|
|
much I appreciate what you do for HPR one of the things I enjoy most I'd probably listen to one
|
|
or two episodes per week and then after I listen to y'all do the the monthly roundup and you make
|
|
enough of them sound interesting that I ended up having to go back and listen to I I take notes
|
|
while y'all are talking and I go back and say oh wait a minute is that what that is that title
|
|
didn't work for me and I go back and and I enjoy you know another four or five shows that way
|
|
that is actually great to hear now it's I was hoping people would do that that's kind of the point
|
|
to the show cool not good to hear yeah yeah yeah I mean y'all are just kind of talking about them
|
|
but you obviously listen to and take it every single show and yeah it's not that hard to do
|
|
not when you've got a three hour commute every day oh my gosh
|
|
right there are zero currents going anywhere on that header for the
|
|
screen so I guess therefore that you can't be the screen which is actually good
|
|
because I have some chance of having to deal the components okay well yeah that actually
|
|
probably does make it a linear yeah okay no in my bill I still don't think this is fun
|
|
no you're right I agree with you completely I used to do a component level repair of of things
|
|
back you know very long time ago when people actually did that and nah it's not that much fun
|
|
okay so there's no current going through that there's nothing to do the screen so what do I do
|
|
what do I do what do I do maybe she well just tries it out I guess can you read a PCB then
|
|
oh yeah because there's a link to the PCB in the show notes there I can throw it in the mumbo
|
|
oh okay I'll just run get my multimeter you couldn't read
|
|
up against it into the mumbo chat and there she goes actually hold on let me
|
|
I rotated it by 90 degrees myself just made it life a little bit easier so
|
|
current comes in there close to a transistor a 9012 the thing about once it goes to a transistor I
|
|
have no idea if there should be current coming out of the transistor or not should I be doing that
|
|
what I said did you populate that entire board or is this the board that you started with and
|
|
it already was a computer I this is what I started with I scanned this physical thing it is
|
|
this physical noise and the back of it I have mirrored 90 degree or I just flipped it over so that
|
|
the tracers on the back match up with the with the top yeah I have I used to do that kind of
|
|
stuff my my degrees in the computer hardware and back 40 years ago oh well more than 40 years ago
|
|
and we actually had projects like that in classes or because the idea was to learn how to fix
|
|
computers and so we had to start by building things from circuit on circuit boards and stuff
|
|
wow yes okay so let me see where is this that is that side see this side
|
|
all it's best to continue continuity tester are a voltage meter I don't even know what the
|
|
the tools I have right now are a voltmeter are a DVM and I have a bitwise scope but
|
|
no idea do I just solder some stuff I'm hoping to work is your voltmeter a it's a digital voltmeter
|
|
yeah DVM I can do volts amps no that's working resistance and I've got a continuity tester
|
|
do you have something to check doubts or transitions with with a with a DVM do that or I mean can
|
|
you put it on like the the old meter you could get what I was hoping yeah this thing will do
|
|
oh hold on maybe I have a crappy meter that might do that one one second yes that happens I've
|
|
got a cheap meter that's got a kind of resistor checker which would have been handy to do before
|
|
I solder them and put them in yeah checking components after their father in circuit you have to
|
|
look at your circuit and see what are the other paths for that electricity to come back to your
|
|
meter so you don't oh wait this is great it's it's it's working and it's not going through your
|
|
component instead it's going around a different path and that's the problem with that well it could
|
|
even be the Arduino chip I would say start with the assumption that the components themselves are
|
|
working and check go back and check that you got that everything is there since this is a first time
|
|
this is the did it ever work or is it broken test and since this one hasn't worked that would be
|
|
the first thing I would do is not don't assume I've got a bad component so try to find that out
|
|
now that it's in soldered in instead go back and check your work and that's really just a visual
|
|
and if some of the solder joints look dodgy just touch them up yeah if possible you can test the
|
|
test them electrically I've always found that the ugly solder joints are probably not good
|
|
for the the very low voltages that you get and I mean it probably low currents rather than
|
|
voltages but the very low currents that you get in this type of circuit it doesn't take much
|
|
of anything for it to to not work do you usually kind of a flux or anything on your solder to make
|
|
it flow yeah it has the flux core and for some of them I used flux to move the flow down
|
|
yeah I find that the flux core doesn't help a lot because you end up having to melt an inch of
|
|
solder to to get enough to to really clean up a joint so you're better off touching a tiny bit
|
|
of actual so I always keep a can of flux and touch that up and that way you don't over you don't
|
|
to put too much solder it's also possible I heard you're talking about using the surface mount
|
|
things those are very some of those are just very very delicate it's not impossible to destroy
|
|
them with with your solder if you if you're if you're getting them too hot because you're having
|
|
problems with the solder so you just keep messing with it you can destroy a diode or transistor
|
|
yeah I've definitely done that that that was there for ages trying to get us right yeah that's
|
|
that is a danger with messing with them unless you let the component cool back down before you
|
|
mess with it again you know what I'm going to do I'm going to put this into a plastic bag and
|
|
send it to my bill and say okay smart ass you get it working that sounds good you enjoy it
|
|
so much I'm just going to go out and buy a new one because I I didn't enjoy the the throughhole
|
|
components but the surface mount stuff was not fun would have been fun yeah if it had just turned
|
|
on and worked a little ass pin the case yeah surface mount stuff is not for people to solder they
|
|
I've never actually done any except once or twice doing some things a long time ago but you know
|
|
the through the yeah like you said the throughhole stuff that is that's not hard to do
|
|
well I'm afraid I spent enough time I didn't know today so I'm going to have to go do some stuff
|
|
with the kids and stuff so that's that nice well that sounds like a start a new year off right
|
|
start the year off with a massive big fail no no no I mean with the family doing doing
|
|
yeah being a this year I'm going to be a good father well thanks very much yeah I woke up as
|
|
more still plugged into the thing and I was I don't actually remember what time we stopped talking
|
|
last night well when I stopped talking and and and came to bed it's guys I'm going to have to go
|
|
back and listen to the show you know I'm just going to try plugging in some another power supply
|
|
there's two ways of powering this thing so yeah let's try that I remember when they came off last night
|
|
or this morning I don't remember quite hopefully I can sleep though but yeah
|
|
well I guess it's probably time for me to get up and walk around see if anything's going on too
|
|
all I did was go to the kitchen for coffee so I guess I'll call it a date myself yeah this is
|
|
this is over really I think but and this is me puffed up but why but yeah um yep
|
|
I wonder why I'll try that she kept turning off the power until the starts working
|
|
I remember when I was in the army there's a I fixed electronic equipment and there was a
|
|
guy that we had a had a tape recorder that came in to be repaired and it was blowing fuses so
|
|
one of the other technicians not me put a phillips head screwdriver in the the
|
|
in the fuse holder and just turn on the power and watch the smoke and then when it
|
|
stops smoking he just unplugged it and then replaced everything that was burned up
|
|
he had lots of patience it was I guess trouble shooting wasn't his strong point so
|
|
he just but he could replace things so that's what he did it actually worked he got it working
|
|
he just ended up replacing a lot of a lot of the components and pretty much all the wiring
|
|
well okay I'm not recommending for for your device though I'm not sure that actually works for
|
|
this is not a solid state piece of equipment this is an old a lot of my experiences with
|
|
that kind of stuff a lot of it included vacuum tubes yeah that's a lot more resilient too
|
|
so even though I did train on repairing computers I never actually got around to doing that in my
|
|
career so funny how you you go to college and learn to do stuff and then you start looking for
|
|
a job and you end up with something different and so I wrote software for end up writing software
|
|
for about six or seven years and then that's basically a server administrator for the rest of my
|
|
career I did it more or less the same start it as a mechanical engineer and then I was just
|
|
quickly as possible no that didn't work out of right I'm gonna just leave it now for now I'm
|
|
take a break maybe come back I'll get an inspiration well good luck and happy new year I guess I'll
|
|
check out too okay let's call it a halt guys you have been listening to the hacker public radio
|
|
six annual 24 hour plus show and seriously thanks to everybody who took the time to join and thank
|
|
you all for listening and thanks everybody who put the who did out the show notes that is
|
|
absolutely awesome they look a lot better than they normally do and it was fun again was it
|
|
being on this or listening to it I am gathering all the chat logs so I'm kind of busy doing
|
|
stuff one second so yes thanks to everybody for joining and thank you to Taj and honky
|
|
Mugu for the etherpad K5 talks for doing the etherpad restore and all that stuff Kevin
|
|
Wischer and Chris Fish for the stream and thank you all tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode
|
|
of is where you go hacker public radio oh oh oh oh should we call it a day
|
|
two she's gone that's I think maybe close the whole lot down recording there's an everything
|
|
but he's still there and yeah thank you to whoever for making this happen thank you to whoever for
|
|
making this happen again closing closing closing the closes down I think yeah I think he turns
|
|
upon this later on well because all this stuff is over and really now bye bye
|
|
okay me you're still there yes I got a working actually no I didn't I didn't thank you
|
|
everybody that's this it is now 1615 on the 1st of January 2018 happy new year to everybody
|
|
and thank you very much for everybody for joining that's it's officially over
|
|
you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org we are a community podcast
|
|
network that release the shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our
|
|
shows was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
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|
and click on our contribution to find out how easy it really is hacker public radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is
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released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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