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164 lines
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Plaintext
164 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3217
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Title: HPR3217: Sump Minion
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3217/hpr3217.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 18:59:31
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3217 for Tuesday 1 December 2020.
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Today's show is entitled Some Million and In Part on the Series,
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Hobby Electronics. It is hosted by Brian in Ohio and in about 18 minutes long
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and Karina Clean Flag. The summer is my first internet on things device without using Python.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello Hacker Public Radio. Brian in Ohio here back. I'm out from under my rock.
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I'm back in Northwest Ohio using my regular voice and although it was kind of fun doing that
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eSpeak episode, eSpeak's pretty cool. It's actually very fast as type up what you want to say
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and have eSpeak read it out for you and I don't understand why nobody would complain about the
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audio. It's no worse than operators episodes and we all love his shows don't we?
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Anyway, I wanted to talk a little bit about a problem that I had here at my house that I found a
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solution to and I thought it might be interesting to you all. Okay, the problem is is that here in
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Northwest Ohio I we live in a place where with a very high water table we live in an area that
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used to be called the Great Black Swamp was we're basically on the shores of the the great lakes
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here in the US. It's the largest source of fresh water in the planet I believe and we because of
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that you can just dig down a little bit not very far and hit water and so if you have a basement
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in your house you're going to have water issues. To correct that problem houses here in this area
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have a sump's put in and a sump and I've got a couple of pictures here the sump consists of a
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a basin that's in your basement and there's some piping that that directs the water from outside
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into this sump collection area and then that water is pumped out usually done pumped out by an
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electrical pump and a good sump system has some kind of backup usually has two pumps in it so my
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sump system has the picture one or is just kind of looking into the the closet where it sits
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and then picture two is looking down into the sump with the cover off and you see the
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the pump it's the main pump is the black device with the green on top and there's a secondary pump
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that is the the secondary pump is the black part that's got a hose clamp around it with a
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little white knob thing that's that's connected to this there's a PVC pipe with a wire that runs
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down to it and so those are the two pumps in my sump system the the real problem isn't necessarily
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the sump the sump itself it's one the sump pumps fail and so the primary pump can fail in many
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ways of course it can have mechanical failure it's a it's a pump sitting in water so rust is a
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problem a lot of these pumps have some kind of float system that turns the pump off and on those
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flump those floats can get stuck they can have sediment get into them and mess them up and of
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course if you have some kind of electrical outage you can have your sump won't work if it's a
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because it's powered by electric and so if you have a thunderstorm that knocks out the power
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and there's water rising you won't have their your primary pump will not work that so I have a
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secondary pump those can be different flavors some of them are electrical also but usually
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those have a battery backup and those all of all of the secondary pumps have the same problem they
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can fail in different ways mechanically but secondary pump that relies on some kind of battery if
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there's a long power outage you might have to at least recharge that battery it might run into
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problems there my secondary pump actually uses a city water as a mechanism to run a turbine to
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draw the water out so if there's an assumption here that if your power is out and your city
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water is out you're probably experiencing the zombie apocalypse and you've got other bigger
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problems than your sump pump at that point or your sump it's in general so I wanted a system
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I've had a couple of of floodings of the basement for a variety a couple of different reasons
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so I wanted a system that would notify me when the water level in the sump was rising
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and I wanted it set so that though when the water level hits where the secondary system kicks in
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I would get that notification and I wanted a system that wouldn't use some kind of home
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spy system that's available from one of your friendly corporations out there and I really didn't
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want to use Python because I don't really know Python and I didn't want to just install
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Python libraries and for a solution I wanted to be able to do it with tools that I understood
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so the solution I came up with uses a raspberry pie a simple transistor circuit a C library that
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allows me access to the pies GPIO pins those are the general purpose input and output pins and
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those are those that header of 40 pin for number 26 pins I think it is I'm not sure what the
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number is the little pins that stick out out of the the raspberry pies that allow those live
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access to hook things up to them and I use the male client and some bash scripting in a cron
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job to get this job done so here's how I did it I use a raspberry thrive the raspberry pie 3B
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that's what I had laying around I installed of course slackware because that is the best operating
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system excuse me that's the best Linux distribution that's out there and I used the Sarpy projects
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the slackware arm on the raspberry pie I've got links in the show notes for these things
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there's actually their developers of the slackware arm fork of the or part of the slackware project
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they have a podcast I'm going to link to that they've got about 15 shows out pretty good listening
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and so after installing slackware on my raspberry pie I wanted access to those general
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purpose input output pins and initially I was a little bit of looking around and there's a way
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to control this pins using calls to sysfs that are really just echoing into sysfs a virtual file
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system that that creates these connections to these input now put pins from the kernel to the
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real world and but unfortunately that sysfs system is deprecated as a link in the show note to
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to what's happening there and it's being replaced by I think it's called live GPIO so I tried
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to compile that and get it working and I and I could not do it so I was a little bit frustrated
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at that point there's some other solutions of course is using python which I really don't want to
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use there's a project called wiring pie which kind of makes the access to the GPIO pins very
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similar to the way Arduino or wiring does it and it's but unfortunately that project's dead it
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seems like and then there's a project out there called pie GPIOD it's it's still active there's
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a slack builds for it I've got the slack builds is the official unofficial extra repository for
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slackware users and a great source of software out there and they had a slack builds for it so I
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built it up installed it into my pie and then had access to the to the GPIOs and that library is
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actually pretty amazing it allows access from the c c functions it allows it has a python
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wrapper and it has a bash commands that allow you access to the GPIOs it was very cool very easy
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to install the the syntax of the commands are as kind of yeah I'd I'd have written it differently
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but I I'm not complaining I'm just saying that's what I would do if I designed it but I'm not
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going to change it works just fine the circuit I used a rework of a circuit that forced mims I
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have a bunch of forest mims books in my library and if you don't know who forest mims is I've got
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a link to a Wikipedia article in the show notes and he's put out a bunch of radio shack here in
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the usway in this this this retailer radio shack where you get electronic stuff when I was growing
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up and some one of the things they had was these little engineers notebooks and they were in graph
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paper form and that circuits and stuff and just endless hours as a kid of looking at those and
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dreaming about making things that really didn't come into fruition till now when I'm an older guy
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but anyway so there's a forest mims has a circuit that involves a transistor a couple of
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three resistors and it allows you to detect water pretty easily and so I've got a picture of that
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circuit and that and I did it and try to do it in forest mims style graph paper and it gives
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a kind of a block overview the circuits to the right and then what I would my main the main
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change that I did was I installed a relay board and I'll describe how I did this later in the show
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this relay board allows me to do a functional test of the system whenever I want to by
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by basically shorting across the probe pins and then the system runs and it does what it's going
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to do which I'll describe what it does when I get there so that's the third picture
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now too as far as notification goes I remember that you can send text messages via emails and so
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what I there's a link in the show note for different systems for different carriers
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for for my carrier Verizon it's your phone number at vtex.com is who you would email to
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and it comes up as a text message and so the best text messaging system for Raspberry Pi on the
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command line is mutt so I set up a mutt client and I've got a link to on how I did that to my gmail
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account and that is how I am notified if there's a problem in my sump it the system detects when the
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water gets high through the circuit if it's if the water is you know shorted out the the probe
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pins and the circuit goes to a logic level zero because it's driven low then a a mutt message is
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said to my my phone letting me know that there's a problem that this water is coming up and then I
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can go investigate to see what's going on so and so the script that I came up with that I
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run on a cron job every minute it basically it has a few parts the first part is daily at six
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a.m. it sends me a message just to let me know that that that pie is still running that that
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Raspberry Pi is working that the GPIO Damon the PI GPIO D Damon which is what's running in the
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background on on the on the Raspberry Pi is is still running if not it sends me a message because
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only only root can start that Damon up so I would have to intervene SSH into that into that Raspberry
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Pi and restarted it for some reason it died it makes sure that the the pins that I use which are
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pin four and pins 17 on the on the Raspberry Pi the pin four is the input pin from the sensor the
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pin 17 is the output to the relay which turns the relay off and on when I want it and make sure
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those are correctly set up as input and output and if those two since at six a.m. if those two
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those three things those the two pins and the Damon is running it sends me a message it says
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that the system is running and then once a month I picked the first Wednesday of the month at noon
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using those using a little bit of cut commands against date and it the system runs a monthly test
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sends me a message that it's going to run a monthly test it basically energizes that relay short
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shorting the pins of the probe the water probe and then makes and then the the circuit thinks that
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the water is risen the the input to the GPIO goes from a logic high because the pin is held high
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normally it's driven low and it's detected and I get a water running mess water rising message
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does that once a month and then then the last part of the of the script is just the nor just
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what the main purpose of this project is is this checks to see that the sensor pin is not not
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at a logic zero driven low it says if it's a zero then the water is risen that that circuit is
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active and it sends me a message that the water is rising but usually hope you know everything's
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going well it would be a one and I don't get anything
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so I first put this the
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a breadboarded up the circuit I put in all and that's a picture picture for there the raspberry pie
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with all the wires a big old mess of wires there to run the system and did a bunch of testing got
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the script working and and then once I was confident that would work I made a strip board which is
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picture five where a couple little headers ones to the to the right on the picture that's a
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transistor in the resistors are on top and then on the left is the is where the wires that connect
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to the to the some pump and to the relay board are put in and then the the header that's to the
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right on the picture facing down is what plugs into the raspberry pie and then I had a case I
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did a little cutting and pasting and I stuck that relay board onto the top of the case and secured
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the whole thing into a two by four in the some closet and that's where the where my some minion
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lives and hopefully I'll never have another water problem again that would require a flooding of
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my basement for me that I could be able to intervene before I get a flooding problem and that's the
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hope and right now I feel confident that that's what this device will do for me so in conclusion it
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was a fun project I think it shows the power of Linux and floss there's so many different ways to
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approach a problem and different solutions out there this is a solution I I chose and certainly
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it's not a static problem it's something that I can tinker with and if I find new and better
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ways to do it that's what I'll do it I'll implement those changes so anyway I hope it inspires you
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to take one of those raspberry pies and and hook things up to the physical world and and make things move
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well that's in the show if you have any comments go ahead and email me or post a comment or better
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yet make your show for HPR telling us about how you solve the problem like this or just anything
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that's a raspberry pie related would be interesting to hear all right enough of that Brian and
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Hynes signing off and I want to remind everybody to go fast take chances
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