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169 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1547
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Title: HPR1547: My Linux Experience Birthday Special
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1547/hpr1547.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 04:52:26
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---
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🧽
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Hello Hacker Public Radio.
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This is David and it's on my birthday today, so I want to talk to you about how I came to
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find Linux and why I use Linux.
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Beans house my birthday, I'd like to tell you about my favorite birthday cake.
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My mother used to make this for me, it's called an Ambrosa Sunshine Cake.
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It was in the Pillsbury little book she got for collecting coupons and this was back
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in the 60s and you could always tell that she made this cake a lot because Paige had
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a lot of sticky stuff on it, remnants of when it was made.
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She made a dandered pound cake from scratch, you take from that a small can of concentrated
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frozen orange juice.
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When you thaw it out, pour it over the top of the cake and let it absorb and then she made
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a cooked frosting for the cake made out of basically egg white, sugar and vanilla in a
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double boiler and mix that with a egg beater thing or a beater, electric beater, tell the
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thing frothed up and got stiff peaks put a little vanilla in it and then make the two
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layer cake and then of course a little coconut on top.
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This was a wonderful cake and I used to have the recipe book or at least know how to make
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it and I think she gave me the recipe book and it's been lost and so I haven't had the
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cake for quite a while.
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But today I don't want to talk about cakes even though the cake is truth, another thing
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I'll talk about birthday cakes, one shop I worked in, every time it was your birthday
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you brought the cake and I guess that's what I'm doing today with Hacker Public Radio
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is I'm bringing the cake for my birthday.
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Hacker 1979 was really when I first used a computer, why I really liked the computer
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which was given to me was an Atari 160XE, it had the five and a half or so five and a
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quarter inch floppy drives could use a tape drive, it was really very primitive, you could
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use basic to program it but when I got this computer what it really did for me was help
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me to type things.
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I didn't learn typing very well when I was in school and I had a real hard time with
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it.
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So the first computer I had this Atari had an NX1000 printer hook to it and I could actually
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using formatting commands, format a resume that I could actually was presentable so that
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I could apply for a job and when I was younger I applied for jobs so it was really nice
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to have this and I was really proud of the fact and there actually wasn't much in a way
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of computers around people did things with electric typewriters, it's in the days of
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the weighing labs if you remember that and the word processor typewriter that had an
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actual LCD screen, the little characters that come upon you go back and correct it.
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I did a horrible job of typing resumes, I typed a resume for a job, then I went to work
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for the county and I was things were slow, I was in the construction field working on building
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residential houses, so I decided to try to apply for a job the county had for a maintenance
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supervisor.
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I had a lot of experience doing different kind of fix it things and then also was a lead
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on a construction crew building houses and so I applied for the job and when I did I
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went, I typed my resume out and I used the little white out stuff and you know type
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to hunt and pack so the actual type on the page was light and dark and there was across
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some things out when they didn't work out because it was so frustrating.
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Just think about it, the document had one flaw in it, it was ruined, where when I got
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the computer I could look and see the flaw and eliminate it, so but to finish the story
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I went to the interview and the personnel director for the whole county was there and
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he asked me one of the questions was do you know how to type and I said yes and he just
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smiled.
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I still got the job and we were kind of became friends in fact since I had to fix it
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knowledge I went up and roofed his house for him after he had retired from the county
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and he trusted me that much with my fix it abilities so that worked out but I knew that
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I couldn't type and so did he.
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So having a computer is really a good tool for doing typing that.
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My first use for a computer and probably one of my better uses or a real primary use
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for me these days I can correct things, make a document look nice even though I really
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can't type all that well except that I've really improved a lot because I use a computer
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every day at work now.
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So my first computer was the Atari 160XC there wasn't really a lot to that one I wasn't
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really all that comfortable with it or programming and basic or anything so then my brother
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could give me that computer and told me about a Mac that he had and so I got a Mac classic
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and I liked it a lot but boy programs were expensive if you wanted a page they out program
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I didn't know of any free ones but you could buy a page maker for $595 the computer
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only costs $835 or you can buy quark express or you could buy a printer cost $2,000 for
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300 DPI laser printer and I was trying to do type setting to make a few extra bucks
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and because I'm not and using Adobe Illustrator to draw logos and stuff which I still like
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to draw logos and that I'm really poor with an artistry and I think Richard Quarran
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others going to test to that in fact I'll just point out right here I have on the drawing
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boards and Richard's done some work making some logos I was going to make this cup for
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HPR and I still got that on the drawing boards in fact I got a prototype made but this
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has been over a year ago I won't tell you the tales of whoa that has made my year it
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was 2013 was a year from hell but I'm about ready to put that out so I'm going to get
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that out to the guys at lunar pages any other smack was very expensive and lo and behold
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what happened things needed updated and I had to spend more money and it was irritating
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to me and then it just wasn't working very well they moved on to different more powerful
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machines and the mat classic even though it was a really good machine in fact what I liked
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about it it was halfway portable I bought a big carry bag with you could stuff the keyboard
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next to it take it down to the library and plug it in and still use it down there and
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I had a hand scanner for it and a flat bed scanner CD-ROM drive all this stuff costs a
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lot of money and the software and so as the internet came into being a little bit more
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and I got dial up I bought a Windows computer to get away from the Mac because I figured
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there was more free things made for the Windows computer which was true and I think I ran
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Windows 95 on my first computer in the days of Napster I tried it out a bit and it's
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pretty an interesting time but the Windows computer I stayed with that and later bought
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a laptop computer and one of the things that I noticed about it was it had problems and
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then Windows came out with this thing called the genuine advantage which was a genuine
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advantage for them it told them whether you had ripped off their programs and I tried
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a few in Kazaah in that but you know it was ridiculous the fact that they controlled
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your computer that thing was sit there and spin I remember I had this laptop and it
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was a Fujitsu I something or another laptop that I bought and I actually had Microsoft
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office on it I think a friend gave it to me and this computer would just sit there and
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spin and spin and I couldn't do anything with it what's going on is it calling home
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is there a virus on it I didn't know it was hooked up to the internet it's very frustrating
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well during the time I had this computer I worked on a job where I had a lot of free time
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I was monitoring equipment and so I learned a little bit about Microsoft Excel which came
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in handy a little later for me and did some internet surfing and stuff but I was really
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frustrated with how the computer actually worked and so Mac big bucks I didn't have a
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lot of big bucks and Windows didn't work very well what's going on there you know why
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does Microsoft control all this stuff so much and so I was fairly frustrated and I have
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to excuse me I have turning air on in this car it's my wife's dog here kind of dog babysitting
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right now computer I started thinking there's I remember driving one day and thinking there's
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got to be an alternative that hackers or people are our developers use besides this garbage
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sites the Mac besides Windows and I can remember my brother telling me that Mac was based
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on a unix operating system and somewhere I think on NPR which is you know a copy of
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HPR right there was mention of Linux and so lo and behold my wife had to go in for
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knee surgery and she was having it at the doctor's office in Beaverton and I know when I drove
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by there I could see there was a border's books and I'm a very busy person and I didn't really
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have time to go to the bookstore all that much I thought when she's in there for her surgery
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and recovery when I won't be able to just sit around there and do nothing I think I'll run
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over and see if I can find something out about Linux get a magazine or something there's got
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to be a hobby magazine for this so I went over and I bought the Linux magazine in some sort
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of it had a bunch of disc in it and as soon as I started looking around on the internet with
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using a Windows computer I found out about Linux reality and I decided that I wanted to learn
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a lot more about it so I listened to every episode of Linux reality on my commute and I was
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really nervous though about putting Linux on my computer one of the first obstacles I faced
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was getting an ISO image of Ubuntu and I had a disk in the book but for some reason I didn't want
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to use it or in the magazine but I didn't want to use it so I figured out there was a freeware
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program of some sort that I could make a ISO or downloaded and make an ISO image and I made that
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and I had this laptop and I sorted out somehow how to make a dual boot with Linux and leave
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my Windows on because I really wasn't quite sure what I wanted to do and I got a Ubuntu on
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I believe it was Ubuntu 8 something and I was using it and I still used Windows though and I
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needed that security blanket and kept it there then I found Linux Mint and started using it
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now believe it or not I'm not a hacker I've never written a script even though I know
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Shabang bin bash and you know make execute in this type of thing I know a little bit about this
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I've never actually written a script so I'm more of a basic user I guess and I suppose a lot of
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people are like me and when my wife worked for Nike and she used she had a laptop that had
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Microsoft Windows on it and she had bought in the office program and open office was in Vogue
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and Linux then but soon as she stopped working for Nike and went into this early retirement and
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phase as she's still in and I'm not the I took her off and put Linux Mint on her computer and
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do a booted it and since then we've migrated away from Windows entirely in fact I don't even use
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it except it work I'm really frustrated when I see it it's kind of a joke I guess because I can
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get a free program that's community developed that has where people are working together to make
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the program and the Linux distribution and there's there's scratching their own itch everyone's
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working together or I can go get a Windows computer where they want to basically tap into my
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jugular get into my pocket book all the time or a Mac where it's really hard for people that don't
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have a lot of money to use to buy these expensive Macs and that and guess what software I found out
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software is available for things that I'm really interested in like well internet exploring
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software no problem use Firefox or Midori if you want to do illustration for drawing programs you
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can use Inkscape which is very similar to the Adobe Illustrator program GIMP for the new image
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manipulation program for doing photo editing instead of thinking you have to use Photoshop lots
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of free tools are out there to do things so Linux is my everyday use do I miss Windows no I like
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the utilitarian part of Linux the fact that you can have something that's really lightweight fast
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I like the fact there's a command line where you can do many things in grand fashion using the
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command line I'm interested now and kind of listen to one HPR about the art programming language
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and these things I really want to get into more advanced things but I don't think until I actually
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reach my early retirement you know be able to do that my job seems to take up just a lot of time
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and keeping up the place and everything so I'm going to close out now and say that this is my
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birthday special for Hacker Public Radio is how I found Linux and I'm using Linux and it'd be a
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nice thing if on your birthday or some other holiday you'd be KHPR and I'd like to hear about
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more interesting things than what I've talked about so thank you very much and God bless
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio our Hacker Public Radio does our
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