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1848 lines
160 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1676
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Title: HPR1676: HPR Community News for December 2014
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1676/hpr1676.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 07:14:55
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---
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This is HPR Episode 1676 entitled HPR Community News for December 2014 and is part of the series HPR Community News.
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It is hosted by HPR volunteers and is about 201 minutes long.
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The summary is HPR Community News for December 2014 and part three of the new year show 18-20-100.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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It is now the HPR New Year show part three. This is the HPR Community News.
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It is now 18-100 UTC and we have just welcomed in the time zones of Bangladesh, Russia and
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for more. Happy New Year everybody.
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The community news if you don't know already is a show that we put on once a month to give you
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the ins and outs of what's been going on in the HPR Community News in the HPR Community and if
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you've been listening to this you probably have a better handle on what's going on the most.
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I'll paste the show notes into the link to the show notes and so you can all follow along.
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Yeah, can you paste an oncast planet or PM it to me Ken Fallon because I'm on my phone right now?
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It's on allcast planet and if you go to the HPR site it's episode 16-7-6-16-7-6.
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Okay, folks. So the whole point community news as I said is to just give a bit of a rundown of what's
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been happening in the HPR Community and we usually start this with welcoming new hosts. This month's
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hosts are Real and Michael whose second name I will not be pronouncing because we thought
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when we get a cheap laugh I'd be butchering it. So it started off with the HPR Community News for
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November 2014 and the following day we had GeekSpeak which was showcasing the central closed public
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broadcast radio show splash podcast GeekSpeak. I think there's one of yours.
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You need to watch and the and the reasons of all that I spent in my preamble and the show notes
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they all when they started out they weren't giving any thought to creative commons and they always
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I guess since they're radio station they can get away with it they played you know a part a part
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of DeVos through being cool as their as their start music and then oh a couple of years ago
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many more they started you thought towards going creative commons and so they submitted for
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unique creative commons submissions occasionally they would play they would play that instead but
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you know I I listened to the first part in the end part of months of you know I had to go
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clear all the way back to June of last year before I found one that didn't have it didn't have
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DeVos either at the starter the end now they did correspond with me and I guess at least we've had
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the effect of that you know they're set up making them realize that they got DeVos all the time
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even though they want to be creative commons and so they said well we're not going to do DeVos
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to be getting anymore so guess we could say we've had a positive effect on that show that
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that was one of the first podcasts I started listening to and it's great for just general
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technology news and they're not a Linux podcast but they are certainly Linux aware
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now as a great addition is it's nice to get these little shows and there you're doing
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I think a boiler place templates for what you should do for syndication of shows as we don't
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syndicate shows on HPR there is a site called hacker media which is the sister
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in a project I think and their shows can be syndicated but this is a perfect example of you
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know taking a good show that you like wrapping it up and here's why I like it here's the sample
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episode and off with you brilliant I'm good show notes as well thank you I think you're
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beginning to understand how how paranoid I am about show notes well always seems to be mine
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because you're a problem no no lack of show notes is is the folks I've been I've been freaking
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everybody out about whether we're going to have people to do the show notes or not
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for this episode and the e2pad thing is is brilliant actually it's a really really lot that's
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a collaboration collaboration tool it makes it really easy just to be able to copy and paste out
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the the links in there so thanks today though it is already done the show notes for this section
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of the show so we can just refer e2pad to those I don't know no sorry hello there I'm
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don't you stay here just so just to say I'm here I see his name three times and he appears
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I'm not saying I'm not saying it's all the evidence I need to stone him stone him how are you
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keeping Dave I'm good thank you happy new year everybody yes we had on 1653 that was the third
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howca's in was Rucho's interview or at the I think it was a talk at the Ohio Linux Fest and
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about hardware needing to be open as well I really liked this this interview or this talk actually
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and again another good example of taking an episode or a creative commons event
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and wrapping it up and putting it on here is a sample and it is still permissible I mean
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I'm not saying we should do it when we've got plenty of shows in the queue and I'm not sure how
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to find what's plenty but it is still permissible to grab a talk off say archive.org and wrap it
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up and put it on as a show isn't it well anything's permissible but you kind of want to make it
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into a show yourself if if it's something that you found an archive that org that is interesting
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and cool and will be of interest hackers and absolutely do that but if we're just day after day
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going out to archive.org and putting stuff on HPR just to keep HPR going on the back of
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somebody else's project then I don't see a lot of point you know set up an RSS feed and feed
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it into hacker media and let everybody just get it from an aggregator then we become a planet you know
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and there's no we're not creating new content the whole point of this is create new content
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and I do want to congratulate the HPR community or commend them for stepping up it's probably a good
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thing my computer was dead for two or three days because of fan problem because I was going to
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I was going to dump like three more in a row in there so good on the hacker public radio community
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I second that completely I if you ready myself to rock was I've already had this heart attack
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moment several times and every single time the community does step up usually you know who you
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are who step up actually it's very easy to find out who you are basically the people who
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contributed this month so yeah well done those people earn a very special place in your heart
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wouldn't you agree 50 anyway the following day we had 1654 which was using ASN numbers to
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uniquely identify each network on the internet I don't know if anyone found this interesting but
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I have been struggling with this problem for a long time and this was a pretty elegant solution
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oh yeah I really enjoyed oh did you ever show notes attached to it I want to look
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I know sorry to put you on the spot that's one of those I'd either have to listen to it again
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and take notes or hope I could find the resource somewhere but yeah that's I found that fascinating
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not only you could do it but you'd actually you'd actually come up with a real world
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use for it yeah I do have the I have of the show notes ready but with this month being
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kind of busy on the HPR front we guess not only the community news but the other stuff that
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I've been doing I haven't had a chance to cross post it and put it in here but that those
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show notes will be coming and after me giving you all the stick about not having show notes
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we go to my episode and it doesn't have any show notes okay I'm gonna pop myself in the corner
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after the show but it is you you before I had that script you you want to see what an ugly
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hacks I had trying to get this thing achieved and now it's just a simply simple bash case statement
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it's really you know sometimes you have those those little moments where your life suddenly
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is a lot has been made a lot better to these computers I think nightwise often talks about
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past you know getting computer technology working for you and that was the case where it worked for me
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okay moving on 1655 LibreOff was called creating pivot tables does anyone ever use pivot tables
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well I might be able to now I will tell you a story because nobody else is talking
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on anyone else there was a time when we were I was working for a company and we were trying to
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convert people to using a standardized desktop which was Microsoft Office at the time and the
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amount of friction that we got from people you would not believe it I know in this world where
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people think Microsoft rule the world that was not the case we had to give training courses after
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training courses to get people off Lotus 123 or other spreadsheet packages and I remember being
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there was one diehard accountant person who would not move over and we had her in the training
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course and she simply would not get on board with the program and then I showed her pivot tables
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and that was it from that moment on she switched and the whole accounting team came over and
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life was was a lot more bearable after that they are very powerful if you happen to use them
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download this episode oh and I want to interject from hash off cast planet uh k-wisher just posted
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that he got email back from john newsteader and now we have 40 connections so give it you do
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can you uh can somebody who's on this please paste in the names at the very bottom of the episodes
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put in a thank you page and add these people to k5 talks as well and Kevin yourself as well please
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so that we can have a list of people to thank at the end yeah and uh Jonathan
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uh called from uh a ananastoz.com as well or somebody remind me to do that after the show
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then we had my audio player collection which is from Dave Morris who has far too many
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audible players and this is part one if was this part one or was this the the full total of your
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audio players Dave no this was it this was it i'm not doing anymore i've already driven everybody mad
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with this list it just goes to show what happens when you retire and you haven't got you haven't
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got enough to do Dave you will always have enough to do just take up the email and send me an email
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and i will make sure you're busy for the rest of your natural idea what i said
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now brilliant it was also nice because i had quite a lot of those myself and it prompted me to dig
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out my first mp3 player which i'm holding here and it was an mp3 player because that's all
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the plate and for some reason the back him off and i was keeping the battery in with cello tape
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and now the whole thing is like going up the cello tape has come off and all the sort of stand
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is stuck to it so yeah i might do an absolute mess sometimes but good show Dave good ideas thank you
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people have other case that they like to tell us about that is something excellent and awesome
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that they should do your first computer your first you know device that you carried around that
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you really found a little bit the following day we had john culp from Louisiana if i'm not mistaken
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is that correct seem to associate him with that okay hacking gluttenberg ebooks i love the show
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i love the show because it's it's got technology that's outside of copyright and he's going in there
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and doing exactly that there's one thing that's annoying him and he's going in and he's fixing it
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and you can do that because you've got access to the to the books brilliant brilliant brilliant
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well this is a whole example of using open software to scratch your own itch because
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i mean you know i wouldn't spend that much time on on formatting a book but i i'm so glad that he
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can do it yeah exactly but you know 50 you've had that thing where it's just annoying you
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it every time you look at it it's annoying maybe it's just me yeah possibly it's just me but it's
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really really cool to be able to go in and make that change and the the like go back to the script
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that i have every time i used to run us i knew it was a luge even though it worked i still knew
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it was a luge now i run it and i think it's exactly the same outcome but it feels nice and
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comfy i don't know it's a small cup no that's why we're hackers will spend three hours on on
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tweaking something that has absolutely nothing to do with our productivity and we could just
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just easily ignore absolutely yeah it's that xkcd comic i'll try and remind myself to put a link
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to that one in the show the following day we had cool stuff part two c prompt talks about more
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cool stuff that he discovered one of which was the today i found out podcast to anyone start
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listening to that Dave i can't believe that wasn't in your list no no sorry and we had
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david was those of that podcast and website came onto the comments and said thanks for mentioning
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the show which is kind of cool and command line tips control left right that's that was also
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very excellent and xd2 which was something i didn't know about in xfce very nice the only thing
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again i would say is why he not split up into three episodes but that's just me now i really enjoyed
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that one as well the following day we had john archer with a core nominal who as rapidly putting
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all of us who do interviews to shame with the professionalism that he has of the putting in
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editing at the beginning and the the beeps and the interview and the beepouts so very very good show
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um with john archer i understand as well that they're starting going to start a new podcast
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was he involved in the linux podcast or did i get that wrong it's been a while since i listen
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an episode but yeah i think there was something about that in there i think they pulled circle one
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of our sister well one of our i would say yes sister podcast at least definitely in our
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hpr family um they are stopping with the full circle podcast and they're starting a podcast called
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the linux podcast and i believe they're having somebody from the um uk fedora team i think it could
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be john but we'll see but it was a nice interview is nice to get in some more of these odd
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yeah thank you yes you're audible i hate you and you get to keep the book after you hit me
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okay the following day which was uh the 12th of the 12th which was my birthday um trying out
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slackware hpr 1660 slackware newbie benny is taking a long time he's talking to a long time
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slackware user macnalu and this is a nice sort of chassis episode and basically all about slackware
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so opans whose first distro was slackware in the day gosh that's a lot of hands well done
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yeah i haven't been playing with linux long enough for for for me to come in when it was the only
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distribution it was my it was my first one on the same machine that we were testing out windows 95
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believe it or not uh we also were trying out slackware uh in mark so there you go and the reason was
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is the bolt had a DVD not to start another debate the point you know i i just don't understand
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the dichotomy really was slackware because you can install it have it not install those parts of
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the kernel that uh for hardware you don't have uh so you know you can make it very slim on memory
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but you know as a default you would you install every single package that you could ever possibly
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install at the beginning so you have you have the huge hard hard drive footprint
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yeah but didn't have to you could that's why the easy packages you could load cd or the floppy disk
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be or the floppy disk d so you haven't split up that way it was it was kind of cool efficient
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that way as well and of course back in the day i don't think you had the linux modules
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everything had to be compiled in your module system wasn't there
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okay
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hey 51 50 kind of funny you spreading you do a slackware install you can choose individual packages
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from the different sections you don't have to install everything
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wow you rely and you're done you're done
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well well then uh uh i understand that but a lot of what they were talking talking about
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less their theory is since it's it's not a problem that uh it's more difficult to install packages
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on slackware because you it's you're installing every package that you could ever need during
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during installation process so you never have to go back and uh compile and install software
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i think that was more to do with the dependencies the
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i have heard um tell to you all about that that you install a lot of the dependencies so
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anything that would be on those disks you just install it and you don't need the dependencies
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because they're already there oh i see so what they're talking about is installing all just about
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all the possible libraries but not not actual applications i believe so but i um slackware give
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me a lot of gray hair as we said yeah that's it in the nutshell see which can pick up folks if you
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listen to an off podcast anyway coronal again 1661 i'll come back to you with Paul Tamsun this
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i loved the code club volunteers this is this is um following on from my um interview last week
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last month with uh or is it this month actually yeah anyway getting more kids involved
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is the way to solve a lot of these um profile issues uh with members of the community and this
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is a brilliant way to do it given you know going out volunteering going in uh supporting teachers and
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giving a class one one day a week uh to your local school that's that's that's that's genius that's
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what that is and the following day we had Linux logcast episode 001 outtakes pre-show and after
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show banter and with Kevin wishes i like this it's um i like the i like the Linux logcast
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shows for a start because they're quite interesting um but it's it's this was a cool
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pre-emotional chat but again during to this sort of 26 hour show then why wouldn't you be
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into another outtakes show and there is another one uh uh that we're gonna we're gonna get to
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yeah so there's some of the things we're in that first show that if i'd known it was going to be
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is going to be used i might have used a slightly different phrasing but that's okay i can't
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imagine anybody's ever going to listen to it that would uh get me into trouble but i'm going to
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take you know feel free to have at me since i'm the uh i think the only member of Linux logcast
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uh or well everybody's a member of Linux logcast because everybody is welcome to come but
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uh they'll be the only regular member here in the room so uh you know feel free to take shots at me
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on the on those podcast but i i will i remember watching irc when that came out and i wasn't sure
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what was going on but some but and i think it applies more to my shows last month but uh
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uh somebody was saying well we ought to do this every time uh hpr gets uh low on shows is
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is is just load up fifty one fifty on beer and let them sit there and talk
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yeah but yes i'm i actually i'm completely in the agreement with that especially when you do
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the beer reviews 50 so you keep doing that my friend
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they following day i don't know if it was the following day but the next sequence is hpr 1663
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which was uh interview with Greg uh greenley founder of blacks and technology and as i said in the
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show basically um you know there's a bit of a was a bit of a stomp about uh odd camp and did it
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basically uh reflect society and the answer of course is no uh whether reflected the state of
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the technology um world the actors probably yes more so than more so than the most i would say
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but it just does highlight that we have a bug here um we have a bug here in relation to
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um the the type of hackers that we're getting in that's not to say we're excluding
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these hackers at all we need to grow the community because there are hackers out there everywhere
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it's just they probably don't know their hackers yet so we need to grab them and pull them in
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not because they're black not because they're white not because they're uh i don't know
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Asians not because whatever um because they're hackers so yeah that's uh and i i would like uh
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i'll send out a few more feeders to other people to see if they would like to come on and just
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discuss this topic i don't want it to be a uh you know we're discuss we're talking to this person
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minority group because they're up in to be a minority group um both i do want to make sure that we
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are uh pulling people in and that uh we're making everybody feel as welcome as possible
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on worse getting as many hackers as possible in the world well i mean uh just microcosm for that i
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mean yeah uh it was questions in the mailing list whether we should you know
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be saying well make uh make uh make uh like distinctions but you know clearly with lack and i
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think the lack of participation uh by everyone except uh you know white European descent mails it
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you know is actually worse in in the free software area than it is in technology in general so
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clearly you know i uh i i i think somebody making an effort especially especially if we could go
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if it would be possible to go in places and and uh uh teach people the young age to come over
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technology you know that uh uh i i don't the culture tends to exclude from technology because
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clearly the culture does i don't think that the culture excludes necessarily i think it's more the
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fact that there's not as many uh anti-social minority people that's the other kind of worms in the
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but i i think to just to answer the the thing on the mailing list is you know it's about a point
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to why are we segregating off blacks and technology and why are they doing their own thing
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yet at the same time you know if you think of it from the point of view of
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boss you know the Ubuntu UK podcasts are doing that they're having to show just about a Ubuntu so
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that you know it's just another way we're at the same community they're just supporting
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their community uh in the same way that the Ubuntu community is supporting Ubuntu users it's just
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a different way of looking at the patient it was really glad to hear from Greg that he he does
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consider himself uh part of the general community in fact the his reason for doing it his reason
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for getting involved was his participation at the Ohio Linux Fest which again is a great legacy
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for the Ohio Linux Fest so regardless uh it's uh it's something that we need to keep an eye on
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and uh i think we need to move on to the next show if that's okay with everyone and that was
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1664 life and times of a geek part one Dave Dave Dave Dave you are prompted me to uh
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there are so many shows i want you to do as a result of this for a start how to use the slide rule
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yes you definitely need to do that yes yes i've i've agreed that i'll have a go though uh as i said
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in the in the comments my old mathematics teacher would probably have a fit if he heard me trying
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to explain this because uh i was not a good student in those days but i'll have a shot
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they're correct me from long they were we always had to use log tables but if you had a slide rule
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you could work it out yeah it's a logarithmic scale you just uh you just align numbers according to
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uh you know you put the if you're multiplying two numbers you put one on the bottom and the other
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one above it and and because they're logarithmic scales you can read off the uh the um the answer
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on the on the slide rule i you see i can't really do it because i've forgotten and i haven't
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going in front of me tell you what we'll do tell you what you need to do right is uh i remember on
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deal extreme or somewhere like that one of the uh chinese uh you know deal our uh cheap websites
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they had uh slide rules that you could buy for real cheap but they take about a month or two to get
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there so if we can find out one of those put it in the mailing list then everybody can order
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them and then once everybody's got the slide rules you can do the show how about that
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yes yes right everybody let's multiply three by three and this is how yes i can see it now
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i would personally love that as well yeah that there are some good resources out on the way
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but i did notice that so i'll probably be pointing at those once i get around to doing the show
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but uh yeah it's it's cool it's cool stuff but even aside from that you you did prompt me to um
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reconsider looking us uh how i got into the mix as well uh how it got into tech one
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you're uh yeah love these shows keep them coming folks keep them coming
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well i always love these origin shows and especially if somebody who's an original geek like Dave
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yeah they don't come much older than me yeah but it's it's uh you put the origin shows like that one
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you put your finger on it like everybody in all of the shows that's been done every single person
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has had a like a different story and it's just amazing the interesting
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this was the reason that i did this because i i don't think i would have wanted to do this if i
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hadn't had other people doing fast what i found to be fascinating shows about their origins um
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so yeah so thanks to everybody else for prompting me to to do it really yeah i think i'll
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rename this series origin uh episode and you can remember to come back and do that once i uh
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listen to the show and i figured that it must exist Dave doesn't have any excuse for not doing
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the show right away because i just i just posted an all cast planet a a uh slide rule simulator page
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well cool oh no there's no way out folks you uh you won't hear this because of the trunkade
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silence but for the next 10 minutes it's been silent can i sit in the back of this classroom with
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the other cool kids you you someday you'll be stranded on a desert island needing to know the
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exact angle for takeoff right and then you'll be going why did no pay attention with my slide rule
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i don't think that's ever going to happen because i don't really leave my house so
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close the warming your house becomes an island you'd never see it coming time
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anyways uh working with pivot tables uh i can't basically say anymore about that then i already
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have said pivot tables are cool if you are not using them you should and uh don't forget that there
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are um examples in the show notes and detailed um detailed links and summaries in all of who
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shows so very very good keep up the good work bare metal programming from the rarest repire part three
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whoo no fluff episode here i'll tell you nothing uh this uh uh you know the the intro and outro thing
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where we go the episodes for text-to-speech that's uh i think all our visual impaired listeners hate
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um i love it because if i was listening to this if i was on the train in the morning and listening
|
|
to this i would have a brain seizure it's this show had to be listened at the particular correct
|
|
time that your brain is capable of taking it in oh yeah oh yeah i got a hand at the game or even
|
|
fire i mean uh just it wouldn't occur to me uh oh what let's get a raspberry pie and as a learning
|
|
experiment uh let's start and build our own operating system for it it's just amazing the the
|
|
level this guy is operating on it's just yeah i'm shocked i'm shocked by you know the quality of
|
|
stuff everybody in this network brings and i'm embarrassed by times of what i put up
|
|
look at me written a basket yeah and uh who's got real writing arm code and transporting libraries
|
|
or it's amazing awesome awesome awesome stuff folks and the following day first time holes
|
|
real how to start your own blog and we've had this up on the uh requested topics and i think the
|
|
approach here was you know why you would start your own blog and i had a really had to chuckle
|
|
because on my own blog it's uh i have per lesio people that my blog target audience is so that
|
|
i won't forget stuff um so my target audience is already met a hundred percent when i read it
|
|
myself so but it was a very nice um philosophical look at why you might want to start a blog so a good
|
|
read platoon made a welcome return with uh talks about the nicks installer packaging applications
|
|
for the new linux and the bsd's we also didn't even know this was possible and i need to put this
|
|
into the packaging series um that he has done he's done some in the past and rpms and uh
|
|
devs and that sort of thing um this is this is excellent oh yeah i can't imagine this and
|
|
hats off to the to the uh coders who who built this system at you know a distro agnostic
|
|
packaging system and especially when it knows what it it knows what distro it's going on and put
|
|
stuff in the in the appropriate folders and and solves dependencies and etc i mean just hats
|
|
off to this and and you know it seems seems like well why would we need to to mess with any other
|
|
package manager well i think it was more supporting the package manager is just a way of
|
|
distribution but what i really liked about this was that it could the integration with the package
|
|
it could integrate with the existing package manager so that's when you did uh a yum
|
|
erase or a apt aptitude removed or whatever that it would know that those files are there and you
|
|
could remove it that way which is which is a stoker genius you know oh yeah i forgot to mention that
|
|
that that is the best part of it brilliant and you know i suppose what as platoon says he was doing a
|
|
hack by uh running his own scripts and you know doing a sort of bootstrap but hey you know you
|
|
could you could send down a simple app like that and then have a pull uh stuff from your own
|
|
website or whatever so yeah it's pretty uh pretty cool i like this
|
|
miss your new live bill new retro computing and uh another person who's operating i must say
|
|
as a higher level than myself um although i do would like him to do some more um introduction to
|
|
electronics things this is a very very interesting topic it's a like a little basic computer
|
|
pretty cool yes another one of those things that never would occur to me to do i mean it sounds
|
|
fascinating but uh you know i i want to get a really working computer out of it i mean maybe
|
|
you could do a retro apple 2 or something like that but yeah hats off it with this this is just
|
|
something that i can't imagine doing myself but i'm glad bill is here to tell us about it
|
|
some of my first computers were uh were basic computers and just dropped you to a prompt like that
|
|
and then okay what next 10 print hello go to 10
|
|
yep pretty cool anyways have a follow-on date ahuka privacy and security digital signatures and
|
|
certificates how how canonical got all that's money and good he is laying the foundation for
|
|
very very good security and the privacy um series so much so that the security community are now
|
|
beginning to refer to hbr as a location for getting security podcasts so well done uh hookah
|
|
yeah i didn't realize that that's great not yeah i i so much enjoy this series as well
|
|
yeah i follow the uh i get notified of the twitter feeds if you follow as hbr we've been uh
|
|
in the last week or so we've been getting um uh things about security podcasts that you should
|
|
listen to hbr for those shows which is pretty very good Linux lookcast episode two outtakes i think we
|
|
already uh already discussed this one that's okay yeah i think we talk about there's a whole
|
|
no problem uh japan next one Roger and then we have um Steve with system d for learner drivers how
|
|
to drive system d without crashing the vehicle through arguing with your passengers my more main
|
|
argument against system d was exactly this that they were wasn't and again with pulsodio i think a
|
|
lot of the confusion comes from the fact that people don't know what's going on and they feel
|
|
there's no documentation there they don't know how to get to the documentation and it's all very
|
|
well to say there's a man page but this i think had done more for my understanding of system d
|
|
than anything else now i'm looking at some of the tools that he's mentioned oh that's a lot
|
|
better than than what we had before oh this is a lot better than what we had before and uh
|
|
then you go oh this is this the whole approach now after doing this seems very um much like what
|
|
son solaris have done with their work or IBM or aix and you think okay well this is
|
|
system d might be trying to make Linux a little bit more professional perhaps so
|
|
well well i think i think a lot better but go ahead again no and i was finished i was just
|
|
telling you to go ahead okay uh i don't know i i think a lot of the init versus system d debate is
|
|
just because you know for for people who are already init hackers and know what to uh how to get
|
|
down in that system and do something with it it's just oh we gotta learn all this all over again
|
|
i think it's a lot of the resistance and then probably your average Linux user who
|
|
who doesn't get that that deep into their system it's probably transparent to them
|
|
yeah but a lot of sys admins who work on various different unique systems would know that
|
|
um on other platforms this exists you know and it's not it's not random from one
|
|
distribution to the other to the whatever i'm not i'm not arguing for it or against us yeah
|
|
don't get me wrong here and i would prefer if if in a way you know you're going away from the
|
|
BSD's not using this but in another way you're harmonizing the Linux distribution so all
|
|
Linux distributions are now operating like this because before you had Debbie and do in her own way
|
|
um fedora doing is another way you know and
|
|
and yeah now if everybody uses the system d well system d is the way the way the Linux does it
|
|
but it still feels like system d is fragmented that says maybe but at least here my point here
|
|
with this episode was okay now somebody has explained what's going on and then we can
|
|
make an informed argument as to whether it you know it makes sense or not so cascading things
|
|
seems a bit overdone to me but but this is a good a good kickoff point you know what I mean
|
|
talking about the episode not they it's not they system d now per se yeah it was a great episode
|
|
i really enjoyed it and i think he did manage to avoid you know okay here system d we
|
|
whatever you say about this is how it works i'm not saying the world where the other so yeah
|
|
brilliant it loves you something else that is normally available on Linux is the zfs
|
|
file system and this was also from first time hawk michael to ransky nope nope can i answer that right
|
|
anyone want to have a go i would say seeransky i would be more than happy to accept that
|
|
can i put my two pennathan i have two two Polish guys living next door and i took this name across
|
|
them and said how would you say that and they said it's chera zinsky there you go above and be hot
|
|
well i just saw them in the driveway and said this is so typical of you Dave i do a script and you
|
|
come along and replace my 20 lines with a one liner in perl thank you very much slap me in the face
|
|
again i don't just just because i have Polish neighbors you know it's nothing to do with me
|
|
no brilliant okay thank you very much anyway great episode and also refers to another good episode
|
|
about jwp and that was it for the month as far as episodes go all in all 15 not bad considering we
|
|
were starving for shows at the beginning of the month eh yeah they had the i was sweating both a
|
|
little bit too i bet you are i bet you are that has been my life for the last couple of
|
|
some of the years four years now it's been four years on hpr has been going for seven years
|
|
so yeah i've been posting them for about four years okay holy crap congrats there can
|
|
wow thank you very much okay Dave do the comments and you're in your living and there better be
|
|
a good humorous story with every single one of these yeah what what no ken old defer to you you're
|
|
better at this than i am let me see let me see let me see how to start a blog what do we start
|
|
well we normally start from the from the bottom i think don't we because it's
|
|
the way we've ordered this we agreed on doing it this way but i always find a little bit puzzling
|
|
to be honest with you it's ordered this way because that's the order that you'll see the comments in
|
|
the in the if you follow the the p link in from the home page yeah okay
|
|
oh i don't know what to do
|
|
yeah okay we had mans mans son asking about tidily wiki if this is on to john pulps adopting and
|
|
renovating a textbook i don't know why what the point of tidily wiki would be except textbooks
|
|
as i'm searching for tidily wiki here next place the versatile notebook application you can download
|
|
for free is this a is this an advertisement did you let us spam in mans are you spamming us
|
|
i couldn't make i let this one through so it's my fault but i couldn't make up my mind it looked
|
|
like a genuine comment but no no i'm part of tidily wiki i think they've used used it in the day
|
|
so we had a bare metal programming part two with even more comments of course from mike ray saying
|
|
brilliant um i bring you into the episode and uh oh no there's Allison um it will be
|
|
great basis for a hackfest and i couldn't agree more yes a comment on one of your episodes uh if you
|
|
want 50 um by gigasphere basically saying um that community is a meta people and that's um yeah it's
|
|
great episode uh good to listen to and make sure you remember that it's the people that makes the
|
|
difference well thank you for those kind words gigaspiracy i i'm only saying part of these uh my
|
|
my comment on the uh on what you link you gave me just ends in great episode yeah you need to
|
|
click on the link or you need to click on the p in hacker public radio and then you will see that
|
|
so for example there's also a comment on the unison syncing utility by bort i5250 thanks for the
|
|
podcast to use some one thing i would like to add is that both me and both back ends need to be
|
|
the exact same version when i tried getting it working between two we run two machines with
|
|
different versions it wouldn't talk to each other so it took it ages to figure out what was wrong
|
|
also when we were talking about this last month i think i was saying i was having trouble with it
|
|
in work and then i realized that there are different versions of unison that you can install
|
|
and it's only in later versions that has this sync book so if you go back and install a previous
|
|
version of one that's something or two that's something definitely not the two that four version
|
|
it doesn't have this unicode panic issue that i'm seeing so it's a case of uh Linux
|
|
ludite deciding we like the old stuff better on this okay great it was a bolt tank
|
|
thanks for for that because that uh that was more detail or more or more research that i went into
|
|
and seeing it sounds like unfortunately you came up on some of that stuff by accident but uh
|
|
uh good on you for uh you know coming up with a solution and posting same
|
|
yeah and um there was a lot of comments on your bash parameter manipulation
|
|
David um starting with our uh comment by um see we went down as far as john
|
|
at this month it started by um john culp yes whole new category of cool bash tricks i think
|
|
john had a few bash scripts himself if i recall
|
|
oh john's no slouch when it comes to to bash so uh it's very kind of him to uh to uh make
|
|
complimentary comments he's he's a pretty cool guy himself and they had uh there was a comment
|
|
by music piece um uh they're talking about magnum tunes as well
|
|
you replied to that can you just give us the summer yeah yeah he he was saying thanks for the
|
|
show and also thanks for the pointer to magnum tune which he apparently hadn't come come across
|
|
which is surprising but but magnum tune is not free but uh but it's uh it's an excellent
|
|
source of music and it's run by john buckman who does an amazing job and really he's run
|
|
these people who he's running a label a music label here but he's he's paying great attention
|
|
to the artists which is pretty unusual for music labels in my understanding so uh he's uh
|
|
he's a person to be admired i believe you know i think i remember uh hearing an interview with him
|
|
on the links in tech show but it's a long time ago now so it might be might be time for somebody to
|
|
give him a call and see what they're doing and how they're good enough they do promote creative
|
|
commons works those uh unless they change that yeah i think so yes but but they do it is creative
|
|
commons works yes i think you're right yeah
|
|
sorry the next one raspberry pie accessibility and this was uh mic ray who just to recall
|
|
he fixed a bug on the um with pie speak up and uh we had a comment by gigosphere same
|
|
thanks mic great episode and great to help great to hear these types of uh episodes and he had
|
|
this issue with e-speak and he completely agrees with the accessibility accessibility terminals
|
|
hey everybody it's buddy omuranda how are you?
|
|
i told you all i told you all the bull how are you?
|
|
doing okay uh trying to figure out how to plumble i should have talked to 51 first
|
|
yeah where is that in the middle of you usually should be rocked up in the list and you're um
|
|
yeah i know i'm getting out of your arms uh if anything i guess i'll try and call in a little bit later
|
|
just give us 10 minutes i think yeah just give us 10 minutes i think yeah
|
|
speaking of time zones uh did we miss one?
|
|
i think we've got three minutes to the next thing
|
|
whoa oh god my ears
|
|
yeah okay that's uh yeah i think that's something arises that
|
|
okay uh comment on the the
|
|
the
|
|
interviewer community news of last month the reason all these comments seems so new to me is
|
|
because somebody has taken over my job of approving the comments mr. morris and now i'm reading them
|
|
ah when you're trying to help that Ken you know that's worse this month
|
|
51 snoring or Ken Fallon saying thank you very much mr. mic great
|
|
okay
|
|
well it wasn't just by storing in fact it was mainly taken at your store because he was keeping me awake
|
|
that's that's what's the boundaries of that episode i really do have to say
|
|
i mean all the crashing and thrashing that you hear in there that that's that's me awake rolling
|
|
over from side to side trying to go back to sleep
|
|
yeah and Dave um those also commented there Dave you kind of people then the indiegogo projects
|
|
deleting digital divide one computer at a time um is that over yeah it's uh it's over
|
|
thank you it is actually yeah and then we had a lot of comments also about mic raise
|
|
on my audio player collection by Dave morris and mic ray who thoughtfully had the Dave morris
|
|
national audio player museum commenting about uh you know error getting an error so Ken might actually
|
|
work um pee commenters that you never try the irriver clicks too why Dave why
|
|
so many so many hours in the day it's actually quite hard to get hold of them now i've been
|
|
hunting debate for the film um they don't seem to be about maybe they're not very popular maybe
|
|
they're not then people don't like them as much as pee does anyway i shall try i'll find one i'll let
|
|
you know okay and you uh replied to both of them as well so um and pee then replied to you
|
|
basically goes into uh both of you going to the discussion about that if you want to read more
|
|
there in the comments with available as an rss feed uh Ken is on the side would it be i don't know
|
|
would it be would it be possible to email the uh host i mean automate emailing the host when
|
|
when one of their shows has been commented on i you know i obviously had a couple on there
|
|
of comments that i didn't personally get back back to just because uh i don't uh i'm not
|
|
happy to go back and looking for comments where i should probably should be it is something we could
|
|
consider something we've we've spoken about before it's not Ken at least i have yeah i i was going
|
|
to say i use a um an rss reader since i still use rss for some old and creepy uh then i find that
|
|
i seal the alerts to new podcasts in an rss reader quite it's quite successfully but uh that's
|
|
just me yeah some people might like the rss and yeah the cause then if we start emailing everybody every
|
|
time a comment comes on we'd have to get up in whether they want to do that or not so i don't know
|
|
what do you what do you think uh um can we put that on to the it's emailing this discussion i think
|
|
50 it's a it's a good point technically i think we can do it yeah because you know we're we're
|
|
doing emails now for um the show uploads which we get to in a minute um so i think we could do
|
|
it technically it really i'd like to hear back from people i'm reluctant to still have to go
|
|
around and put another tick box in for people do you want notifications when comments come in
|
|
you see that right we'll get that one over to the newsletter
|
|
okay so we had uh some other comments cool stuff part two uh about c prompt
|
|
and uh davin says uh yeah we already said he uh he put in a link to his uh today i found out
|
|
com um which any to add to my reader and we need to send that out as well you need to tell
|
|
about the new year in there again okay um no you can do this oh no i i i don't have the thing in front
|
|
of me okay so then who else can i guess to do this welcome uh to much of russia uh i don't see no
|
|
no okay 1900 i'm sorry greetings to pakistan and tashkit is lahabad Lahore and kerachi
|
|
and we missed india shirlanka new deli Mumbai
|
|
kola kaupt and bangalore at the half hour so happy new year to you as well
|
|
we're sorry we missed so many of you and we missed nipal kathamamdu
|
|
brithinatar and kookaar please put me down this misery
|
|
you know and in light of of urn luve having a new year's whistle to blow every time since
|
|
since pegwalls here well you can get the didgeridune and uh play it every every time uh we
|
|
celebrate a new year i didn't have a i could i did have a a text to speech
|
|
paying announcing them both then you were all talking over them in the background so i stopped
|
|
it was coming in on the hbr streaming boss it was going announced in the mad at particular time
|
|
so i just cancelled it i mean this year i didn't realize yeah at the beginning i put them
|
|
irsi and in the chat and and they uh and uh you just kept talking over i don't know it sounds
|
|
just like somebody's got text to speech on the mumble because it's the same voice it's the
|
|
speak voice so you probably notice oh okay that's what i was hearing yeah if we don't get this
|
|
if we get the break at the exact right time which i did several times this morning
|
|
um but well that's that's a great idea so we don't miss it but uh and i guess it was i was going to
|
|
say if it wasn't coming over the uh uh the mumble then anybody recording on mumble uh wouldn't be
|
|
able to get it but uh you got to keep going because it was coming in on the mumble um then
|
|
everybody on mumble gets it and because it goes out on the mumble boss it's because it's coming
|
|
and from the mumble boss they also got it so it's probably more pronounced for the people on
|
|
the recordings than as well as for you uh now okay is it the text to speech pronounce things right
|
|
can well it pronounced some better than me
|
|
and my bill uh left a comment by the way on augham bend review with uh john archer and he just
|
|
realized that uh he had met him in person at aug camp uh i saw that going up i've met john as well
|
|
twice now there were comments to trying out slackware and uh lumix enjoyed listening to minor
|
|
corrections since 14.4 the ISO is a ISO hybrid that can put straight on to a pen drive
|
|
migray uh giving in um comments that it's now something from to the pack with uh accessibility
|
|
so some work that could be done there and uh bending replied um giving some answers back
|
|
if you want to read those in the show notes you're more welcome to do so then we had a few uh comments
|
|
on the episode um that i did with uh Greg greenley um basically um referring to the links to the
|
|
podcast and directive has he gotten back to you with the correct link yes i posted it as a as a
|
|
comment there uh can it's in the second comment after this thing um it's uh it's a spreeker
|
|
you spreeker for the that's right uh the podcast so uh it's there he said it was going to put it
|
|
on the site uh when he had a moment okay yeah cool and then there was a lot of comments to your
|
|
uh life and times of a geek uh from uh ftenny um cool stuff nice start looking forward to more
|
|
was it my column also replied says it was a great episode uh looking to the uh slide route tutorial
|
|
and you of course reply it back saying that you definitely will be doing the
|
|
tutorial in the future no escape me no no very metal programming part three just two more sets of
|
|
comments mike where uh migray really liking the show as he showed and then uh gabriel uh replying
|
|
back and some answers to the questions that you mentioned and um two reals episode and how to
|
|
start a blog um uh saying uh devi jordan likes flat uh press because it doesn't require a database
|
|
like uh more prestos i've never heard of that one devi you should really do a um episode on
|
|
flat press that would be interesting to hear so that is pretty much it for the comments and for
|
|
the um for the rundown on the review so all that's left for us to do is discuss what was going on
|
|
on zmailing list and then the community news is pretty much over so let me just dig that out
|
|
um so migray has an alternative text to speech s vok dashpego which was available for ubuntu and
|
|
i installed it there work beautifully really liked the the sound coming out of it um
|
|
haven't had a chance to implement that into the workflows yet because i'm a bit busy with the
|
|
getting ready for this show and also um finishing off the new year's resolution for the
|
|
what you talk about in a while so if anybody knows how to get that installed onto
|
|
fedora really easy that would be nice to have a how-to yes uh i think uh somebody replied
|
|
back saying that i can take the package apart and and have a look or you know uh there's a package
|
|
of build per arch but i'm gonna see i want one more and then sorry go on i was going to say when you
|
|
get that uh working met uh that project put a uh put a link in the mailing list i developed uh
|
|
small interest in uh text to speech and you may for may or may not have heard earlier this morning
|
|
i was talking to jonathan some i think he agrees with me that the default
|
|
voice in uh in in e speak at least in e speak is the easiest one uh to uh to hear because he
|
|
he listens to it at so many times advanced and when he tries one of the more natural sounding ones
|
|
he he has more uh he says he doesn't can't understand them as well as the uh default voice
|
|
please continue but uh but mike and trend we did we did get around the talking about that this morning
|
|
okay let's not redo that again but um yeah mike is kind of passionate about the uh migrae is also
|
|
blind and he's passionate about using e speak as well because it's very fast so um but they
|
|
there are other accessibility uses for text to speech engine which is my use case and that is
|
|
where um speed is not of the uh essence but um understanding is and nurturing so the person
|
|
listening doesn't go away crying that is that is my goal for text to speech so we shall meet
|
|
somewhere in middle i hope then we had a call for emergency shows um and we were uh yeah
|
|
put it down to the wire basically you know i put more problems on the website but i will say
|
|
said it before and i'll say it again if we don't get shows hpr as a project stopped very very simple
|
|
don't have shows it stopped stopped is going to happen someday you know um we've discussed it
|
|
and community news is probably a good time to discuss that but we we've already touched upon
|
|
that i bet i guess uh 50 and you know we could rehash all episodes but you know i want to go down
|
|
i probably want to go down like a inflaming ship if there's no episodes then we just stop it and then
|
|
put everything is available in our pocket it's not as if we've lost anything but the only part
|
|
the only person who decides whether hfr continues as a project is people listening to it and
|
|
they do that by submitting shows we've already had 260 shows this year and just to give you
|
|
an idea they're um and then ex-outlaws one of the most prolific podcasts have been running for
|
|
was it seven years and they have released 370 shows we have released 260 this year and it's not
|
|
you know completely different ballpark but just to give you an idea of the number of shows that
|
|
we churn through here every every week and again if you hear people other podcasters uh we've
|
|
who've been discussing hfr as an alternative um to you know as linux podcas and especially when
|
|
we've had the promo going out for the show and we need to thank everybody who played that and a
|
|
lot of them will say they don't listen to the show and that's absolutely fine um that they'll
|
|
listen to one or two episodes there this is actually it's very few people who has you know you need
|
|
to be a specifically dedicated podcast listener to be able to listen to every one of these shows
|
|
coming out in this network so that is it's it's just the volume of stuff that i want to say is
|
|
over how i move for a lot of people but we do five shows a day five shows a week so therefore we
|
|
need five shows a week coming in to meet them and thanks to everybody who did contribute shows
|
|
this month that's all i'll say about that and this might be an interesting point to Mitch i see you
|
|
scheduled for show 1700 which counting the 300 episodes of today with a techie will will be the
|
|
2000s show for uh for this podcast network i don't know if we have any idea what we want to do or not
|
|
or for if this is the time to to discuss it but i didn't want to throw out there somebody look
|
|
ahead at at the calendar like i do that that that's coming up well i do have a plan for that episode
|
|
so that episode i reserve for myself because um i'm one of the uh today with a techie
|
|
pulse so i have a plan for that episode however i've also reserved episode 2000 of HPR which will be
|
|
300 episodes of the measure and i very soon will be a reserving episode two thousand and eighty four
|
|
for those binary uh those 48 that's one yeah just calculating it okay so uh i do have a plan
|
|
i do have a plan 50l i'll tell you if you really want to know but i'd like to
|
|
know that now i wasn't questioning or anything i was just saying hey i saw that out there in the
|
|
schedule and i thought it was worth noting at this point that the show was reserved it is indeed
|
|
it is indeed a lot of shows then we had uh back to the mailing list we had a reminder of the HPR
|
|
audiobook club 14 which is on tonight which was uh the 10th or sorry the 9th and the book club
|
|
club do i say that funny book book book club the next one is at uh 2015 012 at 7 p.m.
|
|
eastern u.s. time and the audiobooks will be City of Masks by Mike Ravens Macmillan available
|
|
for the ebooks.com links and show notes the audio quality is not as bad as you remember
|
|
a few years ago okay so it's a good audio book don't be put off by the audio quality
|
|
and yes i was complaining about people uploading shows with the old intro and guess what
|
|
it was my fault i had the wrong intro on the website so apologies to everybody for me being
|
|
a noona so please please please please please if you noticed stuff on the site that's wrong
|
|
please contact me or admin at hackerbookgradio.org or see me send me an email directly
|
|
i would appreciate it then we have a whole go of um uh discussions about the new year planning show
|
|
i don't know if we want to go into them but basically i love uh either bad and that's all we have
|
|
to say about that and unfortunately our fuss stem stand proposal was rejected but i'm still going
|
|
and a bringing Dave or vice versa how would you like to look at it i'm actually bringing my
|
|
cousin nephew um he's a uh a 16 year old cousin and we'll be doing some videos or something
|
|
with us so he's quite excited to come as well so there you go
|
|
yes and i think recently the Netherlands resented there you can drink beer at 16
|
|
but i'd still think in Belgium you can drink beer at 16 so i'll always nothing to be your enemy so
|
|
there you go it's like the hard stuff does he uh you have to be 21 no you have to be 18 to drink
|
|
the hard stuff can can fall and contributing to the delinquency of minors
|
|
no i just find it funny that you know you have this arbitrary day three decide
|
|
well i i think i've said it before but i was talking to a friend of mine about you why
|
|
why you can buy a gun in this in the states is 18 and uh you can only start drinking when you're 21
|
|
and uh he put me in my place very well by saying can you don't want those two things happen
|
|
on the same day so i'm not sure what the lower age is i bought a gun uh before you can buy
|
|
long guns just uh just about any time it's you can't buy pistol till you're 21
|
|
you're not sure enough so you can do it on the same day that's it's very uh very strange
|
|
anyway so anyway enough gun talk if i uh once i saw a flying rickshaw i thought okay there's
|
|
going to be a gun talk on this show so uh we will we will be enjoying that later um one comment
|
|
about the uh moderators since we don't moderate here on hark pubic radio um lost uh
|
|
the outro team hbure community news believe it or not it's now um oh popcast promos at the end
|
|
of hbr shows so here's the deal here's the deal when we uh put together some promos ourselves
|
|
for this new year's show we sent them out to a lot of people and a lot of people were very
|
|
gracious to play the shows for uh the promos for us on their shows and i think in return um it
|
|
will be nice if we could you know play other people's promos at the end of our shows at the very end
|
|
of the outro just slap on the promo there and i was and now we've got a workflow that allows us to
|
|
do that i think it's something we can do so i don't think there's any objection to that from anybody
|
|
who do i send the promo to uh admin at hark pubic radio dot org and i was kind of thinking
|
|
that we would uh just send a link rich and uh i'll um or send us whatever or tell me where you can get
|
|
on the apple of down um i was thinking it was actually because you were doing the promo and you've
|
|
been very good to hbr down through the years that uh we definitely should be you know spread
|
|
the laws and especially if you're doing an episode you know promoting some other podcast uh and
|
|
you put it in the feed like you did uh 50 it will be nice to have their promo at the end of that show
|
|
you know yeah i agree uh if it gets you know if we get back to this complaint about oh adding stuff
|
|
and it's too long and all that i guess we could remember other shows are only doing promos once
|
|
every week or every two weeks so we wouldn't necessarily i think have to feel obligated to being a
|
|
promo each and every day but you know like i said i assume since you're suggesting it it must be
|
|
you must have a way to completely automate it so it's no more work for you to use it.
|
|
Absolutely i would not be suggesting it otherwise i'm actually thinking about the mechanism
|
|
because sometimes we might want to promote a particular show um more heavily you know if an
|
|
if an event was coming up you might want to say you know any you know that's for any shows been
|
|
posted between in the month of January you want to put on um that this event that starting in
|
|
February is coming on if you get my drift and the only uh the only comment i think about that
|
|
was you know uh by migray i think if people don't like it they can just delete the shows at the end
|
|
the only thing would be it makes these they shows that little bit longer
|
|
okay so people it's open for discussion so uh tell us what you think and we will see from there
|
|
okay the other thing that has been occupying and know a lot of my time this month has been
|
|
the New Year's resolution i made here um hpr last year and that was that we would be
|
|
able to upload shows um via the website and that is now possible you can now
|
|
upload a show um directly from the website so we don't know if anybody's seen that or tried that
|
|
i haven't looked at contribute you know and you know why how has it been edited then
|
|
yeah i've done a lot of uh tidying up of um all the pages there's uh i did uh i did stuff
|
|
on the about page for instance where i now have um you know a little bit of our history what
|
|
differentiates us uh you know some things of interest hackers you can download and listen to the show
|
|
showing you how to do that one thing i want to put in there as well is
|
|
floating the idea of an additional rss feed i was thinking
|
|
oh
|
|
Claudia you need to go fix your audio summer uh i was thinking of having an rss feed that um i don't know
|
|
how i would describe this dive uh for people who would like to that the episodes are not in
|
|
closures they're just like on the web page so that you can link that would have a link to it
|
|
instead of being an enclosure so you can read it in a blog feed and then you can choose to press play
|
|
on it do you think there's any value in that because um some people were saying that they don't want
|
|
to subscribe to your feed but they do read it as a blog or no value anybody anybody i'd have
|
|
i'd have thought it'd been quite useful actually in a in an rss reader if you're into that sort of
|
|
thing it would be quite a quite a fun thing because as it is at the moment if you
|
|
subscribe to the feed uh the the podcast feed with a feed reader then it's formatted horribly
|
|
i think we've discussed this um it needs it needs some really good formatting for rss
|
|
okay we might do that but i think the podcast a lot of the podcast reader pod catchers can also
|
|
display embedded code as well but anyway that's one for you know long windry once a year right
|
|
okay so um yes we don't filter anyway and i put in the line that i think i was i thought it was on
|
|
the website but that it was probably more in the text of that we had said down to the years
|
|
and that is how can public radio is dedicated to sharing knowledge we do not accept donations but
|
|
if you listen to hpr we do expect you to contribute one show a year this is what we mean when we say
|
|
you owe me a show so a little bit of an explanation there and then other things that were updated
|
|
is basically all they um there's the contribution link uh well just to be a long page and now
|
|
let's it up into separate ones so we've got a requested topics page with a link to how you can get
|
|
there and Dave and migray i need to talk to you about multiple series and tags at some point
|
|
but the major change is on the calendar page if you go to the calendar page you get the scheduling
|
|
guidelines now which says that you decide when you show wants to be released and there are some
|
|
guidelines in there which are uh basically what uh i think a lot of people wanted so you can pick
|
|
how many slots you want so by default the next available slot is always picked for you if you go
|
|
to the request page but here in the calendar page you've got you know the upcoming shows with a
|
|
graphic of the previous shows and you got the shows for the next two months shown which has been reserved
|
|
and which have been posted for example you know podcast recommendations is episodes 1687 so you
|
|
can click on that and actually play it and if you can't wait and then all the reserved tools
|
|
and then shows that are outside of the two months are down as also scheduled and then we have the
|
|
emergency shows but instead of um so an episode now has a link that just says available reserved now
|
|
and if you click on that link you will be brought to a page which will uh which will tell you some
|
|
stuff the first thing you need to know is that um basically how to fill in uh you put in your email
|
|
address and this show that you require and then we'll send you an email and you have 15 minutes to
|
|
click on that link that's in the email for that 15 minutes the that slot is is locked for you
|
|
after the 15 minutes is uh no longer becomes available and all sorts of things are checked in the
|
|
background as you do on that so there's basically once you click on the link you will be able to fill in
|
|
information about yourself which will use to populate the host field and information about the
|
|
episode um basically they the the show notes everything that we had in the show notes apples and now
|
|
um is now filled out on a web form and you have the option to upload via the web browser
|
|
and this is kind of the important thing so everything else is the same you know series is
|
|
click from uh link the licenses and all the rest of that stuff um but you have the option to upload
|
|
the web page and if you do that in chrome you will see a percentage um upload if you do it in
|
|
Firefox you will need to download a plugin in order to see the upload the used to uh the used to
|
|
have that feature in Firefox but not anymore um so you either need to be patient but you don't
|
|
need to upload the show via the browser if you don't want you can um if you just uh you can put
|
|
in a URL in which case uh we will pull it down the URL but be careful there it would want to be
|
|
working and there's no guarantee that we're not going to pull the URL straight away that's going to
|
|
be a human pulling that down um just as a bite by um so it would need to be available for at least a
|
|
week but if you do if you just select other then we give you the information for the call and
|
|
numbers the ftp uh my postal address where you can uh you know email your or you can post your show
|
|
over physically and then envelope and send it to me and um then if you're doing that then
|
|
your file names should all begin with the hpr and then the episode number which you know is all
|
|
detailed there it's probably making that sound a lot more complicated than it actually is so
|
|
and that's all linked on the main website and there was a lot a lot of work
|
|
yeah thanks for everybody who worked on that because that seems like it's going to make it a lot
|
|
easier for people to contribute i hope so um there's already been uh one show
|
|
posted through the mechanism and uh three three shows have been uh uploaded that way
|
|
now one of them has actually been posted so quite happy about it i am exceptionally paranoid
|
|
with the upload so you're going to see 402 errors if you do anything out of the ordinance so i
|
|
i mean it's this is not an advice to hack the thing um although if there are php programmers out
|
|
there i would appreciate you um people auditing my code because i'd like to make it available to
|
|
everybody i just got suspicious activity detected yep that would be uh one of the examples so for
|
|
example we have never had five episodes from five different people on the same day so probably now
|
|
five people have clicked on that link and it's gone oh something suspicious has happened so it's
|
|
probably blocked it well that's entirely your fault Ken because you said about half an hour ago
|
|
we do five episodes a day so somebody must have panicked yes i wish you were that easy 50 and i really do
|
|
so yeah anyway i do stuff like that i do uh i check lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of things
|
|
but it's it's been something that's been on my list for a long long time so uh hopefully it'll
|
|
it there it's not completely automated we're never going to automate this we just dump it to
|
|
a isolated directory uh we don't parse any of this stuff on the server so if you're thinking of
|
|
you know putting the big exploit on up there that's that's something that you can do i guess but
|
|
we're going to be taking it down to a completely different machine and run on tools on us
|
|
keeping Dave very very busy for the next few months but the beauty of that is we can if we need
|
|
to make changes on the web form you know the output of the forms and the show notes and the
|
|
whole stuff we can do that without having to you know redistribute a updated template or whatever
|
|
so i would ask people to use the web form and that's what i have to say about that
|
|
oh and we just missed one uh see 1930 Greetings to Afghanistan, Kabul, Kandahar,
|
|
Mazar Shreef and Harat. Happy New Year! Okay just to finish off the um what was on the news
|
|
micro a mumble how-to is broken he's having lots of problems and still having no dice getting into
|
|
um mumble there so he can't get on and i'm going to contact him because uh in my
|
|
experimentation with the streamlining the hpr broadcasting thing we're now using a vps
|
|
while we had the vps which was sufficient for what we were using and it was since capable of
|
|
keeping up and i just asked uh Josh um uh called to who's from analystos.com our sponsors and patrons
|
|
and within a few hours the server have been upgraded to uh four gig for four gig
|
|
pauses uh four gig of ram and four gig for additional process have been added on the fly and
|
|
everything is just sweet there's like less than 10 seconds of of a lag um in playing streaming out
|
|
stuff everything's in one running uh in one session mumble goes into pulse audio pulse audio goes
|
|
into um dark ice dark ice goes out into uh ice cast and ice cast just streams it out and you can
|
|
play like em player in a screen session connecting their vssh startup em player and this will go
|
|
be picked up by mumble and go up to the stream so it's really really um uh a nice solution
|
|
i would probably do a hpr episode on that as well and then we're looking for help uh putten
|
|
up the show notes i did get contacted by Bruce Paterson of the uh just letting
|
|
give me one second while i um yeah from distrawatch.com and he has an announcement that he's looking
|
|
for somebody to take over the distrawatch podcast and i don't know if people i'm sure day of you
|
|
listen to that no sadly not anymore the distrawatch podcast is a that's love buttonered sends out a
|
|
distrawatch email list and uh Bruce and his team have taken upon themselves for the last i don't
|
|
know how many years to um to basically read this out in as a script for the podcast and to be honest
|
|
they do such a fantastic job you wouldn't think it was a script but um it is uh it's very very useful
|
|
to hear what's happening in the in the distro communities what's coming up new new distrals and
|
|
stuff like that so if you're want to do podcasting but don't want to have to think of something to
|
|
podcast about then this is the thing for you and it might be an ideal thing where a group of people
|
|
can come together and say well we'll do uh if we all do one um you know five people come together
|
|
and you do one a month or one every month and a half it would be it would be ideal so yeah well i
|
|
know the king of not thinking it's pegwall he could do that i sure can i think Bruce might be put
|
|
off by the didgeridoo at the beginning of every episode though so i'm not 100% sure but i think
|
|
that's it Dave do we normally have anything else so we would want to do there miss anything do you
|
|
think i don't think so unless you want to comment on the changes we made to the css which is not
|
|
really very exciting yes go ahead actually yeah oh it was a bother it was not as i say very
|
|
exciting but um i felt that we didn't have anything css to represent tables very nicely so
|
|
we uh we agreed on a some some some css to make for example the table in this
|
|
show 1676 look prettier so so we're just saying really yeah it does actually and uh it's not and there's
|
|
a few other things that i'd like to you know fix on the css in general things somebody emailed me with
|
|
with fixes but never got back to me sending in the fixes so i know something's wrong but i don't
|
|
i don't know what the fixes are to them so please please contact me uh if you notice
|
|
issues with the website it's not set in stone so if there are improvements please send them in
|
|
also i'm interested in a navigation i have it's kind of now that you give chills and you have to
|
|
click and contribute an info team and upload and stuff so if people want to suggest a better way
|
|
of doing that but please do i've also did um validation on most of the web pages so they're
|
|
the other a few missing tags and stuff so it was nice to spot those things so if
|
|
if you're used to that sort of thing then give me a shout and with that we'll switch it back to
|
|
your regular release schedule podcasting and with that folks this is the point where i totally
|
|
turn into a pumpkin for at least four hours so uh i would implore somebody to uh pull up the shared
|
|
pad i i or my notes either one but i put both addresses in the add-off and enough that i think
|
|
people can find it and and continuing uh continue taking notes in my uh in my absence however
|
|
as long as my battery list i probably will be listing on the stream and i'm totally going to leave
|
|
the pie running so well feel free any any way to say bad things about the total mess i've made of
|
|
the podcast so far in both podcast planet and uh on the stream can we also um somebody get a
|
|
copy of the um the uh podcast plan vlog as well uh tomorrow i also need to go and do family stuff
|
|
now so uh if i don't get back to you happy new year 50 and thanks very much for uh carrying it so far
|
|
and as i remind as i reminded you last month we still need to sing
|
|
join us now and share the song with you three free hikers you three free
|
|
that was going out to my green that was one of those things where you know like i kind of wish
|
|
i were deaf so i didn't have to hear it see you later guys
|
|
at least you didn't have to see it later can time i had a very important comment to make just now
|
|
and i can't remember what the frig it was most of them have been all that important
|
|
oh yeah uh i'm loggin irc somebody remind me to dump my log
|
|
all right when all that the community news is over where are we on uh new year's greetings
|
|
am i audible yes you are fighting with the liza the chatbot
|
|
i i tried to get it to tell me to dump my log the next time i said something in irc and it tells me
|
|
you can tell yourself that so i don't rip this off don't pick a fight with an artificial
|
|
intelligence it's clearly smarter than you that's not a trick to it in the fight
|
|
never go mud wrestling with a pig you get dirty and the pig enjoys it sounds like my kind of weekend
|
|
close thinking that sounds kind of fun go ahead these to come back to improve the quality of the show
|
|
yeah now we're starting to talk about pig mud wrestling
|
|
which is fun have you ever been in a grease pig contest he was the grease pig
|
|
damn it i was about to say something you beat me to it
|
|
frickin i'm making a phone call too
|
|
so your lawyer telling you to disobey all liability for the show
|
|
is there a hotkey i can use to tell mumble to switch audio outputs in between headphones and speakers
|
|
no that sounds entirely too useful for the linux world
|
|
yes but that's why i run linux because it lets me do things like that
|
|
if you can set up a key binding that runs a script you could probably do it if you could
|
|
script it i wouldn't know how to script that it's all clicks and crap
|
|
sure it's not just a front-end or command line i mean come on
|
|
pia even pulse audio has a command line control utility
|
|
yes but i still roll with alsa
|
|
darn it's quite all i'm just going to read from the IRC for now on
|
|
no no no no it's like you too don't read the comments
|
|
tell me about comments on youtube it's like tilts don't list don't don't go to any links
|
|
uh danpeo posts limit to the mouth dot info
|
|
everyone get there now
|
|
that domain is still up but Jonathan can't afford knell like what is this one too
|
|
you can actually just do a youtube channel just buy some youtube comments and just read the
|
|
youtube comments from around the world from various channels it's quite funny
|
|
does anyone have a pool and know how to work one
|
|
used to sort of okay i let's see where's my calculation
|
|
i was told to put two gallons of muriatic acid in my pool my pool i believe is 46,000 gallons of
|
|
and i was just working on the pool light and my fricken arms are acid burned now i put the acid
|
|
in like four hours ago do you put what in your pool
|
|
don't you just put chlorine in the pool no two gallons of muriatic acid apparently the pH was high
|
|
that shit's corrosive man oh yeah but in two gallons in 46,000 gallons that's you know nothing
|
|
not necessarily to etch a concrete floor you need a ratio of one part muriatic acid to 45 parts water
|
|
and you still have to wash that off immediately wow well you'll be spending the next couple
|
|
hours in the emergency room now i just rinse the water off in the sink and then i reached into
|
|
a big pickle jar and i'm good dad's about to say you should like douse yourself with some vinegar
|
|
there balls now the redness is going away i think i'm good i haven't you tested your pH
|
|
hey you know i just i did the idiot method of testing the pH i got the bottle of
|
|
uh from the hardware store they said fill it with water bring it back and i did and they're like oh
|
|
yeah you need acid and then he dumped it in and went it'll probably be okay but don't you have
|
|
your own pH tester did they told you it's not that hard he said i probably need three to four and i
|
|
should only i'm like well let let's go low and see what happens is your pool pump on yeah i had
|
|
it on for about four hours five hours did you did you when you put it in did you all dump it into
|
|
the same spot or did you distribute it as you go in around all around because you know what as
|
|
you're poor that stuff in you can't take the vapors coming off it oh jeez i wonder why
|
|
is it because it's corrosive i will see rich this is what i'm remembering the last time i used
|
|
maranic acid i i filled up a i was wearing rubber gloves and i filled up two uh cap falls we'll say
|
|
i had about six tablespoons moving to the ship and i dropped one of the caps onto the garage floor
|
|
that i was going to etch and uh there's a really big hole there now yeah yeah the shirt i was
|
|
wearing i threw in the washing machine and did a rinse and spin and now i have to buy a new washing
|
|
machine you know now i have a short sleeve shirt i just tossed the shirt used it for grease your
|
|
egg i think you know if somebody needs to hide a body we just take it to riches pool good yeah seriously
|
|
oh my gosh i'm reading the eye or see the stuff spade well the the calculation on the pool might
|
|
be way the flock off i just measured and figured out cylinders that would occupy the space as an
|
|
average and hopefully i'm not way the heck off did you do the calculation yourself or did the
|
|
guys at the hardware store do that for you well the guy at the hardware store is like well what kind
|
|
of pull you have going on 20 or 30 thousand gallons i'm like yeah i guess that's about right and uh
|
|
then i went out and measured this morning and the number i came up with you know not not a
|
|
precise measurement because it's like uh it's almost like a figure eight it's you know like kidney
|
|
being you have a dent in one side but i got a dent in both sides and uh the number i came up with
|
|
was like 46,000 gallons and i'm kind of sorry well a 24 foot uh four foot deep pool uh in a circle
|
|
is roughly 18,000 gallons okay um on one end of my pool it's nine feet deep
|
|
so it goes from probably you know four feet to nine feet where's the manual for your pool man
|
|
manual what do you mean manual you just type man pool yeah
|
|
rope i shit like six times a day man i don't need any more fiber i was just telling you to dump
|
|
your logs okay i appreciate it because i will forget come on can i not make like a downloading
|
|
data joke i did that it thanks giving and people got the joke but no speaking of bad jokes i'll
|
|
tell you the worst one i had today or not today it was it was this year worst joke 2014 so my wife
|
|
and i are in the grocery store and we're looking for um don't start laughing now we're we're looking
|
|
things for christmas dinner and we see blue velvet cake mix and she's like blue velvet
|
|
what the heck is blue velvet i said it's like red velvet but it's coming towards you
|
|
boo i'm sorry
|
|
rich they said two to three gallons for 20 to 30,000 gallon pool yes don't swim in it
|
|
because i said like the basic dose is a quarter of a gallon per one per 10,000 gallons
|
|
pool water how high was your pH i don't know i think i got the paperwork uh oh wait what's this
|
|
what do you say two cups yeah two gallons we really meant two liters we're sorry this metric
|
|
conversion stuff screws us yeah i gotta look i think the paperwork's in my truck
|
|
i check your paperwork man some some sounds off bad
|
|
well i'm wondering you know even though i did pour it all around the pool i'm wondering if it
|
|
just stayed on the surface you know it intermingles and uh it does mix with the water and everything
|
|
and it'll dilute itself out but it's kind of slow it's kind of like when you're uh when you
|
|
have a glass of ice water or just really cold water out of the tap and then you pour your
|
|
vodka into it you can watch the vodka swirl around in it this is slower than that
|
|
yeah i because i after i realized what happened i i went around and i stuck my arms in another
|
|
part of the pool and it didn't seem so bad genius absolutely pure genius get a pH stick man
|
|
not your arms well my my wife's coming home wait you're saying your pH stick is your arm
|
|
you should use another stick
|
|
yes women and naked don't worry if it falls off well you can sew it back on later
|
|
they just use cold fusion yeah i'm gonna have to agree with Jay Lindsay on that one
|
|
and he said that guy didn't even work there he's just a clever assassin
|
|
i don't know you should definitely just check the pH again before you let anybody swim in that thing
|
|
yeah i will if you find like birds in like various states of like you know you find bird skeletons
|
|
of the bottom your pool that probably means there's too much you probably won't find any bird
|
|
skeletons there'll just be a couple feathers floating on the water no those will dissolve too i
|
|
think but just think you could you could sell a service where like people jump into like your
|
|
pool and they come out superheroes yes your pool pumps still on right now i'm heating a hot
|
|
tub right now maybe time for other time things you you are here apparently and then what else
|
|
okay so who's doing the readings while we're waiting you you brought it up i didn't bring it up
|
|
said brought it up but i'll do it and then there's what else but no it's going in and you are
|
|
here because somebody was saying i see so yeah i bring can do the readings it's about three minutes
|
|
together i think my clock must be three minutes fast then because i'm seeing that is exactly 1500
|
|
hours my time which means it's 20,000 zoos 20 hours yes 20,000 hours zulu 20,000 hours zulu
|
|
20,000 hours zulu which means it's greetings to and then 2015 greetings to much of russia and eight
|
|
more Moscow Dubai Abu Dhabi and Muskat which means UAE because that's Dubai so we're right on time
|
|
you're early now you're early with my family as well same i was at it but yeah and there's the next one
|
|
happy someone to them someone's not running intp probably not no oh wow you know
|
|
your attic acid is more commonly known by hydrochloric
|
|
at least it's not sulfuric
|
|
johnny was a conist johnny is no more what johnny thought was h2o was h2so4
|
|
that's awesome
|
|
uh in my former line of work we came across a lot of h2s which is lovely
|
|
that's hydrogen sulfide yeah you dump that in water and you've got h2so4
|
|
how do you pump a gas in water uh i'm sure there's a way to do it
|
|
you could always bubble it through or it could mix with water vapor i mean
|
|
you usually this stuff would come up through like the lakes and what not we'd be walking on
|
|
it probably makes you immune to pickles rotten egg farts
|
|
not when your well water smells like rotten eggs uh actually you don't really spell it if it's
|
|
in higher concentrations than 50 parts per million and now it's a new year
|
|
full sections can i think what those countries and i'm here 2015 for them
|
|
yeah so you're now up to 26 it's already been done though
|
|
yep we're not dropping 26 balls here or anything okay
|
|
now i'm gonna leave that alone i cut it right at that i have that beautiful
|
|
so what's this about a soda stream is that what we're turning riches pull into
|
|
a soda stream don't know well i mean it's really supposed to be like carbonic acid is what makes
|
|
carbonated water at least it would be very low concentrations of it i'm not really much of a chemist
|
|
it's my weakest subject if you talk to me about significant uh digits i might just
|
|
i don't know gochatatonic from it i don't even know what a significant digit is anymore
|
|
or significant figures it has something to do with and some i've seen that if they
|
|
check a garden's bowl nice it has something to do with the accuracy of your measurement
|
|
like you may you may have something down to the like you know the three like the the
|
|
thousands of a gram but it may not matter because your scale isn't that accurate you're you know
|
|
how you're measuring the masses and accurate or enough so that you may be really really precise
|
|
but you're off and so you only care about the the first digit pass that that's my point or example
|
|
that's about all i really understand it's your special rounding things that you only use for this
|
|
it's why i did not do very well in chemistry
|
|
twice sucked at statistics oh don't get me started on statistics if chemistry is my worst
|
|
subjects statistics is my second worst because statistics for me was hey do a bunch of math and
|
|
forget everything you learned on how to do math and just guess and you'll get the right answer
|
|
but if you actually work the problems out and get a more accurate answer you fail
|
|
he didn't tell us my my instructor for the class didn't tell us how many places to round
|
|
our decimal places to so everybody else in class did two and i did four and i think i failed
|
|
three tests in there because of that along and fortunately for me i did the show your work
|
|
thing and i'm like look i can prove that i have the right answer and i'm more right than everyone
|
|
else in the class you should fail them then i still managed to pass but he still wouldn't take
|
|
away all their marks and give them zeros i didn't understand that well you know if you don't pass
|
|
enough students you get you the class gets reviewed for quote being too hard i was going to say
|
|
there was something about Ken was talking about earlier oh though the the announcement bought
|
|
except for the fact that it's an e-speak and it's the same voice as well users like Ken is
|
|
why we can't have nice things because everyone's willing it's going to talk over the bought
|
|
if we had a thing that gave us a 30 second warning to shut the hell up before the bought
|
|
thing and then like five seconds after the bought was done doing its thing that made like
|
|
some sort of noise that would be handy you know like one of those air horn noises
|
|
talks over everyone you guys house music going in the background
|
|
trap my friend trap my apologies it is creative comments though or if it's not creative comments
|
|
it's freely redistributable i think goat your mom is freely redistributable also
|
|
so is that lemon tuna mouth thing what was it dito dodo divo tada what do you want to know
|
|
oh oh i know who you talking about doba wouldn't you like to know
|
|
it's been a while you think somebody else other nurse would talk
|
|
no never if there was a if there was a good chat subject maybe yeah
|
|
well why don't you come up with them then gen2 go
|
|
why you don't need wireless adapters on your camera i totally needed a wireless adapter on my
|
|
camera what am i supposed to do when the cop takes it from me the problem is the only solution i
|
|
know of is a wi-fi SD card that you need windows or mac to activate dude i think you just
|
|
like gave me the only real use case for having a wi-fi adapter on your camera there you go that's
|
|
right backing backing up your footage in three separate countries by the way you and i need to talk
|
|
about that in case i ever do need to back stuff up because you're in Canada and outside the range
|
|
of certain jurisdictions put the home of echelon uh not necessarily i mean u.s citizen
|
|
i'm only in like geo like a geographical different thing like i'm still my government can
|
|
still get me that's right i'm gonna need to find somebody who's not a citizen like my wife
|
|
oh that works that not just probably it's have to see something if i can back it up
|
|
about my lawyers so i'm like i'm gonna go go around recording cops but you know hey
|
|
i would well i i really can't uh we should like you know change a subject because
|
|
that i can't stream this
|
|
so how is it harp was the u.s military installation and it wasn't in Canada i'm sure the same way
|
|
they did it with the one in Cuba you know it's like we're gonna have a military institution here
|
|
and it's a hundred year wheel you kidding me the cube that's the only source of revenue in Cuba
|
|
selling tobacco or no tobacco is privately held still or it's companies yeah the coffee is collective
|
|
actually i know tons of people from around here who get on a Cuba for vacation and they love it
|
|
there because it's a cheap spot to go vacationing and it's like a flashback to the 60s
|
|
all the 1960s cars yeah they love it and as long as they stay on the uh the little resort area
|
|
there and they're completely oblivious to uh any of the social decay that's happening around them
|
|
speaking of social decay did anybody see the interview
|
|
no oh we we watched it on youtube for five bucks or five ninety nine good you know good
|
|
low-brow humor life and my wife enjoys that so we had a good time i want to see the one that
|
|
Sony pulled from the theaters yep that's it
|
|
you know it yeah i wouldn't see that film as well i think but uh yeah after Obama
|
|
satisfying or whatever it is back in the america and to the mars and on vinyl it was the news here in
|
|
the you can anyway but i'm wondering about the rest of the world when i'm going to the cinema
|
|
or DVD i can't understand your accent yeah could you speak english please no i could you
|
|
just talk more so i can like use more words me yeah you like your accent is really hard for me
|
|
to hear and i don't know why because it's different from your accent yeah but i'm listening
|
|
to a lot of different accents but where are you from you know i just told you if you just
|
|
twice in a minute yet did you miss the part where i can't hardly understand you i said to you
|
|
k yeah but what part i know a bunch of folks from the uk and you don't sound like any of them
|
|
that i know somewhere south but not to yourself
|
|
is it on the accents again i love accents man but it frustrates me when i can't hear the english
|
|
thrill how are you able how are you not able to understand if i can understand what is fine
|
|
i don't know i i you know it's funny because you're both southerners of different countries you
|
|
should like you know have select this like southern bonding thing going on but nope
|
|
i i thought i was still a southerner when i came to canada and then i discovered that 90 percent
|
|
of Canadians live within a hundred miles in the us border prick i forget where it is in
|
|
Minnesota but like 90 percent of Canadians live at a lower latitude than that
|
|
it's probably one of the more northernmost points then again considering how cold it is up there
|
|
i really don't blame them yeah you know what was good about minnesota is you can get cheap flights
|
|
to denver to go ski i thought leaving was the good thing about minnesota oh like i kind of did say that
|
|
when i was flying in from calgary and whatnot uh minnesota zink paul that airports where we always
|
|
went to and then breached off to go like to it land or whatever and miserable place shaped like a
|
|
you i don't remember the airport well there there's two terminals i guess it depends on which
|
|
terminal it goes to i'd be in the international one maybe i wasn't there yeah i flew in and out of
|
|
there a lot why do they have all the ipads everywhere to order things off the menu
|
|
um you're going to have to give us some more context in cuba or in the minnesota
|
|
st paul airport oh who knows i you know the the airport puts crazy restrictions on things
|
|
and it might be that the preferred vendor for a checkout terminal is whoever that uses ipads
|
|
i know uh you know i'm not not speaking totally authoritatively on this but uh my local airport
|
|
guy runs uh airplane repair shop you know an airframe power plant mechanic in the airport
|
|
is supposed to get a percentage of his revenue wow that sounds like a sweetheart deal if you're the
|
|
airport yeah i guess they do have to pay for you those things you know like security
|
|
well they in here's uh here's the thing it's uh it was on private property with an easement
|
|
onto the airport and so really none of that has has very little to do with anything you know just
|
|
if there was or wasn't an an ap repair business there it wasn't going to cost more or less on
|
|
security that that should be paid for through your rent but still i don't understand why
|
|
the ipads were so prevalent and so locked down oh is it for customer ordering the customers actually
|
|
use them to order yes oh now they hand them to you while you're in line or what do they do
|
|
or you just walk up uh you walk up to wherever and the little ipads are mounted on the table or
|
|
mounted on the counters mounted at the bar and you flip through the friggin ipad to order your stuff
|
|
no i haven't seen that that sounds like it's really inaccessible it's very it's very convenient
|
|
if there's only one person at the bar and there's 20 people waiting for drinks um if you're the only
|
|
guy at the bar it's very hard to talk to the bartender slash waiter uh and you know have a conversation
|
|
why because they're always looking at their ipad no because they're always running around to
|
|
everybody else they're not being a bartender they're being a friggin waiter
|
|
i have a problem with a bartender not being a bartender hey you need them to be a counselor also
|
|
yes that's why there's a tip jar hey and i'm not cutting on you it's like uh you go to places
|
|
hey i told this story i don't know in in the preer post show on tilts but i probably once in seven
|
|
years i uh the last seven years uh this summer i went to a strip club and as soon as i got in i
|
|
wanted to leave but the the most amazing thing since it's been a long time since i was out one of
|
|
these places is the girls would come around you and then if you give them a dollar they would leave
|
|
it's like no i thought it should really i didn't want you around me in the first place but
|
|
i thought it would be you pay them to keep them occupied here no as soon as they got money from
|
|
you they left so that finally it's like all right just give her a dollar so she leaves you know
|
|
he should have given her a 20 she might have stayed longer
|
|
no i'm sure she would have left you know it's like you're just not worth the economic investment
|
|
that's what it was i mean come on really give somebody a dollar for their time well no they
|
|
they'll hang around because they want to see how much you know you know what their income level
|
|
is and it's like oh this person's going to hand me singles so i know this guy over here is going to
|
|
hand me 20 gee you know free markets says i know exactly where i'm going i just hope he smells good
|
|
so it's audacity that has that theme that removes the silence?
|
|
yeah pokie tried to use it once on my music compositions and then wondered why it was off time
|
|
this isn't exactly meant to be all that mean to pokie but i was like dude yeah those
|
|
silences are supposed to be there to his in his defense i looked at the the waveform in the
|
|
in the sound editor and there are because the way i was generating that sequence of music
|
|
there are some serious silences but yeah it's in audacity this is audacity have a command line
|
|
tool yet i don't know i'm sure that a version exists for ipad and edit your podcast and get a drink
|
|
at the same time i said command line not finger line and i was attempting to be funny you know
|
|
rich is like i'm not cutting on you i think you're the only one just so we're clear everyone else is
|
|
ripping on each other as hard as they can he's too busy tending his burns yeah i think his
|
|
fingers fell off and he can't hit the push to talk key not like arms aren't right anymore
|
|
well that's a good step in the right direction no it's because they've died white because all the
|
|
flesh is falling off have you lost your tan yet he's bleached his skin are you even still on florida
|
|
yes i am you lucky bastard it was uh hang on i got a convert to do you reach Celsius
|
|
only one flying all right it was minus 20 out here this morning which is just about minus 20
|
|
Fahrenheit no it is not all right 10 degrees Fahrenheit is minus 10 degrees Celsius roughly
|
|
minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit is minus 25 degrees Celsius roughly that one's really rough
|
|
i don't remember that one and then at minus 40 they're both the same it doesn't matter it's still
|
|
cold minus to it where the heck are you i mean that it was minus 21 is in Minnesota i'm
|
|
north of Maine crap yeah i i think it was 80 here yesterday it's only 70 something now
|
|
well winner my suck for you yeah i'm going back to new york monday i'm actually Saturday
|
|
yeah it's cold snap up here right now so have fun yeah i don't know if i was going to drive or fly
|
|
or what and i i got my sports car in new york and the truck down here and i'd like it reversed
|
|
now i think you get the better into the deal right there well i want the four-wheel drive truck
|
|
in new york and it isn't now you want the four-wheel drive truck in florida so you can run over all the
|
|
assholes on the road don't know how to drive oh gosh yeah i don't know if you'll look at my google plus
|
|
feed but there was somebody that barely made it into their diagonal parking spot the basically
|
|
90% of their car was in in the roadway i've known that a lot of states have issued the the
|
|
law that makes it mandatory for new drivers to have x number of hours of drivers ad before they go
|
|
before they even get their learner's license or anything like that or before they get their
|
|
license they get their learners and they get drivers ad and then they have to have x number of
|
|
hours logged driving with an adult but i swear these kids are getting worse and worse at driving
|
|
that's because they're probably busy texting oh dude that that's so old school don't you know
|
|
about sexting please hey it's like i'm at the gun range with my daughter and her friend and
|
|
you know taking them shooting and in the second my daughter puts down the gun she's texting
|
|
as long as she put it in a safe direction first yeah actually she's been good about that
|
|
you should carry around a portable cell phone jammer with you just so you can have an aura
|
|
oh jeez death and destruction everyone that's funny i well when i was commuting on the long
|
|
hour railroad i always wanted that especially you know what the worst was the worst was when you're
|
|
working in Manhattan you're going back out to Long Island is the holiday weekends you know
|
|
fourth of july when when everybody goes to the hamptons so somebody pays three thousand dollars
|
|
they get a one one twenty fifth share of a bedroom which means they can only sleep in the bed for
|
|
six minutes with three other people every other weekend and they're yelling into their phone dude
|
|
i'm on the train i'm going out to the hamptons it's like yes you think you're cool we understand that
|
|
so you know meanwhile i'm riding the train every morning every night the whole shoot and match
|
|
and i don't get to sit because some jerk has his suitcase on the seat next to him instead of putting
|
|
in the luggage rack oh you're considered american i would have kicked that asshole in the head and
|
|
thrown his bag in his lap it's crazy the the people that you get it and out and uh we
|
|
believe it or not i turned on the tv twice and you know the last two weeks and both times the same
|
|
episode of the Kardashians and the hamptons was on but they were in matatuck which isn't the
|
|
hamptons which means they lie do you they lie there there's a north and south fork on Long Island
|
|
on the east end and the north fork is where the town of matatuck is the south fork is where the
|
|
hamptons are and only someone from there would know the difference work here although i had been
|
|
the Long Island once but i went there to see some friends and actually i've gone to Long Island twice
|
|
and the first the first time i was like in high school and you know it was mostly just hacker
|
|
meetup type stuff and then the second one you know we actually went there and there are farmers
|
|
markets on Long Island people still farm on Long Island that seems strange to me well when you
|
|
think about it um east meadow which is in nasa county was a meadow where you had your
|
|
herds graze so a lot of that a lot of the very populated areas used to be potato farms Long Island
|
|
was really well known for potatoes unfortunately now the the lifestyles of the rich and the
|
|
payments have come in and taken it over well it is honest every every time i go flying over Long
|
|
Island i look down in places that were farmland or you know that there's not a whole lot of woods
|
|
is now housing developments which is this is what they call gang plank syndrome although my house is
|
|
120 years old but it's like i finally moved out east nobody else should be able to move out east
|
|
you want to pull up the gang plank and not let anyone else come that's exactly how i feel i want
|
|
to buy a hundred acres of land somewhere i don't care where it is as long as it's a hundred acres
|
|
and i would prefer that it be a square and i want my house to be in the dead center of that square
|
|
so that no matter which direction i go outside to piss off my deck nobody can see me
|
|
yeah too bad you won't get any cell towers on that property yeah you probably can rent them out
|
|
but uh actually i'm i'm in Jupiter farms which is an unincorporated village uh there's no actually
|
|
i'm not even on a paved road here and uh there's uh no police no uh streetlights no stoplights
|
|
just uh road signs and that's about it i miss small towns hey and the funny thing is you know
|
|
10 minutes east and you're you're in a densely populated or reasonably densely populated area
|
|
i'm we sold our house i'm now in a densely populated area in a basement apartment it sucks i hate my
|
|
life uh sorry to hear that that house that you spent so long like doing an energy audit on
|
|
yeah that one broke even okay well i guess it could have been worse well it made us very mobile and
|
|
there's no way we could afford to stay there uh giving our future income situation
|
|
um
|
|
wife's pregnant i'm in school on unemployment
|
|
i hear uh pegwalls got some free rooms available
|
|
yes but unfortunately he's on the other side of the border a long way away
|
|
i don't want none of you in my house i would gladly stay with pegwall though but i don't know if
|
|
he'd cuddle is really well you know okay i think he's on the phone
|
|
yeah he's i probably very concerned so it's not me getting only one side of the conversation
|
|
no he's not saying anything wait i thought i heard a vehicle
|
|
nah maybe i was mistaken i'm confused
|
|
should be a natural state and you should be used to it all i just got confirmation that
|
|
clad too is going to be on the show where is he new zeland the urban camp all the way to new zeland
|
|
i believe he did uh even while he was floating on the raft
|
|
how i figured he was like urban camping on a steamship that one there
|
|
i believe he used his chest hair to lash together a couple logs and straddle c-turtles and
|
|
clad his way chest hair that's news to me
|
|
shit happens but you drink coffee man i i didn't know you're that close to him
|
|
well you know maybe he can send you a lock of his chest hair
|
|
the little ribbon around it with the little canoe world order written on it
|
|
oh i didn't know it's blue love clad too i'm missing bad i've actually started using twitter
|
|
because he was uh started using shows on networks
|
|
boldly but that's a good question uh what social networking tools do you guys use
|
|
twitter and what about google plus
|
|
kind of but there's no light weight application that i can put on my phone and it's very hard to
|
|
tie something like say it'll be it to google plus um i just don't use google plus because it
|
|
annoys me that i have to like it tries to tie everything i do online ever to my google plus account
|
|
oh yeah that's really annoying as well so like uh if i ever do anything in google
|
|
plus on a browser i never do google plus shit on my phone i always do it on a browser and i treat
|
|
it like facebook it is a disease that should be carefully managed well that's something i i didn't
|
|
realize i and i knew this but i left facebook open because there was something i wanted to look
|
|
at and remember to go back to and i had it open for days i'm like oh man their login days worth
|
|
of where i've served if you use android there's an app in the f-troid repo called tinfoil for
|
|
facebook you still log into facebook i mean facebook still tracks you but it runs facebook and its
|
|
own browser context meaning that you don't have to be logged into facebook on your normal mobile
|
|
browser and when you click a link it opens them in the normal mobile browser unless you change
|
|
the preferences but this basically allows you to use facebook and then facebook doesn't get to
|
|
actually know very much about what you do on it and no website gets to know about facebook's usage
|
|
and it's free software sounds good but i'm getting worried my wife was shopping and she hasn't
|
|
returned yet she's getting more pool chemicals for you i um i also use the chat part of facebook
|
|
because it seems like many many people that's all they know how to use is the little facebook
|
|
messenger thing so but that ties into middlebee so i'm fine with that yeah facebook is a non-federated
|
|
xmpp network and you can't do certain things like change your facebook password on it you have to
|
|
set up your account the right way but you know once you get that going you can do otr over facebook
|
|
which is really fun when you go back and like look at your message history in the website
|
|
and you see all these encrypted messages to each other it's great but you know it works with linux
|
|
it's facebook chat you can talk to grandma and everything's fine how would i get otr working with say
|
|
my mother you would have to get her on a chat client you can't do it on the website so good luck
|
|
with that so if anyone's using the website it's pretty much fail it's unencrypted yeah people
|
|
i've seen some people especially using like the google if you have otr on you'll see a lot of
|
|
blank lines in the content because you're it's trying to initiate the private conversations and
|
|
it's just you know the clients it most clients ignore it but sometimes you'll see a blank line
|
|
but otr is cool stuff so what's also now works do you use rich yeah the wife came home i got
|
|
unload the truck uh her car all right have fun enjoying seeing how much money you don't have
|
|
anymore what money rockin ohhoi mi hearties john what's up Brian how's it going
|
|
i'm good man i'm good how's Los Angeles treating you i'm actually not there yet i'm still up
|
|
with my dad's for another week or so um he's been having me do farm stuff well it's good to get
|
|
it all out of your system before you travel oh yeah i'm i've definitely decided i'm more of a
|
|
city boy than a country boy after all hey buddy oh boy oh boy mi hearty you're like a Scottish pirate
|
|
that's kind of crazy yeah well i'm from down these so we talk funny yeah you use funny words too
|
|
like bombic no i was thinking down east what does that what does that mean exactly
|
|
so down east is if you're in north carolina specifically carter at county if you go east of the
|
|
north with a river bridge you're down east is there an up east no there is not that's why i find
|
|
it confusing well you kind of have to go south and around your ass to get to your to your elbow
|
|
to get there but you know it's way out in the middle of the water so where about are you from
|
|
arkers island with carolina jojo obviously he's down and around around up your elbow what
|
|
you got nice although i dad retired and moved up to the mountains to and
|
|
bought a farm up here and he's been really all kinds of crop stuff and every time i'd come up here
|
|
he has me doing something honestly um don't care too much for out you know riding around on
|
|
tractors fun but the rest of his hard work and it's not the kind of hard work i like doing
|
|
i miss driving around on a tractor does she think you're tractor sexy no she never seen it
|
|
any what didn't even mind well dad's got a new tractor i got an old one i got a 53 farm all
|
|
i believe this was uh 59 international nice nice 49 sorry 49 international
|
|
what color candy apple red and light custom paint job no they're all some sort of red
|
|
unless you get a forward forwards are all blue it seems like
|
|
no this was uh repainted uh dad wired up a painter's paint booth and he painted it for him
|
|
no no there you go hot ride tractor oh it was pretty it had it painted uh Georgia colors
|
|
well Georgia traveling colors red and white
|
|
that was my present i got to pick the colors
|
|
well better than carolina blue where's that ugly duke color
|
|
and this house old everyone wears red and white
|
|
uh it's not the tarheels who's that gamecox
|
|
in sea state i only believe in the SEC
|
|
ah come on you got to play woosey teams like tech the preface with Georgia
|
|
he he he he at what fastball or football
|
|
boose well i reckon i need to think about getting back to work
|
|
dad's got me putting up a a fan in the hot house because it turns out he gets too hot in there
|
|
during the summer and so i used to be an electrician so every time there's an electrical
|
|
project i guess he winds up doing it which you just cross some wires together and burn
|
|
to place down then you won't have to work on it no more but burn down something small something small
|
|
well yeah burn down the bar and then it won't burn down the house but it'll still
|
|
it'll be enough that he won't have me doing the electrical work for him anymore
|
|
i think it's something a little bit smaller than that you know like the outhouse or the wellhouse
|
|
well well a little more sophisticated than having the outhouse the wellhouse eat nothing but a
|
|
piece of pie just taking all the ground with the motor on top and one of these fake rocks sitting
|
|
on top of that your motor how deep sure well how far down does the motor run down into the open
|
|
cavern there i'm not sure i've never looked at it when when he had the well put in they
|
|
wired it up for him so ours was on a slab it was a 500 and something foot well this is a pretty
|
|
deep one and it has earth weight no sorry that was the next door neighbors ours was three something
|
|
and we had uh we had to put uh build like a little slab then have a put a little shed up around it
|
|
and everything and insulated the shed because it's still freezing the winter
|
|
well yeah put heat strips on it oh come on it's a whole lot cheaper just to build a build and put
|
|
insulation on it i wonder what this segment will be called redneck to digress
|
|
yeah and 5150 gets to talking on here we can have some interesting conversations too
|
|
i think he's sleeping right now he'll be back later
|
|
well i wasn't got me a three pack of monsters to get me through the night
|
|
oh son you know they have this awesome thing i don't know if you've heard of it but it comes
|
|
in a little bean and they call it coffee i can't drink coffee it shit's nasty
|
|
go somewhere cold you'll learn quick now pass i'm i'm moving out the soakow here in a couple of weeks
|
|
i i'd drink coffee on and off and i only liked it black and i'd have maybe one cup every two
|
|
three weeks a month and then when i moved main i drank coffee by the pot because it was cheap
|
|
and hot and it wasn't hot water well i reckon that's one way to do it i just do hot chocolate
|
|
oh hot chocolate ain't cheap yeah that's true where you could buy the big
|
|
big big 50 pound bag of cocoa and make your own i was couch surfing i don't think i could afford
|
|
that at that point in time yeah never quite done the couch surfing thing i might i might do that
|
|
at some point a little word advice don't hey
|
|
i know just saw a commercial on the tv so there's a date inside just for farmers
|
|
farmers only dot com exactly must have prissy city girls all over it
|
|
yeah i got to admit though i do like me a girl with a country accent
|
|
i just like a girl with accident i don't really care what uh what accident it is as long as
|
|
there's one there and as long as i can hear it yeah that's true that's true
|
|
as long as they don't bloody yanky accent
|
|
yeah yeah yeah we don't need no yankies around here does a canadian count as a yanky
|
|
and we let them slide by sort of but until it comes to the winter and that well what it was
|
|
was back home all the Canadians would come down during the winter because it's a go to the beach
|
|
well i know i'm in Canada now it's bloody cold
|
|
yeah i reckon we'll let you slide by because you kept Canadians kept the economy going back home
|
|
during the winter yeah my in-laws are planning to be uh snowbirds they're planning on migrating
|
|
down to the south every winter they're looking at myrtle beach and uh that general area
|
|
yeah well if that's their thing then myrtle beach has got it for them but they don't like
|
|
if they're not the types to go visit Vegas and they probably shouldn't go to myrtle beach
|
|
uh we actually go that's our family vacation we get a couple condos and what not there
|
|
and my folks from back in Georgia get a couple places and their folks by in-laws up here get a
|
|
couple places and it's just like a whole herd of us just move down in my grade and party for four
|
|
weeks on and off some some of us are there for one week some are there for four weeks you know those
|
|
lucky retired folks yeah well i reckon that's my dad i never saw too much benefit from driving
|
|
from the beach i lived at to another beach it has a whole lot more people
|
|
ah well you're on a beach what's the point of going to another one that's my point
|
|
unless it's got bigger waves yeah just wait for her can get plenty of big waves in
|
|
guys i'm gonna have to mostly step away from a bit here we got a minor emergency
|
|
at work all right well peace bro well i actually got to get back to work myself so i'll be back on
|
|
here in a little while all righty don't you leave me with them i will leave you with them and you
|
|
will like it don't worry buddy i'm still here y'all have fun bro start a fire in the kitchen or
|
|
take care of your work problem no we'll just give me it will just give me three problems because
|
|
i'll have to start a fire using regular expressions oh fun i think i'll rather put up fencing then
|
|
deal with regular expressions right now anyway i'm off i'll be back on a little while
|
|
3 30 if you can hear me i'm gonna come down and shove this thing and i'm drinking right up your
|
|
dareier he might like that i'm just reading what he put in IRC and it says man cobra too is
|
|
working on that southern accent but he really sounds like Bob and Doug McKinsey these days
|
|
all right well i'll see you later have a good one man don't party too hardy
|
|
peg wall yep what are you doing it lunch hey handsome pirate how are you
|
|
you scared him into silence is that how it works
|
|
must be downtime oh are we nine minutes closer to new years somewhere
|
|
yes i hope you have the little thing you pulled up because i don't then i'm too lazy to go find it
|
|
i'd have to know what utc is and being a pilot that's kind of embarrassing oh i know where to look
|
|
how do you not know what utc is well what it is now i don't know if we're minus four or minus five
|
|
right now max don't run on utc oh i can't wait for summer spring i can't wait for spring
|
|
i think hell dead middle of winter i can't wait for the dead middle of winter when the days
|
|
are a little bit longer and it's not dark at four thirty hey three thirty you should get on the
|
|
the little mumble thingy okay so we're coming up on 2100 zulu so it's new years or in eight minutes
|
|
should i announce now i'll wait i'll let everybody be in suspense yeah let us be in suspense we
|
|
get no good conversation going on right now that's anybody taking notes notes of what the
|
|
conversations and put them in the etherpad yes i have i'm very busy i'm i'm too busy to do that
|
|
i'm playing a game right now and i know pegwals too busy doing nothing i'm eating lunch
|
|
you made yourself hamburgers more than one no i'm eating dirty rice
|
|
hey i i put you only eat ramen noodles why are you eating the rice the second time
|
|
recycling don't you find it a little chunky and clumpy?
|
|
nah it's when it's a really good spread on the same age just like that Australian food you love so
|
|
much yeah Benjamin is fantastic oh i didn't say the name for a reason it makes me gag
|
|
is that kin valent it is hi are you tired yep can you gonna make the announcement in five minutes
|
|
yeah i'm gonna do that and then we're gonna think we start the stream but let me just check that
|
|
i i did that too and i flushed after
|
|
i hope you guys are all feeling in the show notes as you go oh yeah they're all full
|
|
oh yeah yeah yeah yeah we got that covered that's a nice big line of bullshit for you can
|
|
somebody was funneled that was plus uh he suddenly stopped
|
|
i think Rome might have been doing it but he just had to go run take care of it far
|
|
i think it's awesome that we talked about a pool
|
|
yes well three times eights and twenty four did we have figured it out three and a quarter
|
|
yeah i don't like quarters okay the question is should this be a four-hour segment or a three-hour
|
|
second i say use the very scientific any mini money mo method or the faster scientific method flip
|
|
a coin yeah that helps i'm sorry can i'm just very lazy today as can be seen by your show notes
|
|
so what have we been talking about sometimes you use nothing so is this now what time
|
|
uh we didn't really have a topic we were talking about uh there was another southern
|
|
failure hopped on we were red necking it out there for a little bit and that was about the
|
|
only thing of note okay so we are hitting very soon another time so
|
|
yeah i'll carry it for another hour i think uh and uh stop it then we'll see how we go
|
|
sounds like a lovely plan okay let's welcome the next time zone which is
|
|
2100 hours UTC and we welcome Iraq and 20 more Baghdad
|
|
Karatul, Nairobi and Adesababa and 20 more happy new year everyone and if you're in any of these
|
|
regions please feel free to join HBR as a host and submit your shows via the brand new spanking
|
|
if you're a website which i now need to unlock one moment while i do that and while you're submitting
|
|
your show please correct hands pronunciation yes thank you i think that goes for everybody you
|
|
i all everybody will be treated equally here in HBR you will all have your names butchered
|
|
equally badly by my good self
|
|
i'm just wondering have any of you guys come across the uh talk of the right to be forgotten case
|
|
here in europe new is there new information i'm familiar with it but i i don't know anything new
|
|
about it well it's not actually anything you per se it's um just the reporting of that in the press
|
|
um doesn't give a hundred percent but i i the funny thing about the right to be forgotten is
|
|
i think the us and you can our little law and and Australian laws kind of based on
|
|
British law yeah so it all comes from the same
|
|
um pot by good work if you can play dry's yeah i'm making all this stuff up now so
|
|
feel free to correct me from wrong but one of the things that i noticed when i moved to the
|
|
Netherlands was they they're slight subtle differences you're like you're into McDonald's no
|
|
not that one it's still little things uh subtle things in bay their approach to the law was uh
|
|
one thing and uh in the whole right for right to be forgotten case was taken by somebody in spain
|
|
who had gotten bankrupt over something or other and then had taken his case to the european court
|
|
and said that although that there is a right to be to have this information forgotten and the
|
|
fact that it was coming up on google for him meant that google worked on removing these
|
|
um these files related to this person and in the reporting of that especially in English
|
|
speaking podcasts and stuff and English speaking articles i found that people are slightly missing
|
|
the nuances in it in that and uh just thought maybe as a topic it might be something interesting
|
|
to happen to chat about namely that in the about the right to be forgotten and certain other
|
|
rights for example in the Netherlands if you commit a crime they won't release your name so you
|
|
will be just known as um you know i would be known as ken f are are um uh k fallen whichever happens
|
|
to be the least um they will use the name the the last name if that's the most common or the first
|
|
name if that happens to be the most common so um the idea being that even though a criminal
|
|
it gives the even though somebody is convicted of a crime they're they still feel that the
|
|
criminal has rights that they shouldn't get named well they can um they can come out and start
|
|
in your life after they've rehabilitated themselves so i can't imagine for me am i distorting
|
|
or is it just me locally too locally it's probably because i had pushed i was talking so probably
|
|
looped through okay all right so here are the united states there's a couple of things that
|
|
that ought to be discussed and and one of them is an arrest record which is not a crime it's not a
|
|
conviction uh some papers publish that so the joke was in high school that all of the teachers
|
|
would look through the paper to see who was bad over the weekend yeah and that's uh that was
|
|
something like when i was living in the uk there was a lot of things about pedophiles going around
|
|
and they were you know they uh the mob rule were losing house uh finding pedophiles in the neighborhood
|
|
when you say that i i think about uh pita which is people eating tasty animals
|
|
no no no no no it's both sad you know uh people with a criminal record for uh for um
|
|
amusing children essentially so now here in the united states they categorize it as a sex crime and
|
|
you could be and i don't know for certain i heard this and i haven't done any research on it
|
|
but urination in public could be considered a sex crime and you would have to report your location
|
|
basically like a pedophile would that's only in certain states oh my gosh god bless you if you have to
|
|
pull over to the side of the road in that state now uh i did work for a company we did pre-employment
|
|
background screening and one of the things is a criminal background check now there it falls under
|
|
both state and federal fair credit reporting acts and the interesting thing about that is if the job
|
|
that you're interviewing for is expected to pay you $40,000 or greater they can go back seven years
|
|
in your history if it's supposed to be less they can only go back four years in your history
|
|
so um now that's for a third party looking up the information now if i was going to hire one of
|
|
you directly i could conduct my own search personally and go back to the day you're born
|
|
and this is where the right to be forgotten when comes in for a start personally you could not
|
|
as an employer ever look up somebody's record that's something that you're not allowed to do
|
|
aside from what's available publicly so even if you are a pedophile and you've murdered and
|
|
massacred people after you come out of jail for a start your name wouldn't be on any records except
|
|
with the police department so if i was employing you i would have to get you to fill out a form
|
|
you would have to go into the police department with that form and you would hand it to the police
|
|
and they would give you then they would give you would give the police permission to tell me
|
|
the outcome of that uh search which would be a binary yes or no obviously when you're going in
|
|
with that form you would know the results because hey you've done the crime so you were going with that
|
|
form and then as a employer i would get an answer back from the police yes this person has been
|
|
cleared or know this person is not suitable for this position no other information is given out
|
|
so that's how like when when your teacher or something they make sure that uh the checks are
|
|
stimulated while privacy is still the privacy of the person is still respected and the information
|
|
is not shared and that kind of goes core to what they're what they're trying to protect
|
|
with the right to be forgotten case so as you as you can see there's a massive
|
|
mind shift difference between the US, UK and Ardons Australia whatever and continental Europe
|
|
yeah we actually sub our clients because they were concerned about legal issues they wanted
|
|
us to make the decision and basically there were i think four states so there was clear
|
|
there was terminated immediately there was um do not promote and i i don't know if there was
|
|
another one but we would based on a matrix that we agreed upon with the client would return to them
|
|
those decisions they wouldn't see any information but they basically would say hey not an issue you
|
|
know eligible for hire or if it's a recurrent check like a driver may go through recurrent checks
|
|
for their driver's license and other things and they may get a you know terminated immediately
|
|
or a do not do not promote based on something happening in their history
|
|
um and the other thing that was mentioned quite a lot in the arguments against this right that it
|
|
was you know something that the EU was pushing on people but these low i did some research here
|
|
in the Netherlands so i can't speak to what it is in Spain or Germany or some other countries
|
|
and this was an addition that was added to the Dutch constitution in 1986 so it was put in there
|
|
to protect people's information in databases as they were coming online then so it is something
|
|
that you know any person coming in doing business in the EU should have known about so
|
|
it wasn't like you know there was an argument oh this has been this is something that's been
|
|
pushed down Google's throat at this point but you know it was on the books and this is something
|
|
that they should have known about so i i i don't think things are as clear there as you know
|
|
what you're hearing in the news reports and the other issue that has come up has been
|
|
um when google was asked to remove those searches they removed them from google.eu and google.co.uk
|
|
and all the all the local domains within in that are operating within europe however they didn't
|
|
if you went to google.com you'd still get the search even if you're originating from europe
|
|
oh boy yeah and you know google were arguing are and google were arguing and they in the tech
|
|
press were saying well these are american domains and and that's fine uh if that was the case for
|
|
if you went to google.com and wanted to watch a video for instance that's available in
|
|
if i wanted to watch the latest saturday night life for instance or whatever and um
|
|
um that's available in the u.s then i would get an immediate this is blocked here in your country
|
|
so technically everybody in europe is well aware that google can block based an ip address and not
|
|
domain names so that i thought was also uh into you into a little bit of what so uh yeah those
|
|
are a few things other other than that i don't really want to go into i can't really add a lot
|
|
to the to the to the case except those were two noticeable things that i did i did notice
|
|
well that's kind of interesting but the the other thing that goes on is uh you know in a
|
|
pre-higher process or maybe a post-offer process where they do background checks is um you know
|
|
they want to check credentials so if you say you have a doctorate in computer science and you
|
|
came from Brazil how do you validate that in some of these things can be a little tricky one
|
|
yeah that's actually a useful one for us uh yeah just on the on the right to re-forgotten case
|
|
was this uh mayor and one of the local towns has now been sued by a guy who was a pedophile who
|
|
has been put into uh temporary housing above a nursery and uh the town bit mayor released that
|
|
information and you know there was protests and he was driven out of his home and all the rest
|
|
and he's now suing the town because they they gave his information out at which point that
|
|
was thinking you know one one half of me was going well yeah good for you but then it comes out that
|
|
his uh preference was for older you know children not that it was on the good but i don't really
|
|
that did you know that's totally creeped out yeah it's it's just weird what you what you need to balance
|
|
on uh what that what is balanced so it's never really as black and white as uh as things are
|
|
to be and needless to say as a father of three children i have very very very uh strong opinions
|
|
and what should be done to pedophiles just bye bye yeah that boy see i i don't know if i can talk
|
|
about the situation as a business policy and if you did enough research i don't want to name
|
|
specific names but we're we're caught in a tricky situation once and uh we found a way to get
|
|
enough information to the client legally that they could figure it out on their own yeah and that's
|
|
that's the thing here that you wouldn't you just wouldn't be able to do and that's what the whole
|
|
right to be forgotten thing is about and although the funny thing is you can go into the library and
|
|
you can look up that person's you know you can look up September 1986 and find out that joe b
|
|
was arrested for whatever so you could do it that way but you know it's not
|
|
as accessible i guess correct so but then again it would also be joe b and thus
|
|
another person so like when you're going to like newspapers and whatnot old newspapers in the
|
|
library yeah looking things up it's already redacted yeah no it's like published in the first place
|
|
so my name would i wouldn't be i would in in our country would be can follow most sentenced to this
|
|
you know did this terrible thing or accused of this terrible thing or whatever um whereas in the
|
|
Netherlands it would be kf if my name was because my name would be pretty pretty unique um anyway
|
|
it would be just initials or something you know that i kind of touched on this topic and i
|
|
was just talking to my wife about this the other night when when you talk about anonymizing data
|
|
and i've worked at two different hospitals and we would anonymize data and we we went through some
|
|
pretty uh tortured methods to really abide by and go beyond what any uh regulations would be
|
|
and the the reason you want to work with pseudo live data or anonymized live data is because
|
|
there there's going to be corner cases that you run into uh when you're writing software
|
|
so it is important to have that information so you see these instances and are able to code
|
|
for those issues now um let's see both my cars have gpses in them and one is a general motor's
|
|
car from 2007 so it has the on-store system and it has a cellular phone and data system you know
|
|
it'll do cellular data and same thing the genesis has a gps and cellular data so both those cars
|
|
they can be reporting back their position but apparently that information is anonymized
|
|
and it's a little like i know both cars um if you have the service they can turn them off they can
|
|
unlock them they can do a bunch of things remotely well along with locating them and you know who's to
|
|
say there's not a kill switch for these vehicles or you know hey wondering where riches if they don't
|
|
know yeah exactly who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's who's
|
|
what about uh you uh dang it sorry i'm ready to get the 1970s carbureted olds and feel with uh
|
|
breaker point ignition where we're the most sophisticated electronics in there or the radio
|
|
yeah it's scary actually looking inside an engine though uh you know open it up a car and remember
|
|
taking the part of those having an old four deathscorp mark three and then just completely
|
|
replacing whole sections of it in the in the evening and uh Gundam's the scribe area by
|
|
fixing the thing up and then heading off again. Was that a 2.3 liter engine?
|
|
i have no idea or are you in europe and you're not allowed to have engines above two liters?
|
|
uh this would have been uh probably i have no idea i was never that big into cars for real
|
|
cars only got you from point a to point b a that is pretty much it mostly away from point a
|
|
which happened to be balibar that a was for you 3.30 looking at the show notes here for the next
|
|
episode gones gones and wargones i guess it's easy to identify when you come on rift
|
|
what's your opinion on the the right to be forgotten again do you do you agree with it or
|
|
are you opposed to it? well it's uh it's uh i do agree with it yeah but then
|
|
i do agree with it because the front of mine um she um she had a you know she was young and she went out
|
|
with this guy and he ended up there there's a thing where if you live together here after six months
|
|
you come into this default sort of marriage like arrangement kind of yeah well you can get a contract
|
|
and whatever and you can get you specifically have to get a contract saying that i'm not sharing
|
|
my goods and services or whatever but anyway she had then ended up in a situation where she
|
|
was liable for all this debts that he had and so for five years she was on the credit watch list
|
|
and whatever so then after the five years even though she had done none of this stuff was
|
|
hers aside from the fact of you know falling for it falling for a guy i mean which we all do
|
|
right off you know maybe everything wants um then uh you know after five years that was all
|
|
that was all gone then there was no problem getting the mortgages there was no problem with um
|
|
you know credit cards on the rest so and then you then you have the situation where okay you're
|
|
going in and you have um somebody's done something and they do really it does work on the assumption
|
|
people can rehabilitate which i think is a is a nicer way to to work from well i i think the issue
|
|
there there's a couple of issues is recidivism uh rehabilitation and the context and uh you know if
|
|
if you have a crime where there's a very high rate of recidivism and if it's somebody in like say
|
|
a pedophile applying for a daycare center that that's a fricking jam on the brakes issue
|
|
yeah but what's he a pedophile for you just say a pedophile is he a pedophile because he slept
|
|
with a 16-year-old or is he a pedophile because he was uh in possession of some awful pictures of
|
|
10-year-olds right okay and that's and that's what they write to be forgotten thing i think it works
|
|
out well but it does require you to put down your your your basic instinct of picking up a club
|
|
and going over and bottering somebody to uh you know well first off you shouldn't treat anybody
|
|
in a way that you wouldn't want to be treated so if you you got feelings that go on and beat
|
|
somebody upside the head if you don't want that to happen to you don't do it but regardless of that
|
|
when you when you come across folks who have committed crimes and they've already served their time
|
|
I'm not so sure it should be forgotten like that's that's their chip on their shoulder they they
|
|
have that put behind them and to grow from and learn either that or they fall right back into it
|
|
but they're released to the public it it shouldn't harm them that uh they've been quote-unquote
|
|
rehabilitated if they weren't rehabilitated they should still be locked up uh if uh if folks are
|
|
not being hired because they have a criminal record then they're being discriminated against
|
|
and i see no difference in between that uh as somebody not being hired because they're a woman
|
|
or because they're black or because they're max can or whatever there's no difference to me
|
|
whether you discriminate over somebody because of something that they did or if you discriminate
|
|
because the color of their skin this is all the same thing the thing though just to be clear about
|
|
the right to be forgotten is only the right to be forgotten by the public at large
|
|
in general it does not mean that you're going to you have the right to be forgotten by the
|
|
penal services or the law enforcement or the government or whoever there are circumstances like
|
|
the example that we get that if you're going into health care are you going into any any
|
|
the sense of the various you will get investigated and your entire record going back to the
|
|
beginning of time will be analyzed so it's there are safeguards there to protect society in general
|
|
so it's not it's not a black and white issue but i'm i'd be very much in agreement with what you're
|
|
saying there yeah i don't fully understand the issue but that was just my two cents on what i
|
|
was hearing yeah the the point in this case is that google are getting that this guy went bankrupt
|
|
and he's an after five years that should be scrubbed from his general record
|
|
bankrupt five years then he could start a new life and do his thing what happened was later on
|
|
after the five years he was being googled and that information was still coming up so
|
|
he said well either right to be forgotten so this should be taken off the books google should
|
|
be moved as the court said yes you do you have a right to be forgotten should be taken off the books
|
|
and that was the right to be forgotten case yeah all right so he should be forgotten in that country
|
|
not the world no you should be forgotten in the region that signed up to that law which is
|
|
Europe so this is a pan-European thing so a lot of these countries have that laws and all
|
|
they state all the country states have signed up to this doctrine so it is EU law now
|
|
so the EU law is that if you are in physically in Europe that should not be found that information
|
|
should not be available to you except of course if you go down to the library in that country and
|
|
you make a specific you know you got a private investigator and you you go the extra mile to find
|
|
out about this guy yeah then it's going to come up because it's a matter of public record yeah
|
|
not a problem but this guy's point was he does have a right to be forgotten so it shouldn't be
|
|
the very first case that comes up on on the guy's website google could probably use their
|
|
and chio ip blocking that they use for their multimedia not protection but DRM of sorts
|
|
and that is exactly what I was saying that's why I was calling bullshit on their on their argument
|
|
that no we don't want to censor the web well you're already censoring the web you know
|
|
if this is a law in Europe you have a choice of obey the law in Europe in Europe and I completely
|
|
agree that if you're googling this guy and you're sitting in Texas and that information is on
|
|
file servers in Texas or then it should be displayed in Texas yeah wait let me ask you I just
|
|
want to do the opposite here in play devil's advocate if google said go after yourself what are
|
|
they going to do block google yeah they did it with microsoft 500 million fine day for how many days
|
|
500 just thousands fine they there was millions that were bleeding out of microsoft over the browser
|
|
case they have they have done it and they are thinking about it and this is a this is a this is a
|
|
law just like everything else and google has a choice like they did in china if they don't want to
|
|
obey the laws of the land that they're operating in but it's not like we are china or you know
|
|
Europe is China where you have the great firewall yeah but it's the same thing if you're operating
|
|
in the country you know whatever you say about the regime or whatever you say about is you're
|
|
going to operate there under the rules of that country I'm guessing yeah otherwise you're you're
|
|
not operating within the country now if there were if google didn't happen to have an operation
|
|
within spain and and or within the EU and this information was stored in servers in data farms
|
|
in in Texas well then you know the EU doesn't have a leg to stand on go after yourself yeah because
|
|
the information's not in europe but maybe about european system you could argue I suppose but
|
|
it would if that would be a dangerous road to go down on what we're talking about here is
|
|
information aggregated by servers that are located in europe about people who are located in europe
|
|
and they clearly violate the laws that they know about because they've been unstacked your books
|
|
in these countries at least right four years longer than google has existed longer than they
|
|
I looked it up and they went into law on the same day that on the same later on that year the first
|
|
TCP IP protocol was proposed so this is how far back these things are going okay I've got a
|
|
slightly different take on this because there's another issue that you're you're not even thinking
|
|
about on this and that is what is the source of the information here's here's a question for you
|
|
let's say a case had become internationally known was written about by american newspapers american
|
|
publications and stuff and european publications now that information could be aggregated both
|
|
in europe and in the us how do you determine what information you can show to somebody who's from
|
|
europe if they are trying to search through us servers there's no geolocation information
|
|
associated with the individual very fine green pieces of information and that's you know basically
|
|
saying to google you actually have to go back now and supply geolocation information on every
|
|
single article that has a mention of any person in any country any place seems to be kind of a
|
|
fact you're you're taking you're taking this to the stream in the in germany for instance is a law
|
|
that you're not that they're not allowed to display Nazi symbols they uphold that law and if you're
|
|
in germany you can't find those that information yeah so this is an accepted this is an accepted
|
|
thing about the reporting of that particular case in general the reporting about that case is
|
|
completely open and should not be censored in any way if they because it's a reporting of factual
|
|
events that are ongoing at the moment and the guy who has brought the case has done so in public
|
|
so the reporting about him will be forever associated with the fact that he had bankrupt
|
|
20 years ago yeah absolutely not a problem but within the laws of the country that you're in
|
|
you need to abide by whatever those laws are and i don't for a moment agree with the argument that
|
|
um it all it's too difficult to do because it's not the these are these are issues that they
|
|
have tackled that is are being tackled by by technology companies they can identify people's
|
|
faces worldwide across the globe they can you can show them put on a picture and they can
|
|
identify your face from the millions of people that are out there they can produce a self-driving
|
|
car this is not a non-solveable problem it's a problem that you don't want to it you tackle i
|
|
agree with that but it's a problem that they met for themselves because they ignored the law
|
|
for so long okay i have a very fundamental disagreement with you because unfortunately
|
|
unfortunately a lot of these technologies like facial matching and facial recognition
|
|
aren't working correctly there are lots of of cases where they are misidentifying people and
|
|
the the fact that companies are using them because they think it's going to gain them some kind of
|
|
financial gains doesn't is not really driving the technology it's the financial gains it's driving
|
|
that okay so i wouldn't you i wouldn't even i think you're missing a point there but my point was
|
|
that they are capable of tackling complex problems if they put the mind to it so the argument that
|
|
it's or it's a very difficult problem yes i'm not saying it is or it isn't
|
|
the fact is they have teams of highly qualified highly trained engineers who are used to dealing
|
|
with complex problems and finding solutions so in one case the argument is you can build a self-driving
|
|
car but you can't do this you can build face recognition but you can't do this both equally
|
|
complex in their own fields yeah if they worked correctly yes and if they were definite solutions
|
|
to a problem yes neither of those are actually solutions to a problem at this point in my opinion
|
|
that's part of the issue is we see all this hype around technology it's unfortunately broken
|
|
technology so just because something's out there because marketers wanted to push it out there
|
|
don't think that it's actually technologically sound yeah but it's i do think you're missing a point
|
|
there boss so i go in the head over i said i still think he's missing the point there
|
|
well how am i missing a point you're you're arguing something different you're you're you're
|
|
both arguing but you're not arguing about the same thing Ken's arguing about a privacy issue
|
|
and you're arguing about the technology no the argument is that unfortunately the technology
|
|
as far as the government wants it to be applied does not conform to what their requirements are
|
|
and unless the government wants to put for for the system that says okay now all newspapers and
|
|
all all these these businesses have to go back and and basically provide the information to
|
|
Google so that we have all the geolocation information associated with every scrap of information
|
|
that's out there that's absolutely guaranteed that this can be done that's not
|
|
What's been asked right first start a newspaper reporter reporting about this
|
|
incident Google is allowed to index that yeah a newspaper is also allowed
|
|
indexes but this information is coming from sources that they know where it's
|
|
coming from in the first place but take take this for an example unit archive
|
|
has huge actually it's not on the internet archive maybe it is I can't
|
|
remember where it is now but Aaron Swartz had actually gone through and pulled
|
|
a bunch of court records and had actually made them available publicly because
|
|
they were supposed to be available publicly okay and all that's basically
|
|
stored right now on servers in San Francisco now say somebody had done the
|
|
same thing in Europe had pulled those court records and had stored them on
|
|
servers in the US now there's no geolocation information for a lot of those
|
|
records it just was never encoded with that no they took them from there in the
|
|
first place the documents were sourced from there in the first place the
|
|
documents themselves will have regio de lequa blah blah
|
|
spania on them they may or they may not yeah well one of the problems is that
|
|
you see stuff stuff it's out there in these systems those heavily
|
|
protected heavily modified and heavily changed to a point where you can't
|
|
always necessarily identify them or their their images that aren't necessarily
|
|
going to scan correctly if you try to do a CR on them you're basically putting a
|
|
lot of burden on people to actually make certain that they attach extra
|
|
information to things that's just not happening now that's what I'm saying
|
|
yeah it's not happening now but that's my point the point is it should be
|
|
happening if that's the information that they need in order to do this it's
|
|
information that they should have been adding the whole time as they were doing
|
|
their indexing because it's the law but you can't wait to blame on Google for
|
|
that Google's one company you're talking about Google against every government
|
|
in the world at this point every every company every local search engine in
|
|
Spain has had to deal with this every newspaper every outlet every search
|
|
engine in the Netherlands has had to build their systems knowing the laws of
|
|
the country that they're operating it not knowing the law of the country is
|
|
not an excuse to get out to get away from I can't remember that it's not
|
|
you're getting out of jail free card exactly thank you I'm not saying it should
|
|
be but I'm saying that you shouldn't be delaying the blame on one company
|
|
because you're not basically dealing with the the facts of making certain that
|
|
the source information is properly available that you have the proper
|
|
information associated with those files the source information is coming from
|
|
government policies if you choose to talk about metadata away then you are
|
|
knowingly you're not doing the job then the new that if there are
|
|
hiding this information it's coming it's sensitive personal information they
|
|
were going to be archiving the law says that after five years they have to
|
|
retract it and they have not done so I don't see what's what's on to the
|
|
center here in the new that the information is about people because of the
|
|
databases where they get in the front what's rocket science in this there's
|
|
so many different scenarios where that information can be handled in so many
|
|
different ways you just can't guarantee it I mean that's one of the problems
|
|
right now like I'm saying right now you know here we had like Aaron sports
|
|
went ahead and pulled a whole bunch of documents from the court system and put
|
|
them out there now those are publicly available documents they're they're
|
|
open enough I could pull those down archiving someplace on a server anybody in
|
|
the world can do the same thing and archive them then you've got no guarantees
|
|
of what controls are available over them and Google comes along and
|
|
Nexus it how are they necessarily going to identify that these documents that I
|
|
have named ABCD and E are actually those court documents they may not know
|
|
that yeah but there's a lot of things here that you can get through and you
|
|
can say that hey we don't necessarily know everything I completely agree with
|
|
your point but what we're we're not talking about that we're not talking about
|
|
Aaron Schwartz case which actually doesn't apply anyway because it's American
|
|
laws those and that information should have been public that's what he was
|
|
trying to get out to make them public and don't don't get them wrong I am a
|
|
huge advocate of having this information in the public open rights and all
|
|
the rest of it however we're not talking about that we're talking about this
|
|
information it's only source is from government documents so you on servers
|
|
that are located in Spain operated by a company that is registered in Spain
|
|
and yes they're arguing that that's the laws don't apply to them and other
|
|
companies that perform a similar function in Spain are doing what are
|
|
complying with the law correct I'd love to see an audit of the systems and
|
|
find out how accurate it is that's I mean that's what I'm pointing out is that
|
|
you're you're kind of walking into a point here where you're saying okay we can
|
|
make the technology do anything yeah you can do a point a lot of times I see
|
|
stuff like this come up and I know from having been in places where they
|
|
fully have tried to comply with laws and actually go ahead and update this
|
|
information try to add this stuff 90 a lot of the time it's not accurate at
|
|
all and I just I think that there's a lot of things where again if you're
|
|
gonna say that a company has to be able to comply with something they need to
|
|
make certain that the facilities are correctly implemented to make that work
|
|
and I think a lot of times we see governments take these actions without doing
|
|
that at all yeah but this was in place before the internet correct exactly so you
|
|
think that when they converted documents from offline to online they went
|
|
ahead and had all the facilities to actually do things like geolocation
|
|
geolocation didn't even exist when they converted the documents the did
|
|
because we're physically there in the building do you think that was encoded in
|
|
the documents when there was nothing in the document formats of the time to
|
|
actually support your location okay okay where do you think the servers are
|
|
that those documents are stored on so the government scans the man where are
|
|
the servers you know good question especially now look at the cloud you have
|
|
almost no guarantee it's not 19a to say where are they at that point they might
|
|
have been there now you don't know that you know that's what I'm saying that
|
|
that you know the point is you can you can say anything when it started it was a
|
|
good idea the problem with our governments are they they do not sit there and
|
|
update things to actually handle the newer situations and so it should over
|
|
complicate in this subject no I'm not not at all and also you're not taking into
|
|
account that there is another law that is extremely that's extremely and
|
|
everybody's face that all companies need to sign up to them that's the
|
|
privacy law what you're allowed to do with European citizens information is
|
|
very very restricted you're only allowed to use it for the information that you
|
|
require and you have to stay beforehand what information that is so they know
|
|
about this it's up standard operation procedure I love that phrase standard
|
|
operating procedure that's like going to the dark and the dark tells you you're
|
|
gonna feel some slight discomfort 80 days I apologize over here come back in a
|
|
week
|
|
but I do I do get your point I mean to stop on you soundly oh you guys you
|
|
didn't find you I was stopping on me I don't care do you need a hug no not at all
|
|
I'm laughing I have my fun debating the stuff hey look somebody had to take up
|
|
the devil's advocate position for real I'd see the only thing I was doing as
|
|
I thought hey here's a chance for me to actually jump in and have some fun
|
|
basically trolling you guys for a while hey so I mean by the way me defending
|
|
Google what the hell is that it's just a little weird to podcast over the last
|
|
few months that have been discussing this and not one of them has brought up the
|
|
fact okay well the you know these are the laws of the country you have to
|
|
respect those and you know there is another approach and that's the right
|
|
to privacy and there's another report that the right to be forgotten this
|
|
and something you and it's scary the amount of statements that are made and
|
|
I'm thinking if this is the level of reporting and all the other things that I'm
|
|
assuming are taken for you know factual research topics then it's a bit
|
|
scary all around but now that I've said it on the community news I can get
|
|
all my chest for you okay that killed a conversation sorry about that oh no
|
|
Claudio Miranda killed the conversation just need to make sure that everyone knows
|
|
that no I think I think I killed it when I finally admitted I was trolling you
|
|
guys cool no I stopped talking what I had the sling that phones across the room
|
|
what is up with Claudio's set up he's using plumble and he doesn't know I'm
|
|
guessing he doesn't know how to set it up I don't know how to set it up there's
|
|
nothing I know although in my Galaxy S3 it's added awful and I don't know if it
|
|
sounds better on other phones did you use headphones with your Galaxy S3 yes
|
|
Claudio get a pair of friggin headphones dude no no it's still sound
|
|
awful on the Galaxy S3 with headphones good did it have bad reverb because he's
|
|
not going everybody back in no didn't do that all right I can deal with Gorkhan
|
|
audio quality you know that's a funny he keeps saying that whatever reverb back
|
|
into the system is somebody else but when it's only him that has the mic
|
|
keyed up and you know if it was anyone else but this guy is a ham radio guy he
|
|
should know better right I love him to bits you know that although I still
|
|
think he should be doing more ham radio shows on HBR a lot of them all has
|
|
Gorkhan done HBR ham radio no he wants to give us a few ham radio podcasts
|
|
there because there's Linux and the ham shack that is a good show I like that
|
|
yeah I haven't listened but and I do have an interest in him but I guess not
|
|
enough because I got interested in a hundred other things too believe me that
|
|
can happen guys I'm gonna have to go for a minute and do some family stuff so
|
|
oh 15 minutes what's gonna happen 15 minutes we we will have been an hour late
|
|
for someone and hey if that works we can tell him in 60 minutes why is it
|
|
confirmed by Dave can multiple people edit this thing at the same time yes
|
|
it's in the bridge so what happens when you reload the page you get the
|
|
whatever's the version at that time what happens if you edit something and
|
|
someone else edits something in a different place does it save them both as a
|
|
revision yep can you look at can you then reload the page and look at each
|
|
revision individually yeah look at the timeline thing we're talking about the
|
|
e2pad I'm guessing yes we are so if you look at the timeline slidebar up at
|
|
the top it allows you to go back to the conversions it also allows you to save
|
|
particular version right now I only see versions edited by me and Ross yep this
|
|
is genius isn't isn't it just brilliant and it's open source right it is I think
|
|
the project got this it was a Google project and got discontinued
|
|
we have their own website now Google you mean no etherpad I need to run and go
|
|
make coffee and get dinner started because my tummy is growling okay you do
|
|
this I'm hanging in for a little 12 minutes I hopefully will be back in time to
|
|
hit the stop and record button again on my recording on the hour I'm ready for a
|
|
nap I don't know about you you probably been up for 20 something hours I had this
|
|
weird thing right well I had to work today unfortunately so I was only I was
|
|
around to start stuff off with this be 5050 card that is weird thing last night
|
|
where I just was late to bed anyway because I was working and then I just woke up
|
|
at 4 o'clock like my ass just couldn't I get back to sleep wide awake so I decided to go
|
|
down have breakfast and I caught the 5 o'clock train into work oh man I was wrecked though
|
|
I had to I was sleep when I came home which is why I'm okay now yeah I can go for a nap but my wife
|
|
she wants me to put a light fixture up you know emotion detecting light over the garage cool
|
|
now I'm hoping I got all the stuff I need for it really the big problem is just
|
|
figuring where I'm going to tap power from you neighbors yeah we don't have we don't have
|
|
single-payer electric in the United States yet what single-payer electric I'm making a goof on
|
|
single-payer health insurance what single-payer health insurance basically the government pays for it
|
|
what we think is here everybody has the same everybody has to have health insurance by law
|
|
and if you can't afford it they'll pay for free so but that means then you have the choice
|
|
of whatever hospitals you want to go into that works but provided your plan supports that but
|
|
then again the standard plan includes all kids I think up to 21 now and you know you don't
|
|
go into weird stuff if you want to the number of times you can do IVF or if you're if you get knocked
|
|
down on a when you're skiing abroad whether they'll provide you with a helicopter whether you
|
|
have to pay for that yourself you know that that sort of stuff was the most stuff includes like dental
|
|
and pretty much everything yeah I used to ski without a helmet then I got hit by a tree
|
|
one of the funniest videos and I presume it came out okay because the guy uploaded to video
|
|
or to YouTube I saw this year was you know the skiing down the mountain following somebody else
|
|
those tracks and the guy with skiing skiing skiing between the trees and whatever and then
|
|
it goes all from between two trees into the darkness and all the years like oh no
|
|
I was a place where power power of lighters had skied off you know into the overlift
|
|
where I really hope the guy was okay yeah I was in hey guys back hey excellent you can do the show
|
|
not so I was just gonna have to wait so I think I've got the rest of the day myself which is good
|
|
living the clock in the morning you're back from the nice tool you're on earlier yeah that's
|
|
on last night I jumped on this morning just for a little bit but I couldn't speak so one of those
|
|
things we've got someone else in Rome so what's it like in 2015 I don't know session last day oh it's
|
|
not real I suppose it's nice that's quite warm outside but it's a little overcast but yeah it's
|
|
not TV it's relaxing I don't really really really been outside you should go for walk no you have to
|
|
be on the New Year's show I know but I hope that myself now it's quite good I really wanted to go
|
|
the New Year's day sales but I'm gonna miss out because I wanted to get a laptop I'd have to
|
|
worth it I have to wait till the next sales in a couple months so it's what get chance to get
|
|
down today I've got cash in a couple months I think I'd rather pack cash and put on a credit card
|
|
yeah good plan I'm editing some shows and we're believing in about seven minutes
|
|
thankfully we posted the show for tomorrow is up now that's the pressure off and if I get this
|
|
on up then the pressure will be off for Friday as you eat and the stats they hit normally have you
|
|
this one but when they hit you now that's yet it's still making it so it's just past india now
|
|
so we haven't hit here either in the Netherlands all the people are sitting off fireworks still
|
|
there's a lot of people around because there's no snow so people who normally go skiing
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are forced to stay at home so there will be a lot of fireworks tonight
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hey it's the middle summer here so it's nice getting we do the mountain next door though
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they were leaving our fireworks last night which is annoying
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we have an initial haul in the fifth of the new green bus I don't fall but lots of people
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in fireworks they hold it they can be that often easy oh my machine's slowing down
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I got a little laser laptop it's a netbook type thing it's actually a trouble mate
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just looking at aces but I don't know I think I'd rather get HP I like to shivers and I like the
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HPs but I want to get in tell I'm not really interested nowadays oh the saga of buying this thing
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this is the only laptop that is available well there's one laptop by Dell
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and they have a top of the range model that's a four or five grand that's available with Linux
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you know it's a lot for me I know we don't have that much money
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you can get some like last year's models for around the eight nine hundred mark
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they're normally the four-dram with a low processor but watching machine going a bit
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girl you can't hear that but I think I prefer to I want to HU laptop and I want something
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with the high-end processor so if you're having a low
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rather speed the whole one thousand bucks then they actually buy a speed 700 bucks and get cheap
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you know get one it's not going to do me for you yeah no money for a living hundred which is
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quite nice which is eight got eight year RAM and it's her HP she's got some nice ones too but
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non-touch the touch stuff is coming and it's like it's like two green here by touch
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so well that game really all the old models I'm just worried if I leave it too long I leave it
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another 12 months I'm going to miss out on all the all the non-touch laptops you won't be any
|
|
laptop non-touch laptop's room so I'm just trying to get the deals when they actually come in
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it's just top speeds of here like we're looking at seven hundred bucks for i3 if you're talking
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until i3 a laptop like it's just like I can't see the point I'll have a non-touch you know i7
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and get actually RAM it's pretty yeah yeah no I don't use touch anyway why would I want it I've
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spent all my life going don't touch the screen don't touch the screen and if somebody touches it
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get my spray out and clean it and all people are touching the screen all the time it's just that
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always me um would you guys recommend getting something with a video card I don't know if I'm
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getting it intel is a huge difference or not like um intel graphics aren't too bad is it
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I am the last person to um ask my search criteria was it must come without an operation system
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|
or wood linux or bsg or some free operation system yes now i did down to two laptops so that was
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that what do you want to do with your laptop pretty much this video we did think and next
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stuff and not game I'm saying not too much right not not not the big get big stuff okay before you
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answer that we will um in two minutes we'll be doing the new tonsil so brace brace brace
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to Ken Fallon just cut me off no but I will go ahead don't say if you're not doing any serious
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gaming or um maybe 3d graphics rendering blender type stuff you could probably I mean intel
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card is just fine I mean I have an intel card in mind I do some gaming but if you want like
|
|
cutting edge steam you know borderlands two gaming you probably want an Nvidia card
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|
I say borderlands two is a must I have to have it and if you want to keep your Linux experience
|
|
pain free of having to fight with some distros installing Nvidia you should probably have
|
|
you know in a void Nvidia yeah that's what I'm thinking I'll say I've got another yeah g2
|
|
10 and it's annoying on when do you stop with some um deviants in some match bestest drove
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|
what pain have you experienced within video recently
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|
well Dan Dan I haven't had any but I know some people have problems installing Linux
|
|
distros and we'll just get rid of the smallest thing it's a low-end yeah it's just 600 and the
|
|
two tens that people have traveled with probably that it's well it's helped by where he's called
|
|
has been having huge issues and he just to follow me on operating systems I use
|
|
and we had the same problems all the time the only problem I had was I had to use the
|
|
proprietary drivers instead of the free ones it's what I used the priority was did you have a
|
|
newer cart paywall no but uh we we talked about this until it's remember and we
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interrupt this broadcast to bring you the news that it's 2200 hours sees hold sees hold sees hold
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org
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