- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
821 lines
74 KiB
Plaintext
821 lines
74 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2436
|
|
Title: HPR2436: HPR Community News for November 2017
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2436/hpr2436.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 03:05:11
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR episode 2436 entitled HBR Community News for November 2017 and is part of the series
|
|
HBR Community News. It is hosted by HBR volunteers and is about 87 minutes long and can
|
|
remain an explicit flag. The summary is HBR volunteers talk about show release and comment
|
|
posted in November 2017. This episode of HBR is brought to you by
|
|
an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
|
|
That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
|
|
Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
|
|
Radio. This time it's Community News for November 2017. Joining me tonight is...
|
|
Hi, Steve Morris. That's usual of course.
|
|
Hi and for those of us who are new to this show, it's a monthly look at what's going on
|
|
in the HBR community and it's a regular show scheduled for the first Monday of the month.
|
|
So we recorded the Saturday before the first Monday of the month and at this point you
|
|
traditionally welcome the new host. Yes, I do do that and I just forgotten to check.
|
|
Shall I do it Dave as it's pronounceable this time? Okay, you go for it. The Alien Brothers
|
|
Podcasts, ABB Alpha Bravo P, have joined the network and you too can join the network.
|
|
It was a normal strange month just to let people know what this show is all about.
|
|
Dave and I are two of the volunteers that help out here on HBR and by no means leaders of this
|
|
community we just facilitated and one thing I have noticed Dave has been that there has been a
|
|
lack of shows from people this month. Have you noticed that? Yes, yes. We've had, we have some holes
|
|
in the queue which desperately need filling and thankfully Clatu has found lots of time to do
|
|
podcast. He's basically carried the network this month. So there are still a few thoughts left.
|
|
If you met a New Year's resolution this year 2016 that you were going to record a show for HBR,
|
|
we have a free slot in less than four days by the time you hear this. And then the next
|
|
one after that is another four days after that and another three days after that. So we could
|
|
definitely do with chills and this is the time of year where people are inside and an ideal, an
|
|
ideal opportunity to nip into the tech cave and record a show for us. So today is Puckis Avond,
|
|
Dave in, well actually it's Puckis, it's actually Puckis Avond on Tuesday but today was celebrated.
|
|
So you need to explain. That is when central class who came from Spain in a steamboat with
|
|
those helpers, politically incorrect helpers perhaps, and they deliver presents to the children
|
|
and the presents were Julie delivered. And one of those presents was a circuit board, Dave. Would
|
|
you believe that? A component tester circuit board. I have no idea how sent new that I was looking
|
|
for one of those. Well, there you go. That's just astonishing. How can it be? It's almost as if we live
|
|
in a modusher. It's a surveillance state. Yes. So shall we go through quickly the shows? So
|
|
giving some feedback so that people are aware that, yeah, people who listen to their shows. And
|
|
today I will be drinking a regular old Hartoch Jan, which is a beer that you find in the
|
|
supermarkets along with Heineken and Kroelser, something like that. It's taste okay but it gives
|
|
you a hangover. Yes. Yes. I have asked 5150 to give us a show on how to do a show about reviewing beer.
|
|
So that was my show. That's where I am now, 5150. So if you could bring me to talk about the
|
|
palatums, the smell and the aromas, that would be nice. Not about beer, but it gives you a hangover.
|
|
Okay. Yes. Which don't the ones I'd like to know about? The first show was by Bitbox.
|
|
It's personal healthcare wherein Bitbox discovers he is fat and can no longer find his feet.
|
|
And this was inspired by an earlier show that the information on the ground did on health.
|
|
What do you think of this on David? This is interesting. It's good. It takes some doing to come out
|
|
and talk about these things, I think. Bitbox is trying to give up smoking and losing weight and
|
|
do more exercise and all the sort of things that can be hard to get to to fight. So I
|
|
was very much sympathized with his challenge and his coming out in public with his intentions here.
|
|
Good luck to him, I say. Absolutely. Norrist says, fear and cold turkey. It took me a few tries to
|
|
quit smoking. I was only able to quit after I convinced myself I would get cancer if I continued
|
|
smoking. Fear and cold turkey work. Great episode. Can we hear more about life on the road?
|
|
Shane Shannon says, all the best. The episode was very engaging. Thank you for sharing. Would you
|
|
let us know in a month or two how it's going? And I would also like to say, yeah, smoking is easy.
|
|
I've done it hundreds of times to call it Mark Twain. But I have done a show on this
|
|
back in the twat days, actually. And it is basically cold turkey. You remember you are a
|
|
smoker every single day. So good luck with it. And don't be put down if you do if you do
|
|
fail, then just start again. Start stopping again. Yes. Yes. I managed to do it. I was a
|
|
smoker too. I managed to do it by having a bet with somebody else who was also trying to give
|
|
up smoking. So we sort of kept each other in check. Have did you smoke today? No, no, no.
|
|
Or yes, or I'm winning it. That sort of thing challenge for somebody else can help a lot.
|
|
Whatever works. It's one of the best things that you can do to improve your health. Indeed.
|
|
So next day we had Mr. X with a what's in my hamshack part one? I'd like to see more people
|
|
around those. As he said himself, I think your hamshack is, was it him or
|
|
that your hamshack is never complete? So it's always a good time to do a show.
|
|
Various different equipment. A lot of mobile handsets, actually, more than I would have expected.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I was impressed by the number he had there. And they sent it very
|
|
sophisticated and stuff. Though the digital radio, I made a note, sounded strange, which he
|
|
did warn us about, but sort of strangely robotic effect with odd sort of side noises and stuff.
|
|
Yeah, it was cooler. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was really nice to hear it too.
|
|
It sounds all technical and stuff, but yeah. We're spoiled by modern, some of the, you know,
|
|
mobile phones and that type of stuff, I guess. Still very interesting stuff. Yeah, great.
|
|
Great. Great. A bullet journal to org mode from Brian in Ohio. And he describes how he's used
|
|
bullet more, a bullet journal, which I had not heard about before, in migrated to org mode in
|
|
obviously Emacs. Yes. Well, I found this really interesting. Though I must say a bit of behind
|
|
the scenes, he sent his notes in out of org mode and boy, were they hard to wrestle into some
|
|
into proper HTML, but we got there. We communicated with him a few times about it. We got it there
|
|
in the end, but yeah, the bullet journal thing is fascinating because it's about sort of keeping
|
|
your stuff organized and, you know, keeping a record of what you're doing and what you plan to do
|
|
and stuff. Some people go to a huge length to make them really beautiful works of art, but
|
|
he was saying things like, well, it's, once you've written it down, it's static and you can't
|
|
then insert a bit, which is quite understandable. So I can see why he would have moved to Emacs
|
|
org mode. Though it's a little sad in some respects because the, you know, the artistic side and
|
|
the handwriting side and so forth is something I quite like, but I can see why you do this for
|
|
efficiency. I never have, unfortunately, don't have the motoric sincerity to be able to do those
|
|
artistic works, but I've always appreciated it when I've seen somebody else who can do it.
|
|
Corey says, you big tease. I'm very curious about your Android integration. I previously published
|
|
a show about using org mode to create presentation PDFs. Glad to says, org mode. This is really cool.
|
|
My girlfriend does some bullet journal stuff, but I never understood what it was all about.
|
|
Hearing about it in this context is elucidating, though. Also, I'm really happy to hear that my
|
|
Emacs episodes helped you learn to love Emacs. I am like Kroy, previous comment, eager to hear about
|
|
your Android integration. Yes, as am I. And I'm very impressed that you stuck with org mode for
|
|
as long as you did, because I tend to get excited about some organizational methodology and then move
|
|
on to something else and get into a point where I need an organization methodology to organize
|
|
the number of organization methodologies I have. Oh, I know, I know. I spent all my work in life
|
|
fiddling about with different ways to organize stuff. A very early primitive date, the base on a
|
|
PC under DOS, for example, to manage my work and my team's work and stuff. And it was,
|
|
it's been more time fiddling with it than actually getting anything done, you know.
|
|
All of that sort of thing. It's very, very tempted to get lost in the technicalities of it.
|
|
And I should imagine, though, the artistic side of the bullet journal as well.
|
|
Well, the next show was about the HBO community news, which we did last month. And Wendy
|
|
Gold mentioned straight through cable, just a quick bit of clarification. When Shane said he
|
|
was used as straight through cable, he was referred to the order of the wire inside the connection
|
|
connectors. A straight to also called patch cable is used to connect a device to a piece of
|
|
network equipment like a PC to a switch. For connecting two PCs, you can switch the transmission
|
|
to receive pairs and create a crossover cable. Very good, very good, nice and clearly, but I
|
|
commented on this because I felt I'd sort of let the ball drop in the episode itself saying,
|
|
thanks, wind to go, I did actually know that, but my brain refused to come up with anything useful
|
|
in the spur of the moment. I spent time over many years during my main brain days making
|
|
serial cables. That's RS-232 and RS-423, where this is pretty much the same. The varieties of
|
|
null modem cables with crossovers was something I knew well, but I've largely forgotten that.
|
|
I don't think I've ever used a crossover cap 5 or cap 6 cable, though, come to think of it.
|
|
Maybe we need more shows on the details of connecting devices together.
|
|
And I replied how I would have expected myself to reply by doing a correction show. And that was
|
|
it for your 2433. The next day, we had a show Transmeta Caruso Fujitsu Siemens 4-2s-210 thin client
|
|
and troubling shooting a Debian 9 install, where JWP did a basement cleanup and got his old Transmeta
|
|
CPU open running. This was fascinating, absolutely fascinating. And he's earned a lot of
|
|
geek points from me for going through this. Well, yeah, absolutely. JWP knows a lot about
|
|
all sorts of what I would class as obscure things. Boy does he know a lot about them? He's certainly
|
|
increased in my estimation in that regard. And that machine sounded like quite an interesting
|
|
interesting box, at least for its time it was. An emulation of an X86 device in a thin client,
|
|
which... Yep, it sounded pretty good. It sounded very good. And flat 2 said,
|
|
the first time I've ever heard of this. Thank you for this episode. I thought it was really
|
|
pretty cool for embracing risk, at least to the degree that I have since my iBook G4 finally died.
|
|
I've been mostly riskless lately. Arm notwithstanding. But this Transmeta thing sounds really
|
|
clever and very obscure. Thanks for the history lesson. And DRRTY says, wow, thanks for this JWP.
|
|
Upon further inspection, it was surprising to see that the Transmeta Crusoe powered both
|
|
the OQO model O1. It gives a reference, which I distinctly remember,
|
|
salivating over in 2004. Very good. This stuff completely passed me by, and I didn't think about
|
|
this. This was a big deal at the time, because Linus went off to work for these guys for one,
|
|
and it was a big... It was announced that he was going to do something, and it was going to be a
|
|
revolution, and it was going to change the pace of computing. So yeah, if we ever use any other
|
|
companies of over-hoping something, perhaps this would be an example that we could point back to.
|
|
But it was really cool that he was able to salvage these and get them up and running and functional.
|
|
Well, I thought it was very impressive. It sounds we had quite a struggle getting it to install
|
|
anything, with a DVD drive and stuff, but very impressive. He's certainly not a guy to be
|
|
daunted by this sort of stuff, obviously. Yeah, quite modest actually. When you talk to him in person,
|
|
he doesn't claim to be a techie at all, but, oh man, I don't know. You're going to have to go into it.
|
|
BS on that. And the following day, we had Watson, my handshack part, by Mr. X, where he continued his
|
|
walk through many meters and standing wave ratio generators and SWR power things.
|
|
And this makes me very afraid Dave, Tommy Lords and all sorts, makes me very afraid of doing any
|
|
hum radio stuff, mostly. Wow, there's a hell of a lot of stuff there. It was, yeah, it was sort of,
|
|
I was feeling I was bogging my head with this stuff I have to admit. It's interesting, but I'm
|
|
not sure I want to get that deep, but I imagine probably things that once you start, you get dragged
|
|
into this sort of stuff. Yeah, I imagine so too. And Latu says, great impulse. This is exactly the
|
|
kind of not-and-volved information I've been looking for in Ham related episode. Thanks. So
|
|
perfect. Couldn't have said it better myself. Funny how Latu seems to be able to do that.
|
|
He has a gift, gift of words. Alien Brothers podcast season one episode, one introduction,
|
|
meet the Alien Brothers Casper and look her two tech junkies that take nothing sacred,
|
|
that take nothing sacred. Okay. And Latu, I think doing a better job than either of us,
|
|
by commenting on this episode says, shows like these. Do you want to read this one?
|
|
It says shows like these. It's episodes like this one that make me want to quit podcasting because
|
|
I'll never reach this level of greatness. It's so disjointed and natural that I think it could
|
|
possibly have been planned. But it's so coherent and persistent that there's no way it could have
|
|
been scripted. The characters in it have mysterious backstories. You saved my life, Casper.
|
|
For example, they cut to empty commercial breaks. They come up with the name for the series in
|
|
the episodes itself. They talk about how they'll talk about movies, but then barely talk about movies.
|
|
They talk about video games, but can't decide on how to categorize them. The host barely even
|
|
know one another's handles. And yet they pull through. It's gripping and triumphant.
|
|
This is some amazing avant-garde audio. Well done, Alien Brothers. Well done.
|
|
That's a comment in a half. That is a comment in a half. Anybody who gets
|
|
wants to go to Latu or to podcasting is, yeah. And the guys had a second episode and they have had
|
|
some, well, there are generally some problems uploading to HPR at the minute. We're working on
|
|
that with Josh still. Yeah, yeah, it's very mysterious. Yeah, well, we're basically
|
|
under constant attack now. I don't know. Somebody has just decided to really start
|
|
using HPR resources 24-7. Yeah, I don't know. Whoever it is, if you listen to the show, can you
|
|
please stop? Because it's not cool. Human psychology is a strange thing. Yeah, fair enough.
|
|
Well, you know, it's an RSS feed, so in fairness, it means it doesn't, it's not going to do anything to
|
|
the people who who listen to the show because, yeah, if they don't get it at 6 o'clock and they end up
|
|
getting it at 7 o'clock, a big deal. If you don't get the show today, you'll get it tomorrow,
|
|
but it's just annoying for people who want to, who have taken the time to do something constructive,
|
|
recorded the show, want to upload it, and then it turns out they can't upload because somebody's
|
|
being juvenile and, yeah, using all the bandwidth or whatever. So, yeah, there you go.
|
|
Anyway, thanks guys. Keep trying. If this continues, we'll come up with a, we'll work around the
|
|
problem and they come up with an alternative means of uploading to HPR and an alternative means of
|
|
posting. So it just makes more work for us, and that's fine. Unfortunately, that means we
|
|
have less time to produce shows ourselves, which is a bit of a pain. So if you, people listening to
|
|
the, to this show, could record a few shows for ourselves, it would free us up so that we could
|
|
devote some time to fixing all these issues. Anyway, netbooks, keeping an old friend alive by Biza,
|
|
why netbooks are not necessarily obsolete and how to keep them alive. And this one I really
|
|
and so sad that my Acer Aspire one has, has died. It was the perfect form factor for in the train.
|
|
And you could just leave your own laptop running and grab this and bring it into meetings. It was an
|
|
ideal little form factor, but it, I'm actually missing a hard disk cable and I can't, can't get
|
|
a replacement. Well, I can, but it will cost more than the laptop. So it's got into that stage of,
|
|
yeah, the cost of parts and stuff. Yeah, I went on that. I don't know if I've told you this already.
|
|
It turns out that the cable and the hard disk are from the original, you can use the same one from
|
|
the original iPod and I went on to, you know, one of the Dutch equivalent of eBay and there's a guy
|
|
asking 68 euros for this thing, but you know, one that doesn't work and I go, but dude,
|
|
why are you asking this? It doesn't work. Yeah, but it's a collector's item. It doesn't work.
|
|
All right, Ferrell, that's the mentality. I still try and buy MP3 players when I can.
|
|
I've got alerts on eBay for for them and the prices and things that have obviously been
|
|
smashed around and smashed. They're twice the price of what they were originally to buy new.
|
|
Yes, clips and clips of 175 euros. Yeah, yeah, ridiculous. Yes, yes.
|
|
I know it's mad. I knew it. Yeah, go on. Yeah, go on. I was just going to say I loved this show.
|
|
It was brilliant. It was a, a visa has a great delivery. I love the way he does his shows. He
|
|
sort of sounds very off the cuff, you know, talking to him across the bar or something like that.
|
|
And his content was brilliant and I really enjoyed it. And I'm thinking of getting
|
|
resurrecting my triple EPC on the same basis using Rasmussen X86. So thanks to Beza and
|
|
to Tony for for raising this issue. My triple EPC, when I did consultancy work for a year or two,
|
|
that was the machine I used to take to my client. They only had two clients, but I used to take that.
|
|
And it was just perfect for setting up in a corner and hacking a bit of code for them, you know.
|
|
And yeah, yeah, it was just, it was just grabbed plug a monitor and maybe plug a keyboard into it as
|
|
well. It was brilliant. So anyway, do you want to do the comment? I do accept how about need to say
|
|
to those dummies, netting which I can never do. So let's keep over that. He says, would love to hear
|
|
you on the Libra Vox. Great episodes like to hear about keeping things alive, by the way,
|
|
have you considered reading for LubriVox and I think, I think, Pauke used to say that he sounds
|
|
he sounds good even if he was reading the telephone book. Some of you Hipper snappers wouldn't know
|
|
what a telephone book is. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a... No, he's right, he's right, it's good. I would
|
|
like to hear more from being read or spoken by by Beezer, more episodes if he can get around to
|
|
them. Absolutely. The following day, Project Interest Lawson Brown wonders how some projects die
|
|
for lack of interest. And Tatoo says, attention, there are two types of people in the world.
|
|
Those who are attention getters and those who are not. The right combination of obnoxious,
|
|
overexcited, supremely nettered attention getter plus, given any given project results in
|
|
site geist, whether that site geist is justified or not, enter the equation. Site geists
|
|
procreate the more people stricken with it, the more it builds in volume and size, and the more it
|
|
grows and the more people get stick stricken by it. What I'm saying is that you need to be a popular
|
|
kid to jump in your calls. The problem is, you hate proper kids and proper kids probably don't know
|
|
you exist and by you, I mean me. Yes, it's a great comment writers. I love the classic is Tatoo.
|
|
Ah yes. Lawson Bronx says, popular kids merit will always be secondary to charisma when it comes
|
|
to the success of projects and individuals. Routinely, people in professional environments that
|
|
have no business being where they are, and they can't even do their jobs correctly, continue to
|
|
move upwards. It's the nature of attraction, the culture of personality. When the media is involved
|
|
and the media is involved in everyone's lives now to some extent. I don't think there's a solution
|
|
except to seduce or blackmail the popular kids over to you aside. That's a depressing thought.
|
|
Yeah, I do struggle with this one because you're working on this, the natural curious that
|
|
was helping out, and yeah, I don't know. I think there's so much stuff that came up in that
|
|
whole episode. I'm really just trying to let us think in so that we can yeah, great episode.
|
|
Lots of thoughts. Lots of thoughts. There is no easy answer. I mean, if there was an easy answer,
|
|
boom, we'd be done, but you know, getting people involved, getting people motivated,
|
|
you're going to be a happy money, are you going to do people get tired of that, you know,
|
|
watch your goal, or do you just plow your own furrow and see where you go?
|
|
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I'm probably the wrong generation to fully appreciate all
|
|
nuances of this. But the thing is the two people who are commenting there discussing us,
|
|
if those guys, whatever they do, I will support them. I've bought their books. I've both
|
|
supported tattoo and stuff. So no matter what these two dudes do, I happen to think they're,
|
|
I don't know what it says about me, if I think those are the most popular guys in my sphere of interest,
|
|
if you know what I mean. And that's that's not a case of flashiness and those other,
|
|
those other terms that were being kicked around. That's a razzle dazzle and so forth in
|
|
showmanship. That's about trying to judge true merit, I think, isn't it? Yeah, that's how I feel
|
|
about it anyway. So you read tattoos commons there and they, they, you know, they're artistic,
|
|
both of them are considered to be artists and what they do. And you know, the fact that I release
|
|
shows on the same network as them, sometimes when we wonder, you know, should I, should I put this
|
|
show up? You know, some, you know, the Arnon board ones, whatever, but, you know, other ones that I'm
|
|
serious about that have done a little bit of work on. And then the following day, you hear
|
|
tattoo doing a show and it's going to demotivate the ease at which he can come up and do a show or,
|
|
and you talk, you listen to lost and bronx now in this car and he's just leveling away and all
|
|
his works. You think there should be somebody, you know, dictating his works for posterity.
|
|
Thanks to him, which of course, HBR is doing, but yeah, they're just, I think these two guys
|
|
are operating on a different level. And to me, they are the rock stars of, of, yeah, I don't know.
|
|
Yes, yes. But I got their point. Yeah, they're never going to be, they're never going to be on,
|
|
I don't know, we're all the cool kids now. I don't know. Yeah, yeah. But the, the, the generational
|
|
comment that I was making was really to say, I've reached the point in my life, where I don't want
|
|
to be following the, the, the razzle dazzle and so never have been really. I've probably been
|
|
old on my life, but, you know, I don't care. I really don't care. I know it's a nature where you
|
|
can say, I don't care. I'm an old man. I go, yeah, leave me alone. That's right. That's right.
|
|
That's right. I definitely grumpy old man territory. Yeah. So get off my lawn, would you just
|
|
find out about it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Open source gaming number two, all lit by the dude. And Tato says,
|
|
cool discovery. After a while, one begins to think one has heard of all the open source games out
|
|
there, but obviously that's silly. Stan one runs out of place to look for new games until someone
|
|
like you brings them to light. So thanks. You just jumped to show that you throwing me totally.
|
|
Whoops. Sorry. Sorry. I'm just thinking my brain's melted totally. I don't know what the hell's going on.
|
|
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. That's all right.
|
|
Thanks twice. This is Kickstarter Kickstarter post mortem, which I thought was quite depressing,
|
|
that love to Kickstarter didn't work out. One thing I think he missed in all the introspection was
|
|
the lack of time that he gave to people to support it. It takes quite a long time in order to
|
|
to get the news out beforehand. I'm going to be doing a Kickstarter. Are you ready to do the Kickstarter
|
|
and then have your people in place to do a little bit of publicity about it? When he launched
|
|
to show about intending to do the Kickstarter, he was already well into it before he
|
|
got on board. And then I would have expected him to be on all the other podcasts that are out there,
|
|
get the words out to other people that would have been interested to get on to the gaming podcasts.
|
|
So yeah, I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. I agree. I agree. He did say in his talk though that he
|
|
perhaps hadn't fully understood the way that Kickstarter works or the way that people respond
|
|
to it and so forth. So maybe that was part of the mistake in it in a way. Yeah, I think if you
|
|
look at the normal Kickstarter, the way it works is there's an initial burst and then it
|
|
tails off of it. And then it picks up again after a while. This is what usually happens.
|
|
And I think that's reflected in the fact that the person who's going to do the Kickstarter is all
|
|
their social media people ready and primed for the big launch. And then there's an initial
|
|
spurge. And then those people get the news out and then it takes a while for that to feed back in
|
|
to get the last to get the last, you know, pushed through. I also wonder why he went to Kickstarter,
|
|
not Indiegogo, who would allow him to the option to, you know, to keep the money that he already had.
|
|
So yet 85% of the total goal, you know, why not just set up an Indiegogo and then you got 85%
|
|
of your total goal. Yeah, it might not be all of it, but it's 85% of us.
|
|
Didn't he say missed it by 85%? I thought that many got 25%.
|
|
Yeah, still 25% of, yeah, sorry, missed. Yeah, but it says something, isn't it? It's something.
|
|
So my advice to tattoo would be to plan that in three months time that he tries this again and,
|
|
you know, have ducks in a row and get people involved so that people have blog posts ready to go
|
|
on the day of the thing. And that there's a hashtag trending on Twitter or on whatever the things are.
|
|
And that's, he's got interviews lined up on the other Linux podcasts and gaming shows and stuff like that.
|
|
Yeah, I agree. Yeah, yeah, good work.
|
|
Now indeed, indeed, I'm sure there's lots of outlets that would be quite happy to talk about it.
|
|
Absolutely. Yeah, talk about it or whatever, you know, so yeah, and even there like the he's he's already
|
|
of open source news and stuff like that. Yeah, seems like a cool.
|
|
Yeah, okay, following day, the open source gaming. Yeah, can we can we do that now?
|
|
Okay, so we had previously we had tattoos coming to both cool discoveries and then lost
|
|
and Bronx had the common jewellery that? Yes, indeed. Lots and broke says it must be me. I must
|
|
only be running junkers. I've never owned a machine that could play games like this. I'd like to
|
|
try it someday when I joined the 21st century gaming world. It's not to see lots of rocks. It's not
|
|
just you. Yeah, yeah, I've never aimed for a machine that could run things like that. My kids,
|
|
I can't do so, so I know it can be done. I don't know what what it requires, particularly.
|
|
We had a interface zero RPG play with tattoo, lobot, entage, playing interface zero.
|
|
And Claudio, I am had a comment. Wonderful intros to RPGs. Loved listening to this episode. My sons
|
|
and I wanted, wanted to start playing a tabletop RPG like D&D, children's and dragons,
|
|
but we're sure we weren't sure of how the gameplay would be like. My eldest and I have our characters
|
|
created already, which was fun to develop so that give us a head start. Since I've never played
|
|
anything like this, but I've always had an interest. I've had no idea how it would play on.
|
|
Even though the type of RPG was different in this episode, and yet enjoyable enough for me
|
|
to want to try interface zero as well, it made everything much clearer. This felt almost like playing
|
|
a text adventure on a computer, even though it is exactly that minus the computer. Lots of fun
|
|
to listen to as a spectator as well. Thanks for the episode and I look forward to more like this.
|
|
Yeah, nice comment, actually. I certainly got an insight into what a game like this would be like,
|
|
and not really fully appreciating it. I live in my own bubble, you know. I'm sure I thought it
|
|
would have put me right for the rest of it, because she's into D&D. But as I've probably said before,
|
|
but yeah, I found it quite fascinating to listen to. It was a good way of getting the message across
|
|
to people who might be interested in this type of stuff, I thought. Absolutely. I was at the end of this
|
|
show going, okay, what's going on? And then at the end of the next one, which we were also going to
|
|
be discussing, I was going, I was so into it, it was like listening to an audiobook, you know,
|
|
with even with the discussions, it was like, what are you going to do? And what's your character going to
|
|
do? And really put the whole role of Chlatu, the game master. Wow, what the amount of work that
|
|
that person has to do, they're really, you're really just privileged to be there because they've done
|
|
a lot of work reading up on all the rules and having their imagination and the discussions and stuff,
|
|
so fascinating. Loved it. I really go, no, you can't have been in an hour, you know, that was there,
|
|
we're at an hour and then no, it hasn't been an hour. It was just so, we went by so fast, it was so
|
|
cool. Yeah, yeah, I found myself a lot more fascinated than I thought it was going to be. And
|
|
yeah, it was quite looking forward to the next one. Yeah, what's going to happen? How's it going to end?
|
|
So the following day, nothing grounds people more than XSL and XSLT proc by Chlatu. And here's a,
|
|
how to convert XSL to XSLT. Do you want to read your comment? Oh, yes, I forgot, I comment. Yes,
|
|
so this was really interesting. I enjoyed it. So a lot was very clearly explained and the example
|
|
was helpful. I tried to understand XSL back in 2012 when I was writing bass scripts, let me download
|
|
music for magnitude. They held their catalog in XML at that time. Now it's an SQLite database.
|
|
And I used XSLT proc and XSL to extract stuff. I didn't find any very clear explanations
|
|
of what could be done in XSL at that time, though I winged it by copying examples and using trial
|
|
and error. Your links just seem to fill in many of the gaps in my understanding. So thanks for
|
|
them too. And to which Chlatu replies, glad you enjoyed us. Sorry, glad you enjoyed it. I just
|
|
can't wait for your Latin episode, although you will call us. Ah, tech. Oh, something. Yeah,
|
|
that's complex. Yeah, obviously, clinging on. It's caused some amusement. Obviously, we got
|
|
indoctrinated into this stuff. I think in the university I worked at, there was a group in the
|
|
maths department because math, mathematicians used, what's it called, math, tech, and whatever,
|
|
there's a mathematical version of it. And there you were very adamant about the, the rope
|
|
pronounce and stuff. And we ran it on our Vax cluster back in the 80s and stuff because we didn't
|
|
have anything. There was nothing better. There was no Microsoft Word and stuff. We're using
|
|
PVC microbes to do other stuff. So, yeah. So that must have stuck in my brain for some reason.
|
|
I said it before and I'll say it again, you can still tell the quality of a Latin document
|
|
over anything else. They just look so. It's something perfect. Yeah. Yeah. There's something very
|
|
beautiful about it, actually. Yeah. But you can, you're a restriction of what you can do in
|
|
Latin itself. If you're going to tech, which is the sort of the thing it's written in,
|
|
then you can do even more stuff and you can change your font and do all sorts of stuff.
|
|
It's a huge subject if you, if you ever want to get into it. But yeah, it's exciting stuff.
|
|
XSL and XSLT is on my list of stuff to do. But Dave, I happened on it because actually this entire
|
|
month has been very demotivating from the HBO point of view due to the number of issues that we're
|
|
having. It's basically every morning wondering what else is going on or going wrong. So. Yeah.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. I know. I know. It's been quite messy, hasn't it? Yeah. It's nothing down to Josh.
|
|
He's like you, we go, if we, it's nothing about the provider, it's nothing about anybody. It's
|
|
just constant stream of things going on. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just a little bit demotivating.
|
|
Yeah. I must just to digress a second. The notes here, which contain XML. Boy, did they cause
|
|
some problems with internet archive? It's like because they, they store their HTML as XML.
|
|
So HTML with XML in it, stored as XML, turns into a bit of a nightmare and getting it to behave
|
|
correctly. I found a bug in my in my code for doing this, but they also have bugs at their end,
|
|
which I had to work around. So we store it in my SQL and parse it through PHP, which converts it
|
|
as well. Oh, it's a mess. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's, you know, I get it. I wake up in the morning
|
|
and get an email like that for you and I go, oh my god, what are we doing?
|
|
The e-pages on stuff where you go, oh, good. I was going out of my nut that evening. I was trying
|
|
to solve this problem. And I, the process of writing it down to say to somebody, even if I was writing
|
|
it to dev null, I think it's something that I don't really, unfortunately, you're dev null. Sometimes
|
|
you get these messages. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And that morning, as well, what's not helping is I've,
|
|
I had lots of problems with my SSH keys to the HP or site. So I've had to copy and paste my
|
|
passwords in and all the scripts that I have to work anymore. So trivial things have become a
|
|
pain in the buttocks. And then for some reason, oh, yeah. So now the version of software on the
|
|
website is does not reflect what we haven't get. And I have no idea how that's happened because
|
|
I've been using Git to push it up to the website. So I am having to go through a merging process.
|
|
And the hardest that I have for that was over there and I wasn't working properly and I couldn't
|
|
find connectors. And it was just, it's just, you know, some days, some months, Dave, it's just one
|
|
thing after another. Oh, yeah. Oh, yes. It's out there. Anyway, it's, it's not. And then, you know,
|
|
you have the issues with some, we have enough issues as it is on daily life without some plunker
|
|
deciding to make our life misery because they're using up some voluntary resources that somebody
|
|
is paying for out of their own pockets. Thank you very much. You wonder, anyway, if they could do a
|
|
show explaining their motivation, that would be awesome. Yeah. Yeah. I think you know,
|
|
wait a long time for that one, but we can't but try. And by the way, we've had over the years,
|
|
lots of hackers who have found stuff on the site and have given us time to deal with it and moved on.
|
|
And we appreciate that. And that is, that is definitely something that makes you a hacker as
|
|
opposed to a plunker. There you go. The following day, Lost and Brunk shares some thoughts about
|
|
the need to talk about addiction. And yeah, this was a fantastic, fantastic episode. And he's right.
|
|
Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's, yes, it's, it's hard to summarize a fact. It's certainly true that
|
|
that the whole, the whole issue of mental health is something which is surrounded by
|
|
all manner of taboos. Yeah. And of course, the addiction being one element of that is
|
|
even more so in some respects. But yeah, we, the, the Victorian view of all this sort of stuff,
|
|
I think, has a legacy. And was this, this, and somebody, I think, in listening to a mental
|
|
health program on the BBC, the other day. And they were talking about how we're using terminology
|
|
from maybe my childhood about mental health issues and we're pointing out these are now, now,
|
|
no longer used because they're a Victorian legacy. And, you know, it's, I mean, in fairness,
|
|
at the time, they were doing their best, but, you know, things are moving. Yeah. Yeah, sure.
|
|
And the, the, the logical part of me goes, well, you know, if you get a photo from time to time,
|
|
you should, you get a pain in your foot every now and then, you should, you should not be surprised
|
|
that something in your head goes wrong from time to time. So you have just general mental health.
|
|
But I mean, his topic was about addiction. And I've seen this, I would argue, though, that
|
|
there is no such thing as alcoholism, you know, being able to deal with it. I've, I've seen
|
|
lots of families where it has, it has just eaten away like a cancer. Everybody else and the,
|
|
the person in question continues on and continues on and continues on and continues on. It's a
|
|
horrible, horrible, horrible disease, I think. No, absolutely. Yeah, absolutely.
|
|
And gambling even, I've seen, yeah, horrible, horrible things. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And, and back to
|
|
the smoking thing as well. Yeah, that's it. That's also a deadly, deadly business. Yep. Cool.
|
|
Not all, obviously not cool. Just if you are a prediction does affect your life, that is
|
|
definitely fallen under the category of things of interest to hackers. Talk to us about
|
|
indeed. Following date, server basics 101, clatu endeavors to explain the basics of server
|
|
administration. Why? Why? Has this not been a series before? This is beyond me. Yeah, no, it's,
|
|
it's so obvious. Yeah, I've never cut to me to do anything like this. I know clatu has been
|
|
taking over the network this month, which is great, because I happen to do a call for shows,
|
|
but there is now a call for shows out. We need shows. We're on our shows by then the next week.
|
|
So yeah, she shows, we know her also have a look at your the about page. Yeah, go to your host page
|
|
on the about page, click on about and then on host. And if the number 2017 doesn't come next
|
|
to your name or worse, you can find your name on that. Then that will be an ideal time to send in
|
|
the show. And if you have any, if you get any errors or anything or if your file is greater than
|
|
probably a hundred megabytes, I think, if the file that you're uploading is a hundred megabytes,
|
|
just tick the option URL or something uploaded later. And then email the admin or myself,
|
|
Kenneth Valenda, and I will figure something out how you can get the show to us. Just plenty of
|
|
is an SEP get to my sort of my own server or something. Yeah, yeah, I got FTP to work, but
|
|
but it's it's it has its own issues switch off switch off passive mode. Oh, anyway, she has
|
|
she in she says, thanks, I made a connection. This is so silly, but I had not recently realized
|
|
the aptness of the term server and client, you explained so clearly that the server
|
|
computer serves a client computer. Thank you. Yeah, it's I remember the day I had that particular spark
|
|
of insight myself. And it wasn't my first day on the job either. It was well into it. Well,
|
|
I came from the background of mainframes where there was one computer that the university had one
|
|
computer. And you know, so the server client thing was nobody caught use those terms. And then
|
|
you know, things changed and people had computers on their desks and stuff in the center,
|
|
et cetera, et cetera. And those sort of concepts crept in in an insidious way without really being
|
|
all that well explained. And did you ever encounter the X system in the early days where the idea
|
|
of server and client was backwards? Yeah, and that's exactly in investigating that. I tweaked
|
|
that was exactly that particular day was when I when I first came across the X because I was going
|
|
the servers, what the server's running on my machine. Oh, bizarre, bizarre. Yes, yes. Anyway,
|
|
0 x f 1 0 e says Solaris. Nice. Nice start. Clare 2. I'll make sure to point
|
|
Junius's admins to this series. So was was the third option which isn't really around any more
|
|
Solaris? Because open Solaris fork Illumos is in fact six years after Brian Cantrell's fork. Yeah,
|
|
the rise and development of Illumos using X talk. Well, I'm having difficulty passing.
|
|
Yeah, and he refers to to link there still around. It's the base for distributions like
|
|
joint smart OS and the database appliance Delphix and upstream for open ZFS too. So yeah,
|
|
don't forget Solaris. Yeah. And we've had interviews with the Solaris
|
|
and the Illumos folks. Oh, it's first time actually. Yes, indeed. Then floater 2 said the open BSD
|
|
user, I've been running servers since before you were born. Sorry, I have to go back and do that
|
|
with an accent. I've been running servers since before you were born. And 1975. And I'm enjoying
|
|
this series. It's good to have a series on these taboo things, you know, dah, dah, dah, dah,
|
|
excellent. By the way, if anyone wants to do my accent or how you perceive my accent to be,
|
|
feel free to do so. Yes, yes. I sometimes do impressions of my own accent. Anyway,
|
|
there was a fake Ken Fallon. And his now vanished, I guess. It's a shame.
|
|
Get blobs. Klaatu talks about git media and git annex. This, the whole, I don't know, I haven't
|
|
a complete brain thing when it comes to git. I have a whole series of commands that I know how to do
|
|
but I really just do not get it. I don't understand it. I'm man enough to say it.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I have, I just get on a daily basis really. But it is a case of just doing the
|
|
magic thing that you do that, that you've just done lots of times that don't necessarily understand.
|
|
It's like the three commands. It's the, it's the escape call on WQ exclamation mark.
|
|
I've been using that for years and having noteworthy in VIM, noteworthy did, except this was
|
|
the magic key thing that you needed to do to save your file and exit in VIM on tell you did your
|
|
series. So I guess we need a series in case guys. That's what we're saying. Yeah, it's a big
|
|
subject. It's a big, big subject. Yeah, it starts and we have lots and lots of slots, Dave. We have
|
|
216 nice fresh new slots coming up on the first of January, Dave. Yep, when taken. However,
|
|
that said, I do have needs to do this very, very, very, very same thing because I've got a
|
|
whole group of test scripts that involve ingesting large movies and 4K and AK movies and HD and SD
|
|
and I don't want them in git but I do want them somewhere where people who are running them
|
|
can get them if they need them. So I have absolutely need for that. Yeah, yeah, it's
|
|
not a thing I've encountered. We did not use git at my work or I did but nobody else did and
|
|
refused to accept that it was a way to do stuff. That place, university is a strange organisation.
|
|
Anyway, I can, I can, I can understand why it's necessary and appreciate its existence, etc. So
|
|
that was very good. So the following day we had the Interest 0 RPG play and all I can say about
|
|
this one is that why did they stop at this and this is exactly why I didn't want to get into
|
|
to this sort of role playing games because I just could not put it down after an hour. You know,
|
|
I, it would be an all nighter or nothing. I need to know how it ends. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
|
|
it's very much that, isn't it? You want, you want to know. It is like reading, reading that
|
|
interesting book. Yeah, you kind of, you just just want to go right to the end and then
|
|
and you realise it's four in the morning or something. Yeah, the only problem with that though is
|
|
if you've got an interesting book, you can do it yourself. Whereas this, you're keeping people
|
|
out of their beds, you know. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know. Like I said, my daughter's into D&D and I think
|
|
some of her sessions can be, yeah, can be long. Yeah, the important word of those students.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, she's in the final year and I was so she dead. I hope she's not doing too much.
|
|
Yes, yeah, that's unhovering the floor. There's two things that you do before your exams.
|
|
When I go and when I visit my daughter, I always take it back in cleaner because, yeah, anyway,
|
|
no, I never do. I never had a house was always spicken span when it was exam time because, yeah,
|
|
I just, anything to avoid studying with me. Oh, clean the fridge. I wish. Yeah, yeah, it doesn't work
|
|
like that. It's simply to do less. Anyway, no, that's a good thing. So the following day we had
|
|
scanning books. I explained how and why I was scanning schoolbooks and, you know, this is
|
|
exactly my point. You put up a show like this after all the shows of Lost and Brong,
|
|
so Dave and all the people this month, Mr X and however, you go, oh, why did I bother? Oh, well,
|
|
I don't agree. I don't agree. I don't agree. Everybody's, everybody's show has its own merits and
|
|
I thought it was fascinating. So no, I don't think you should look at it lower. And I was delighted to
|
|
know that there was a thing called graphics magic as well as image magic. So I've done the show on
|
|
image magic at some point and graphics magic looks better and realized that image magic could sort
|
|
of stuck and and gone a bit moldy along the way. So good for that. Yeah, actually, I heard that
|
|
on as a, you know, one of the, I don't know if you listen to the, the podcasts with the guys who
|
|
they published the magazine and they're called and they misscapes me now. Oh, you full circle stuff
|
|
is no, not the other magazine. The one that did the open source collection on the next
|
|
source thing. And then you mean the next voice. Yeah, the next voice, of course. Thank you.
|
|
They had one of their segments on one of their, you know, finds of the week or whatever was,
|
|
was the graphics magic, somebody from graphics magic had gotten touched at them because they had
|
|
mentioned image magic and they had said no, the project is frozen and that they forked and
|
|
graphic magic is the, is the one to use. And then bam, and I looked and there was already installed.
|
|
So and a lot easier to use a lot clearer documentation. Yeah, very, very nice all round.
|
|
Yes, I wrote stuff in pearl using image, image magic library, which was strange and, but it works.
|
|
So so I'm interested, it's just to find out what the equivalent is in graphics magic.
|
|
Very good. That was great. Thank you for that. And 24 or 31 information underground local control
|
|
and I'm really glad information underground has come back. And wow, it's, it's this sort of thing
|
|
makes you realize, you know, the, the way Americans think about democracy. It's more so than,
|
|
you know, you see the, the two horse race that is the presidential elections. Yes, I know there
|
|
are lots of other candidates that don't get the word. But then you see the, the amount of democracy
|
|
there is in the local areas. It's fascinating, fascinating to see. Yeah, yeah. So there are local
|
|
aspects of British society as well that often get things done that wouldn't get done otherwise.
|
|
So that was how I was sort of interpreting what they were talking about. And also there was a lot
|
|
of mention of union activity and stuff. Yeah, I imagine unions are very different in the states.
|
|
I was quite an active union member when I was working. I've been on picket lines and been and
|
|
protested outside parliament and things of that sort. Not to any great effect, but you know,
|
|
it's hard to know. But if we hadn't done it, would we would, would we've achieved less? I don't know.
|
|
So, yeah, but I don't know. I can't map the one to the other very easily.
|
|
Fascinating topic. People do not be afraid to do shows like this. Do not do not be afraid to
|
|
to assume that people will know about things in your neighborhood. Do not be afraid to do a show
|
|
on how local democracy works in your own area or not. How, how, you know, if you happen to live in
|
|
a country that that frowns upon democracy and you feel that your system of government is a good
|
|
system or you want to tell us about it, then feel free to do so. That is what H. Burr is all about.
|
|
So Zen Flotor 2 says benevolent dictator of the magical forest. I was amused at the Debian
|
|
comment about not being transparent. I will accept that. I don't use Debian and the more since
|
|
cringe bang has ended, a tier in my own eye. Debian is a community run distro, so is free BST,
|
|
so is net BST, so is gen 2, so is void linux and archlinux. Both of the non-transparent
|
|
distributions such as open BST, which is run by a benevolent dictator known as Theo,
|
|
or slackware, which is run by benevolent dictator known as Patrick, to make really solid distros,
|
|
which are great many people love. But as an aged old man, it does make me smile at your comments
|
|
of the Floss youth who complain. They simply don't like non-transparent government. Yes,
|
|
they stand by their monarch's derived oasis. Not that in complaining that you're human.
|
|
Very doubtful. Two shades or two shades. Yes, yes. I had difficulty parsing when I first read it,
|
|
but yeah, I think you made it to the point. I was going to read that first. I was going,
|
|
why is he going with this? Yes. No, no, he's right. He's right. That's quite an interesting insight
|
|
there. Right. The following day, living with Nokia 6, an upgrade to which Dave Morris replied.
|
|
Well, Tony was directed one bit of this to me because I'd asked why he was moving on from his
|
|
one plus one, and he said it because he can't get 4G on gift gaff. And I said, cheers, Tony,
|
|
thanks for the clarification. I'm also on gift gaff, but wasn't aware of the 4G issue issue,
|
|
and the one plus one, I scarcely use my phone and I'm currently using a fraction of the data I pay
|
|
for each month. So I don't see this being a problem. So I'm really actually just digressing.
|
|
Beezer says he doesn't even have a smartphone, and I went, wow, I should do that because I don't
|
|
need a lemon smartphone. It's more of a nuisance than anything else. So have you seen the Raspberry Pi
|
|
one, the Raspberry Pi zero and there, I haven't, I've not looked into it in detail, but I've heard of it.
|
|
Yeah. Oh, I so want that. Especially good. Allow myself an extra six hours when I go through
|
|
customs. Oh, wow. It's my phone. Anyway, OWA says Nokia 6 update. I was wondering how the Snapdragon
|
|
430 processor is doing with the apps you run. The Nokia 6 interested me when it first appeared,
|
|
but I had concerns about the 430 processor. Everything else was a major plus for me, screen size,
|
|
fingerprint scanner, NFC, and metal build, any comments, especially compared to other mid-tier
|
|
phones like the Moto G5S Plus. It does sound like a nice phone. What do you need for a G?
|
|
Just get faster access to you. It's a better bandwidth here. It's pretty cool. I use a
|
|
quite a lot, even for certain hotspots and stuff around that the kids can connect.
|
|
Oh, right, right, right. My son is still away in the Borrowaway Parts. He's in New Zealand at the
|
|
moment. Internet there is pretty crappy where they're going anyway. Backpackers,
|
|
hostels, and stuff. They're using a phone to hotspot while they're there. I do appreciate that,
|
|
but I don't do that sort of thing. I'm too old. Yeah, I don't know. This is what interests me about
|
|
doing it on a Raspberry Pi Zero, because what I want to be able to do is tether my laptop.
|
|
Usually, although that said, now I am using my phone more and more and more, not because I really
|
|
want to. It's more that I'm forced to with the price of MP3 players. One of my MP3 players,
|
|
the battery blew up, and yeah, I can't get a battery. I'm not paying 175 for a used device.
|
|
That's, yeah. I know. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But I'd like a little phone that I could keep
|
|
in my pocket, you know, like a shirt pocket, something because one plus one is a great lump of a
|
|
thing. Yeah, technically. Tell me about it. Listen to things. It's a ridiculous size thing for me.
|
|
I had a, I had a, like, would be nice to have that little Raspberry Pi Zero Fold.
|
|
If the battery life was quite good, you could do tethering to like, is there a spire,
|
|
one or something, and then so there you have your external device with a keyboard that you could
|
|
do some real work, but yeah, I digress. And do you want to ring, read Tony's comment?
|
|
Sorry, we're, oh, yes, yes, sorry, Tony, I got, I got completely lost. I replied to,
|
|
replied to RWA re app performance. I've been using the phone now for over two months,
|
|
and the performance is better than the old one plus one. All the apps I use are snappy and
|
|
responsive with no lag that I can detect. I can't compare to any other phone as I've not used
|
|
anything else during this time. I'm not a mobile gamer or any type of, for fact. So I,
|
|
I cannot say what game performance is like on the phone, but I think it stands up to most mid-range
|
|
devices well. If it hadn't been for the 4G issue, I would probably have stuck with the OnePlus
|
|
one, just flashed it and saved myself 200 pound, 200 million pounds. That's a hell of a phone.
|
|
But I'm happy and my wife will get an upgrade to her Nexus 4 at some stage.
|
|
Cool phones, interesting one. Keep them come on about phones.
|
|
Yes, the whole only day, you were right, I was wrong. I can eat tumble pie,
|
|
where I correct the inaccuracies. I really, really don't like being wrong, Dave. Not that I don't,
|
|
I, but I'm so often wrong. That is why I don't like to be wrong. Just happens so often,
|
|
and all the time. I went to live with that person. No, I can't, I really can't, and I can't,
|
|
I trouble over things that I've said to people like 15, 20, 30 years ago now at this stage.
|
|
You know, I, well, I've just found a piece of information that I've proven like.
|
|
Oh, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I've been there. Yes, yes. That thing that you suddenly find that confirms
|
|
that you're, that you're an idiot, you know, you thought you were an idiot, but now you've got
|
|
confirmation. But, you know, slagging off one of the kids at the school that Noel Starski
|
|
and Hutch's car is not red with a white stripe. It's gray with a white stripe. Isn't it guys?
|
|
Yes, it is. Spot the one guy who had a color TV in class.
|
|
Oh, dear. Oh, so easy, so easy. Anyway, Shane, sorry, sorry, we're getting that wrong.
|
|
Thanks, Wendy. Go for it. We're getting it right for what we're going to be right.
|
|
Oh, there'll be more of these, don't worry. But it's quite, it's some quite interesting stuff.
|
|
I haven't read all your links yet. I haven't had a lot of time since that I reheard that one.
|
|
The whole twisted pair business has fascinating me because we ran to Supero all over the campus
|
|
when I first went to work at that unnamed university. Would you believe when I left there,
|
|
I got voluntary severance, which means they pay you to go away. And I had to sign the thing that
|
|
said I would never disparage them. So I'm always cautious about even mentioning them.
|
|
So, yeah, yeah, yeah, I probably do it. I doubt whether anybody listens to Hutch here.
|
|
But the head twisted pairs all over the campus. It was sort of run from lamppost.
|
|
So a guy sat on the far side of the campus typing on a terminal, that's just terminal,
|
|
so the mainframe over four core to spare RS232 would be very prone to atmospheric issues.
|
|
And the day we had a lightning storm on the campus, it just blew all of these
|
|
lines to smithereens. All the line drivers had all the chips had a little holes in them
|
|
and the lightning hit it and stuff. And the time when I won't go into stopping the second.
|
|
But the one where we spent months trying to debug one, only to find that the guy who'd set it up
|
|
had swapped the twisted pair. So it started out with the twisted pair. And then one why I went down
|
|
another twisted pair and the other one went down another twisted pair. And then they joined back
|
|
up again and somewhere else. So it went through cabinets and stuff and he just got lost or he was
|
|
having a bad day or something. And they couldn't work out why the signal was so crappy even with
|
|
line drivers and everything on it. So yeah, so twisted pairs made me twitch.
|
|
I put in a link to a video there on balanced audio and noise reduction. If anyone's ever
|
|
wondered why you would have a phantom power in a speaker or no, I'm not even going to say this
|
|
because I'm not sure about this. So I'm shitting the hell up now before I have to do another episode.
|
|
If anyone wants to do an episode on phantom power and microphones while you need them, please do
|
|
that. There's a balanced audio noise reduction video which is quite interesting. I linked to
|
|
in that show. It's interesting. So I read Frank's comment. Please do. Frank says best title ever.
|
|
See above. And is this the body of his comment? See the time. You're right. I have a
|
|
strong that one. There was a that comes from a there was a back in the day when DSM networks
|
|
were starting up in Ireland. There was like two a new provider. And their selling point was that
|
|
they had voicemail but nobody at a clue what voicemail was because nobody had answering machines either
|
|
in Ireland at the time. And they had this ad on the newspaper or on the on the radio. Yeah.
|
|
And the premise of it was, you know, this guy was obviously somebody might be guy who
|
|
could be a girl. I don't know. They were dialing in their voiceman. You have one new message.
|
|
Boop. Hi, John. Oh, I was okay. Hi, John. I'm really sorry about last night. You were right.
|
|
I was wrong. Doop. Hi, John. You have one new message. I just kept playing it over and over again.
|
|
You were right. I was wrong. You were right. I was wrong. Excellent. I think that one ad in
|
|
itself introduced the whole concept of voicemail for everybody. Yeah. Brilliant. That's rather
|
|
nice. I tried to several times to look for a copy of that on the internet, but I last can't find it.
|
|
Yes. Yes. There's a certain age where things when they reach a certain age that they don't
|
|
seem to be on the internet at all. Actually, I think the internet is such a fickle thing.
|
|
It maintains memories of things being on the internet, but the things themselves are actually gone
|
|
and gone forever and will never come back. Yes. XKCD has a very good cartoon about that,
|
|
a very good thing about that. So the library is pretty much the one constant that you have where
|
|
you can get access to information over time. It disappears. But we've seen that ourselves on
|
|
our shows, Dave, you know, part of the work that you do and that you don't get a half an
|
|
up praise for is the archive.org work. And a lot of that has gone back to older shows and they
|
|
domains that they were referring to have ceased to exist. The images of the audio has gone,
|
|
you know, a lot of the old podcasts that we used to listen to just come to. If it wasn't for
|
|
the work of, you know, the internet archive and the memories don't think of the way back.
|
|
Yeah, the way back machine and things like that. The archive is out there who are scanning
|
|
books and archiving this stuff. And, you know, I don't get me on my high horse about copyright,
|
|
just fine and dandy as well. But I think that the scales of balance too much there should be
|
|
a requirement that if you have copyright, if you're claiming copyright in a piece of work,
|
|
then that piece of work should be archived in three places. That's what the Trinity colleges
|
|
were for. That you've got a book, you put it into Cambridge, Oxford and Dublin, that if any of
|
|
the, any of those places were damaged in any way that you would have a full copy of the book.
|
|
And that happens during World War II, both libraries in Oxford and Cambridge were destroyed,
|
|
are were damaged. And quite a lot of the works only survived in Dublin because they were neutral at
|
|
the time. So I'm very important stuff. I don't think we have a lot of lost works as a result of
|
|
that, but they're not as I get off my high horse and continue talking about the audiobook club,
|
|
PC Harris, Cybrosis, say Dave, can I get a... Cybrosis, I think you're right. Yes.
|
|
Whoa, there's a first. The synthesizer didn't like it at all, but yes, Cybrosis is what they thought
|
|
it was as well. So it's pretty good. And quite a lot of these shows are in the queue. And I'd like to
|
|
thank very much these guys for coming back, the audiobook club and Poké and the guys over on
|
|
Uranum. I'm very sorry for that trick that they pulled the news. It was not nice. And so I think that
|
|
was it for all the shows. I was amazed. I hadn't realized these, these were so old, these
|
|
audiobook clubs, because they were talking about how they just heard my show on how I make coffee.
|
|
Yes, it's a lot of water. What's going on? They were concerned that putting them in a vacuum jar
|
|
would suck the life essence out of the coffee or something, but I don't think so.
|
|
That there's a whole load of shows that could follow on from that one, I'm sure.
|
|
And they've added a link to their book itself where you can follow on from that.
|
|
I do like the book clubs. I've always thought it would be cool to be a member of the book club,
|
|
and now I am if more standing outside in the front lawn looking in type of way than actively
|
|
participating. It's good. They do a great review. I do enjoy listening to them, but I can't say
|
|
I'm going to be rushing out to listen to this book though. It didn't sound that
|
|
desirable, but maybe I should give it a try. Give it a go.
|
|
Give it a go, and then go. It's going to make up my own mind, but fair enough, that's what reviews
|
|
are all about. Note two volunteers, comments marked in green were read in the last community
|
|
news show and should be ignored in this one. I don't know why you don't leave those in Dave, because
|
|
they were really, that's that's kind of cool. Very nice.
|
|
Okay, completely ruining the whole professionalism of this. You get the full
|
|
amount to hear, guys. Comments on this show, what I'm talking about is Dave has put in a comment
|
|
in the comments to tell us not to mention certain comments. It's been a long running thing,
|
|
but there are 44 comments in total, 18 or from nine previous shows. The first one was comment
|
|
number four, information underground 21st century superstar, and this was by flat two who commented
|
|
on the discussion. Hey, blind date, set frightening having a flying non-sounds probably occur
|
|
I found the album in a random kiwi upshop. Oh yeah, this is about, he mentioned a kiwi band and
|
|
blind date commented about where more with more information. Clatic continues. Shortly before
|
|
moving to New Zealand, I found a Chris Knox CD on the street literally. It was lying in the
|
|
gutter and absolutely fell in love with not only Chris's music, but also that general sound and feel.
|
|
I've been really enjoying discovering kiwi music and kiwi air in general.
|
|
Pretty iwiana. Could be, could be. More likely, probably is. General rule, my pronunciation is
|
|
probably wrong. Well, you don't mind me interjecting. No, it's my idea. So the next one was a comment,
|
|
comment nine on HPR2378YDocbook. It's got two script episode on Docbook where R2 is commenting
|
|
KWNPSA. I took a look at the page, Bob. Good stuff. One addition, there's a missing entry in your
|
|
text editor section, Gnu Emax. Probably just an oversight. Hardly hardy hardy hard. They can't leave
|
|
it, can they? Frank Bell's episode, free weights and a bicycle. BJB had a comment about a
|
|
5bx and a 10bx memory lane. When I was a preteen, my mom brought a 5bx booklet and 310bx
|
|
booklets, one for each member of the family. I was never good at being a regular exosyser, but my
|
|
mom has done her 10bx routine her whole life. She eventually lost her book, but she still does her
|
|
routine three times a week. She's not tapered off though, still stuck at the highest level she
|
|
got to, and she's not growing old and wildly. She's not growing old, waddling me smiley face.
|
|
What a great memory. Thanks for the show. Cool, eh? Yeah, yeah, yeah. The whole subject of
|
|
exercise and continuing it is an important one, I think. It's a good subject to discuss.
|
|
Yeah, could get a series any time soon. Or we need more people to send in shows, Dave.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, that's a good point, actually, yeah. Never, never, never mention that before.
|
|
Just came up. It's just amazing. Right, Pastor Generator by Zolk, Aaron had a comment about
|
|
Haystack Passer Generator. And this, what do you think about the Haystack Passer Generator
|
|
by GRC.com, who's got a Pastor Generator? It's all pretty cool. Yeah, I remember looking at that
|
|
at some stage. Is it not a JavaScript thing that you can access on these pages, aren't the one?
|
|
Yeah, I can't remember. Yeah, it looked pretty good, what I could tell. And he seemed to know
|
|
it, seems to know what he's doing is Mr. GRC, whose name is, escape me? Gibson. Yes, yes, thank you.
|
|
Gibson Research Corporation, or something. So two, three, nine, five is a comment number one,
|
|
which is a hookers show on ObamaCare, BJB says, thanks, thanks for your economic series. I find
|
|
it very interesting. That's just very difficult. Yeah, comment five to do do do do do do do me using
|
|
super glue to create landmarks and keyboards and replying to comments from the community episode.
|
|
I agree that I might be able to get permission to use work resources on my own time, assuming there
|
|
is information. I'm legally bound not to reveal and doesn't contain proprietary information,
|
|
but asking for that permission is more effort than I want to make. I'll see what I can
|
|
muster about work resources. Oh, yeah, this was him. We asked during his show, he was talking
|
|
about work stuff. And we were saying, oh, go on, get it and stuff. So I ask, you don't know,
|
|
the mic does. Yes, yes. I don't think we were suggesting that he broke any confidence or any
|
|
sort of that, but but his main frame experiences and so forth. I think there's a, there's a whole
|
|
fund of useful and interesting information there that absolutely one would like to hear more.
|
|
And you know, if you can't talk about his own experiences, he could talk about Bob's
|
|
experiences in the fictitious company working on mainframes. Absolutely. Bob's very handy
|
|
for his friend, Abina. So, how about that? Robin, comment six. Yes.
|
|
D-O-D-D dummy. That's the way I say it. Anyway, it says control versus function keys.
|
|
In the augcast planet ISE channel in free node, Glad to mention the use of this that more people
|
|
might have. I had it myself and didn't consider using this. The use is to distinguish between the
|
|
left control and function keys on laptops. For example, control is usually in the bottom left
|
|
most position on HP laptops, whereas those two keys are reversed on Lenovo's. I've decided,
|
|
I've used this method to mark the control on both. For what it's worth, I decided to use three
|
|
dots to superglue on a horizontal line on the key because sometimes my finger hits that key
|
|
in different places. I chose to mark the control instead of the function key because the control
|
|
is the one I need to use most often in the control keys, not the same position and relative
|
|
to the function key on different keyboards. That makes perfect sense to me.
|
|
It's a great idea. I do like this idea. It's really, really very clever. Oh, yes, you like this,
|
|
but my iron and board one, Dave. My iron and board one. Yeah. Oh, there's no superglue. I mean,
|
|
they'd be superglue. Yeah, sorry. Then that would have been a whole different ballgame.
|
|
Anyway, there was a big discussion on information underground co-op paradise where the guys were
|
|
discussing how to start your own server co-op and change channels as well done. This was a fun
|
|
episode because of the enthusiasm of the presenters, some intriguing ideas. And BJP,
|
|
comment three says indie hosting. Would you be willing to provide DNS secondary or backup email
|
|
services? I run my own DNS server and email server, but it's a challenge to find the second
|
|
to make my services a bit more robust. I don't really want close friends to do this. I'd like it to
|
|
be cast a little wider. It's even hard to convince the ISPs to do it, sadly, but it's hard to find
|
|
like-minded people. You guys stand about right, smiley face. And if you like, I can second read me
|
|
you as well. To which I replied, do a show on how to set it up on something like a Raspberry Pi,
|
|
and I'll be happy to join a pool as well. I have here a fixed IP address with no portal
|
|
restrictions, so that's something we can do. It's always something I've always wanted to do is
|
|
just mirror my own DNS. I have no idea how to do it, but I have plenty of smaller domains that I'm
|
|
happy to test it on. Yeah, yeah. The last comment five from Silver on the same show,
|
|
alternate web server. Engine X is a great alternative to Apache web server, so it's silver.
|
|
Yeah, a lot of people use it for static webpages and for cloud as well. So call of Clat 2,
|
|
HPR Audio Boot Club. Katulu. Yes, obviously. Just set that deliberately to others. You correct me?
|
|
D-O-D-D-D-O-Me says there is a link to the audio. Is there a link to the audio you listen to?
|
|
Is there a link in the audio cast on the show notes of the episode? If so, I didn't see it,
|
|
but I missed it a lot. I found it by looking in the last boot club episode. It is not,
|
|
it might be worth adding to the next one. It will be a good idea, actually. Yeah, yeah. I mean,
|
|
4L Mussol file unavailable. Plus one for D-O-D-D's dummies comment above, I'm getting lost in the
|
|
D's then. However, does I W get minus C on call of Clatulu and gets a 403 forbidden error back?
|
|
Yeah, I think I've just opened it in Firefox and it works. Okay. If W get is not working on there,
|
|
you might want to try and spoof your user agent, I would say. Okay. And if you want,
|
|
if you want, maybe you should do a show about stuff like that as well. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I don't
|
|
have time to, sorry, I really genuinely don't have time. I need to fix this git mess and stuff.
|
|
So the last comment in the old comments that we like to do is to episode 406 in 2009,
|
|
in shine by Clatulu, and it's Cobra too, who was actually being interviewed, if I remember correctly,
|
|
says show notes. Reference to UnixPawn.com needs to be updated to UnixPawn.pro. We have lost
|
|
the original domain and it now leads to not safer work content. Well, I did, I edited that show
|
|
and but a little editors note against it. I didn't comment it, but I assumed anybody seeing the
|
|
comment will also see the, yeah, the notes had been modified. So, so yeah. Link adjusted in
|
|
the accordance with the comment one. That's pretty clear, I think. Who is it? Another XKCD,
|
|
all eventually, all websites redirect to a porn site. Yes, it's the whole domain thing of
|
|
domains falling off. Yeah, the edge of the world is a total claim. It's, it is when you do a project
|
|
like this HBR, it's really a, it's really, it's been fascinating for me. The stuff that you think
|
|
helping out on a network like this would be about actually turns out most of your time to spend
|
|
thinking about, you know, really weird issues like how to give more people involved and the
|
|
ratios of people who contribute to stuff. So, you end up listening to, to shows on, you know,
|
|
crowdsourcing or whatever and the whole archivist problem because our shows were around so long.
|
|
It's just fascinating. It's a really fantastic opportunity. We've had day, I know I've been a bit
|
|
down and depressed, but that probably has a lot to do with the Northern hemisphere and the light
|
|
disappearing. It's a bit of an issue, it's just a problem here. But it really is fascinating. They,
|
|
they issues that we have, that we deal with here compared to like stuff that we deal in work,
|
|
in work about maximum availability and high thingy. You know, this is completely different
|
|
kettle of fish, you know, long term RSS feeds that are going to be pulled in the hours, in the,
|
|
in the magnitudes of 24 hours as opposed to like microseconds and you're dealing with years as
|
|
opposed to months. It's just a very unique, unique sort of project that's going on here and
|
|
it's absolutely fascinating to work on it. It is, it is. Yes, yes, the, the long longevity issue is,
|
|
is a fascinating one because I was interested to, I mean, I am interested to look at other people
|
|
in their relationship with the archive.org and quite a lot of people use it as a repository for their
|
|
audio, but they don't do what we're doing and put the entire, or attempt to, and it might
|
|
to put the entire episode up there. So, you know, you can, you can follow HBO on, on archive.org
|
|
pretty much. They can't see the comments, you know. So, I'm, I'm a great advocate of what we're
|
|
doing actually. So, yeah, it's tough. It's tough what we're doing. Well, you're doing
|
|
particularly. And it's disheartening that, that, you know, the resources that are being given to us
|
|
kindly and every time I have to fire off an email to Josh and we are not again, you're just,
|
|
he, he must also wake up. Oh, God, this guy's complaining again of us. And you know, if, I know for
|
|
myself that if I was paying for this and work, at the level of response, I get, not my, not necessarily
|
|
this work, but the amount of commitment that Josh has to really this anonymous toast. If you wanted
|
|
to recommend an honest toast to your company, I really would do it without a shadow, without a
|
|
problem. Absolutely, no problem. It's the level of service that you get from essentially if you
|
|
guys is fantastic. Yeah. Yeah. And it's, it's cool. Absolutely. When you look back, maybe on the
|
|
year and the number of different shows that we've got in about different topics, it has been
|
|
absolutely fascinating. But also, yes. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yes. Absolutely. We, yeah, we don't stop
|
|
and think about this often enough, perhaps. Yeah. I think we, I think we actually should do and
|
|
and speaking of a time when you can stick back, relax and talk about stuff that's coming up,
|
|
is the new year show by put on, put on this year again, like last year by Honky Mugu, who have
|
|
offered to look after Hitchbarr New Year's show event again this year. They say we plan on starting
|
|
on 2017 1231 T 10 0 0 0 so 21st of December as 5 AM Eastern Standard Time. We will stop the
|
|
recording and the stream as long as there is no one on as 2018 0 1 0 1 T 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 as 7 AM
|
|
Eastern Standard Time. If people are still on, we'll keep the stream and the recording going.
|
|
Full further details are available on the mailing list and on the linux logcast website. So we will,
|
|
I'll probably start the stream, I'll start the stream on when the first, well, at the time 10
|
|
and we will then continue on. Probably be up before that and probably after us and
|
|
thanks again for honky for taking this over and you know Kevin is involved in that and loads of other
|
|
people. So it's really cool that they're doing it that I don't need to worry about that because it's
|
|
it's basically now it last year was so much more relaxed for me that I could just take the time
|
|
with the kids and chill out and then actually coming up to the mic and then having a chat with people
|
|
it was just nice. So what I'd like is people to come on and amid all the talking and stuff just
|
|
tell us what your coolest show was for the year and what surprised you what you'd like to hear
|
|
more about and stuff like that and also please remember to type in links in the in the ether chatter
|
|
and they put them in the in the stream or somewhere so that makes it a lot easier for people to
|
|
get the show notes. Okay, cool. Yes, loads of that. No, it should be good. So while we're on the
|
|
any other business I just comment that as I like to do that we had a couple of contributions to the
|
|
Tag and Summary Update project from Windigo and BJB in the last month. So we're gradually
|
|
whittling away at that particular problem. So thanks to them. Cool, thanks Steve and thanks
|
|
for doing that. Do you want to check the mailing list at all? Yeah, there's no. Don't think there's
|
|
a loss this year. There isn't a huge lot. No, no. Goes like that sometimes. Ham Radio Round Table,
|
|
SteveSander.net. Let's put that on. The size is down, continuing issues with people. All I can say
|
|
is yeah, stick with those folks. It's HBR might not be here today but it will definitely be here
|
|
tomorrow. So yeah, I've wind on enough about that. Focus more on the positive. They really cool
|
|
stuff that people have done and if you have not submitted a show this year it would be an ideal
|
|
time to do it and there are 260 nice clean slots opening up on the first through January. So go
|
|
look forward to that coming up. Cool. Anything else? Nope, that's it. Okay,
|
|
tune in tomorrow folks for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
All start. Okay folks.
|