- 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>
1977 lines
122 KiB
Plaintext
1977 lines
122 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2855
|
|
Title: HPR2855: 2018-2019 New Years Eve show part 6
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2855/hpr2855.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-24 12:21:33
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR episode 2008-155 entitled HBRNY Show 2018-2019 Part 6.
|
|
It is hosted by Honki Magu and is about 141 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
|
|
The summer is.
|
|
The HBR community comes together to say happy New Year and chat.
|
|
This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
|
|
At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An HonestHose.com.
|
|
Speaking of which, where does it need new episodes of the makers?
|
|
Yeah, well, there's door and there's a Aaron that usually records that and we're having
|
|
a hard time getting those guys together with everybody else.
|
|
That doesn't mean that I or somebody else couldn't record, but we're just lazy, I guess.
|
|
I do miss the makers podcast.
|
|
Then again, I think it's been about a year since I've had mine working, right?
|
|
So I need to actually just hunker down and get some time and try to get mine up and working again.
|
|
He or that or just buy a new one.
|
|
Which one did you have?
|
|
I had a trunk CX1.
|
|
Okay, I think Liam on the show has one of those.
|
|
Who likes it?
|
|
It's not bad, but I basically changed out the hot end.
|
|
And since I've changed out the hot end to like a generic E3D, I have not had any success
|
|
getting it to work right.
|
|
I think the stock hot end that I had with it, I basically just, I've done something
|
|
where I just quoted the thing up.
|
|
So the trunk CX1 is one of those 3D printers that I consider to be a cheap learning experience
|
|
where you basically, you've got to learn a lot of things the hard way.
|
|
I've never used one, but a friend of mine I think had one.
|
|
I saw it for about two seconds one day.
|
|
How's that now?
|
|
You sound perfect.
|
|
Just right.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Great.
|
|
So what I was saying before, before I went into Alvin Mode, was that I don't know where anybody's noticed,
|
|
but I was on a Mac system and I was using virtual box.
|
|
And I noticed that the graphics actually had a penguin in them, very much like a Linux penguin.
|
|
And I thought it was kind of odd because I wasn't even, I was installing a Linux system,
|
|
but I tried installing a Windows system just to check, but it was still Linux.
|
|
Well, penguin graphics and being that virtual box is an Oracle product now, it seemed kind of odd
|
|
that even if you were not using Linux that you would have the penguin graphics.
|
|
Anybody else noticed that?
|
|
When did you get penguin graphics?
|
|
Oh, yeah, when away.
|
|
I think it was in the wizard.
|
|
I have to look.
|
|
I took some screenshots of it, but it's on our computer.
|
|
But it was basically like in the setup wizard.
|
|
And I think after you had a machine set up, it was in one of the configuration pages.
|
|
Yeah, I think I know what you might mean.
|
|
So like, for example, if you go into virtual box, which I think I even have installed.
|
|
I wouldn't say that.
|
|
Anyway, you're setting up the wizard to set up a virtual machine, you start the ISO,
|
|
and then you go, and it says, what operating system is this?
|
|
And you go, you can go like Linux, Windows, Mac, Ubuntu, possibly.
|
|
And then if it's Ubuntu, it might change when Ubuntu logo.
|
|
If you go other or no and all these Linux, it's going to get maybe a penguin, I guess, or something.
|
|
It might be that.
|
|
No, it's not that I know what you're talking about where you can have like an icon per virtual machine.
|
|
This was something different.
|
|
It was like kind of friendly graphics.
|
|
A penguin that was working with the toolbox.
|
|
And I was on a Mac system at the time.
|
|
It was before I even chose Linux or something like that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
The virtual box is also cost platform.
|
|
So I've never used it on a Mac because I haven't Windows as well, obviously.
|
|
But I assume it's pretty much the same when it comes to looks regardless of the platform.
|
|
Linux, Windows or Mac.
|
|
And I assume that virtual box originally might have even come from the Linux world kind of.
|
|
When it was under Heno Tech, all those in all the history.
|
|
It might explain that a bit.
|
|
Otherwise, Apple secretly, like lovely, like Microsoft apparently do now.
|
|
And so there's your answer.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know.
|
|
I think the developers it would be hard to say.
|
|
I don't remember seeing the graphics before.
|
|
It was kind of a shock when I saw it.
|
|
Even though I've been using virtual box for like 10 years.
|
|
Well, did you do an upgrade of your virtual box version?
|
|
Yeah, it was a recent version.
|
|
It was maybe four months ago, three months ago.
|
|
And I downloaded a new virtual box for Mac.
|
|
And I was getting ready to install.
|
|
I forget what now, but I tried installing something unrelated to Linux.
|
|
I still saw these, you know, this penguin that was very reminiscent of a Linux penguin.
|
|
It wasn't the exact one, but I just thought it was odd because, you know,
|
|
virtual box had the family line of being through son and then through Oracle.
|
|
And as you said, the company before in in a tech or I'm probably sounding like the office space.
|
|
Company, the thing you probably ran into what most certainly ran into was was a.
|
|
An artifact of the new generation that may have been a virtual box six,
|
|
which is fairly recent.
|
|
And because it was a but nine artifact, they didn't remove it.
|
|
Yeah, if I search for like screenshots of virtual box online,
|
|
I don't see the exact graphics I'm talking about.
|
|
But I do see how they have, you know, different logos for the different operating systems.
|
|
But the graphics I was seeing were very much like it was the penguin that was the centerpiece working with different operating systems.
|
|
So it seemed like it was trying to be centering around Linux, specifically, even though it's not.
|
|
So here's the answer, right?
|
|
You basically got cracked by Linux user because you were using a Mac.
|
|
And they were like, thinking, no, you should be using the looks.
|
|
So I'll use virtual box. Let's get into that as well.
|
|
And and then they put in the penguin basically to remind you that you're meant to using the looks apparently not not mac networks OS X.
|
|
What?
|
|
I don't know how you came to that conclusion.
|
|
It's fine to make a joke about it. I'm not the best joke.
|
|
Actually, he may have something there. How does this read?
|
|
Well, I mean, since I was getting up there.
|
|
I'm downloading the software directly from virtual boxes website and stuff. It seems unlikely.
|
|
Well, what would happen if somebody cracked the virtual box storage server?
|
|
Well, they did. I hope they would do something better than just change a little icon to look like talks.
|
|
There we go. I found a link. I put a link in the chat channel.
|
|
And if you scroll down, it's on sysnettechsolutions.com.
|
|
There's a screenshot that shows a penguin holding a hammer and a wrench.
|
|
And the screenshot seems to clearly show its virtual box running on a Mac and a Mac virtual machine inside of it.
|
|
Oh, how cute. And yes, it looks like talks or enough like talks.
|
|
Maybe the virtual box developers just basically me like live. So yeah.
|
|
So anyways, one thing.
|
|
Going back to nursing, you were talking before about 32-bit systems and pretty much talking about how
|
|
making reference to a bunch of old hardware and old operating systems.
|
|
But one thing you may not have mentioned, I'm not sure, is the Raspberry Pi.
|
|
Happy New Year.
|
|
Yes. Happy New Year, Mountain Time.
|
|
Raspberry Pi's are actually 32-bit as of now and before.
|
|
So it could very well be if they end up being 32-bit for another five or even 10 years that will have systems that will be 32-bit fairly close to 20-38.
|
|
Well, the original ones were 32-bit. I believe the newer ones are 64.
|
|
Yeah, the A54 or 64, even though they still run 32-bit operating systems.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. I don't know if I've bothered you a bit enough by the new Raspberry Pi's, but it probably makes sense that the new ones are 64-bit now
|
|
because it's still getting cheap, isn't it, hardware? Like like that.
|
|
No, I think they're still 32-bit. I downloaded Raspberry and recently, and it still only has one architecture download.
|
|
No. No, it shows one architecture download.
|
|
The processor is 64. A Raspberry is still 32 because the people who run the Raspberry Pi Foundation said that the A54 is the best 32-bit processor they could get even though...
|
|
I mean, in other words, they're not right now interested in porting to 64, though I believe there are images for 64-bit.
|
|
Right, but even with that, I'm still saying that for the foreseeable future, we could have Raspberry Pi's installed with 32-bit OSs.
|
|
You're right, and that could become an issue.
|
|
Which case, you know, the people who are working on Raspberry and should really, you know, switch things before that actually becomes a problem.
|
|
One of the most interesting things is that the Raspberry Pi, but the last update to the Raspberry Pi 3 series has been made.
|
|
Um, linked also to an earlier subject, or not, well, kind of.
|
|
You know what the Raspberry Pi was actually made, don't you, NetMiner?
|
|
Yeah, sure. Well, actually got made originally, yeah.
|
|
Italy, right? Oh, wait, that's Arduino.
|
|
No, not Italy, no, not Italy. NetMiner, you know, yeah?
|
|
I'm making a joke now.
|
|
Oh, you know, where it was made?
|
|
The UK, right?
|
|
Well, yeah, but when the UK, that's one getting that.
|
|
We were talking about Brexit earlier as well, so that's what I said.
|
|
Sort of linked to another subject, but not really.
|
|
You bet, kind of.
|
|
Yeah, not really, but I think it was when NetMiner was doing that word.
|
|
So what was it now?
|
|
I don't really know.
|
|
Well, you talked about Scotland and all that earlier, right?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it's not Scotland.
|
|
It's made in Wales. It's made in Wales.
|
|
Really?
|
|
Yes, yes, really. It's made in Wales.
|
|
That's where it was made.
|
|
And it's all Wales where not much goes on really compared to England and so on.
|
|
But yeah.
|
|
Well, um, is that where it calling was?
|
|
No, I'm not sure what they call.
|
|
I think it was England somewhere.
|
|
But yeah, there's risk of OS as well, like keeping that alike, keeping that going as an open source project.
|
|
And I've been to two, two, a conference for that small one.
|
|
And that was interesting.
|
|
Twice went to that.
|
|
And used to have the holiday calls at school back in the 90s.
|
|
It's long gone now.
|
|
And the BBC computers as well.
|
|
But she probably didn't even know what I'm talking about.
|
|
But yeah, isn't there a new risk OS for the FPGA stuff that people are using now?
|
|
FPGA was that field programmable gate array?
|
|
Basically, you turn a bunch of gates into manipulating a piece of hardware.
|
|
No, it's new.
|
|
But I know you can run risk OS on Raspberry Pi as well.
|
|
And obviously the old A-Core machines and things like that as well.
|
|
There's a couple of new ones that are using embedded systems and they make high performance specific processors for single use tasks.
|
|
But they do it all in hardware, so it makes it super fast.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And then there's one that, what do they call it, mist or something?
|
|
Basically, that's the game system that's FPGA-based.
|
|
But I don't think that's...
|
|
How could I be based on that processor?
|
|
Well, it's risk, but I don't know that it's the open-free risk OS I'm thinking of.
|
|
But I believe the proprietary risk OS isn't the old one.
|
|
It's basically gone or mostly gone now and it's all about this...
|
|
...misc OS that's open source.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But then there are some of the programs that aren't open source.
|
|
Like the operating system is open source.
|
|
But a lot of the old programs aren't open source as well.
|
|
It's like the actual operating system is, so yeah.
|
|
Which is an open source version of BOS.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
And about HIKO as well.
|
|
That's pretty quite good, in fact, the usable of it, something simple.
|
|
But yeah, I'm never really used it.
|
|
That's going to be interesting to see what happens in March.
|
|
Well, the back-set back-set thing, you mean?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, no, I'm talking Pi Day in March.
|
|
Where's that?
|
|
314?
|
|
What 314?
|
|
In America, isn't it?
|
|
Is it all?
|
|
No, it's not Pi Day.
|
|
Raspberry Pi Day March 14th.
|
|
Well, we like globally or something.
|
|
Very much globally because that's when the Raspberry Pi Foundation tends to spring new...
|
|
New Virgin.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Everybody, yeah.
|
|
They really fully Raspberry Pi enough to know about that.
|
|
Okay, yeah.
|
|
So, they upgraded the last module that they're going to, I think, the compute module,
|
|
or one of them to the current V-plus.
|
|
Oh, it's the A-plus that they updated to the current Raspberry Pi B-plus processor.
|
|
What was that one called, the A-plus?
|
|
Yes, the A-plus.
|
|
But it's basically a Raspberry Pi 3A-plus.
|
|
That was an interesting one.
|
|
Joel, you still on?
|
|
Yes, though.
|
|
But he was talking about...
|
|
And I started looking at it, doing it recently, the Alexa Pi and stuff like that.
|
|
I started looking at trying to spec it out and trying to figure out how to get purchase
|
|
your single board computer, your button.
|
|
Because I believe the...
|
|
It requires you to have a button.
|
|
And then you need a button, a speaker, and a mic to make one of those things.
|
|
And I started trying to spec everything out.
|
|
And around this time of year, the cost for an Echo Dot, or even the new Echo Third Generation Dot,
|
|
is somewhere between $25 to $30.
|
|
And I think the Google Home Minis are similarly priced this time of year as well.
|
|
But it seemed like it was going to be way too much effort for what I could probably easily purchase.
|
|
But yeah, that's...
|
|
Because I had gotten...
|
|
I actually have two Echo Dots that I got for Christmas, along with two Tbilink plugs that I have set up.
|
|
One is set up to a lamp in our living room, which there was no good switch for.
|
|
So I wanted to hook that up to it so I can control it through the voice and a lamp in the bedroom, where again,
|
|
there was in a spot where there was no good switch for, so we can control it through voice.
|
|
And we're just having fun with just playing around with the Echo.
|
|
And I was considering putting...
|
|
Making using single board computers and making my own ecosystem and putting it up into the kids rooms,
|
|
more on the lines of a home intercom system slash a way that we can just kind of play music up in the rooms.
|
|
But trying to spec...
|
|
Like I was just saying, trying to spec things out for trying to build one just kind of seemed not very plausible.
|
|
Yeah, you run into the system...
|
|
Builders dilemma, where a dollar, whoever can put together a machine using wholesale parts,
|
|
a lot cheaper than you can if you go down to your micro-center or what have you.
|
|
I think that's more of a control issue.
|
|
You want something that you have full control over.
|
|
Yeah, and I would have...
|
|
I would have especially appreciated the fact that for the kids to be able to use it,
|
|
they would have had to walk up and push the button to get it to work.
|
|
And that was kind of...
|
|
They wouldn't be able to just straight up talk to it.
|
|
I kind of appreciated that form of it.
|
|
But at the same time, just trying to spec things out.
|
|
I mean, you take...
|
|
Even just leaving the price of the Raspberry Pi out of it, trying to find like a speaker mic type of situation
|
|
and then something for the button.
|
|
And then you want to put a...
|
|
You probably want to put a case on it, but even if you leave the case out,
|
|
just trying to put a speaker mic and button pricing that out.
|
|
You're almost just better off buying your own.
|
|
And then I probably wouldn't...
|
|
I'll probably just wait.
|
|
And if I get anything recently, I've put it somewhere central located upstairs,
|
|
like in the hallway or even in the bathroom or something where it's kind of essentially located
|
|
between the two bedrooms that are upstairs, as opposed to one on each.
|
|
Because I think if they can talk to it right this age,
|
|
I have three...
|
|
I have a three-year-old and a six-year-old.
|
|
Right now, my six-year-old just wants to sit there and not constantly have Alexa tell her jokes all day long.
|
|
The three-year-olds can't speak up enough to actually get it Alexa to respond,
|
|
but either way, that's why I would have been happier with a button,
|
|
but it's just price-wise.
|
|
I think it would be...
|
|
I mean, you're talking about $25 versus it almost seems like $20 at least,
|
|
just to get a speaker mic type of thing that I can plug into, even just regular pie.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Okay, two things.
|
|
So, Julio, where he's called, look at that video later, I guess, about the brisk OS.
|
|
And I was listening to this, but Alexa and all this.
|
|
The thing is, it sounds like using this, you know, voice to speech.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, wait.
|
|
Listen to your voice.
|
|
Getting to do things.
|
|
Alexa and it's got talent and all this kind of stuff.
|
|
I think, and Apple's got one as well.
|
|
I think, I think, testing trust is things, because, you know,
|
|
the thing that's going to pick up on what you're saying,
|
|
like that could quite simply be spying on you.
|
|
That's one thing.
|
|
And I mean, a lot of people do use those things, but I won't.
|
|
Just a bit like I won't.
|
|
I don't like using public Wi-Fi there, because again, that's not secure.
|
|
And he ends your device potentially.
|
|
So I'm not really worried about anybody spying on me.
|
|
That's, I mean, if they're going to do it, they can do it with my phone.
|
|
Because let's be honest.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Your phone can be cracked pretty easily, and you're walking around with that thing all the time.
|
|
Anyways, I mean, I've debated putting, putting all of those devices,
|
|
the plugs, and the Echo dots into a separate network.
|
|
A separate network, I'm sorry, I'm kind of plumbing here.
|
|
Basically, I have like another, I have an old router that I could probably just hook up to my network
|
|
and hook up all wireless devices up to that network.
|
|
And it being completely separate from, you know, all the part of the network where all my other stuff is.
|
|
And like my DMZ where things like the etherpad are on and stuff like that.
|
|
But so it would be on its own network.
|
|
But at the same time, you have, you're falling apart.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
I agree with that point as well.
|
|
And that's a good, that's a very good point now.
|
|
And I'll be serving you earlier.
|
|
Well, we thought about the purest of the environment, but earlier,
|
|
where you've been able to turn the cam off on the hardware switch and all this kind of stuff.
|
|
But I totally agree with that as well that these smartphones can be spying on you.
|
|
You could, the cam could come on and the microphone that you know in all this.
|
|
And I know that full well.
|
|
But yeah, you know, I like both, you know, we all use, most of us use phones now.
|
|
Even though we know this, some of us know this.
|
|
And a lot of people don't know, though, that actually is very easy to simply somebody to get into your phone
|
|
because of especially against a Wi-Fi or something.
|
|
But yeah, we're basically walking around with devices that can spy on us in the modern world.
|
|
And lots of people.
|
|
Right. So I don't see any reason to be afraid of echo.
|
|
If I'm already having a device in my pocket that can, everywhere I go,
|
|
that can record my voice and stuff.
|
|
I had the same conversation with my dad over the holidays.
|
|
He was telling me, he was concerned about having echo or Google Home in his house.
|
|
And I told him, well, you know, Google and Siri are listening to you right now.
|
|
What's the difference?
|
|
And he said, Siri's not listening to me.
|
|
I have to click the button and activate it to get it to respond.
|
|
And so he takes his phone out of his pocket.
|
|
And he says, hey, Siri, whatever you say.
|
|
And it of course spoke up and said, you know, what can I do for you or whatever it says?
|
|
And he has completely taken it back by the fact that that thing was on in his pocket.
|
|
And he didn't even know it.
|
|
Siri is the Apple one, isn't it?
|
|
Yeah, Siri's Apple.
|
|
What's the Apple?
|
|
For at least the keyword, you know, and there've been cases, but I don't think they were given any information.
|
|
But, you know, Amazon Echo was listening to people and crime happened.
|
|
And I think they didn't turn over the data.
|
|
But it was clear that they had recorded the data.
|
|
What's the one for Android?
|
|
How do you get?
|
|
What do you say to the number one?
|
|
OK, Google.
|
|
Oh, yeah, of course.
|
|
OK, Google.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The name is.
|
|
I believe.
|
|
Google.
|
|
OK, Google.
|
|
But the home you can change to say, respond to other things.
|
|
And there's the Apple one, as well, isn't there?
|
|
Apple, sorry, Siri.
|
|
Yeah, because of a iPhone as well, which again, that's going to probably be more likely to spy on me than anything else.
|
|
But yeah.
|
|
Actually, it seems like Apple has been very, they're pushing for the whole security thing.
|
|
What is it that they would somebody was trying to sue Apple to try to get them to unlock somebody's phone?
|
|
Wasn't it the FBI or someone?
|
|
Yeah, I think so.
|
|
Right.
|
|
So they're actually pushing for security.
|
|
So as much as you don't like Apple, you shouldn't like Apple because they try to get you locked into the Appleverse where you have to spend, you know, 13 grand for a computer and, you know, $800 for a frickin' phone or whatever the hell it is.
|
|
But you can't argue with the fact that they're making an OS that's designed specifically for their hardware.
|
|
So that's going to work really well.
|
|
What do you like the operating system or not?
|
|
I mean, that's all some people's opinion.
|
|
I haven't used a Mac, and OK, I've never really used a Mac.
|
|
But I can't argue with the fact that I'm sure it works well.
|
|
Apple is also doing the news.
|
|
I'm not sure how much the other guys have as far as...
|
|
The thing with accounting gigabytes of data on people's phones, that's been recording continuously all this stuff.
|
|
And people didn't know about it until their phones started not working, right?
|
|
The thing with Apple as well, though, is...
|
|
Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's like the hardware looks quite nice in a way.
|
|
And the lipstick, I think I like people saying the operating system and the Mac out of the graphics and all this.
|
|
But then they get a lot of people who don't...
|
|
People don't really...
|
|
We understand tech for the most part here.
|
|
But we are not average people in this context.
|
|
Average people have very little understanding of tech and how it works and all the rest of it.
|
|
And they are basically...
|
|
And a lot of these people then go for Apple products because they...
|
|
I guess it could be partly because they've used Windows and they kind of know it at the back of their mind.
|
|
It doesn't work very well.
|
|
Crashing reboots, viruses, but it's not just that.
|
|
It's like Apple as it's like, hey, it's cool.
|
|
Let's buy an expensive device because all the other people have it.
|
|
But then it does...
|
|
I mean, iOS is quite boring, I find.
|
|
Compared...
|
|
Or from what I've seen a bit.
|
|
I find Android boring as well.
|
|
But they both work and they do the task and they actually work and do what they're meant to.
|
|
They work reasonably well.
|
|
And so people have iOS devices.
|
|
But it's like, hey, it's cool because it's expensive as well.
|
|
People think, oh, yeah, it must be worth money.
|
|
That must be worth it.
|
|
But generally Linux people seem to give Apple less flak than say Microsoft or the old...
|
|
Well, yeah, Microsoft because of how it's sort of, you know, BSD based or whatever done the Mac.
|
|
And it's not too bad on the iOS, I guess, how it's designed.
|
|
As stupid as it sounds, it really has probably nothing to do with tech and more to do with the fact
|
|
that accessories and customers and scanning you can do with the iPhones.
|
|
Because there's only like two or three versions available at a time.
|
|
Skinful themes, oh.
|
|
No, I mean, just the actual hardware, like you can go out and get a case that's personalized to what your tastes are.
|
|
Oh, cases, why?
|
|
I mean, there's like a zillion cases available for an iPhone, but there's only a couple available for any version of an Android device.
|
|
Because there's so many Android devices out there.
|
|
But you also have to remember that iOS likes to do what we like to call the...
|
|
Was it the OS rot where after a while you're operating a system that will no longer work with the hardware?
|
|
No matter how much you...
|
|
If you just keep updating things, it's just going to make the whole system completely stop working.
|
|
And it kind of forces you to have to buy new hardware.
|
|
Well, like Windows used to do...
|
|
Did Windows do that?
|
|
No, they just make a consume so many resources that it doesn't run anything, right?
|
|
Right.
|
|
Other people with Windows, you could still like...
|
|
Obviously, you wouldn't get any updates if you run something like XP or whatever.
|
|
I know they've worked pretty hard to kill that now.
|
|
But, you know, it's not nearly as bad as iOS, which I mean, everything seems to be working fine until you update.
|
|
And then everything starts to run like crap.
|
|
And then you update again.
|
|
And everything starts to work, leaving them more like crap.
|
|
And I mean, I know people who had their hardware for a while.
|
|
And like, yeah, everything was working fine.
|
|
I mean, the only thing they're doing is going on the internet and using a word processor on the thing.
|
|
So, you know, why should everything just go to crap?
|
|
But everything just slowly went to crap.
|
|
And they had to wind up buying something else.
|
|
We had a real turn in the office with an iMac desktop.
|
|
And first, they had to update what Firefox or Chrome or something.
|
|
And then that wouldn't install the new version because it wasn't the newest version of the iMac operating system.
|
|
And then, at some point, I think it was QuickBooks or some other thing,
|
|
where that also wouldn't install an update because it wasn't the current version of Mac OS.
|
|
And they did end up having to buy a new machine just so they could run the software they normally used just three years ago.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
It wasn't like the last year or so that said that iOS on the iPhone was actually updated.
|
|
It did something that actually brought the speed of the phone down.
|
|
Yeah, they were sued because they killed the battery life if your phone was a certain version.
|
|
Right.
|
|
I just had a mumble crush or something, so I just restarted that.
|
|
He said to me like, it's not just that.
|
|
And then my mumble problem there, she'd like me ahead now as well.
|
|
Well, I was just saying it's also the fact that Apple does the OS rot,
|
|
or if you're on a piece of hardware for too long,
|
|
the operating system will force you basically with every update,
|
|
start degrading the system to the point where you have to,
|
|
they may need almost force you to buy a new hardware.
|
|
And they do that on both OS X and other iOS systems.
|
|
Well, I think the many two things is so yet one point was that they've recently emitted
|
|
the slowing down iPhones because of when they get about two years old,
|
|
so people apparently buy new phones.
|
|
And they were like, no, it's not that.
|
|
It's just because of performance.
|
|
And then I was talking about people going for Apple in the first place
|
|
with a mumble crushing.
|
|
And why people, yeah, why people go for Apple in the first place.
|
|
It's simple.
|
|
I mean, I think a lot of it has to do with simple and everybody else that they know has it.
|
|
And since like everybody they know has the same thing and they're using the same thing.
|
|
And it's a very simple interface.
|
|
And I mean, you can't really argue with that.
|
|
I mean, with Android, Android is kind of turning into what Microsoft is on the desktop where
|
|
there's so many applications and so many different versions of it.
|
|
It's kind of like when you buy a computer and it has windows on it,
|
|
it's going to be kind of like, you're going to get the Sony version of windows
|
|
with its with its theming at first.
|
|
I mean, obviously you can take all that stuff off for the most part,
|
|
but it's the same thing when you buy an Android phone.
|
|
You get the LG version of Android with all of its stuff with all of its stuff on it and whatnot.
|
|
So it's Android has become so big in a Play Store, so big.
|
|
And there's so many other marketplaces where you can get stuff where the iPhone is.
|
|
You're given this iPhone.
|
|
You have basically this is what you use for your texting.
|
|
This is what you use for, you know, if you want to do video conferencing,
|
|
I don't know what the hell it's called.
|
|
I'm blanking on it for video conferencing with other people who have iPhones.
|
|
You use this app and that's.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You're basically going to screen with a bunch of apps and that's it.
|
|
While with Android, you're given it's like a desktop.
|
|
You swipe three different types of desktops that you have.
|
|
You have widgets and stuff like that.
|
|
You don't have widgets on iPhone.
|
|
You just have, you just have the big bold icons for those applications.
|
|
I've got public holding on, but now I'm doing it again.
|
|
Anyway, yeah, I guess you have a point there.
|
|
So the people have gone for iPhone Apple because I mean,
|
|
even picking like something like bungee with its old Unity and space in a way,
|
|
but being inspired by Apple, something I sent anyway, but like,
|
|
you have the icon, you have that.
|
|
But yeah, you have like one option.
|
|
So actually, although you've in the window, you've got like your start menu in space,
|
|
and that's about it there.
|
|
But yeah, it's like you've got one version.
|
|
This is how it looks.
|
|
Everybody has an iPhone.
|
|
They're going to see the same thing when it comes to software.
|
|
The same theme, the same general look,
|
|
and everybody's getting that the same thing.
|
|
Whereas with Android, it's like, well, there's Samsung,
|
|
there's Sony, there's different implementations of Android with different themes,
|
|
and boot up graphics, and even the apps that are pre-installed to an extent.
|
|
And so you go like Samsung's Android, and you go like Sony's Android,
|
|
and you go like LD's Android, and so on.
|
|
And I think that's the point you were getting that as well.
|
|
Well, yeah, but they also have, like, again,
|
|
I have very limited experience with iOS products,
|
|
but from my understanding, for the most part,
|
|
the screen is pretty much just a bunch of icons for choosing your applications.
|
|
And then you will, I think there's a bar in the bottom,
|
|
maybe for some quick applications, but it's not like Android,
|
|
where Android is almost set up like a desktop,
|
|
where you can have, you know, one desktop that's just your calendar,
|
|
another desktop, where you have certain applications,
|
|
and other widgets and whatnot.
|
|
I don't think there's any widgets in the iOS sphere.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, and I think I saw that you can have user accounts,
|
|
and I'm drawing them on my Sony for India Day,
|
|
but yes, only on iOS handheld.
|
|
I think so.
|
|
Like again, interesting.
|
|
You know what that is?
|
|
That's Windows 3.1.
|
|
If it's Windows 3.1, then it's Windows 3.1 with much better,
|
|
nicer looking graphics.
|
|
Well, I'm working, networking with iOS,
|
|
but yeah, the graphics are so nice to an Apple, aren't they?
|
|
That's top of it as well, the general feel and the...
|
|
Well, talk of it like this, it's kind of like life.
|
|
You know, Apple is simple and pretty,
|
|
but rarely is simple and pretty good for a long-term relationship.
|
|
Oh, yeah, I suppose.
|
|
Well, actually, it's like nobody got fired for buying IBM,
|
|
for people who want their hands held the way Apple does,
|
|
having everything in the walls garden of Apple Store and Apple OS
|
|
and Apple branded SSDs and Apple branded discs
|
|
and Apple branded screens, it is a safe choice.
|
|
It's an expensive safe choice, but it is a safe choice.
|
|
That's the brand as well.
|
|
Oh, yeah, it's so cool because it's expensive, like I was saying.
|
|
It's a brand people know, but saying that even with Android,
|
|
you know, to an extent, you know, Samsung is the biggest player
|
|
because those people have Samsung and know and about and yeah.
|
|
You've also been a good point about the whole wall garden thing
|
|
because I think Apple has done a good job of marketing themselves
|
|
as being a wall garden for businesses,
|
|
because there's a lot of businesses that will hand out Apple devices
|
|
for their users and they have them locked down
|
|
so that the only thing that they can use
|
|
is their proprietary applications on their systems.
|
|
I'm not sure whether they think that it's a little bit harder
|
|
to do on an Android system or if there's too many products out there
|
|
that you know, they can't nail one down to be able to...
|
|
Who made that point?
|
|
But yeah, there's that as well.
|
|
There's a tie in between the hardware and software
|
|
and talking business and consumers even.
|
|
And it's all right there.
|
|
This is the Apple way, basically.
|
|
This is the hardware.
|
|
This is the software you went to run these together.
|
|
And I've read that recently,
|
|
it's one of the Macs couldn't run the notes for now.
|
|
They can run the notes or whatever.
|
|
The new Mac or something like that.
|
|
But there's a lot of businesses that will hand out
|
|
to their employees like Apple products.
|
|
Like I know what my mother does sales reping and they handed her
|
|
and I've had to be able to check in all the information.
|
|
Oh yeah.
|
|
Because I think it's locked down to that version of software.
|
|
They do that here now as well.
|
|
Sure, they get iPads and business data,
|
|
maybe schools even.
|
|
But the only other choice will be Windows.
|
|
And I think Windows is kind of like I was saying earlier.
|
|
I think Windows is basically showing to people
|
|
that over the years, even non-technical people,
|
|
that it doesn't really work very well.
|
|
It can get better.
|
|
It can crash.
|
|
I mean, look at Windows Phone, for example,
|
|
which they just dropped last 2018, 2017,
|
|
whatever.
|
|
That's completely dropped the phone project
|
|
because it wasn't going to compete against Android.
|
|
iOS.
|
|
And it must be because people know the back of their mind
|
|
that it's like, you know,
|
|
there's no PC that didn't work that well.
|
|
So why don't I want my phone when there's an iPhone
|
|
and Android out there, might they'll use that?
|
|
Right.
|
|
Now I wasn't talking necessarily about the desktop.
|
|
I'm talking more in the lines of they're pushing out their iPads.
|
|
And I mean, there's some schools.
|
|
Schools have seen it be going somewhere between Apple products
|
|
and like Chromebooks and stuff like that.
|
|
Because the Chromebooks, they've done a good job
|
|
at walling off what they can install on them.
|
|
And only having pre-installed the software
|
|
that they use for their schools.
|
|
Well, there's a lot of businesses that they'll hand out
|
|
to their employees that are on the road and stuff,
|
|
things like iPads.
|
|
You know, I'm not talking about necessarily Windows.
|
|
Windows isn't even in the mobile marketplace as far as I'm concerned.
|
|
They don't, they don't, they've just completely failed
|
|
when it came to that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
That's what I'm saying.
|
|
They've totally dropped the old Windows phone.
|
|
But I'm saying it's because consumers didn't want it
|
|
or not enough people who've mostly sold in mainland Europe
|
|
probably read somewhere.
|
|
That's where people have Windows very mostly apparently.
|
|
But with the Chromebook, that's a good,
|
|
that's an interesting one as well in a way.
|
|
Because yeah, it's very dumb down and all that.
|
|
But you can stick your own notes,
|
|
they're strong enough, you know what you're doing.
|
|
But again, it's called Google behind it,
|
|
which people, the mainstream know Google.
|
|
Google, the people trust Google enough in the mainstream.
|
|
And they know for Google because the search engine also
|
|
because of Android potential anyway.
|
|
But you know, it's Google.
|
|
So it's like, oh, Google, yeah, yeah, yeah, cool.
|
|
We'll have this cheap Chromebook and use that, sure.
|
|
And we'll give kids that at schools possibly.
|
|
Because again, if big brands make no a name,
|
|
say people, you know, people trust big companies
|
|
have lots of money generally speaking.
|
|
Well, but it comes with Chromebooks.
|
|
Chromebooks, I think, are cheaper.
|
|
Plus the fact that they do have the ability
|
|
to do other things with them.
|
|
But it takes a little bit of know how to be able to do that.
|
|
And a lot of times if, you know, the teachers find out
|
|
or somebody finds out about it,
|
|
and they all they have to do is bring that in.
|
|
They can wipe bits and reflash it to the, you know,
|
|
the original stock with the original stock applications
|
|
on there, and then just send them right back out.
|
|
Who was it?
|
|
I know Kevin, Kevin with the Kevin Whisher
|
|
just works through in the K through 12 school system.
|
|
And I believe they are all on, they're all on Apple products,
|
|
iPads and stuff like that.
|
|
What if it was Tarja who was talking to when the school system
|
|
that he was in that they gave him Chromebooks?
|
|
Well, maybe the schools that they gave him now iPads
|
|
have all money for this, right?
|
|
And then the ones that give him that Chromebooks
|
|
don't have as much money.
|
|
So they're being cheap and giving that Chromebooks instead.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
Well, it's my understanding that these, you know,
|
|
they get all the hardware back at the end of the year and whatnot.
|
|
So, you know, Apple, I know Apple used to be big
|
|
in trying to get their fingers into schools
|
|
by giving away a bunch of free stuff, I'm not sure.
|
|
If they're trying kind of the same way
|
|
and trying to work their way into schools
|
|
and work their way into kids' hands
|
|
by giving them a bunch of hardware for Chromebooks.
|
|
And Microsoft did that with Colleges here,
|
|
which is not the same as America, by the way.
|
|
But similar as you can, any Colleges
|
|
and schools, possibly.
|
|
You should in this channel.
|
|
So you get windows for free or Microsoft Office for free
|
|
because you're a student or a training teacher or something.
|
|
So I remember getting the full Microsoft
|
|
for $5 a CD, five bucks for the iOS, five bucks for Office,
|
|
five bucks for the programming environment,
|
|
pretty much anything for five bucks on one CD.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
Yeah, they know what they're doing when I was working for,
|
|
for a school, you know, if, if Microsoft charged
|
|
for Office Pro or any version of Office
|
|
would charge it, they charge it to the school.
|
|
I would have been installing open office
|
|
all over the place or Libra Office.
|
|
But, you know, when they're charging $68 for Pro
|
|
or, you know, maybe Office Business or whatever,
|
|
you know, it's hard for me to convince the administration.
|
|
Yeah, say $68 and get this Office suite
|
|
you're not familiar with even though it's better.
|
|
Yeah, I remember.
|
|
Is it the iOS upgrade like $50 or $100?
|
|
I like how $51.50 says at the end of that one.
|
|
Even though it's better because, I mean,
|
|
I remember having a debate with the guy
|
|
who up camping last, uh, 2017, yeah,
|
|
canterbury and we were sitting there on a Sunday night
|
|
at the hotel and we went into the debate about Libra Office.
|
|
There's a guy who will, um,
|
|
Matt on Impress might know that name somewhere.
|
|
The guy does bunty Marta and things like that.
|
|
And I was with him and somebody else
|
|
and we were there like full 30 in the morning
|
|
having a debate about if the office really is good enough
|
|
or not compared to Microsoft Office.
|
|
And it's like, yeah,
|
|
we should fully get out, get some sleep
|
|
could go check out of the hotel later.
|
|
But, I mean, I would say in many ways it is
|
|
better than Microsoft Office or usable or, you know, good enough.
|
|
But then there's a few specific features
|
|
that only certain people need it can't do
|
|
or doesn't quite do the same.
|
|
And, and it's, it annoys me a little bit
|
|
with my same older brother, for example,
|
|
he's doing teacher training now.
|
|
Um, he got a laptop off the computer fair,
|
|
you know, got a cheap price idea.
|
|
He might have bought that one.
|
|
I put a bunch on it.
|
|
Um, and, you know, he's got his email.
|
|
He's got his Firefox.
|
|
And he's scratch for the programming for kids thing.
|
|
They use it now.
|
|
From the battery pie world, I think originally.
|
|
But he, you know, you think you can
|
|
have a better operating system.
|
|
But then, um, he phoned me up a few weeks
|
|
or two weeks later or something was like,
|
|
so yeah, but I got a confession.
|
|
I can hear the windows noise in the background
|
|
on that phone call, but he's like,
|
|
so yeah, I got a confession.
|
|
They gave me Microsoft,
|
|
they gave me Windows 10 for free.
|
|
So I've upgraded Windows 8.1 to that.
|
|
And he's, you know, that's what they do.
|
|
He's got people in with these free giveaways.
|
|
And then when people don't want to give
|
|
something else a chance enough,
|
|
like the office or when the past open office
|
|
or any of these alternative things,
|
|
they just stay locked in basically.
|
|
And then Microsoft wants to do it with the schools and all that
|
|
because that's part of it.
|
|
Get people locked in when they're young and all that.
|
|
Well, before Microsoft Apple was selling 68K max
|
|
to schools for half or a third the retail price.
|
|
So they, they were doing it first and then about,
|
|
about the time they switched over to the IBM processor,
|
|
the power PC processor,
|
|
I think they couldn't afford to do it anymore and quit.
|
|
So I got to let a lot of legacy schools.
|
|
And they were like, well, what, you know,
|
|
they started out buying max and then suddenly max
|
|
were expensive and they were like, well, why,
|
|
why are we spending all this money on max?
|
|
I would tell them, yeah, why are you spending all this money
|
|
on max when students get out of school
|
|
unless they go into art or something,
|
|
they'll never see a Mac again.
|
|
Yeah, I think my entire high school was pretty much max.
|
|
Except for a very small,
|
|
it's very small lab where they taught some of the,
|
|
I don't think it was Microsoft office at the time.
|
|
I don't remember what the heck it was.
|
|
I think it was like a me pro and stuff like that back then.
|
|
Yeah, only one lab where we had IBM stuff.
|
|
Yeah, so my...
|
|
Back in my...
|
|
My secondary school, you would say,
|
|
or high school, you would say, over there, I suppose.
|
|
It was basically Windows PCs and then there was a few max
|
|
but only really for the art students or music students.
|
|
And also college, which is not the same in the UK as earlier,
|
|
but just some rubbish, ICT course, IT course.
|
|
But you'd open a computer up,
|
|
it was slightly more technical than that one.
|
|
No level was rubbish,
|
|
but there was,
|
|
they decided to put something in the back open office,
|
|
which was kind of nice at the time.
|
|
But yeah, sort of rubbish,
|
|
ICT teaching in this country.
|
|
In fact, I say the whole of the UK,
|
|
and for the most part, anyway,
|
|
is very behind when it comes to say IT
|
|
and computing and all that compared to say,
|
|
somewhere like Germany,
|
|
where they have actually embraced open source
|
|
in certain, like,
|
|
Munich or the U-turn and gone back to Windows,
|
|
but they've rendered a switch to Linux
|
|
and open office back in 2004 and things like that.
|
|
Well, I heard part of the problem with Munich
|
|
is that they had to have their own custom Linux.
|
|
They didn't just go with open source or something.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Custom Linux.
|
|
Also, I just before, in case I forget to say this,
|
|
there was a story about the Google CEO
|
|
or something like that came over to London
|
|
and was in some conference where people from schools
|
|
and also people in the government, MPs,
|
|
and he said something like,
|
|
oh, you know what?
|
|
ICT is really rubbish in the UK.
|
|
All you do is learn Microsoft Office,
|
|
and that's about it.
|
|
There's nothing about programming or anything like this,
|
|
and so apparently the people in this audience
|
|
dissend a bit and it was like, right,
|
|
we're going to do some programming teaching at schools
|
|
and we're going to do things like this
|
|
or try and get into curriculum
|
|
and also the Raspberry Pi,
|
|
I believe, got reduced quite soon after that as well
|
|
because the idea was to have young kids
|
|
being able to learn programming with a cheap device
|
|
about 30 pounds.
|
|
And I think it's improved slightly since,
|
|
now it's learned scratch like I mentioned earlier
|
|
to do basic programming,
|
|
but it's still quite behind
|
|
and, you know, yeah, and stuff like that.
|
|
Well, if I was in school,
|
|
I sure wouldn't take my bed.
|
|
And that is an inside joke
|
|
that maybe 10 people in the audience listening
|
|
will understand when this is broadcast.
|
|
Wait, so you're not going to miss that,
|
|
again?
|
|
So if I said if I was in school,
|
|
I wouldn't take the iPad.
|
|
Well, no.
|
|
Well, you have a choice.
|
|
That was a reference to a DevRandom days, wasn't it?
|
|
It was.
|
|
Haha, got it.
|
|
See if you tell everyone
|
|
that it's no longer funny.
|
|
Well, maybe they'll go back and listen to the old DevRandoms.
|
|
That's true.
|
|
They're still out there.
|
|
Is it DevRandom.org?
|
|
I should know.
|
|
Yeah, definitely go back and listen to DevRandoms.
|
|
I think they're still relevant and funny.
|
|
That's true of the relevant,
|
|
but they're definitely funny.
|
|
But yes, like, you know,
|
|
something maybe comes really popular
|
|
in general, like can I,
|
|
like an iPad or an iPhone?
|
|
It could be, or it could be something else,
|
|
depending on the time,
|
|
what year we're in, you know.
|
|
And it's like, hey, cool.
|
|
Everybody on it.
|
|
Like, loads of people have this.
|
|
Or that's the more expensive thing.
|
|
So if I've got money for that,
|
|
I'll have that.
|
|
You know, I'll give it a slightly cheaper thing,
|
|
Android in this context.
|
|
And then, yeah, that's what people do.
|
|
And then those two players,
|
|
it's called having a stranglehold,
|
|
I think, of the whole market,
|
|
have a stranglehold, I think it's called.
|
|
And then all these alternatives
|
|
that in many ways are technically better,
|
|
such as UB ports,
|
|
which is, you know,
|
|
you're having on the Ubuntu Touch project.
|
|
UB ports are actually very good for the hits.
|
|
And I know, as I know,
|
|
as somebody with devices,
|
|
also know that cell-fetch OS
|
|
is very good for what it is as well,
|
|
from YOLO,
|
|
or a lot of former Nokia developers.
|
|
But yet, these two things,
|
|
I guess, you know,
|
|
never ever going to go mainstream
|
|
when you're anywhere close now,
|
|
because how it is,
|
|
and it's a shame in a way,
|
|
but that's, you know,
|
|
that's how it is, isn't it?
|
|
The market takes,
|
|
and if people don't,
|
|
if both people don't know,
|
|
tech enough, then,
|
|
well, yeah, you know.
|
|
I think a lot of these things
|
|
have a better shot is,
|
|
like, just for the American market,
|
|
if you didn't find a carrier,
|
|
that would actually carry these things,
|
|
like, and get,
|
|
at least 4G,
|
|
you know,
|
|
whether it's CDMA or GSM,
|
|
doesn't matter,
|
|
as long as somebody,
|
|
would actually,
|
|
in the US,
|
|
would actually carry these things,
|
|
and they'd get an actual phone,
|
|
or then there'd be a lot of people
|
|
that would actually buy it.
|
|
Not as big.
|
|
You're not going to,
|
|
you're not going to, you know,
|
|
put a dent in the marketplace
|
|
of Android or iOS,
|
|
because there's too many people,
|
|
let's, let's, let's,
|
|
let's be honest,
|
|
there's too many people out there
|
|
who are not actual technical people
|
|
who are using these devices
|
|
every single day.
|
|
I mean, as much as,
|
|
I mean, this,
|
|
this goes back to,
|
|
to an argument of,
|
|
you know,
|
|
has the world
|
|
completely turned into mobile.
|
|
Yes,
|
|
there's a lot of more people
|
|
using mobile than there are,
|
|
people using PCs,
|
|
but a lot of the same people
|
|
who are using PCs
|
|
before are, you know,
|
|
still using PCs,
|
|
and there's,
|
|
but there's a lot more people
|
|
who are not using PCs
|
|
before who are now using mobile.
|
|
But if you can get people
|
|
who are,
|
|
want something else,
|
|
or they,
|
|
you know,
|
|
are intelligent enough
|
|
to try something else,
|
|
I think,
|
|
and you can actually
|
|
get a carrier in,
|
|
like the US,
|
|
you know,
|
|
actually aren't a device
|
|
where you can market
|
|
that device.
|
|
That's a huge issue
|
|
inside one of these things.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So you need a carrier
|
|
and network,
|
|
as you would say here,
|
|
but yeah.
|
|
Or,
|
|
or some sort of hardware
|
|
manufacturer that's
|
|
ideally knowing enough about,
|
|
because I mean,
|
|
like a brand new touch
|
|
on the conical,
|
|
and it did get to hardware players.
|
|
They got the,
|
|
well,
|
|
there was a Chinese,
|
|
Spanish BQ,
|
|
and the Chinese,
|
|
Miser,
|
|
so in Spain,
|
|
BQ,
|
|
was reasonably popular,
|
|
and in China,
|
|
Miser,
|
|
was reasonably popular,
|
|
but then you couldn't get into the US
|
|
because of,
|
|
well, as easily,
|
|
because of how,
|
|
it was kind of sold
|
|
to which countries and that.
|
|
But,
|
|
they couldn't get the carriers.
|
|
No, no,
|
|
they couldn't get the,
|
|
you couldn't get the phones
|
|
into the US,
|
|
or not as easily.
|
|
I think you couldn't,
|
|
you could still buy a phone.
|
|
Or you could,
|
|
you could,
|
|
you could get the hardware
|
|
device into the US,
|
|
that should be too hard.
|
|
Or you could get the phone in,
|
|
just forgot about,
|
|
you could buy a phone,
|
|
sorry,
|
|
or,
|
|
okay,
|
|
let's try it,
|
|
and we can
|
|
press the secure sensor,
|
|
so,
|
|
we can click and
|
|
we can press just because
|
|
we open the
|
|
storage,
|
|
you'll just
|
|
press the secure,
|
|
but something else.
|
|
It's all back home,
|
|
and I went home and
|
|
at the tripod
|
|
it was there
|
|
where
|
|
It was a bit of like three pounds really cheap, but already old and I bought it in like
|
|
2015 or something and but it was from like maybe 23rds 14 or something but with from like 2012 or 2011
|
|
It was like predicting the future of like Firefox OS and what might happen
|
|
Was it called mobile pharachrist or something?
|
|
Yeah, I don't know mobile pharachrist or something like that. It was interesting because I read it like three years or so later
|
|
so I was talking about how like Firefox and
|
|
Could have a chance and a bunch of touch and maybe you can sell fresh it change in the duploy and
|
|
Things like that how it could maybe do it and I you know never they've never really changed anything any of this because I've never
|
|
None of these could compete in that sense really, but it was interesting reads to read like two years later
|
|
I can't remember what I booked called now, but it's here somewhere
|
|
But yeah, it's interesting like this is 2012 user of addiction and so on and then you see like well
|
|
That didn't quite work out, but they won something here with some of these points
|
|
And that's what if the whole world's your mobile well
|
|
That's debatable, but but yeah, I mean most people who use either computers or
|
|
Mobile devices are mostly using mobile phones and tab and then possibly tablets as well for those of tablets and
|
|
That the desktop computer laptop is
|
|
You're going to be using your face still for like word processing all that show spreadsheets and all that stuff
|
|
But and it but other than that not that much noted maybe graphics as I'm a cad for those who do you like sure and then gaming possibly
|
|
But but it's like I mostly use mobile devices myself now and have done for
|
|
Even just inside your house or your flat, you know, we have a laptop as well because for basics, you know email
|
|
The season music
|
|
browsing internet
|
|
You know, so it's all fine on the phone for the most part
|
|
So why sit there with a bulky laptop?
|
|
Wish I'm doing right now
|
|
Right I was more arguing the point that everyone that some people like to make that
|
|
The laptop is basically dead and I'm saying that yeah
|
|
That's that's that's not really a thing because as much as you can write an email on your phone
|
|
It is but it is more than like a few lines. It is way too damn tedious to do on that phone
|
|
I need a keyboard. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you can plug a keyboard then possibly, but yeah
|
|
Yeah, I'm not getting I'm a plus than a Bluetooth keyboard just to write a thing
|
|
I'd rather just get my my computer out and if it's if it's more than a few lines
|
|
I'm just going to write it on a on a freaking laptop and it's I look if I just want to check something quick
|
|
over the net or you know
|
|
Do a quick search through the the social media networks or something like that. Yeah phone
|
|
I mean my the browser is going to work a lot quicker on my phone and it is on
|
|
Under my laptops for the most part and it's going to be a lot quicker
|
|
But if I want to do pretty much anything else I'd much rather have a laptop for it
|
|
I mean it even if it's like most of my little projects around stuff around here are going to be things like
|
|
Trying to connect to one of my silver computers through SSH. Can I do that on the phone? Sure
|
|
Again, it's going to be a lot easier to type a lot of this stuff out with an actual keyboard as opposed to to try and to do that or on the phone
|
|
Well, yeah, so that's another point in a way, but yeah, some of the
|
|
Program or things you want to do are gonna be best on a phone or okay on a phone possibly best one a phone
|
|
Or just better on a computer. I mean I see as a great example
|
|
In my I have why I tried somebody I see clients
|
|
I mean I tried web I see even on a mobile phone that didn't really work for you know web I see key
|
|
We are see all this kind of stuff. I tried to get some sort of app in Android as well for I see you now to go at something
|
|
It just didn't seem to work very well
|
|
And then your phone goes on to suspend and you disconnected a fire see that's another issue
|
|
And you just never really worked very well on the phone
|
|
But obviously if you bring up a laptop or a desktop it works
|
|
That's absolutely great and fine because really I see was designed for a laptop on desktop anyway, but
|
|
And then again like you can have like computer grab I think make the computer graphics really myself
|
|
But I could provide this as an example anyway if you're going to do graphic design
|
|
You're probably going to turn to your laptop or your desktop your PC or Mac or whatever
|
|
Not your mobile
|
|
Phone or tablet even though you could probably do it there
|
|
Because on the day on the computer will have to go a bigger screen and you probably got some better software for any way that works better
|
|
And they're either in again cad or something else. I don't do you're not going to do that on your phone or your tablet and
|
|
Virtual machines I think you might be able to run on some of these phones eventually if not already because these hardware is always getting better
|
|
But you know you're gonna do we're talking about virtual machines earlier. So yeah, you know
|
|
You do virtual machines on your less on your laptop or your desktop. You don't think hey
|
|
I'll just do a virtual machine on my mobile phone on my tablet
|
|
I mean look at audio playing a brother. I'd rather have you see how it's my phone because it's actually portable
|
|
A lot of some a lot of times video playing. I don't like playing video on my laptops at all really
|
|
I'll I'm probably fine watching video on my phone
|
|
But anything that actually requires typing I think I'm gonna need an actual laptop for because like I said
|
|
I'm like I even have a Bluetooth keyboard and I have a tablet and whatnot
|
|
But it's it's not the same and maybe I just need a better Bluetooth keyboard
|
|
But I still would rather but rather open up a an actual laptop and do work that way then
|
|
You know trying to do it on the phone browsing on the other hand
|
|
But I think my browser on my phone works a lot faster than browsers. I'm probably all my all my computers
|
|
And I don't know if that's yeah, yeah, yeah, I think I agree with but yeah, yeah, browsers on the phone seem to work
|
|
But you I can say in different operating systems like in fact
|
|
Okay, Android show iOS show yeah a bunch of touch cell fish firefox OS
|
|
Ties and I think I tried one and I got ties and phone
|
|
You know, well, you know, yeah, I'm about where I seem to work really well
|
|
But on the desktop you putting you've had the same thing you know your firefox crashing or the profile goes wrong
|
|
Or your Chrome or ever goes wrong as well and it's a bit slow
|
|
When the the desktop
|
|
Browsers are gonna open up a lot more crap and you know, and I maybe I need to run no script or start running a
|
|
Pie hole or something like that, but when you open up a desktop version of some of these web pages
|
|
There's too many like videos willing to play ads on the corners and stuff like that
|
|
That I want some load up so it takes forever to load up some of these general pages while the mobile version of these pages
|
|
Just kind of load up, you know, it's spontaneously like that. I also with it too. Yeah, yeah
|
|
Running multiple tabs and multiple browsers on your phone. That's true, too
|
|
I usually only run about like maybe eight tabs at a time on my mobile
|
|
I know I don't get up there into the
|
|
30s or
|
|
I do have sometimes I don't know 15 windows tabs open the mobile, but it seems to be okay
|
|
But yes things are like a stout down and also I wouldn't say about the video point so I
|
|
Mean people like different screen sizes on a mobile device even for video
|
|
People you'll usually want a slightly bigger screen over the fork, but even on a small screen
|
|
Video can come out quite fine, I would say and then some people are like well, just watch on a laptop
|
|
I find that video is
|
|
There's generally fine on different sizes of screen even and different mobile operating systems even
|
|
But it's also works usually fine on on a laptop as well. Yeah, if I can break in it's time to
|
|
A little past time to say happy new year to the
|
|
West Coast of the United States and the rest of the Pacific time zone. Yeah, yes
|
|
Have a new year 50 how many of tabs? What's what are you maxed out by?
|
|
How many tabs have you the most amount of tabs? There we go. That's right
|
|
How many what is the most amount of tabs you've had opened on the browser before on a desktop?
|
|
I'm embarrassed to say there were times probably maybe
|
|
I haven't lately, but maybe 200 or something
|
|
How did you open something to say yeah, I want to I want to look at that deal with it later and then rather than bookmarking
|
|
So
|
|
California and Mexico I guess up in the year and you're thinking with tabs
|
|
200 others
|
|
Yeah, you can end up with about 56 you're putting quite easy actually depending what you're doing
|
|
Well, I anymore. I'm running a lot of tab managers, you know
|
|
Let's see. There's one tab which you click on it and anything. It's not pinned or whatever it just puts them in a web page
|
|
So you could always go back to that web page and find find the link and and
|
|
reopen us is for Firefox
|
|
also
|
|
Tab hunter is one I use because you get so you get so many tabs open and you
|
|
It will search your open tabs by keyword. So those those are a couple tab managers. I recommend
|
|
I had a question. Does anyone have a browser that will allow you to access mobile
|
|
versions of web pages? I think you can set that up. I can do that on chrome and chromium. I think yeah, I think you can do that one
|
|
Certainly desktop browsers either would set up or use the quality as well
|
|
Well, I think chrome. I think the quality actually has like a shortcut from its main
|
|
On somewhere on the top of the bottom of the building. I mean seriously. He uses me out here about times
|
|
I could play netflix and chrome on linux it worked for that on linux before chrome did
|
|
Yeah, I think I've tried it before actually. What was it called remember the baldy no the the thing to switch
|
|
modes in chrome
|
|
Um, I think you inspect the page and then under the network tools you can change what
|
|
Layout you want your page
|
|
That was the name for it. I just can't remember what it was called where it would basically change the way that you
|
|
The way you browse down the pages like you can browse the page as
|
|
Like it was an add on I think that's what I was thinking of that was like you were saying that back in the
|
|
When we had to do a little configuring to be able to get Netflix to work with
|
|
with linux
|
|
Oh, you're talking about the the header re-writer thing the plugin it yeah, where would the change
|
|
There's live headers was like a diagnostic tool and then there's another one
|
|
Yeah, there's another one where it's specifically designed to do that
|
|
But that just changes your header that doesn't I don't know it doesn't work the same way as when you
|
|
Inspect the page and you click the little tool that toggles it says toggle the vice toolbar and it changes it to
|
|
Tablet or phone or regular
|
|
That's there's something where it would have you do it or you can change it where you can
|
|
Make the make the web page think you were like internet explorer or make it think it was like
|
|
It's far or something. Yeah, that's user
|
|
ID
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's to use agent string and those
|
|
user
|
|
Agent strings switch
|
|
Yeah, user agent switcher. That's it. Thank you
|
|
If you really want to
|
|
Goes belonging into the glorious past and
|
|
Versus the what people thought was going to be the glorious future
|
|
I have a book to recommend to you, which also seems to be in google books one moment
|
|
Tell that bbs
|
|
No, it's called exploring the internet a technical travel log by Carl Mellemode
|
|
This is a book written around
|
|
9193 about a fella who
|
|
converted some
|
|
OSI documents to a to pdf form and had them on his son serve a server supplied by son and
|
|
He explored the internet at the time you could actually
|
|
Follow where connections were being made and how the net was growing
|
|
He also talked about how
|
|
There was a tremendous fight to get TCP
|
|
IP and and you know the internet protocols that we understand
|
|
Into europe and other countries because the
|
|
Organization for international standards was
|
|
Was pushing their own seven-layer magic carpet. They were also making those same standards very expensive for the world to
|
|
Actually access and when he put them up on a server shortly after finding out that people were actually accessing the standards on the server
|
|
the people at the
|
|
Organization for international standards had him take down the server and
|
|
Unpublished the published
|
|
Data because the paper standards were an expensive flush fund for the
|
|
For the OSI people and they would have tons of them printed up and a few of them would be sold
|
|
But since it was all you and money nobody really cared
|
|
But the kind of politicking and how how people had to
|
|
Tunnel stuff through
|
|
Like x25 links and stuff to try to use the
|
|
TCP IP in Europe in a europe where
|
|
Were things were
|
|
Locked down to the OSI seven-layer model which
|
|
Produced a lot of standards, but very few implementations that could actually work with each other
|
|
So did they not allow
|
|
And the like in europe at that time?
|
|
Well a lot of the times fight on it and stuff
|
|
Required making a phone call and in some countries that was a major major problem
|
|
Uh, yeah, I wonder how europe the europe thing was for phone companies in the eighties
|
|
Those bad enough with states here must have been a worse country to country
|
|
well the the whole thing was that
|
|
Everything was was designated that the phone companies which were of course government organizations in most of Europe at the time
|
|
Locked everything down. So anyone trying to do a private network was looked at like they were stealing money from the government
|
|
The fact that the government couldn't provide the services that that private companies were or capable of doing was
|
|
Overlooked the details make hilarious reading. Yeah, like always I only wanted what something like
|
|
256 networks in the world. Well, that would just be too many numbers to keep track of
|
|
Well the only person that's supposed to have a network is you is the national phone company
|
|
So you don't need any more
|
|
Networks than you have national phone companies. Yeah, I guess that wouldn't work here since we had all private phone companies and ISPs and
|
|
Universities etc etc
|
|
well
|
|
Actually, that's what and besides TCP IP came out of DARPA and that came out of the evil
|
|
American defense industrial complex
|
|
While the OSI paper came to came out of Geneva, Switzerland and some very expensive
|
|
junketing
|
|
Talkfest as OSI like the IEEE
|
|
Actually IEEE is the I believe the American branch of the OSI
|
|
Representative agency whatever you want to call it is IEEE government owners that of
|
|
Private thing. I think it's somewhere in the hazy middle when you're dealing with international standards or
|
|
National standards that have to mesh with other international standards things get pretty muddy
|
|
We were talking earlier about some European Union stuff and the politics of of getting
|
|
networks across national boundaries and with the EU
|
|
uh
|
|
management
|
|
I should really wash my mouth out but uh
|
|
It was amazing
|
|
also
|
|
The IBM network at this time was a purely and simply bootleg
|
|
Construction of IBM system operators and system programmers
|
|
And it became a primary part of IBM's own connection with itself
|
|
Yeah, if you look on garlic dot com
|
|
I think it's garlic dot com and in Lynn Wheeler's
|
|
Stuff talked about how
|
|
IBM's VM or OS which IBM repeatedly tried to kill off was the thing that kept
|
|
Their own worldwide systems going. You must have a different garlic dot com. I'm getting South Valley internet
|
|
Maybe it's garlic dot net you want to look at
|
|
And in Lynn Wheeler
|
|
Or maybe it's garlic dot org. I don't have the proper extension for it. No, it's none of those. Those are all ISP things
|
|
50 I would just like to say thank you for putting things into the etherpad
|
|
Well, I'm not doing everything. Yeah, I do it every one every few minutes. It's like oh what we're talking about five minutes
|
|
Yeah, never mind
|
|
Still, I appreciate it. I even appreciate the fact that you named yourself from the etherpad so I can give you the credit
|
|
Well, I think that's carries over from the
|
|
easer pad for the show
|
|
For Linux logcast probably it's the same pad for the same page of the same pad right
|
|
I think I'm gonna hang in for maybe another 10 more minutes and then I'm gonna call it a night
|
|
We tell my daughter that she's not allowed to
|
|
Actually get up and out of bed and until at least like five o'clock
|
|
And if I go to bed now, that'll give me what like I don't have
|
|
She'll sleep if she gets up
|
|
It's a little past my bedtime too. I'm gonna drive
|
|
Block tomorrow. What time you start your drive for tomorrow? Um, I don't know depends on what time we can get to load it up
|
|
So probably 10 or 11 and how long was it for you?
|
|
Uh, it's a good 12 13 hours. Okay, and I won't be the only one driving. So that's good
|
|
Yeah, I am gonna set an alarm so I can jump back in here just before the end and see what's going on
|
|
But uh, yeah, I was all headed towards bed myself
|
|
Yeah, what time is the end?
|
|
So we usually like what is it? It's about 7 EST and I don't know what it is UTC
|
|
But about seven o'clock EST uh, we usually check to see if there's anybody on and then if there's anybody talking if there's
|
|
still people on and talking and
|
|
Then we just keep it going until we stop hearing people talking and we'll stop the recording
|
|
So basically officially around 7 am EST and if people are still talking then we'll just
|
|
Let it go and then you know truncate so then come back to it later and check to see if anybody's on there
|
|
If not, then we'll shut it down and then you know truncate silence will kill any of the dead air
|
|
Well, I did want to bring up one thing
|
|
I just
|
|
Found a guy that's selling a 3d printer for 125 dollars, but it's um
|
|
That m3d micro plus 3d printer
|
|
Not skip it and 3d is a little square cube
|
|
Yeah, it's tight. It's not heated bed. You have to use their
|
|
PLA filament with it usually
|
|
Because it's a special
|
|
Temperature I guess
|
|
Special size pool. It's kind of slow and it's kind of hard to deal with
|
|
We had one of those when we first started a couple years ago and
|
|
Dumped it within six months. Okay. Okay. I will give it a pass
|
|
Basically, you really want a heated bed no matter what you do anymore. It's always works better
|
|
Uh, I know a couple of my buddies got um what was it the a8?
|
|
The a8
|
|
Yeah, that's good if you want to build a kit and learn everything about 3d printing
|
|
I would recommend the mk3 Prusa i3 if you have either 500 or a thousand dollars in a pocket
|
|
That's absolutely best. What's the um the one that door got
|
|
That's the c-i-10 reality. I have a new tennis
|
|
That's still 400 bucks
|
|
The old the one he has is 350 now the new one of the same thing is
|
|
For some thing like 425 you can also get the same
|
|
Brand or manufacturer. It's the
|
|
Ender three. Yep, which a lot of people like it does the same kind of stuff. It's just a little bit smaller but cheaper
|
|
Um, that's a really good one. The thing about those is
|
|
They're easy to customize and upgrade and you know, once you get the basics down and know what you're doing
|
|
You can add stuff to it and get it working pretty good. Right. Do we know if you know if the ender has the heated bed?
|
|
That I don't know. I know of a couple of guys that have one and I I can't remember if they said it does or not
|
|
But again, that's something you can add later if you really want it, which I recommend
|
|
Yeah, it's something I should look into is like the ender because the ender is the same type of style as I think the trunk
|
|
Say where it's got the um it's got the arm as opposed to the um right
|
|
Yeah, like the arc as the like day ain't that eight has but I've heard nothing but good things about the ender
|
|
I think who was it? I know of two people who got them actually
|
|
Well, there's a lot of people that have them which means you can get a lot of help if you ask around
|
|
Right and the trunk sees not on like that um the trunk see I don't have a heated bed
|
|
But I've the anything that I've gotten to print has been pretty good
|
|
But like I said, there's still like learning curve with it, but there is a I am not a
|
|
Facebook promoter at all basically. I'm just on Facebook for to keep tracking my family
|
|
Because I got ticked off the fact that my wife knew more about what was going on my family than I did
|
|
Because you followed up on Facebook
|
|
So I joined Facebook, but there was also a tronxy group on Facebook and they are super helpful when it comes to anything
|
|
I basically I've posted stuff there in their path in the past going hey, what's going on with this and they came back with
|
|
There was like five or six people that just automatically like came in and
|
|
Responded and was willing to help out but the ender look like it was there's a pretty
|
|
It's actually not just the arm. It's it looks like the CR-10. It's just smaller
|
|
Really? Yeah, it's a full age
|
|
But I think it's it does only have one z-axis like the a-net
|
|
I think has a left and right up and down whereas the ender and the CR-10 only have one
|
|
50 have you got yours up and running yet
|
|
It's sitting there. I haven't done anything with it yet. What did you did you get the monochrome for the monoprice?
|
|
I did monoprice is the same style as the tronxy x-1
|
|
But I think yours is more of it's a lot of the stuff is in case if it's ready to print out of the box
|
|
Yeah, there's no similar or anything on it. It looks exactly like the one Joel has except it's it's backwards
|
|
Right, I was gonna say I was gonna say I think Joel got one of those very similar. All right guys
|
|
Good night. I'll see you bunch here on Friday. Yep. Happy new year. Happy new year. That's right. That's this Friday isn't it?
|
|
Yep first Friday and I
|
|
I don't know don't hold me to it
|
|
But I thought I would try to spend at least part of the day tomorrow getting
|
|
Working on some of these real-world projects. I always say I'm gonna do it never do. Okay. I think the way I'm going today
|
|
I'm good tonight. I'm probably gonna spend most of tomorrow and then out of like naps
|
|
Five minutes a year ten minutes there coffee
|
|
Easy kids. Can't be easy kids in the house. Right. Well, I may be holding the floor here for
|
|
For a while. So thank you gentlemen for everything. Well, thank you. Thank you for hanging out. Right and giving us good history information
|
|
Right. Yeah, well, I'm I'm sort of the historic reference person for a lot of stuff since since my first computing experience was on
|
|
On a Wang using a teletype the storage medium was the yellow teletype punch paper tape history and puns all part of the aspive service
|
|
I always love the racing still ones. Yeah, so I just finished dissecting that for relatively recently
|
|
So it looks like the ender three does have a
|
|
Bed maximum bed temperature of 110 C. So I must have a heated bed
|
|
So for $187 it's a partially built machine. That's pretty good
|
|
Well, it looks like I'm probably gonna be saving up for an ender three
|
|
Yes, skip the an end go straight to that because a nuts, you know, might be 140, but it does not compare
|
|
Yeah, and I've it seemed like the a nuts can be a lot of work trying to get put together and like the trunk seat was was some work
|
|
But the a nut seems like it's a little bit more. Yeah, and sometimes the a nut doesn't have all the parts for when I hear
|
|
So it seems the same way I've heard a lot of horror stories from people not having enough screws
|
|
Just like that with the trunk seat. Yeah, and when you've not done it before you don't know what you don't have and it's just really
|
|
Knocks you back a bit. Yeah, I was trying to explain that to something before that you know these these things sometimes are
|
|
More kit than they are actual just like, you know a finished product
|
|
They they give you like you're just given the fistful of screws and the fistful of this stuff that you need to base to get the thing running
|
|
And most of the time you get the right amount and you have a lot of some extra stuff
|
|
I mean, I have a bunch of extra screws
|
|
But there are other times when people get like not enough of some of the things that they need and whatnot
|
|
Yeah, it's the Chinese warehouse experience. You're gonna get what they gave you
|
|
Exactly, you know 3D printing is such a the whole the the whole fact that these this idea moved as quickly as it did
|
|
And I know a lot of that has to do with the
|
|
I'm okay, it's too late and I've had a look to much string maybe but I'm blanking on the guy's name but the the company but
|
|
Since they open sourced that's at Prusa the whole Prusa design and stuff because the way they open sourced all the stuff
|
|
That everything was able to move at the speed that it did because I remember there was a time when we were talking about 3D printers
|
|
And it was like you had to spend a thousand dollars to get something that was like
|
|
Yeah, I don't know like a box that you basically tried to put something together and know what I had an A family out there
|
|
And nowadays you can spend a hundred and fifty dollars and get yourself something that's like pretty much almost out of the box
|
|
You could just start printing stuff and there's enough stuff out there between thingiverse and whatever else that you can actually print something cool pretty quickly
|
|
Yeah, there's basically three major things that occurred pretty close together one was
|
|
super cheap stepper motors
|
|
super cheap
|
|
eight-bit microcontrollers with boards set up to control those
|
|
motors and then
|
|
the hot-end
|
|
materials when Prusa was putting his stuff together you had to wrap your own wire
|
|
To make a tube that would heat up to the right temperature to do the plastic, you know
|
|
You are making everything yourself if you look on the the wiki page for I don't know
|
|
It's probably rep wrapped out already they have a hot-end area and if you look through there
|
|
You can see all the you know old revisions of things and it looks like when they're you know making
|
|
You know capacitors inductors in the 1920s. It looks like that kind of stuff
|
|
Wow, I gotta look that stuff up
|
|
But nowadays a lot of these parts are so cheap like you're saying. I mean you can
|
|
You can buy motors and you know all the tubing and everything else
|
|
I mean I go on I went on Amazon and bought replacement parts for like half this this printer and
|
|
You know maybe like $10 of these for like different things
|
|
I bought like a whole freaking thing of the tubing and
|
|
You know, I don't
|
|
I just
|
|
The speed at which that this finally got caught up and nowadays you can do whatever with these things is just phenomenal
|
|
Yeah, there's plenty of cheap knockoff stuff on eBay and wherever I think the the best source to go is the
|
|
e3d-online.com
|
|
It's a UK company and they produce like the v6 hot-end that you bought
|
|
If you bought a knockoff, it was knocked off of their original design
|
|
And so they're they're the precision manufacturers of all that stuff and they have a lot of really really good equipment
|
|
It's not really that much more expensive
|
|
You know, you can pay $30 for the hot-end on eBay, but you're gonna pay 45 from these guys
|
|
You may as well spend the extra ten bucks to get the perfect one right
|
|
And I was surprised living in Hawaii
|
|
They don't have shipping like you know us post office. They have like international
|
|
Two-day for like 1250. So if you buy
|
|
Things that don't weigh a lot are not bulky. I can get stuff from the UK and two days cheaper than I can buy it from Amazon
|
|
Aren't you closer to China too?
|
|
Well kind of in the middle, but you know, I don't think we're a major hub for China
|
|
And I understand people who have like the 3D printer and don't know what to what to do with it
|
|
I've pretty much I've had times when I've just sat there and gone through like think of where it's going
|
|
Okay, I want to print that I want to print that I want to print that I mean even simple little things like I found a
|
|
Orb that's a storage container that prints in like three separate parts top part
|
|
You know, and they kind of all swivel and they're used for like different storage compartments
|
|
But then when you fold it all back together it's an orb like that's cool. I want to do that
|
|
Yeah, part of it too is just you know figuring out the puzzle pieces
|
|
You can go on tinker CAD and that's super basic
|
|
But you can take you know blocks and cylinders and planes and
|
|
You know tubes and stuff and and make whatever shape you want and print it
|
|
Yeah, once I get everything running up up and running again
|
|
I want to number one print out a bunch of things that I have found and in number two just
|
|
Get more into the designing aspect of things
|
|
One of the first things I ever printed that I made myself
|
|
I still use today and that it's probably two years old that it's just a clip a plastic clip for the
|
|
that
|
|
You know wire stick under the hood of your car that holds up your hood when you have your hood up
|
|
the plastic clip broke on my truck
|
|
so I
|
|
Looked at the old one and played around with them all enough and printed out a few of them
|
|
And replace it and that piece of plastic is still working today. I just don't get stick it to the hood of the car
|
|
Sticker to the hood of the car. Well the well stick to the the the plastic clip on because you're talking about the clip that the
|
|
Metal piece that goes to the
|
|
Holds the the hood of the car up when it's open, right? Yeah, so when you put the the
|
|
That metal bar down to close the hood. There's a clip that holds it from vibrating around right
|
|
I replaced that clip right now just clips into a hole in the in the front there. Oh, okay
|
|
I don't realize that it clips into a hole
|
|
I don't know if you hadn't used like a sort of a glue to get the thing on or I don't know it's let's a clip in
|
|
Manufactured thing that there's like a square hole in the metal on top of the radiator and that clip pops into that little hole
|
|
And that clip has you know a pinchy thing on the top that holds that bar
|
|
Right right right right right right now be on the inside of the car. I'm on the hood. Okay. Yeah, sorry
|
|
Some of you noticed thinking that that bar was on the hood, but it sticks into the hood
|
|
It's been a while since I pulled out of the car
|
|
Can I drop a note for those who may be upgrading laptops? Of course. This is not a commercial
|
|
They're just a company that I found to be very good. Is it pluggables? No, well pluggables is good if you're doing anything with USB
|
|
uh
|
|
Video
|
|
Charging all sorts of stuff, but this is a company called new mode us. They new mode electronics is a official name
|
|
What I purchased from them was a
|
|
eSATA P
|
|
adapter that uses the old eSATA P which is the powered eSATA
|
|
connection and
|
|
I
|
|
I used it to hook up to a cheap ssd externally on on my old laptop. I also got a
|
|
replacement for the
|
|
DVD drive that that holds an ssd adapts an ssd to your your cd dvd drive inside the laptop
|
|
So that's new mode die. I'm sorry new mode us.com is the website
|
|
Yes, now I got mine through amazon, but what I wanted to with your talk about Chinese
|
|
warehousing the the cable that I came with has two pieces one of which would adapt to the
|
|
DVD drive that I pulled out and there was a second part that would adapt that that connection to a full
|
|
for a regular laptop hard drive or ssd it was missing the second part
|
|
I contacted amazon and amazon contacted new mode and they had that part to me in a few days of
|
|
a very quick uh correction of of their error. I find a company that responds to a
|
|
quickly more impressive than someone who may do it perfectly because you know you can
|
|
trust them to back their stuff. So you bought it at amazon but it was a new mode us product
|
|
and you told amazon there was a problem and amazon told new mode and they fixed it
|
|
and they fixed it quickly they sent me yep the parts going to be in a mail it was delivered
|
|
I'm quite impressed. Yeah that's another example of getting a good product from amazon. I bought
|
|
some you know no name LED headlights through amazon and I could have gone to ebay or somewhere else
|
|
but I bought it through amazon and when they went out there's there's zero documentation
|
|
in the package you know it doesn't have very good english you know any instructions it just
|
|
kind of shows you some pictures of how to set it up and all this stuff well about six months
|
|
later one of the headlights went out and all it says in the packaging it says contact manufacturer
|
|
for replacement if broken you know and a couple things like that well there's no phone number to
|
|
the manufacturer there's no website to the manufacturer so I get on amazon I look at the reviews
|
|
and you know how to contact these people and what their information is and basically there was
|
|
nothing I could do in the listing but I told amazon that I needed to get the manufacturer to
|
|
replace this broken thing and so amazon contacted the people that listed that product and then the
|
|
people that actually listed the product contacted me through the amazon communication system however
|
|
they do it and they got me the product so yeah if you're going to buy something weird I think amazon
|
|
is helpful when something bad happens yeah well I just you know I bought two items one of them
|
|
was a little was a different package than I actually ordered but they cleared it up in day
|
|
the replacement part came to me faster than my original order yeah that's pretty good
|
|
according to new mode us there in california and it's funny because I've done these websites in the
|
|
past this is a completely unskinned basic zincart website they don't even have pretty rls all your
|
|
rls are you know main underscore page equals index you know ampersand see path blah blah blah and
|
|
whatever the id number is they didn't even bother to skin anything they just installed zincart
|
|
put their stuff in there and started selling stuff so it looks like they pay more attention to
|
|
customer service at least than they do the website which is probably good they already shoot
|
|
shooting off fireworks over there oh yes they started at 5.30 it's 10.45 all right guys I got to go
|
|
to bed good new year sorry happy new year and I'll probably see talk to some of you guys in the
|
|
morning if anybody's in the morning but if not I'll see some of you guys on Friday hey Jay
|
|
Ruel I'd hang out till it was your your new years but I'm just getting too old no worries have a good
|
|
night and happy new year everybody well I'm going back to my days as as a midnight date security guard
|
|
staying up from sundown to sun up is brings me back to well the 90s when I was doing security
|
|
all night all night that minor take care talk to you tomorrow or Friday happy new year Mrs.
|
|
Oak do you guys have a new year's drink or food that you do over year well I do commercial
|
|
legnock the more alcoholic drinks are medically inadvisable for me I finally had more than one
|
|
agnog at Christmas with my family that was nice I haven't really had agnog before not bad it was
|
|
the basic grocery store brand I look forward to it although this year you can only get it by the
|
|
court locally yeah I think it was a court hi guys Mrs. Oak here hey Mrs. Oak happy new year happy
|
|
new year I have mr. Oak here too happy new year and my friend and my friend like a Tony Montana
|
|
little friend no like my best friend from when we were in college she's still my best friend
|
|
you had one job anyway imagine I did a really really good impersonation about it you know I had one
|
|
job it was to press the space bar I'll call me after the first bottle of champagne I think we
|
|
can forgive you I don't know we haven't been here long enough for you to how about this could get
|
|
isn't your aren't you in central time zone your new year's already happened we're in
|
|
Pacific and our new year's just happened here too so yeah we're in Pacific oh okay that was
|
|
thinking Arizona for some reason desert definitely desert we're in Nevada oh that's right so
|
|
Zappos still over there Zappos the retail chain the uh shoot people that Amazon bought
|
|
I don't know if we have any open still here in this area but I know that we we ship to them all
|
|
the time with one of the customers that I wear house for I remember reading an article they were
|
|
big in Vegas or that was their headquarters for a while that might be the case Vegas is 450
|
|
miles from here so who's been on tonight who do we miss well 51 50 just left uh sub sub sub unity from
|
|
Sweden left a little while ago I think I think it was Hockey McGoo left left Joe from tilts and
|
|
other things was here earlier so yeah we missed all the fun people apart from you obviously and I
|
|
think all the tilts people were supposed to be on earlier in the day but I just got on a couple
|
|
hours ago yeah we've got a house we had a house full that we just finally sent the old folks home
|
|
and took the small folks into bed so we finally get to be you know middle adults so have your fireworks
|
|
subsided well they're illegal in this state and was there the actual like pyrotechnic shows that
|
|
are put on so yeah they have but that didn't mean that they didn't happen oh yeah there's a bunch
|
|
and the cops will go in front figure out who they are yeah my my son's friend lose around the corner
|
|
in every year I have to Facebook come and threaten him with police action yeah well at least so
|
|
all kinds of stuff at Walmart and Costco over here so but they they just don't have the roadside
|
|
sign or the roadside stands like in Texas the only place you can get them and Nevada legally
|
|
is at the Indian reservation and then you can't take them off the reservation which of course
|
|
stuff people how yeah it doesn't we were just discussing that when we started to talk button yeah it
|
|
doesn't stop anybody that's why I always have to threaten the neighbor with police action that's
|
|
where he's giving him well look at look at this here I just moved into a new house and it just
|
|
rained for about 30 minutes and then you know far worse we're going off all the time but now they're
|
|
accumulating more and more I told my family that this year I'll be sitting at home spring
|
|
down the house hoping it doesn't catch on fire we probably would get like eight inches of
|
|
precipitation in the whole year luckily it is typically this time of year that we get it
|
|
so if you guys been doing any Linuxy stuff this year um we we've been talking about going back to
|
|
doing some podcasting I know so extend some hpr episodes but I haven't been able to do anything much
|
|
with it this year um I'm not usually I've been working a lot of hours I spend too much time away
|
|
from home and doing things that aren't my designated hobbies I think we both miss hanging out with
|
|
our old crew online though we used to have a lot of fun on you know whatever night it was five
|
|
years that a day yeah you guys used to be on the odd cast shows and different things with Clotto
|
|
and those guys right we used to mostly be on Linux crank so those sometimes I think we went on
|
|
something kind of techy once in a while and a few others probably here they're good or miss
|
|
well I can extend an invitation to Linux logcast as the remaining representative of that group
|
|
yeah you're gonna have a Friday show right what time does that start on what time zone
|
|
nine o'clock eastern uh the number details are on our website and nine o'clock is a very nominal time
|
|
sometimes people are there eight thirty and sometimes the start time drag yeah um that would be
|
|
six p.m. our time which means we've probably just be getting off work and that would be not me
|
|
I haven't been at work home from work before eight p.m. any night in the last two weeks and I
|
|
just don't know when that's gonna let up um but so it might be able to pull it off it depends on
|
|
how cooperative the five year old is well we sometimes run to midnight Houston well then I guess
|
|
that we just have to hop on light maybe yes and uh we are on the first Friday first and third
|
|
Fridays of the month so you get two chances a month to hear our brilliance or our fertile
|
|
exposition anyway I'll have Zook put it on the calendar because I think we should probably try
|
|
to start getting back out there again I think that the longer we put it off the I think the sooner
|
|
we get ourselves back doing any one thing the sooner we'll get back into the swing of it well
|
|
we're extremely open format so um it's not where you know we're part of the old dev random and what
|
|
not the kernel panic Mrs. Zook do you guys do any kind of particular New Year's food or drinks
|
|
at the near uh drink anything alcoholic food anything that could be eating the fingers and dipped
|
|
did you guys just hear what I said and if I've managed break it I heard you
|
|
oh you did it's a nasty knack of accidentally breaking things what about you what's your poison
|
|
well definitely I'm paying it midnight but um I've been having a mochi fried mochi and some
|
|
conoco and sugar which is pretty good it's like a rice cake what is the oh rice cake it's a
|
|
what's kind of a hard rice cake like hockey puck or something but you fry it and because it's a
|
|
solid kind of hard rice thing it kind of melts in the pan and it becomes really bubbly and expands
|
|
a little bit and then you can you flip it over a couple times in the pan with some oil and so it's
|
|
got like a crunchy outside in a chewy center and this conoco stuff is a very finely powdered soybean
|
|
and you mix that with half and half sugar and um it's a good little snack sounds interesting
|
|
it's supposed to be like a good luck food the Japanese tradition I was going to see it sounds
|
|
far more appetizing than my mother's idea of a good luck food which is a black eyed piece yeah
|
|
you're you're also supposed to have a tangerine and I think uh clam soup of some kind but I don't
|
|
like clams so I don't do that I only do clams and they're deep fried and breaded
|
|
a lady after my mother's soul god rest her well my dad's southern and he always told me that
|
|
everything tastes better if it's deep fried and smothered in cheese I'm trying to think of what in
|
|
the south is deep fried and smothered in cheese doesn't have to be both but you can do both
|
|
oh I see melted cheese on anything or fried yeah I'll definitely agree with the fried my uncle made
|
|
us some chicken fried steak with tops are going over the holiday which was nice I made a beef
|
|
Wellington was that last week yeah Christmas day yes Christmas day if I so yeah well I probably
|
|
should have remembered it with Christ how many pounds was that maybe it was the day it was going to
|
|
be Christmas day after the Christmas day we have this son who's almost 20 and he likes to cook
|
|
but he's got this horrible habit of saying okay I want to make this so here's the shopping list
|
|
and then we go spend $300 of the grocery store and then we get all this stuff home and he says oh
|
|
I got to go and we ended up having to cook it ourselves but yes I made beef Wellington
|
|
which was a five pound beef tenderloin and obviously prosciutto and the
|
|
buckwheels whatever they have the mushrooms and all that fun stuff mixed I followed the Gordon Ramsey
|
|
version sort of here the Christmas version but I didn't find any roasted chestnuts to put in there
|
|
unfortunately I stumbled upon must have been a five or maybe 10 year old YouTube video of Gordon
|
|
Ramsey because I was watching the America's test kitchen or something on YouTube and the next
|
|
video was Gordon Ramsey's holiday whatever and he made like 10 different things and they all look
|
|
awesome that guy knows how to do stuff it's it's kind of weird because he's a footballed original
|
|
soccer player I was going to say he could teach an entire class on the proper use of the effort
|
|
yeah well it's that that's his personality I mean if you see him interacting with the kids there
|
|
was one episode where um it was I know some kids saying kid kid master chef class something
|
|
and there was a girl and she was like 12 or something she's crying because the souffle he didn't
|
|
rise or something and he sat down he said there's no crying in the kitchen I've got two daughters
|
|
man yeah whichever one is like your age and he did this like silly little thing and made her smile
|
|
and cheered her up and yeah I just think it's basically it's just he it's the whole thing like
|
|
it's a show something cow that holds I'm gonna I'm gonna be very rude to people just because it's
|
|
yeah it gets people to watch basically that's what we should start calling my son
|
|
what he's being what he is some prince what Gordon Ramsay when he's being a trickster called
|
|
assignments his Simon English or Australian English he's British he's definitely British
|
|
just don't call Gordon Ramsay English I used to love his kitchen nightmare series
|
|
yeah whatever this happened to you that um I can't even remember what that one that was
|
|
horrible way basically walked away from it they ignored everything he said they didn't cook
|
|
anything it was so that the stuff they cooked was horrible the only thing he liked is the thing
|
|
they didn't cook and they lied to him and they were just it was terrible it was like the wife
|
|
wanted to do it so the rich husband said they're about I'll buy you a restaurant and she had no
|
|
idea how to cook I do remember one where they went back and I think it was the one where the
|
|
arrogant chef guy you know it was like a 22 25 year old guy parents basically workers are
|
|
placed to get him a restaurant and he wouldn't taste his cooking and Gordon Ramsay was just like
|
|
why in the world would you serve anybody food that you have not tasted and then they went back
|
|
after and they found out he went back to his old way of doing things you know months later
|
|
after going through all this stuff the problem is a lot of people seem to do that a lot of the
|
|
reality TV shows a it's all sort of big up for TV a little anyway and but the from what I heard
|
|
is that most of these shows the people go back to their old ways and basically fail the the
|
|
biggest loser show was it well yeah the people lose yeah 400 pounds or whatever look in
|
|
in well a year or like two weeks but yeah in over the year and they get surgery to do that and all
|
|
that stuff but I can't remember the numbers it's some of like of the 15 people that were on the
|
|
show 13 of them had put all the way back on and six of them had gained more weight afterwards it's
|
|
a really weird they'll do it for the TV show and then people generally go back into their old habits
|
|
so on the biggest loser did they actually his part of their win package some kind of surgery
|
|
like lap band or something that's like a like a gastric thing that helps them not eat so much
|
|
that might have been the best way for them to do but I think most of them just ended up using
|
|
the surgery as cosmetic yeah to take off the extra skin that doesn't go away when you lose fat
|
|
lost weight and they had flab and they got surgery for flab not eating yeah mine's standing
|
|
I mean again you see what the TV show wants you to see and one of my jobs was actually still
|
|
IT but worked at I'm trying to not give specifics away but it was not home shopping network but
|
|
think home shopping network that kind of thing and the like the studio's teeny it's just small
|
|
enough to be to you see basically everything but you have there's there's narrow at the back
|
|
and the hosts walk out from this area in the back and it's just large enough the host of hide
|
|
out of camera shop and then step in and be like hey welcome there's nothing back there there's like
|
|
wall there's warehouse there was nothing else behind there was nowhere to go but you make it look
|
|
like you can step out and walk out let's it was really weird to see how you know they control
|
|
everything so you see exactly this the camera angle is specifically here because if you move it
|
|
three inches to the left then you've got something you don't want to see and it was very weird
|
|
so I'm sure a lot of these reality TV shows are very strict on sort of what they show you
|
|
but supposedly it's all yeah they had the camera the personal trainer guy but they had him on
|
|
cool to Chris something or other yeah um to talk to people and teach them how to eat better
|
|
and work out no that they stayed on the program they could they could continue what the way
|
|
they were doing but just like most people you know you're doing great you're doing great you're
|
|
doing great and you're like oh oh this weekend I can do whatever I've been doing so good I should
|
|
just reward myself when you have a food addiction it's the same as being an alcoholic you can't
|
|
get off that wagon at all or I mean it's stupidly simple you eat less calories than you burn
|
|
and then you lose weight it's that it's one simple formula that's how it's calories in calories out
|
|
eat less than you burn and then you lose weight eat more you gain weight listen to us like we're
|
|
some kind of help for no no that's real simple it's just really difficult to do in practice and
|
|
has someone who needs to get back on the the wagon of eating coffee and losing weight again um well
|
|
today um and yeah i'm completely hypocritical you but it's a beautiful thing over there
|
|
sorry what's that mr. beef Wellington over there
|
|
yeah exactly i mean Wellington was to like us by the way you know just i'd like too short you should
|
|
enjoy it a little but absolutely you can't cross that line between enjoying abuse and i think
|
|
that's where a lot of us end up because food does become an addiction i'm addicted to tacos
|
|
so we we have the friend was waiting for me to let go of the bus
|
|
sitting here hoping we'd stop talking you'll like go that the buttons do she get open for beer
|
|
that's podcasting gold you know pop the top poured in the glass you can hear the gliggle gliggle gliggle
|
|
gliggle gliggle gliggle gliggle gliggle gliggle
|
|
wait we've outwasted glasses around here it came in the appropriate good dispenser
|
|
it's already in the container what do you put another one for cheers I'm glad
|
|
it's nice and wet outside there's all kinds of cool stuff going on wet what
|
|
is this water thing you talk about it's the stuff that falls from the sky
|
|
every once in a while it's the stuff that fell from the sky every day for me
|
|
growing up and that's why I moved to a desert yeah one extreme to the other we
|
|
get all excited when it rains or snow it's because we so rarely see it we've
|
|
like 360 days of sun in this state so we get excited when the rain comes
|
|
or the snow comes every time I'm all cheering for it and he's over there in the
|
|
corner pouting well bunch of people like it rains a doomy singland and like
|
|
there's a reason I moved to a desert okay there's bits of England I totally
|
|
miss this really cool architecture yeah this yeah this building that was 400
|
|
years old that was not particularly special because all the other buildings on
|
|
that road are also 400 years old my grandmother used to live in a farmhouse at
|
|
400 years old had a patch of roof nothing special about it wasn't a listed
|
|
building because all of them were like that but the weather is definitely
|
|
something I do not miss from England well you can always visit yeah there is
|
|
that or I can just or I can just go to Washington yeah if I want snow I drive or
|
|
maybe 45 minutes to the top of the mountain and I can enjoy the snow and then
|
|
get back in my car and go back to 80 degrees that's what's nice about here
|
|
where we're at in northern Nevada if it snows it does stick around till April
|
|
and and usually it snows in the mountains and we just get rain in the valley
|
|
and it's really really pretty and you have to build up the stupid drivers I
|
|
totally don't mind the snow at all it's just sharing the row of people who don't
|
|
know how to cope with it that bothers me and I I really kind of just prefer it
|
|
when I'm on my couch at home with a book in front of the fireplace I get make
|
|
you another drink and then no one sticks no one's talking what did you say what
|
|
did you say about the weather I guess we scared everybody off I guess the
|
|
real show is going to start in about 40 minutes there's quite a few big
|
|
bangs going off already okay what's happening in 40 minutes because
|
|
Alaska was 20 minutes ago and I'm losing track of which islands are
|
|
next then why is that 40 minutes for the big island
|
|
yep is that where you're at yeah I'm in corner I hate you
|
|
you would hate the humidity no why it's fine you just stay in the water all the time
|
|
it's a little too many today but it's been cool what do you define as a little
|
|
few minutes what's your definition of cool well it's probably like 75 now it is 23 degrees
|
|
on my front porch well nice I'm back I just had to take advantage of a few of
|
|
a moment's right to grab some lunch and some stuff from the local convenience store across
|
|
the street welcome back I'm being haunted by my house mate a tuxedo cat who wants
|
|
her share of lunch our cat constantly thinks she's starving it is it'd be funny if it wasn't
|
|
so aggravating well I must admit that I've encouraged her we usually split the sandwich a
|
|
little bit I pull off a chunk of the ham so she's now got entitlement issues if we're still
|
|
talking about cats they all have entitlement issues that's because they remember the Egyptians
|
|
wishes them as ghosts yes and the guy who wrote the cat came back was a pessimist doesn't
|
|
mean cat an Egyptian and this is a tuxedo cat female and the guy who drew sovester knew what
|
|
he was talking about we've got not orange tabby who is a sleep not too far from us at the moment
|
|
she's always asleep well she's a cat I don't know by definition you know she just looks like she's
|
|
asleep and this cat keeps me under proper feline supervision have you seen the subreddit cats are liquid
|
|
you know they're just lying really weird ways and it just peaches them like lying
|
|
like they have no bones yeah basically I spilled something on the floor they cut laid out
|
|
well this one there is well I'm a restless sleeper but when I'm awake the cat believes
|
|
my hands calling is to pat her yes that was good the rest of it to mine we also have a
|
|
French door which this cat learned very early to open by herself the French door yeah it probably
|
|
has those lever handles instead of the turn oh right okay we had a cat that could have done that
|
|
if we didn't have a turn in arms but that done my sense now I was confused we had a cat that
|
|
in the hole sorry I just we had a cat that used to light some in the hallway because she wanted
|
|
us to open the bedroom door and let her in at night so she's to sit out their own night
|
|
and meow for five minutes and then she jump up and turn right on jump up and turn right off and
|
|
she do that for two or three minutes and then she go back to meowing it was the constant chorus
|
|
all night long well this cat has learned how to either push the door open or hook its claws
|
|
into the edge of the door and pull it open the door the entire edge of the door has a whole
|
|
series of little pin bricks so there's a story behind this cat we have we didn't really want the cat
|
|
we have a five-year-old she just turned five and she's a bit of a brute still and we just
|
|
weren't ready for a cat but our son who just tonight today turned 20 he brought this cat home
|
|
and decided we had we're having a cat okay now that was pretty upset at first but the cats
|
|
really cute she's really really cute but then we found out that this cat is going to spend
|
|
her entire life trying to eat anything and everything that anybody leaves out she
|
|
bread yeah she figured out how to open the bread box so she could eat the bread
|
|
she chewed through tinfoil to get to a cake she did too well to get to a cake and then she
|
|
proceeds to get sick on the carpet it's been a battle our bread now lives in the microwave
|
|
and everything else lives in the fridge of the freezer sometimes we can find a place to put
|
|
something in the pantry but we have to put anything and everything that she could possibly chew
|
|
through into a place that she can't chew through because if we don't she will eat it
|
|
a friend of mine had a cat that they originally give canned food to and then some dry kibble to
|
|
tighter over then the vet said oh no no don't give the dry food well the cat got up on the kitchen
|
|
counter and tore into look in the cabinets and tore into anything that looked like a cat
|
|
food bag beans what a have you now she spills them on the counter but the cat had been taught
|
|
that it wasn't supposed to eat anything on the counter so it would knock the stuff onto the floor
|
|
or it could eat it this cat also learned that at a certain turning one way was to the vet
|
|
in bad times and one way was to petco and fawn so it reacted accordingly instead of they
|
|
started driving around the corner past petco well it was a fork in the road and there were two
|
|
different directions but the petco when the cat went to petco it had fawn and it was very happy
|
|
when it was headed toward the vet and it knew that it was headed toward the vet it was kind of
|
|
upset you know also it was a feral kitten so they said well you know it could be standoffish or
|
|
whatnot from my friend friend she reported that it was the most snuggle post that you could find
|
|
you guys have those plastic bags that you get to grocery store not the paper bag but like the
|
|
the crunchy plastic bag yeah we have different varieties of those yes we had this cat
|
|
that would look at you from around the corner of the kitchen cabinet and if there was a bag on the
|
|
floor it would step on the bag and make noise with the bag and looking at you to try to get you to
|
|
go into the kitchen to give her some food or him some food there was a funniest thing if there
|
|
was a bag somewhere and the cat wanted her attention he'd go stand by the bag and just look at you
|
|
and step on this bag and make the you know the crunchy bag noise so you looked at it and did
|
|
something I discovered the most brilliant thing in the entire world last night or night before my
|
|
five-year-old with a long string with a inflated balloon tied to the end her and the cat man
|
|
around the house for an hour and a half with this dumb balloon and they were both so tired when
|
|
they were done they left me alone well one of my cats got mugged by a catnip mouse I can't
|
|
cure your teeth had did I hear you right well the catnip mouse was on an elastic string as they
|
|
tended to be and the cat was chasing it and the string got wrapped around the hind leg so the cat
|
|
was convinced that it was being attacked by a catnip mouse that is so funny also that was one of our
|
|
last outdoor cats at the end of my driveway we lived near a stream in Canada goose landed this
|
|
little gray cat looked at the goose and started doing its best neutral of Omaha I'm a lioness
|
|
imitation the good news is that in a true f-true moment neither neither the cat nor the goose
|
|
got into trouble with the with the other do you know what's really sad about that story is
|
|
I'm old enough that I can hear theme music to mutual of Omaha in my head right now I can see
|
|
my land perkins in a pond or a lake or something yes well yes but the also this gray cat once
|
|
crawled under the blanket on my mother's bed and decided to wash up including lifting one
|
|
hind leg up in the air which of course lifted the blanket up but the cat didn't care it was going
|
|
to wash up regardless of whether it was under a blanket or not we also had a 50 pound
|
|
westy westy interior spits cross it was a large family size westy and when the cat wanted to
|
|
sleep in the dog's bed the cat the dog moved when the cat wanted to sleep under my mother's bed if
|
|
the dog was there it moved the cat bossed around the dog the way you know five times what it did
|
|
my cat just opened that French door into our hallway because it wants to go upstairs and look
|
|
around or whatever since it's not going to get anywhere ham tonight she's done it's time to patrol
|
|
amazing we just disconnected on this and we're finally back I don't know what caused that it was
|
|
really weird well this cat is is not spoiled in our front window I've put a drop leaf on the
|
|
window sill to widen the sill and in the summertime that sometimes has a fan on it in our dining room
|
|
there's a large low radiator which the cat will sleep on that's also another window we don't have
|
|
it air conditioning in the house so I put fans in that window so the cat has that sometimes and
|
|
yes it wills with sleep on a hot water radiator we have a gas stove which has the pilot light in
|
|
the middle under a griddle and the cat would stretch out on that and sleep what's the normal
|
|
temperature of a cat right there hotter yeah 104 degrees body temperature now she's looking
|
|
through the French door is it same won't you open this thing I would never let any of my cats
|
|
be out there cats I'm always like petrified they're going to get hit by a car well around here
|
|
the chief hazard is the coyotes yeah I was going to say we get enough of those out where we
|
|
live too I wouldn't want them to get eaten by those either but typically if you bring your pets
|
|
in at night that's not a problem this is our first truly house cat because a friend of mine
|
|
well it a neighbor on the other side of the block reported that it had a orange tiger and
|
|
they found that that had been eaten or half eaten by a coyote I can't remember when it starts but
|
|
my son's going to go on a coyote hunt here and I think it's a few weeks but I'm not positive
|
|
I can't remember exact dates but he's going to go on a coyote coyote hunt this year they have
|
|
like a free coyote hunting day in this area once a year I don't know how long it lasts a couple days
|
|
but I don't know how I feel about it but at the same time yeah well I remember that there's a certain
|
|
little patch of woods and where the bus turns around there is a sort of a loop around this
|
|
little patch of woods with a dentist office on it and in the parking area I saw two or three
|
|
coyotes nine o'clock one Monday morning yeah they're pretty common here too much in the city but out
|
|
in the outskirts where we live you see them you hear them more than you see them but
|
|
and you're eating lunch in your car at work they might come up and I don't know I've had one
|
|
do that once which was one time too many to be honest well we're sort of out in the suburbs there's
|
|
patches of woods and stuff around here there isn't enough to keep a reasonable small game population
|
|
one didn't of course there's the territories and cats which coyotes are not not picky eaters
|
|
that's the truth when building density is high enough around here that hunting is not an option
|
|
yeah in Nevada if you go five miles outside of any city limits you're probably going to be in
|
|
pretty much the middle of nowhere so no one cares yeah my brother's a long old trucker and he
|
|
tells me about going out west and saying what's out there he said nothing in large quantity
|
|
that's kinder than what most of us say we always go we always say things like go that way a little
|
|
bit there's a whole lot of nothing well I'm calling him on his cell phone and Verizon used to have
|
|
a commercial where they had a guy who was saying can you hear me now I was telling my brother that
|
|
you should sign up with AT&T because he can tell them all the places they don't have coverage
|
|
well here the only two carriers that are even worth having at all really are I mean I was
|
|
about the whole west coast I'm just talking about my section of Nevada are really AT&T and Verizon
|
|
I think Verizon still beats AT&T most of the time we do have several other carriers you can get
|
|
but you have a lot more no signal zones with those yeah well my brother also
|
|
uses the internet over his cell phone so you know that's his lifeline and he he bounces from
|
|
Washington to California and he can be up to Chicago and down to Atlanta it's a life I'm not sure
|
|
I could live that's for sure um I have a hard enough time when I have to work long hours
|
|
not being able to come home when I want to come home but you know I could I have lots I know lots
|
|
of people who who work long haul and he's a love that you hated I guess well he's been married
|
|
several times then he probably loves it right well he's uh he's making do he's he's looking
|
|
forward you're retiring to the Philippines they have lots of snakes there I'm not so sure
|
|
that would appeal to me as I understand it they also have special taxes for non-resident alien
|
|
or for resident aliens but he believes it's going to be a tropical paradise and since he's going to
|
|
be on the island which where the city of vanilla is he doesn't believe that he's going to run into
|
|
any problems with the Muslim extremists putting out that the reason the army went to 45 was because
|
|
of Philippine Muslim extremists that didn't seem to make an impression also if he found
|
|
moving to a country where the returning native workers have to shrink their baggage so that
|
|
customs people do not solve it with ammunition and then charge them for importing ammunition
|
|
to be a perfectly reasonable and civilized area that's interesting um I work in the freight
|
|
industry and there's tons of LTL carriers that could teach those custom agents how to rewrap that
|
|
baggage without a problem well I find it to be a news if if you have to defend yourself against
|
|
your own customs people I don't find that to be a positive outcome I completely agree with you
|
|
that is a total reason to promptly move right well also the fact that as far as I he um he believes that
|
|
his pension or what have you will go far over there but he doesn't realize that there's no
|
|
Medicare and there's no all the medication is cash in all the hospitals are cash and carry
|
|
basically um and as a resident alien they they have special they don't have the kind of
|
|
they don't know I'm I have heard that he won't be able to work or anything because they don't
|
|
want to take jobs away from the natives you know the usual protectionist stuff but they're
|
|
perfectly willing to tax it uh especially the usual protectionist stuff but they're perfect
|
|
willing to tax it uh especially oh of course they are I mean that's just how governments work
|
|
I mean that's kind of I don't know it's probably not right it's not fair but it is and you're not
|
|
going to find any place it's any different I'm sure the US has similar or or or even worse
|
|
rules and some respects but what I'd be concerned about is even if you have to deal with healthcare
|
|
and a foreign nation uh you know I just I don't hang off the faith I would need to attend
|
|
a doctor in another nation I'm just I don't know I mean maybe if I was like in England or
|
|
something and that might be different because I know people who have used that system
|
|
but I am just I don't like doctors to begin with and I would be absolutely petrified to have to
|
|
go to one in a nation it didn't even speak English because how could you even advocate for yourself
|
|
if you don't know the language? Well also he says well if he had if he brings a certain amount
|
|
of money they don't tax him but if you ever have to tax tap that bankroll for anything like
|
|
medical care then they turn on the taxes again and that doesn't make a whole lot of sense either
|
|
it doesn't I mean the more money you have the more people want to tax you usually correct
|
|
why would they suddenly decide not to tax you when you had a certain amount of money? I don't know
|
|
I don't understand because it gets people over there they put it in the bank
|
|
and then something causes them to go under the magic number and then they're taxable
|
|
it's like some of these assisted living um arrangements that they have in the US here
|
|
where you can move in if you have certain amount of assets and then they keep the meter running
|
|
into your assets are drain sufficiently and then you're out on whatever nursing home you can
|
|
afford on on the public dole yeah I think every country has strange stuff like that in their systems
|
|
I don't think anyone in particular has an op way on any of it I think you just got to be
|
|
like dealing with the side which ones you can live with and which ones you can't
|
|
well I um I can't really point out these too much because um it's uh he just doesn't get through
|
|
well when people make up their mind they make up their mind and you usually can't change it
|
|
I mean especially when they're growing adults you notice that kids are a lot more open to logical
|
|
reasoning than those adults you know are well I'm calling for the Boston area uh logical reasoning
|
|
seems to be uh an option around here not not a standard feature yeah I think that seems to be at
|
|
least a concept that 50% of this country doesn't grasp right well that's one reason why we have the
|
|
current president and the democrats really missed the boat on that one you know they've been
|
|
pushing class warfare and whatnot and then what about identity politics and identity politics only
|
|
works if you don't know what your identity is sadly well most of us know exactly who we are
|
|
well the problem you had is that you had the the class people who knew what was good for us
|
|
then you had the rest of us with no class who decided to say to heck with you
|
|
I completely agree we were tired of the status quo it wasn't getting us where we needed to be
|
|
I don't think I am not a supporter of our current president in the classic sense of the word
|
|
but I don't think that we had any good options during the last election so you know when you
|
|
pick the lesser the two evils right that's all we've ever done for decades and uh whatever
|
|
politics is what it is and I don't think they're welcome I used to be a republican but but the
|
|
second president Bush and our current incumbent made me an independent so interestingly enough
|
|
I'm an american citizen now obviously wasn't originally um the last president presidential election
|
|
would see first one I got voted and oh boy what a wonderful choice that was and I mean that in
|
|
the most sarcastic way or bigger ship pile yeah well interestingly I can recommend to you a book
|
|
called The Less Centurion I believe John Ringwell was the author and it posits what a Clinton
|
|
administration would have been like uh way to the dystopia they talk about also global warming
|
|
turning into global cooling and some other issues uh like the porousness of our our borders when
|
|
it comes to containerized right so it's quite possible for uh someone with a epidemic illness to
|
|
be shipped from China to the US and our customs is just not built to handle that it's built to
|
|
fight in drugs but not people well it's hard to fight a war if you aren't allowed to fight
|
|
that applies to so many things of life but if you take away all of the tools to win
|
|
you only set it up for failure right which describes the Vietnam experience fairly succinctly
|
|
it describes everywhere we've been involved in since World War II it describes everything
|
|
we've tried to do on the border it describes the war on drugs I mean it describes just about
|
|
everything it's because well in part this is going to sound so so 1945 of me
|
|
and in essence but it's the purification of America everybody is afraid to hurt somebody's
|
|
feelings well do you remember when the US used to back the right to privacy I remember when the
|
|
US believed there was a right to privacy now everybody in this country is like don't expect it
|
|
it's not there well do you realize the Patriot Act made basically the Bill of Rights
|
|
purely optional they haven't made that purely optional yet although I have seen those who
|
|
would like to see it become purely optional or only apply to the parts of speech and life that
|
|
they wanted to but well well when you remember that somebody shut down a secure email system
|
|
because the government wanted keys to the system and this guy I forget his name but he wasn't allowed
|
|
to tell his lawyer what he was charged with because it was a national security issue yeah they have
|
|
those those super secret cool things that they can't you're not allowed to tell anyone about which
|
|
is just yes horrible yeah I mean that's why companies some companies have warrant canaries
|
|
because they can give you they can slack with a warrant that says you're not allowed to tell
|
|
but they'll go to Google and say we want information about net minor and you cannot tell him
|
|
you cannot tell anyone you're not allowed to discuss it or we will slap you with a felony
|
|
and arrest you and your family and you know shoot your kids and okay not quite but it's the how
|
|
this whole thing about you cannot tell anyone about it so some companies have warrant canaries
|
|
as a case as we have not received any warrants requesting requesting information about people
|
|
I just can't frustrated with the with the whole us versus them crap aren't we all on the same god
|
|
do you have team yeah well yes but you see to protect you you see you can have a lock on your front
|
|
door but in order to protect you you have to give the government a key to your back door
|
|
reminds me of the Soviet apartment blocks that had special elevators for the KGB yeah and I know
|
|
the UK wants a serious happy anniversary oh happy new year yes happy new year Hawaii
|
|
Mahalo and Mahalo yeah I barely speak English yeah depending on how many beers I've had
|
|
I've seen Lilo and Sturge does that count I've really passed Hawaii once I've been to Hawaii
|
|
I've not I've passed it that's the closest I was not old enough to appreciate it and
|
|
a luall scared me because the pigs still had its head attached the pigs had what the head was
|
|
still attached to the pig when they bowed into the ground I had nightmares for a month about this
|
|
flaming pig that was chasing me I was eight this is the psychiatrist house yeah usually they pull
|
|
it out and they put on a big rack and they're trying to get on the rack sometimes it comes apart and
|
|
you get you know legs this way in that way all I saw was the pig in the ground on the leaves and the
|
|
coals fully intact and I never wanted to see anything more about it and so I completely
|
|
entirely avoided any visual of that area of the luall will be smiling as you chase you
|
|
I don't know I couldn't see past the flames I was eight and I was severely sunburned
|
|
so I don't know if it was bad it was bad what I found impressive about the Hawaiians was that they
|
|
were and still are those that practice this the Nick what you would what the Canadians would go
|
|
first nations people according to something that I saw on youtube they had this sort of greeting
|
|
ceremony where the warriors would greet people and there would be sort of a force you know they
|
|
would be in your face but they would move forward and according to one of the guys a military
|
|
guy who who went through the process or who was greeted this way when they came up you could feel
|
|
sort of a shy energy radiating from these people so they they basically said you know if you're
|
|
nice people will be nice to you and if you're not nice people well we're perfectly willing to
|
|
get busy quite impressive yeah I think the Māori people in New Zealand are like that
|
|
there's still quite a bit of attitude among the younger people well this is a refreshingly
|
|
honest way of greeting foreigners I mean they're not hostile from the start they're just prepared
|
|
yeah it's probably good to show that you're not passive from the beginning well also I saw they have
|
|
a habit of sort of sledding down some of those slope steep slopes that I found quite impressive
|
|
since it was sort of like to bargaining without snow that I haven't seen there's there's not any
|
|
soft lava over here well I guess it was on a different island but yeah I mean these are
|
|
you know they have a lot of ways they call flumes that go from the top of the mountain
|
|
and they kind of meander through the hills down the lower areas and that's how they do irrigation
|
|
in the mountain areas and they run these flumes and they're just basically not like a kayak
|
|
but like that log ride at six flags you know you you ride in the log down the watershed kind of like
|
|
that but do these ditches and that can be fast at sometimes different points in the the thing it's
|
|
like a closed circuit whitewater rafting aren't familiar with some of the similar while they
|
|
were usually wooden but they were similar flumes that were used for transporting logs in the
|
|
the northwest and I can imagine riding them would be rather exciting also some of these pollinations
|
|
would give the average football player pause yeah there's definitely some tough guys out there
|
|
well I'm just saying uh pigmeas they aren't you know very strong very well built so there's
|
|
like all these people in this room and where the only three talking I think they're not really there
|
|
some of them are recording it's just like when you go into the the uh augcast planet channel
|
|
you know there's like everybody in god is in there but no one is saying anything
|
|
yeah except they're not lurking there their user is just recording it so that they can always
|
|
have a backup recording nothing because nothing is being said no what we're what's being said by us
|
|
is being recorded by everyone with a red dot although I did mention earlier that it reminded me of my
|
|
youth the days of the silent majority what do you mean nothing the internet loves cats me out my cat
|
|
has not yet learned how to use the keyboard or mouse you know I'd be more interested in training
|
|
mind how to use the toilet first when I get to stop scooping a kitty litter pan I will have it made
|
|
yes well my housemaid is sitting at my feet looking at me with great sad eyes as I'm nibbling on my
|
|
ham sandwich by the way just for your information my brother found a site called chewy dot com which
|
|
has a good uh price and good shipping on on catkibble something like twelve or thirteen dollars for
|
|
sixteen pounds of frisky's uh seafood temptations that's an appropriately named website
|
|
you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community podcast
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows
|
|
was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click
|
|
on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was founded by the digital
|
|
dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com
|
|
if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website
|
|
or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is released on the
|
|
creative comments attribution share a like three dot org license
|