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1068 lines
97 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1851
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Title: HPR1851: HPR Community News for August 2015
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1851/hpr1851.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:15:22
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---
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This is HBR Episode 1851 entitled HBR Community News for August 2015 and is part of the series
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HBR Community News. It is hosted by HBR volunteers and is about 114 minutes long.
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The summary is HBR Community News for August 2015.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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My name is Ken Fallon. You're listening to HBR Community News for August 2015.
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Joining me tonight are from top to bottom. John, this is where you introduce yourself.
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Oh, sorry. I couldn't see the screen. I'm looking at the web browser.
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This is John Copen, Latheat, Louisiana.
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Hello, this is Dave Morris in Edinburgh. This is Ken Fallon in the Netherlands.
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Anyway, for those of you who have never heard of HBR or Community News, HBR is a community
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podcast where the people listening to the shows contribute to the shows more about that later.
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Also, the Community News is a little bit of a rundown, a bit of a sink for everybody on what's
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been going on and heads up on stuff that we need to talk about. One of those things is the amount
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of people contributing shows and why basically you have contributed to the show. We will be
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pointing to individuals during this. Feel free to listen along to see if you're picked out.
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We usually start by introducing the new hosts for the last month and going through last month's
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shows. So, Dave, even though these two I can probably pronounce, I think it would be better if you
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did. Okay, new hosts in August have been a shadowy figure and Foki, two excellent names there.
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So, let's go through quickly the show that I've been on for this month and we will discuss
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any common stuff. You can come across as well. The first one of the month is the HBR Community News,
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which as I said before, is open to is a community news, anything that's going in around the community,
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the community being the shows themselves, the mailing list, which anyone was free to join,
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and stuff that's been emailed to the admin mailing list, which while anyone's free to join,
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we do want to make sure that it's people who are known to the community and stuff so that we're
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not starting international, instance, people who are known to the community, who's helped out us,
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who've done a few shows, will help, who we've met at various different conferences and stuff like
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that. So, comments for this month, there was no comments on this show itself. So, the following day,
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we heard, how do I make bread? David G it's, Dave Morris, sorry Dave. Yes, well, this was in
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response to some guy called Ken Fallon who'd been asking about bread making and so I told everybody
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how I've made mine and hope, well, I think a few people enjoyed it anyway. It is absolutely a very,
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very excellent show and unfortunately, I didn't get a chance to make it myself as yet and as
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yet been the optimum term, but it is, the show notes are again excellent, Dave. I really like the
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image magic one, two, three, four thing that you've done on top. You can tell I actually got another
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show out of that because I did a show on how I made the images for that one, but excellent. And again,
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one of these where I am just kind of sorry that we don't have like smell of vision or taste of
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vision to go along with it. And this was really good, you know, there was a time when my wife used
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to make bread all the time, probably two or three loaves a week. And man, it was excellent, but as we
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get older and busier and the kids grow up, we find that we don't have much time to do it, but
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love hearing about how people make bread. So, thank you very much for that episode Dave,
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those great. I'm glad you're doing it. I'm going to try and get my wife to do an episode on the
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two recipes she's actually settled on as a result of her own investigations. It can take a while
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to settle on a favorite recipe. There's a whole lot of trial and error and definitely a lot of
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hacking going on, you know, when you're finding recipes and adjusting to suit. I've always said
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that my mother is one of the greatest hackers I've ever known because of the way that her cookbook
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has so many alterations written into all of the recipes. And when I make stuff from my youth,
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I always want to check with my mom too. So, I use it her hacked recipes rather than the ones that
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are written verbatim in the cookbook. Yeah, that's RMS. You use that analogy quite a lot to explain.
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But apparently a lot of people are claiming copyright on the recipes now as well.
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Ron. There you go. The following day we had very time we wanted to do the comments on that one.
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Oh, of course I did. Of course I did. Sorry. So, hello, perhaps I shouldn't. I'll start by saying
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how about I do you, I'll do you do them that way. That would be good. And then you can do your
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own feedback if you want. Okay, this was Charlie Egbert. Love the episode. He uses wax paper to cover
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that they work in a line pan for baking to keep the bread from sticking. He has a couple of
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bread makers around, but doesn't use them anymore, other than kneading the bread. The kneaded bread
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quite well and keep it slightly elevated temperature, which is nice. He'll also have a look around
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for some of the ingredients assuming the FDA has some random interesting show. He also likes watching
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Alien Bob from Slackware fam post his bread experiments on the web. He also bicks.
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Very hackery thing to do. And then Daniel Worth from the Open Musicians podcast.
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I make a lot of food from scratch. He also makes a sourdough. He loves hearing other people's
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process of cooking. Did a fantastic job on the episode to which you replied. Well, I said to
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the two commenters. Thank you very much for the comments and to Charlie I said I'd never
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thought of using wax paper. I think it's the same as what we call grease proof paper in the UK.
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Exactly. But it's such a pain to get into bread tins, I find. But and I've never used the
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knead only program for my bread maker, although I think my sons used it, but I'm not sure
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you could make pizza or something with that. But yeah, so good luck with finding the ingredients.
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I'm sure it doesn't matter that much, but you know, it's nice if you can get a bit of variety in
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bread making and to Daniel. Sorry, go ahead. I was just going to say to Daniel, I said I'd like to
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hear about how he makes sourdough bread, because that's always an interesting subject.
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I was just about to say that I didn't realize that bread makers could do just the kneading,
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but not the rest of it. So we've never had a bread maker. It's a good thing to invest in. As I said
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in the episode, as life got busier for me, I bought one and used that as my main root for making
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bread. So it's and they're not fantastically expensive and they're very good nowadays. So it's maybe
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something to consider if you enjoy, you know, having your own homemade bread. When my wife was doing
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this, maybe. Sorry. Yeah, my wife had bread from Ireland, she basically occasionally one time out
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of 20. It wasn't mixed right and just all the dough would be all the flour would be on the bottom
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and just be a big mess. So she went to a to a king who had done. My bread maker gets a little
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bit silky, sometimes there's certain types of flour. I think it depends on the wetness of the dough
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and weird things like that. So I always check it as it's kneading stuff and if it's not behaving
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itself, I give it a wee poke to make it pick up all the flour so it doesn't, so it does what it's
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supposed to do, but it needs watching which just sort of goes against the grain a bit, it goes against,
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oh sorry, that was a bad one, but it goes against the principle of the process.
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Okay, moving on to the following day, sorry John, were you finished?
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Nah, it's all good, go ahead. People who are listening, I'm wondering why we're cutting in
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on each other, that's where different parts of the world and time lag can cause issues, so it's
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not intentional that I'm speaking over other people, except for Dave, of course. Of course.
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And my bill, who I'm trying to secretly coax into doing more shows on electronics,
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basic electronics stuff, but I really like to multi-meter mod one, and since started using a
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started watching a YouTube series, which I will talk about later in an episode that I have coming up.
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And this looks like a really, really nice multi-meter for about 50 bucks.
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Yeah, you can get it in the UK too, I was checked up on that, it does look quite desirable,
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almost tempted to buy one. I wish, I just wish I knew how to use the multi-meter that I have.
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I mean, I can test for continuity and stuff, but I don't really understand
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everything about it. I loved hearing him talk about the hack that he did to this, though,
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to open it up and install a backlight and all of that stuff, I just love that.
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Yeah, that appealed a lot to me, it's great to have a thing and then think, oh,
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he's not doing quite what I want and then go in there and change it, make it work. That's true hacking.
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If you go to a guy called MJL or Tion, MJ Lorton, he's South African gentleman and he does,
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I'll paste it into the mumble chat here if you go to that guy's website on YouTube,
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YouTube's website. He does a lot of multi-meter reviews, the guy has a fascination for multi-meter
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reviews and he also does introduction to testing voltage and he's done a few introduction
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series. Basically, he's been on there since 2010, so he's going to know a lot of episodes and
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I'm working through them slowly, but very good, just explain anything you want to know about
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multi-meters, what you should look for, the differences in price ranges and how to look at what
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the percentage means and what the numbers of digits means and all that sort of stuff, so that's
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what I've been watching all week. Thanks for the tip, I'm going to check that out. But as I say,
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that's I will be doing a show on my YouTube subscriptions later on and they script that I've
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written to do it. Sorry, Dave, you were saying? No, I was just going to agree with John saying
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something about how to use a multi-meter would be, would be very nice to hear. I have one,
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an old one with an actual, an analogue, one with a needle on it and I've used it in the past,
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but I don't really know how to use it all that well, so yeah, agree.
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John, mine a couple of times just to see how much I've used it a few times to check how much
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power my battery, batteries are putting out, I did it, used it on my car and on some just like
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a AA batteries and stuff like that, but the kinds of things Bill's talking about using it for,
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I just don't understand it, and I think either something like these YouTube videos you're talking
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about or even some HPR episodes by NWI Bill or someone else on just basic use of one of these
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things would be excellent. Yes, absolutely, NWI Bill, I hope you're listening. John, you posted a
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common saying amazing job. One of the favorite shows in the year looking forward and hearing this
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becoming a series. See, I've cloned another, you owe me a showperson. To which, I might be replied,
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thanks Paul, I thought I'd record an episode while I was doing a project, talk as you go, my thought
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process, troubleshooting, etc. Although I felt the edges was a bit rough, I'm glad you like it.
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And you should absolutely not be worried about things being rough. What I've found interesting
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about a lot of these episodes is you're sitting down and you come across a problem,
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and then comes back with a fix and goes, okay, well, I'm not going to be able to do that.
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That's pretty much how a lot of my projects go, you start something, it doesn't work out,
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you stop for a while, life catches up, then you go back to it and sometimes you finish it,
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sometimes you don't. I agree. In the episode I just uploaded yesterday, there is a major
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disappointment about six minutes into the episode that I then will rectify later, so I decided
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to keep that whole thing in the recording anyway. Excellent, excellent. I'm looking forward to that,
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as you know, I don't listen to shows until they're released. Of course you have released
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episode 1A29 was my new used Kindle DX. You got this at the Goodwill version.
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I'm not at the Goodwill now. I got this one I wish. I got this one on Amazon. Yeah, I paid
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good money for this one. It was 128 bucks on Amazon used, but I found out that they retailed
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originally for nearly $500 after I poked around a bit, but yeah, I'm just kind of a degenerate for
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e-book devices, and so I got this even though I already had two other Kindles.
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But this looks like a fantastic, fantastic one, because the guy who I mentioned is one of his
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projects is trying to charge, he's into solar panels and stuff, and living off the grid,
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and one of his projects is trying to charge this exact Kindle using solar panels and super
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capacitors. Yeah, well, it goes wrong in so many ways, so he's got 16, 17 different episodes
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on this alone, but it's great because you go through, you know, people just put up the YouTube
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videos here, I made this simple circuit, and this is how it works, and you know, you can see his
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iterations as he goes through, and it's fantastic as somebody interested in electronics too. Well,
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I tried this, and then this happened. All right, and then you'll see how I'm going to fix that,
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and it turns into a mess, and then he just goes back to basics at the end, so it's excellent.
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You do well worth a lot. Yeah, well, as I tell my students, you learn a whole lot more from
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mistakes than you do from doing it right the first time, so maybe that's what this guy's going on.
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And the comments to this show was from freeweeb, freeweeb, freeweeb, F, Fokstra Whiskey, Echo, Echo, Bravo,
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BQ caveats. You mentioned that you were looking for an unaffiliated e-reader. How about the BQ
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curve? Soventies. Thank you Dave. Thank you. It is a touch expensive, but it is unaffiliated,
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and as a bonus, the version I've linked to runs open-source slack. I don't have one, but I'm awfully
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tempted. Yeah, I don't have the Servantes, and I looked at the link that he put in there, and it
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certainly looked really interesting, but it's not available over here. I would have to order it
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from Europe and have it sent here. It's 139 euros. That's right, pricey. Six inch e-screen
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front light technology in your reflection, only 185 grams, therapy, eight gig of internal RAM,
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150, 1500 milliamp hour ion battery developed in Spain. It's got Spanish,
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Basque, Catalan, English, Galicia, Portugese, Wi-Fi, Asia 2011, BG, MicroSD, USB-2,
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dictionary, several dictionaries. Commatible with EPOV, PDF, DRM, P-B2, Moby, Doc, TFF,
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and text files. PDF files with DRM, that's interesting. How they managed that and free project.
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It's very strange. I mean, it does look like a great device. I'd love to have one, but I'm
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probably not going to order one. If anyone has one, please do a review. And then send it to me.
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Apparently, cyber-groog, Dave, cyber-groo, I think that one is. Thank you. Do you want to
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read it? You've been eaten by a guru, I imagine that is, but anyway, yeah, says one thing you missed.
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Another good show, John, one thing about the Kindle DX that you missed is that it can display
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full-size PDF documents without resizing them or reflowing. That's quite unusual, I'd have thought.
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It works great for technical PDFs like scientific papers with embedded graphics and graphs, for
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example. It can handle very large PDF documents, but changing pages is very slow. Also, it can
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display other formats as well, plain-asky text, for example. On mine, there is an experimental
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features menu item that claims it can retrieve web pages by cellular, I think I've never used this
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feature, so I don't know if or how well it works. The DX appears to have been an attempt at a
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professional version of the Kindle and appears to have features that were not on other Kindles,
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which explains its price and short life. That's interesting. Yeah, and I commented after that that,
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yeah, I did forgot to talk about the PDF capabilities, and it's probably because I still, I tried this,
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and I didn't really like PDFs on this all that much either. I mean, it's better than on a small Kindle,
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but I still didn't like it all that much. It's not too bad for musical scores. I loaded up some
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scores on there in PDF format, and it looked pretty good. One downside of the PDF on that device was
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that you could not access any embedded table of contents that might be there, which is something that
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I talked about on a previous episode that I did about PDF TK, how you can embed tables of contents,
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and once I've done that, I want to have access to it, and so this thing doesn't give me access to
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that table of contents, so it's not that great. The experimental web browser that he mentioned
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is something that I've not used on this Kindle DX because the wireless doesn't work, but I've
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used it quite a lot on my other Kindle, my Kindle Paper White, and actually what I use it for
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is to access my book collection, which I have on my Raspberry Pi, and I serve it up using the
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Caliber library server that's built into the Caliber program, and I can access my whole
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caliber library from the Raspberry Pi in this web browser, and then download books straight to
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my Kindle from that. That is a very powerful program. Okay, there was also a comment,
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yeah, did you already reply to the comments that you replied back to? Did you cover it?
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I think so. Okay, shall we move on to the next one? Yeah, that's enough about mine.
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No, it's one of mine, how hard on the work screen wheels, yeah. This is a show that a series actually
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I want to start that Dave has asked for, which is basically an outsider's view of Holland,
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and as I mentioned during the episode, I'm here so long I don't know if I necessarily
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find any of this stuff interesting or weird or not, anymore. But it is, and this episode I tried
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to record 17 times, and for some reason sometimes you do in an episode and it just gets jinxed,
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and so I went down and just did it. I really liked this one. I mean, I don't think we have any
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service like this in the region where I live, but I've heard about it in places up in the northeast,
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not this particular system, but some kind of car rental system that works in basically the same way,
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and my solution for not having a second car was just to buy a second car, but that's a
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forthcoming episode, but I really thought this was interesting. Yeah, no, sorry. No, I was just going
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to agree and say, yeah, thanks very much for that. It was an interesting insight. I quite like
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the graphics too, actually. I mean, it's dead simple to use, but again, it just happens to be
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where I live, that we live in the room, and the lesson was pretty close, 20 minutes from Amsterdam,
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and the other side, the whole central, the whole coast of what people tend to know as Holland,
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the province of Holland, is very well served with public transport. So it works here, but if it
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was living anywhere else, you'd still have to have a car, and we were in England, we had two cars
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even, so it is just lucky that I can do that. I'm curious. Are all the cars essentially the same
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kind of car, or do they have things like pickup trucks that you could rent for an hour and move a
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large item somewhere and then take it back? Yeah, they don't tend to have pickup trucks per say in
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Europe at all, and any pickup trucks that there are, are people who have imported them from the
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states and they keep them pristine, so they don't dare to put anything into them. But they do have
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like station wagons, and the station wagons are kind of larger vehicles that can fit seven people
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and you can flip the back seat over and put in a large pallet of stuff into it, and those
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those ones are only in the bigger towns, but you know, you're still within 10 kilometers of one or
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two of those in any of the towns around. So here I would need to cycle down five kilometers to
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the nearest town and grab that one from there and then use that, but that then is slightly more
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expensive to rent. Interesting. But it's amazing what you can fit into the back one of these things,
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and I have had times where I needed to move larger amount of stuff and then it just becomes cheaper
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to rent a van for a day. Yeah, even over here you can rent a truck for a day, a whole lot cheaper
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than you can buy a new one. Yeah, exactly. And we did the maths because I did have a car when
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I moved here first, and you know, I used to wash my car every month because, yeah, because of me,
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and I had washed it twice without actually having driven it, so it had been there up there for
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three months, so we did the maths on how much it was costing us for, you know, tax doing the,
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you know, emissions test, the MOT, or whatever it's called here. And apica is what it's called here.
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And just it didn't make any sense. If we had paid a taxi to bring us for the amount of times
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that we've used, that we would still be making money if we had used a taxi for everything. So,
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yeah, it's an old brand, or get rid of the car. Well, I wish it were that easy here.
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Sadly, where I live, cars are necessary. I mean, we only just recently got the second one,
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but we'll talk more about that in a little bit. So the 5150 says, she can, I thought this was your
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long promise description. I have windmill on the dyke system works. Windmills, I have recorded,
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yes, I have not edited it, but it's on the list. The dyke system, I actually was going to record
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in a place, but it was out with the family and I thought, no, it's more appropriate to be a dad,
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so sometimes. And Dave, you mentioned, do you want to read it yourself for?
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Yeah, just to say that it was interesting to have that sort of insight into how things are
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done in other parts of the world. And we do have a city car scheme here in Edinburgh, pretty similar,
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I think. Though, I don't think it's quite as sophisticated, but I've never used it, so I don't
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actually know. Well, it's quite common for people in the city itself, not to have their own
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transport, just use that for, similarly, our argument to the one you made.
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Yeah, actually, but there you go. The following day we had, new host, a shadowy figure,
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our speed listening and show background music, compatible. Excellent show, well done, although
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he criticised my episode on my life hack and how to tell your left and right earbud apart.
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I'm offended, sir. I'm offended. I thought you would have been delighted, because it did just
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what you wanted to do. Yes. Yes, that's true. Well, actually, I'm serious. I really think
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that's a good life hack. I use that every day, just as a bud of eye. It is a good life hack.
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On my own earbugs, I don't have to do that because they're the kind that sling and sit over your
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ear with these little hooks, and so it's easier to tell which one is which, based on that.
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And John, you replied to this?
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Yeah, he asked, I guess he was asking somewhere in the podcast about how fast people like to
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listen to these things, and so I replied 1.7x. That's how fast I normally listen to, although I
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mentioned that, if the focus of the show is music, then I will listen at normal speed.
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So for the bug cast, for example, I listen at normal speed, and any podcast I listen to where
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they're just talking, and music isn't the focus of the show, I go 1.7.
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I would be more or less the same. I would be 1.82, and then down to, you know, I have a separate
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cue for music shows. And here I'd like you to that saying, thank you John, I find your contributions
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both entertaining and formative, royalty viewing music isn't generally what I'd like to focus on,
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but rather some sort of ambience for background to add something to the entertainment value of
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presentations or even transitional segments that includes musical or other forms of non-vocal
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cues between thoughts of segments in essence, adding some color to the audio presentation,
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think radio lab, or this American life, etc. I personally feel adding this sort of elements may
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encourage casual Haitian runs listeners to tune in again, not only for the educational content,
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but for the entertainment as well, thanks again John. And Vindigo just commented on the 1.5x,
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he started speeding up podcasts at work, he gave some 1.5x, although some have gone up to 2x.
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And just on my personal feeling, and we've had debates on this topic about whether to put music
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into the, into shows or not, as bedding music into shows or not, you know, splitting up segments,
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I don't think anybody has a problem with them, splitting up segments, but there are two trails
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of thought about whether you should post music as bedding music, and there are, as HBR have
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been, there's been a lot of discussion on this, speaking with my HBR admin hat on now officially.
|
|
There have been two trails of thought, discussion on the mail list, and if you want to discuss this,
|
|
feel free to open the topic on the mail list, but taking my HBR hat on, I'm putting my podcast
|
|
listeners hat on for a moment here just to be very, very clear. There is never a good reason for
|
|
putting bedding music into podcasts. Stop it right now! I have to agree with that, I don't like
|
|
to have bedding music either. I do like bumper music between segments, but I don't like to have
|
|
music going on while people are talking. It's a great, I had a Twitter voice with Dan from
|
|
Rattle Radio when he started putting in bedding music in the background. It's really, really,
|
|
really annoying. It's surprising that Dan would do that. I mean, I haven't listened to Rattle Radio
|
|
in a very long time, but they never used to do that on Linux outlaws.
|
|
But then that's a music show, and a lot of people like it because they're listening bars and
|
|
listening live, so there's a bit of jive going on in the background, they're in the zone,
|
|
whereas I'm listening a market, it just distracts. Yeah, and it really gets annoying if you're listening
|
|
at high speed. Absolutely, and speeding it up to 1.7 want to do anything. It just makes it very
|
|
difficult to listen to a show, especially when you, all my shows, not only do I speed it up to
|
|
1.8 to or something like that, I will also switch it down to mono so that I can listen to money.
|
|
So, and the reason I do that is if there's a delay on the trains or anything, you're listening,
|
|
you take out one ear, and you're listening to the announcements going past on the public address
|
|
system, which can be very, very, very crappy by times. So, anything, then you don't pick,
|
|
you're not able to pick up the podcast, it's just too much going on, it's very frustrating.
|
|
Yeah, it sounds like you might need to try out the, remember my episode about headphones,
|
|
one of them was these bone conduction things, which are great for that kind of situation because
|
|
your ears are still wide open. When I heard that, I did stop at and make a note of the
|
|
of the modern numbers to go and give it a shout, but on the other hand, there is a lot of times
|
|
where I don't want to be hearing what people are saying on the train. Very true. So, yes,
|
|
well, the shadowy figure, excellent show, and I love your icon, or icon, please,
|
|
anybody help me. Avatar, that's the one, that's the one. I knew you'd get there in the end.
|
|
It took a while. We covered all the comments on that, did we Dave? Yes, I think we did.
|
|
Dave is distracted because I told him my SQL script earlier on. So, if you ever want to,
|
|
if you ever want to distract Dave, just tell him, Dave, how would you do this? I'm going to come
|
|
back into half an hour. I've tried really hard not to be distracted. It's not work in mind,
|
|
do it. The following day was, how I use Markdown and Pandak in writing workflow
|
|
by Be Easy. Why do we have an alternative text link in there for images? Oh, because it's
|
|
doing what it's supposed to do. Sorry, in the show notes. This is an episode about Pandak,
|
|
a tool that I had no clue existed, but kind of thinking that it might make a way into our
|
|
automated workflow would now be a good time to talk about that discussion we had offline, David.
|
|
Certainly, if you want to, yes, I think it's a good subject. Yes, go ahead.
|
|
Okay, so we've done a lot of work on automating stuff. One of the main things that we've done
|
|
has been the web upload thing, which has made sure that the format, at least for all the questions,
|
|
has your intro been added, has your outro been added, has your summary been added, that sort of thing,
|
|
that there's always a title of the correct length that is always synopsis and the show notes
|
|
and stuff was always there. So that's really helped a lot. So people are wondering, has been asked on
|
|
IRC and also David's been asking, why does it sometimes take a long time for shows to be posted
|
|
and sometimes it doesn't? And the answer to that is because the process of posting the shows is
|
|
still me doing it. And Dave is off to help, and that's fine, but there is a human doing it.
|
|
And the reason there's a human doing it is because they show notes themselves come in different
|
|
formats. That's put it like that. Sometimes they come up in text, sometimes people send them in as
|
|
TZ files, Dave. I have uploaded the show notes to the FTP server, Dave. So everyone
|
|
is the wrong way of doing it, which is our all valid and correct ways, and we're very happy to get
|
|
the show notes. But we're working through a process of how we were actually Dave and I are going
|
|
through all the old show notes to see if there's a way that we can automate the processing of the
|
|
shows so that there will be process faster. So that then we can just when somebody's finished
|
|
uploading a show, it will get emails to the admin list, which are again, people who are open to
|
|
anybody who is known as the community. And one of those people can then simply approve or
|
|
disprove the show. And we're also looking at a way to bypass that, which is why you're asked for
|
|
your PGP key. So the idea is that if you've got your PGP key in there and you're a trusted member,
|
|
there's a little tick that goes beside your name. That way you can automatically validate your
|
|
own shows and submit them in so there'll be nobody in the way. But the issue is right at the minute
|
|
that we do get different formats of different interpretations of formats. And that's presenting
|
|
us with a little bit of a problem. So basically the upload is still a manual task at the moment
|
|
that's the long on the short of it. And when we heard this show, we had a quick look to see if this
|
|
would be any use to us so that perhaps people could start submitting shows in Markdown or any of the
|
|
other formats that Pandock supports because then it would allow us to pull out valid XHTML
|
|
for slurping into the show notes. So that pretty much was that. And this was an excellent episode,
|
|
excellent introduction to Pandock and Markdown by Be Easy. I keep waiting for Dave to comment on this,
|
|
but he must be doing that SQL query thing. No, I'm just sort of absorbing the possibilities here
|
|
because the whole issue of submitting, well, let me go back a bit. The way I actually do my
|
|
shows and I've been doing this for a while now is I write them in Markdown and I use Pandock to
|
|
generate the output. And I discovered along the way that Pandock can generate EPUB and I've been
|
|
playing around with putting EPUB out and that sort of stuff. What I had wanted to do
|
|
in the days before we had the new submission form was I was producing a script or set of script
|
|
which I was hoping I could get offered to people and say, look, run these and they will simplify
|
|
the process of you generating your show. I think it was maybe a not entirely a realistic idea.
|
|
It's what I do. I use the scripts to do this, but I'm not sure they're really
|
|
going to ever be suitable for somebody else to use. And as an aside, the reason why I'm still
|
|
producing my shows in the format that I am is because I'm using this script set which is still
|
|
generating them in the old format. And I haven't changed it yet. But this has taught me
|
|
generating Markdown is a great way to go because it's a relatively simple way of representing
|
|
text that you want to turn into HTML or various other formats. I don't think it's a very difficult
|
|
one to use personally. It's very, very close to the way I used to make ASCII notes back in the day
|
|
before we had the before Markdown was even invented. And I think that's why Markdown was invented
|
|
because it's very similar to the way that people used to make notes on PDAs and
|
|
just typing on terminals and whatever. And so it seemed to me to be a pretty good way of
|
|
going forward. But I find when I make utterances like this, I find very often I'm completely
|
|
obsessed. So I tend not to say that very often. But here's me saying it now.
|
|
Well, I wouldn't have any problems switching to Markdown. I've been using just kind of simple HTML
|
|
for my notes. But I'm also very familiar with Markdown. And if you guys decided that's what we
|
|
should do, I'd be super easy. I use it all the time at work because the learning management system
|
|
we use Moodle has built in Markdown support. And so I'm always writing quick notes to my students
|
|
using Markdown for some simple formatting. But I like to sprinkle in a bit of HTML just because
|
|
you have a little more control with that. Yes, so yes, that's true. Well, that's an important
|
|
point you've made, John, because Markdown is becoming more or less the standard across a
|
|
wide range of applications. I'm not an expert on this, but I certainly see it in many contexts.
|
|
I think GitHub has it and GitLab has it. And many others do. I couldn't enumerate them all.
|
|
So I think it's becoming generally accepted out there in the world.
|
|
Okay, well, then I would suggest, personally, I don't care so long as it's valid. If it's,
|
|
if somebody uploads show notes.md or whatever, or show notes.html, then that will be treated as
|
|
an xhtml document. If they upload a show notes.md, that will be treated as a Markdown document,
|
|
or they're just placed in Markdown. But which of the 4,000 variants are we going to support?
|
|
And this is why I think most of them essentially handle things the same way. I mean, I use multi-markdown
|
|
on my laptop, but then the code that I use it with almost always looks exactly the same when I use
|
|
it on Moodle on the learning management system. And I click Save. It'll show up just like I had on
|
|
my laptop. So I think the many variants of this aren't, it seems like the differences come in
|
|
the more advanced kind of markup that you do, things like tables and stuff like that. The very
|
|
basic things like bullet points, bold italics. Those I think are going to be pretty much the same
|
|
across all of the various flavors of Markdown. Yeah, personally, I think it's fine. If people want
|
|
to send in Markdown, that's fine. If they want to send in hhtml, that's fine. But what makes life
|
|
difficult is when it's a mixture of the two. When it's formatted text, preformatted text, when it
|
|
kind looks like Markdown, but it's got some hhtml in there, it means you really need to, you better off
|
|
having plain text stopping. And what you end up doing, what I end up having to do is basically
|
|
rewriting the show notes manually. And that, if that happens and it's in the queue and there are hhls
|
|
behind, then the hhls behind are waiting because I don't have the time right at that moment
|
|
to fix it. So yeah, just try and send in same stuff to us. That would be great.
|
|
Yeah, I've been looking at the possibility of analysing text, which is not
|
|
any sort of markup language, or possibly maybe first of all detecting what it is, if at all possible.
|
|
And if it's not anything known, flagging it and having a bit of a go at
|
|
turning it into Markdown and then offering it to somebody, Ken on myself, to
|
|
in an editor, to fix it and then turn it, then put it through Pandox to generate hhtml. But
|
|
that's not a simple thing at all. It's just turning out to this, I think most people would have
|
|
guessed to be quite complex. But we'll see how it goes. If Markdown using Pandox to convert
|
|
from Markdown and text hhtml, which is what we put on the website, is easy peasy lemon squeezy. So
|
|
great if we can do that. But if you are using some form of Markdown, can you just put in the heading
|
|
type of Markdown you're using if it's not? If it's some sort of... I think there's probably
|
|
converters from all these languages to hhtml or xhtml. So that's not an issue. What I'd like to know
|
|
is what people would like having supported. So that would be kind of cool so that we would know
|
|
beforehand. Because we're easy to put in a, you know, my show notes are in hhtml, my show notes
|
|
are in Markdown, my show notes are in form at a plain text. Also, we want to make it too complex
|
|
for people because the show notes, as always, are optional. If you don't, we want the shows,
|
|
we'll get somebody to write the show notes of me. So, yeah, send in something. Send in shows,
|
|
that's important. But... Okay. The other thing I suppose we could talk about as Be Easy has done
|
|
here. There are tools that assist in the process of generating Markdown. I think it's
|
|
re-text is the one, the first one in these lists that I think I've used that, which lets you type
|
|
Markdown in one's in a double pane screen. You type it in one pane and you see the result in the
|
|
other. You can run that on your desktop and that's actually quite a useful way of preparing stuff.
|
|
And a lot of editors have plugins that will do this too. It seems like I use Genie as my
|
|
main text editor and it has a Markdown plugin that will give you a preview. Jezra also has written
|
|
a Markdown preview program. I think he just calls it Markdowner and I've got it installed on here,
|
|
but I haven't used it all that much. I normally don't need the preview because I already know
|
|
what it's going to look like. Yeah, same here. I use the BIM, it's BIM's pan.plug-in, it checks
|
|
the syntax of stuff that I write and I just run it through a make file and then look at it in a
|
|
browser. That's the way I work, but I wouldn't force that on to anybody else. Yeah, but again,
|
|
it doesn't actually matter because you guys send in validated, because you work at the stuff and
|
|
as does be easy. So the stuff that you guys are going to be sending in is going to be valid
|
|
whatever the spec is. It's when you start kind of deviating from the spec where you know maybe
|
|
newer users or people aren't familiar with that. We're putting in a barrier to submitting
|
|
shows if you have to learn Markdown and if you have to learn HTML. So possibly another option
|
|
might be to put in a wizzywig editor on the HPR website which can't be done using static HTML
|
|
and would need to have a yes JavaScript tool on the page to do that. But that could be a pop-up
|
|
window that's you know click here for more formatting that you would know that you were going into
|
|
a JavaScript website webpage on the website because there is no JavaScript on HPR. If you come
|
|
across JavaScript on HPR, it's been put there maliciously. So maybe might be no harm firing an
|
|
email off to the mailing list to get people discussing this. Sounds good. Okay, let's talk about
|
|
the show notes for this excellent episode. And 0xf10e said thanks very useful, nice episode,
|
|
many things I didn't know about Markdown. While I prefer restructured tasks over Markdown,
|
|
just like he or she prefers Mercool Python GoLang over Git Paralljava, I have to use it in Git Lab
|
|
so like I say, it's very useful and the restructured text is rst2pdf works without latex,
|
|
smiley face, and ps1 of the words you were looking for us, what you see is what you get. And John
|
|
Comp is here to do his live reading of his comments. Yeah, you're not going to like this one very
|
|
much Ken because I I point out that you can freely sprinkle in bits of HTML as needed in Markdown
|
|
and it doesn't mess up anything. Then I do like that. I don't have a problem with again, I don't
|
|
have a problem with stuff as long as it comes out as the author intended at the end. Okay. And that
|
|
actually when Dave and I were doing some tests on this, I was quite impressed to see that it's
|
|
allowed HTML to pass through some HTML to pass through not all of a sort. Yeah, I'm not even sure
|
|
which does and which doesn't, but I know when I'm using Moodle and I put any kind of hyperlinks,
|
|
like I can't use the shortcut for Markdown hyperlinks, you know, the angle brackets on either end
|
|
of the URL, I can use it, but then on our version of Moodle at least when I go back and try to
|
|
re-edit something, my link disappears for I have no idea why, but so when I'm putting a hyperlink
|
|
in a Markdown page on Moodle, I use standard HTML, a tag with the href and all of that to make
|
|
my links, just because I know if I don't, I'm going to be sorry later. Yeah, so and this is exactly
|
|
the point. So say you have Dave who does it that way and then we process it and we don't realize that
|
|
and the person who's submitting the show doesn't realize that that's happening and then we have
|
|
to manually edit it to get all the links, because all the links are now broken, so we end up
|
|
spending more time putting the links back in fixing your HTML for you and then the question is,
|
|
do you rely on playback to the host saying, look, I've just wasted a half hour of my life fixing
|
|
your show notes, which you in all the faith sent in to me, which is why I, this is a very awkward
|
|
topic for me to discuss, because I don't want to stop people from contributing and I also don't
|
|
want to necessarily give feedback about, you know, show notes not being submitted correctly, because
|
|
they have been submitted. It's just it's taken me quite a long time to figure them out. But come
|
|
back to your example, it is possible for us to fix that, because if that's, if that is the only issue
|
|
with, with Markdown coming through and if everybody's submitting shows, Markdown not saying that
|
|
anybody has to, he can still submit them with text or not, we'll do the show notes. Then we can
|
|
always write a pre-imposed parser script that will beforehand check for that and fix it, and
|
|
afterwards extract all the links and put them into a link section at the bottom, which is something
|
|
that we're planning on doing anyway, because of the way that we release our show notes, not all
|
|
feeder feed readers convert links correctly. So we always make sure that our links are visible
|
|
for copy and pasting. So for example, instead of saying click here for Hacker Public Radio, it will
|
|
be click here and then in brackets, Hacker, it should be called on for so far, so check
|
|
out public radio dot log. Ah, that's good to know. So yes, we can get around all the stuff, but
|
|
it's a, it's a little bit of a, it's, in some ways, it's been easy, some of the things have been
|
|
easy to fix or to automate because, you know, everybody's doing it that way. So then, you know,
|
|
fine, we'll just do it that way. Other things about how to do your show notes is a very personal
|
|
thing. So I want to make sure that whatever we put up is what they host intended us to put up,
|
|
so yeah, just like that. And Dave, do you want to do a live reading of your
|
|
content? Indeed, indeed. I said X on episode, I use Markdown and Pandock myself for all my HPR
|
|
episode, though I've not yet moved away from ASCII doc when writing my own project notes and similar
|
|
things. I did start with that a number of years ago. And a while ago, I had to look at the best
|
|
lightweight markup format. I was very happy to find Markdown and then I found Pandock and very
|
|
much appreciated its extensions and huge range of features. So thanks very much for your great
|
|
overview. So yeah, it's really, really useful to bring this to everybody's attention. And it's
|
|
definitely going to be added to the toolbox of the show automation. So thanks very much for that.
|
|
The following show was resurrecting its IBM T40 and attempt to bring a 13 year old
|
|
laptop back to life from Swift 110 who I keep missing in the IRC channel. And the reason for that
|
|
is I check in in the morning on the train and then I check in at the beginning of work and I'm
|
|
really not all from them to the IRC, I just pop in and out. So not avoiding you Swift one then.
|
|
Very good episode. I love this laptop. All was one to one, but there were always two expensive.
|
|
Yeah, great, great laptop. Quite really something like that. Myself actually, just as a
|
|
as the one to take to to conferences or something like that. And it's the perfect train.
|
|
Is this one of those ones? Is this one of those ones that's got that little red dot thing by your
|
|
index finger to use as a mouse? Yep. Yeah, that's kind of cool. I've never had one of these, but I've
|
|
seen them. These are like the ones that you can, you know, assault and battery. Yeah, you can
|
|
use them as a laptop and also a blunt instrument. But a good show. And then the following day,
|
|
lowering the quality of shows again, John Colk with his password cards. How to hire how to pass
|
|
her using a password card. It's up to somebody else to start submitting shows so there's not enough
|
|
room for me to submit anymore. There you go. Stop him. Stop him. This was existential. Thanks,
|
|
thanks, John for this. And we're using I would not have used this myself, but I can see how it
|
|
would be cool. I don't use it all the time, but like I said in the episode, I use a password card to
|
|
hide one of my passwords that I find myself needing to type in occasionally. Otherwise, I just
|
|
use the password databases on key pass on my phone, my tablet and my laptop.
|
|
Yeah, I use an oddly enough, I would, I like this because you can, you can print off this and
|
|
give it to somebody and say, look, you know, here's your password there, from there to there,
|
|
and then they'll have it and it's printed on the screen. And yeah, I like it as maybe the entry
|
|
to your key pass stuff that's on your monitor. Yeah, well, it's certainly better than just taping
|
|
the password and plaintext under your keyboard or something. Well, you know, about that, I think
|
|
that if you're at home, that's a valid thing to do. It's, well, it's not a great thing to do,
|
|
excuse me, it's not something that I would ever encourage people to do, but you know, if somebody's
|
|
breaking into your home, they're, they're physically got access to your home computer, I think,
|
|
all that's wrong for that stage, you know. Yeah, well, there's that, yeah. And, okay, cool,
|
|
and comments, Dave, do you want to read your commenter? Yes, yes, yes. I certainly find the
|
|
show very useful and said so, I'd never come across this idea before and thought it was really good.
|
|
Didn't know about PWGN, actually, I've got out of the world of password generators, really,
|
|
these days I'd use key password, everything. Back in the day when I was working at university,
|
|
I used to use APG as password generator, which was the rage at the time, but it was the days when
|
|
we all thought that eight character passwords were highly secure. So, oh, and thank you very
|
|
much for the ambient bird song at the start of the episode, I said, which as always, I really enjoy
|
|
that sort of out there in the world, type things, the outside in the world ones, I do like.
|
|
Yeah, I have a couple more of those kinds of things coming up as well. PWGN is something I use
|
|
also with one of the scripts that I use to make my cat post the, it's, I think I call it security
|
|
kiddies password of the day, and so he'll post a message to the social networking timeline
|
|
with a randomly generated password of a specified character length, and it uses PWGN to create
|
|
the password. That's very good. I actually wrote my own password generator years ago,
|
|
because I wrote the university's student registration system, so the students came in and got
|
|
their account when they started university and that, so they lost the passwords, it generated them
|
|
a new one on a bit of paper and that type of thing. So I wrote that and I feel completely dwarfed
|
|
by the, how wonderful these things are compared to the crappy thing that I produced.
|
|
Well, I got a brag on my son here from my son took a computer programming class over the summer,
|
|
and he did it online through Duke University, and it was four kids about his eight, he's 14,
|
|
and it was for kids, I think, between 12 and 15 years old, and they, they learned C-sharp,
|
|
that's not necessarily the language I would have chosen, but he seemed to learn quite a bit,
|
|
and then after the class was over, he had an idea one day to write his own random password generator,
|
|
and he did it. It took him maybe half an hour, and he came up with a random password generator
|
|
that uses the random library in C-sharp and it takes as the character set all of the valid ASCII
|
|
characters, and you can tell it how many characters you want the password to be, and it'll generate
|
|
one for you. So I was really proud of him, he did a nice job on that.
|
|
Very cool, yeah, yeah, that sounds like sort of stuff that we were doing back in the day.
|
|
We have other constraints, because people compute ones and else, so you had to filter out
|
|
you know, any potential ambiguity, and other potential ambiguities in the things,
|
|
and we were also generating buses for a whole range of different services, some of which
|
|
had really crappy Windows password limits, and some of which had less crappy limits, and so the
|
|
other thing had to know, you know, this is the password for system X, therefore it needs to be made
|
|
in this way, and et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. But yeah, it's a fun subject, but I'm glad I don't
|
|
do it anymore to be honest. Yeah, by the way, I think the PWGen program has command line options
|
|
that will take care of the kinds of difficulties you describe. I mean, you can leave out special
|
|
characters or include them, or you can leave out numbers or include them, and you can also tell
|
|
it to avoid characters that could be mistaken for other characters like zero in an uppercase. Oh,
|
|
I saw that. I saw that. That's what I was saying. I was sort of shocked at how clever it was
|
|
compared to my crappy efforts at this back in the day. Well, still, you had the fun of writing one.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So the following day was a Friday. I know this because it was Libra
|
|
Office Impress Pictures using and formatting pictures, creating a photo album, and this is part
|
|
of a whose Libra Office series, and he's now on Libra Office Impress. And I did not know that
|
|
this was possible, that you could even scan from a scanner directly from a scanner into a photo
|
|
album. This actually might be quite useful for some other project that I was thinking about
|
|
scanning all the documents for archiving. So very, very good show for there. As usual, I mean,
|
|
once again, I use this program quite a lot for my slideshows for where I teach at the university,
|
|
and yet again, he comes up with something that I'd never even heard of that it can do. So
|
|
who could always manage this to do that? And again, he's doing nothing more than reading the
|
|
things on my page, although in fairness, it's a hooker and he's writing it as he goes along as well.
|
|
He does contribute back to this project quite a lot, so well done him. Yep.
|
|
Then we had the status net shuffle, and this is through and NY Bill, talking about status
|
|
status net instance and converting it to GNU social, and I can't say anything bad about
|
|
through for several reasons. One that he has a video of me has a webcam that hopefully he will
|
|
never release on the internet. So I have seen it, okay, now I have seen it, I know it exists
|
|
anyway. Yes, yes, yes, very embarrassing. Dave, can you send that to me please?
|
|
Okay, sure, yeah. And but interesting, a lot of a lot of work involved in this GNU social,
|
|
a lot more, I'm so glad that I'm not actually managing a GNU social website, to be honest.
|
|
I jumped on when it goes about a year or two ago. Yeah, I hadn't fully appreciated all the
|
|
ins and outs of these things. It's having joined GNU social in the past,
|
|
but since FOSDA actually, it understand a little bit more about what running such a thing must be,
|
|
though I don't particularly want to do it, just it's quite impressive. I ran one for quite a while,
|
|
but then when there was a database crash on my server, I decided I didn't want to anymore,
|
|
and so I just got myself on account on when to go instance of GNU social, and I'm much happier
|
|
that way. Yeah, yes, yes, because a lot more sleep at night. Yep. And there were comments to that
|
|
episode by X0XF10E. You should put up some VPS-based blog, something where you could push
|
|
Markdown or RST to engage or Mercurial repository. This is way harder to lose the contents as you
|
|
have it in at least two different places, to which in my bill replied, maybe someday. I never
|
|
thought of that, even if it's not just published blog, at least you can keep your notes safe.
|
|
This is a method this method would make for a good age for your episode. We're in quick
|
|
and over us here. See him turn on everybody in today. You need to submit shows first.
|
|
And then we had a German gentleman to be frank. We met as Dave Belgiumer. Thank you, that's
|
|
the one. Sorry, following asleep, it's past my bedtime. And he put an SSD into his Linux box
|
|
and supplied all the commands to do that. I have just been given a SSD 250 gig SSD
|
|
laptop with 16 gigs of RAM. And I put Fedora 2200 from work. And now I'm taking it off because
|
|
it doesn't support it. So it's a one dates Fedora 22. And there you go. But yes, I'm very happy
|
|
about that. I've met my day, but I still haven't had a chance to use it. Sounds like a nice machine.
|
|
Yep. It's a nice still quite a lot lighter than the one that I have at the minute, but I had thought
|
|
it was a smaller model, which would have been nice for the train and stuff. You know, to have a beefy
|
|
laptop, but yeah, I do a lot of processing offline processing of large database, see type files.
|
|
So yes, that was a good show. And tips about trim support, which I had no idea existed. But there you
|
|
go. And 0XF10E, who I think at this stage, if you come on three times, that you have to actually
|
|
do a show. A little correction on ATA trim, fragmentation of files isn't a problem on SSD,
|
|
but the SSD controller leads to know which blocks can reuse for leveling out the wear of the flash
|
|
cells. As the SSD knows nothing about the file system, it's storing the data on only can swap out
|
|
the blocks that they've that they when they're overwritten once. On this, of course, the OS tells
|
|
the solid state drive, I need free these logical blocks. You do know one to use them.
|
|
This is why the SSD controller can add the blocks to its free list and reallocate the underlying
|
|
flash cells as soon as all the logical blocks are free or remap the leftover logical blocks to the
|
|
free they rest of the flash cell. Oops, cut a little long. Don't worry about that. And Nora
|
|
replied, Dave, do you want to do that? Or not? No, no, fine, sorry, sorry. Distracted there for a second.
|
|
Yeah, Noah says minimizing rights. I just want to take a quick moment to disagree with your
|
|
recommendation to put swap and or var slash var on traditional spinning disk in order to limit
|
|
rights to your SSD. Yes, doing so may ultimately increase the expected lifetime of the drive,
|
|
but you're missing out on the greatest benefits of the SSD by doing so. SSDs are extremely
|
|
faster random access patterns, but for sequential operations such as reading or writing large files,
|
|
they aren't significantly faster than spinning disks. The parts of your system that perform the
|
|
most random access operations are likely to be swap and slash var. Speeding up swap is quite
|
|
possibly the single best application for an SSD in a Linux system. That's interesting. Yeah,
|
|
yeah, I've heard more people saying the opposite. I have to say, but I don't know the truth
|
|
of it myself. But that sounds like a logical argument actually. It does, yes. Cool. But yes,
|
|
Noah and 0xf10e, if nothing else, do a show explain and how to pronounce your
|
|
your handle. That would be awesome. Thank you very much. Both of you guys could do
|
|
little shows about those that would be fantastic. And thanks again, Frank, for sharing that episode.
|
|
And if anyone has any little smidgen of German at all, their, uh, Siri, their, uh, show,
|
|
Linux on their own is absolutely awesome, lovely podcast to listen to. It's very slow.
|
|
And it's got lots of words in there that even if you have not only a German, you'll be able to
|
|
kind of pick up what they're talking about. Waking up, we'll, we'll, we'll, to go. And we've learned
|
|
in the intervening time that his, um, headdress is not special Indian headdress. He's looking
|
|
through a pinball machine apparently in this thing, which is a lot less, uh, a lot less cool than
|
|
I thought it was going to be. So yes, it's, it's quite cool. In its own now, there's just, just
|
|
to, to support Windigo there. It's quite cool. It is, it is cool. As I saw this, I saw this
|
|
or something similar to it at the, um, the Dutch camp thing that I went to and reported from
|
|
and was very hot. And we can't remember its name. That was oh, wasn't it? Thank you very much Dave,
|
|
my regards. I'm, right. I have to do the same for me sometimes. Yep. Um, 2013, 2015,
|
|
that there are 2013 or 2013, I think. Yep. And his, he has a done many nine. And there are many ways
|
|
to, uh, to skin, uh, to approach a problem. And I can be happily say that I would not have picked
|
|
any of his ways of approaching this problem. So it's interesting. It's awesome. It is awesome.
|
|
Don't get me wrong. It's also, it's just how other people approach the same problem. I would have
|
|
just got a lot. There's only one way to do that. And it's this. I would never afford of, uh,
|
|
putting audacious to sleep for five seconds and then making it up again, uh, which is a perfectly
|
|
valid way of doing it. Don't get me wrong. I don't think I would have done it that way in it. I mean,
|
|
I, I have a comment to this episode that will summarize my thoughts on it, but yeah. Shall we jump
|
|
down to that? Yeah. Go ahead. Uh, yeah. So, uh, after hearing this episode, my comment has the
|
|
title, can you hear me? Yes, I can. Sorry about that. I've been having a little bit of audio
|
|
break up on my end, but I'm assuming that it's going okay on y'all's end. Yeah. So the title of
|
|
my comment is the very essence. And I say, when to go, I salute you. In this episode, you've
|
|
captured the spirit, the very essence of HPR. Either that or you were just trying to see if you can
|
|
make Dave Morris twitch enough to send shockwaves across the ocean and feel them over here.
|
|
All of us listening, I'm sure we're shouting suggestions at our audio players, but every
|
|
last one of them would have drained the awesome out of your alarm system. I see no bugs here.
|
|
Absolutely perfect. Absolutely perfect. I do have to which you reply. Yeah, that was,
|
|
that was a great comment there, John. Um, yes, I said, well, of course, I had to then say,
|
|
well, I wouldn't have done it that way, but not that was just a joke. Very fine entertain shows.
|
|
I wouldn't have done it, though, but that was, um, I wasn't really here to chastise and wag
|
|
a finger at him, but that was really the point. But, um, no, I wouldn't have done it that way.
|
|
Probably got would have bought an alarm clock, actually, but that's, you know, that breaks
|
|
through the whole hacker spirit. Um, I didn't twitch excessively. I wasn't wild about the
|
|
multiple sleep solution, but then neither were you, as I said in my comment. I thought the use
|
|
of at was great. Background 2005, I wrote a thing for my work as a cis admin at the university that
|
|
allowed people to request migration of their mailboxes from a Unix mail system to exchange by
|
|
sending an email to a particular server. It slurped their mail out of one system and into another
|
|
into the other one, the exchange system using iMac. But I didn't want that to be more than about
|
|
four slurped jobs running at once, because iMac is not very efficient. So anyway, long story short,
|
|
I used at to schedule the work and do avoid bottlenecks. And this was a supreme lash up. They're not
|
|
quite in the same ballpark as when it goes on, I think, supreme lash up, but it worked. Yours
|
|
was the perfect hacker story, thanks. And then my build applied. I think the next logical step here
|
|
is to enter your desired wake up time from the mini nine via clockwork. Steam band. Awesome.
|
|
And those were applied. This episode shows exactly why nine geeks think geeks are weird while
|
|
giving us geeks a nice warm glow. Yes, you could buy an alarm clock for pennies for whoever
|
|
would perform an sense of achievement being that. I once found myself in a hotel room without my phone
|
|
or any other kind of alarm. I had to be off early for the next meeting. My solution was to create
|
|
a simple MS access application. He was on the company laptop. To pull the system clock until
|
|
it reached five thirty, then repeatedly triggered the beep. I took all of five minutes to call
|
|
and test. Absolutely excellent. That's pretty good. Yes. That's great. Actually, I'd love to see
|
|
this because of a series guys like Dave, you know, those truck, you know, those is Gutenberg machines
|
|
or you know, that hits a hammer that falls thing. Oh, yes, yes. This reminds me of I saw the other
|
|
day in the, sorry, Dave, go ahead. No, no, sorry. I was just just trying to think of an answer to
|
|
Ken's to help Ken's memory there. Gold for machine. That's the one. Yeah, a root goldberg is what you
|
|
think it was. Yes. Yes. Sorry, John. Now, I was just going to say that the other day I had to go to
|
|
a meeting on campus in the computer science building. And in the men's room inside the bathroom stall,
|
|
there was a poster on the inside of the stall that clearly was made by one of the computer science
|
|
graduate students or someone. And it said months of programming can save you weeks of planning.
|
|
Yes. Absolutely. That's what this reminds me of. Absolutely. No, I think where I think when
|
|
it's script does exactly what it says in the tin. Have a script that will wake you up in the morning.
|
|
Does it wake you up? Yes, I know. Then we had John Colp, the following day with my new use pickup
|
|
truck. And I have to admit, for quite a while through this, I was going, does this pass the of
|
|
interest to Hacker test? And I was a John just telling us all how cool his new pickup truck was.
|
|
Why don't you tell the moment where you said about the making a copy of your keys if you have
|
|
two keys that you can clone it? From then on, it was hacking all the way as far as I was concerned.
|
|
Well, I tried to mix in some do-it-yourself repairs and stuff like that. But the ability to clone the
|
|
keys doing it yourself inside the truck rather than paying either a locksmith or the four dealership
|
|
much more money to do it to me. I like that. Absolutely. I didn't even know it was possible because
|
|
my brother got charged 300 euros for that, which was more than the price of the second-hand
|
|
carry bot. Yeah, yeah. I don't know that that would have cost this much. I don't know if that
|
|
would have cost this much for the truck, but for the truck key. But I think it would have been about
|
|
80 or $90 and I paid $15. I actually like this episode because the all the way through. I used to
|
|
do a lot of repairs on my car, you know, back when I had a car and I just basically able to afford
|
|
every pay packet was putting something else on to make it not fall apart as much. So these were
|
|
enjoyable shows. So keep it coming, yeah. Yeah, I have part of an episode about the break repair job
|
|
already recorded, but now I have to actually do the break repair job and I'll do some recording
|
|
after that. Cool. Excellent. Did you have to say? No, no, I was just agreeing with the
|
|
the appeal of the the key cloning bit. I've certainly hacked the key on my previous car,
|
|
which was not as sophisticated, but the electronics of it all fell out and so I've sort of rebuilt,
|
|
rebuilt it in an alternative shell. I think I managed to acquire an empty one from the car dealer,
|
|
because if you, you know, there's all massive amounts of expensive, you want new keys and stuff,
|
|
it's one of these, these ripoffs. Gotcha. Like toner on printers and stuff. Anyway,
|
|
the following day we had run an external command on Kate and I must admit, you know,
|
|
HBR talking about is it the show of interest hackers for new listeners? If you're wondering if
|
|
your show is of interest hackers or not, it is if one or more hackers are interested in us. So
|
|
you're already a hacker because you're submitting a show to hacker public radio. So you only need one
|
|
other person to be interested in the show for to be of interest to hackers and that other person
|
|
usually is me. And in this case, I cheated a little because I was the person recording the show
|
|
and the person listening to the show. This was just for me because every so often after a update,
|
|
the this plugin to Kate disappears and it takes me an hour or two to figure out how to get it back.
|
|
So I thought, well, I'll do a HBR show because we were running our very, very, very low on shows
|
|
at the time on how to get back. So I don't know if it's of interest, Tony Willie. I hope it was,
|
|
but it definitely will be for me in the future. Yeah, that was really interesting.
|
|
I've never taken to KDE. I've tried it a few times and the one part of it that I really liked was
|
|
the Kate text editor, but I didn't like the rest of it enough to keep it. So I really liked hearing
|
|
this. I do similar things to this with Blather voice commands, but it would be pretty cool to have
|
|
this text filter thing set up in my genie text editor, but I don't think there's a plugin that
|
|
does this exact thing for genie. Kate is pretty smart to editor. It's not quite as nice as
|
|
them, but it's appealing to a different audience, I think. I certainly use it. I use Kate quite a
|
|
lot. I thought this was, this is very helpful and interesting. I've not really explored all the
|
|
ends and outs of Kate. So it's good to know about this. Yeah, I end up just doing Kate the whole day
|
|
because it's just my editor of choice. I don't know how it happened, but it happened.
|
|
This plugin one day, when I could do this, rather than having to save the file and then
|
|
do the set up and graph and then come back in, press F5 to refresh it. Yeah, this is just
|
|
absolutely excellent. Even on a sort of table or something in the middle of a block of text,
|
|
you just highlight that block of text and then you sort it. So pretty cool. Anyway,
|
|
if nothing else, it was for me. And my way to Linux, how I found Linux from point cards to Man
|
|
Jarrow by Falky, and I have to admit that I was thrilled to get this on because for ages we have
|
|
said that if people, contributors feel uncomfortable about regarding their shows that they could always
|
|
do a text-to-speech challenge, or there's a list of people who have volunteered to do a narration
|
|
of their episodes if they wished. I would love to hear Falky doing this in his own voice, but I
|
|
really, really, really enjoy this episode. Not only because, like, oh, the coolness of the text
|
|
speech, but the fact that, as Windigo says, and I quote here, I am always a fan of how I found
|
|
Linux episodes, but not many have taken me to Eastern Berlin first, a fascinating story,
|
|
and hopefully the first of many episodes, welcome to HBOR, to which Falky replied. Thank you very
|
|
much. You're very welcome, Windigo, but I wasn't living in Berlin. I lived in a small town
|
|
not far from the Baltic Sea. I have already ideas for more episodes, and we will see when I have
|
|
time to dare to record my own voice. Please do so. Please do so. Yes, indeed.
|
|
Yeah, I agree. I mean, I don't really mind hearing e-speak, but I would prefer to hear people's
|
|
own voices. I think at first people don't like hearing themselves, and they assume that other people
|
|
won't like their voices, but I don't think that's true, really. It can be awkward to hear your own
|
|
voice at first, but I think other people just, they don't mind. I mean, it just sounds like you,
|
|
so I definitely encourage him to use his own voice. I think his issue is probably that English is
|
|
second-language here, so we are very forgiving here. People put up with my bad English.
|
|
So, yes, take your time, read it slowly, and don't worry about it. You can always put the text,
|
|
if you're reading from the text, you can put the text into the show notes, and people can read
|
|
along. Yeah, so very good episode. Keep in common. Thank you very much. I was going to say the same
|
|
thing, put the text up, and then we'd love to hear your voice, and what I love listening to
|
|
accents as well, so go for it. The following day in response to our low shoals, and if somebody
|
|
from who's English isn't there, first-language can submit a show, then surely the people listening to
|
|
the show, who have not submitted a show in the last 12 months, need to start submitting shows.
|
|
Because, folks, we are running out of shows constantly. There's always a trick, and we're relying
|
|
on Dave Morris, we're relying on John Colp, we're relying on NYU, we're relying on Kevin Ahuka,
|
|
we're relying on the all-regular show people, actually, to have the list of people who submitted
|
|
shows over and over again, these people are having to submit shows because you're not getting off
|
|
your lazy beep to record a show for us, yeah? So please record shows and send them in. I know you
|
|
have a list of all I will do that show sometime. Yeah, now is the time to start sending them in.
|
|
Record them over the winter in the Northern Hemisphere here in the Southern Hemisphere,
|
|
while enjoy your summer and record some shows. I'm sorry, folks.
|
|
It's a rant, yeah, you know, I actually really enjoy doing the shows and it's not that I have to,
|
|
but since the fall semester started up, I'm not going to be able to supply as many as I have
|
|
over the summer, so some new people or some old people who haven't done it in a while should
|
|
probably get after it here. And that's exactly, it's not that we don't want to hear you, John, it's just
|
|
a HPR, the whole point of HPR is that it is not a show where, you know, regular hosts and you
|
|
get the regular slots doing the regular thing. Yes, it could be like that, but and there are people
|
|
who come in quite often and will do shows a while ago, Klaatu was doing shows quite often because
|
|
he was the one who was taking up the slack. Now it's other people are coming in. Thankfully,
|
|
we have more people who are coming in taking off the slack, so you don't notice this as much,
|
|
but I did a calculation on the number of episodes submitted by Hulse. And of all the Hulse last year,
|
|
we had of all the people who submitted the shows, they each had done five shows in the last year.
|
|
Yeah, so that means that taking into taking out the people who are only submitted one shows,
|
|
it averaged out that everybody had submitted five shows, so that is far, far too high.
|
|
We want to have new blood coming in, we want to have people who are young people, old people,
|
|
people from diverse communities, we want all the hackers that we can get telling us about
|
|
how they got into tech, what their passion is in life, you're listening to podcasts,
|
|
the excuse or if nothing interesting to say it doesn't cause it anymore, I want to know what
|
|
else is on your podcast player. If you stuck for episodes, I will find you episodes.
|
|
This is a community podcast, right? It's like if you go into a log meeting and the same three people
|
|
are getting up every time to give you the shows. What about the other 50 people who are in the room?
|
|
There are more than 8,000 people who will listen to the show, and yet we only have, I don't know,
|
|
300 people, 300 hosts who have ever committed contributors to show. Guys, Dave, can you cut me off
|
|
here because I'm going on around too much? I think you've made the point that I can, yes, yes.
|
|
Thank you. Speaking of people who contribute shows, it's Tit Radio 20, you've been polled probably.
|
|
Peter 64 went on holidays, I think went to China or somewhere, and 50 and 50 put up a show
|
|
here. It's made me chuckle. It also made me very sad about that FCC ruling about the
|
|
OpenWRTV band on firmwares. Not very good. That's a pity. All of the railries in my house run
|
|
that stuff, so I hope I'm not running a fell of the law already. Maybe it's only in newer ones or
|
|
something. That this is banned. I don't know. They don't allow to import them anymore, so yeah.
|
|
Not good. Not good. The following day, we had some bash tips by Dave. Hold on, can
|
|
also have some comments. Do you want to go through those? Please do, please do.
|
|
So we had a comment from 0XF10E who comments on the car malware issue. I'm expecting more
|
|
ransomware bricking cars than causing accidents. This was in relation to the ability to hack cars.
|
|
First week, windscreen wipers and air conditioning are disabled until you pay five bitcoins.
|
|
Second week, speed is limited to 30 miles an hour until you pay 10 bitcoins. Third week,
|
|
your car won't start until you pay 20 bitcoins. Way less incentive for law enforcement to come
|
|
after them when they go for people's money instead of everyone's safety. I would have actually
|
|
laughed at that if it wasn't for them. In fact, that people are encrypting hard drives and doing
|
|
this very thing. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I know. It's all too likely, doesn't it?
|
|
And Mike, I made the comment. We're doomed, I tell you. That was essentially my thought when I was
|
|
listening to this. I mean, I had to stop listening because I just couldn't take any more bad news.
|
|
No, it came. It came very thick and fast. Mike says, I think I'll just make myself a tin fall
|
|
happens sitting in the cupboard under the stairs. Just wait till they start cracking train and bus
|
|
systems. Actually, yeah, I thought I wouldn't have had that much of a problem with this. I hate
|
|
the public transport system, the check-in checkout system, maybe I'll do an episode on that too,
|
|
okay, some bash tips, Dave. Can we do that now? Yes, indeed. Some fantastic comments on that show,
|
|
about pushty, pop-d, and durs. And again, excellent show notes associated with that if you follow
|
|
the link with examples. I still don't get it, Dave. You have not convinced me on like all your other
|
|
shows. I'm not convinced by this one. Yes, well, there was this fellow called Ken Valin who commented
|
|
to that. In fact, obsolete he says, hi, Dave, I can never get my head around these commands and
|
|
your show has clarified them for me. I've never been able to get a use case for this. It cannot
|
|
be done using CD- that jumps you back to the previous directory. Running it again brings you back
|
|
to where you started, which of course is quite true. I attempted to give one possible use case for
|
|
it, but I have to say that I use this a lot, but I used it back in the day when I was a
|
|
Unix system administrator where we used dumb terminals most of the time, or we didn't have,
|
|
we had an X term emulator on a Windows box or something to get to our machines. And if you
|
|
just got the one terminal, then using push the impopty is quite useful to allow you to
|
|
to leap around between different directories. Nowadays, it's not really necessary in most cases.
|
|
So I tend to agree, but I thought it might be interesting. I'm glad that you did this
|
|
episode because I've known about these commands, but I'm never really used them and I might try
|
|
to incorporate them into some of my bladder commands. If I'm hopping around the different
|
|
directories, I actually have bladder commands that will take me to some of the most frequently
|
|
used ones from a cis admins point of view, but I'd like to have a series of commands to build a
|
|
stack of directories and then hop back to the second one or the fourth one or whatever. So I might
|
|
experiment with this a bit. Well, I have actually written some scripts around the idea because
|
|
there's a bash array that holds the stack, in which you can see. You can't manipulate to any
|
|
great degree. You can read it, but you can't change it to have the sort of effect that you want
|
|
if I remember right. So while I'm since I looked at this, but certainly you could write stuff around
|
|
it that was able to tell you what is directory two in the stack or something and then go there
|
|
if you wanted to. So yeah, yeah, go for it. But are you able to like pick from a list, if it's
|
|
a, if it's an array, then you should be able to pick like 0, 1, 2 and 3, store the metals,
|
|
animations, index numbers, right? Yeah. Okay, that might actually be useful. Yeah, I think there
|
|
are still some some uses for it. As I said in my response to your comment that it may be
|
|
obsolescent or outmoded, but it's still, I think it's still worth knowing about maybe using this,
|
|
John said, because I always find it a bit dangerous, to be honest, when I've looked at it in the past
|
|
because if you get the ordering wrong, then suddenly you're changing into the incorrect directory and
|
|
the chances of running something. That's why I always use opposite full paths names, not relative
|
|
paths in any script that I do, because I want to be absolutely sure I'm in that directory and
|
|
no other directory. That's good practice anyway. Yeah, yeah, I would definitely do that.
|
|
But you never know, maybe somebody might write an alarm clock based on us. Who knows?
|
|
Oh, dude, that sounds like a challenge, I can't do that. Yeah, I'll tell you if I do, I will, I will
|
|
do a short one. And the following day we had the Marn, how do you pronounce that, John?
|
|
Marn, I'm sorry, I think it's Moran's. Okay, thank you. And yeah, it's not a, not a nice story,
|
|
how do you manage to get it, but it seems like your mother-in-law had quite an act of fulfilling life
|
|
by the sounds of it. Certainly did. Yeah, she traveled all around the world for a good part of her
|
|
life. And so that was like for her work. But then she also would do field recordings. She has a
|
|
book that she wrote called Voices of Resistance, which is a series of interviews with women who
|
|
are involved in the Moroccan resistance back in, I don't know, the 50s or 60s or something. And so
|
|
she would take this recorder and record the interviews and then transcribe them and publish them.
|
|
And so yeah, she did a lot of oral history and I was really glad to get the recorder,
|
|
but it will definitely miss her. But as I said, when she had her stroke, she was in Morocco,
|
|
giving a paper at a conference, doing what she loved. So she never had to give up her walk-up
|
|
apartment in Manhattan and things like that. So I think she led a good life. And the, it's actually
|
|
sounded quite nice, the recording better with the second microphone, I think.
|
|
Right. At first, I recorded part of it in my carport using the built-in microphones, which
|
|
aren't bad, but the microphone that she had with it, the external microphone is really a very nice
|
|
one. Audio Technica, Audio Technica ATM 710, Cardioid Condenser mic. And yeah, that one sounded
|
|
really good. Micro-replied sync quality. I love the show. As I do all of John Schoels, the words,
|
|
this is John Culp in Lefayette, Louisiana, is always guaranteed your quality. Today might be an
|
|
exception. Oh my god. And she knows to be on the show, but they sound recorder sounds like very
|
|
nice piece of case and the sound quality was superb. Pity about the compact flash media.
|
|
And the harpsichord music break was always very pleasant to which John replied.
|
|
Thank you so much for the nice comments, Mike. Regarding the bumper music, I got it from the
|
|
open goldberg variations. A wonderful performance and completely free to download and share.
|
|
And by the way, Mike, it was not harpsichord playing it. It was a piano. However, the piece was
|
|
originally written for the harpsichord. Kevin O'Brien commented. I agree with Mike. I also find
|
|
John Culp showed it's very good. So that's very nice. Thanks, Kevin.
|
|
Excellent. Excellent, John. To the following day,
|
|
Leblow Office Impress, the tea, the gallery and themes. What I liked about this was his reference
|
|
to the icons being like Tlipper out of the 1990s website. So yes, very true, but I suppose that's where
|
|
the history of this. People wanted Tlipper at one stage in their work processor.
|
|
Can't remember the last time I used Tlipper. Now it tends to look a little bit cheesy when you do
|
|
doesn't it? Because it's that type of stuff. Yeah, good to know. A few magazines that I get and
|
|
you know, homemade magazines and they're spluttered with that sort of Tlipper. But it doesn't take away
|
|
from the content though. It's quite nice. It's nice to know that Leblow Office has that
|
|
and you know, why take it out. And you can put your own in as well, which I actually sat down
|
|
there following along with Impress for this one, just so I could get to the full details of it.
|
|
And it's hell of a thing. Hell of a package that Leblow Office is. And then the next day we had
|
|
did a quick review of his favorite multimeter, the Unity UT-61E. And I liked this as well,
|
|
also because I'm following up watching the other multimeter videos on YouTube. And this one
|
|
looks like it's covered all the bases with regards to things that he suggests. I also see that he's
|
|
got a variable power supply on his desk. Photograph is supplied. So I like these. I think
|
|
M.I. Bill is assuming that people listening know more about stuff than we do. So a few basic,
|
|
few basic shows on stuff will be really helpful. I agree. I would definitely like to hear more
|
|
basically how to use this thing rather than a product review.
|
|
M.I. Gray said the UT measures. He had great episode on the UT multimeters. He had a UT-60A,
|
|
which has an opto-isolated serial port. Sadly, the software was totally inaccessible to someone
|
|
who like himself can't see. So he's been writing his own to run on Linux. And those of us who
|
|
know about M.I. Gray will understand that that's what he does. Admittedly, I started a few years ago
|
|
and did some initial work on reverse engineering the protocol, which I can't find documented anywhere.
|
|
Hearing this episode is always a project I was project to resurrect the code and
|
|
compiling it. I have another multimeter which actually talks, which has stopped me doing the
|
|
completing the project once before. I think the UT-60E possibly other models like the UT-61E
|
|
have similar ports and probably have serial all sorts. It's always an impressive range of meters
|
|
given the price by editors note or my note. That seems to correspond with what I've seen on
|
|
other videos. I'll go back to Mike's comments. When I have something completed and talking,
|
|
I'll stick it on the web and do a show. Yes, you will. Thank you. It could be good to get bladder
|
|
to respond by making measurements and breathing it out alone. That would be great. Yeah.
|
|
It would be worth then because this is like a reasonably affordable multi-measure because then
|
|
you'd know it'll work in Linux. It works with bladder and all the shows that Mike and M.I. Bill would
|
|
follow along. Everybody using the same multimeter. So N.Y. Bill commented,
|
|
replied to this comment saying thanks to the kind words Mike. That's sorry, you can hear my cat
|
|
in the background maybe? I don't know. That's just an F. I thought it was something. This microphone
|
|
I've got is so sensitive that you can probably hear it. What do they say in that fart from
|
|
Ray some distance away? Anyway, sorry. That's just an episode that I felt like doing because I
|
|
felt I was a bit harsh on the uni-T meters. You do get a lot of bang for your buck with those units.
|
|
And yes, this one has the serial to opto a couple of connectors as well. Who has...
|
|
Sorry. What's your car's called, Dave? I am Misty. I'm fortunate. She's annoyed because she can't
|
|
go out because I can't get up and open the door and let her out. We don't have a cat flap.
|
|
So she's sort of expressing. Anyway, how far have I got up? Yes. I did say they sell a connector.
|
|
We'll go to USB. But as I said in the episode, I don't really feel in need for that feature anyway.
|
|
However, I'm sure some do. And yes, if you could get one of these meters going text-to-speech,
|
|
that's an episode I'd like to hear. Dave, you can go and let the cat out. I never thought I'd say that.
|
|
The reason for the USB stuff is I think you can do logging to overtime.
|
|
So you could log, you know, voltage or current over time. And if you had two of them,
|
|
you could log voltage and current and then calculate the power of stuff as it recharges overnight,
|
|
copying all this from the guy who uses this form. He does that logging to computer with
|
|
the multi meters so that he can see how much power consumption he's getting from his solar panels.
|
|
Anyway, microwave replied. The unit team meters and serial ports, having written the first comment,
|
|
took another look online and found some stuff about the standard DMM chip used inside the meter.
|
|
And I think all the unity meters, the only problem I think might be the serial port. I'm not
|
|
sure whether it will work with a neither PL 2303 or a FTDI USB to serial adapter, since the
|
|
client software needed to raise either a CTS or an RTS or Bolt to power the octocoupler in the leads.
|
|
If UTC or USB to meter adapter, I'd like to know where to get one. I particularly like the RMS
|
|
feature you mentioned in your show, which is uncommon in such a cheap meter. And the RMS is where
|
|
it takes an average of the voltage AC current and back to the current. I'm jealous of your ability
|
|
to add a timeout power modifier, though, could have done with that when I could see, but not now,
|
|
forever leave my media switched on and flattening the batteries.
|
|
To which my bill replied, here's the USB connector mic. This says it will work with a UT61,
|
|
and I see a UT60 is listed. I think they are going to use in a question mark like an asterisk.
|
|
It's cheap enough. Maybe I'll throw one in the cart for the next Amazon order and see if we can
|
|
get the UTF units off or working with wine. Slash me wonders if Ken or Dave is reading all this in
|
|
the community news. Let's be verbose. Ha, ha, ha, and my bill. Yes, we are.
|
|
Nice. Yes, nice. I didn't even spot that earlier.
|
|
Microwave replied PL2303 USB to RS232 and UT6. Thank you, Mike. I'm happy to report that myself
|
|
or works with the measure plugged into PL2303 USB to serial adapter. So either the octocopivers
|
|
are being powered somehow else, or I have the term I all set up right. Or there is some magic
|
|
about the adapter. I don't think these things supported hard, where I didn't think these things
|
|
supported harder, handshaking pins, and you two guys need to have a room to continue talking about
|
|
these comments. Thank you very much. You do realize that we shouldn't even have read these
|
|
going into the rules because they're their September's comments, not in August, but I'll shut up now
|
|
and go away. No, they're, well, I thought we were allowed to read them if they were in the show.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So this show wasn't. I was just being facetious.
|
|
Thank you, Dave. I did mention it's late and I've been working hard all day. Thank you very much.
|
|
Okay, guys, I'm going to have to take off. I'm going to take my kids to their pottery class,
|
|
but I've enjoyed it and I will talk to you all later. John, thank you very much for joining.
|
|
Thanks. We're going to wrap up. John's going on too long. See you soon, John. Cheers.
|
|
God, I thought that guy would never leave. I'm still here.
|
|
Bye, guys. See you, John.
|
|
Nice guy. I actually looked up where it left yet. Louisiana is
|
|
close to New Orleans. Only that far on the map.
|
|
It's this is why John's often mentioned going to sit by the swamps and that sort of stuff.
|
|
Sounds good. Seriously, you know, I have it in my head like do do do do do do that. I will
|
|
someday take the kids and not that they ever wanted to go to Disneyland or anything would take
|
|
take the kids and drive around you know higher Winnevego and go around the states and meet up
|
|
all the podcasters as I go. I'd love to do that because some of the places where you know people
|
|
live are really really really beautiful places. Oh yes. Oh yes. I sympathize with that point of view.
|
|
David, how are we dealing with the comments? Well, we have two that are not included in the
|
|
in the way we've just read them. Hold on a second. This will in my bill. Sorry, I'm late.
|
|
So don't forget your reverbs, which was in my bill talking about refurbishing his Lenovo.
|
|
I'm modifying it to the way he likes it. This is where he did the
|
|
uh put the speakers in the front and change the bias. And his comment was uh sorry I'm late.
|
|
On the comments guys, I bought the rig via microcentre polky. So there's a comment on the question
|
|
of polky ad. Again, in case you didn't know to be on prepare. So so yes, you probably bought
|
|
something by now, but just in case anyone reads it in the future new egg tag or direct
|
|
Lenovo offers and the Dell outlet also sell refurbs. And thanks for the kind words,
|
|
Charles and energy. Yes, I've always hacking on something and it's fun to blabber about projects
|
|
on HBO as well. Yes, it is. And this is me getting checking comments is only been about nine
|
|
months. I don't know if fair enough. I did uh did point out to N.Y. Bill that he could uh
|
|
subscribe to the comment feed and and get them uh in a more timely way. I'm not sure the people
|
|
are fully aware of of its existence to be honest. Yeah. I actually want to talk about that as well
|
|
can but just remind me in a minute. There was another show comment on the last pass
|
|
getting hacked. What does it mean? Which was won by a hooker who who uh what did
|
|
you expect it for us? And I met the valid uh point, but it is not free software. Free
|
|
isn't freedom would would not be an ethical question mark. And again, to remind everybody
|
|
where your HPR itself is uh not necessarily a free software um show. You could do shows on
|
|
proprietary software if you wish. The fact that most people who are on sport free software
|
|
uh is by the way. But yes, he does have a point and and that is why I use um not key pass
|
|
but um let me say I'll just look over on my voice computer while Dave reads the next comment.
|
|
There aren't any more comments again. That's it. That was the last one. Key pass x
|
|
k e p s s x is an equivalent piece of software that is completely open and you can use that.
|
|
So there you go. That's another piece of news. What do we have? Sure not, Dave.
|
|
We have uh we have three email emails to look at and that's uh that's it really. Do you want to go
|
|
through? Yep. Well the first one was on 15th August was me saying uh um help with tags and
|
|
summaries asking people if they would be prepared to join in with the uh the process of adding tags
|
|
and summaries to shows and I'd created a script which um summarizes all of the uh the missing
|
|
tags and summaries all the shows that need them and uh there's a web page that's mentioned in
|
|
this um message and there's a web uh there's an email address I mean um which to which you can send
|
|
updates and the email describe the format that we needed in the um in the email message. It's
|
|
very simple it's just a tag show and the show number summary colon and the summary and tags
|
|
colon followed by a list of tags you just send that in this software which can um check it and uh
|
|
and put it into the database. So that would be great but I don't think anybody's had a chance to
|
|
do that yet. Yeah I was people want to contribute to this just uh gives a little bit give us a
|
|
shout tags at hyperbubblegradio.org and uh as I don't know maybe we could set up a I don't know
|
|
feed or something a way that you could every day get another show um that we need shows for
|
|
rots. Okay yeah yeah it would be nice if people could uh if you're want to listen to shows you could
|
|
download uh today's episode of hbr and an archive one from the archive and listen to
|
|
those and send us in show notes that would be fantastic. And john uh Kevin O'Brien sent a
|
|
mail to the uh say about john kulp um wanting to contribute to the league office so show and he
|
|
says that's absolutely fine and anybody who wishes to do that can and john replied of course saying
|
|
that he's done thanking him for that and that he's also done some uh shows and the privacy and
|
|
security series. And the last uh email was one that you sent Ken which was uh uh entitled do you
|
|
owe me a show um where you pointed out that we're running short of shows and uh making a request
|
|
for the contributions which I think was about a certain amount of uh response but um could certainly
|
|
do with a lot more I think. Yeah exactly and I think I've already ran to this long enough about
|
|
that but uh yeah it's uh I mean then the hpour website if you go to the calendar page you'll see
|
|
that they you know we track the number of shows and stuff in the list uh but there's also a few
|
|
things that I personally track to know if the health of hbr is um you know how they health of hbr
|
|
itself is going. So we've got the next free slot which is the red line and that's kind of the one
|
|
people tends to watch quite a lot and that jumps around a lot because uh we leaves certain you know
|
|
of a our horse who's contributing a lot leaves tends to leave spaces for other people to come in
|
|
so when the slats get filled jumps from you know one day to the next free slot to 20 days or
|
|
something like that um and then the shows and the queue is one that I don't particularly pay that
|
|
much attention to so quite often I've quite a lot of shows in but we still have gaps in the queue
|
|
so you see quite a bit of difference but the one that tells me about the health of hbr as uh
|
|
as a project is the number of holes we have that in the queue and from its peak we've had 20 people
|
|
in the queue down and that goes down quite a lot it's gone down to under three at one stage
|
|
um earlier on this year and uh it's it's between ten and five mostly and that's not good we need
|
|
we need to get that up that should be up at around a hundred people in the queue you know
|
|
yeah yeah yeah i i i tend to look at the red one and now you point out the the green line it's
|
|
um it's a little worrying isn't it yeah it is it's um it's you know people contribute um you
|
|
have regulars who come in and contribute quite a lot and but eventually you know live catches up
|
|
with all of us and we we're lucky now that there are several people that are regularly contributing
|
|
shows so nobody's noticed in that that much but it's five or ten people that are contributing shows
|
|
that's why I love to see um people coming in with new shows uh all-time
|
|
hosts returning doing their one slot a year that's exactly what we want because we've
|
|
to be honest if everybody decided in the morning everybody was listening to this
|
|
decided okay i'm going to do my show and shut this guy up and submitted the shows
|
|
you know we would have four or five years of shows in the queue and you know you know we'd be
|
|
spotted for riches but the fact of matter is it's a very very tiny percentage of people keeping
|
|
this project alive so we don't ask for contributions although in fairness if you wanted a good deal
|
|
and hosting go to an honest host.com um see what i did there Dave see what i did there
|
|
all done um okay so but let's skip over that we'll have
|
|
board people to that about that there was one other thing there's something up with my email or
|
|
the email on the server which John is looking um uh not John John Josh Josh yeah our long suffering
|
|
actual administrator owner and contributor patron um who is looking at the issue and it was about
|
|
accessibility on the HBR website now i have added as an emergency measure um the accessibility
|
|
dot php which gives you a list of all the links that are in the in the header and the footer
|
|
uh without any CSS attached so that um people at least can get to a page so this is
|
|
bird by the fact that Mike Ray has been uh going to the website and as you as you mentioned in his
|
|
comments um that he is uh he's basically a blind user so um obviously he can't see what we're
|
|
trying to do because you know he's hovering over the thing and it allows the makes the noise and
|
|
if it doesn't make a noise he can't quote air quotes see it or hear it the text to speech doesn't
|
|
work so basically i need to get my uh finger out and boot up a machine that has got 64 bit Linux so
|
|
that i can run chiscale on it and uh do the text to speech stuff but unfortunately i'm really
|
|
in the middle of the actual rebuild of the the backroom here and i have no machine in which to put
|
|
it on as yet i'm going to actually know that i think that i'll try that new laptop from work
|
|
and see if i can uh i can boot it up with that she might be no harm to run chiscale as a generally
|
|
okay by the bite by the bite stop focus focus okay um so what i want is people to help us out here
|
|
also if you're running macOS x uh windows linux um android bsd enable your accessibility functions
|
|
go to the website site users obviously are people who have the ability to use at least some vision
|
|
go tell me what is what you what you're able to what works what doesn't work if you want for
|
|
reference go you can go to the accessibility.php page and that is what should be in the in the main
|
|
links so if your reader is not working then that is the reason why so um please go have a look
|
|
at that and uh those of you who could also tell us what is wrong with the css that would make
|
|
it worth better please do so if you have any uh suggestions about general ways of making the website
|
|
better please do so most of the website is still um on the it's it's all not moved over to the public
|
|
site but that's something that we would do if we ever need to touch a page that page get moved
|
|
gets moved out to they uh to the main site so the more stuff that you can fix the more
|
|
the more open you're making hpure. Anything else Steve? I don't think so and i think we've covered a lot
|
|
so i think that's uh that's about it um the the issue you alluded to was the the hpr list went through
|
|
slight hiatus and messages weren't getting out. Josh thinks he's he's got it fixed now but i don't
|
|
think we've sent any nothing's come through the list since then so uh just between you and me we need
|
|
to check that the list is working but uh i'm not 100% sure that the problem isn't on my side either
|
|
because i'm now getting double emails back from stuff i send out on all the stuff so it can be an issue
|
|
on my side perhaps as well okay but as i say i'm like in the middle of rebuilding out here so it's
|
|
a bit messy everything's uh nothing's nothing's where it should be Dave nothing's where it should be
|
|
well i'll send a message to the list and just check to see how it how it goes through um
|
|
just uh just to check that it's it's not down to you or something with going on you go to
|
|
maybe we mentioned in the show um about the markdown thing so maybe you might want to ask that's
|
|
what people's thoughts are on how to get uh you know what you see is what you get and how to get
|
|
the show notes to hpr in the format that people want to send it in but maintaining the formatting
|
|
that they want so that would be a good one to actually yeah i'll get that sorted out for
|
|
tomorrow think if i can good all right that's everything as far as i'm concerned okay this show
|
|
has gone on now for a long time so let us stop and remember to support free software
|
|
no wrong person um yes tuned in tomorrow for another exciting episode of
|
|
hacker public radio join us now and share the software
|
|
you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org
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|
we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday
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|
today's show like all our shows was contributed by an hpr listener like yourself
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if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out
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comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record
|
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