- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
594 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
594 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2761
|
|
Title: HPR2761: HPR Community News for February 2019
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2761/hpr2761.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 16:30:23
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HBR episode 2007-161 entitled HBR Community News for February 2019 and is part of the series HBR Community News.
|
|
It is posted by HBR volunteers and is about 67 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
|
|
The summary is HBR volunteers talk about show release and comment posted in February 2019.
|
|
This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An honesthost.com.
|
|
Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio today for February 2019.
|
|
Joining me this evening R is even is well I seem to be both of Dave and Dave yes so yes
|
|
yes yes yes me trying to make grammar errors around Dave nobody wants to do that guys.
|
|
So this is HBR this is HBR Community News what HBR HBR is a community podcast network one of the
|
|
longest out there and indeed probably the one of the longest one out there without a wikipedia page
|
|
hinting to wink wink anyways subtle hints are not working so we are a network of volunteers who
|
|
record topics of interest to hackers which can be anything and we submit them up to a website
|
|
and that is distributed as a shared RSS feed and that's just how you get it in your podcast
|
|
unless you go to the website of course and in order to make sure that we as a community get some
|
|
feedback we do this community news show which is open to everyone and anyone even French speaking
|
|
Swiss people if they bother to show up so nobody particularly mind no no just you know surely
|
|
we must be somebody in French speaking person in Switzerland anyways so how are you Dave
|
|
everything good I'm good I'm good yep yeah nothing nothing much to to report really just the
|
|
usual stuff yes okay so in this show we basically go through what's been happening we listen to
|
|
all the shows and we give comments and if there's people have left feedback which we do encourage
|
|
you to do then we don't have to give us many comments because we can read out your feedback
|
|
so starting with and then after that we'll go through they
|
|
go through anything that was on the mailing list and and the other business if there was any
|
|
indeed so the first show we will discuss was some Yannick the French guy from Switzerland
|
|
oh there's there's odd coincidence yeah he just said hi in somewhere in oh yeah he just popped
|
|
just popped into mumble actually so he's so pretty good he's on his way anyway this was a
|
|
re-edited version re edition of the review of pop up OS which was done on tuxjam
|
|
December 2018 who violates our our redistribution policies I'm afraid but we let it go this time
|
|
yes yes yeah we did have a small conversation with him but I thought it wasn't with the
|
|
the trouble to to make a fuss about it but yeah since 2006 there's a well-known
|
|
prepare of open source hardware or Linux-friendly hardware and all of it's completely free and open
|
|
I don't know I have no idea if I Yannick would know we should we should drag him in call him in
|
|
sat there in the lounge is he can he not come in hello Yannick can you hear us
|
|
hello well you're not able to get into the hacker public radio yeah I was asking for permission
|
|
before we need we need permission to come into the hacker public radio room yeah I fixed that
|
|
right now no I didn't know if you were recording or something oh no just come on in yeah okay we
|
|
just spent the last 10 minutes slacking you off for not being here on time yeah yeah yeah my fault
|
|
so we were yeah no worries we were talking about your show actually Papa West yes do you have a system
|
|
76 laptop no and do do you know if system 76's laptops are all open source hardware etc and yes
|
|
to my knowledge there okay cool so the following day we had no comments on that episode it's hard
|
|
to get um it's hard to get system 76 laptops over this side of the pond so yeah yeah I would love
|
|
to have one yes there are some nice machines there truth be told the following day HPR
|
|
community news so this show but for January and there was one comment on there from Brian in
|
|
whole hi oh I listened to HPR on my android phone using antenna pod available on F-Troid
|
|
and see the show notes and links to the show notes take you to the website great application
|
|
yep fair enough that was that we were we were discussing whether all all pod catches
|
|
on of the the show notes properly and showed links and stuff I think something like that I don't
|
|
remember precisely but he's just answering there I think yeah there was a comment on the
|
|
augcast IRC channel where somebody was asking if you could put show notes into the media files
|
|
themselves and I recommended not doing that doing it the other way so have the XML and then
|
|
have an the media file linked from the XML so do the show notes first and link it the other way
|
|
else you get into all sorts of strange issues with strange characters in media files some media
|
|
players at least back in the day broke I don't know what it's like now maybe some of you should
|
|
check out see how how well that would work it's might be difficult for some people to see them
|
|
I don't have a device that can see show notes in in the audio because I just use little
|
|
the audio players you know MP3 players okay well to be honest I'm pretty sure most of the people
|
|
when what I mean is listening to a podcast is not probably not something you do sitting in front
|
|
of a computer or looking at your phone so it doesn't make really any sense to have show notes in
|
|
in the audio or even on the on the podcast sure well that's that's how I consume my podcast anyway I'm
|
|
driving so I don't I can't read the show notes on the device but then I make a mental note of
|
|
you know I have to go to this this podcast website and see the show notes because I want to
|
|
see a link or a picture they referenced so I'm not sure it makes any sense to have show notes
|
|
on the on the audio yeah yeah then again they all depends on somebody's application there's
|
|
probably four or five people were shouting at they at their media player go of course shouting
|
|
after computer course computer going of course you said because that's perfectly logical for my
|
|
use case what would the accessibility angle be I wonder yeah I don't know I don't even know if
|
|
there's a standard for this because I I know that it's kind of for MP3 at least there's a limit of
|
|
of the amount of data you can put in there and then is it XML or is it just text files or does
|
|
it support HTML or what in the media you mean yeah in the media itself well it's pretty much whatever
|
|
you want it's a while if we're talking about MP3 ID3 tags there are text text text text data so you
|
|
can pretty much do whatever you want with that yeah that's all right but then you have the
|
|
description which links of the show notes and some of our show notes are maybe eight or nine pages
|
|
of stuff so what do you do is it yeah it would be up to each individual media player which you have
|
|
to also consider might be a hardware device so yeah hard to know anyway the following day we had
|
|
SAP HANA certification directory and this falls under the heading of stuff that's of interest
|
|
I'm sure a lot of people would not find that interesting but to me I was fascinated by the
|
|
restrictions implied required by to get SAP running on on some harder reminds me of my old IT
|
|
system days where you had to read pages on pages of that sort of stuff and you then understand how
|
|
they make a ton of money because if you're not writing the specifications it's not supported and
|
|
an issue you need another license or whatever it's it's it's crazy and you usually find that out
|
|
like five minutes after your system yeah yeah it made me think of Oracle and people like that and
|
|
all the horrors of having to do with them so interesting of course the next day Latu and
|
|
Lost and Bronx talk about character building in the D20 system and there was one comment on that
|
|
oh your ruin has just joined us yeah well does my mic work yes it does yeah okay small
|
|
favorites great okay continue please to do to says pleasure to listen to this was really fun
|
|
episode to listen to and it made me kind of want to play some role playing a game game again the
|
|
comment about charisma being least useful staff made me think how it depends on the game being
|
|
played and the group someone like some like shooting or hitting or magic missling everything that
|
|
moves while others like politics and intrigue probably best to have a chat before the game to set
|
|
expectations of what kind of game people are generally looking forward to that's actually a good
|
|
point yeah I actually agree with this comment with this comment says that makes me want to play
|
|
role playing games again never have the pleasure to be honest and they are they are there's some
|
|
so much energy in there in their episodes that you know there you when you listen to them talking
|
|
about the role playing games you can feel that they actually passionate about that and it it
|
|
shows through the through the podcast and the yeah it was a very interesting episode yeah I agree
|
|
with that absolutely they're they're they're very very keen and I know people who are as keen but
|
|
I'm not one of my friends that's that's because I'm very very old probably well there's no age limit
|
|
on the playing RPG okay I'm just boring then so the following day we have 75 updates for my
|
|
Fedora system apparently the following day is yet another rambling drive into work from Mr X
|
|
this was yeah his sound quality improved immensely after that tip from
|
|
tip of the lapel mike yes I think that was David Lee who commented on Mr X is shown and suggested
|
|
so yeah absolutely yeah lapel mike and a pass through a phonic and that makes wonders
|
|
yeah just just saying just to show how easy it is to record an episode for HPR and hint
|
|
if thank you I'm failing myself here it was an interesting discussion actually because I had a just
|
|
my brother knows because an electric vehicle not having a vehicle myself I have very little
|
|
interest in it but it was interesting to see about battery life and stuff so yeah pretty cool
|
|
yeah it was quite an insight I thought I'd I'd toyed with buying a hybrid if I if I renew my car
|
|
before too long or an electric car but yeah there's this factors there I hadn't thought of
|
|
yeah like picking the perfect laptop you know yep yep and he told me that you can get
|
|
haggis pizza in the co-op which is oh my god that was because Mr X lives in Edinburgh as I do so
|
|
so he's pointed the way so I know we're not to go I'm sorry haggis pizza every
|
|
that was very kind of it's it's inevitable and the following day my youtube subscription channels from
|
|
Ahuka and of all of these I yeah quite a lot of the RV ones while I'm interested in other
|
|
something yeah it's a bit bit wet and cold and miserable for RVs around here I did subscribe
|
|
to the history with Herbert one which I thought was quite cool yeah when I when this the series
|
|
started like I'm going to review my subscriptions kind of if you said I thought well it's not
|
|
going to be really interesting etc etc but actually even if it's just one or two you can pick up
|
|
some some interesting channels from those listings so yeah things that you know you might not
|
|
think you're interested you know and then you just have a look and then it turns out to be
|
|
something you can subscribe to yep I think it gives you a great insight into somebody's
|
|
interest and hobbies yeah that too yeah yeah it's surprisingly personal isn't it to see the world
|
|
through somebody else's eyes in this sort of way I thought it was really interesting the way to
|
|
and I share an interest in astronomy with him and it's interesting that we we follow similar sorts
|
|
of stuff so yeah I'd like to know more about RVs because I know they exist I've seen them
|
|
have driven behind them but I don't know much about why you would have one and you know because they
|
|
pass yeah some of them have got got small cars clipped on the back yeah so they're so vast
|
|
well what is that all about well you can move your house and go and live for a few months
|
|
done in sunny weather and then go back up to cold miserable weather yeah yeah yeah I'd like to
|
|
have an insight in some of the living in Scotland the whole place it should appreciate
|
|
getting away from cold and miserable weather but that would just begin to another bit of Scotland
|
|
yeah after Brexit for sure yeah you'd be all lucky yeah yeah yeah there's no no Europe anymore
|
|
come the end of the month then swing to island oh don't don't get me started on that
|
|
no okay the next day my software part dear Tony Hughes Ak Tony H12 a H12 12 12 where does that
|
|
come from Tony do show on that I see USB image writer open box open broadcast software CD writing
|
|
and game yeah he uses a lot of salt test a lot of software yeah and now this you can
|
|
you can test software without I was going to say to polluting your your system using
|
|
snaps or app images or what's the flat packs so that that's that's something I'm looking into
|
|
trying new software like that you install a flat pack or a snap on obviously on the new
|
|
systems of course and it's all there it's all contained and if you don't like what the software
|
|
doesn't you just delete one file or snap and install the software and your system is just like
|
|
it was before and that's really nice in six months time you've got a piece of out of this vulnerable
|
|
software system there on your system with no chance to update it with what with the snaps and
|
|
happy images and yeah it stops nothing images they all it's like they yes they have a they have
|
|
a place and everything but if it's not integrated into your update system you're not getting your
|
|
updates so no snaps of that stem cells you don't you don't have to do anything there that
|
|
does they update themselves so if they're well I look forward to your show clarifying how snaps work
|
|
okay that did well once once you start getting into a discussion about I think it's time
|
|
yeah okay very enough Brian a 911 four show shows up it has a 911 engine I check the oil and
|
|
the car lives this was brilliant oh my god did you hear the show I love this yeah do more of
|
|
these just just and this is a throwaway show oh my god this is awesome please do more of these
|
|
type of shows I don't know anything about cars but there was a stuck to my yeah what's next what's
|
|
next yeah isn't that interesting that to the sort of detective work and and so on there's
|
|
there's so much so much to be got out of that and there's another insight into a different way of
|
|
life as far as I'm concerned I don't I wouldn't know how to do any of that at all so yeah more please
|
|
I basically know how to turn my car on and off and that's all and drive it of course and this is
|
|
the same person who teaches us how to split a block of beeswax I'm I just like to hear more
|
|
shows from Brian coming in and also making clay pots and things like that exactly that's
|
|
I recall so yeah very very yeah multi-talented person I think he may be suffering from
|
|
or I don't think anyone will find this interesting syndrome which we are kind of plagued with
|
|
on the network the answer to that is yes people will find that interesting which is the proof
|
|
which brings me on to the next day writing web games in Haskell special events and it's beginning
|
|
to it's beginning to make sense yeah I agree I agree it's gradually gradually there's the the
|
|
mist is clearing I don't I couldn't sit down and write anything but I can see some of the stuff
|
|
that he's he's trying to do and how he's doing it this is actually becoming fascinating now because
|
|
I'm wondering I just wondering yes I'm following along in 100% fate knowing what not having
|
|
clue what you're doing but it seems to be working it seems to be very you just sit and write it
|
|
it seems such a different way of programming Haskell yeah I still haven't taken the time to look at it
|
|
but yeah and as I said earlier on I'm prejudiced it's something I want to have a look at
|
|
and the following day the Laurel and Hardy return lost and Bronx and Latu don't know why I'm saying that
|
|
false on RPG calendar to character building modern RPG play styles compared with old school
|
|
more was this the was this the edited version with the Twinkle Bell bit in between no no this was
|
|
this was sort of outtakes from two seven four three oh yeah you described it
|
|
yeah now this this was the one about yeah where they were doing the star finder build
|
|
okay cool I like this show as well this is again it's fascinating to me this whole
|
|
RPG stuff following day we had the windmill is on the fritz where I use a fritz software to reverse
|
|
engineer some a little model village type windmill yeah fritz is really interesting actually as a
|
|
free free software to do the electronic designs I like it helps me when I want to use a
|
|
to layer breadboard or something I usually go to fritz first and visually see what I'm going to do
|
|
before I could try to do it because with this I usually end up with a whole mess of cables and
|
|
stuff on my breadboard it helps to have something that's not physical to play around before
|
|
laying out the cables and the components I like the way you can you can get three different views
|
|
of the same thing you've got the sun diagram you've got the breadboard and you got the
|
|
what's that heard on the PCB layer the PCB yeah it's really nice there was a I saw a talk on
|
|
past on Hackaday that there's some question about the viability of the project that it hasn't been
|
|
updated in a while but there seems to be yeah that's people trying to get that sorted so hopefully
|
|
it'll all work out it's amazing yeah I yeah I I think I must have been busy doing something when
|
|
I was listening to this because it I sort of squeezed over my head a bit and I came back to it to
|
|
listen properly and follow the the links and stuff and I was just blown away it's amazing
|
|
that somebody's put this sort of stuff together I'd been wondering how the hell you would make PCBs
|
|
I didn't know how you would how you would go from concept to PCB well this seems to be it didn't it
|
|
oh it gives you it's probably like you know when you also generate HTML you get a form of
|
|
HTML that isn't perfect but it gives you somewhere to start yeah yeah I mean for for the hobbyist
|
|
I think it's the main use but obviously there are professional tools that do an entirely
|
|
different job but wow yeah let's get my son involved with this he's interested in electronics we
|
|
must have a have a go at doing some stuff with this I used to if I may add my sorry now go ahead
|
|
okay thanks if I may add my two cents on this there are several open source
|
|
editors for electronic design and the better ones also do I don't know what the word would be in
|
|
English but yeah that's okay other routing that's it so they they place the components on the
|
|
board in a way where it minimizes the number of layers necessary so you can even say I want this
|
|
in three layers and and you get another you get another placement of components in a way you
|
|
do it in four layers for instance and the output eventually is some sort of a file that you can
|
|
send to a PCB production facility that will print on the mount for you in a way your PCB in a
|
|
one-off action piece so you can put components on it and try it out kai kai is the best free
|
|
open source software to do that yeah that's the one yeah exactly so basically in kai kai do you do
|
|
your your electronic diagram and then you switch to PCB view and yes it does you place your
|
|
component on your PCB and it does the auto routing for you although you usually end up redoing
|
|
half of that but that's another problem yeah that's that's where I like the experience in that
|
|
department sorry could there are some more shows on that hint hint that you and kink well I'm not
|
|
an expert on kai kai but yeah there must have been a harm to introduce people to it and maybe
|
|
somebody said and they're going oh well I didn't think I knew kai kai that well but I'm
|
|
no better than Janik so let me do a show well that brings up an idea a very good friend of mine
|
|
it has been has been into embedded Linux projects for his work life would last well I guess 15 to 20
|
|
years so maybe I should interview him and get some some hints and tips on how to proceed on those
|
|
those kind of things no don't do that that would be such a silly idea oh sorry then I won't okay
|
|
I won't you just give it to yourself to make a new episode okay no there's clearly no interest
|
|
so obviously I will tell you that would definitely not be of interest to any hackers alone
|
|
no exactly well if I may draw your attention there is this Dutch initiative of the
|
|
it's it's a sort of a event batch with embedded software and applications and it's sort of evolved
|
|
over the last two years or something and now they have their own project on Hackaday and you see a
|
|
massive interest worldwide on application design in I believe in micro python that runs on this
|
|
thing so it's a sort of a batch with a battery and an LCD display well color LCD a colors well it's
|
|
not an LCD but it's a TFT probably display and it's it's well regarding the events where these
|
|
things are used it's it's pretty popular I've seen that all right yeah I thought it was always
|
|
kind of awesome and cool cool yeah obviously record the show yeah it's an end you're talking about
|
|
micro python because I was thinking about doing an episode on circuit python yeah today
|
|
you do you know that now that you've mentioned that you all know me a show you know if you say it
|
|
out loud yeah everyone that's recorded and waiting for it it so that's not yeah you're gonna have one
|
|
soon but yeah I got two more to do then I guess there is this one movie where does some sort
|
|
of an angel going to earth and it's the last time that he can do that blah blah blah whatever
|
|
and he has this this one line of that says you can never have too much sugar and and this is a
|
|
case where I would say you can never have too much python so please go ahead yeah agree python's
|
|
awesome next next episode the water we're gonna spend three hours on this subject I'm being I'm
|
|
being interested in whether or whether or whether or whether or whether we should move to the next
|
|
show nice nice with that with it definitely yeah
|
|
Dave you have no idea how many times I have referred to this show even before it was done because
|
|
this came out of an email originally that's uh Dave how do you spell this
|
|
I'm gonna I'm gonna have two decent to bat one and two because I haven't uh it was a way
|
|
to go bat one and two I guess um so battery was yeah it was interesting at the no idea there was so
|
|
many words something similar so I'm gonna have to go back and listen to bat one and two
|
|
yeah english is a is a great language but it's also evil evil language and you can't
|
|
read things like this so yeah it's this loads and loads more like this
|
|
following day uh xsv for fast csv manipulations um this was the second part of bz's
|
|
show which is an excellent tool and he covers some additional commands one of which is format
|
|
um the other yeah yeah brilliant brilliant stuff absolutely yeah I've uh I've sent an email to
|
|
my colleagues um said hey look at this uh this tool that I just discovered and the everybody was
|
|
like wow this is gonna help us yeah I know I know I was my reaction was similar I did a
|
|
fair bit of csv stuff when I was working and uh I ended up writing my own bits of pearl to to take
|
|
in csv and reformat it and do do stuff with it so like bits that so but this is this is way
|
|
way better than anything I've done it's beautiful yeah and the uh the option to fix the column lens
|
|
so that there's always the right amount of columns because yeah you know rule 4872 has
|
|
some column expected something something you know what is that oh yeah yeah to put in another
|
|
comment in there or there was two commas one of which was on escape uh brilliant stuff yeah yeah
|
|
and great too yeah the possibilities you had the um uh double quotes or quotes around the
|
|
columns and so on just to make uh zero old excel understand what we were talking about
|
|
or have it not format dates for example yeah yeah yeah hey I was very alive before actually because
|
|
I uh on the very day he was talking about it I was walking into work thinking how the hell am I
|
|
going to do that I have all these records that I need to go through and analyze and yes
|
|
ma'am catch beer for the rest together yeah exactly very much ta ta ta ta ta ta and after taking a
|
|
little swig of leffa random elements in story time lost and Bronx leaders on a fundamental uh on
|
|
investigation of the fundamentals of storytelling and this was again with all of lost and Bronx
|
|
shows amazingly obvious after you've heard the episode yeah yeah I agree once again it's
|
|
something I'm not into uh storytelling or writing books etc but each time there's an
|
|
episode about uh from lost in Bronx uh about storytelling I'm just glued to my uh but catcher
|
|
because it's once as you said it makes sense but also you can feel that uh is very passionate
|
|
about the subject and uh I think it's uh someone can talk about anything if they are passionate
|
|
about the subjects and that is knows we'll we'll just you know uh stay stay there and uh wait for
|
|
what's next what's next yeah that's a very good point yeah these these are great I do like
|
|
like like you I'm not that much into writing stories I don't think I'd ever want to do it but
|
|
it's so interesting to sort of see the the fundamentals of it all and and here's somebody who really
|
|
knows this stuff talking about it great stuff and there's examples you know sometimes I wonder why
|
|
movie you know cowboy's in space why it doesn't work in one instance and it does work in other
|
|
instances and you okay it makes sense yeah and it's it's something that you know as I said I'm
|
|
not into storytelling or or writing something but I guess if I ever want to do something like that
|
|
that's something I will always remember and that would that would be a voice in my essay go listen
|
|
to those episodes again and then do your work no it's saying to me you have not loo about what you're
|
|
doing don't ever attempt to write a story because it's going to be crap to something that lost
|
|
in bronze comes up with not if you go back and listen to the episode yeah okay fair enough yeah
|
|
that you apply all the idea then well what you say and then yeah it's gonna work I'm sure it's
|
|
gonna it's gonna be a great book yeah we have uh tattoos already told us the secret formula so
|
|
all we need to do is just sprinkle it's very dusted you don't the following day we had the
|
|
craiglist scam catch and this was in Edward murals or cypher's um privacy and security series
|
|
that he's doing like a introduction to security for people and this really first made me very
|
|
surprised then it meant me very angry and annoyed how's that well I was surprised that somebody would
|
|
fall for this and then it meant me very angry and annoyed that people would go to this length to
|
|
just sleazy people who would yeah yeah yeah take people's money it's just yeah horrible
|
|
but you'd be you'd be amazed at who and how many people can fall for that yeah yeah it's a shocking
|
|
thing it's not that we're sort of programmed to fall for that sort of stuff I think it's it's not
|
|
hard to do if you if you're not you know alert to the possibility it's very easy to be trapped by
|
|
this sort of stuff so it's quite sad but yeah I didn't hate it a great job of explaining things
|
|
and the red flags there said or wouldn't talk on the phone said or named and seen the
|
|
legitimate email didn't match sort of you know the classic stuff yeah and I mean I personally
|
|
wouldn't have fallen for this but equally I wouldn't have suspected that this was an attack
|
|
factor so yes if you have more I look more forward to more of shows from him but I also look forward
|
|
to shows from other people about scammers and the like if you have particular scams that worked
|
|
tattoo has a comment anyone want to read this so clap two says this episode great episode the
|
|
question is how to get the target audience the people who'd be fooled by this kind of transaction
|
|
to listen to this I think part of the problem is that people who have fooled by this sort of thing
|
|
have no interest in learning about it then again maybe people who can't be bothered aren't the
|
|
audience either way thanks for the walkthrough of the investigation it's great to hear an example
|
|
of a bototical analysis yeah I think though if you alert the audience to us like I wouldn't have
|
|
heard if I heard somebody saying oh I'm adapting a puppy I would have just kind of walked on
|
|
but he immediately raised a red flag to him hold on a second or something going on you know
|
|
if I was welcome past my my sister and all says yeah yeah I need to send some money to an
|
|
Nigerian prince then oh wow you know and now this has been added to a lot of hackers alert systems
|
|
to go you haven't see a lot of puppy pictures on your on your computer there be careful
|
|
about the scam yeah yeah so I don't know if it's not even a generation problem because
|
|
there are some I know my my my parents are a very easy target for those things but I also know
|
|
young people would fall for that so it's not a problem of generation it's just I mean we know about
|
|
those stuff because yeah we kind of kind of geeks so yeah that's that's something that's known
|
|
into in in our circle but maybe just outside of geeks and technical people people maybe you know
|
|
it's the people don't know that it's possible or the I know my mom doesn't understand why
|
|
someone would do that why would someone try to steal my money yeah yeah so there's no reason
|
|
someone would steal my money so there must be a honest you know it's like it's on Facebook so it's
|
|
true no it's not and no people are not honest some people are trying to steal your money mom
|
|
I don't know who you have the calls but I keep saying to the kids you do realize you're only
|
|
a nanosecond from every creep on the internet so keep that in mind yeah yeah and equally you're
|
|
only a nanosecond away from a lot of nice people on the internet so yeah anyway the day that followed
|
|
brought us surely YouTube subscriptions part two and more RV stuff geeks and tour and
|
|
and some of them I actually BBC earth unplugged my son watches that quite a lot I'm subscribed
|
|
computer file and I was subscribed to host of forks but it was it's a bit too flashy
|
|
bam bam bam what's the word Dave what's the word cramp no I don't know intense you know the
|
|
everything is too intense but it's it's not one of the things that I find with YouTube is that
|
|
some people believe that YouTube in itself and the things they do themselves is not good enough
|
|
because it's not TV enough so they have to try and make it return into TV and that's the point
|
|
I unsubscribe because I hate the whole concept of you know the the drives behind TV and stuff and
|
|
it's it just spoils the whole thing just just be yourself just tell the story you know it's
|
|
amazing how many of my shores involve a camera just looking at people's hands
|
|
no idea what you look like well what's his name the Khan Academy when it became very famous by just
|
|
a video recording scribbling on a blackboard yeah that's what's over yeah and that's how they started
|
|
anyway I just looked at both lists and well due to my relocation to another house I didn't
|
|
had a lot of time to listen to the old shows but I just two channels that I would like to add
|
|
because I'm I personally think they're pretty amazing I don't know have has everybody ever heard
|
|
of the channel curious mark okay now curious mark I think he is working for the the computer museum
|
|
in Los Angeles anyway somewhere over there and they so they they video record for instance how to
|
|
how they restore something like a teletype model 15 from 19 20 that's five bits and and then at
|
|
some point they have a model 20 stop stop stop stop stop stop stop do the show do the show
|
|
okay so anyway so that's that's and they also they have a project restoring a Apollo guidance
|
|
computer also very cool to see and the other channel and this is a maybe a weird one and I don't
|
|
think you've ever heard of it but it's called death death wears bunny slippers and that needs some
|
|
yeah yeah I know they need some explanation if you think about it the title is correct death wears
|
|
bunny slippers and what it is it's about it's about this guy who in the in the States in the United
|
|
States he buys a former missile silo location so it's completely on the ground and it was
|
|
well it's not demolished but it was made pretty hard to get into and somewhere in the 80s so
|
|
he he he dogs he dogs up enough dirt to to get into the system and then tries to make that into
|
|
his I don't know man cave or family festivities and it's a series of videos and it's absolutely
|
|
amazing to see it and come to think of it at some point it clicks and death wears bunny slippers
|
|
because when these things were actually operating no that's not but you know what I mean
|
|
yeah there were occupied 24 hours a day so you had a watch of 24 hours a day inclusive training
|
|
inclusive watching inclusive sleeping inclusive eating so at some point during the night you
|
|
sleep there and you get into your slippers to go to the bathroom to the toilet or something but
|
|
at the main at the same time you're the guy who can get the signal that he should push a button
|
|
and launch a missile so death wears bunny slippers this is uh okay that was a waste of a show
|
|
right there but okay we'll let it go this time now I can't do it more elaborate no problem
|
|
you wanted to say something unique no just uh that uh the detail is awesome it is still
|
|
yes yes I've written it down I've written it down sounds great I want to hear more
|
|
deleting arrays positional or special parameters in bash tidying up loose ends by Dave the man morris
|
|
sister yeah I'm getting tired of saying that this shows our son so I'm not going to see it
|
|
yes I uh rubbish I know I know the what did I get from this on deleting arrays Dave do
|
|
something I wanted to say about this one but yeah thanks it's the table is quite cool the
|
|
explanation you need to put all those episodes on the cd and then sell that to yeah get
|
|
to get money for hpr I second that I guess the show notes as a book well yeah yeah I've been
|
|
thinking about how to how to collate it all into some form rather but yeah I definitely do some
|
|
do that but it's it's not a trivial task so I take a lot bash tips the audio book
|
|
yes yes yeah oh yes that might actually be cool to do a video series along with that of each
|
|
episode just saying no no pressure you know in between all the other stuff you're doing first
|
|
at the follow the moving on yeah yeah yeah film filmed in the the hpr video center some studios
|
|
international something like that how to dm glad to explain dm and rpg last and wrong
|
|
demonstrate step by step how to build a dungeon yeah this was the think about one yeah and it was
|
|
yet again very interesting and the show notes helped because he has written down you know drawn
|
|
what he has doing there are some pictures in there which really helps and the show notes are
|
|
excellent it remained in me of my dungeon masters times I have never I think I missed out on
|
|
not getting involved in that yeah it's yeah it was really interesting where I was at school and then
|
|
we had a little group of of role-playing players for lack of bitter word and yeah it was fun
|
|
just when I still remember how I I still remember my first game and the first time I was at dm
|
|
and yeah lots of good memories I'm a skimp I keep telling my daughter that there's these these
|
|
shows are on she she's quite heavily into into rpg stuff and place it quite a lot with her
|
|
pounds over the over Skype and whatever and yeah she I keep saying you should do this and and give
|
|
us a show but my kids always walk away when I say that yeah mine too funny funny what you have to
|
|
make them you know you do a show or then yeah do a show or I get you don't eat money yeah
|
|
I don't eat now anyways I think that's that's that's that's probably legal
|
|
yeah right I've just pasted those two URLs into my subscriptions dot tech 12 we'll see what happens
|
|
okay the following day yeah this was Haskell data types and data actions this is the one that
|
|
brought a lot of clarity to me on what's going on with data types and stuff this is really really
|
|
interesting how you beat how you build up your data types yeah Haskell yeah I got the impression
|
|
that this might have been a response to us saying yeah but but what does it actually mean what how do
|
|
you actually store anything and how does it you know what's the persistence layer and where's the
|
|
database and things because I'm sure we've said this at some point or other in one of these shows
|
|
so it really does help to clarify things it like I certainly got a much deeper insight into into
|
|
what was going on with the database interface from it excellent yeah it is it is excellent yes
|
|
and possibly one on you know loops and stuff or basic structures might also help a little bit
|
|
you know the classic hello world program yes yes but there's there's met a lot of the other shows
|
|
make a lot more sense soon we can all put Haskell down on our CVs guys yay thanks to HPR
|
|
John Culp cleaned some potentiometers in his Peebly banded 65 I enjoyed this but then again I'm
|
|
a into electronics salt I'd appreciate hearing Dave's view of the show I yeah I was fascinated
|
|
by this because I have various bits of equipment in this house of an audio audio kind like
|
|
cassette player thingy which is also an amplifier whether and they're never to believe the
|
|
the potentiometers get crappy and they make horrible noises when you turn them I think I've got a
|
|
ghetto blaster in the attic as well from my ghetto blaster days as you do as you do and it
|
|
makes the most spectacularly awful noise when you turn the volume control but so and I've never
|
|
never actually looked into how the hell you clean these things probably because in their day
|
|
it was incredibly difficult to do you just basically threw them away or something but
|
|
where you put a new new potentiometer and I found this there's utterly fascinating I like the
|
|
pictures too but I don't think you were throwing them away back in the days but there was so
|
|
there were built to last and probably your usage would you know you would use it for less
|
|
less longer than their life expectancy but now you use them back now and now we know how to fix
|
|
those because well we have some HPR shows to tell us how to do that and so yeah I think
|
|
yeah those those old stuff that we're using now as as you said retro retro things yeah
|
|
yeah then it then it to be fixed or cleaned but yeah back in the days there were there were
|
|
built to last like 20 years and you were expected to use it for ten years so you never had to
|
|
to change those things but yeah now you buy something and it is programmed to fail in six months
|
|
oh yes yes no my so-called ghetto blast to go it dates back to about the 70s or early 80s or
|
|
something but it's just one of these they've got the potentiometer on the top and I think that
|
|
just muck and dust and stuff gets in in under the knob that you turn and falls into the
|
|
into the works of it you know yeah so so I also have an MP3 player my favorite one from
|
|
about 2005 where the controls are all gummed up with the same sort of thing and I'd love to be
|
|
able to to clean that out so I'm gonna I'm gonna have a shot of this based on what John's been
|
|
telling us and what's again an example of someone passionate about something and
|
|
recording a show about that and it turns out to be really interesting and it turns out
|
|
somebody else was going to record a show about the exact same thing there is literally a picture
|
|
on the entitled winter to do list fix this and a picture of a banded 65
|
|
speaker the exact same one and it was added on 2018 10 27 by in my bill and yes stepping on
|
|
tools stealing a show via plan john all right all right you bet me to a fair and square by the way
|
|
there is a contact cleaner that is specifically made for music gear and does contain a lubricant
|
|
it's made by DE OX IT deoxit deoxit and I guess and the line of products is called
|
|
their font choice on theater looks awfully similar familiar also I would say your saturation
|
|
is not working properly if at all that thing should give you the hair metal distortion you could ask
|
|
for smiley you might have a problem with the foot pedal I had the same issue in the past you
|
|
might be stuck in norm gain and the pedal is switched into lead gain where the saturation is
|
|
the problem I used to have is the 90 degree jack on the foot pedal does not retain or grip the
|
|
cable in any way any tug on the cable can break the solder joints inside it's something to check out
|
|
and it's only a couple of screws good luck and get some hairspray
|
|
great image that something to do john with the Lafayette axon please
|
|
should I do this one never too much about eighties gears as john
|
|
haha sorry bill please do the show anyway I think the foot pedal is actually working fine it's
|
|
just that I didn't realize it was switched over to the other channel while I was working on the
|
|
and the foot pedal wasn't actually plugged in at the moment I realized my mistake when I plugged
|
|
the foot pedal in and stepped on it and suddenly saturation is working because it was on the right
|
|
channel thanks to the tip on the cleaner lubricant I think I will check with my audio engineer
|
|
faculty guy and see if he's got a can sitting around that I can blast into some into the pots without
|
|
having to pay 20 bucks for a can myself smiley face always the best
|
|
indeed why not what is vnf I unfortunately missed the open networking conference but
|
|
you're you're into next month you know they're candy if you want to be doing now that's
|
|
so you don't know that's in whether or whether I should be doing that day or not
|
|
yeah I might be changing the weather oh dear right do you have other comments six from the
|
|
previous shows one from a show back in what is this 10 is October 2018 the show was portiers by
|
|
tattoo and tachy is responsible part of tachy is played by Ken uh three test driving
|
|
or do you want to do it Janik yeah okay so test driving Linux in computer stores that was the
|
|
title of the comment Alison I've been pleasantly surprised here in Hong Kong that if I ask the
|
|
store clerks they would generously allow me to boot from a USB stick to see how well Linux runs
|
|
no complaints whatsoever and that's lucky too because let's spring and summer when I was shopping
|
|
for a new machine I tried like ten of them before I found one were screen Wi-Fi and touchpad
|
|
were working without glitches and the machine didn't crash after a few minutes that is awesome
|
|
that is awesome yeah yeah yeah I don't know many uh store around here would let me boot anything
|
|
from around the USB key on their on their machines oh I went to the media marked here and they
|
|
let me do it they were fine but but I think it was more because one of their older guys runs Linux
|
|
at home so it was okay okay he had the talk Rob says on episode this crappy episode about some
|
|
AS400 system how you ruined thank you for the talk about the AS400 system I was working on those
|
|
magic machines for a decade or so I must say I must admit it was a truly enjoyable experience
|
|
thanks again for bringing back good memories cheers uh tree borer ps I don't know how about others
|
|
but for me those machines will always be AS400 no matter what the new marketing name
|
|
IBM invent for them i-series system i etc etc smarty face to which yeah I feel exactly the same
|
|
I feel exactly the same to me they will always be AS400 systems even in generations yeah
|
|
so and while on the subject um I will be in Munich at the end of April during the vcf e.org
|
|
vintage computer festival europe uh exhibiting and AS400 with uh I think to to connect terminals
|
|
so anybody who hears this show and is in the neighborhood is of course very welcome to
|
|
visit that location in Munich and uh well have a chat with me for instance ideally on mic
|
|
um yeah well an AS400 doesn't have an audio interface actually yeah but you're ready to
|
|
remember what it does yeah i'll do something that's called the lapel mic and a mic a smart phone
|
|
and there you go what kind of mic is that you can get a like ten dollar lapel mic that you
|
|
clip on to your uh go ahead oh okay i understand the lapel for all your clothing yeah okay got it
|
|
sorry yep okay Dave can you do the next one as i can't pronounce that word uh okay this is uh
|
|
2707 the comment on steg analysis 101 by Edward Miro and uh it's a comment by RTSN who likes to
|
|
make titles that consist of a single exclamation which is quite cool so they stand out certainly
|
|
and he says thanks for a wonderful episode yeah nice to get some short feedback yes Steve says
|
|
to uh tattoo show on uh privacy and security manipulating pdf's with ghost grouped
|
|
and he says just what i needed just wanted to say thank you for this episode i needed to
|
|
reduce the size of the pdf today and then you write where to come and the necessary commands was in
|
|
the show notes worked perfectly you see tattoo show notes do work thank you yeah yeah that's that's
|
|
funny because you actually remember that you i heard that on on an hpr episode and then you go and
|
|
watch the uh the show notes and uh it's yeah it's it's it's like with everything every episode on
|
|
on on on hpr it might not as i said earlier it might not be something you're into or something
|
|
that you're interesting right now but then some situation arise and you say oh i heard that on
|
|
hpr let's let let me go and grab the the show notes and uh you know look like a hero yeah it's excellent
|
|
um tattoo has really started doing uh excellent show notes in the last year or two so
|
|
because before that you would know it was on the tattoo show somewhere was it on new world order
|
|
or was it on hpr or was it on information underground how now with the show notes at least you
|
|
know exactly where it's coming from i'm worried you can get more help so it's excellent and it's also
|
|
nice again for you know a show from last December boom i had a problem i heard the show and i
|
|
got a fix that's it that is that shows reason for existing absolutely verified and you
|
|
want to take the next one yep so it's a comment on hpr show 2737 which was my pioneer RT707
|
|
real-tree tape deck by john kup and the comment is by vulcan rider this is excellent i listened to
|
|
your RT707 podcast this morning on my way into work what a blast from the past have the RT909
|
|
the 10 inches real version of the same tape deck that you have i picked mine up in the mid to late
|
|
80s now i am raking my brain to figure out where i can pull it out of storage and setup
|
|
sorry i want to go back and listen what i put on some of my tapes comparing traditional music
|
|
format lp's real tapes etc to mp3s and aug is like comparing dead tree books to ebooks with books
|
|
you have the physical sensation of a paper book the smell of the book the fill of the flipping pages
|
|
meanwhile with music not only do you have the spinning tape reels and the movement of the ton armor
|
|
but more than that analog music has more depth and richness and is generally a warmer ambiance and
|
|
than digital music by the same time i can put several hundred thousand digital tracks onto a device
|
|
which fits in my short pocket and only need a pair of headphones to protect anyway it is
|
|
james like this show that makes me enjoy hpr thanks john well what an excellent comment
|
|
so we shall i do the next one john culp replies the rt909 thanks to the comment spoken rider
|
|
very glad to hear you enjoyed the episode i've seen the rt909 that you mentioned in catalogs
|
|
and on ebay that would be a great tape deck to have takes considerably more space than the 707
|
|
probably would not fit in my stereo rack because it would need room above it for those big
|
|
reels to spin i'd love to have one though i believe you i believe the youtube tech
|
|
moan host has an rt909 in his collection if you do pull it out of storage and send it up i hope
|
|
you will do a response episode about it i would love to hear that so what i
|
|
excellent there you go another episode in the in the books you'll be sure
|
|
yeah mailing list discussions i guess not a lot no
|
|
lost in bronx and taj and platu are going to play a one-shot star finder on february the 16th which
|
|
is a little late to join now and i hope that will be a show the game may or not may or may not
|
|
become a hbr episode of course it's going to become a hbr episode even even if it doesn't work out
|
|
then i would like to hear how a bad night of star finder works out i'm just interested in hearing
|
|
both sides cool nothing else and the other business Dave yes um well there's only the the usual
|
|
thing about the the tags and summaries stuff we had a contribution from windigo this past month
|
|
in february for which thank you very much and we've managed to add tags and summaries to 24 shows
|
|
that didn't have them in that period so slow slow progress but we are making progress
|
|
thank windigo yeah i really think i need to go back to my own shows and just do them
|
|
i also think we should update the host page not to put in all the show notes on it because
|
|
they can be rather huge can't yeah especially if maybe if you exceed 10 shows or something
|
|
yeah yeah it could do definitely do with some some thinking about i think
|
|
you are also you can i think you can shorten the the name i have on this pure
|
|
so then that's a unique that would be enough for you no no no no no okay you really can do that is
|
|
uh submission you show with it correct information see what i did there i understand that footwork
|
|
was very fast i have to say and coming back to myself Dave now after all that it's been a very tough
|
|
week this week i must say but uh it was nice to come on here anything else guys that we missed
|
|
well i think so no no no well now i've been busy with other stuff and i listened to this show and
|
|
i participate a little bit and next thing i see is myself making a google checklist of all the
|
|
sessions new recordings that i can make i see myself going to a web shop to to buy a low grade
|
|
remote what's it a field recording unit and it's your guys are all to blame of course i recently bought
|
|
a book on on on podcasting it's a Dutch book you know from the Dutch guy who calls himself the
|
|
podcast professor well i don't know yet if he qualifies for that title but anyway i am this is
|
|
and it's all you guys are all to blame if i hadn't gone to our camp and if i didn't get Dave's
|
|
business card i wouldn't be here and i wouldn't spend money on on this and i found myself a new hobby
|
|
that i really love so you guys are really to blame yeah we get you the freebies and then
|
|
well achievement achievement met there i think yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i was really nice
|
|
having you guys on because it uh yeah likeness the mood well it's a pleasure as usual to be there
|
|
and uh you know go over the SPR shows with you okay cool um anything coming up that any more
|
|
months to mention or not um just just to say i don't know if we talk about that last month but
|
|
a camp 2019 is something is going to happen it's later this year remember exactly the day if
|
|
someone can just October 19th and 20th i think is it after told my head something like that yeah
|
|
that's that that's it such a direct about 19th some direct about 20th 20th 2019 in Manchester UK
|
|
so if anyone wants to meet i guess uh are you going i yeah i will be there uh will you be there Dave
|
|
i certainly plan to yes yes i can't miss that it's a wonderful wonderful event
|
|
and then yeah i know many other from other shows and uh other podcast that we'll be there too
|
|
it's going to be good fun so if you want to just meet a bunch of geeks uh talking about free
|
|
culture and come to a camp yeah yeah i'm already talking to my wife about it so um better along
|
|
yeah yeah i'm trying to um well there's of course this this my new thing that's going to happen
|
|
in the UK in some way i don't know the exact date i mean but it's it's world news every day so
|
|
let's see how that all plays out i think we can get tourist visas should be an issue
|
|
if it happens at all i'll tell you what we all listen to uh you rune you uh we should go listen to
|
|
uh hookers RV thing by an RV we go through the channel
|
|
picking up Yannick on the way drive up today
|
|
yeah yeah well if you go from Scotland to Switzerland back to England and then to
|
|
uh to to the other men on the road and the Netherlands that that's going to be a long trip
|
|
yeah but it would be a very it would be much fun
|
|
yeah yeah that's for sure it doesn't sound it yeah yeah sort of an international beer trip
|
|
yeah yeah yeah i see i see i sense that more people interact getting interested
|
|
well when you throw the word beer in there and instantly that gets more interesting
|
|
definitely your purpose i do want to ask people to start submitting some shows because uh the
|
|
the entirety of next month has been provided more or less by platoon so um if platoon lost in Bronx
|
|
and some of the other regular hosts so we are unfortunately relying very very heavily at this
|
|
moment on contributions from uh well-known hosts so what i'd like is if you i've never submitted
|
|
the show before if you could please just record a show say hi my name is Mary and i'm a
|
|
thingy and i want to do a show on hpr but i have no clue what to say and here's
|
|
the story of my life so far if you can suggest some shows that i can record
|
|
that will be awesome you can submit that to us that will be great then you're past the big hurdle
|
|
of the first show and then we can all suggest shows that you could send in to us so if you do that
|
|
well that would be absolutely excellent yeah and it's as easy as pressing record on your
|
|
mobile phone recording app it is people overcomplicated but that's how simple it is
|
|
okay tune in tomorrow folks for another exciting episode of yay hacker public radio
|
|
hey
|
|
toolkit silence will have removed today with the timing between that well that was excellent
|
|
all right thanks guys thanks thank you see you bye bye bye
|
|
you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org
|
|
we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday
|
|
today's show like all our shows was contributed by an hpr listener like yourself
|
|
if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contribute link to find out
|
|
how easy it really is hacker public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
|
|
infonomicum computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com if you have
|
|
comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record
|
|
a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is released on the creative
|
|
comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
|