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271 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3306
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Title: HPR3306: HPR Community News for March 2021
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3306/hpr3306.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:31:01
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3306 for Monday, 5 April 2021.
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To its show is entitled, HPR Community News, for March 2021 and is part of the series HPR
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Community News It is hosted by HPR Volunteers and is about 33 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, HPR Volunteers, talk about shows released in comments, posted in March 2021.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today, it's Hacker Public Radio Community News from March 2021.
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For those of you who are new to HPR, this is a summary of what's been going on in the HPR community
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for the last month. All this information is available on the website and it's useful even for
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older hosts to go and have a quick read of the website and make sure that everybody knows what's
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going on. The HPR Volunteers, myself and usually Dave, who can't join me today, are the ones who
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basically post the shows when you press the OK button and process comments and stuff.
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We do this under the guidance of the HPR community via the mail list and we make sure that once
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a month we give you an update of what's been going on and make sure that every show has got
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some feedback due to the nature of HPR can take a while before feedback comes in.
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So the idea here was that one month would be the longest you need to wait for some form of feedback.
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Last month, we had finally one new host, Tim Timmy, who took advantage of our narration option.
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If you, for any reason, are unable or unwilling to record the show, you can always send a script to one
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of the HPR folks here and we'll find somebody to narrate it for you. Worst case scenario,
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we can also run through text-to-speech engine. So that's Tim Timmy. Welcome to him and now we will go
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through the last month's show. The first show was HPR Community News and there were zero comments
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about the show. Nothing controversial either was said apparently. Then some guy on the internet,
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excellent, excellent handle, Mosay was on about the HPR laptop with AMD Ryzen 3 mobile and with
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radio graphics and Frank posted the comment using your OEM Windows key in a VM. Hi there,
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I'm afraid to have to dampen your expectation. These days the Windows license key or at least the
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OEM ones meaning those that are imposed new when you buy the hardware is usually tied to the
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hardware for that means i.e. the BIOS or whatever chip. I don't think it will be accepted inside of
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VM. Your best bet for the drive will be to pop it into an external case and use it as mobile storage
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or as a backup drive or at least bear or at least bear if you have a hotswap adapter. That's
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what I did with the hardest drive that came in my thinkpad when that arrived five years ago.
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I only did one short boot-ups because I was curious about Windows 10 so I had my first
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and for many years only contact with that. I then swapped the drive out for third-party SSD
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also from crucial straight away. Regarding your RAM particularly, I'm not sure it sounds like
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those missing two gigs are siphoned off for the internal graphics.
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The next day we had the Hitchpure RPG Club reviewing Dead Earth Escape from reality by pretending
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you live in the dystopia. Dead Earth is an RPG game published under the GNU documentation license
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and I will say I really enjoy these games, game reviews even though I may not be that into the game.
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Introduction to GDB, a really friendly introduction to GNU Debugger. This is also by Tlatu and
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it's part of the compiler series. Let me just go back and make sure there were no comments on the
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tabletop gaming or another word and there were also no comments on this. This was a nice introduction
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just into compilers and how the work I don't do a lot of compiling myself and it's good to see
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these introductory shows being put on there so that you have at least a feel for what's going on.
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Next day we had upgrading Lubuntu on my Samsung N150 Plus netbook and this was submitted by
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MrX and walked us through the entire process. Also no comments on this but I will comment that I
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recently just dug up my old Acer Spire 1 G5 model and it was literally the most perfect form factor
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for a small PC. Just slightly bigger than an A5 notebook, sorry A5 notebook and keyboard wasn't
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too cramped. It has a better keyboard than a lot of the Chromebooks that there are now.
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I can definitely see why it would be worth your while digging out some of these old laptops and
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use them as just a SSH to something devices. The following day we had a Tim Timmy episode
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supporting the wire guard showing how to use wire guard to as a VPN. This was a show that I've
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been asking him to do for a while and technically he put it together and we recorded it and got it
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out there. No comments on that. For a few comments this month.
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Acer 72 sent in a quick tip with regard to cooking and boiling eggs and this one I did not
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know. Perfectly peeled eggs. If you want to know what that is I recommend listening to the show.
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It's very short and you will have a very good tip there. The following day we had
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continuing series of the Linux in-laws, Grumpy old coders and David Thomas Martin and Chris
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discuss borrowing and basically a discussion various different programming languages. I actually
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found this quite an interesting discussion so if you've got a minute no harm to give that listen.
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The next day was a show of mine that had one comment and it said monochromic.
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Apache control restart versus system control restart Apache 2 service. I've been using
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system control restart Apache 2 service to restart Apache but the recommended way is to use
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Apache 2 control. Interesting observation as the only difference seems to be a private Tim
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clause in the unit definition for the service. I wonder why exactly that made a difference so this was
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basically I wanted to have a next cloud on my internal network behind the router but before my second
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firewall. The next day we had GIMP more on layer tools and techniques and seriously if you're not
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following this show, particularly interested in the GIMP, do listen along because a lot of the
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fundamental stats I've been talking about here are applicable to quite a lot of the graphic
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programs in general. There's only so many ways you can do it and within free liberal
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sort of software anyway they make no bones about trying to say consistent between ways of doing
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things. Very good show there and I'm actually looking forward at the end. I hope
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that he produces a sort of PDF of all the posts that he's done should be quite easy to do because
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he's covered on his own website and just put them into some sort of ebook for the rest of us to
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enjoy. The following day we did have another show from Ahuga and the reason we have some host
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posting twice this month is because we were very short of shows and people are sending them in
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just to remind you all that HBR is a community podcast network and we basically need to have
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shows coming in all the time. Don't worry if the queue is full there will always be a few months
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where there's nothing and since the pandemic has started we've seen that it's more difficult for
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people to send in shows possibly because of the less commuting time possibly because other things
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are dragging people's attention maybe you're in front of the computer more and not walking as much
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so less time for podcasts more time for videos but if you've got a tip or an idea or you're
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writing a bug post then just record it as well and post it up here tag in public ready that will
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be great. Okay batch processing three comments on this one so this was interesting.
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armacodd.com says audio I think that's operation could be wrong. Using FFMPEG and VLC will get
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everything done you likely need and there's a link to the how to speed up and slow down video
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using FFMPEG and the key words and it includes a command there and it's quite long.
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The most important one is FPS frames per second equals 120.
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Gamos says which hardware podcast player did you move to? Hey I was a long time fan of the
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Sansetlap as well and managed to eventually kill both of the ones I owned and put rock box on.
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When I went to look for a third one they were out of landishly expensive and I couldn't
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source out the make a model of the one you switched to. Kevin O'Brien replies the one I brought was
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Plan top KL and GTOP which I found on Amazon I just looked and now I didn't see it but I see
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something that looks identical under the name AGP Tech. My guess is that they're all manufactured by
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Chinese manufacturer Azoiums for various companies and Gamos or anybody else I have some Sansetlips
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left over if anyone wants one I think they're all working done what the battery life is like
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some of them have got the original firmware and more of them have got rock box all of them are
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capable of having rock box on them so if anyone wants one of those give me a shout and we'll see
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how we can get it to you. The next day the squirrel free sf blog the trouble with humans and
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human beings then floater to give us a very sitting in the kitchen rambling of lots of things including
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Global Chroma West and many ten Open BSD and maybe so forth. Some comments here a good question
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one of the questions that was asked was possible to use text brace browser to
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post to hack a public radio the answer of course is yes yes of course it is because we use standard
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boring HTML I just tried to post a show with links can be used to upload HPR just tried and it
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works fine if you're leaving comments Zenfroater was commenting that the common system wasn't working
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but it is because we get comments we even get comments from dedicated spammers who are
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go through all the hoops to try and spammers so if you are posting on a current show which is a
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show in the last 10 days then you get you get a difficult question you need to ask answer what
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does the P and HPRs done for hacker public radio and that's pretty much it if however you're posting
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a comment for a show that's in the future or posting a comment for a show that's in the past then
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you need to go through additional questions and the reason we do that for is obviously the ones in
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the future are not in the OSS feeds while people browsing those are more likely to be spammers
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and spammers tend to go back and pick out a popular show from about a popular blog post from two or
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three months or even years ago that you're well used to improving comments on that's something
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quite old that people have commented the last one yeah I really like this this is great thanks
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this helped me out and they do that quite a lot we get quite a lot of them where they the dead
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giveaway is of course spammers if you're listening to this is where they go great blog post yeah it's a
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podcast okay so four steps that you need to do if you're posting comments to older newer shows
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one is P for public you need to deselect they I am a spammer tick box that will be selected for
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you by default so you need to un-tick that you need to go up to the top of the page and
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select who the host is for that particular show and then you need to tell us something to prove
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that you were not a spammer and I'm really enjoying the ones that we get in there like comments like
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you know HPR is a community podcast blah blah blah but some some very nice ones and I said I'm
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using watching out for that squirrel is running 32 bit so just something that we know when we
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approve the comment that you're a human or squirrel squirrels and aliens of course clutter yes yes yes
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fine that you're a community member of the HPR podcast a listener says enjoy the podcast
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both the coffee slurping noises and tool clearing distracts from what was an enjoyable podcast
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and for someone who mentions his PR is apolitical you spend a lot of time talking about fascism
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and cancel culture Kevin O'Brien says thank you a gather you won't see it but thank you for
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a gather you won't see it but thank you very kind words I look forward to more shows from you
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ties says well I'm canceling this episode you the only valid reason slurping your drink in my
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ear at high volume and smiley faces so there we go a bit tongue in cheek there I think
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and the following day we had a HPR book RPG not book club no not the book club
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guys the book club has been submitted in a while hmm did I hear a show recently where
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somebody promised me shows and pretended it was first of April I was in a different time zone
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at that time so that doesn't count any who done generators this is Benny McNally and it is a this
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one was a simplified I don't know if the word is yeah simple simplified D&D and the recommendation
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was this would be a good one to get kids into playing a game of kids so yeah useful if you want
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to listen to that I suggest you do update my make kiwi to backup media this was archer 72
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and another episode on how he is using mkb to do backing up this time using a raspberry pie good
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episode actually archiving is very close to my heart as well I do buy a lot of DVDs so that I
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physically own the media and then have that on the nas available to us in my previous show where I
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put on cloud or sorry next cloud behind my ISP's firewall the only way to get an SSL
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cert from let's encrypt was to do it using the DNS TXT method and that didn't allow automatic
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update so I was a bit concerned that my cert was going to run out and how it was going to renew it
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well natural fact it's quite easy so that's what this show goes through and it's only
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yeah three minutes long that's including the intros and outros spam bot honey pot implementing
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honey pot spam style filter for your HTML forms is quite interesting uh great show Kevin
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O'Brien says I really enjoy these shows where people show how they can defeat the bad guys I hope
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there are more worst stories to come um there was yeah the accessibility of the form came into
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question so if some of our uh screen reader community members could have a look at the sample
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included in that and see air quotes what is if there are any issues implementing the accessibility
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using this method next cloud application updating tojess implementing a cron job and this one
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is on my tick list to do seeing that I had done a next cloud episode and it is basically run once
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week uh an update command uh very cool some guy on the internet did a show called about poisoning
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the well shut down the negativity in our community and windy go agreed saying well said I never
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understand why people feel entitled to attack those donating the results of their hard work
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if I don't feel like a piece using a piece of free software I can skip it and support the ones
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that do so an interesting um thought uh discussion there on supporting you know when is the
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right time to give constructive criticism and when is that crossing over into negativity very good
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show some some good shows come there out of uh out of that next day make your linux harder
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ever wanted to know about up armor and se linux yes I did and this actually turned out to be a
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very good introduction to it nobody says other msc implementations in the episodes you're
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can quite sure if there were other msc's for linux beside the se linux and up armor as
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and indeed there are there is smack which is quite uninteresting as it's just another labeled
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base msc similar to se linux to me the interesting one is t-o-m-o-y-o which started as a patterning
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file based similar to up armor but later it started differentiating between applications based
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on their process invocation history this means you can apply different policies and say
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slash bin sh depending on the chain of execution leading to it kernel pointing to the end pointing
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to get it pointing to login pointing to sh vs kernel pointing to the is pointing to ssh
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d pointing to sh while this is also possible in up armor it's quite a lot more manual work
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and more difficult to reason about t-o-m-o-y-o also has much nicer tools than either
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of the more well-known mscs se linux has given msc a bad name as being hard and laborious to manage
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if instead of se linux people would be first introduced to t-o-m-o-y-o then they would
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probably be more inclined to implement an msc youtube channels for learning spanish was
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episode three thousand three hundred something we're not even celebrating we've passed another
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hundred and yes fine and this is a list of various different aids that websites that hookah
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Kevin is going to to basically learn spanish couldn't be easier to understand the idea behind
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the show common European framework for reference languages is also an interesting read if you
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get a minute links in the show notes then on the 29th we had the curvil space program game
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now i'd heard about this before and i particularly often see hackadee articles where they have
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hardware things for controlling this game and that all the same kind of cool it was nice to get
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a rundown of the game and operator did that very well also good advice on how to get into the game
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or how to skip forward and stuff if you're a new user so pretty good there another another thing
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that i have never really come across has been the installation of different language input methods
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so to support different non-western languages i guess how you put them in using
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chinese moji yuriki ping-win and kanji etc and hackadee has a multi-lingual and multi-keyboard
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requirements type household and this was an excellent example of what you need to do to get this
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all running and i can understand exactly why he forgets this every time you do it because things
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subtly change so that's why you post a show on hbr so that you come back and listen to yourself
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telling you what to do uh the following day we had um slackware on the raspberry pie
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bump brine in ohio and zen floater too says bravo an excellent show sir some day i will try and put
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slackware 13 on my order chromebook and that was that for this month so yes now what we normally
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do is how a review of any comments that they were posted on older shows and back about
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posting shows to remind yourself to do something this is now the um second time i've gone back
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and thanked myself for posting the show on fixing ebook calibrary and pdf crop in this case i
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needed pdf crop because i needed to i got a quote from somebody in the first half was
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the header of one thing and the part i needed was the bottom three quarters so i took the entire
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thing scanned it in cropped the bottom three quarters which was from the third party provider
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and not via the reseller so the reseller bit was on the front and then they had embedded a word
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document into their thing so their header was in each page so i was able to crop that down
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exported as individual jpeg files and then uh do a text to us do a optical character
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your wish character recognition thing in order to convert it to a um to a file that you could edit
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and both was your uncle macius your aunt and tom indeed is your first cousin well done on the
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community news for december 2020 plackay i had a question uh open ldap on bdb i didn't know open
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ldap originated on bdb these days i use it on use its own lmdb which has also replaced bdb in many
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other places turns out open ldb started using bdb in 2002 and lmdb wasn't ready until 2011
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in the middle of the no sql boom smiley face and he includes two links to open ldap and
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they're lightning memory mapped databases on swift 110s my thoughts on diversity and linux
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and open source uh bjhdnd says get rid of the bad terms in it thanks for sharing your thoughts
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and feelings about bad terms in it i've better understood now what what they may cause so
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you got me to finally rename the different branches of all the gif repositories in my organization
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i'm responsible for i've written an internal blog post about that linking to the hpr
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episode hope that others will follow my example wow pretty pretty cool that an episode can make
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such a change and i hope it continues to be a change for good um male list discussions uh let me
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just see uh call for shows during the week so i had first call for shows from people who were not
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regular subscribers or regular contributors and then when that failed i had to put out a call for
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show from regular uh from the regulars who thankfully were able to fill up the niche but i'm looking at
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they um looking at what's coming up right now in the queue and it's not looking good either
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we're okay for next week thankfully um but for the weeks after it's still free slots there
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are loads of free slots um right up until uh next month and then after that it's things out
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considerably so yeah time to start recording shows just think of your day
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are you doing something that other people would find interesting god if you're doing it
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you yourself find it interesting so why not just press record on your recorder
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and send in the show it can be that easy you don't even have to send in show notes it's great if
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you do we really encourage it it makes our life a misery if you don't but you're getting shows in
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is the key here and then you can work on your show notes later okay uh that was that what else did
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we have for the last month Dave oh yeah subscribers that since uh 2019 i sent you i sent in a
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uh basically a chart showing the number of subscribers that we've had for that period of time
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and there was a question uh why why did it drop in 2017 so much and the answer to that was
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we were experiencing some um issues at the time uh with the upload system but we were also
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those issues were as a result of us being de-dust so during that period we were off the error for
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appear uh something like a week so yeah that was that uh i think also Dave commented yet we had a
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de-dust attack uh around about that time so it's kind of a round about that period
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so describing the graph uh it goes from first of January 2016 to the sorry not the first of
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January yeah the first of January 2016 to the first of February 2021 and it shows the number of
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subscribers to hpr these are the number of people hitting the rss feed within 24 hour period
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from a unique ip address i can guarantee you that that is is very conservative way of doing it
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if you're comparing it to other platforms and we see that the um the graph kind of went down
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2016 uh from uh hover around the 25,000 mark there was a big dip in 2017 uh down to 15,000
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and that came right back up uh again that was around the detail uh the following month the
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de-dust attack time then between 2016 uh middle of 2016 right up until the start of uh the pandemic
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really we saw a gradual growth in um subscribers up to total of 40,000 uh month that has since come down
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and erratically hovering around 35,000 subscribers not a month sorry 35,000 um
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uh subscribers yes supposed to be within a month within a month period 35,000 people have
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subscribed that means of course that those people are coming every day during that period so
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on a particular day on any given particular day 35,000 people are choosing to pull down the feed
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so if they pull it down four times a day that's still counted only as once
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and that was it for the um mailing list
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so not a lot of point going to the events list calendar and they've added 10 additional shows
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with summaries so if you want to help out there are only 404 left so if you want to be part of
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this excellent project you can go to the link in this show and report underscore missing
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underscore tags.php and you can help out so uh that was it tune in tomorrow for another exciting
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episode of hacker public radio
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot 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 hbr listener like yourself
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if you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is hecka public radio was founded by the digital dot org pound and the infonomicon computer
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club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show
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please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record a follow up episode yourself
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unless otherwise status today's show is released on the creative comments
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attribution share a light 3.0 license
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