- 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>
140 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1712
|
|
Title: HPR1712: What's in my Crate
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1712/hpr1712.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:07:29
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is HPR episode 1,712 entitled What's in Micrate. It is hosted by Mike Ray and is about
|
|
20 minutes long. The summary is, what was in my crate when I went to a log to give a R11Y
|
|
presentation. This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
|
Hello, welcome to Hacker Public Radio. My name is Mike Ray. What's in my crate? I've been quite jealous
|
|
listening to some of the what's in my bag shows. Reason I say I'm jealous is because most of those
|
|
shows of course feature people telling you what they're carrying in their bag on the way to work.
|
|
Now being blind, I'm almost inevitably unemployed at the moment. Despite the fact that I can still
|
|
write code and actually I'm writing better code now than I ever have, I don't currently have a job.
|
|
But so you know I don't have a reason to do it. What's in my bag show because I don't go to
|
|
and from work. So what's in my crate? How did it arise? At the beginning, in the middle of last
|
|
summer I got involved with the Surrey Linux user group and one of the things that I was asked
|
|
to do at one point was to give a fairly modest demonstration of Linux accessibility and how I
|
|
write code although I'm totally blind to the Surrey Linux user group. And to that I took some
|
|
bits and pieces and laptops and stuff and gave a very modest, very hastily put together presentation.
|
|
Following the success of that, I was asked by the coordinator of the Portsmouth Linux user group
|
|
to give a similar presentation to that user group of the same subject and Linux accessibility.
|
|
This was some months after the first event so I resolved to make it very much more comprehensive and
|
|
very much more entertaining. So I took quite a bit more kit and I actually piled quite a large
|
|
amount of stuff into a plastic crate. Now I've heard people doing the what's in my bag shows.
|
|
The first thing they do is to describe the bag. So I've described the crate. Now this is a
|
|
brand of plastic boxes. Plastic crates called a really useful box. That is literally the name of
|
|
these things. And this is the 35 liter capacity really useful box. What it is is a semi-transparent
|
|
box. Or I should say semi-opaque plastic crate with ribbing on the corners and on the bottom
|
|
and a raised hexagonal pattern on the bottom to strengthen the sides of the crate. And it's got a
|
|
close fitting lid which has got latching handles either end which sort of hinge up and latch
|
|
to hold the lid in place. And as I said it's 35 liters in capacity so it holds a fair amount.
|
|
I think the biggest really useful box is 60 liters. It's quite a big crate and you can get them down
|
|
to sort of about 300 milliliters you know about as big enough to hold the contents of a soda can.
|
|
And I've actually got one on the desk in front of me here with SD cards in it from my Raspberry Pi Tinkerings.
|
|
So what was in the crate? I'll tell you what was in there in the order of how I packed it and
|
|
then I'll tell you about why I took each of the things and what I did with it and what I talked about
|
|
etc. So the first thing into the crate was a three-ply layer of bubble wrap for padding.
|
|
The next thing into the crate was the first of two Dell latitude D630 laptops. Now these are
|
|
quite modest machines. They're two gigs of RAM, 2.3 gigs clock speed I think 64 bit,
|
|
1880 gigabyte hard disk. The thing I really like about them is they have a serial port and
|
|
it's quite uncommon now to find a machine with a serial port and me being a radio hammer
|
|
used them to control radio equipment transceivers etc. that have all got computer controls
|
|
interfaces these days. So now the first of those two Dell latitude D630s was next into the crate.
|
|
The third thing into the crate was another three-ply layer of bubble wrap
|
|
followed by the second Dell latitude D630 identical machine to the first one except I think the
|
|
hard disk is only 60 gigs on this one rather than 80 gigs then another inevitable three-ply layer
|
|
of bubble wrap and finally on the laptop front was the third laptop this being a Dell in Spiron
|
|
machine which is considerably older I think than latitudes and a bit of a clunky old
|
|
slow coach but I found it in a skip so you know not to be sniffed at I'm not sure if the clock speed
|
|
of that is two gigabytes of RAM because I put new RAM in it and it's a 60 gig drive I think
|
|
and then of course on top of that what did I put I put another layer three-ply layer of bubble wrap
|
|
now I'll tell you what what's on each of those laptops when it become to the actual presentation
|
|
but the next into the crate was a Saker 40 cell refreshable braille display
|
|
now this is a USB device it's a it's a long narrow piece of kit with rubber feet on the bottom
|
|
it's about the width of a keyboard you know a standard PC keyboard and it sits quite nicely
|
|
in front of a PC keyboard and it's got the row of 40 braille cells which are refreshable
|
|
that is the braille is cell is made up of the dots that form a braille cell
|
|
they're actually little holes and it's got little actuators that pop up metallic pimples
|
|
so the braille changes as you move the cursor around the screen you know it follows the
|
|
follows the focus or follows the cursor informs the line of braille so that was next into the box
|
|
that was in a nice cardboard nice stout cardboard box so that was next in and then I put in the
|
|
AC power supplies for all three of the laptops of course the next into the crate was a four-way
|
|
mains power strip you know one 13 amp UK mains plug to four 13 amp UK mains sockets
|
|
and then I put in the box a clear plastic pencil case this is about 12 inches wide
|
|
quite long enough to contain a 12 inch ruler and this is stuffed with audio leads and various
|
|
USB to micro USB leads it's quite tightly packed with three and a half millimeter stereo to stereo
|
|
leads some of which have got volume controls in the leads they were all in that pencil case
|
|
next in was a mesh bluetooth speaker it's like a little brick
|
|
redding color with a touch sensitive top panel and this thing will be a bluetooth speaker or
|
|
it has a lining socket as well and it also has a micro SD card slot so you can use it as an
|
|
MP3 boom box but I use it as an external speaker for PCs or for Raspberry Pi's
|
|
also I placed in the box a brawn speaker and this is a nice little device it's a little thing
|
|
that sits in the palm of your hand and it's an external speaker and an FM radio and an MP3 player
|
|
via an S and micro SD card slot again again it's got a three and a half millimeter line in so it
|
|
can be used as an external speaker for a PC or a Raspberry Pi I also took with me a mobile phone
|
|
charging battery brick you know one of these big flat bricks that you charge up which you can
|
|
then use out and about for powering a mobile phone or for charging a mobile phone I actually use
|
|
it as a power supply for a portable Raspberry Pi so that went in the box along with a Raspberry Pi
|
|
a banana pie a couple of Arduino's a couple of Arduino shields not there was going to do anything
|
|
with those at the presentation just to let people have a look at them and you know just ask
|
|
questions and things so they went into the box as well did I put anything else in the box
|
|
so I can't oh the only thing that I took with me that wouldn't go in the box was a standard 102
|
|
key keyboard USB PC keyboard which was slightly too wide to fit into the box so that was placed on
|
|
the top now the three laptops what have they got on them and what did I do with those at the
|
|
presentation well one of them has is currently running one of the Dell latitudes is currently running
|
|
triskel Linux which I think is an Ubuntu spin and the slogan for triskel Linux is run free
|
|
and the free software foundation actually are currently advertising a laptop called the
|
|
Libra Boot 200 which has got triskel Linux on it so the obviously meets with the approval of Mr.
|
|
Storman and configured on triskel on that laptop I have known fullback and orca the screen reader
|
|
so that was demonstrating the accessibility of the known desktop on the
|
|
Inspiron laptop I had and still currently have 32 bit Debian 7.4 WZ I think it is
|
|
which I did from a net install and I had that along with me to demonstrate
|
|
speak up which is the console mode screen reader and it was the Inspiron that I connected the
|
|
Braille display to so I could demonstrate using a Braille display for silent operation in the console
|
|
the second Dell latitude at the time did not have an operating system on it because I was taking it
|
|
to Portsmouth Lug so that one of the guys there who could see could make some adjustments to the
|
|
BIOS because I think at the time the boot sequence was incorrect and the hard disk was
|
|
before the optical drive and the USB so I needed to change the sequence of the boot that's why I took
|
|
the second latitude and on the Raspberry Pi I was running Raspberry with my fixed audio code
|
|
which I did a show about a couple of shows ago I think which I'll put a link to that in the show
|
|
notes and it was just demonstrating you know running a Pi headless no monitor connected to a portable
|
|
battery so you know it's just a very very portable solution we had a projector of projector to
|
|
connect to the latitude that was running Triscale so all of the people watching the presentation
|
|
could look at the screen of the of the latitude as I was demonstrating accessibility in
|
|
terminal in Libra Office Calc Libra Office Word Libra Office writer I should say
|
|
EMAX speak EMAX speak being a talking version of EMAX and various other things just demonstrating how I
|
|
can write code and get stuff done even though I can't see anything at all the banana pie I didn't
|
|
power up that was just I just took that long for people to have a look and they are doing
|
|
bits and pieces people were just sort of looking at those and asking questions after the presentation
|
|
about how I generally muck about with an Arduino so that was what was in my crate when I went to
|
|
the Portsmouth Linux user group earlier in January to do a presentation about Linux accessibility
|
|
I have to say thank you very much to Tony Wood a very nice chat who gave me a lift I when I did the
|
|
sorry Linux user group presentation he also gave me a lift across to the Red Hat Office over in
|
|
Fambra I would not have been able to do either of these two things without Tony because particularly
|
|
that one in Portsmouth carrying the enormous great big heavy crate I couldn't have carried out on
|
|
the train I have been to I think one Linux user group meeting on the train but I could not have
|
|
lagged the equipment for the presentation on the train so thanks very much to Tony Wood I should
|
|
say thanks also to Lucy who's last name for the moment escapes me the coordinator of the Portsmouth
|
|
Linux user group Portsmouth Linux user group incidentally very very friendly so he's sorry
|
|
Linux user group actually and for those of you who don't know the geography of the UK sorry is
|
|
a county in the southeast corner well not the extreme southeast corner but it's sort of to the south
|
|
southwest of London so it's in the southeast of England and Portsmouth is the home of the British
|
|
Navy it's the town on the south coast and where I live is actually pretty much geographically
|
|
equidistant middle this you know halfway between London and Portsmouth so making it across to
|
|
sorry Linux user group and down to Portsmouth Linux user group is quite possible but again I
|
|
you know I couldn't done it without Tony so thanks very much to Tony for that I think that's
|
|
pretty much it for watching my crate you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka
|
|
public radio dot org we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday
|
|
Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by an HPR listener like
|
|
yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find
|
|
out how easy it really is hecka public radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
|
|
infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binwreff.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
|