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654 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2261
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Title: HPR2261: HPR Community News for March 2017
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2261/hpr2261.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:34:47
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,261 entitled HBR Community News for March 2017 and is part of the series
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HBR Community News. It is posted by HBR volunteers and is about 70 minutes long and can
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remain an explicit flag. The summary is HBR volunteers talk about show release and comment
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posted in March 2017. This episode of HBR is brought to you by
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an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15. 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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Community News. This time for March 2017. Joining me tonight is...
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Hi everybody, I'm Steve Morris. Hi Dave, how are you? I'm great, thanks. You survived the
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stupidity that is the summertime wintertime thing. I hate it. I really hate it, yeah. I'm adjusted
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yet. Anyway, pick one. Pick summertime, I think, myself personally and stick with it, but only
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I shan't go into that. If anyone wants to go in, do an episode on summertime, wintertime. Why,
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it's a great idea. That would be awesome as it's pointless. The reckon Dave, four dollars either way
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is the difference per household, four dollars. It's either one way or the other. Why bother? Why go
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through all of this? I know, it's an arcade thing. It's about farmers going out in the fields and
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no Dave, it's not. Farmers don't give a rat's ass. No, no, no, no. That's the excuse.
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Well yeah, yeah. It's still trying to, that is the excuse, I've heard it. Yes, I know, but I know
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from being a farmer, the cows, the cows don't have a clock in the barn, God. We'll use it this
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morning, but it will hold up this smoke for an hour. No, they continue to expect you to arrive at
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the same time. Thank you very much. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, no. I've said before my cat, my daughter
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trained the cat to expect a treat at nine o'clock every evening, and she is totally messed up.
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She knows what time it is, but she doesn't know about DST, obviously, but yeah, stupid, stupid.
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Anyway, let's remind everybody what HPR is. Dave, tell us what HPR is.
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It's a crab sauce podcast network. Yes, and if anyone wants to do a series of shows on
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tell us what HPR is, that would be awesome. Yes, I agree, I agree, because it is a sort of
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strange thing. It's hard to get it in a one minute, you know, a elevator pitch for what HPR is,
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where the longest running community crowdsource podcast network in existence.
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We're probably the only community crowdsource podcast network that's in existence.
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Yes, yes, but we will talk about that later. Joining us this month were
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right. We had Bob Junkman, I think he's, I think it's J-Rub and Junkman, yeah, yeah,
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and we had Ainabina, which means what A-B, I believe. One B, yeah, but the sound of a J-Rub,
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if it's anything like Dutch, I'm just finishing off a sandwich here, so sorry about that.
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Oh, lucky you haven't started. I didn't. Anyway, the first show, anyway, this show,
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HPR Community News, is a show that we put on once a month to basically go through all the
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shows that have happened in the last month. Give everybody a little bit of feedback, because that's
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one thing that we do know encourages people to do more shows. And it's also a way of bringing
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people up to speed on what's going on on the mailing list and the comments and stuff, because not
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everybody subscribed to those. So just to give you an idea, we have about 16,000 people who
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subscribe to the daily feed, and there's less than 100 on the mailing list, and it's the mailing
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list where we make decisions, anybody can join that. It's quiet most of the time until it's not
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quiet, and then it's a bit busy for a while, and then it's quiet again. And the comment feed is
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available under subscribe as well, where you can get feeds to feedback from the comment system,
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especially if you're a holster, new host, you should subscribe to that one as well.
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So the first show was GNU Arc Part 6, and this is a series, joint series that's been done by
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Dave, and also by Be Easy. Yes, I was on the tip of my tongue, thanks Dave. And an excellent series.
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I tried to get through this one, Dave, without referring to the notes, because I think it's
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important to know, but I must say I did have a quick peek just to make sure that I was following
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what was being said. Okay, okay. Yeah, well then the notes are there really as a pullback and as
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a reference for the future, and that sort of stuff, that's what I like to make them fairly comprehensive.
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Yeah, it's no harm. I always think it's no harm, especially with the, I could follow it, but some
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of the explanations is no harm to go through these notes, because why not? It's hard to say, why not?
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And also regular expressions read out to you don't necessarily latch into your brains. It's good
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to see them if you can. Yep, exactly. So the following day was a show that I really needed to know,
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but actually hadn't didn't know I needed to know it until afterwards. Hold on, let's just check
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to see if there was any comments in your previous episode. No people, no comments on Dave's episodes.
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Come on, leave comments. They're stunned. Yeah, they're stunning to silence.
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Making jerky, Jezra goes about the process of making jerky, and I was really glad to see this,
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because I have no idea what jerky is. So this forced me to actually figure out what jerky was.
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Yes, yes, I did know what it was, but I've never, never been motivated to make it. So it's
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quite interesting to hear that. I just knew it was like a cowboy thing. Let's get some jerky
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and beans and ride them there are prairies and stuff. Yes, yes. I'm afraid that my reaction
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was to question, well, how not hygienic, but meat contains parasites. And I'm always a bit
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nervous about parasites. I'd like to know that the parasites that they could be in there were
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all day, but I'm sure they were, but it just bothers me very slightly. It's just one of my
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my foibles. But is the meat not cooked first? No, it's just dried. It's raw and dried. Yeah, I think
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if you, the commercial ones, they, they do some sort of flash heating, very, very quick heating
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in some, some mechanism, but I'm not really looked into it in detail. You want to go through the
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comments, please? Yes, indeed. So we had one comment from Operator who says, yum, hacking meat.
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I just got like four pounds of deer meat, teriyaki, oldton brown, he says, to which Jezea
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replies, that sounds amazing. Do you know if it's a doe or a buck? I needed to reply to that,
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yes. There's no answer now. And Ina Beena says, hmm, sounds great.
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It's pure exceptional responsibility for anyone dying as a device from many of the shows blah blah blah.
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Yeah, yeah, don't listen to me anyway. What do I know? Exactly. Amateur radio around here,
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but oh, wow, was I waiting for this? And they delivered. Yes, they did. I have a few shows
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lined up for it to go into this as well. What did they cover Dave? There was four, five different
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people on how I'm going to go through the thingy. Brief description of how to get into
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Ham Radio from an American's perspective. At least, do you need a license? Yes, you absolutely
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do. If you want to join the round table as David Whitman says in the comments, Ham Radio Round Table,
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nice show. I hope there are many more. I would like to ask you for a dedicated explanation of how
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the length of a frequency is measured two meters. What frequency is most powerful? How modulation works
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and of course, is ET trying to contact me? That's a good one, yes. Yeah, I thought this was great.
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I'm not particularly motivated to try it, but it really hit the spot as far as understanding
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what it's all about. I thought it was really well done show and extremely well managed and
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choreographed as well. Absolutely, yes. I would like to know among other things.
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Oh, let's start. Let's see. What was I thinking? Yeah, the frequencies versus the wavelength.
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Focus on that. Focus on David Whitman's one for the next one. That's what I would suggest.
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Try and help people because on visualise what's going on when you talk to a radio. You have this
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energy wafting from somewhere. How does resonance work? How that whole radio itself works? How a spark
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goes from one to the other? What happens there? Difficult. I'm kind of getting a grasp with that,
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but it's been one of the most difficult things for me to understand that. Yes, yes, it's a radio,
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radio frequencies and radio signals are a strange concept, especially for physicists comes along.
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It's as well. It's all light, after all. Yes. How can the light be? Yeah, how can it be
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literal, magnetic? Is it a beam? Is it a wave? Then if it's a wave, how can you have multiple waves
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in the one place at the one time? Because a wave I've found is a very bad analogy because a wave
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describes something moving as opposed to it being a thing itself. As a kid, you think a wave
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at the sea and you draw a wave. But it's not that. It's talking about somebody. It's like the word
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walking. It's not an actual thing. It's a description of movement. Hopefully people are going,
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no, Ken, that's wrong. Well, then you can join on to the amateur radio roundtable, which will give
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you more information about that later on in the show. Stay tuned. The following day was HPR
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Community News with no common stave, or rather I don't think we did a whole lot that deserves
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comments on that one. That's very fast. Yes, we're not in on controversial. Just the facts, man.
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Following day, we had an interview with Colin J. Mills, organizer of KW Linux Fest. This was
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by Bob Junkman. I had not heard about this fest. Very, very nice. Kitchener Waterloo Linux Fest,
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2017. Yeah, sounded really good. I haven't quite appreciated it. It was fairly small.
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7GRA, I think you said, but that's good. That's cozy. I don't sound as about good.
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No, no, no, absolutely not. No, no. And it's around the the lug of that area as well, I think,
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isn't it? Yeah, pretty cool. So yeah, it sounds like a great, great setup.
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I appreciated that. Waterloo is Waterloo University, which is well thought of in the computer science
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community, this thing. What was it? Waterloo Fortran, Waterloo Basic, Waterloo iMap, various other
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things have come out of there. All right. Did not know this. I think so. Yes, I had to have a big name,
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at least in my understanding of it. Somebody wants to do sure enough that they can in actual fact.
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My quick tips, episode 01, which of course there means, you know, always the episode 02, which
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means he owes me a show by my reckoning, our good friend operator, and a long time
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participant here on HPR before that, today with a techie before that, binrib, for those of you who
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don't know your history. So ad blocker, which is always a good thing, cash litter box tips,
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very, very good, how to collect the leaves and other free stuff, electronic dumper diving,
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and some shaving tips. I like this. I like this. It was quite hpuri, I thought. Yeah, yeah. I've
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always liked this sort of thing. It's sort of a mixture of stuff I've discovered, or today I learned
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and those sorts of things. It's always good to pass on these tips. Some of them can be real gems.
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And what I particularly liked was the variants in audio. And you have to remember folks here.
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And I'm not saying the audio was bad, but it wasn't recorded perfectly in a perfect studio with
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people talking in perfect sounds. And now you're listening to a quick tip. No, it was just a quick
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tip. You were there. You were getting a quick tip. That's what HPR is about. Our greatest
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enemy here, Dave, is procrastination, as you well know. And the friend of procrastination is
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perfection. So yeah, perfectionism is a bad thing. Yes. Yes. So if you're sitting there,
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if you're sitting there, I was thinking, well, we talk about it later when the HPR New Year
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Show was on about people passing on and stuff. And I was thinking to myself, folks, when you pass
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away, as will happen, if you record shows for HPR, there will be available in perfection as long
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as at least the archive.org is around. And I know that HPR's website has been around for quite
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a long time. But there's probably more chance of archive.org sticking around. And you never know
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there's aliens downloading the archive.org as we speak. So yes, if you want to mortality or as
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close as we can get, then record the show for HPR. Maybe not catchy. That's a good one. That's a good
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one. I could see that going on the list of why you should do it. Yeah. Yeah. Okay, moving on
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the following day, we had building a lineage OS by Brian of the clay pot thing and a very, very
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nice little run through of a lineage OS, which I didn't get running myself. So I will try that
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again, which is the following one from Sionogen mod. Yes. And it's a since I've looked at now,
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it's a lot more stable. So you might want to give that a little look as well.
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It was an interesting, yeah, I was particularly interested in this, that I was slightly
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daunted at the prospect of building it myself, I have to say, but it's it's definitely something
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to be looked into. I've got something called revolutionism, revolution remix, which is a
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Sionogen version on mine, but my son did it for me, so. Yeah, jeez.
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Okay, the following day, managing tags on HPR episodes, dash one, which comes out as episodes
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one, which sounds improper when the text just speaks does it, but no, it's correct. And this is
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about the tags and how the way we're currently doing tags, bugs, Dave so much that he's done
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three shills all right, Dave, make your point, why don't you? What, what? You think they should
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have been more shows, right? Okay, then I do actually, Dave. Yes, well done for volunteering.
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I think, well, as I said in the in the show, we could do with some database shows actually.
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We could actually, we could very much do with database shows, especially the difference between
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the various types of database databases, assets versus base, SQL versus no SQL,
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light little topics, a bit like what JWP did for file systems there, you know, light little topics,
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take them and just sprinkle a bit of, you know, if you're doing nothing more than going to Wikipedia
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and reading out the first paragraph, just enough to give people a flavor. Yes, yes, yes,
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there were some comments on this one, Mike Gray said, he said, C show 1569, he said,
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pointed to, that was his show, how to do many, to many, I wonder what I was doing to the show,
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I was thinking, oh, oh, Dave, you're in trouble now. Yes, yes, well, it was the initial answer was,
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well, it's in my answer, I think, did I say it in the, oh, I'll read it out, I said,
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read your answer. Sorry, Mike, I hadn't forgotten your excellent show, it's been in my list of
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references all along. However, since I started by designing a single show, which then got
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split into three, references show 1569 got relegated to the last show in the series, I didn't quite
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appreciate the effect that would have since the three shows were still one in my head. It's, as it
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stands, it looks if I've disregarded your contribution, whereas what I'd wanted to do is to move
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slowly towards it, looking at possible alternatives and showing their advantages and disadvantages
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along the way. Show two is in the queue for the 31st of March and show three still in production,
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right, since it's sort of in the queue now, in fact, it'll be the next show I upload. So,
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Mike replied going, you are a cancer. No, he didn't. Listen to the entities, wherever possible,
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all database design should be driven by what the entity relationship is telling you and Mr.
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Codd should be obeyed. In the case, there are just two entities, show and tags and the relationships
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are, show can have one or more tags, tag can appear attached to one or more show, which gives rise
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to a many-manry relationship like show dashes, dashes, dashes, dashes, tags. They show underscore tag,
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underscore FRX table has a compound unique key comprised of the key column of the two outside tables,
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show tag. That's the pure analytics of the two entries concerned, entities concerned. I can't
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think of any processing constraints like speed or storage that will compel that relationship
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to be compromised. As you said in part one, this is a small bit of this. Indeed. I should just say
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that Mike's diagram show and tag was supposed to have greater than or less than such on it, but the
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comment system took them away. God, I see. So much. Just screws everything over. Anyway, I think we
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come on to that later, do we? No, we don't. Oh, yeah, right. Do it now. The common system doesn't
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understand HTTPS. We're serving HTTPS from the website, which we don't actually know anything about,
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can turn it off because it's part of the control panel thing that's that we're given.
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And because it doesn't understand HTTPS, we get all these PHP errors coming through, which
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look ugly and horrible. So in order to get around that, we can't disable HTTPS, but now we have
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disabled a special page that if you come through via a HTTPS, then you get redirected to a page
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saying, no, we don't have a HTTPS version of the site. Of course, we do that. Then we get emailed
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by Google to say, hey, did you know that now every single link on your website has turned out to be
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a 404 or because we're Google and we decide everybody should use HTTPS, which I guess is correct,
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but it's kind of pointless if your whole show is about spreading knowledge and making sure everybody
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has access to it. But can don't you realize that some people might want to view some content via HTTPS
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on the HPR website because they don't want anybody to know what subversive stuff they're reading.
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And I suppose they have a point. Yes, yes, yes, it's just a mess.
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It is. We're thinking, I'm actually listening to Dave's comment tag show to see how that turns out
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because I'm like one straw away from breaking the camel's back type thing or one drop away from
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overflowing the bucket on getting rid of the common system and doing something completely
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different. Yeah, I think something commenting is important, but this particular implementation
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anyway, moving on, my custom RSS and security feed, which is actually quite interesting by
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operator again, and he has a RSS feed amalgamated down so that he can scrape some of the sites that
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don't have the feeds on them, which is a good way to do it. And he gives us access to his scripts
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on the website. Do you want to read the comment? Yes, yes, indeed. Yeah, Windigo says,
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good idea. I've run to this with some of the RSS feeds I've subscribed to and have never
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thought about creating a secondary re-feeder feed to fix it. Brilliant. So yeah, it's quite clever.
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Yes, we have separate people on this network, Dave, present company excluded.
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And then the following day, New Year's show episode one, 5150 talks about home network and
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guns, which, yep, that'll be 5150, all right. Regie talks about early days of computing and here's
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somebody who joined us as a regular host. And Karne, you, Karne, I think it is, it's from the word
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Kaga, from Katalan, which means the nasty stuff that the people do in toilets and stuff.
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Very good. So it's the same as in English, Kaka means the same thing. I was brought up with that as a
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word to mean you wanted the toilet. And so it's the same route, I think. So that's the,
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where the Kaka in South Africans is the word for a, yeah, poop or donny or something like that,
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Kakao's, they say, yeah, I think it's common amongst many, many European derived languages.
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Okay, the U.S. Air Force, Boose Food, CPIIS, CPF and Pew machines, earliest memories,
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early days of computing, night-wise, the mobile computing and the, or W's, early days of computing
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and Linux. And I will avoid any comments about all of these kudubin shows in their own
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and move on to the next show, where we waste even more episodes on one of which we are show.
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Katie, Neon, Steamship, Virginia, and that, that I've seen coming through in the feeds,
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we should actually, an outcast planet, there, who is it that talks about that?
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It stands in Pirate. Yeah, that's right. Handsome Pirate should, and actual fact, do a dedicated show
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to that. Arthur Foss is another tugboat, a tubular computing, ham radio, ham radio, ham and the oven,
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see what they did there. Boose, fraternities, Linux Fest, remembering Matthew Willem Williams,
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Rob Youngburn mentions, they, oh, God, Kitchener, Waterloo, of Fest, yeah, which we had there.
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Fixing audio with the computer with beats audio, open Linux community, Linux desktops,
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more Linux desktops, mobile OS, Gordon, Loves Katie, oh, yes he did. And do all the
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lingo. And Clinton Roy says some interesting stuff, but give up on the conversation turned
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to rape on college campuses. Should have actually stick around for a little bit longer. And that,
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that I've been thinking about that. And I think HPR, if you have experiences,
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yourself, all of that, and would like to share that with the community, then that is definitely
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something that would be of interest tackers. And we would, if you're, if you're not willing to
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do it, the show yourself, or don't want to do the show yourself, and just want to write it out,
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we'll have, we can always have somebody read the show up for you, or narrate it. And you can
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always submit stuff to HPR anonymously. And if you want to share your experiences on that,
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or any other topics around that sort of thing, or that you would not feel comfortable sharing,
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or having other people know, we can always have people do it anonymously for you in your stead.
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Cool. Yep. The following day was the new year show episode three,
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Carrie Fisher, Vaughting Politics, Herches, Wikipedia for News, Pizza Gate.
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I will love Linux, text editors, forum fund, coffee is great, making money from sea software,
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free software, the workplace, single board computers. And there were two comments. Do you want
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to do these? Yes, Clinton Royce says, and I gave up on this one about 20 minutes in when
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birtherism came up. I really like the concept of the new year show, but it feels like it's gone
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completely off the rails. Well, you give people free speech and they will freely speak, especially
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after a few beers. Although the birtherism thing, I really did have to look up that. And I must say,
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as an outsider, nobody go annoyed or anything. I mean, it's like the Fahrenheit Celsius thing,
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right? I just don't understand it properly. Yeah. So if somebody could do me a show, why that's
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important? Because for everybody else in the world outside of the US, nobody cares. You're a citizen
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of the country. I don't see why you can't be president of the country. That's not me pulling
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the piss. That's me asking the question, why if you're a citizen of a country, can you not be
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president of the country if you're born outside of the country just by virtue of birth? That seems
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to be in a democracy. That seems to be completely sort of monarchy thing to do. Well, low by virtue
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of birth, you get to rule the country by virtue of place of birth, you don't get to rule the country.
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It seems a bit strange. So somebody wants to do a show about that. That would be great.
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Keeping politics out of it. That would be also great. Okay. I'd certainly like to hear a breakdown
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of what the hell is, is being put forward there. I think the term conspiracy springs to mind,
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but leave that there, I think. Well, I think it comes down to that he wasn't born on US oil.
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So therefore he can't be president or or lied or whatever. So I don't see the magnitude of the
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of the thing of the, I think it's, I don't know, somebody do a show on it. Shall we move on?
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And the next comment on that show is fact check about Scotland Brexit. So this is a little bit
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of a correction. And there were many things I would have liked to correct in that New Year's
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show, but this one, Scotland voted in, and this is coming directly from the BBC Scotland politics
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page, resulting in an article written immediately after a referendum. And I quote,
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Scotland has voted in favor of the UK staying in the EU by 62% to 38% and all 32 council
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areas backing to remain. So yes, 100% of Scotland's council areas are not back to remain. However,
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I don't think that matters. It's the 62% to 38% that matters. Anyway, also turnout was 67%. So that
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still leaves a lot of people who didn't vote and a lot of people who voted to leave the EU. So just
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to clear that one up. Yes. Okay. And if you are listening to this and there was anything on any of
|
|
the HPR shows that you feel should be rectified, please feel free to record a show and do so.
|
|
Okay. The following day was New Year's Eve episode four, which was 0.64 laptop.
|
|
86 versus arm, arm devices and thus devices. Retropy. How should you consume your video content?
|
|
Jonathan Nadu has a book, New Year traditions, 3D printing phone,
|
|
car talk, fireworks and Disney exploring the US beer talk, black arch, old hard disks and old cars.
|
|
And there were no comments on this. Dave, do you have anything to say?
|
|
I don't really know. No, this says that there was a vast quantity of stuff there.
|
|
It's a bit like listening, sitting at a bar and just listening to people chat. This is
|
|
this is the New Year show you shouldn't really get too overly worked up. It's a different.
|
|
It's it's a social event. It ain't meant to be a typical HPR show. It's a it's a social event where
|
|
all where HPR and people who are into podcasting can get together and shoot the breeze for a while.
|
|
The pie. I was just going to say that I was slightly daunted by these things because they
|
|
look so huge as they were they were in the queue there. And I was thinking I was sort of semi-dreading
|
|
listening to them for them for them being long and rambling. I actually found them pretty much
|
|
all fascinating. So yes, that's really my main comment. I normally listen to every show
|
|
as they come out I come out of work and I go down the ramp and I go walking over to the bus.
|
|
And the first thing I do is look at my podcast pod catcher for HPR and then I play that and
|
|
these ones I just I just had to yeah. I don't know I was thinking okay it's going to be a HPR
|
|
community news now next week. I better start listening to them. But then it was just quite easy
|
|
following some of them. Some of the topics didn't float my boat so much but more of them more
|
|
were quite kind of cool. I did get a lot out of each of the episodes as Haster said. Yep. Yep.
|
|
So coffee and tea, screwy 50s ISP, home networking, Singapore computers which were all great
|
|
v-core 2, blacksmith banana pie, pine 64, crowdfunding fund, Linux Vest, Google, police stories
|
|
and more funding and single board computers. Then the next day was the last one and yet more
|
|
single board computers, spoken languages, programming languages, open source, creative
|
|
podcasts, synaptic drivers, search.code for sale.com, some enlightenment love, blender love,
|
|
the Ubuntu phone is to die in 2017. Question mark. Can we trust Google programming? Ubuntu
|
|
touch with Lazarus, GPD Win and CES and then there was one comment. I nearly made it all the way
|
|
through this one. There is some interesting content on Lazarus IDE project. It's probably
|
|
I agree with that one too. Lazarus is fun actually. I used it a few years ago when I was working.
|
|
That's the Pascal advertisement talk. Yeah, it's the free Pascal with a sort of front-end
|
|
IDE facility so you can generate some pretty nice code. I just wrote a little database thing in it
|
|
for the help desk at work and yeah, I'm a used Pascal for many many years. I used to teach it
|
|
a little bit at one time and so I thought it was great but I stopped using it. I'm almost tempted
|
|
to go back and start having a look at it again actually from the discussions that I heard on this
|
|
show. I have I rolled my thesis in on related to a Pascal program. Very tempted. It's just so
|
|
bad when I look at the code. Very tempted to redo it again. This is how you should have done it
|
|
30-year-olds myself from 200 minimums. I've not written thesis on it but it was the main language
|
|
that I used that we had to use. I was in charge of a VMS Bax cluster, Deck Bax cluster and Pascal
|
|
was the primary language at that time for doing anything of any great consequence on it.
|
|
You know, this you went into there assembler which we didn't have access to then Pascal. It seems
|
|
odd now but Pascal was the language they recommended. It was the one that was most completely
|
|
implemented on VMS back in the mid 80s. So there you go. I remember yeah I did a I had to
|
|
program into a some sort of ID card at the time. I was trying to do a simulator that would do
|
|
something on the screen as a computer was working at the same time. You know program it was a PLC
|
|
program a large controller simulator that you could simulate the programs on PLCs
|
|
on the computer first before you put them into a machine but it was kind of cool. It worked
|
|
and then we brought the downstairs from my presentation and then of course it never worked which
|
|
but anyway move it on with lots of comments about oh the next day was how to make a stencil
|
|
cutting and using a stencil made of thick foil hosted by Ain Bean and this was their first show
|
|
and I think I think yeah I think we should actually change that okay and how you cut out a stencil
|
|
very nice episode and how you make it how you use it and Linda Roy says thank you this is great
|
|
thank you for uploading you did the next and then Bob Youngburn said um said consultant
|
|
strangely but I think he filled in the wrong bit before. She says hi Ainna Beena and I should say
|
|
that she is a contributor on GNU social as is Bob um so so we sort of semi-know one and
|
|
another one already um so she says do you have a template for that anarchist carrot image
|
|
an SVG or XCF or an OGG or even a PDF thanks he says and when she to which she replied hey Bob
|
|
here is the German download page for political art stencils some pretty cool ones and there it
|
|
has to be said link in the show notes. Yes Brian says food not bombs that's one of the food not
|
|
bombs logos. Siro could dunk said pH and Beesey says welcome new host thanks for the new episode
|
|
it was well done and easy to follow the process you described reminded me of a silkscreening class
|
|
I took long ago I think I'll try this out sometime soon keep the episodes coming. Bob yet said
|
|
thanks for the link and I mean there's a lot of good design motifs on that page and Drupes says
|
|
very cool I'm doing this with the kids tonight my wife has a cricket but it's way more fun using knives
|
|
that's that's one of these cutting wheel things is it is that what it is? You can program the main
|
|
and it's like a little needle that goes across and cuts and it's like a printer printer or you
|
|
know a dot metric printer that goes over and back and there's a needle that cuts the things out
|
|
okay okay well that's where the cool that's cool in itself you should tell us that is that's
|
|
a show all by itself third droopy do El Druperino the Drupcy yeah it's very good very good show I just
|
|
wanted to say I thought this was a great show I never thought to use an OHP foil as a stencil
|
|
I'm currently making a stencil so I can label my bins with the number of my house and I'm
|
|
making it out of I've got a roll of mylar sheet from an old graph plotter being a hoarder
|
|
they somebody bought a roll of mylar for doing a really fancy plot on a on a drum plotter many many
|
|
many years ago and when they finished that they said just throw that in the bin with you and it
|
|
didn't go in the bin it went to my house and it's perfect for stencils it's really strong you can't
|
|
tear it or anything so okay that's just me excellent Dave excellent show well done the following day
|
|
we had a show about model rocketry by Steve Sainer what an excellent excellent episode I was thinking
|
|
to myself Dave when I was listening to this I first of all didn't think all I looked at the
|
|
duration and I thought to myself surely you cannot make a show 54 minutes long about a subject
|
|
of model model rocketry and how wrong I was proven this is possibly people should possibly refer
|
|
to this if you've been a lecturer in a college this is the show that you should refer to to say this
|
|
is how you should give a lecture lots of information very clear very concise and very logical
|
|
nice logical build up I really really enjoyed this show yes I I looked at the length that's
|
|
well I thought wow that's I don't know will I make it through it's a being one who does
|
|
longer shows as well I shouldn't do that but but I it just the time is whispered I thought it's
|
|
fascinating and I was thinking at the end no there's cut me yeah but he covered all the topics I
|
|
thought and very you know it's you have the feeling after the show that he's just skimmed the surface
|
|
of of the whole thing and that you could have gone on for several hours and I wish he did
|
|
on the history on on various different aspects that he covered in it but a very very good
|
|
introductory show if you wanted if you ever wanted an example of how to do an entry
|
|
introductory show to a topic this is it there's plenty of information in there got everybody interested
|
|
in it and I came away from that thinking oh gosh I would I the last thing I need is yet another
|
|
hobby however it would be cool if there was an open day somewhere here to be you know to take
|
|
the kids and go down and have a look at that I think we'll be awesome absolutely absolutely
|
|
and Christopher M Hobbes says as a comment excellent show and detailed show notes
|
|
this was exactly what I needed my son has been asking me about monon rockets for a long time
|
|
and I wasn't sure where to start looking for information unfortunately there doesn't seem to be a
|
|
club in my area but I may have some friends who would let me launch on their property it may be
|
|
time to look for a kit thanks for the show see what I mean see what I mean this is how you judge
|
|
sure Steve by the impact on the people not the number of downloads not the number of likes this
|
|
is how you judge a show the impact on people oh yes absolutely this is a gem absolutely
|
|
all righty the good ship HPR this is the one we've all been waiting for HPR is a wonderful yet
|
|
fragile project completely dependent on a steady floor of shores from horse we're in Dave
|
|
Morris describes it as a leaky bolt and how do we fix the problem and what we want is basically a
|
|
nice steady line that the number of shores gone out equals the number of shores coming in yep
|
|
let's do the do the comments shall I start with Tony who says hi Dave I enjoyed the show
|
|
about the history and working with HPR I did a slot about HPR at Manchester bar camp last year
|
|
and during the talk liking HPR to a bar camp of the airwaves as just like a bar camp as long as
|
|
it's legal and you can you make it clear if family friendly or not you can talk on any topic the
|
|
other passion for and you want to share with the listeners maybe that could be a new tagline HPR
|
|
the bar camp of the podcast world excellent love it and what I think what I would like to hear
|
|
from people is suggestions for those taglines because what we could do is maintain a list on the
|
|
HPR website that every time you go to it or every day at the top of feed we can replace it with
|
|
one or liners like that HPR the longest running podcast HPR the bar camp of the
|
|
podcast world HPR crowd sourcing podcast since before crowd sourcing was a word you know that's
|
|
sort of thing yeah that's that's a great idea it's a great idea and then that that could
|
|
that could those things would go well in a tm little ts I've got times a minute or whatever you
|
|
call it yep Dave you replied thanks Tony and thanks for telling Manchester bar camp about HPR
|
|
great cover it nightwise says how about a drop box folder one of the things you could do to make
|
|
the recording process similar as to have something like a drop box folder that people can send
|
|
their shows to straight from their phones when they're done that way you have a one button upload
|
|
without having to develop an app right now the second thing I would find cool is if there was a
|
|
telegram or moxer channel HPR listeners and hosts that way we could talk to each other and in a
|
|
pinch these audio conversations could also be used as a show interesting interesting thought
|
|
Merichard says a very interesting show I really enjoyed the history and statistics it would be
|
|
nice to have a page in the HPR site but let's you see a bunch of these stats as they change I also
|
|
think that a store would be great depending on the type of gear sold for example t shirts hoodies
|
|
are a must but the show also be cool things like raspberry pie kit supplies for building some of
|
|
the projects you were mentioning on the shows for those who were interested in experimenting and
|
|
duplicating works of others maybe something like hack five does with the hack shop.com it's just
|
|
an example but that kind of stuff would be cool as well I also think iOS and Android apps really
|
|
are needed to happen it would be great if there was a stream of episodes let you stream the episodes
|
|
as well as contribute them perhaps incorporating some data on the website into it as well such as
|
|
calendar sure lots of the episodes I don't know just spitballing these are some things that
|
|
I would love to see happen thanks for the show. Drips says new hosts I don't listen to all of the
|
|
episodes will keep up as much as I should but I'm very interested in the new hosts we should have a
|
|
page or a tag or email that just indicates when a brand new hosts released their first episode
|
|
this would enable me and others to keep track of when someone new posts then I can send them
|
|
encouragement or thank you or feedback thank you for this episode it was very cool hearing the stats
|
|
I remember the day when we didn't have an episode very good ideas all around and
|
|
do you want to just do your own replies to those? Yes yes I just wanted to have something on record
|
|
that I commented back rather than just do it on this this show I simply I said tonight
|
|
wise interesting ideas thanks how to control access to Dropbox though wouldn't it fill up with
|
|
spam and other junk so first thought I had mirror shades I said thanks some good thoughts to ponder
|
|
there and to droops I said yes the new host alert idea is a good one need some thought
|
|
so what I wanted to actually say Dave was that when people are thinking about this problem
|
|
that you stay focused on getting on Willis bring in more hosts and Willis make the hosts that we have
|
|
continue to try to continue to send in shows you know what I mean? Yes so I think I think the one for
|
|
me if I look back at all the new episodes that we've had and be very clinical about this when
|
|
you're thinking about it is stay focused on Willis thing that I'm doing encourage people directly
|
|
to be a host and I think we're missing quite a few topics here actually the majority would be
|
|
go around your workplace and ask your fellow colleagues and your fellow workers to do a show for
|
|
HPR ask your family and friends to do a show for HPR if you see somebody interesting in the street
|
|
interview them and ask them to do a show for HPR talk to people and this goes back to the bar
|
|
camp thing so I think you know you I'm not sure there's a correlation between the number of people
|
|
that listen to HPR and the number of people who contribute because you know by virtue of the fact
|
|
when we started nobody knew about HPR and we still had hosts coming in and over time the number
|
|
of people coming in has remained more or less steady but the number of listeners that we have
|
|
has dramatically increased over that time so I'm not 100% convinced that more listeners will
|
|
bring us more contributors okay what do you think about that yeah it's it's a it's a difficult one
|
|
to completely get your head around I find anyway I mean the awareness of HPR to the potential host
|
|
community if you like is is the key to getting people to contribute yeah um and partly listening
|
|
so you need to know that HPR exists in order to contribute on the first place is that what you
|
|
say and you also yes and you also need to know that you could be a host and that even though you
|
|
think you've got nothing to say you have got things to say because everybody is interesting
|
|
to somebody you know there's always the humanity at large has got many many stories to tell
|
|
to other other people and so you know getting that message across to people as you say whether it's
|
|
friends family colleagues saying well that's interesting maybe you should you should record that
|
|
and turn into an HPR show is the sort of thing that we need to be proselytized if you want
|
|
yeah I think Tony is on on the ball though because we dig there was a period of time when a few
|
|
years ago when we were going to every Linux festival we had a table at every Linux festival and
|
|
if we can do that if we can get people to sponsor people to be at those tables so if you're going
|
|
anyway that there will be people who will sponsor you know t-shirts and sponsor tables and give the
|
|
money that way I don't really want to be doing money here on on the HPR website because
|
|
if we do that then we need you know there's always a question of accounting and finances and
|
|
that then takes my time away and your time away from you know get more people to record podcasts so
|
|
it could actually have a negative effect but what we've always done in the past and I think we've
|
|
stopped doing it a little bit has been going to the shows and I think that's a great thing get HPR
|
|
as official media sponsors to a particular show so if there's a show coming up this year that
|
|
you're going to go to let's get us as an official media sponsor let's interview the people beforehand
|
|
promoting the show get more people in get a table have the booth kits going around and talk to people
|
|
there because people who are bothered to come to a Linux Fest or to hack Fest or to a whatever
|
|
Fest are people who are by definition interested in the sort of stuff that we're into what you reckon
|
|
yes I agree I agree and promotional materials that that you know we could we people could hand out
|
|
such things we'd also be an advantage yes and we do need the background videos we need a video
|
|
explain in HPR we need probals explain in HPR we need more banners we need business cards so
|
|
that people are armed with the swag that they need to go to these Linux Fest and I think that's
|
|
not necessarily Linux Fest but you know walk around and go here where HPR we're doing this do you
|
|
want to be interviewed or do you want to do it yourself promote your project talk to your local
|
|
mailing list if you're involved in a in a in a small computer project or even a big computer project
|
|
get them to do the release announcements as shows here in HPR you know we talk to people is
|
|
essentially they the best way one-to-one actual conversations anyway that's enough about that
|
|
we were joined by kdg how are you doing kdg he's muted now because I'm sorry about that we were
|
|
in the middle of a very easy conversation there and we're just going through the shows now we're
|
|
up to episode two two five six modular game scaling which was by Eric Dumel
|
|
and it was nice to get a short podcast after the long series of long podcasts yes yes I can't
|
|
disagree and it was an interesting approach to how to think about gaming actually that you need
|
|
how to pass that a game is actually three different things working in harmony with each other and
|
|
that's pretty cool pretty cool yeah more on this would certainly be be appreciated by me I can
|
|
tell you it's I liked it because it was a bit like a little chat to myself to get I have these
|
|
conversations with myself from time to time to get something clear in my own head and why not
|
|
record that and put it on to hpr as a show indeed and Tony Hughes who I'm hoping is feeling better
|
|
had a bit of a stroke apparently but still able to do a hpr show which is absolutely excellent
|
|
so all our best wishes are with you Tony and it's on the distro what OS for a spire laptop which I
|
|
have here in bits on my I bits of an isr aspire one laptop as well and I'm missing a hard disk and
|
|
a hard disk cable so if anybody has a hard disk and hard disk cable that they want to sell me
|
|
that would be awesome or if somebody wants a isr aspire one for spare parts then drop me a line
|
|
cool yeah it was my favorite laptop ever because you could just take it out plug it in it always
|
|
worked it was excellent yes so I enjoyed netbooks it's a great time so the next day we had
|
|
over there in commons on that show let me just check no no commons and either of those two
|
|
shows which is a bit sad and that is one thing that really encourages people is commenting on their
|
|
show that absolutely absolutely excellent idea I'm not 100% as in favor of likes and dislike buttons
|
|
because or even statistics as I've said before although we have committed to putting statistics
|
|
up on the website because you can't really measure a contribution of a hit virtual by statistics
|
|
alone no no no it's just just that numbers numbers people like numbers i like numbers it's just
|
|
nice to see a table of stuff some some some people like numbers David I don't
|
|
yeah well we're probably going to do something anyway no no we've committed to do and this is just
|
|
we haven't got around to cause it involves logging and that is not ideal at the minute how we
|
|
get those logs out um so the following day we had by bill november fox strat mic zulu one
|
|
miller and it's killer killbasa killbasa is that right that's right yep and I had to google what
|
|
killer killbasa was actually I ducked to code it but you can't say duck to google as easy as you can
|
|
google anyway yes it's like a sausage oh and fentanyl noise says I had to do a bit of googling but
|
|
killbasa some sort of polished sausage which can be of any sort of meat non-American
|
|
perspective and when you say jelly I think you mean some sort of jam or accept take all the fruit out
|
|
yes I don't know about that one but the killbass there is I'd heard of it um but
|
|
I had neighbors to polish neighbors so maybe it was from them but it just means just means sausage
|
|
in in there's many types of killbasa so never heard of it before there you go okay
|
|
and zork said little smoky is my family recipe we use a little smoky sausage uh cocktail
|
|
sausages from my English brother and a jar of grape jelly or grape jam and a bottle of barbecue sauce
|
|
and he's got a link to the recipe I think the confusion might be that in in the English English
|
|
then jelly does actually mean a jam um you know we boil fruit with sugar and stuff and you take
|
|
in all the bits out so it's a completely clear thing like like the americans jelly jelly
|
|
whereas I think americans mean any form of um of jam as we would call it so well there's a
|
|
show right there for somebody to do the intricacies of uh that would that would be fun
|
|
yep and then the next day John Colt did a show about htbr 2212 on response to sorry on response to
|
|
htbr show 2212 which was above mini discs and this was a nice uh trip down memory lane with John
|
|
DJ extraordinaire that he was is it was fascinating isn't it yet John's really done some interesting
|
|
things and yeah he's seen some stuff I wrote down here I think uh yeah I think there will be
|
|
there's three comments to the show but um I think it might be a series actually stuff I've done
|
|
podcast and eat so Drupes says do you want to know if I've heard it jump jumped in on top of you
|
|
there mini discs says the more I hear about these things the more I think I missed out yep
|
|
so Dave Morris says hey interesting this was a cool device you had and some interesting stories
|
|
do I really write like that yes David oh hey the new it's more like my son in the mini disc walkman
|
|
which still exists I was prompted to look that's how you sound in my head anyway Dave I was prompted
|
|
to look for it today and found it and found it discovered it was still working he just wanted
|
|
so I must see what can be used for what it can be used for I don't know why I'm doing your bits
|
|
okay that was me jumping in yeah to do the first one um Jonathan kelp says mini disc walkman
|
|
thanks for the comments guys sorry I've been so silent with shows and comments lately
|
|
it's really busy at work I bet he is yeah um I think the Sony walkman mini disc had a much
|
|
slimmer profile than my sharp md702 so it might work pretty well as an actual walkman when you're
|
|
carrying it with you while you walk around you could also record a show on it have fun oh see what
|
|
you did there Dave oh he did it he did it but oh yes I've y'all trimmed up and that's how
|
|
everybody else should be thinking get more horse in everything is an opportunity to get more
|
|
there's no excuse every android phone comes within the ability to record sound press
|
|
send an email record press share type an email type an admin at hackerpublicradio.org
|
|
job done I was thinking that really we could do with a better summary of what has been done you know
|
|
just a very very brief pick of some of the things that people have done the original things that
|
|
people have done the very to be honest just to to get the creative juices flowing when absolutely
|
|
you think about what to do you know this is the promotional material we should do more of that
|
|
absolutely yep and managing tags for htbr episode two no comments so this one you are you're
|
|
taking it more I want to probably wait until three before we go into this in more detail yeah
|
|
fair enough fair enough it's it's it's it's pretty detailed but yeah pretty cool I'm pretty
|
|
more data bit shows absolutely without a doubt we do we do yes yes yes so shall we then do the
|
|
other comments for the ones that happened on previous months indeed so I'm actually lined up
|
|
this time I think so what's happening done so fighting words there now let's see how you do so we
|
|
had two on seven eight the comment on that from 51 50 and the show was about it was a platoon's dice
|
|
mixer one where you build a corn to dice mixer yep yep yep it was a rather wonderful thing
|
|
and 51 it's slightly expensive thing to unfortunately yes yes I think we had the conversation I
|
|
would have liked to bought one but they're too expensive especially with shipping anyway the term
|
|
tin horn gambler refers to a tin and leather dice mixer carried by gentleman gamers in the old west
|
|
you are a really good salesman clout to even though I neither tabletop game nor participate in
|
|
dice based games of chance by sitting on your description I sort of want one of these now yeah
|
|
hey yeah he would be we would all be doomed if if platoon was a was a sales capitalist yes and the
|
|
etymology of tin horn is a fascinating one actually I didn't know yeah I'd love there to be a
|
|
nautomology show here love it even and if there's a crazy commons etymology podcast that somebody wants
|
|
for most do cordon introduction and send in a sample episode and so they next a comment was
|
|
on windigo who was commenting on building a soundboard android app with app inventor which was
|
|
done by droops and he says fantastic you had the advanced fart app I think yes yes quite a few
|
|
others perhaps as well and we do the next do you do the next one next one is on two to six podcasts
|
|
I listened to comment yes bookworm says thanks and sorry wretch thanks for the good shows I've
|
|
been looking for a podcast manager from my android phone and tried pod kicker I'm currently using
|
|
the free version I've been using it since about a week after your show ed I have every intention of
|
|
supporting the developer and buying the paid version what a great little app I'll also be checking
|
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out some of the podcast you mentioned sorry the sorry is for my taking so long to reply now
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don't worry about that HPR is timeless that's what we're saying and then we had a comment on
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musings of another TV cord cutter this is by our red j and it was by Regina loved it thanks for all
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the information and creative vice so the next one was next one was community news yeah
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oh yeah this was we we we should have done this one last time I think we recorded on the fourth
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and we somehow missed this one coming on the third but never mind this was I won't read it out
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because it's very very detailed but basically it's crayon who who does who another boss from
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yeah he's got this this bot is brilliant I leave it like that yeah yeah opbot runs on the on
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IRC and it takes commands where you can do searches and things and and normally there are a
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manner of other cool things so he demonstrates how it can be used to do a topic search
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for the word raspberry so yeah it's it's it's it's very type of yeah so you type
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ogbot ogbot so type og tab and then HPR space ti or ti dashi for probably case raspberry and then
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it'll show you all the raspberry pi episodes and what I use it for is HPR dash eps
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eps works as well and then it will show you if there are many episodes are in the queue
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and it also by virtue of the fact it does that if there are any messages for me it'll
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the ogbot or botly will come up saying oh can you're back online and give me my messages so I
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kill two birds with one stone that's very good he does say he needs to do an episode on ogbot
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oh yes definitely definitely recommend that he does do that so he'll be listening and alpha 32
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left a left a comment on hoarding raspberry pies which measures all jealous and
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his comment is this one's by be easy who had a like a stack of raspberry pies like a little mini
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tar block great show bot it seems the HPR robot voice think you're all she raspberry piss
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so i just made that i do it listening to the to the fact that it did that in the first place
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but this remark was wonderful i just laughed out loud at this one brilliant cool cool cool
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mind you from the pet pedantic point of view it does indicate that the use of apostrophes in
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florals is a good thing sorry you're just strictly yes i must do a show on on this
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it i did test it actually if you put an apostrophe in it does it right so that proves the point
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sorry given some it help here in the background um yes you need to do a show on the
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apostrophes and another one on the you sent me an email on wither weather on weather at one stage
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which needs to be a show or was that a show i don't think i've ever done that it's it's in my
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you have sent me an email dude people i have suffered i suffered from this
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correct emails and i keep trying to find that and uh i can't find the email again and i have to
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go google and then our go look up to go actually and try to find out exactly what it is so if you
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could do a show on wither weather weather we'll find that email and you can just read it verbatim
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so everybody can get a view into your mind yeah yeah we i thought you were trying to promote
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yeah no no no no no it's it's crazy if if you're if you want to know stuff you know i don't want to be
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deliberately using the wrong word i'm not as so annoyed about it that you would just like to see
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you just realize at a particular point in time you're going to make mistakes but i don't actively
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go out of the way to make mistakes so um yep i'll go show on that will be great i want to use an
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repository when to use s that would also be cool it's it's something that i've tried to teach myself
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because i don't like getting that sort of thing wrong so yeah be happy just happy to share
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that you happy to do a show yeah just just i'm comfortable in that area i'm always well i've got
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this database right yeah full of full of show ideas so um you're not going to shut me out you know
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i'm just going to keep on doing them to let drop the only way to stop day is by getting more
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people to record shows and then we can keep them out of the queue so if you don't actually want
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to hear a show like that then you know the best thing you can do is record to show yourself
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and send it into HPR yeah when you look at look at march you see that that bastard did three
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yeah three shows i mean you want to shut him up surely you do yeah is it three or even yeah three
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four or even uh where are they email are they they they they they they they they have you
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mailing list there was no mailing list they were have you not refreshed the the notes like i have
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Dave i have refreshed notes and there they are because i forgot to add them to the thing you know
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|
you're on today but yeah okay then i remembered so we had the sad news that Frank Delaney who was
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uh the host of the ulus rejoice podcast about james joys has passed away a microate sent us
|
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in a message uh to relay that information yeah very sad he seemed as a great great fellow and
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to listening to not i never listened to that particular show but some of his other ones i
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listened to a lot cool oh i'm not cool but okay uh amateur radio roundtable how to proceed
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so i'll read it verbatim as we need to first round table episode is out and since about two
|
|
weeks ago it seems to be good and we need to plan for the next steps i propose this is um this is
|
|
michael myri d elf delta lemma for mike golf mike talking here okay um the first round table
|
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episode is out since about two weeks and it seems like a good time to plan the next steps i
|
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propose keeping using the etherpad which is linked there uh for a call
|
|
ordination of show notes and preparations shall we delete the old content and make it official show
|
|
notes and just keep the link the intention was to have a more european friendly recording time for
|
|
the next one would any of the people willing to participate skiing come up with a suitable
|
|
proposal put it in the pad please in the addition just one second regarding the general schedule
|
|
with the current fill state of the show q hoping that the higher bias level can be maintained
|
|
the frequency of schedule recording finding a free slot waiting for feedback after it's
|
|
out scheduling the next recording light stretch things out unnecessarily the question is
|
|
are we yet prepared to make this a regular show are we willing to commit to more predictable
|
|
scheduling i'm thinking of reserving a show slot every two months targeting recording in the middle
|
|
in between that would leave no room for comments to trickle in until the next recording as well
|
|
as allow a some time to process uh as well as allow some processing time after that what do you think
|
|
just my notes here and continuing on how about occasional including a decoding challenge some
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|
short text that is encoded in the digital mode or some other format listeners can have a take
|
|
on decoding it i have confirmation and support of hpur that's such a site for riddles
|
|
where the correct entry will be recorded and counted is basically possible so do we want that
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in whatever way the roundtable will develop even if it becomes a very relaxed ragtune event i'd
|
|
like to see it a trigger for all sorts of individual shows on ham related topics i further suggest
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|
that someone start a new series what's in my shack this could be a very uh it could be a cool entry
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|
point for amateur radios to start contributing to hpr just tell us about your gear you have in your
|
|
shack what you do with it how to develop how it developed over time if there are any individual
|
|
home brews modified pieces their own story uh you have a follow up show right there now let's try
|
|
not to lose positive momentum uh i felt we had after the first recording and get the
|
|
wheels spinning further regards michael some excellent ideas there i love the what's in my shack
|
|
episode everybody should do that and even if you're not a ham but no a ham you can go round with
|
|
a microphone and record a show with them why do you think that sounds like a great idea actually
|
|
yes yes there's a lot of scope there and then there were some questions because not a lot of people
|
|
replied back to that um although did you get a spam message no problem uh this is uh Steve
|
|
replied no problem with the mail uh failed people failed to respond he's game for it and so forth
|
|
so if you want to get involved in the ham radio thing this is something i would really love to
|
|
see open running and have people contribute to yes absolutely i think we're done Dave i think we're
|
|
done yep yep i think i'm there's anything else no okay so tune in tomorrow for another exciting
|
|
episode oh hacker pop pop pop pop pop like radio gonna snow and share the self where you'll be
|
|
free hacker you'll be free seeing with me joyous now and share the software you'll be free hacker
|
|
you'll be free i said now joyous now and share the software oh you'll be free you'll be
|
|
free you know all right Dave good bye yeah oh no comment no comment bye bye can goodbye Dave
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you've been listening to hacker public radio at hacker public radio dot org we are a community
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