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358 lines
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358 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 878
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Title: HPR0878: OpenShorts Episode 4
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0878/hpr0878.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:58:08
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---
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Music
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Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, this is Mr. Gadgets, and I guess we'll call
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this one Open Shorts episode for Open Shorts, the podcast, the very infrequent podcast about
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open source and hackable hardware.
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It was my dream once, and I really do have a passion as if you can't tell about making
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things and building kits and things like that.
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And I was thinking that this would be my contribution, of course I never did get it together
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to do more than a couple of episodes.
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So one of my earlier hackable videos, I called Open Shorts episode three, and we'll call
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this an Open Shorts episode four.
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This will be somewhat of a continuation of the discussion we've had over the last couple
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of weeks.
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I think we need more makers, we need more young people being makers, and we need more older
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people getting into makers.
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And when I say makers, I am referring, of course, to make magazine the O'Reilly publication.
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So if you are interested in electronics at all, I would suggest that you might want to
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at least take a look at Maker Magazine because it has lots of interesting projects that
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you can go beyond just the magic black box of your computer and get into actually baking
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electronic circuitry of your own.
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And rather than do kind of a black Friday report or anything like that, strictly the US,
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I will give a briefest of reports that a couple of oddities that I saw.
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It's always interesting to see the odd little accessories that people come out with.
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Quite often, you see them actually in the storage in real life on the Christmas season.
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So see if you can sponsor anything weird like this and report it in.
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I saw two odd little things.
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One was a telephone handset that looked like an old ant log phone telephone handset.
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For those of you who are too younger, remember this, you know, before cell phones, they
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were supposed to connect to the wall, right, and they would have a coiled cord that sometimes
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you got an extended cord, you know, so you can walk all the way across your kitchen or
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something like that.
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And there's a mouthpiece and a earpiece or an ear receiver and that's how you would make
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your call.
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Well, somebody decided they wanted to go retro with their mobile phones and so I hear
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that was the X, he was the X, actually has a cell phone that's built into an old western
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electric phone.
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And so he's carrying it around this old red western electric phone.
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I believe it's the red one and I actually have one of those upstairs in my pile of
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carp.
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It's the nanogram and you see why it's got a cell phone inside so you can make a cell phone
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call from his old style ant log phone.
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Well, they weren't willing to go that far, but there's a pretty much a standard connector
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for smartphones other than Nokia.
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I think Nokia doesn't follow this, but there's a, instead of just tip-ring sleeve for the
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3.5 millimeter connector, which we actually use proper metrics for telephone connectors.
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We don't call them one 30 seconds and one eighth jacks, but I think that was the one eighths
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of an inch jack.
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I don't know, anyway, the, you know, still just having the three connectors for stereo,
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there's a fourth ring, there's a fourth connector, there are two rings.
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So you have tip-ring-ring sleeve and of course the extra connector for the microphone.
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And I believe you can use the same kind of microphones for iPhones as you can for most
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of the Android devices.
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So apparently this would be cross-platform across most of your popular smartphones.
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And so they have that came in even in various colors because just because we want to go
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retro doesn't mean we want, don't want to have our pretty colors there.
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So it came in various colors and it was about 20 bucks, whatever the exchange rate is
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internationally.
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I'm sure you could buy it even cheaper if you were in Bangkok or any of the places that
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have wonderful electronic stories, so I have more direct connections.
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And so in that case we were, we were talking about a, you plugged that into your cell phone
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and then you hold that up to your ear and it would look like you're using old sessions.
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So that was a funny little thing I thought.
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You know, I'll say myself some of those.
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Now some of the other ones though that I did see were the, were, was a really strange
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little cannon device.
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Cannon used to make printers, I mean, it still makes printers, but cannon used to actually
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make a computer or two.
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In fact I believe it was actually cannon that made some of the original parts for these
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original knackentoshes.
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We're all cannon manufactured.
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And there's Gunning Jeff Raskin who was on the original knackentosh team who was really
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a user interface kind of a guy and you should look you up on Wikipedia.
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He came up with just an alternate kind of a, it was kind of like a word processor to
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does everything, kind of a lot e-next, but not with the same list kind of programming language.
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Anyway, his idea was, you know, you should have everything all in the one user interface,
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your database, your word processing, even some calculations, types of capabilities.
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And he came up with a program before he passed once again before his time.
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And so maybe we'll talk about him at some other episode.
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But that was a cannon, I believe it was a cannon cat, which was not to be confused with
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the little cats that were barcode readers that were all the rage that in the 80s.
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So cannon has an accessory here besides just your printer.
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And it looked kind of like a mouse with a calculator put on the top.
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And it was a Bluetooth mouse, tinkey pad, and calculator all in one, 40 bucks.
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Little high, I think.
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But the main reason why I think people like to have tinkey pad is because they're essentially
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tinkey pad experts, they're like touch typists with numbers at the tinkey pad, they know
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where all the numbers are and can give them data, very numeric data very quickly with the tinkey
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pad.
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And this does not work for that because the number pad was too small, it wasn't even
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the right range of it, all those kinds of things.
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So who knows whether they will actually sell of you those or not, but they actually have
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those too on a nice little cannon display, little cardboard you know, sold out display.
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So those are some of the oddities that I found.
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And I did actually manage to get one of the door buster kinds of things here in the Thanksgiving
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holiday tradition of Black Friday that will have what they call door busters.
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And so one of the big door busters that I was actually interested in this particular year
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was a three terabyte USB drive, the free agents from Cgate have this three terabyte USBs.
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And they had an amazing price for the three terabyte drives and normally it would be closer
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to 200 than not depending on sales and things like that.
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And they had it for 100 and I actually found one not by going at 10 o'clock at night or
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earlier camping knowledge in the line for the midnight opening of Beth by to get to it.
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I actually found it in the Beth by at like one o'clock in the afternoon, but it was on
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a shelf where extra just drives were usually stored if they didn't have enough for their
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normal place where the drives would be on the lower shelves.
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Up on a high shelf and it didn't push the back and no one could tell that it was there.
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And I found it in the one o'clock in the afternoon and still got the door buster price.
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So there you go, there are busters without even having to camp all night.
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But what I wanted to talk about, when this open short episode was open source hardware,
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we finally, ladies and gentlemen, finally children, we have open source hardware really coming
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into being true open source hardware.
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And this, of course, is in the form of various MakerBots and RepRap machines.
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And this is the new revolution.
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I attended a session where the person who ran the session at Ohio Linux was way into
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this kind of thing.
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And he had, I believe, a MakerBot, these are usually made of wood.
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And if you go to the magazine site or go to the Maker Store, you can see these.
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It's called a single medic and it's kind of a wooden box with holes kept in it so you
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can see what's going on inside and get to the things that are being built inside.
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And this is the way, with a lot of the stepper motors and electronics involved, that
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moves a platter around, not a platter in the, or, new a table around essentially a square.
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Move around the table, back and forth, underneath an extruder that extrudes plastic.
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So it eats up the plastic and then essentially prints little bits of plastic.
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It's a 3D printer.
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So the 3D printer revolution is upon us and this is very analogous to the PC revolution
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which I actually experienced back in the middle 70s.
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And there are many, many kinds of parallels here.
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In fact, I would put to you that you're better off now as then you were in the PC revolution.
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Number one, because there are more people with the skill sets to be able to do the programming
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to program the 3D printers to do things.
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So there's a place called single-verse and single-verse has a bunch of plans, essentially
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3D instructions for these 3D printers to be able to make these little plastic doodas.
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And right now, of course, it's all about plastic.
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Eventually, we're going to get to the universe that, not exactly what you think of as Star Trek,
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and you order your hot coffee and essentially something along the lines of the transporter
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type of transportation of matter, I think, was involved in that.
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And Captain Picard would say Earl Grey Hot and the chief would order his double-chocolate,
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double-sweet or very things like that.
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But that's just kind of materialized magically, right, in the microwave of the future.
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At least that's kind of what it looked like.
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But that was kind of like transport of technology.
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I mean, they have developed ostensibly in this future time the way to manage the whole
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energy matter and going back and forth between things, right?
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This is more like a printer, except instead of printing ink on a page, it is printing
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the threat level of plastic.
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Not in the future.
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I imagine we will have available for relatively inexpensive prices, things that you can have
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at home that will even be able to do metal of various types.
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But right now, it's plastic.
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And basically the ITS computer, right?
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The model instrument telemetry system is computer that was the first computer kit that
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caused a big computer revolution.
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And was the reason why Bill Gates stopped going to Harvard and he had followed and moved
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to New Mexico, which is where the place Altair, who made the MITF, was actually located.
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And they moved there and wrote the basic computer interpreter for that to be able to print
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and do the rest of the history as far as Microsoft and to a certain extent, the computer revolution
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in general, right?
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Everything was based off of that.
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There were a few little things here and there before that, but that was the first
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code and put real computer, right?
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That's a team available with that 8,000-eighth processor, eight-bit processor.
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And what in today's world would be a ludicrous amount of memory in terms of how small it was.
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But was a huge amount of memory compared to A-frames?
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Or at least equal to what A-frames had.
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So at that particular point, in my mind, I could go back and I could look at the specifics
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of the prices.
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But I'm fairly certain that MITF, because I left an afternoon, I wanted so much to be
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able to afford an MITF kit, but it was somewhere in the range of $800,000 for that kit.
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I may be a little bit high, but I don't think so.
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I think it was closer to the 800,000 range that it was the, you know, say, 600 to 800
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grades.
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Given inflation, which does exist in spite of what central banks want to tell you,
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between 1970s and today, the price of a kit for a 3D printer now,
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is well below in terms of average income.
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And in today's dollars, compared with $19, you know, mid $70, the $75, $74 we're talking
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about here, it is cheaper in terms of the equivalent dollars than those mid $70 compared
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with the average income and, et cetera, et cetera, back then.
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And I think this is going to be as revolutionary in terms of 3D objects as the printer was for
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the printed page and information.
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Now, true, not everybody in the entire world probably has a usage for a 3D printer device
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in their home.
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But imagine not having to stock things in the store, but just going into the store the
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same way you go in with paint.
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And they don't have to stock every color of paint now.
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They just look at your paint chip you're interested in and it figures out what the pigments
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are to mix together to have paint whatever color you want.
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Now, imagine that with parts.
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And instead of having to go to the other parts store and then having all of the parts
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actually in stock, they can actually just print up a part for you.
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I think this is in rural areas, imagine this beyond just rural areas, imagine this in
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something here in Africa where that part might literally be unavailable for any price
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or at their minimum is going to take maybe weeks, two months to get there.
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That's plastic parts now, but do you realize how much of your life is run by plastic parts?
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The insides of lots of things, including lots of things in your car, our plastic parts
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are nylon parts.
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And I'm not sure that we're very far away from 3D printing on nylon.
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And in fact, the ABS plastic that they're printing with is really strong material.
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We have a group here in town that has several of these at the mini-maker fair as well
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as the full-size-maker fair that we had here in Kansas City.
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So I've seen them up close and personal.
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I have handled the parts they made as well as the IOTO limbic stuff.
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And I always have to do in my mind that these are some kind of soft, squishy plastic kinds
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of things that, you know, yeah, maybe you could build up the plastic model, but it really
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would just be that.
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It would just be a plastic model, but it really wouldn't be useful in terms of structurally.
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No, this is fairly hard plastic that use useful in many, many situations.
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And in fact, one of the most exciting things about this is a 3D printer is actually able
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to print out the plastic parts for a new 3D printer.
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So if you own the 3D printer for the more reasonable amount of money than compared with, say,
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buying that first computer kit or any of the computers in the 70s there, up until the
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very late 70s, commercial printers, commercial printers.
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Commercial computers that were coming from someone all put together were towards the end
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of the 70s there, right?
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First one, Apple II, and then candy came out with its computers, and there were several
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other ones that you'd get that weren't in GIFs one.
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They were more extensive than the $600 price, by and large, until some of the color computers
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and candy came in and started low-balling and being more affordable for the average person.
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But in this case, those things weren't able to create another computer.
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Now there was a person who came up with an idea of these were actually commercially available
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for a while.
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Now you got a picture of this before the internet and before MP3 players.
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Like when we all used to play our music on polycarbonate notes, okay?
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So CDs were the norm.
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There was a person who came up with this idea and there was a whole company that had this
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where you would go to the CD store and the CD store could literally stock thousands of
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CDs that were real oddball kinds of CDs, right?
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Independent, things like that.
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What was going to happen with this was you're going to figure out what CD you wanted,
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and it would burn the CD for you on the machine and you'd carry it home with you.
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Now this would be a CDR, right?
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Instead of the Whitney close reliable, the Stan CD or anything like that,
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but you'd have access at the CD store, which was your only way to buy music, right?
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Of a wide variety of things.
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I don't think it was anything technological.
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In fact, I think these guys had a better die system and a more reliable, less scratch-prone
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kind of a way of producing the CDs with the burner.
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Right there in the store, it wasn't a technological problem.
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It was a licensing problem.
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I know how hard it is for you to believe, but the music companies could not get their heads
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wrapped around where it would be an advantage to them to have their old catalog available in
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every CD store in the land. And they weren't going to have that. They were going to control,
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it wasn't that hard to believe. They wanted to control the distribution of the music
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and not have music available in the store.
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I mean, you could have gone and do a convenience store in order to CD.
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Not just those pre-made CDs that you hate, right?
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That they might sell at the convenience store, but a wide variety of music.
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All available from a machine, a little kiosk machine, that would essentially burn it for you
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right there. But the royalties stopped it from happening. With thing overs, it's a totally open
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system. Everything they publish out there is everybody can take it and do with it what they want.
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And there's all kinds of really interesting things. The cheap problem with the systems now
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are they're pretty extensive for people that there was a guy who didn't see it. He didn't get it
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at the Ohio Linux system. He said, well, you know, I think this is a $800 or the rep rap
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was a $800 machine. And he said, well, $800 is a lot of money. What's it good for?
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And he doesn't see the revolutionary aspects. Okay, trust me, it's not going to be as big as
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computers in general. Or maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it is. Maybe it's going to be bigger.
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But we're on the cut of another revolution. And that's another revolutionary wave. And you can
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ride it. So at the very minimum, go out there online, find Make Magazine and start looking at it
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there. You can find lots of sites that talk about this. And I will, of course, have various kinds
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of links that I will send. And Kim, Alan, St. Kenneth of Hacker Public Radio will put them in
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the showdown. And this is the revolution folks. Trust me, this is the revolution. I've seen
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it before and I know what I'm talking about. And there's nothing quite like it. Be in there
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at the beginning of the revolution and participating in any way, shape or form you can.
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You can produce the parts aside from a little bit of
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middle rods that are involved. Okay, there's few middle rods, some threads, some knots that are
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involved. You buy those little hardware stores. And there's, of course, stepper motors that are
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involved to control all this. But the plastic parts, the machine itself can reproduce itself. It can
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produce the parts to build another machine. And people are getting real money for just those plastic
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parts. Okay, there's something here involved called the hobbled boat bolt. Okay, it's a bolt that
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has a dud on it. I don't even understand exactly what it is, but you have to have one,
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right, for these machines. If you've got any mechanical kind of attitude, I've seen people
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throw them hobbled bolts on eBay for $35. I don't guarantee you, there's not $35 worth of bolts
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and nuts and whatever else is involved there. So there's an opportunity here. There's an opportunity
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if you can acquire a machine to print out parts for other machines and sell those hobbled bolts.
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I know because of my practical arts experience, back when I went to junior high, which was seventh
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and eighth grade here in the States, back in the sixties, we had to have a certain amount of
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practical arts. And mine consisted of going to industrial arts class for my seventh and eighth grade
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years. And then I didn't have to do any in high school to fulfill my couple of hours of credit
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that I needed for that. And I know for a fact, my hand-eye coordination and my mechanical skills
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with my hands are not that good. The only thing I got a really good grade on in my entirety of
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those two years was the electronics class. Of course, when we were starting the other parts to build
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circuits, and of course I built every circuit that was involved in the class inside of the first
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months of the quarter, I think, and then there were several months that I just did extra credit
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for other circuits and things like that. That was really decent. Great I got. And I know from my
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model building, I'm not the best in terms of my mechanical skills and all that type of thing.
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So I'm not even sure I wouldn't buy pre-cut, you know, versions of the rod, the straight rod empty,
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the rod that is threaded. There's all kinds of possibilities where you can jump in,
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you can start producing things and spreading it around. And I'm not sure you're going to
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make a living at it, but you'd probably be able to buy yourself a bigger machine.
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There's all kinds of interesting things here. In fact, what I'd like to see is every single,
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every single machine out there, and every single time you print the parts for a new machine that
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you sell, you print an equal number of parts for a machine that you can donate to a school.
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And I think every school, not just every school in the US, every school is your every school on
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the planet eventually should have a 3D printer. And yes, there's a computer involved that runs
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the small amount of electronics that's on the board that runs the stepper motors. And yes,
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we have to figure out how to get the stepper motors. But, you know, once we start getting the
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plastic parts, and the other is that we can figure out a way where, you know, maybe every six
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machines parts will get you enough money to buy a stepper motor, and eventually you can have
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the entire kit. Stepper motor plans everything and you can donate it to a school.
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Every school should have one. And even for the schools that don't already have a computer,
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the kids will have running the software. It's not going to, we're going to be able to get that
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software running on practically anything. That Raspberry Pi that they're working on over at
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Cambridge, it's going to be able to run this software. That one top per child could probably run
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this software. It's just a question of porting it. Okay, so computing platform is the cheaper
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and we have the ability to have a system where I speak into the hymn of people who can learn
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how to do 3D printing and can then go with that. And who knows where we can go.
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Eventually, we could be having 3D printers that could be revolutionizing the way we make all
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kinds of things in our lives. And you're right at the beginning. You're right at the cut.
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And it's going to change things. And pretty soon, that guy who said, well, that's a lot of money.
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What's the good for? He is probably going to look back on that and realize what if we save it that
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was. But you know, it's hard to see it from here. And it's hard to see it anytime there's a
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singularity. Okay, and I'm not talking about the big singularity that Kurzweil talks about.
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You know, the transhuman singularity that that Werner Vingy or Vinge, however you pronounce it,
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actually wrote about in Peace War, which is an excellent novel you should read from the 70s.
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I'm not talking about that, but what I am talking about is little singularities that on the other
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side of them, you literally rethink how you think about the world, okay? Whatever your politics
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or whatever else you think about it, September 11th was a singularity. And there are certain
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differences in the way we think about things now that we really can't conceive. We could not
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conceive of that before that happened. Okay, the micro computer revolution was a singularity.
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Before that, there were a few people who had an idea about how cool computers were,
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but that was all big iron, or at least mid-size iron. You know, Bill Gates never touched the
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micro computer when he was in school. In high school, he was lucky enough to go into a school that
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had access to a mid-size computer, a time share computer, right? And that was the access he had
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to the computer system. And that was the access that already had the computer system there.
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It was especially people, and it was a specialized kind of a machine. And at the time, he literally
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could not figure out why anybody would need a computer in and out. Okay? Everybody knew what a
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computer was for. Everybody knew why it is you would get into computers, and what you would do
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with computers. And then micro computers came along, and pretty thin, there's computers everywhere,
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and there's computers and everything, and it changed the world. And this is another one
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that's going to change the world. And you can get on that now. Truly open source hardware.
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And that is open shorts. That's the floor. Links will be on the web page now, get both of them
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and if they're not, well, I'm going to get those out to you, then we're going to have those
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ready. And of course, you can always contact me. Tell me that I am full of carp,
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mangram, or agree with me, or tell me what you think about this open source 3D printing revolution
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here, or what other kind of oddball thing it is that you saw in your Christmas shopping this
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year. What kind of crazy tech, right? Have you seen out there just the strangest thing? Who is
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never going to buy that? You know? Because we need more shows, people. We need more shows.
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So, what are you shopping for this Christmas? What kind of odd thing did you see when you were
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shopping this Christmas? What do you think about open source hardware? All those kinds of things
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you can, of course, send me email to hbr at mrgadgets.com and get ahold of me that way via email. And
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until next time, this is Mr. Gadget. And I am out here on trailblazing to find out the latest
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things that I can about open source hardware to report that back to you. And until next time,
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this is Mr. Gadget. Say it and be careful out there.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday and Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical and
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computer cloud. HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com. All binref projects are
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crowd-responsive by linear pages. From shared hosting to custom private clouds,
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go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs. Unless otherwise stasis,
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today's show is released under a creative comments, attribution, share a line, read those
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show license.
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