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551 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
551 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 911
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Title: HPR0911: Hobbies
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0911/hpr0911.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 04:49:03
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---
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Hello, welcome Hacker Public Radio audience. My name is Mr. X. Why you Mr. X you ask?
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Well, primarily due to lack of imagination on my part.
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Today I thought I would give you a briefest of the hobbies I've had over the years.
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I hope you find it interesting, and if not, I apologise in advance.
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The hobbies I'm going to cover are playing musical instruments, electronics, radio and computing.
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Right from an early age I was driven to find out how the things around me worked.
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As a small child I was always taking things to bits, quite often not being able to put them back together.
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Incidentally, if like me you're fast-tested in finding out how things work,
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then I highly recommend the series The Secret Life of Machines by Tim Hunkins.
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It was broadcasted here in the UK in the late 1980s on Channel 4.
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The videos are now available from Exploratorium.
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Interestingly enough, I've heard that the TV series was only aired because the station manager's wife was out of town at the time.
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He thought it was exactly what he needed so he would be able to get some washing done while she was away.
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I guess he was in for a shock when he found out it was actually about the principles of how a wash machine works.
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I find myself driven mostly by things and topics around me which I find interesting.
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A friend once told me that the secret to learning anything is to somehow make it interesting.
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I guess this is probably true, and indeed isn't good advice.
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It's not something I tend to do myself.
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I either find something interesting or I don't.
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Maybe I'm just lazy.
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It's certainly I have been accused of this in the past, as I tend to be rather laid back.
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Although these days I tend to find I get grumpy quite a lot.
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Perhaps this is an aged thing.
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I am a mid-forties you know, and I'm turning into a bit of an old fart.
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If you're being forced to learn something which is particularly boring, find some way to make it interesting.
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I have a luxury of only following topics I find interesting.
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Since at this time of life, I am not being forced into some academic course.
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Anything I learn these days is self-taught, and this is by far a more satisfying way to learn.
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The first hobby I took up was self-learning to play musical instruments by year.
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I gained most enjoyment from the ones which were self-taught.
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I never got fantastically good at any of them.
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I took them as far as I could until I finally got bored with them and moved onto something else.
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I guess again this is either down to laziness on my part, or limitations of talent.
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But as I wasn't out to impress anyone, and did it purely for my own enjoyment, it didn't matter.
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The first thing I learned to play was the piano.
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This I learned as a young toddler.
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The instrument in question was a toy piano I had.
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The story told numerous things by my mother was that she was sitting with her friend,
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who said to my mother that she recognised the tune.
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She said you must be imagining things, but when they both listened I was playing Twinkle Twinkle.
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A few years after this my mother convinced me to take piano lessons.
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This I find extremely frustrating.
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Having to go through the discipline of learning the correct fingering and learning ever so slowly to read music.
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I thought this was a great waste of time, slowly picking up note by note what was to be played.
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The piano teacher only needed to play the piece once, and then to her frustration I could then play it back,
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much easier or so I thought.
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Of course now in hindsight I can definitely see the advantage of learning how to play properly.
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However, would it be as much fun?
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Who knows.
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I just know I enjoyed playing things by ear and not from musical notation.
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Here in chronological order are some of the instruments I learned to play to some limited degree.
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Piano, electric red organ, recorder, pipe bandrums, coordinate, mouth organ, ocarina, e-flat horn, flute, synthesiser, accordion.
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For the most part this is a hobby I've let fall by the wayside, and it used to be something that I got great enjoyment from and was a big part of my life for many years.
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I guess that it's the natural order of things, I just had to get bored with it once I found I could only take it so far,
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or maybe more accurately it was just too lazy to take it further.
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My earliest memory of being interested in electronics was when I was a young boy.
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An angle of mine explained to me about how Christmas lights were wired up in series.
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And explained that this was the reason why all the lights go out if one fails.
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This had done to an explanation about lights wired up in parallel, and finally onto Ohm's law, I was hooked.
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He used a very simple diagram which consisted of an equilateral triangle which was split into three sections.
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The top section had a V, which represented volts. The bottom left section had an I, which confusingly represented current.
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The bottom right section contained the symbol R, which represented resistance.
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He told me that if you know two of the items in the triangle, then you can always find the third.
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He uses the diagram by putting your finger over the item you don't know.
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Obviously the whole idea of the diagram is a little difficult to appreciate in audio,
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but it's a fantastic way to see and understand the relationship between voltage, current and resistance.
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Much easier than having to remember three separate formulae, you just remember one diagram.
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For many years I self taught myself electronics, dabbling in all sorts of things.
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There's nothing like playing around with bulbs, batteries, various switches and resistors,
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and a like to truly appreciate the fundamentals of electricity, and how all the components interact with each other.
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I always think learning is so much easier and enjoyable when you have a practical application for what you're learning.
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Theory is all very well and indeed very important, but for me practical experimentation is much more rewarding.
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Like Mr. Gadja, I too had a chemistry set, and a low I played with it a little, it never really caught my attention.
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I also had a few electronic sets, these I found much more fun.
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Many years later in high school and again in college, I came across Ohm's Law, mostly I found academically boring and uninspiring.
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They would take a subject which I loved, and somehow find a way to turn it into something dull and uninspiring,
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and if there was a complicated or convoluted way to explain something, they would find it.
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All through my childhood, and into early adulthood, I strived to become an electronics engineer.
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And what do you know, I did indeed end up, and a job that could loosely be described as being an electronics engineer.
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My actual title as a systems engineer.
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However, I think this is far too really a description, and when you tell people this, they look at you with blank expressions.
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I mean, what kind of system are we talking about? It could be almost anything.
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It seems now to be very fast involved to give job titles, and they did companies themselves, fully non-descriptive titles.
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I mean, what the hell does insignia mean? For those non-U.K. listeners, this was a name given to what is now the post office.
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As you can tell, this name changed with a complete flop, thank goodness.
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The name post office is perfect since it's a U.K. wide set of offices, where you go to post letters and parcels.
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Recently, I visited the local museum, where they had a demonstration of a simple stout your telephone exchange.
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The stout your exchange was a revolutionary breakthrough that was created by a local undertaker in Kansas City, Missouri.
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It single-handedly replaced all the telephone operators around the world.
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The whole faceting story can be found in the Secret Life of Machines episode about the telephone.
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Again, as I mentioned previously, this series is well worth watching.
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The exchange in the museum had an old-fashioned dial telephone placed at each end.
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You pick up the receiver at one phone and dial a number to make the second phone ring.
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One of the members of staff immediately told me of her story when she told the young lad to dial a number on the phone.
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The young lad pushed his fingers into each of the holes and turned, waiting an anticipation for the phone to ring.
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He had never seen a dial phone before and didn't know that you had to turn the dial.
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It was certainly rather funny, but it shows how fast the pace of change has become.
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Sadly, this is another one of these hobbies that I've let slip by the wayside,
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although sometimes I still find it interesting to dabble and let odd thing,
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and I still enjoy taking things to bits.
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Hopefully now, I'm more able to put them back together again.
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I'm not exactly sure where I got my interest in radio.
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My father ran a local sea cadets.
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For international listeners, this is a bit like Cubs of Scouts, but with a focus on boats.
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I myself was not in the least interested in boats.
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Probably much to the noise of my father.
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The cadets met in a long thin wooden shed.
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I went into the shed with a small room full of wonderful old radio equipment.
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Mostly donated X Army stuff.
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My father had no knowledge about any of this equipment,
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and I think for many years it just lay in the back room, literally gathering dust.
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After lots of bleeding and whining, my father grudgingly let me play with equipment.
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Now the time and adult I can fully see why he was so reluctant to let me near it.
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For one reason, he would be busy looking after the cadets at the other end of the shed
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and could not supervise me.
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Secondly, I might break something.
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Thirdly, the equipment was full of high voltages.
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And most of the radios had a flap.
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You could simply lift getting direct access to valves.
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The valves had lethal voltages on them,
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and it wasn't uncommon for bits of the shatters of equipment of this age to become live.
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It's really amazing I didn't electrocute myself.
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So from time to time I was allowed to turn on the radios,
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watch the beautiful glowing valves,
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twiddle the plethora of knobs,
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while trying to understand what each of them did,
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how they interacted with each other.
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This was indeed a rare treat,
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and was something I only got the chance to do very occasionally,
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and for what seemed to me,
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a frustratingly short amount of time,
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but I was in heaven.
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I seem to remember having a bit of a fast nation for intercoms.
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Maybe this was because they are a bit like walkie-talkies, but with wires.
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The reason I didn't have the real walkie-talkies
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was at that point they would have been too expensive,
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but I'm not sure if there was any legal frequency allocation available for that sort of thing back then.
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I had a pair of toy telephones as well,
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which I think I eventually took to bits and broke.
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I think with a real intercom,
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like the type that was used here by the local doctor,
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which led him to buzz through to the reception to ask for the next patient.
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Eventually the cable broke,
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I took the units to bits and broke them further.
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My granny also had an intercom system,
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which was strangely part of the BT telephone she had in her house.
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Her house was above the shop that she and my grandfather owned,
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and it allowed her to talk to the shop down below.
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I think both the shop and the phone shared the same phone line,
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so any incoming calls made both phone ring.
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The intercom phone wasn't really the most fascinating thing my granny had.
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What interested me more was the Teak Mahogany radiogram she owned.
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This consisted of a record player and radio.
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It was a huge big affair,
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perhaps half as long as a family car,
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or at least it seemed that way to me.
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The Teak Mahogany was polished like a mirror,
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the whole unit stood on four sturdy legs.
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The speakers were at each end and eliminated when the radiogram was switched on.
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I presumed the radiogram was full of valves,
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as when you initially switched it on, the unit was silent,
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but after a few seconds, gradually the sound would appear,
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as if someone was inside slowly turning the volume control up.
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This was caused by the fact that valves need to heat up before they can operate.
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The amazing thing about the radiogram was that never before,
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or since, have I heard from any hi-fi,
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a sound so rich and mellow,
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but maybe I'm recalling it with those tinted ear drums.
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The first set of real wireless walkie-talkies I owned operated on 49 megahertz.
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They were really just toys and a fairly limited range,
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but I still had great fun with them.
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The range was about as far as you could shout.
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The other limitation they had is that they did not contain squelch circuit,
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so every time the talk button was released,
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the sets would produce a loud continuous hissing sound.
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Around 1981, I got a set of CB walkie-talkies.
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These had two whole channels to choose from,
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and also had a squelch circuit,
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which silenced the receiver when the talk button was released,
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and produced a massive 300mW of power on 27 megahertz.
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The range of these was many times greater than the toy walkie-talkies I had.
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I eventually progressed to a real CB,
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and through this made many friends.
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From CB, I progressed to amateur radio.
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There are so many interesting things you can do with amateur radio,
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such as speaking to astronauts on the International Space Station,
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bouncing signals of satellites, bouncing signals of the moon,
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speaking to people all over the world through internet gateways via RF links,
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playing with high-speed microwave data links,
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sending TV signals over fast scan and slow scan,
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numerous data modes, digital included audio,
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talking all over the world using the HF band,
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take part in contests,
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and many, many more things far too many to cover here.
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I had to sit and pass the city and guilds amateur radio examination
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in order to allow me to transmit on the amateur radio bands.
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I befriended a local TV repairman in the area,
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and I think it was him that encouraged me to go for the test.
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A magazine at the time was doing a set of articles called
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How to Pass the Radio Amateurs Examination.
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I think they had an article each month on it Christmas,
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a special edition came out that pulled all the articles into one,
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and this is exactly the magazine that I purchased.
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It was a crash course, and I think I studied for one month and passed the test.
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What made it easier for me was that a lot of the course materials related to electronics.
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Two levels of amateur radio license existed in the UK at this time.
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These were class A and class B licenses.
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The class B test mainly consisted of RA and electrical theory.
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This allowed you to operate within the VHF and UHF part of the spectrum.
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To get the class A license, you also had to study and pass a Morse code test.
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This allowed the operation within all parts of the amateur radio spectrum.
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I never seriously learned Morse code.
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Again mainly due to laziness or lack of interest.
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This meant I became a class B amateur,
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and was restricted to VHF and UHF operation.
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Again after many years, this hobby has lost some of its excitement for me.
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However, just when I thought I would lose all interest in it,
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the license in the UK changed,
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and amateur radio operators were the class B license,
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were given a full class A license.
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This gave me a bit of a new interest,
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but was a bit of a dilemma for me.
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I did not have an aerial setup for HF operation.
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Setting up an HF antenna can be problematic,
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since it can take up quite a bit of space.
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This is because the HF part of the band by definition operates at a lower frequency,
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and as your frequency goes down, the wavelength goes up.
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Incidentally, a triangular diagram just like the voltage current on resistance
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can be used to find the wavelength or frequency,
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as long as one of these is known.
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I won't worry with the actual details.
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I had an even bigger problem,
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because I had no HF radio equipment.
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I started looking at shiny magazines,
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and for some strange reason,
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I decided to go from ultra-modern, ultra-wide band,
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ultra-small, ECU FD817.
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I was going to use this as a base station radio.
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I must have been mad.
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I should have known better, but I didn't.
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It was indeed a miracle of modern engineering,
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and the technical abilities of this small device was guffsmacking.
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It covered all the amateur bands,
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and general coverage received capabilities.
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I had no problem updating the radio,
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but somehow it just wasn't satisfying,
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particularly as it was never designed to be used as a base station radio.
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All this changed when I swapped it for a much older Kenwood TS940S base station radio.
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It was an absolute joy to use,
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and in fact still is, as I am still the proud owner of it.
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All the controls have a satisfying weight to them.
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The front panel is not plastic, but metal.
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It just looks a fantastic build quality to it.
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It has no rear filters and noise blankers
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that can be selected to help remove noise from a signal.
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He's actually work, unlike the filters in the Micro 817,
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which seem to do nothing.
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Almost any device designed to do many things as I compromise,
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just think of a Swiss Army knife,
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where it's immensely useful in an emergency,
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and it's no winner's good as having an array of custom made tools,
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made specifically for one job.
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To some extent, I personally feel the same way about mobile phones.
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For me, a phone is something for phoning.
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Once you add an array of functionality to it,
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the phone itself becomes a compromise.
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It ends up being bigger than it needs to be,
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heavier than it needs to be.
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It becomes an all-around purer phone.
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However, if you want a multi-function device,
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then the modern smartphone is immensely useful.
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I have a very old Nokia phone.
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It has a battery life many times longer than any smartphone.
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It is lighter and smaller than its most modern smartphones.
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The ringtone uses a pdelectric device,
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which is not capable of producing polyphonic ringtones,
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but is much, much louder.
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A mobile phone, by definition, is most useful
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when you are out and about.
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It rather defeats the purpose of the phone,
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if you can only hear it when you are in a quiet room.
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I could go on, but I won't,
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and I apologise for my rant.
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Remember I am an old fart, and that's what all farts do.
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Everyone has different priorities,
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and you pay your money and you take your chances.
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From time to time, I still very much enjoy my radio hobby,
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but it's been far more time-lusting than transmitting these days.
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For, for computing.
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In the middle of my career, I nearly ended up in IT,
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but thanks to a decision made by my boss,
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that I suspect was purely selfish,
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in which utterly stunned me, I ended up staying in the electronics.
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In retrospect, this was probably a good thing,
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but I didn't know it at the time.
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Our own local site had its own IT staff,
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and over the years, I saw that they were not being treated terribly well,
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and when our management decided that IT was not part of our core competencies,
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IT was outsourced.
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At which point I was truly glad I had not switched careers to IT.
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The other advantage to not having a career in IT
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is it doesn't spoil my love of the hobby.
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I am free to follow any area of computing I choose.
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The thing I enjoy most about computing is tinkering.
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I was never really interested in games.
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The first computer I owned was an Amiga 500.
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I spent endless hours tinking with it,
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especially since its file system was far from robust.
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Something I was to learn a few times after I upgraded the computer,
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and installed a scusy hard drive.
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I'd have the whole thing working nicely,
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and then bandwidth would crash,
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and the whole file system would be corrupted.
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I needed to be rebuilt.
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From memory, this only seemed to happen
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once I installed external scusy hard drive.
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The computer booted from the hard drive,
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briefs to this the computer would booted from a 3.5-inch floppy disk.
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If you're interested in finding out about early computing,
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and enjoy seeing historic footage of early computers,
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then check out the Secret Life of Machines episode
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about the word processor.
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My next computer was an IBM PC clone.
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I think it was a 486DX2 with a speedy 66 megahertz processor,
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and a massive 4 megabytes of RAM.
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I think it ran DOS 3.3 and Windows 3.1.
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I enjoyed creating various DOS scripts, known as batch files,
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and tinkering with various configuration files,
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such as autoexec.bat and config.sus files.
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In the middle of this, I came across Linux,
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the front cover of a computer magazine.
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From my memory, it was Red Hat 5.2.
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I was able to install it as a dual boot system,
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but it was all a bit of a mystery to me,
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and I really never found a use for it,
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and at the same time I was still finding Windows interesting.
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As time progressed, I slowly began to find
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that each successive version of Windows
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had more and more of the nuts and bolts hidden from the user.
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For straightingly, they would try to automate things.
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I'm all for automation, but only when it's fully controllable,
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and when in history can be turned off.
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By Windows XP, computing started to become boring.
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I rediscovered Linux, and was able to tinker again.
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It was great.
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Like many people in Linux flavor, I chose was Ubuntu.
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I read from cover to cover the book,
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beginning Ubuntu Linux from novice to professional.
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I highly recommend it.
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Once I got familiar with Linux, I moved on
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and started playing with bash scripting.
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I highly recommend the book Linux Pocket Guide.
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Reading through the commands give you a real feel
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of the power of bash, and how the output of one command
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can be picked into the input of another
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to construct truly useful functions.
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The last few pages of the book got me interested in bash scripting.
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I find these bucket books excellent.
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Large books are great for reference material,
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or for further reading.
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But sometimes I think some large books
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are just padded out for the sake of it,
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with unnecessary clutter,
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making it difficult to see the wood for the trees.
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I did the very same thing when I started learning
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how to create those batch files.
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The book I chose for this incidentally
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was aptly named the concise book of MS-DOS.
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After reading a few tutorials on the net on bash scripting,
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I bought the book Wicked Cool Shell Scripts.
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This is a great way of exploring real-life useful examples
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of bash scripting and action.
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It does not take you from novice to expert,
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rather it gives you examples of complete scripts,
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which you can explore and understand,
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so you are able to then modify them
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and take them to bits for your own use.
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This is what I enjoy so much about Linux.
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There is so much hidden depth to it,
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so many interesting layers,
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it takes the complexity that makes it interesting.
|
||
I am all for making things easy.
|
||
I myself often use a graphical user interface
|
||
to get things done.
|
||
This is fine as long as the hidden complexity
|
||
is not shut off from the end user.
|
||
In a previous version of HPR,
|
||
Mr Gadget mentioned about getting things going again.
|
||
In Britain we have a similar problem to America.
|
||
Like Mr Gadget's,
|
||
I don't see the next generation getting the chance
|
||
and encouragement that would start them
|
||
on the road to gaining a passion and interest
|
||
in electronics or computing.
|
||
We have indeed all turned into consumers.
|
||
Fewer and fewer people have any idea
|
||
how everyday objects around them work.
|
||
I find this somewhat disturbing,
|
||
even pushed by a little scary.
|
||
As our world becomes more and more complex,
|
||
conversely it becomes less and less robust.
|
||
I am led to believe here in the UK
|
||
most schools are teaching kids how to operate MS Word
|
||
while completely missing the fascinating world of computing.
|
||
Many of the kids having absolutely no idea
|
||
what programming is.
|
||
The project Raspberry Pi is trying to solve this.
|
||
I wish them good luck and every success.
|
||
If you are interested,
|
||
take a look at their website.
|
||
Personally, I am very interested in the Raspberry Pi hardware,
|
||
purely from a selfish point of view.
|
||
I suspect many of you will be too.
|
||
The great thing about this hardware is that
|
||
they will be selling it at almost unbelievable price
|
||
of $25 for the Model A and $35 for the Model B.
|
||
From what I understand,
|
||
the main difference between the Model A and B
|
||
is that the Model B has an Ethernet port.
|
||
The board will run Linux.
|
||
I'd like to use it to replace my aging Xbox,
|
||
which runs XBMC.
|
||
But even if I end up not doing this,
|
||
that's such a cheap price it doesn't really matter.
|
||
You can just have a good tinker with it,
|
||
which is exactly what I enjoy doing most.
|
||
Their website says that the Raspberry Pi
|
||
is a credit card sized computer
|
||
that plugs into your TV and keyboard.
|
||
It's a capable little PC,
|
||
which can be used for many of the things your desktop PC does
|
||
like spreadsheets or processing and games.
|
||
It also plays high-definition video.
|
||
We want to see it being used
|
||
by kids all over the world to learn programming.
|
||
Competing is something I still very much enjoy,
|
||
although I now have a new hobby taking up my time.
|
||
Conclusion
|
||
My latest hobby seems to be producing podcasts.
|
||
Only time will tell how long this will catch my interest and imagination.
|
||
But they certainly have a few other ideas for podcasts,
|
||
which I'll hopefully share with you at some point.
|
||
My hobbies have given me immense happiness
|
||
and satisfaction through the years,
|
||
but the best thing about them is that they are indeed hobbies,
|
||
and I can decide how much attention I want to give them.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed this podcast.
|
||
I hope I wasn't too boring and didn't ramble too much.
|
||
Again, something I've been accused of in the past.
|
||
Finally, the club of music at the beginning of the podcast
|
||
was part of a song I created many years ago
|
||
with the aid of Cakewood studio and a MIDI keyboard.
|
||
And I'll close it at the end for your enjoyment.
|
||
Hopefully I'll be able to do another show sometime in the future.
|
||
If I'm not too lazy, remember it's only a hobby.
|
||
I bid you farewell.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed this podcast.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||
You have been listening to H flor governor ticophic<69>,
|
||
you have been listening to H flor governor ticophic<69>,
|
||
you have been listening to H flor governor ticophic<69>,
|
||
you have been listening to H flor governor ticophic<69>
|
||
was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
|
||
If you ever considered recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
|
||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical and computer cloud.
|
||
HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
|
||
All binref projects are crowd-responsive by linear pages.
|
||
From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs.
|
||
Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons,
|
||
attribution, share a line, read our own license.
|