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650 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2916
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Title: HPR2916: HPR Community News for September 2019
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2916/hpr2916.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 13:15:47
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---
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It's Monday, 7th of October 2019, and this is HPR Episode 2916.
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Entitled, HPR Community News for September 2019.
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It's part of the series HPR Community News, and is hosted by HPR Volunteers, Gabrielle
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Levenfire, Jung Baton, Dave Morris and Ken Fallon. It's about 68 minutes long and carries an
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explicit flag. The summary is HPR Volunteers talk about the show's released and comments
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posted in September 2019.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hi, everybody. My name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of HPR Public Radio
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today. The exciting Community News for September 2019 and joining me tonight are live from the
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US of A.A. Presume. Gabrielle Levenfire. And the lowlands of Holland.
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Ah, this me, Gerald Baton. Hi. No, that's me, Ken Fallon. Oh, you too, of course. Oh, I'm
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sorry. Technically, I'm in Boston. We're one meter above sea level, so I guess I wouldn't
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qualify as the lowlands of Holland. I'm from the North Scotland.
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Very high heels of Scotland. Dave Morris.
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And you're listening to the Community News Show. The Community News Show is a show that we put
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on every month, basically random people come on and talk about the shows and anything else that's
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been going on the HPR community vis-à-vis the mailing list and stuff like that. We traditionally
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start this episode with a welcoming new host. So Dave, can you do the honors, please?
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Well, yes, it's a pretty short list of zeros. I'm afraid I'm going to host this announcement.
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Oh, how is that possible? How can it be? I don't know. Oh, man.
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More than shame. Can you imagine being there listening to this episode thinking, gosh, I could have
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done the show. I could have been that host if I had only tried. I'm not hungry. I'm just disappointed.
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That there are so many people always saying, oh, I have a show idea. I should make a show. Well,
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do it. How hard can it be? Look at me. I did it. Can did it. Dave does it. Lots of people do it.
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Okay. Gabrielle. Yeah. Gabrielle as well. Absolutely. Come on. And there are so many topics.
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So, so, so many topics that we want to hear about. You know, we just got to just got to pick
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up a mic and do it. That's all put in the time. Okay. So, so let's go through the show's
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for last month, starting off with two eight nine one, which was the HBO community news.
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And we'll skip past that one because nothing really important. Oh, no. Oh, no. I think that one
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was solo, wasn't it? No, it wasn't. And there was a certain joke in there that I will reference
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later on. Be a rest assured. Okay. I was there. That even and completely forgot about the
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community news sitting over there. Poor old Dave had to go by himself. Oh, dear. Dave, Dave.
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I was sending frantic messages. Can you join me? What's happening? Oh, well, I'll just do it then.
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Excellent stuff. But you did it a lot faster than the ones that I'm on. So obviously, you should
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be taking over. Well, it's conversation. It's conversation. That's the thing. I think
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conversations what people like to to fair degree. So, you know, but I didn't couldn't talk to
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myself all that much. Well, you know, it doesn't make it more lively. But, you know, it's always good
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to hear from you anyways, Dave. So, you know, thank you for holding up. Thanks a lot. So,
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I left a comment, which is copyright from the Blues Brothers. Both, yes. And then John Colp says,
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heroic effort. Great job on the community news, Dave. Thanks for stepping up and flying solo.
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To reach out, I replied, thanks, John. I was slightly shocked at being there on my own,
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but have ridden shock kind of a few times now. I've done a few shows with other co-hosts. So,
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I didn't panic. It's my only face. Glad I turned it turned out tolerably well. Now that Ken has
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been released by the Dutch mafia slash Yakuzzer slash aliens, we'll hopefully be back to normal next time.
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Cool. So, the following day, we had Star Drifter RPG playtest part D.
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So, I've come to like this series. I'm a bit of a gamer myself. So, I've been enjoying hearing
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some of these live playtests, but it's also been really fun to hear about how, you know,
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the different opinions people have on, you know, the mechanics of the game and how they would
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rather see them come together or not. So, it's been fun. I love this entire series, but I leave
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my comments to the very last episode. Yeah. Yeah. It's quite interesting to see how the
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sausage is made, if that's the expression. It's good to see behind the scenes a little bit.
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I'm not much of a gamer, but I'm quite enjoying just sort of being a fly on the wall here.
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Yeah. A fan, definitely a fan of David Collins River as work too. So, you know, seeing an RPG,
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you know, built around it is going to be kind of fun. Well, I love his universe. I must say
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absolute nailed it for me. This is what science fiction is about. So, the following day, we had
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what's in my box park gear and in my bill finished just like a tar pedal from Tim Timothy
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Sentum. And he basically fixes some issues in there. I'll jump straight to the comments on this,
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which came from Tim Timini himself, the trouble pedal. Hi, in my bill. Glad to hear you
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got the trim pedal working. It came from eBay. If anybody wants to try and build one from scratch,
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just search for DIY tremolo pedal, all case with 3PDT switch and 1590B. I may grab one for myself,
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but first I'll go to finish rebuilding my guitar, which I promise to record a show on HPR about.
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Nice try, nice try. John, shall I do the next one? John Colt says, no delay bill. Thank you so
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much for closing the loop on this project. You really left us hanging with part one of it.
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Very glad to hear that you got it working. I'm sorry to report that I ordered a similar kit
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from China for a digital delay pedal for about $20. And after assembling it, all I got was allowed
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and couldn't even get the case to close right. I don't think I'm cut out for assembling small
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electronics. The instructions are exactly like you are simply a photocopy of the circuit border
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about any real instructions. And in my bill replied, hit and miss. Thanks for cluing us in on the
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source, Tim Timini. John, these things are tricky. Are a trick actually. I really think some
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manufacturers order $10,000 plus of these from China assembled, then broaden them all for resale.
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The fact really making them might as well sell a kit with all the parts and make some money
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on the side, smiley face. However, you're left to your own figure, figure the thing out. Then again,
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I do like a challenge. It was a fun project. At least a different cost and price of a new
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microscope, which what happened with my $15 thing I sent to. And the following day we had
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repairing a musical instrument case. I talked about repairing a case for a Vietnamese
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done throne. Is that how you pronounce that, Dave? All right, it's the way I pronounce it. I'm
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not sure how you pronounce it in Vietnam, particularly, but yeah, that'll do. I'm sure.
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Yeah, I've never heard of this instrument, but it was I was really excited to hear him
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test it out at the end because after, you know, it was all about the case, but the instrument sounded
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kind of neat. Yeah, it did, didn't it? It's just like the China, there's a Chinese equivalent, I think,
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which is like a sort of zither type of thing with lots and lots of strings that you play with
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fingernails or with the plectrums on your fingers. I've seen people at the Edinburgh festival
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playing these things in the street and stuff. Amazing, absolutely brilliant. I have to say that
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I just like these, you know, repairing something in both, you know, the last episode with
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in my bill, and this one, I just love the, you know, hearing people repairing things in their
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shop. The background noise just, it's really fun. But, you know, the other thing that's that I
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think just sometimes is hard to quantify is just, you know, hearing people go through the thought
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process of what they're, you know, what they're fixing, how they're, how they're troubleshooting
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issues as they come up. Sometimes that also, you know, I find that educational without, you know,
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just a very subtle way. So I love hearing those sorts of things.
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Well, it's great to hear somebody who looks at a problem and goes, I'm sure I can find a solution
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to this. And they do, you know, because it makes you perhaps review things that you yourself might
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might look at and think, right, that's, that's to be thrown away. Certainly, that's the case with me.
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I'm much more inclined to have a go at repairing things over here or other people doing it.
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Yeah, definitely 100% agree there. So the following day, we had the work of Firefighters part to
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the introduction to the work of Firefighters, pretty disappointed in this episode. To be honest,
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the guy didn't really try. I commented on this, very disappointed. Just walked around the neighborhood
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and all four have a car parked over it. I was hoping that the solution would be to cover
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fire hydrants would be to crush the cars, but the last yours annoyed.
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Yeah, well, may I humbly insert my comments on that?
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Yeah, being the guy making the podcast. So I put in some effort, I made a podcast, I uploaded
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and this is not the first time this is happening to me. Imagine last year, Adolf Camp,
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Dave comes to me, will you please put your convert your talk into a podcast? Yeah, sure, why not.
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I uploaded and the first comment I get, I wasn't yours, was somebody else. The first comment had a
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title. Now, this is embarrassing. Imagine me reading the title of the comment as a first podcast
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saying, stating, now this is embarrassing, turns out in his contest, then he goes on and says,
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I've been thinking about myself for years and I never did it and now you beat me to it and
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great things. Okay, great, thanks. But, you know, the effect of the first title is not to be ignored
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here. And thing happens here, I know Ken and we had a lovely dinner sometime ago, we should
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repeat this as soon as possible. Yeah, but imagine me reading again the title of this comment,
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stating, disappointed. And I'm like, oh, okay, what did I do wrong? Turns out I didn't do anything
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wrong. He was disappointed by you were disappointed Ken by walking around the day. But
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um, that's not the impression that was not my first impression as you might imagine.
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Indeed, and for people who haven't picked up on the show, it was an excellent episode by our good
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friend, Yuru, who was about my tier. No, but it's very good episode, like particularly
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one. Why you don't turn, why you don't go in like waterholes is blazing into a house.
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And one of the comments I had was on the previous episode was, you know, what happens if
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fire hydrant is covered? Yeah, there was a car park there and Yuru says, yeah, well, there's
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plenty of water in the truck. And, you know, by the time that runs out, they've rigged up houses
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to some one, some of the cars that's available. However, yes, I was actually in the neighborhood.
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In your neighborhood, they are covering the underground water.
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Yeah, the car park. Yeah, but they're not allowed to park there, right?
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They're not, but they do. But they do. Yeah, okay, but so from a
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government planological kind of view, there shouldn't be any forecast parked on top of the
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fire ends. Yeah, they do. And so it's illegal. And but didn't you say that they were starting to
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what's the word for it? Make a citation for those cars? Yeah, I was there one day and there was
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fire inspectors walking around with the car and they were noting how many were covered.
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Yeah, because it's something that they took that were pretty seriously. Yeah.
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See, you know, I think all of us were really hoping to hear from this episode that, you know,
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this is why we reinforce the front of the truck so we can just ram those cars out of the way.
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Well, there are hydraulic scissors and hydraulic sprays. And it's total fun to play with that and
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crush cars. When whenever possible, I won't deny it. But no, on average, I haven't had the
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experience of having cars parked on top of fire hydrants in the 10 years that I was a volunteer.
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So I really couldn't say what would happen. But I'll address this in the next part of this
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series. So just imagine you have a whole neighborhood where all the fire hydrants are covered with
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cars and what then, what's the solution then? I'll cover that in the next part of this series.
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Detuned. Yeah, exactly.
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I knew you Steve had the comments. Do you want to cover that? Yeah, I'll do that one.
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Said volunteer firefighters. You said that you're a volunteer firefighter and I'm wondering if
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most firefighters in the Netherlands are volunteers. In the US, there are volunteer
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departments for sure in rural and small town areas. Most of the medium to larger cities have
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fire departments where the firefighters are employees of the city or county. Do not answer
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that question here. Thank you. Yeah, really? Shouldn't I just? Well, just a little.
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Oh, well, we keep increasing the suspense then. Make it a cliffhanger because this while
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I will also address in the next part of the series. And well, it's a little busy over here.
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Otherwise, I will be recorded the third episode. But I'll we'll try to do that as soon as possible.
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I promise. Thank you very much. The following day, don't waste people. We don't waste shows and
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comments. Thank you very much. The following day, Orange Pie Zero LTS version. This was by
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GWP and he went through the Orange Pie Zero. Anyone have any comments on this?
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This seems like a pretty interesting device for the money. It was my impression. I hadn't really
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been following the Orange Pie, but this one is a is a small device and quite cheap. And yeah, it looks
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looks I was almost tempted to go out and buy one to be honest with it, but then it would sit on
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a shelf and look at you. So I didn't. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, of course, but there are so there are so many
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good ones of these that are, you know, we could you could pick up every time I hear one of these,
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I have to like, you know, take a step back. Okay, okay, okay, step away from the credit card.
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I have so much hardware that I never use and it's so much fun to play it. Well, to buy the stuff
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and put it together and then boot it up and when it runs, well, time for the next part.
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Yeah, I did the same and I didn't want to do another one here. I recently bought this
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Raspberry Pi 4 with four gigs of RAM and it has this heating problem and I went looking for
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a solution and I found the fan shim and it's something that you just plug on the GPIO connector
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and there's a little Python program to monitor the temperature and switch it on and it's very
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silent and it well, it looks nice. The combination together with, I don't know, it's some some
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rear case and come to think of it, I could do a talk about it but there's nothing, that's not a lot
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of stuff. So I said, if you're reading my mind. Yeah, well, which part did I could do a talk about it
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or that it's just just not enough. Could you talk about it? Ah, okay, right. Well, it's time
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that I don't have. I'll do that in the next time that I don't have. Yeah, sure. If you do get
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some time, what a lot of our hosts do is make a list and then record, you can record the
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firefighting episode one and then the other one after that. So make a list, do it all in the one sitting.
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Oh, yeah, that's my idea. Okay, good suggestion. Thanks. So the Star Drifter RPG Playtest 3 was the
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following day we'll just jump over the house until we get to the last one. And to Katoruto,
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modeling people in the Spears game. This, although it was Huskow, which kind of went over my head again.
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This was an interesting, I find it interesting the way he's approaching making a game and all the
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things you need to take into account in doing so. Yes, yes, I'd be insight into the components
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of a game like this. I find it enormously interesting. I never really thought about it, never
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wanted to make one, but it's really good to be led by the hand through all of this information I
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find. And the way he's approaching, it makes it interesting that I don't know if it was in this
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one or a later one where he's got, if somebody has brave versus being a coward and I've walked
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a particular time. Yes, but yeah, but yeah, absolutely. So much, so much, it's fascinating.
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I think in years to come when, when kids have been programmed with a Haskell gene that they'll
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be looking back on this gone gosh, that guy was ahead of his time. But I'm still with this
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entire series kind of hoping for Haskell by Osmosis. Yeah, me too, me too. I don't,
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don't detect much of it happening in my case. So the following day we had Endeavour OS, and this
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was Tony Hughes, and he did a show about Endeavour OS, which I would never have considered actually.
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It'd been an arch Linux derivation, but it was a good show I thought. Yeah, yeah, I was intrigued by
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this one. I have to say, I've stopped really looking at, sort of, just to watch and things like that
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because I'm happy with what I have, but I've always wanted to try arch, and this sort of semi-tempting
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me to have a shot at it just to see if I can live with it, you know. So thank you Tony.
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Thanks Tony, Arch, the lazy man's Linux from scratch. So speaking of somebody who sits down and
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records lots of shows in one sitting, I think. Ahuka, with better social media, zero one, an
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introduction. And this is a new series called Social Media, looking at all aspects of social media
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platforms, histories, popularity, and philosophy. And as ever, Ahuka has his own website
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where you can read his blog links and there is basically his posting.
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The text associated with his show. I found this an excellent show. I really learned an awful
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lot of it. And it's take on, on look at social, look at there's more than just Facebook. Well,
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I knew that. I mean, you know, yellow and other, but he really delves into and compares some of
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those. And I find it incredibly interesting to listen to. And in the spare time that I have,
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I don't listen to all the podcasts, but this one, for me, at least, will be stood out.
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Yeah, yeah, agree. I agree. I, this was sort of an introduction to the rest of the series. He's
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put together and made me really look forward to hearing the forthcoming shows too. And I knew
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the existence of some of these, but not all of them. And I don't, I don't really know much about
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what a lot of them do, apart from the odd one or two that I use. So yeah, great, great overview.
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I think it's. Yeah. So I, I hope that he will also discuss at some point. I believe the names
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Okuna. They used to start as open book, but then it stood out. There was an already taken
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name, but this is a Kickstarter project where they promised to make a sort of a Facebook-like
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social platform, but then with building a privacy. So yeah, well, you know, the development needs
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to get paid. So I sponsored, I was on the sponsor for the Kickstarter project. And I, I really hope
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they'll they'll they'll make it. So I will look forward to him discussing Okuna as well.
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Cool. I don't see it on his list, but perhaps. Well, maybe I have the name wrong. Let me just
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check online. I'll get back to it in a few seconds. No worries. In the meantime, we'll move on to
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uh, HPR episode 2,901, which is describing the podcast. I listened to part three. And
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Mr X really knows two things. One, how to make me happy by dragging out a topic to its full
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and complete state. That's number one. And number two, my god, does everybody in Scotland
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over-engineer their their podcast-listing solutions? I thought it was marvelous.
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Unbelievable. Is absolutely wonderful. Yeah, yeah, he's he's a man for detail and I love it.
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It's absolutely fantastic. Yeah, definitely. I think this one came out before you you met up with
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him later day, right? That's right. That's right. Yeah, because when you when that episode comes
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spoiler alert, you keep you keep not wanting to put spoilers to this episode. So having heard it
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was just like not really spoiling. So it was cool to hear. Yeah, we were a bit confused about
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the timing of everything at the time. So yeah, but yes, he's uh, wow, he's he's got a lot to say.
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We had a such a long chat. We had to that to leave because we all had think we had things to do,
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but it was good two and a half getting them for three hours. I think we were we were there
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chatting about stuff you can imagine. Meet up again and uh, bring another recorder.
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Well, we plan to do another another get together sometime later on this year. We can find
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somewhere a bit quieter to go. Yeah, definitely. No comments to last on that one.
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Following day star drifter part four, following day what is PM EM? I had no idea what this was.
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Uh, so thanks JWP, which is persistent memory, also known as storage class memory.
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Yeah, I'd heard that there were folks working on this and you know, I was interesting to hear
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some updates on this. Uh, if the idea of, you know, how you would design an operating system around
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this kind of memory is, is rather fascinating. I mean, you think about a computer that you can't
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automatically, at least not unless it's designed to you, you can't just reboot it because
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its state never goes away. That's that's kind of neat. Or terrifying.
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Now this is amazing technology, isn't it? Yeah, it uh, I also had never heard of this,
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but I'm looking forward to becoming available on the on the market soon. So there were a lot of
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comments on that show, I don't know. There was, there was, wasn't there? There's a comment on
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was it? Uh, yeah. Oh yeah, there is carry on. You can read that. I just had to do a double take
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there and I wonder if I'd skip to show. Um, yeah, we had comment from Archer 72. He says,
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awesome, I really hope this takes off. It would be a great addition to the next Raspberry Pi edition,
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which is true. My price will have to come down quite a lot before I actually think the Raspberry Pi
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is really, yeah, I think it's early days, yeah, isn't it? So now the next show is DIY URL shortening
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by Flattu. Uh, without software as a service, just on your own domain, putting in a simple
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HGTP Equip Refresh. And uh, to Katoruto says, clever, really clever way of doing this.
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When I saw the headline, my mind started immediately working through all kinds of algorithms
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will could use for shorten URLs, no, for me. Yeah, I bet. Turns out nothing complicated is needed.
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So, uh, yes, it's clever, isn't it? Yeah, I like this idea. We use that on something similar on
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HPR with a, uh, PHP script, but being able to do it with native HTML is kind of cool.
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Yeah, yeah, absolutely. No, I didn't quite know where he was going till he, till he, yeah.
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No, I saw, I dug down into it, listen to the, the talk. Yeah, very clever indeed. I like it.
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And two HPR hosts living in the same region finally meet up. So you could have been talking about
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the podcast part three, because it was already released at that stage. Yeah, yeah. We didn't,
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we weren't sure when we would get the audio together and get it into the queue and that sort of
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stuff, but yeah, it was, um, it was fun. And so this is a good one. This is a good one to listen to,
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too. It's always, uh, just, uh, hearing me, you know, hear you guys on so many shows, but hearing
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people together on shows, this is not, you know, this has happened in other cases too. Just,
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it just adds a different spin. It's fun. Yeah, I would like to listen to this sort of thing,
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because you get a bit more insight into the, the people, uh, if you, in that sort of context,
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it was John, Culpin, Windigo, remember listening to ages ago. Um, yeah, that's right. So, yeah.
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So I was keen to do something like this if it was possible to, to do. And, uh, yeah, it seemed
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to come together. Okay. So, Ken, shouldn't we try to do something similar? No,
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do you remember the restraining order you have against me?
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But I mean, maybe I'm the supervision or during visiting hours.
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I'll give you, uh, during the hours, right?
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The following day, moving swiftly along, feature engineering for draft, data-driven decision-making.
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I imagine there's some buzzwords in there. In this episode, I explained feature engineering,
|
|
now you can use it to make decisions. And this was by our good friend Be Easy.
|
|
Yeah, this was not what I was expecting. It was, no, nor I.
|
|
Yeah, I was expecting something more to do with software, but this was more to do with data mining.
|
|
And I found it very, very interesting as a, as a result.
|
|
Yeah, I was most intrigued by this. I didn't know what feature engineering meant at all.
|
|
But it's, uh, it's the sort of thing I, my son's currently doing a computer science course,
|
|
which involves databases. And he, he was in touch with me yesterday and said,
|
|
Dad, I'm struggling in this lab. Any chance you could help me with this database?
|
|
So he sent me a, a light database, which, and I wasn't going to give him the answer.
|
|
But just faced with data in that form, what's the first thing you do with it? You sort of see how
|
|
it stuck together and you do various simple analyses of it and that type of thing. And I,
|
|
I think I was doing feature engineering at some sort of rudimentary level there.
|
|
You know, just, just getting, what does, uh, be easy say, hacking data to make
|
|
information is what he said, which I thought was very, very, very, very, very, very philosophical,
|
|
actually. Yeah. And it was also nice to see just how with even the barest minimum type of data,
|
|
like, you know, when transactions happen at what time and with an account, just how much,
|
|
you know, you're able to extrapolate from just just, you know, that data if you have enough of it.
|
|
Yeah, very much so. This is a perfect example of something I'm, I'm drilling into people on
|
|
work is, you know, with GDPR compliance. It's, it's not enough to say, oh, I can't identify
|
|
the customer because it takes so little to be able to identify somebody or to be able to narrow
|
|
down and to hone down that it's, it's scary in a way, I should. Yeah, no, that's very true. Yeah,
|
|
it, it becomes very easy to, to, to, uh, pick somebody out just by the signatures that the other
|
|
afternoon, so what they do, yeah. Well, oh, project, I, I, since the last year, I do, I teach kids,
|
|
well, kids, you know, uh, 17, 18 onwards, the who aspire to become a software developer. And,
|
|
so I do Python, I do Java, I do IT infrastructure. Uh, but at some point, I touch on the data,
|
|
hunger and the data, uh, uh, uh, what's your collection, collect collectors instinct or whatever,
|
|
off of those big companies, you know, Google, Facebook, etc. And these people are completely
|
|
ignorant on this subject. And the bad, the only reply I, I get, let's say, this default is,
|
|
I've got nothing to hide. And, and, and they are convinced of it. And they say, okay, sure,
|
|
what's, what's your credit card pin number? Well, I don't think I'm not going to share that.
|
|
Okay. When was the last time you had a doctor's appointment? And what was the subject of your
|
|
conversation with your physician? And did you ever have, uh, an STD? What's the reason for your
|
|
last girlfriend's breakup? What was her name? There are so many things that people like to keep
|
|
private for good reason. I mean, and, and, but they, they, they are not, there is no sense of,
|
|
of awareness on this. This, and it's completely ridiculous. And I see that all the time.
|
|
It, yeah, it is, it is. And I, I would love to see, uh, you know, a series on this and not,
|
|
I'm not qualified to do it myself. So sorry, Ken, I can't owe you a show here. But, um, you know,
|
|
I'd love to see a series on, you know, how just again, these basic, just, you know, when you have
|
|
enough of the data, even though it looks innocent enough, just how much you can infer. I mean,
|
|
we got the surface of it in this episode. I'd love to see more. Yeah. Yeah. Me too. Me too. I,
|
|
I like, I, even with the things I need deeper because I don't should qualify it enough for this,
|
|
but there should be some, maybe a listener who says, well, this is my day job. And, and, oh, please
|
|
do a show. I'd, these do a show about it. So we can learn and we can tell others about it. Yeah,
|
|
Archer 72 had a comment saying it was a nice show way above my head, but a great show.
|
|
So that was nice. So we move on to, uh, Star Drifter Part Five. And there was a comment there
|
|
also from Archer 72 saying it's a nice series. I'm enjoying the series. The banter between
|
|
everybody is pretty cool. Couldn't agree more. This is the last one. Is this the last one for
|
|
this month? No, we're up to 25. No, no, no, no, no, the last, uh, Star Drifter one. Yes, I think so.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Have you gone and listened to the future ones?
|
|
I, I think I'm up to the sixth one now. Um, which was, yeah, just haven't gotten to it yet,
|
|
but it's, it's getting interesting. Modeling options in space came. This was a, this is the one
|
|
that you were talking about Dave, Dave. This was, this was the one with the, uh, the bullying opinions
|
|
and, um, sorry, versus cowardice. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That was the thing you were saying before.
|
|
Yeah. Very good. Am I following him? Um, mustard on. I think I need to do that more. Yeah,
|
|
does post a moderate amount on master and I certainly follow him. In a previous life, I, I looked,
|
|
very, I looked very in detail at, at, um, Haskell. And I'm pretty sure I can understand a lot of
|
|
this, but I, you know, it's one of those things that I, I really think I have to live it for a while,
|
|
to really appreciate, you know, the richness of what he's putting into these podcasts.
|
|
Not just sort of, you know, dip my toe in, uh, but it is, it is, it is always, it's been a nice
|
|
series. Yes, he's dedicated a lot of his time and effort into this. I do applaud him for the
|
|
amount of effort he's put into it because he's, he's, he's trying really hard to teach us Haskell
|
|
along the way of describing his, uh, his, um, the game that he's building, you know, and I do,
|
|
I do applaud him for that. And he's also teaching us the whole logic of how you need to think about
|
|
doing your game. Yeah. Yeah, indeed. I'm not only that, but like other stuff relates it to
|
|
if you're building, modeling a concept, a world, you know, if it's a game or, or something else.
|
|
Yeah, all these things that you would just take for granted, you know, if you were playing the game,
|
|
right, you just, you just, it would blow right by you, but that somebody had to think through these
|
|
things in the first place. Fascinating stuff. I just, uh, joined them, I mastered on them if,
|
|
if his icon is anything like what he looks like in real life, he has a completely different
|
|
vision of him in my head. So, it was the way that it was me. That was always the way. Yes.
|
|
Onyx, basic part three, network fundamentals. Some guy trying to come on here on the network.
|
|
Closer, proprietary technology. Hoping to make a big book. Tippies. Typical, typical. Yeah,
|
|
who let this guy on? I don't know. Although I must say, this show was the first two days of
|
|
anti-sysco training anyone was ever done right there. That's what that show was.
|
|
Oh, good. I'm glad it was, it was clear enough. Yes. Well, I found it very, very clear,
|
|
and not only that, but I also found it very useful. And, uh, you managed to get through the show
|
|
without mentioning the, uh, OSI model at all. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, just point to be
|
|
greedy. Well, you know what? There's a reason for that. Actually, when I, when I learned networking,
|
|
my, my instructor at university despised the OSI model. And so he, he, he actually talked about
|
|
it almost last. So I kind of picked that, ended up picking that up just as a matter of, uh,
|
|
you know, a preference, I guess he, he, he preferred the internet model, which is, which is a
|
|
different layered model. Yes. Um, so to each their own, I suppose. Yeah. I worked in the university
|
|
where we had our own networking protocols in the UK for a number of years. Um, I can't remember
|
|
when it finished actually. I must do a show on this at some point. But, um, and the seven layer
|
|
model was, was hammered out so much until I, I just sort of glazed over listening to it. All
|
|
it was really nice to, when we eventually all decided that we would move to using, uh, IP and
|
|
stuff, although there was a lot of politics about doing that and, or not doing it. It was, uh,
|
|
it was a funny time. But no, go on. Oh, carry on. I was just going to say I love this show.
|
|
It was brilliant. And, uh, I think we need more in terms of understanding
|
|
networks. I have worked in the area of networks to a limited extent. But, uh, and so I knew a little
|
|
bit about this, but I certainly found that it, that it, uh, it helped to clarify things that,
|
|
whether I had gaps in my, in my understanding. And, uh, your toolset is just, just a wonderful thing.
|
|
I'm itching to, I haven't done so yet, but I'm itching to have a, have a play with, uh, with some
|
|
of the things that you were, you were demonstrating here. I only listened to it today, so I'm a bit,
|
|
behind on my print. But, uh, I have done stuff in Pearl where I've, uh, we were writing, uh, an
|
|
I-net-D demon thing years ago. And I've written Pearl clients to go and poke it just to prove that
|
|
it works and that type of thing. But, uh, but I had something like this. It would be a lot easier.
|
|
Yeah. I, uh, one of the things that I really was hoping with the, this in general was that, you
|
|
know, if people that, that, you know, if they wanted to pick up these, these tools that, you know,
|
|
that, that they would work, they'd be able, something that you could work with with other tools,
|
|
that, you know, you don't have to, it, it doesn't all have to be one monolithic thing that you
|
|
just, you know, put whatever, whatever that, so if you had some Pearl tools or you had Hpingery,
|
|
had, you know, that all of these things can, it's just, you know, the more they interoperate,
|
|
the better. I've found, unfortunately, that with a lot of frameworks, they don't, like, um,
|
|
you just end up using, you end up getting stuck in one and not wanting to move over to the other.
|
|
So, I don't know. We'll see. I, um, yeah. So, I, I, uh, I think you said last time that you,
|
|
uh, wanted, you were doing a little network monitoring with them. So, I actually spun off on a
|
|
tangent and, and devise a little network monitoring script. I'll, I'll put that in as a show too.
|
|
Excellent. Fantastic. Yes. Yes. It's, I, it's always interesting to see what weird things are
|
|
happening on your, your network. I didn't realize my router was constantly shouting everything around
|
|
saying, I've got, I've got IP version six, by the way, guys and, and everybody ignored him,
|
|
and they kept doing it all the time as the, the network, the house network is, is almost flooded
|
|
with this. Yeah. Maybe not flooded, but there's a lot of it. For your printer going around saying,
|
|
by the way, guys, I'm here. By the way, guys, I'm here. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's
|
|
quite an insight to be able to see that type of stuff. I love it. Okay. Glad it, glad it, uh,
|
|
it was educational for at least some. Nobody's taken me up on my challenge yet. So, I don't,
|
|
I don't know. Yeah. We, I need to get it working. All right. I, I saw your bug report. I'll fix it
|
|
ASAP. I should, no, no, don't feel free to talk to me about it, because it could very well be
|
|
something that, um, that I'm not doing correctly to get it installed. I wasn't installed on my
|
|
Debbie machine, just not on my federal. Yeah. It's probably a header that I just, uh, I have to say,
|
|
that I didn't know wasn't gonna have the same value. So I'll double check it. Yeah. I will say,
|
|
though, that before, because I installed this tool after your last show and I was thinking,
|
|
okay, well, you know, just somebody in the network's built something. So out of, out of niceness,
|
|
I'll install this offer. But after doing, after listening to this show and seeing what it can
|
|
actually do, I'm thinking, I really need to get this installed, because I can script a novel out
|
|
of stuff from my network, just by doing this. Yeah. Good. Good. And also, thanks for the useful
|
|
information like the snippets of like over this number is reserved under this numbers for that,
|
|
even that packets include this. You, you forget how much you've learned about those. It just sort
|
|
of saved a matter of a matter of, of, of no, just, you know, you just throw them off and you
|
|
forget that you had to learn them at some point. So yeah. Yeah. Okay. Cool. Uh, continue doing what
|
|
you're doing. Well done. There's a comment from Archer 72, who says interesting. I want to say
|
|
this is a very interesting topic. I may not understand it all, but there are many people here who
|
|
would take well to this subject. Keep it up. Yep. All right. We'll do. And that's our social
|
|
metrics, uh, the series from a hookah plus porra. And again, Archer 72 commenting, uh, not show.
|
|
If I was not already on messed mustard on, I would be, this would be an exciting move.
|
|
I'm, I'm definitely enjoying this series. Uh, audio cut out while they were doing the last one,
|
|
but I'm, I'm definitely enjoying these series. And I see a hookah's already got a whole bunch more
|
|
in there. I'm looking forward to the rest of it too. Yeah. This plus porra looks interesting. I'm
|
|
tempted to just go and play with it just to see if it would do anything for me. But, uh,
|
|
don't want to have too many of these things, but it's still fully tempting to, to try this one out.
|
|
The thing about the, uh, open source ones, though, is sort of the floss ones, is that at least
|
|
there's a chance that you'll be able to interconnect them. You know, you're not sitting on, yeah,
|
|
you may only be on, in a pond versus the ocean, that is, uh, what's up or, or Facebook or something.
|
|
But at least you can make a canal to all the ponds. And if we get more people on to their own
|
|
individual ponds, we can, uh, join them up to make a great lake. Okay. Technically, I know you too far.
|
|
Yes. And I said, got strange pictures in my head just at the moment. Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, you know, when you're living below sea level, you start thinking in terms of water.
|
|
But, but not just that too, but on that same note, you know, not just being able to interconnect them,
|
|
but the same idea is you're being able to add, add your own tooling to it, right? You see how,
|
|
you know, you see it has features x, y and z, but maybe you can put in another or, you know,
|
|
I have that, you know, add something to it or just do, even if it's just for yourself, at least
|
|
you have that ability when you have access to the source, right? So that's, that's what I love about
|
|
this. Or you can pay somebody to do it for you. Absolutely. Right. Maybe in beer. Indeed. Indeed.
|
|
So the last one, I think, is that last one this month? It is, yes. My internet connection.
|
|
Well, I'm not going to read this. Dave, can you read this?
|
|
Yes. You mean the summary, a bloviated harang with a smatching of spewed
|
|
expletives while describing available ISPs. So it's just, that was a very, very accurate
|
|
subtitle I have to say. Absolutely. I know it. I love these use of words.
|
|
My first job and then other ones was working for a satellite ISP.
|
|
So, yeah, and everything he says is true. So, so actually, this is something that, that I
|
|
was reminded of in this episode, and maybe you can, you can answer it. Why is the, I don't,
|
|
I understand the speed of light as a cup, but, but I did some math. It can't just be the speed of
|
|
light. Why is the delay so high going up to the satellite and down? Because of the geostation
|
|
we orbit bit. Because it's, right, Elon Musk. And this is an interesting thing.
|
|
Elon Musk is putting a new fleet of promise of a new fleet of satellites into space.
|
|
So we've got the iridium, iridium or whatever, iridium, iridium, iridium, set of satellites
|
|
are off there. And it's essentially for mobile phone use worldwide. So you have,
|
|
it can have a satellite phone, horrendously expensive because you need to pay for the satellites
|
|
on the bandwidth. So the idea there is that you have got a small connection of, of satellites.
|
|
Somebody clicking? You here in the clicking there? I think something on Jury, Jury and End is
|
|
clickety. And the idea there is that instead of having your cellular network fixed and
|
|
your moving, you know, in your car, you have the satellite phones work from the point of view
|
|
that you're fixed and the mobile network essentially is moving over your head. The point there,
|
|
though, is that there can each interconnection between the satellite and the ground station. So you
|
|
need to get to the ground station from the ground station. You go up to the satellite, the satellite
|
|
comes down to your phone, goes back from your phone to the next satellite, goes down to possibly
|
|
another ground station comes back to your, the color. So you have a lot of delays worldwide there.
|
|
Just synchronous satellites, you want to put a satellite dish on your house and to make it cheap,
|
|
you want a small dish and you want it in a fixed position. So in order other than the fixed
|
|
position in the sky, the satellites needs to be in the orbit that matches the, that matches the
|
|
spin of the earth. So all satellites are falling. So you just take a ball into space and they're all
|
|
falling. So it's falling at the same speed at which the earth is rotating. And when you do that,
|
|
it's way out. I mean, way out there. And that takes an appreciable amount of time to get out and
|
|
come back. So that's why you got such a horrendous delay. So for satellite for browsing,
|
|
it's not such a good idea for transmitting large data files at the time the use case was that it
|
|
was useful because you could center by its files over in seconds. Got it. So that's why I was
|
|
surprised when Elon Musk came up with his ideas thinking, hey, what's happening here? Well,
|
|
what he's going to do are the plan there. And I think it's probably other engineers and he's
|
|
taking all the credit. But for as time some people will say, they're going to have a connection. So
|
|
you will connect to their satellites. And those satellites will connect with laser beams to the next
|
|
satellite, next satellite, next satellite, and then drop down to the data center. So you will have a
|
|
zigzag path of light speed connections down to the data center. Oh, okay. Let's make it even
|
|
faster than cable going underground. So that's the that's the deal there.
|
|
Oh, that'll be cool to watch. All right. If in the big knife ever comes along,
|
|
no comments on the show as yes, we expect more next month.
|
|
Yeah, yes. The styling thing is causing the astronomers to to blow a gasket, of course,
|
|
because yeah, they put 64 or something up in the first, the first shot. And it's going to be
|
|
thousands. Yeah, yeah. And it's going to make it incredibly hard to run telescopes and that
|
|
type of stuff automated telescopes that have to then subtract the yeah, the these things as they
|
|
whizz whizz over, you know, it's going to mess mess terrestrial astronomy up quite a bit.
|
|
Yep. So we go over the previous comments. I believe there were three.
|
|
All right, guys. Thanks for the thanks for letting me on. I'm going to have to drop off now.
|
|
Talk to you later. Thanks, Camille. Have a good one. Thanks. Thank you. See you again.
|
|
So there was a comment on one of my favorite episodes, a hacker's perspective on schizophrenia by
|
|
cyclop. And it was by veg, veg worst, veg worst. Yeah. And it was insightful.
|
|
As someone who just started working on a general adult psychiatric ward, I really appreciate it
|
|
hearing what it's like on the other side of the curtain. I will never claim to understand
|
|
what it's like to have such a condition, but I feel like I have a better idea.
|
|
One thing we are taught is that patients with schizophrenia are more often scared than anything
|
|
else before angry violent, dangerous, manipulative, whatever negative precondition you want to put
|
|
in. And your podcast has really confirmed that for me. So thank you. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. Very cool.
|
|
Very cool. Yes. Okay. I'm moving on to eight four four Sony TC222 or real to real
|
|
tape recorder by John Cup. Michael says muffled sound because of low path filtering.
|
|
Hello, John. Late comment, but I have a huge lag in listening. One more explanation of the muffled
|
|
sound when playing back at quarter speed is the inherent low path filtering process of getting
|
|
the sound on the real. Assume the original track contains tone in the 10 kilohertz range.
|
|
These become 40 kilohertz tones in the sped up version. When playing the quick version to record
|
|
them on tape, the player has to correctly reproduce those high pitched tones and the recorder
|
|
has to be able to bring those to tape. Depending on the frequency response of this chain,
|
|
I expect this to be the bottleneck. When playing a quarter speed, the highest pitch you will get
|
|
is only a fourth of the highest frequency of the recorder can handle. Regarding Michael.
|
|
I think I got that. Yeah. I'm not sure I could repeat what he's saying there.
|
|
No, no. Get the chest to the mute. Yeah. Yeah. I got to just. But thanks very much, Michael.
|
|
And feel free to do a show because obviously you have stuff to talk about.
|
|
I've been feeling here. I'm feeling this is somebody we know who has, who is a host, but yeah,
|
|
let's more have more shows, please. And splitting album tracks automatically splitting album
|
|
into tracks in Odacity by myself. And there's a common spy hipster. Thank you, Ken, combining
|
|
combined with YouTube, DL1 can pretty much acquire every single piece of creative comments,
|
|
music one has ever wanted to in a single night with this. You've sped up my workflow considerably,
|
|
also great for breaking podcasts into chunk. If like me, one has a car story with an incredibly
|
|
slow, fast forward, fast rewind function. That's cool. Thanks. Yeah, but don't have that.
|
|
So as a mailing list, discussions, Dave, the community news, oh, yeah,
|
|
passing a 5150, Craigy, that cracked me up. Not in the good way out there.
|
|
I was listening to the IRC comments of podcast panelists as you do text to speech.
|
|
And then just I heard this. I had no idea it was sick or anything. So that sucks.
|
|
Yeah, it's a pretty thing. It's not really. It's a terrible shock. I'd expected him to be going home
|
|
into retirement and beyond. You know, he's been such a prolific and enthusiastic
|
|
podcaster, such a shame. Yeah, I didn't realize he'd been ill. I don't know anything about it though.
|
|
I just took the notice down because honky had posted the show on their Linux logcast show.
|
|
And that we were reposted here. So if you don't get a chance to listen to it on the Linux logcast,
|
|
you can catch it here in HPR. Yeah, they I have actually listened to it and they did a lovely job,
|
|
I thought that, you know, it's a bit of a sort of awake for 50 and lots of respect and affection
|
|
going on there. It was great. It was a really good show. Yeah, you just, I don't know, he just
|
|
did a lot for HPR in the background. It did a lot for me personally, you know, just weird questions
|
|
I had and stuff. And, you know, you could not help knowing 50 and 50. If you listened to any Linux
|
|
podcast in the last five years, you would have heard at least a comment or something. Anyway,
|
|
it is what it is. We have no two RIP people on our on our host page. Yeah, yeah. That's an
|
|
I think that was a great idea to do that, by the way. It's yeah, we want to want to mark them
|
|
out as people who passed on and, you know, just give our respect and put in perpetuity in so
|
|
little. That's the way. It's weird. I was on, um, browsing the Twitter feed for HPR and then all
|
|
of a sudden they got a tweet from Lord Dragon Blue. Oh my god. But it's obviously a subscript
|
|
checking for Fedora News and still posting it to the channel. So,
|
|
weird. You know, Tory Pratchett has a, has a, an excellent thing where, you know,
|
|
as long as your name is, your signal is still in the, in the plaques that you, you,
|
|
you exist somewhere, I think it's a philosophy of a lot of culture. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, yeah, that's
|
|
that's rather nice, isn't it? Yeah. So, you will exist here in HPR where, on archive.org and
|
|
presumably we'll be, we'll be encased in some sedimentary rocks at some stage and people will,
|
|
will know of us, they existed. Mm-hmm. Anywho, we have, um, I was listening to Floss weekly and for
|
|
some time, I've been thinking of, uh, doing, uh, submitting HPR over there and, um, they were saying
|
|
they were short of hosts. So, I put ourselves forward. So, we will be on the 30th of October,
|
|
live at 930, uh, Pacific daylight. So, in California time, which is, uh, 16 30 UTC or 1730,
|
|
here in Hamsterdam area. And as a result, I'm tidying up the website and I'm putting together
|
|
stuff to talk about. So, if there's stuff on there representing HPR, uh, so if there is stuff that
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you feel is important, um, give me a shout. They, things that I'm intent to say so far are,
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when I can't find it. Well, basically, I want to go through some of the HPR pages, namely,
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above who we are, bit of our history, how governments has done, how you submit a show, um,
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any length, you know, the topics, series, you're, every series having those RSS feed, you know,
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the general stuff we do at a, uh, all kind of, good thing is I'll be, uh,
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adult camp, hopefully, all go well and, uh, get to rehearse this whole spiel stuff on a bit rusty
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at the moment. Yeah, yeah, it's a good point, yes. And I'm going to need to do statistics, uh,
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when we started and how many episodes and who are our hosts and, uh, how many subscribers we have
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and then moving on to, it's not the subscribers, it's the host, and it's not the host, it's the,
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the imp, it's not how popular a show is, the impact a show has on somebody's life, blah, blah, blah.
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You've heard it all before, folks, if you've ever listened to me waffle.
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I have some, uh, some, uh, listening to me waffle, yes, saying, saying the other way around,
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I'm sure, but, um, the, I've got some sequel, uh, queries that, that we've used in the past to do,
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we used to try and do sort of Christmas, uh, new year things of summarizing the previous year.
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You want me to run any of those? Let me know. Yes, please. Thank you.
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Oh, it's absolutely. Also, if, uh, if people have links, this is technically for next month,
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but I want to do so, I've asked if people have links to Creative Commons podcasts, because I'm
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going to add camp, I want to bring a list, you know, an A4 sheet, uh, with all the Creative Commons
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podcasts that we can recommend on it, so that we have something on the table, I can print off
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rings of them, and we have something on the table that we can hand out to people, and, you know,
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it gets people involved, and even if they don't listen to our show, or they're not interested,
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might take it away and listen to some other people's show, so it's spread in the middle of.
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So if there's, uh, any podcasts that you particularly think should be on that list,
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give us a shout so far we have, uh, ask Noah about voltage, BSD, talk, by the way, I haven't
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checked any of these for their license, if they're not Creative Commons, then they're not going on
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here. Cashmere 5, Chemical Cade Audio, uh, cchits.net, ccjam, destination limits, distra-hoppers digest,
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distra-watch weekly, edXerial, escape pod, flus-weekly, free as in freedom, full circle,
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canoe world order, uh, going Linux, uh, hacker media, hacker public radio,
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international open podcast, jack-tech, night-wise, late-night Linux, Linux reverium,
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Linux for the rest of us, Linux gamecast, Linux in the ham-share, Linux labs, Linux
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loopcast, Linux spotlight, Linux voice, gamingcast, open-metalcast, PC podcast, podcast,
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pseudopod, rattle radio, Sunday morning list review, tales of the unattested T, Earl Greyhust,
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the bugcast, the command line podcast, the dubcast, the duffercast, if they ever released a show,
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the jack-tech, Linux, Linux tech show, the source show, third row of Linux, tux-jam,
|
|
going to podcast and you random. So if there's any, any show that you listen to that is on that list,
|
|
drop us a line. Furthermore, I'll also be adding the shows from the people have already recommended
|
|
on the HPR series podcast recommendations. And we just before this show, blah, blah, blah,
|
|
should we add that to the database? Is this something useful that people would think
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HPR should be doing is keeping a list of podcasts, other creative comments podcasts for
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|
people, namely that we would check once a day and see sorted by the last release date,
|
|
that sort of thing, because we do have a sister podcast under the big red project called Hacker
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|
Media, which could sorely do with some updating. So if somebody is interested in that whole
|
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RSS thing and you know, wants to be able to do something positive for the community in a programming
|
|
way, then we could possibly get on to Stankdog and see if Hacker Media can be, you know,
|
|
this is something we can push over to Hacker Media where you can submit your podcasts and
|
|
keep track of podcasts. And then you have just one OPML file that you could export over there and
|
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that's sort of flying. Anyone? Anyone? Beauty? Anyone? No? Anyone? Okay. What do you reckon, Dave?
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Oh yeah, spelling. I mean, spelling mistakes or grammars mistakes as well on the website,
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|
please, please send them to me. Okay. Okay. It's, yes. The one that says and podcast, if you can find that,
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I'll, I won't leave you there. I'll send it. If I find it, I'll send it to you. Thanks.
|
|
And the calendar for next month is, let me see, October. Do I see our camp? I do. It's on the 19th
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and 20th of October, as is post-gress QL Europe. Where is that going to be? Milan.
|
|
Milan Italy. So anything interesting there that I'm not seeing, Dave, let's have a look at
|
|
November. See if there's anything coming up. This is on the T, sorry, the lwn.net
|
|
for such calendar, you'll find that there are a lot of interesting stuff. Nothing's jumping up.
|
|
Nothing's jumping out. Links in the show notes. I have met some changes to the website
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|
following BEE's latest show upload, where he showed how difficult it was to find the upload button.
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And I thought it was fairly obvious, but it's, I've met a more prominent now on the main page.
|
|
Yes, I know. So that's great. That's great. Yes. It's, yeah, the trouble is we're so used to that,
|
|
so that we don't know where to think about it. And it's for a new arrival, so it can be a problem.
|
|
So yeah, great idea. And the remote report missing tags, which is, I must say, is very useful. I
|
|
used it during this week quite a lot to track down some shores, Dave. Oh, good, good, good.
|
|
So we need to maybe do other things with that, but in the, any other business I've said two things,
|
|
but tags and summaries. One is we had an update from Windigo to change to one show. I haven't
|
|
managed to do any myself, so that's just one this month. And the report missing tags.php
|
|
page, if you can call it a page document, whatever, has been enhanced, so you can
|
|
find information about tags in it. It always could, but you had to scroll through it and stuff.
|
|
But if you know, if you've seen a tag on a show, you've just looked at the main page of a show,
|
|
and you say, oh, it's got these tags. I wonder if there's any other things which have the same tag.
|
|
You can go to that page, put hash, and then the tag on the end of it, and find references to all
|
|
the other shows that have that tag on it. If there are spaces in the tag that you're choosing,
|
|
you need to replace those with underscores, because you're not allowed to have
|
|
anchors in HTML with spaces in. So the tag summaries page, so on the report missing tags section,
|
|
I would like you to split that out so that from tag summary down is tag.php or hml,
|
|
and then on every other page where we list tags, which is on every other page, we would then have
|
|
an automatically generated link for every tag to that page with the anchor.
|
|
Okay, that would be super awesome. Does that make sense?
|
|
Yeah, we haven't got that far with our discussion, but that's the perfect way of doing it.
|
|
Yeah, I will. That should be pretty straightforward. It needs to be the page needs to be PHP,
|
|
though, doesn't it, in order to get the header and footer and stuff?
|
|
Yeah, I can send you a template and then we'll talk about that and I'll show you what to do.
|
|
And what I also want to do is because a hooker mentioned this about the submitting a podcast
|
|
that could be a form and yeah, they could be, they could be, or you could do a show telling us about
|
|
your podcast. But as he will have heard earlier on from our discussion, I don't really want to step
|
|
on Hacker Media's feet and also don't want to step on the Linux link.net, which is Dunes project
|
|
over on the Linux link tech show, because those people are providing the created content stuff.
|
|
So I don't know if that's something that HPR want to take on or not.
|
|
Yeah, it's nice to be able to slurp that information from somebody else without having to maintain
|
|
it ourselves. But one thing I did think we could do, Dave, was just on every show. I'm just going
|
|
to go to a show now. So on every show at the top, we could just have something like a
|
|
submit your edits for this, fix this page or edit this page. And then I can pull in all the
|
|
information from this into a form and then you fix whatever it is in the form and then you submit
|
|
it back out. And that might text. What do you reckon? And then we can just dump that into Jason
|
|
file and send the email out with the Jason file later on. We could then process the Jason file
|
|
like we would do a normal show. And then of course, it would be a diff because you know, we would
|
|
have what the show was compared to what this is. And then we can see exactly what the diff is.
|
|
So if ever we did push this into Git, it would be fast.
|
|
Yep. Yep. The devil's probably in the detail, but it's a great idea.
|
|
Yep. Okay. And I think I need a name for what to call that edge of this page.
|
|
That's too committee.
|
|
Foundable of this page.
|
|
Anywho. Right. Enough of this. So much for our half our show for last one.
|
|
That's good. Okay. That's it then. Yeah. We boarded the other two away. They've left.
|
|
So it's you tomorrow for time. Thanks Yerun and Gabriel for joining us on the show.
|
|
Indeed. And tune in to more for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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You've 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 Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find out
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
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