- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2878 lines
126 KiB
Plaintext
2878 lines
126 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3366
|
|
Title: HPR3366: 2020-2021 New Years Eve Show Episode 7
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3366/hpr3366.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-24 22:11:00
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3366, for Monday the 28th of June 2021.
|
|
Today's show is entitled, HPR 2020, 2021 New Year's Eve, Show Episode 7.
|
|
It is hosted by Honki Magoo and is about 163 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
|
|
The summary is, the HPR community stops by for a chat.
|
|
This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
|
|
Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
|
|
Hacker Public Radio Episode 3366, for Monday the 28th of June 2021.
|
|
Hacker Public Radio Episode 3366, for Monday the 28th of June 2021.
|
|
Games, some games, but I was, and before I started, no, I was not, I had no English
|
|
prognation right. I can't speak English, but I'm not, no, no, no, to speak English.
|
|
Yeah, I get the idea because there's something that happens in your brain, isn't there?
|
|
You can know things, you can read and even, it's different from being immersed with people
|
|
and copying them, which I think is the natural way to learn.
|
|
Yeah, because I, I being here in Norway, and I accidentally talk English to someone,
|
|
and they kind of excuse me, I'm from Norway too, because I was talking to someone that was from
|
|
not Norway, that was visiting, and they were talking to them English, and I talked to them English,
|
|
I didn't think, because I don't know how people in Norway are supposed to talk English,
|
|
because I never talked to anyone in English. I used to, I can't understand why I'm from Norway.
|
|
I get it, there's a, a YouTube channel called Langfocus, and he is very good, so I've
|
|
listened to different, you know, him talking about Scandinavian languages, and who understands
|
|
which region in Sweden or wherever, and how, where the borders cross, because the maps are just
|
|
written down by people, aren't they? They don't ask the people who live there very often.
|
|
The maps is kind of made before the languages, because in the region is a mix between the four
|
|
languages, or at least three languages. Yeah, on this same channel I was listening, he was talking about
|
|
Frischian, so old Frischian, before English language, and he was, he was sort of the people who were
|
|
here before, whoever, you know, the Anglo-Saxons changed the language a lot in this region,
|
|
and just, he was talking the Frischian grammar, and it's strange how the brain recognizes
|
|
what's being said almost, even though the words are not familiar, you know, it's an interesting
|
|
thing that happens in the brain, but the Frischian grammar, for example, is so different,
|
|
as Slavic, you know, there's so many more cases, although those cases did exist in an older
|
|
English, it's the meaning being transferred is the important thing, is it? So anyway, I trailed
|
|
off there. Yeah, so you're starting a ruffling as you call it? Yeah, I'm not having a fixed thing to
|
|
say when one starts, but continuing to talk. I am interested in language in general, so my
|
|
excitement in the subject carries me into such behavior. Yeah, that is, I like to,
|
|
hear on people that talk about what they like, even if it's extreme, more extreme than what I
|
|
think I am. So I'd probably flame up that kind of nonsense talking. Well, in a reaction to
|
|
trying to reduce ruffling, I will now go and sort objects in the real world of three
|
|
and four dimensions, and it's cold as well, so that's five. So Tony, so you can hear us then?
|
|
I can hear, you know, I had problems with my computer audio, I had to do a reboot,
|
|
some reason, some reason, Alsa and Pulse Audio lost my sound card. So you've been in
|
|
mumble before then? Tony, you had been in mumble before today? I've been in HPR in the HPR
|
|
before, yeah. Yeah, so it's not your first time in mumble. No, I've got quite a number of HPR
|
|
shows under me belt. Because it's the first time people have already had time joining
|
|
for the first time in mumble. Yeah, yeah. I used like four times before I was able to talk to some
|
|
mumble. Yeah. And my English was so horrible, no one understood me. It'd take me like half
|
|
a year before people started to understand me. Your English is better than whatever other language
|
|
you speak, because I don't speak anything other than English. Yeah, but my English guess where I'm
|
|
from. It sounds like the continent. Am I correct with that? European? Yeah. Germany or Austria?
|
|
Tony, someone you didn't say France, so many people say France. But you did not hear me in a long time.
|
|
But you? You have not heard me talk that long, so... No. Sometimes 99% guess France.
|
|
Or people ask before I'm telling them. Right. But after I'm told, when you come to me for
|
|
death, it's hard to remember. So where are you from? Norway. Norway? Oh, right. I was in your
|
|
factory a couple of years ago. I wonder if I talked to you before. I don't know. I talked to you
|
|
someone named Tony, but another doesn't remember Tony hey before. Yeah, I want to... do you listen to
|
|
mint cast? No, it doesn't listen to it, but I have been randomly joining her for some times.
|
|
Yeah, I'm on mint... I'm one of the mint cast hosts. Oh, it's kind of funny. So many random mint cast hosts
|
|
had been doing over past hours. Yeah, yeah. I don't know who's been around because I was thinking
|
|
a couple of hours last night, but no one else was around. Yeah, I think for different people,
|
|
as a note, I am a host on the mint cast. Yeah. Yeah, well, there's quite a lot of this. Yeah.
|
|
Please tell me this. So for all of us, I know all about all of us pikes. Yeah. Well,
|
|
Jerry with some mint cast also does the linux, the linux webcast as well. Yeah. So there was a true
|
|
trend there. That's true. Yeah. He has been not talking, I think, in the last eight or six hours
|
|
or so. Oh, Joe's usually around because he doesn't sleep much either. Yeah, he has not been talking.
|
|
It may be listening, but not talking. Yeah. So you have a second number room here.
|
|
Put in. You have a second number room you're doing now.
|
|
I had a second number channel. Yes, I've got to, I've got the, I've got mumble set up twice.
|
|
I've got the flat pack and I've also got the one that's in the repos, but I'm on the flat pack now,
|
|
the newer one, mumble 1.3 point. Oh, 1.3 point. You tried that thought and then you did the
|
|
effort and tried the new one. Yeah. Yeah. I thought it might have been a problem with mumble,
|
|
so I went into the old one to see whether it was a problem with that. It wasn't. So I plugged in
|
|
me, one of the USB sound cards and that worked. So I knew I could get sort of, but then it wouldn't
|
|
pick up the microphone for some reason. So I rebooted the computer and the sound card on the
|
|
computer came back. So I'm back on that. So I was wondering, because sometimes I was kind of
|
|
invited to join you guys on the nincast kind of thing. Is it? Some years ago, probably then.
|
|
All right. May have even been before we took over. Yeah, and then I forgot about it.
|
|
Then I was looking for you guys in the times that you said you was going to be on, but then you
|
|
was gone. And I just told you straightly today you have moved to a new place. Oh, do you mean
|
|
the mumble? Yeah. Yeah, we've got our own place. We use the HPR mumble server as a backup,
|
|
but we have got our own mumble server now that to young Josh that used to be one of the hosts
|
|
set up a while back. So we use that most of the time. People are doing that. Or you're kind of
|
|
predicting it. Sorry, I didn't quite get that. So are you lowering people to doing that place?
|
|
Or is it stricting or is it low to doing? No, we only use that for the people that are actually
|
|
going to be live on the show. We don't we don't we've we've got a YouTube feed for people who
|
|
want to listen to the show live when it goes out. So if you go on YouTube and search for
|
|
nincast and subscribe to it, it'll tell you when the live shows going out. Yeah, I think it's
|
|
trying to say they use the mumble server to make the program so to interview people. Yeah,
|
|
that's right. Yeah, we record though, we record because obviously we're all in different parts
|
|
of the world. Well, mostly in America, but I'm in the UK. We use mumble so that we can talk to
|
|
each other. And if anyone joins us again, they they're joining mumble and we and we all record
|
|
locally on audacity and then mix that down to form the show, but during the show Leo's got it set
|
|
up so that we stream on YouTube and people can join you know, listen to the show as it goes out.
|
|
So you don't use mumble anymore to do the live broadcast. We don't we don't we don't use mumble to
|
|
well, mumble is used to stream, but it gets streamed through YouTube. So nothing that you
|
|
was using mumble before then? Well, we used to use mumble to stream even before, but it was
|
|
on a different streaming service. Kevin, Kevin, that is part of the HPR team. He used to have a
|
|
pie streaming box set up that we used to use. So we'd push the mumble stream through that.
|
|
That would go out as a live stream, but now we push the mumble through into I think
|
|
Leo uses OBS. He's got a separate box set up and he pushes the mumble stream through OBS
|
|
and into a YouTube live stream. Yeah, because before I kind of I come to Minkas and I wanted to talk
|
|
after the shows, you probably doesn't remember me, but not remember who I was and I'm talking to.
|
|
So it's some years ago. Ah, right. Okay. Before Covid was a thing. Before Covid was a thing, yeah.
|
|
I think we know, always Covid was a distant memory. After Covid, I look around for a different
|
|
different place to meet people and talk to. A number has gone down the drain kind of. It was
|
|
opened up on this place. Not sure if you noted it. No. Because it was like 20 or 50 people inside
|
|
this place around the lockdown period beginning for lockdown. And then it was going downhill slowly
|
|
in the summer when this was unlocking of different places and not returning. So looking for different
|
|
places to talk to people. And now here about Minkas drum, that's welcome to people. Ah.
|
|
Yeah, when we say we're welcome. If you want to join us and come and talk about something on
|
|
what is the show, that's what we mean. And we can only have one possibly two guests for each
|
|
episode because it gets too complicated otherwise with all the audio editing. Yeah.
|
|
Because we've already got six hosts. So it is. So we had two guests. That's up to eight, eight
|
|
tracks to edit together to get the audio going. Oh gosh. So we do enjoy people if they want to come on.
|
|
So how do you argue? I'm sorry. The first day of yes. What do you prefer? The way I contact you
|
|
about being invited on the show? Yeah. If you contact us through Discord or Telegram.
|
|
Yeah. I joined the Telegram today. Yeah. If you're on the Telegram group or the Discord group,
|
|
or you can email us directly on the Minkcast. Maybe if you have been on Telegram today,
|
|
maybe you see how I'm doing you guys here. I haven't gone into Telegram for ages. I need to
|
|
go and have a look at Telegram. Because I don't know today and we're kind of trying to find out
|
|
if it was some kind of inwise only member one. But member one that I feel it's not meant to be
|
|
open for people to just join. I just opened up Telegram and I've got millions and millions of messages.
|
|
If I have a question for Tony. Yeah. About Minkcast. So I listen to podcasts. I wonder what do you
|
|
talk about on Minkcast? What level of Linux, kernel, user land, what kind of, I know I should
|
|
just go and have a listen. But before we're actually quite eclectic. We tend to swap around between
|
|
doing beginner stuff and the average users and more complicated stuff. I'm an average, I class
|
|
myself just as a user. I'm not a technology buff. It was never my profession. It's always been my hobby.
|
|
So I'm not into some of the technical stuff. So when they start talking about the really geeky
|
|
stuff, then it starts growing over my head. So we tend to try and have a balance of the stuff that
|
|
the new, you know, someone new or fairly new to Linux can understand. New applications like novel
|
|
applications, but always well, often useful anyway, aren't they? You just know sometimes the name
|
|
and you get this whole new feature set. So I think I might get. We do talk about things that come
|
|
out, particularly if Mint releases a new release and these new stuff in Mint, we'll talk about that.
|
|
When we did the last show, the beta 20.1 beta was out and Leo was going through some of the
|
|
extras that were in that. Without going too deep into it. So I'm thinking of dumping a bun too. I've
|
|
had it for a while. I'm running it on this old server. Well, you're using the main edition,
|
|
are you using one of the spins? I've used a lot. I'll probably do an introduction episode for
|
|
HPR. I did qualify as Sys Atamin for Solaris, like 10 years ago, and before that I had other
|
|
interest in computing since like 1981, ZX81. What's my point? So I've used different distributions
|
|
and I'm getting a bit annoyed with the system D just because it interrupts me and it doesn't
|
|
shut down when I tell it to. That kind of stuff is not acceptable. I mean, I know it's got reasons.
|
|
So briefly, what's Mint following? I know it's simple stuff, but if you don't mind telling me.
|
|
In your sense, so what do you mean what Mint Cast follows or what Mint is doing?
|
|
If you're talking, what's underneath Mint? Is it used system D?
|
|
Yeah, it uses system D because you can get snaps working, although in the latest release,
|
|
the Glenn decided he didn't like snaps, so he's put a script in a file to block it out of the box.
|
|
You've got to go and delete that to get snaps working, but yeah, system D's there,
|
|
but it's by default, it's a flat pack system.
|
|
I have got Mint on another system. I did use it for a while, but like I say, I get into,
|
|
I'll break a lot of things and I'll move my data and stick it in a raid somewhere so that I can
|
|
go back to it, but I've got littered around the place, you know, several distributions that
|
|
I really need to blow away. You probably listen to the cast. It's good. I've got time to listen
|
|
at work when I'm sweeping, so I'll catch a few. Yeah, but I was going to say, for me, Mint is one of
|
|
those, which is why I was a little bit disappointed when Glenn decided to block Snap,
|
|
because I think Mint is one of those ideal distributions for a new person to Linux,
|
|
whereas everything works out the box. But now, if you want to get snaps working, although it's not
|
|
hard, if you're not a technical user and comfortable with either going into the terminal and
|
|
doing a bit of tweaks in the terminal, even though these things on the internet, Leo did a little
|
|
tutorial about how to get rid of the config file that blocks Snap. You know, if you're not
|
|
comfortable with all that, it's just maybe that little bit less user friendly for a new user.
|
|
Right, it's quick. People are quick to forget. I remember struggling around with in between
|
|
those directories, thinking, what is the point of this? Because I'd learn programming, like BBC
|
|
Basic, back in the day, and I just couldn't get, like, my problem was that it wasn't as complicated.
|
|
It wasn't complicated. It was dead simple, but my point just this right now is that, yeah,
|
|
it's easy to forget, and we need people like you to keep things simple for newcomers,
|
|
because I need that help at every level. I remember.
|
|
Yeah, I'm compared with Linuxies over 25 years old now. It's about 25 years, isn't it?
|
|
No, it's more, isn't it? It's 28 years old when the kernel was written, but I didn't get into it
|
|
until Ubuntu came along. So it was a Ubuntu that got me into Linux, because it was an easy,
|
|
you know, it was an easy install. And even then, there was still stuff that you had to tweak around,
|
|
particularly if you were putting it on laptops with Wi-Fi cards and things like that,
|
|
you know, I remember. If you needed drivers to anything, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, but that's what I'm saying. If you had a Wi-Fi card that didn't work out the box,
|
|
you had to do all sorts of things with then Disrapper and all this kind of stuff.
|
|
And it definitely puts you off. I remember one New Year's day, I did the whole
|
|
Gen 2 thing, the whole Gen 2 thing. It was working nicely. No, it was a very straightforward
|
|
and accustomed to all of that because I'd done the Solaris thing. So it was easy, but then it would
|
|
intermittently connect to the network. And because I wanted to do some browsing at that point,
|
|
I just switched the thing off when it sat there. I've done all that work and I never used it
|
|
as a box. Very nice. But just like I wanted, it wouldn't give me, it was a simple network thing,
|
|
but you just have to learn that stuff. And if you're not into learning it, if that's not what you
|
|
there for, then in my case, I won't do it. Yeah. I got into Linux originally, because I moved back
|
|
up from London to the file case and I had an old computer knocking about. And I had a bit of spare
|
|
time on the Amns because I decided to go back to university and I had a summer off and I thought,
|
|
I'm going to get this box working over the summer while I've got a bit of free time. And it was an
|
|
old Pentium 2 machine and I wanted to get it working and then I decided I was going to give it away
|
|
on free cycle. And of course, free cycle required, their rules are that anything you give away
|
|
has to be perfectly legal. And I couldn't stick Windows on it because there was no Windows license
|
|
with it. So I thought, I know a bit about this Linux stuff. I've got a disk floating around,
|
|
so I stuck it on and got it working, got everything working on it. And that's what got me into Linux,
|
|
was fiddling around with computers to give away on free cycle. That was your story. It's not
|
|
to sell it to give it away. Yeah. Yeah. So you need to learn things to give it away.
|
|
But yeah, because you couldn't give anything away that was moody or using dodgy software,
|
|
I couldn't stick a dodgy version of the Windows on this on this tower because that would have made
|
|
it illegal. I also propagate the Windows virus. Yes. Yeah. Well, at the time, I was a Windows user.
|
|
I was using my XP at the time back in 2006. So I was an XP user. I wasn't a power user,
|
|
but I was a little bit of bug average. I couldn't install it myself. So you've got to
|
|
pay the user, not that poor user. Yeah. But yeah. So that's how I got into using Linux. And
|
|
the more and more, I was installing it on these computers as I was giving away on free cycle.
|
|
The more I thought, actually, this is a good system. So I installed a dual group on me on
|
|
tower. And that's how I got using it. I did Tiny Core once. It might have been a very early
|
|
Pentium. I think it had, like, it only had .48 Meg of memory or something. It might have been low,
|
|
it might have been 16. It's just a real time and call reply on that anyway. Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
It's impressive. I love that stuff. Yeah. There was, there was a couple of different versions of
|
|
Tiny Core. Yeah. You have very, very small versions. Put it in. You have the
|
|
terminal version that is so kind of about 12 megabytes. I think it was. Yeah. I think the one
|
|
that gave you a DE was came in at about 30. Yeah. I think it's 45 or last time I used.
|
|
Yeah. I've not used Tiny Core for ages. The only one you use puppy. I've tried it.
|
|
I tried it. I've never used it for more longer and kind of, oh gosh, this just looks so
|
|
rotated. Yeah. I tried it in the early days. And because I wasn't very confident with Linux,
|
|
I probably dismissed it too quickly, but I should go back and have another look at it.
|
|
I didn't use this because this was too kind of noisy. I didn't understand I can just delete
|
|
all the images on the desktop. It doesn't need to keep them. Because I was still new to Linux.
|
|
I was not sure if it was okay to delete stuff. Yeah. No, I know. I know. I hope you use to
|
|
delete all files that have, we can probably not delete 99% of the system. 99% of the X things
|
|
and still have a node to get it working again. Right. Something I don't know anything is about
|
|
this Pulse Audio. Yeah. So funny. Is some people talk about Pulse Audio? One number I know
|
|
does nothing about it. Right. I think I also just hack out it until it's done and then forget
|
|
about it. Because next time I do it, it'll probably be different, might be different distribution.
|
|
I'm sure that's why a good tutorial is always good to have around.
|
|
Yeah. I think since I started using Linux, I think the fact that so many people put some really
|
|
fantastic stuff up on YouTube, but it's fairly easy to find answers to things or find tutorial videos
|
|
in how to get started with a particular distro or doing something nowadays.
|
|
Right. The stuff I do remember is that SSH. Because often you want SSH into that box to get it started.
|
|
Especially if you're rebuilding, if you're hacking something back together.
|
|
Right. Pulse Audio, though, kind of seems like luxurious. But in your day to day, you want that.
|
|
And when you're getting settled in, who've got a bit more of a stable system, then it's really nice.
|
|
Brilliant. So whereabouts are you based? I'm in the Midlands.
|
|
Oh, right. Okay. Birmingham area. Oh, brilliant. So you're another, you're another
|
|
for four. Yeah, since a couple of days. Yeah, we went into level four on New Year's Eve.
|
|
I find it a little bit because they're not being able to go into my brother's garden. I
|
|
should want to go over to his house and go and fix his shower. That would be allowed, you know,
|
|
and I've not been stopped by the police yet. So one that offers funds, are you from the UK? Probably
|
|
I've done many times. Yeah, well, yes, I am. Yeah. And Tony, where are you? I'm in Blackpool.
|
|
Sonny Blackpool. I've got family around there, Chester St. Helens.
|
|
All right. Okay. Yeah. Well, I grew up in South Manchester in a village called Cheeble,
|
|
just South of Manchester. So you just have the same, um, I would be the language team, uh,
|
|
Derek. Uh, no, dialect dialects, uh, in, in the UK can be quite subtle. Um, so it just depends
|
|
where you live. Yeah, because I hear you up from your UK, but, um, one of those spoons,
|
|
I cannot help him from whatever way he's from. Uh-huh. That's why I end up asking me
|
|
probably more than once. I'm not. My accent is, uh, not even my local accent, you know,
|
|
I think because I've paid attention to my voice and also been learning language, but it was already
|
|
strange. I've been told I sound like a 12-year-old, you know, I'm, I'm 48 years old. Yeah.
|
|
There is a bit of, um, middle in Zinnanda. Yeah. Well, no, when I'm being in which
|
|
public and heritage is still around, but I'm trying to find out about, if it English is
|
|
tongue-wish language, because I have sometimes talked with someone from Australia and I cannot hear
|
|
them from Australia. No kind of one 20-year-old, I know it's from Australia. From where, sorry?
|
|
They're like kangaroos lives. In Norway? No, Australia. Australia. Uh-huh. Then kangaroos,
|
|
you know, the punching thing. Kangaroos. Yeah. Yeah, for pronunciation makes all the difference,
|
|
especially Chinese. Oh, you, uh, I learned my English, yeah, not say the third and try to
|
|
describe it. One of those are going to work before later. And more you talk to one person, you
|
|
better, that one person, learn how you talk. Yes, I think if you listen to different accents often,
|
|
or if you have concentrated on learning another language, you've become much better at recognizing
|
|
the, the relatives, like the relative, um, differences in one voice. Yeah, because we long
|
|
have talked to someone the better way I understand me somehow, but not always are getting better in
|
|
language, because I'll tell you, in the end, which is a power gun or a power drug,
|
|
Patrick. Patrick. I get the most and most in our pronouncing, but he kind of still understand me,
|
|
and then I start to loosen what I'm saying myself. But he still can't follow what,
|
|
but want to go with my sentences. Code shifting, the linguistic term is it,
|
|
where people begin to talk like the person they are talking with? Yeah, so it's kind of thinking
|
|
up kind of deal. Practice, I guess, do you read out loud? Or do you take an English text and read
|
|
out loud? Yeah, I kind of sound out to it when we're on the number. Or even to listen and then copy,
|
|
to do you say listen to music with good clear lyrics and then sing slightly after it, you know,
|
|
to echo it. It's a good way to pick up language and feel confident. Yeah, I don't listen to music,
|
|
but I have the lyrics normally. Do you sing along? I have a hard time. I used to sing like the last
|
|
four years sing alone, but before that I didn't know how to sing alone, but I have a hard time
|
|
sing alone. For now listening to Russian, learning Russian, I found it useful,
|
|
well, two things. One, of course, to listen with subtitles. Another to, yeah, listen
|
|
whilst reading the language, because the script is different, you know, the Cyrillic text is
|
|
different, rather than me struggle to pronounce, to try and recall from memory, each of the how I
|
|
should say those symbols, to just listen to someone else say them as I run my eyes over those words,
|
|
was just so much easier. And then additionally, to take English language like a phrase that I would
|
|
say in English, but use the sounds, I use the Cyrillic text and transcribe in Cyrillic the English
|
|
words, if you know what I mean. So if a fantasy, you would use the symbol from Cyrillic and the
|
|
symbol from Cyrillic. So it would be written like Russian language, but it would be actually English
|
|
language. And then I could practice saying those phrases so that my brain could associate and
|
|
quickly say, you know, to learn to read basically. But in the script, I guess Norwegian is very
|
|
similar to Latin script English anyway. Yeah, it's a very similar, because the moment you
|
|
help me to pronounce name that I read them. And you hear my Norwegian coming through,
|
|
it's more quiet and more tired. I used to read the full letter already, I heard myself,
|
|
a good job of name. I think it works okay, if you're for some time with the same person who
|
|
is listening to you, that will work just fine. And they can then correct you if you're part in
|
|
the expression, but basically, you know, they can say how to pronounce that. And you'll learn a lot,
|
|
but if you just practice anyway, even when you cannot pronounce, if you consistently read the
|
|
word of the same way, then learn the English. Yeah, that's a very good at the number, but then I
|
|
have a two years, three years from a member and I still can talk English and no sound totally,
|
|
but talking, not talking two years, it was all people said, it was very damaging for my fluency.
|
|
I wonder how long, how much time each day though you would need, maybe not very much to just
|
|
practice pronunciation from reading or something. Yeah, I don't do it so much probably,
|
|
kind of because I only butcher the names of different people, and I don't know how to pronounce
|
|
a name. It's also easy for me to say, because I'm sorry, what's that Tony? No, what do you mean,
|
|
was that Ken? Yeah, that's buttering people's names as my job. Thank you very much.
|
|
Yeah, I bet you're only all of my names that I've never had before.
|
|
Anyway, by the way, I'm not wish everyone happy new year. Yeah, happy new year.
|
|
I'm just looking at the countdown. The next new year place is in 10 minutes. It's
|
|
Halloween, Halloween. It's the pantheraic one. Oh god, pantheraic.
|
|
Because the name gets me to see out of thing. Yeah, but your reading is as an English word,
|
|
it's not an English word. It's a Irish alphabet. No, it's alphabas. Hasn't switched, so the
|
|
vowels are still the original. I'll be back in a few minutes. See you later, Tony. Also, Ken,
|
|
pantheraic was saying his name is also because he's from Netherlands, pronounced slightly
|
|
differently. Oh, that's for sure. Yeah, there has been a wide selection of buttering their names.
|
|
It has to be there. So is it right that you are from Netherlands,
|
|
Ken? Oh, this is understand what he was talking about. Are you from Netherlands?
|
|
I live in the Netherlands. I'm from Ireland. So you and family with the pantheraic?
|
|
The pantheraic is my son, yes. But I'm glad he was asleep the whole night and wasn't awake at all.
|
|
Like a good parent that I'm supposed to be. Tony, is it a champion talker?
|
|
Yeah, it is, yeah. Then the moment you left, you don't?
|
|
Uh, yeah, I sent him to bed. No, he's actually up. I don't know why he's still trying to do it.
|
|
He was talking about getting something to eat because he'd been talking six hours nonstop.
|
|
Yep, that's, that's pucky alright, yeah.
|
|
And not going to toilet or drinking or anything.
|
|
Yeah, I find those wide-necked fabric conditioner bottles are very useful because
|
|
it took me a long time to make the smell of the fabric conditioner go away. I hope that's not too crude.
|
|
I work in the garage sometimes, you know, it's cold out there.
|
|
And I just heard, it's just recalled people who are playing world, what is it? World of Warcraft or
|
|
something? How they would just stay by their machines, not wanting to leave and therefore be
|
|
urinating in their coffee cups and all that kind of nasty stuff. Yeah, they just, they just,
|
|
they're that hooked. So they just got a five gallon bucket. So they're just kind of drinking and then
|
|
using it to piss and... Yeah, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
|
|
It's very tough, very don't hear the topic.
|
|
Yeah, but addiction, addiction to uh, or obsession, obsession. I've been on
|
|
membel over 12 hours nonstop, wanted to be within or treat membel as a game.
|
|
Time again for me to grab the blue teeth, headphones and go and sort some objects.
|
|
What objects? But I've got boxes of things you know, I've got, I'm probably a hundred boxes,
|
|
I'm just trying to sort, I'm trying to move house, but that's going to be six months.
|
|
Well, I'm into it's Brexit stashing. No.
|
|
I'm not at all the illegal EU contraband. It's kind of recycling, isn't it? But not knowing when,
|
|
like, is anyone going to buy the house? I'm going to get out of the country like somewhere,
|
|
what to keep, what to not. Yeah, I totally understand that. We're in the same boat ourselves.
|
|
So what's you in that boat? The four Covid or after Covid started?
|
|
I would say before. Yeah, because some people kind of want to move after Covid started.
|
|
Because of Covid. I have four small children and we live in the city and I did not grow up in the
|
|
city and it's very difficult for me to adjust to being in the city and I want to get out.
|
|
And I wanted to get out for years, but now it just seems easier. The housing market has actually
|
|
gone through the roof because of Covid. It's going to hell in the world. It's probably good
|
|
for all people, but not me, I'm trying to move away from the city, not into the city.
|
|
I need to move away from the city as well. Yeah, because it's no, he said to move into the city, not
|
|
away from the city. I'm looking for crew and farmland, you know, a community, a bit more resilient
|
|
where you can plant stuff. There's lots of people to help and things to enjoy and develop all
|
|
of the time without being pressured, you know. I have a hard problem. My family want me to live
|
|
close to the city, but I want to live far away. So I'm looking for a place that they are going on
|
|
and I can still be myself on a problem, especially with Covid, but all the places I was looking at
|
|
have vanished. Yeah, now that is something. The places around here that have been for sale that
|
|
have been ideal. They're listed on the market for a week to two weeks and they're gone. Yeah,
|
|
I pointed like four. I was used to randomly lucky and see them and I will listen like two days
|
|
and I will just go most of the way around. But there is still not not from a public listing,
|
|
but it's just some farmer putting a sign up in his yard because he needs some cash. Yeah,
|
|
and I was just broke. It was looked at like 50 different places. No, it's zero different places.
|
|
I'm thinking it's going to sell or go ahead, sir. No, I think it's and the process go up around
|
|
10 to 20% of all the different places. I was going to I knew about Covid, so I thought,
|
|
okay, Covid is going to lower price. I thought they were holding off on buying. But instead it's
|
|
going to 10 to 20. I think it's here. If they just go on, it's going to be 60% over what is
|
|
the last year price. But it's good to live out of your house here. But it's good
|
|
cheaper and cheaper. I think to live in the bunker kind of city that you have a little
|
|
small room between people. So the housing they got cheaper in the city. I think if you want to
|
|
live just a little outside the city, they got real pricey, very fast. Mr. Horrible. I knew one
|
|
I looked at it's got 10 times asking price. That's kind of one of the problems we're having right now
|
|
is with the land and things that are available. So yeah, it's van coming and they go and when they
|
|
come back, because they'll be re-listed, it'll be more than it was the last time. So I believe that
|
|
landowners are getting interest shown in their land and they're like, oh, well, let's up the price
|
|
a little more. They'll go a little more, a little more. And they're not accepting anything and
|
|
to start getting the really high offers. And it's good time to be selling houses for now,
|
|
because the demand is so high and the supply is so low, because we are in the financial position
|
|
Happy New Year, Alala, Luiru. Got it, but you're not. He's just gotten it. Yep. Happy New Year.
|
|
Just two more left. And then it's over. And then it's over for another year. 2020 done and dusted.
|
|
Yes. And now we've just got to crawl our way through 2021. Yeah. Is that light of the land of the tunnel?
|
|
No, it's a freight train. So obviously, Ken. So what was that? I said, you are so optimistic.
|
|
Well, at least he's still in the eight year unlike some of us.
|
|
So you can just move to Northern Ireland and you'd still be at the best of both worlds.
|
|
Do you remember the still wouldn't have the free movement I don't think would wish.
|
|
Yeah, that's going to be a problem. Surely you have an Irish grandparents somewhere
|
|
locked away in the cupboard somewhere. Well, I've got, I've got Polish or Russian
|
|
relatives somewhere. So I don't know when they are. You don't need to like them.
|
|
Do you just need to get the passport? That's all. Yeah, I'd have to track it all down first.
|
|
Yeah, I saw here a market where a lot of people are going to a lot of rounds to find out their
|
|
to get paper work done before the transition.
|
|
Well, if you if you if you were born in Northern Ireland, you're entitled to an Irish passport
|
|
anyway, aren't you? Yep. So I would imagine there's going to be a lot of people
|
|
applying for their Irish passport. Yeah, it's yeah, that's the most of issue.
|
|
Yeah, I would imagine the loyalists probably wouldn't, but
|
|
I would imagine there are people who are just, you know, conservative with a small say, you
|
|
will probably think about it. In order to apply, you need to have a person of high standing,
|
|
you know, sign the thing and that tends to be clergy or members of a political party.
|
|
And they want some of the unionist parties, we're saying, yeah,
|
|
that they were seeing a large increase in applications for Irish passports.
|
|
I'm still a unionist, but I do like to I do like to head off to my holidays down in the lands of
|
|
Rossi. Fair enough. Or I want to go to be able to retire into Spain whenever I want. Yeah, very much.
|
|
Yeah, talking about giving ourselves both barrels in both feet. Yeah, it's, yeah, I don't know.
|
|
But yeah, it's interesting. I'm just glad I'm not on that side of the interesting. I was
|
|
being concerned about the island of Ireland thing to be honest with you. Yeah, it did kind of
|
|
undermine the truth. People call it the peace treaty, the good Friday agreement. Yeah.
|
|
And I can really see how that was puts the unionist community in a very awkward position.
|
|
So I'll just speak the whole thing. Yeah. They had no choice but to support it in ways to
|
|
support Brexit. And then, yeah, it's, yeah, because nobody wants to return to that.
|
|
No, no, we don't want to return to that. I know there's still occasional
|
|
outbreaks of violence and stuff, but nothing like it was for 30 years. So Ken,
|
|
wait. Are you in the D&D thing? No, no, not only enough. My son got the D&D genes from
|
|
somebody else. I don't understand it myself. Because you are always in there when I have been
|
|
working over it. Ah, yeah, but that could be because I have a backup machine in case
|
|
he can't connect on his machine. So I'm just sitting there as a droid, but I am absolutely
|
|
nowhere near it. Although, Patrick is very persuasive. He has managed to get me to create a character.
|
|
So yeah, essentially, I think D&D is just a lot of maths tied up in a story. And that
|
|
maths, I'm not a big fan of. Yeah. But he enjoys D&D and that's the main thing.
|
|
Lot of maths. I tried to talk to you so many times, so good to hear you. Just not there then.
|
|
Yeah. So, no, you're not going nuts, I just, it was just computer connected.
|
|
Yeah. Because so many times, I just gave you up. I forgot you was
|
|
totally annoying me on purpose. Oh, no, no, no, no. It's so tall.
|
|
Because it was kind of the only person I knew beforehand from that group was you, so and I tried to talk to someone I knew before and before.
|
|
Ah yes, yes, no, I have nothing, I have nothing to avoid you at all, that's just a whole no.
|
|
And I kind of pedric, I thought to pedric about cutting in maybe the next time, if I remember then it is.
|
|
Clatu has drawn a little bit of a break at the minute for one reason or another, but he has a calendar that he can subscribe to and will tell you when the D&Ds are happening.
|
|
Let me just check and see if I can find that now.
|
|
No, no, no, no, no, no, let me speak, let me speak.
|
|
Ah no, sorry, just channeling my...
|
|
Does anybody see Clatu?
|
|
He has been around, I don't think I've seen him around.
|
|
Tattoo.
|
|
Oh, that's a weird new year.
|
|
Indeed.
|
|
Yes, someone was asking about someone here, but did I never do it?
|
|
So you kind of make a point, I want to talk, be done and then you got to require it.
|
|
I'm just searching HP R to see if I can find an episode on making sourdough bread.
|
|
If you go to the main page, look under tags, tags.
|
|
Ah, my main page, look under it.
|
|
Let me see, I'm on the mix signal, stop ML Games blog, one second.
|
|
We're getting closer.
|
|
And sorry, that was my impression of Nigel Farage who was known for the Brexit interviews.
|
|
If you listen to the BBC comedy shows, this whole thing was...
|
|
No, no, no, let me speak, let me speak.
|
|
So yes.
|
|
So you are trying to copy that one.
|
|
That's it.
|
|
The indie talk, absence of Clatu, very good.
|
|
I had a very hard time jumping back in here without listening to today's show, Holy Grape.
|
|
That's a good one for today.
|
|
So you joined this run other time of video of one day, Copa?
|
|
I missed that, but you're going to have to say that again.
|
|
Do you join other days and this once a year?
|
|
This one, this memory one.
|
|
I was here yesterday a little bit, probably about this time, maybe a little later.
|
|
Ah, so some people using this place?
|
|
Yeah, mostly it's just a community new show.
|
|
We do occasional interviews on here.
|
|
And there was a big discussion as well.
|
|
I'll just give you the summary.
|
|
This server will probably be shutting down and moving to another server, where there is more...
|
|
Yeah, because a lot of the podcasts...
|
|
I think it was already done once.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
No, because I was giving the new thing because the server was moving.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
The ones before.
|
|
Not to remember, that's probably.
|
|
I think I've even got this from you, I'm not sure.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So, will that mean a new link that will be to...
|
|
Don't know.
|
|
No, no, what I'm going to do.
|
|
It'll probably be mumble, dust, heckaphublicradio.org, anya.
|
|
First, I got a link in to the from places that have a connection to this place.
|
|
Probably one of them, no, it's a bit new place.
|
|
I can't find a...
|
|
Are you going to run your own mumble server there, Ken?
|
|
No, no, no.
|
|
Love to be doing.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
Delwin has a server and I'll probably just put a DNS entry into his.
|
|
What was about to say to everything, how can you do anymore?
|
|
No, no, no, no.
|
|
I just get...
|
|
Everybody thinks I do everything.
|
|
If Marist does all the work.
|
|
And so, he just goes politely in the background about it.
|
|
So, you think I had his work in the scene?
|
|
Yeah, I'm a puppet state here in HPR land.
|
|
Nick, will you keep the other ring currently in this HPR server?
|
|
The thing is, the thing is the reason I...
|
|
Well, the previous person who was paying for this, and I can't remember the name,
|
|
I'm a bit ahead against the wall trying to remember who they were, which is terrible.
|
|
It's all fun when you cannot remember who is paid off a big thing you are using.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
So, they had their...
|
|
They were paying for the server for years and then there was an email sent round saying,
|
|
are you still using the server?
|
|
And we were at HPR war, so I was happy to take it over.
|
|
But then, when the issue about client compatibility and the server not being upgraded
|
|
came up this week.
|
|
I had a look at the rooms and the majority of the podcasts on there are either pub-faded
|
|
or they have moved off to their own server or are using it as a backup.
|
|
Yeah, we're using...
|
|
Link cast is using it as a backup because our server's still a bit...
|
|
Sometimes gets a bit flaky.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So, it's only used for a backup or a bit of a radio thing.
|
|
And...
|
|
Well, HPR uses once a month, so Delwin has offered us a room over there.
|
|
And he...
|
|
I presume it's a...
|
|
He keeps the server up to date and he's got a room that you can go in and...
|
|
When you go in there, you can test your audio and all sorts of stuff.
|
|
So, he's got the podcasts that you take of different random things,
|
|
different random thing read...
|
|
Oh, oh, load.
|
|
Or that other show too.
|
|
No, I think he just has a mobile server for other podcasts.
|
|
No, no.
|
|
I mean, your show is better reading or load different people sending different random stuff.
|
|
I almost forgot those.
|
|
As long as it's of interest hackers, that's the only, only requirement.
|
|
Which works for everything.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, we're literally everything.
|
|
Because I remember one time I joined, it was cooking kind of food topics.
|
|
The whole good thing.
|
|
I've done a cook, a lot of cooking.
|
|
Cookery shows.
|
|
Yeah, maybe that's why I can remember your name, but not talk to you.
|
|
Maybe I heard what you feel reading is something.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You can.
|
|
And can you read an employee from before?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes, I can.
|
|
You're on 24 hour show and you're on the community news of your time.
|
|
Still haven't gotten a show from you though.
|
|
Which is interesting.
|
|
What do you mean?
|
|
Still, you still haven't recorded and high.
|
|
This is where I come from.
|
|
This is how I found out what HPR.
|
|
This is da da da da, recorded and go to the calendar show and upload the show.
|
|
Have your own show.
|
|
You're a real person on the internet then.
|
|
You're a real podcaster.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, I'm not.
|
|
No, because probably where I got to this place.
|
|
I didn't know about any podcast.
|
|
I got to say some place I couldn't get to talk to people.
|
|
The probably not the right introduction to this place probably.
|
|
Still can't find out where to search tags.
|
|
Hold on one second.
|
|
I will get it for you.
|
|
It's not.
|
|
Yeah, it's on the list of stuff that should be more prominent now.
|
|
Probably sounds very bad that doesn't listen to any podcast at all really.
|
|
So I put it into the e2pad.
|
|
Oh, into the show now.
|
|
Yeah, and it's on the HPR thing underneath me.
|
|
The team and right above the latest shows.
|
|
Please help out tagging others.
|
|
So we have two shows on dole, which is 1327 and 131827.
|
|
13271827.
|
|
One by Frank Bell who breaks big spread.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And one by Dave Morris.
|
|
This is this part of the series.
|
|
Cooking.
|
|
Interesting.
|
|
And cooking.
|
|
We have your one.
|
|
So rift it all.
|
|
Whatever that is.
|
|
As I put you in there.
|
|
Making crepes.
|
|
Making sauerkraut.
|
|
Making bramble jelly.
|
|
Killer claspas.
|
|
Kill.
|
|
Bassas.
|
|
Baking your bread.
|
|
Chaffee chip cookies.
|
|
Dot dot dot.
|
|
On oats.
|
|
Alpha 32 pine head oats.
|
|
Frank 5c bread.
|
|
How to make kombucha tea.
|
|
Steele.
|
|
This is actually a lot longer than I thought it would be.
|
|
Cooking.
|
|
Cooking.
|
|
Cooking.
|
|
Cooking.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So there you are.
|
|
And sourdough.
|
|
Do we have a sourdough?
|
|
I can't.
|
|
I'm still sick.
|
|
Yeah, sourdough.
|
|
1327.
|
|
That's the one.
|
|
1327.
|
|
Right.
|
|
I thought you were going to read four wild things.
|
|
Oh god, it's a whole list.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Do you guys have a mailing list?
|
|
Yes, we do.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Because...
|
|
I can't public read it that hard at the end.
|
|
I...
|
|
No, I don't want to get in on this.
|
|
Because I didn't realize it was a mailing list.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
I thought it was like a recipe that used to give me updates.
|
|
I didn't realize what it was.
|
|
Oh, the mailing list is for...
|
|
The mailing list before.
|
|
Okay, the mailing list is for the cooking as such.
|
|
No, no.
|
|
But I didn't know what the mailing list was before I...
|
|
Oh.
|
|
I didn't know it did to your place.
|
|
And understand my whole mailing...
|
|
mailing application gets very fast filled up.
|
|
It tastes like spam.
|
|
Because you said it didn't happen.
|
|
You didn't know the mailing list.
|
|
Then I don't know it.
|
|
It was like...
|
|
50...
|
|
100...
|
|
500...
|
|
100 m...
|
|
Eh...
|
|
100 m...
|
|
So I got...
|
|
It's just keep going in a book.
|
|
You probably don't use...
|
|
Your mail...
|
|
A different mail end or something to it.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
No, no.
|
|
It was...
|
|
Going and growing and you do...
|
|
I didn't understand what it was.
|
|
Because each time someone reprise, it gets sent to all people.
|
|
That's interesting.
|
|
And it was...
|
|
Before I knew it, it was...
|
|
Because I had all my mail clients in one application.
|
|
And...
|
|
Normally I had around 20 unread messages at mail.
|
|
But after I donated you, I have like 500 unreaded.
|
|
And the next time I look at it, this was the 1000.
|
|
And it's just growing and growing.
|
|
That money.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It shouldn't be...
|
|
There's something wrong because it's only...
|
|
There's only a few mails a month left.
|
|
Yeah, it was...
|
|
I just joined a very unlucky year.
|
|
You have more...
|
|
More traffic and normally.
|
|
You normally do.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
I was very unlucky because I...
|
|
I kind of talked to you about the place and...
|
|
Oh, it's unreadable.
|
|
Like maybe 20 a month.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Totally fine.
|
|
But this...
|
|
I kind of tried to follow.
|
|
I hope they...
|
|
But after I added like 500 messages, what kind of...
|
|
Oh.
|
|
Talking about the mailing list.
|
|
I've gone into my email and found...
|
|
Founder.
|
|
That's an email.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, because I thought this was like a...
|
|
A recipe that you have on...
|
|
On kind of...
|
|
This is your...
|
|
On a blog kind of thing.
|
|
I thought this was like that.
|
|
But this is not like that.
|
|
I didn't know what I'm...
|
|
I didn't know how horrible I...
|
|
Mainly, this can be...
|
|
If you need to read about too much as you get...
|
|
On email.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Are you going to have breakfast back in a bit?
|
|
It's...
|
|
It's like your telegram thing.
|
|
I think it's funny.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The mailing list is nothing like that.
|
|
No.
|
|
No, no.
|
|
But it's...
|
|
As horrible in...
|
|
You get a radical number of...
|
|
Tealing.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But like I say, the HPR mailing list...
|
|
It's got nowhere near that.
|
|
Some...
|
|
Someones you don't...
|
|
You know, someones you only get the one...
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I probably just...
|
|
Was very, very unlucky then I don't.
|
|
Because...
|
|
It was...
|
|
More was getting into me.
|
|
And I was...
|
|
Get rid of it.
|
|
It was...
|
|
No, maybe not...
|
|
It was...
|
|
No, maybe you didn't...
|
|
A problem is...
|
|
It's...
|
|
I have some...
|
|
Autosand...
|
|
Backing kind of stuff.
|
|
I probably...
|
|
You...
|
|
But you do as myself.
|
|
Because I didn't know that then how it worked.
|
|
If someone said that...
|
|
Then I...
|
|
Please do not send this message to me.
|
|
Or something like that.
|
|
I used to...
|
|
I used to...
|
|
Hmm.
|
|
Someone's got an echo.
|
|
Someone's got an echo.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
One of spoons.
|
|
Hmm.
|
|
Just a minute.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I can't...
|
|
I'm on my phone, I'm trying to mute.
|
|
Phone should auto mute.
|
|
Come on, that should be like a default setting on...
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Android.
|
|
What kind are you using on your Android?
|
|
It's mumble, mumble, mumble or something.
|
|
Robble.
|
|
One of all three.
|
|
Because I got my friend to install a mumble.
|
|
I didn't mean to get in to install that.
|
|
But he found mumble so...
|
|
Okay.
|
|
He got mumble or when it's fun.
|
|
I wonder if that's going to work at all.
|
|
How's that?
|
|
I think maybe the volume was too loud or do you still get the...
|
|
Doesn't seem to be...
|
|
Doesn't seem to be loud.
|
|
There.
|
|
Because it was very loud.
|
|
The new was feeling back.
|
|
Give them noises.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'm mostly listening now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I'm going to go for a little wonder.
|
|
Because me back pop this morning and just sitting on the computer.
|
|
It's just making it stiff or not.
|
|
Oh, can it?
|
|
It's going off.
|
|
We've all flown you.
|
|
It's going away.
|
|
On the finish.
|
|
On the phone.
|
|
So, hmm.
|
|
Who is left to talk to?
|
|
I'm still here.
|
|
Oh, you asked it out.
|
|
You asked it out.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
Sorry, I forgot you.
|
|
You're probably one of the ones here.
|
|
Because Joe has not talked in either or so.
|
|
And he might have not talked since I joined.
|
|
He has taxes, but not talked.
|
|
Not sure if he had a mic at all.
|
|
And then...
|
|
Have it taxes...
|
|
Have it taxes, but never talked.
|
|
And he has...
|
|
Someone could have no headset.
|
|
And he's on his opening mic.
|
|
So, I'm on talking.
|
|
It's totally echoing.
|
|
We're all alone.
|
|
I forget about him.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
Hi, Mordancy.
|
|
It's been a long time, bud.
|
|
I know.
|
|
I still have a HPR in our Q-shirts for you.
|
|
Oh, my word.
|
|
Oh, my word.
|
|
How do I get in touch with you?
|
|
Mordancy at Gmail.
|
|
Probably work.
|
|
Any address you had for me before should work.
|
|
I made the screen just for you.
|
|
It's a hand-made screen.
|
|
I hand-painted it.
|
|
And I put...
|
|
So, it's got a...
|
|
We're going with an A on it, like kind of...
|
|
Or punk rocky, then...
|
|
Official Anarchy logo.
|
|
And in the crossbar on the A,
|
|
I filled in...
|
|
HPR.
|
|
Real small.
|
|
I'm quite excited.
|
|
That's Christmas present.
|
|
And I don't know what...
|
|
For shirts I still have.
|
|
I haven't printed in a long time.
|
|
I brought a handful of them to the...
|
|
The Linux best was after the last time I saw you.
|
|
I brought a whole stack of them
|
|
and ended up giving them to people.
|
|
I think...
|
|
The flip got a couple of them.
|
|
Somebody was supposed to get some to you.
|
|
Probably not clad to, but somebody in that...
|
|
In that group, when we got in trouble,
|
|
out in the...
|
|
Or circle talk during the closing keynote...
|
|
At the Linux Fest.
|
|
Why did they never made it up here?
|
|
Why did they never made it?
|
|
But...
|
|
Things happen.
|
|
How's it up there in Maine?
|
|
You're still in Maine, right?
|
|
No, I'm a little bit...
|
|
No, I'm a little bit...
|
|
For Northbud.
|
|
Canada?
|
|
Yes, sir.
|
|
I live in New Brunswick, Canada.
|
|
Should we not talk about personal stuff?
|
|
I keep forgetting.
|
|
I...
|
|
It's public knowledge.
|
|
I...
|
|
Public knowledge, I believe.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
How have you been?
|
|
How have you been?
|
|
I mean, I've probably haven't talked to you in four years.
|
|
That sounds...
|
|
Still about right, maybe five.
|
|
Um...
|
|
Um...
|
|
I'm the Soul Linux Admin Architect Engineer,
|
|
whatever for North, South, and Central America
|
|
and have a part in Asia, Africa, Europe.
|
|
Have you heard of GRIF, industrial packaging?
|
|
I have not.
|
|
I have not.
|
|
Um...
|
|
They started in Ohio, 146 years ago.
|
|
Or something like that.
|
|
The railroads were being built after the Civil War.
|
|
Also...
|
|
Um...
|
|
They're...
|
|
A great green company.
|
|
They're socially...
|
|
Or...
|
|
They're logically conscious.
|
|
They are one of the largest land managers in the US,
|
|
in Canada.
|
|
Um...
|
|
All the way back in the late 1800s.
|
|
They were...
|
|
Um...
|
|
Making sure they had enough oak trees growing,
|
|
land with oak trees to supply 30 years of increased productivity.
|
|
Increased product.
|
|
But they make like the steel drums that things are shipped in.
|
|
Plastic drums.
|
|
It's the square cubes.
|
|
Um...
|
|
The stuff everything is shipped in globally.
|
|
It's a...
|
|
A hundred factor.
|
|
A hundred and twenty countries.
|
|
Yeah, sounds like it sounds.
|
|
It sounds like the way to work.
|
|
Um...
|
|
It is very stressful.
|
|
The infrastructure side.
|
|
So, understaffed.
|
|
Uh...
|
|
In Europe, the counterparts said there were three or four Linux guys,
|
|
when I started in 2017.
|
|
And all but one of them have left,
|
|
and they have no plans to replace anybody.
|
|
Um...
|
|
You know, in the office, it's where they had the two bobs.
|
|
I believe so.
|
|
I believe so.
|
|
That they came in down size to everybody.
|
|
They had one of those consulting firms.
|
|
They hired...
|
|
Yes.
|
|
That came in.
|
|
Make more money.
|
|
Cuts.
|
|
They tell you to make.
|
|
And uh...
|
|
They told Greif they needed to hire more IT people.
|
|
Didn't you hire more?
|
|
Didn't you hire more?
|
|
Didn't you hire more?
|
|
Wow.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
There's uh...
|
|
No redundancy in any of our positions.
|
|
Our DBA passed.
|
|
Um...
|
|
Um...
|
|
Not officially, but um...
|
|
Uh...
|
|
Both him and I had in February.
|
|
We had people in...
|
|
In and out of China.
|
|
Um...
|
|
And there were about a dozen of us that got...
|
|
Deathly ill.
|
|
And the ones that did go to the doctor...
|
|
Figure out, you know...
|
|
The...
|
|
They tested negative for everything at the time.
|
|
And COVID wasn't here.
|
|
Uh...
|
|
But I'm pretty sure that we all had.
|
|
And...
|
|
And then he passed away, uh...
|
|
Two months later.
|
|
Uh...
|
|
We had no Oracle DBA.
|
|
Uh...
|
|
Our Oracle stuff's been messed up.
|
|
Old company is going to class.
|
|
But other than having too much work to do...
|
|
It is all Linux work.
|
|
So...
|
|
That's...
|
|
That's good.
|
|
I've gone...
|
|
I've gone out of technology.
|
|
Now I'm...
|
|
Now I'm going...
|
|
I went into some electrical training.
|
|
And now I'm an electrician.
|
|
Uh...
|
|
I have...
|
|
That argue, uh...
|
|
Type of a skilled...
|
|
Um...
|
|
Occupations...
|
|
Uh...
|
|
Or...
|
|
The keystone to...
|
|
To keep a society running.
|
|
But that's what won't be replaced by AI.
|
|
I...
|
|
I...
|
|
Programmer as well.
|
|
I work a tissue plant.
|
|
I work in it.
|
|
So...
|
|
It's...
|
|
It's kind of fun.
|
|
It's kind of fun.
|
|
I don't see much automation replacing what I do.
|
|
I'm a cleaner.
|
|
I'm a cleaner.
|
|
I'm a cleaner.
|
|
I'm a cleaner.
|
|
It's straightforward.
|
|
Take forward.
|
|
You don't have to have...
|
|
You don't have to have to be ordered.
|
|
Um...
|
|
I don't have one.
|
|
Am I...
|
|
Echoing now?
|
|
Echoing now?
|
|
I've just...
|
|
I've just ran out of one point range of it myself.
|
|
I've just run out of one point range of it myself.
|
|
I cannot hear you, Echoing.
|
|
I believe it's you.
|
|
I believe it's you.
|
|
Even more than they have seen it's doing the echo.
|
|
Should I put on headphones?
|
|
Or...
|
|
Or an enable hosh-tattac.
|
|
I'm on plumble.
|
|
I don't see it pushed to talk.
|
|
You should uh...
|
|
Look up.
|
|
Moomla.
|
|
It's the updated version.
|
|
Plumble.
|
|
And then headphone transmission mode, I was gonna see if somebody else is talking on Android.
|
|
I'm on Android. What was the name of the deaf again?
|
|
Mummela. Hang on a moment, I'll drop a link in the chat here.
|
|
I don't, I don't know how to access the chat.
|
|
M-U-M-U-M mic, uniform, mic, lemur, alpha.
|
|
There's four of them. I got mine from F-Droid.
|
|
As did I. Oh no, right off-mournancy.
|
|
What's that? You think we lost the modens?
|
|
Oh it's fantastic. We just got a snowfall warning.
|
|
A what warning?
|
|
Snowfall. We're gonna get a lot of white stuff.
|
|
It's times like these I wish I lived in Australia.
|
|
To not have snow? Wait, actually they do in certain parts.
|
|
I'd want to live in Melbourne. It's a more coastal, maybe close to Peter 64.
|
|
Yeah, but then you'd have a lot of latency.
|
|
There's snow here in Australia, also the big car wash.
|
|
I just dumped all over you when I spoke. Go ahead.
|
|
Really not important. I can't find my cold chisel.
|
|
I'm only mentioning it because you do when you're a while.
|
|
That looks like everybody went away 5 a.m. time to make coffee.
|
|
I wonder if anybody discussed how they make coffee in the morning.
|
|
It's 5 a.m. my time.
|
|
Good morning. Good morning.
|
|
Yeah, I will actually make coffee now, I guess.
|
|
Grind your own beans.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You have a lot of Echo Orch or 72?
|
|
Must be where I'm at. I wasn't the kitchen.
|
|
All right, I think you do.
|
|
Must be where I'm at.
|
|
I know is that better.
|
|
I don't know. It seems that every time anyone says something, I hear it again
|
|
one second later.
|
|
Maybe the server or maybe the mobile app I'm using.
|
|
Including myself, which is weird.
|
|
Anyway, no, I generally don't grind my own beans.
|
|
Well, not generally, I just don't.
|
|
No, I'm lazy that way too.
|
|
I use an uncoffee maker and it's a pre-warms section.
|
|
And so you pour in the cold water and to put out the hot water that was in the reservoir.
|
|
I think it's fine if you don't grind your own beans.
|
|
It's obviously better.
|
|
But sometimes you don't go the instant granules root.
|
|
Okay, I think I might have fixed my sound problem.
|
|
No, forget that. No, I don't.
|
|
It's Friday then.
|
|
Yes, it is.
|
|
I still can't find that link. Hold on a second.
|
|
Which link?
|
|
We know you're...
|
|
Yes.
|
|
35 minutes to the last one.
|
|
I'm going to check to see if that must have done anything work.
|
|
Oh, the bot.
|
|
Did you get it now?
|
|
Yep.
|
|
They approved an account, yeah.
|
|
But I didn't see anything coming in.
|
|
But I'm just going to check the account now.
|
|
One second there.
|
|
Nice, that was too quick.
|
|
Yeah, considering the day.
|
|
And again, I forgot to switch my input when I turned my laptop.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I wish I could figure out how to auto-switch that.
|
|
But I was asking does Baker Island include the Hawaiian Islands?
|
|
I think they already went.
|
|
There's a good um...
|
|
Interactive Cunder time and date that come.
|
|
And that's what I was going off of because of Zulu time confused me.
|
|
Completely.
|
|
Just trying to go off the show notes.
|
|
No, the account is up, but it doesn't seem to take the OSS feed.
|
|
But why not?
|
|
No, I didn't see one for you.
|
|
I'm the mess that I'm 10 open.
|
|
It's uh...
|
|
The account is HBR-as.
|
|
HBR-as.
|
|
As HBR-as bots in space.
|
|
Uh, don't say anything.
|
|
There I just found you and it's uh...
|
|
Subscribe to it.
|
|
Very very good.
|
|
But why did no work?
|
|
Where would I see my own posts?
|
|
Seems to have no posts yet.
|
|
No, no, no.
|
|
There we go.
|
|
There already got some community engagement.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
No need for diaspora, is it?
|
|
Unbelievable.
|
|
I haven't been following you on my own account.
|
|
Anyway, we'll fix that.
|
|
Huh?
|
|
I don't post much.
|
|
Yeah, I did away.
|
|
All right, a lot on drum.
|
|
Wait, today's not a work day for you, right?
|
|
A lot of it did work.
|
|
According to Dave Morris, this is more...
|
|
Morris is as he has a screenshot of it.
|
|
Okay?
|
|
First, that brings up two important questions.
|
|
Why am I not seeing it?
|
|
And why is B?
|
|
Why is B?
|
|
After A?
|
|
Oh, I need some sleep.
|
|
Why is Dave Morris not on mumble talking to us?
|
|
It's probably having some coffee.
|
|
Wait, it's 11.
|
|
Probably in the kitchen, working on this database.
|
|
Why would you have a database in the kitchen?
|
|
Because Dave has a database for recipes and stuff.
|
|
And cooks quite a lot.
|
|
And Dave's database is for everything.
|
|
Does he want to share that on his PR?
|
|
Because at some point, I think I might actually start
|
|
saving recipes somewhere.
|
|
Well, I'll just keep cooking as I do.
|
|
We have a recipe series, a cooking series.
|
|
So feel free to join us.
|
|
Okay, I'm mostly going to go ahead over.
|
|
I was just saying I mostly rip off Chef John over.
|
|
Nor is over.
|
|
The overall gets very annoying for people after all.
|
|
Over.
|
|
Indeed, over.
|
|
Sometimes it's best to go under over.
|
|
But it was already made yesterday.
|
|
Yeah, good.
|
|
Okay, so why am I not seeing my own pulse then?
|
|
Have you tried following yourself over?
|
|
Can you?
|
|
Why would you need to do that?
|
|
I mean, you could follow HPR at BOTSEN space
|
|
with your can felon account.
|
|
Oh, I have, but I don't see it.
|
|
That's the thing.
|
|
Oh, goodness.
|
|
I see them.
|
|
Oh, hold on.
|
|
I see it now.
|
|
I see that.
|
|
On A.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Yes, that's perfect.
|
|
So that's my problem.
|
|
Why it's up on A.
|
|
But okay, if I'm going to leave that off.
|
|
Everything's working fine.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Thanks.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Fair enough.
|
|
One second.
|
|
Yeah, now when I click on it, it has three toots.
|
|
All right.
|
|
I didn't see that toast until now.
|
|
Yeah, that's strange.
|
|
Maybe it needed a hello world click in the bus one.
|
|
Yeah, all this helps.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So fine.
|
|
That was panels.
|
|
Something off the list.
|
|
Good.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I pinned it in my profile.
|
|
So I can use my, you know, influencer profiles.
|
|
Influencer.
|
|
Influencer powers.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
You've lost me.
|
|
Does that like help?
|
|
I have no idea.
|
|
It's like putting an advert in the middle of the woods.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Very good.
|
|
Hello, Dave.
|
|
Hello, Dave.
|
|
Hello, Dave.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
Hello, Dave.
|
|
Hello.
|
|
Hi, young.
|
|
Hello.
|
|
Voice commander closed the ticket about the
|
|
operating the server with the message.
|
|
This notification is select, you know,
|
|
that's we are changing the status of the ticket to
|
|
closed because we didn't receive a response for you in 72 hours.
|
|
Well, that's because I responded.
|
|
And you ignored me.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
We received your message while we weren't looking and didn't look any further.
|
|
So yeah, it sounds like a good excuse to, uh,
|
|
to leave those people and go somewhere else.
|
|
This is the mumbles.
|
|
Yeah, right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So I am in my kitchen.
|
|
Well, the kitchen dining area.
|
|
Which is the working on the database.
|
|
Uh, actually uploading next week's shows to the internet archive,
|
|
but that's what I was doing.
|
|
But, uh, we're going to have a family cook out or cook, cook in or whatever you call it,
|
|
a bit later on.
|
|
We're making something moderately complex and they're all going to
|
|
pile in together and cook bits.
|
|
So I'm just getting a little bit of that.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
What do you have a select asterix from?
|
|
Ken is winding me up because I do have a database in which there are meal
|
|
things, not recipes, but meal things.
|
|
And because my son, this girlfriend and my daughter come over once a week
|
|
um, two evenings to eat with me,
|
|
I wrote this thing to, uh, allow me to select from the sort of favorite
|
|
recipes that we have, favorite menus that we eat.
|
|
And it does it randomly.
|
|
So I run this every Thursday or something and then, uh,
|
|
we know what we're having the following week.
|
|
So as you do, you know, I mean,
|
|
your computers, your database is normal.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
Why not? Why not?
|
|
That is a great idea.
|
|
Although it does smack or something that the
|
|
in that your two thousand people will be using the databases in their
|
|
kitchens.
|
|
Cooking is not the rules of the family.
|
|
So true.
|
|
So true.
|
|
Even today.
|
|
That is very much in, uh,
|
|
in something, I don't know.
|
|
I, my coffee still isn't working.
|
|
How?
|
|
Laura.
|
|
So anyway, what I was going to say is that apparently metropolis has become
|
|
public domain today.
|
|
The 1925 movie or 27, something like that.
|
|
Oh, wow.
|
|
Finally.
|
|
It only took 95 years.
|
|
Not, it's absolutely not.
|
|
Uh, what database, uh, DBS do you use for that?
|
|
I was trying to time share there.
|
|
Uh, it's nothing else.
|
|
Um, I use SQLite for this because it's just a single, single user,
|
|
single use thing.
|
|
So, uh, and it's pretty easy to, to make, um, databases that stuff.
|
|
And also gets some quite sophisticated features.
|
|
I always thought it was a, a toy system to actually start
|
|
with using it.
|
|
It's really quite powerful, given what it is.
|
|
Yeah, also always use SQLite.
|
|
Yeah, it's, uh, when you enable the relational stuff,
|
|
which is not on by default, at least it wasn't in the version I, um,
|
|
set up originally, um, then you can do pretty much everything you'd want to do
|
|
as triggers and, uh, and all of that sort of stuff.
|
|
No, I mean, in many cases, if you want something very sophisticated,
|
|
you have to write it yourself, but there's an API that you can work to, um,
|
|
that, uh, you can write stuff in C.
|
|
People have been using it in that way, even in multi-user mode, I believe.
|
|
So, remember somebody talking about it on, uh,
|
|
Bloss Weekly, some month ago, years ago.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
I stopped following Bloss Weekly a while ago.
|
|
Yeah, I stopped once, uh, Randall Schwartz, um,
|
|
left, or was pushed, or whatever.
|
|
It was, so you know what happened.
|
|
I don't, I don't, I've tried to get as much information as
|
|
possible about that, but I'm, it's so little, he's very,
|
|
very coy about, uh, and of course they were very, um,
|
|
not very forthcoming about what they'd done, but, uh, yeah,
|
|
it couldn't have been very good, because he didn't want to speak about it.
|
|
Yeah, I was a bit confused one day.
|
|
I just came back and he wasn't there.
|
|
What?
|
|
Yeah, he's, uh, you've been doing that, that job for a long time.
|
|
It's, uh, it's a shame in a way, though, I was, I don't know,
|
|
I was just getting a bit bored with it, with it, because
|
|
the ratio of stuff that interested me to stuff that didn't
|
|
was, uh, was, was changing in the wrong direction for me.
|
|
So I was thinking of, uh, stopping listening
|
|
and that precipitated as far as I was concerned.
|
|
Yeah, Floss Weekly actually got me in here.
|
|
The interview we can.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, cool.
|
|
But surely you'd been around before the, or not?
|
|
Or, I'm sure you had been around in the community prior to that.
|
|
I, I only really noticed the community at, when,
|
|
yeah, when I saw it on Floss.
|
|
Oh, there you go.
|
|
That was a really strange experience given an interview like that.
|
|
Yeah, I imagine so.
|
|
It was very, the, the, the description, one podcast a day sounded a bit excessive.
|
|
Yeah, I think we probably said that a few times, Ken, I mean.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Especially when people said, well, why don't you do some on weekends as well?
|
|
There's probably another one.
|
|
Yeah, more on, we'll say that, dude.
|
|
I don't know, I don't know.
|
|
Somebody completely misguided probably.
|
|
I'm going to have to know you're.
|
|
Good year and happy new morning.
|
|
Who is that?
|
|
Hong Kong Wu.
|
|
Ah, he's back.
|
|
You just want to close it off and start the editing now.
|
|
So take about six months to get it all that together.
|
|
Probably.
|
|
Well, we're going to keep recording.
|
|
You know the rule.
|
|
Then, long after people here talking.
|
|
Hi, Hong Kong, how are you?
|
|
What a day, five years.
|
|
Oh, good, good, having, having a good new year.
|
|
So far.
|
|
It's a part.
|
|
Good, good, good.
|
|
Okay, now find tattoos or SS feed.
|
|
Oh, it's an SS feed.
|
|
I have it in my SS read your home on one second.
|
|
Found it.
|
|
Mix signals.ml forward slash games, forward slash rgorpg.xml.
|
|
Is this Vulcan?
|
|
The calendar, the I call that's, um,
|
|
tattoo keeps for the games.
|
|
Okay, that's what happened.
|
|
Sorry, go on.
|
|
I was going to tell you that all of the shows
|
|
but from the community news got uploaded to internet.
|
|
I'll go, okay.
|
|
Super.
|
|
I'll be posting the rest of the backlog today.
|
|
Oh, if I get around to it.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
I actually want to, do you want to have a talk about the, um,
|
|
well, just for people's backgrounds and information.
|
|
Well, in nine minutes, 30 seconds.
|
|
This thing is officially over.
|
|
But, uh, 20 in nine minutes, 24 seconds, 2020 is officially over.
|
|
So let's, let's do it after that.
|
|
But I did want to have a chat about the heart broken heart disc and how
|
|
the composure to the archive straight away.
|
|
Is it a good idea to have the, uh,
|
|
dummy shows in first for the next year?
|
|
And then replace them and how will the archive feel about that?
|
|
Oh, I'm sure they wouldn't bother at all.
|
|
I certainly, uh, rewrite stuff, um, on the, uh, the internet archive.
|
|
I'd rewrite our shows, I should say, when there are changes.
|
|
I mean, somebody asked for a edit to be done to the notes and I would go and, uh,
|
|
propagate that to the EIA version as well.
|
|
So, no, I don't think they were at all bothered.
|
|
Um, yeah, it's, it's certainly doable.
|
|
I'd need to change my code to, to handle it.
|
|
Because the thing that does the upload assumes that it is to go and find all
|
|
bits of the show on the HBR database and upload whatever is relevant,
|
|
notes and other files.
|
|
But, uh, replacing stuff is manual at the moment.
|
|
So, um, um, so it would require some, some coding.
|
|
Not a lot, really, because I mean, the, the manual process of doing it isn't
|
|
usually complex.
|
|
Well, it's a coffee the wrong way when you made me laugh to the earlier,
|
|
still suffering.
|
|
So, in principle, yeah, why, why not?
|
|
But we need to work out the details.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
Um, so the way we're doing it now is, uh, show gets upload.
|
|
All this is on the GitHub page, by the way, including sequence diagrams.
|
|
My GitHub GitLab page.
|
|
Uh, and then we put the, I process the, the,
|
|
we encode the shows and put them on to the hard disk.
|
|
I post them onto the HBR website.
|
|
And then Dave then takes the shows from the, uh,
|
|
the internet archive version and then puts that the week before the shows
|
|
can post it up onto the internet archive.
|
|
And unfortunately, uh, to, to, uh, some bad luck in our part, uh,
|
|
the hard disk broke and we lost, I had to re-encode the HBR versions,
|
|
or the internet archive versions.
|
|
So, that just highlighted the fact that we should probably post directly as soon
|
|
as we're processing the shows.
|
|
Basically, spit off, I think that would actually allow us to spit off
|
|
the encoding and the show notes, uh, editing, Dave,
|
|
because it wouldn't matter on which order they were done that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
So if you say I take down the shows, the physical media, do that bit.
|
|
And then post, if, okay, say we already have slots on internet archive
|
|
for the next, uh, 263 slots and then I can post,
|
|
that's giving me a placeholder to push the content to.
|
|
And then the show notes can be done either before or after it,
|
|
they will actually make a lot more sense.
|
|
There are some weirdnesses in the way that internet archive accepts stuff,
|
|
because each show that we upload is a separate item.
|
|
I know a lot of podcasts just basically have one item with lots and lots of shows attached
|
|
to it, lots of bits of audio, but I designed it to make an item per show,
|
|
because that was the way to make it also display the notes
|
|
as the description part of the, of the internet archive entity item,
|
|
I think they call it, the object that you're building.
|
|
You've got to be careful the way that you initially upload it.
|
|
And I'm a little vague about how, because I've been down this whole before,
|
|
and I've gotten it, I'll have notes, I'll have notes that are going into the cori detail.
|
|
But if you don't get it right, you end up with an item that you can't then
|
|
turn into the shape that you want.
|
|
So I've had to go to the staff and ask them to take it down so I could rebuild it.
|
|
So that, it's just a thing you need to plan properly.
|
|
But that's not something we're going to rush into now.
|
|
No, no, no, no, but it's probably doable.
|
|
I mean, basically, there's a tool that I use, that I didn't write.
|
|
It's written by somebody who is a controller to IA,
|
|
which is a Python script that lets you do this stuff.
|
|
So you can do things like say to it, go to this item and replace this component of it and stuff like that.
|
|
So it's not, it's pretty easy.
|
|
I have not had any, there's not been anything that I've failed to do, except if the show gets posted
|
|
wrongly, the categorization, there's only something that the stuff can change.
|
|
So we post them with Mark the podcast, and if they, if you post them without saying what it is,
|
|
they get added to, I can't remember what category it is, but it's a miscellaneous category,
|
|
and the users can't change them.
|
|
Okay, you're going to do the deed.
|
|
What say happy new year to everybody?
|
|
Because like you said earlier, we're going to keep the recording going until
|
|
we have to do an official ending, you know.
|
|
Oh, sure.
|
|
Seven o'clock, I'll do an official ending.
|
|
Yeah, I'm going to check with Kevin.
|
|
I have one point where all of a sudden came down here to restart the audio recording,
|
|
and it was just not running.
|
|
So my recordings, I'm going to be missing a little bit of a chunk.
|
|
I have everything here.
|
|
With my cool epoch date, and I saw it six or one date.
|
|
So yeah, it should be easy enough to align the latest in UTC.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Might be no harm also to paste in the chast from mumble into the interpad at the bottom of the
|
|
interpad probably.
|
|
Yeah, we could do that.
|
|
The issue is if you close mumble for any reason, it disappears.
|
|
So I don't know if somebody has had their mumble open the whole time.
|
|
Would have got the whole chast because I don't.
|
|
Yeah, mine was open the other time.
|
|
Okay, do a select all copy and put it into a text file real quick.
|
|
So are you going to close it up officially?
|
|
Yep, one sec here.
|
|
I'll just put that into the text file.
|
|
Three, two, one, go.
|
|
All right.
|
|
So this has been the end of the 9th Annual Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve show.
|
|
We want to say greetings to small region of the United States Baker Island and
|
|
howling islands.
|
|
Oh, does anyone want to sing all kinds of times?
|
|
Nope.
|
|
Yeah, thank you.
|
|
Now that can I, I was going to rely on the rest of you.
|
|
Don't even know the lyrics.
|
|
Can sing the show for a song.
|
|
If you want to kick it up, I'll back you up about that.
|
|
Oh, there's that countdown script.
|
|
I was wondering where it was.
|
|
Was it at the beginning of either pad?
|
|
It's at the very end of the day.
|
|
Oh, the end.
|
|
This is the thing about the New Year show.
|
|
You go, all right, yeah, everything's on there.
|
|
I'll kind of definitely tidy up that.
|
|
And then next year comes along, you know, how did I do that again?
|
|
In fact, all versions from four years ago.
|
|
No, I didn't edit the end here.
|
|
Mumble server was supplied by the wonderful HPR community.
|
|
Or Ken Fallon.
|
|
No, who originally had the Mumble server?
|
|
John, I'm just saying.
|
|
Oh, yeah, John.
|
|
God, sorry.
|
|
That's right.
|
|
The stream was a good Kevin and Wisher and then you read it as well.
|
|
No, Kevin had the stream.
|
|
John had the Mumble server of Rages and I just took it over.
|
|
So, yeah, good.
|
|
But I don't think that that's fine.
|
|
The joy of the community is enough for me.
|
|
One of my dealers is a surfaced.
|
|
I'll go and say hello back in a bit.
|
|
All right, I'm gonna go get some, I need some breakfast.
|
|
I'll leave the recording going.
|
|
I don't want to say thank you again to everybody for coming on.
|
|
It seemed like this was a very, very good year for the
|
|
New Year show.
|
|
I don't think I was ever on here once where there wasn't
|
|
somebody talking.
|
|
So, there's probably lots of good audio.
|
|
Yeah, thanks for all your efforts, honky.
|
|
I was appreciated.
|
|
Oh, problem.
|
|
Is that a big deal?
|
|
Like I said, the hardest part is usually just the audio
|
|
what I think is getting it all together.
|
|
Yeah, you know, yes.
|
|
I've watched from a distance in the past and I've been
|
|
directly involved.
|
|
I can still add the show notes if you need help, please.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Yeah, I feel there's so many things that so many audio
|
|
applications that seem to choke on larger audio files.
|
|
And I think that's the challenge really, huh?
|
|
Yeah, Audacity's fine and stuff, but there are limits, I guess.
|
|
I've not tried to push it to the limits.
|
|
I've found so many audio players too that just seem to choke on larger audio.
|
|
It's not surprising, I suppose.
|
|
Like I'm mobile, but there was last year's audio
|
|
that I had my version of the audio.
|
|
And it was, the VLC choked on it.
|
|
I was really shocked by that.
|
|
Yeah, I've not had that experience.
|
|
But it's probably because I always listen,
|
|
mostly listen to stuff on MP3 players.
|
|
And I've got a bunch of those.
|
|
And they don't seem on the whole to be that bothered by
|
|
by file sizes.
|
|
You know, I've got multiple hour shows on there with no trouble.
|
|
But yeah, that's the antenna pod.
|
|
Antenna pod's pretty good now, actually, on the phone.
|
|
But it has had problems in the past.
|
|
Now, do you just throw a spread of audio files at Antenna pod?
|
|
I selectively download stuff on Antenna pod.
|
|
So I don't have auto download set for all of the feeds.
|
|
I just go to a feed and download everything and put it in the queue.
|
|
And then listen to listen to them that way.
|
|
It's very...
|
|
It's sometimes it's a good thing to do
|
|
because my homebrew podcast management thing
|
|
just turns away with downloading every day
|
|
and then making a sort of...
|
|
It makes a database of everything.
|
|
And I can then go and play stuff from it.
|
|
But I usually do them in time order and grouped by feed or a batch of feeds.
|
|
So the problem with doing it that way is that
|
|
I get so behind sometimes.
|
|
At the moment, I've got 16 gigabytes of un-listened stuff
|
|
on the system.
|
|
So this time I'm thinking, I really want to listen to this one.
|
|
I want to catch up.
|
|
I'm currently listening to the next logcast, actually,
|
|
because I'm way behind of that.
|
|
So it's useful to do that on the phone.
|
|
Yeah, but on the phone's the only way I can do it.
|
|
I got a new pair of Bluetooth headphones.
|
|
Earphones, I guess, for Christmas.
|
|
My kids bought for me.
|
|
And so the phone plus them is really quite nice, actually.
|
|
I might switch away from my homebrew.
|
|
It's just what I do.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
You'll see.
|
|
Well, recently I got into the audiobooks.
|
|
I know I'd listened to Joe talking about the Dresden file books.
|
|
And so I was going to go get my teeth worked on.
|
|
And when they initially were talking,
|
|
they said that there was going to be a long process.
|
|
So I was debating.
|
|
So I was going to try and listen to something during this,
|
|
because just sitting there clenching my eyes
|
|
and holding onto the site while they work on my teeth
|
|
to just whatever music they had in the background
|
|
didn't seem very like a very good time.
|
|
So I found Ready Player One from archive.org
|
|
and archive.org, actually.
|
|
So I wound up downloading that.
|
|
I didn't mind up listening to anything during it.
|
|
And they didn't wind up spending as much time working on my teeth
|
|
as they had actually said they were.
|
|
I think just looking at me,
|
|
just the one hour that they did work on me,
|
|
looking at me, they decided to just space them out
|
|
a couple of days, one month at a time maybe.
|
|
But it kind of reinvigorated my love
|
|
for listening to audio books.
|
|
So I went and I downloaded all of the the Dresden files.
|
|
So I've been listening to a lot of audio books.
|
|
That's good.
|
|
Yeah, I just recently contributed to the Kickstarter.
|
|
I think it was Cory Doctorow,
|
|
the he's a science fiction writer.
|
|
And he made quite a lot of his books available
|
|
as audio books by the Kickstarter.
|
|
Plus, he gives away quite a lot of his stuff.
|
|
So I was happy to, and I listened to a fair bit of it.
|
|
And I was quite happy to throw some money his way
|
|
because of his generous look on this sort of stuff.
|
|
So you ever listened to him?
|
|
Have you come across him at all?
|
|
No, I prefer of him, but I haven't listened to him yet.
|
|
I think he was a founder of the EFF or the EFF or something.
|
|
One of those activists organizations.
|
|
So he's quite an impressive guy.
|
|
I've seen Cory Doctorow the name about places,
|
|
but I don't know where.
|
|
Yeah, he used to live in the UK.
|
|
Doesn't any more.
|
|
He's a Canadian, I think.
|
|
I think he's, I'm not sure where he is now,
|
|
but he is often keynote speaker of various things, you know?
|
|
By a minute, it's a digital certificate, actually.
|
|
Ah, okay.
|
|
I think he was a keynote at the Hope Conference, for example,
|
|
the last one that was done virtually.
|
|
And he's been on previous ones as well.
|
|
So yeah, he's an excellent speaker.
|
|
Anyway, his audio books are pretty good.
|
|
So he reads them.
|
|
So nothing quite like having the author read in their own book.
|
|
They get all the pronunciations right, which is cool.
|
|
Very American centric as books, sir.
|
|
So I don't get as much out of them as most people would.
|
|
As in, I don't know about American football or baseball,
|
|
et cetera, et cetera.
|
|
And obviously, then the science fiction
|
|
derivatives are safe.
|
|
When I was in my teens,
|
|
I went through the local library reading
|
|
everything science fiction.
|
|
And the vast majority of it was American based stuff,
|
|
you know, apart from maybe Arthur Clarke,
|
|
but Arthur C. Clarke, I would say.
|
|
And so I sort of got into the way of basically skipping
|
|
over those references that I didn't fully understand.
|
|
So it doesn't bother me over much.
|
|
All right, I think the kids are getting a bit
|
|
rowdy upstairs.
|
|
So I will talk to you guys later.
|
|
Hopefully people will be on later.
|
|
Juryl.
|
|
Bye, Hungry.
|
|
Happy New Year.
|
|
And to you, continue with Marie.
|
|
CD archive in your problem project.
|
|
Well, I'm going to go and do very cooking related things,
|
|
I think.
|
|
So I'm going to disappear now.
|
|
My kids will be over in the next hour or two.
|
|
It's quite a nice day here, actually.
|
|
But so they might be walking in the hills.
|
|
But anyway, there'll be over later.
|
|
All righty, to the books.
|
|
K, bye.
|
|
Talk to you tomorrow.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
True enough, yeah.
|
|
See you later.
|
|
Bye.
|
|
We'll see you all night out, Laveanna.
|
|
It's a simple, interesting one I was talking to,
|
|
and I just hope he comes out of the community.
|
|
All righty, next.
|
|
He's back this time, it's personal.
|
|
So turns out there's a database of leap seconds
|
|
in your computer.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Yeah, I didn't know that.
|
|
I had to work with leap seconds a while ago,
|
|
and it was very annoying.
|
|
I was just checking out the lounge.
|
|
Couple guys are catching up on each other.
|
|
Good, good, good.
|
|
I just thought I'd leave them alone.
|
|
Nice and sunny here.
|
|
Nasty and rainy here.
|
|
Nothang yet here.
|
|
You learned?
|
|
Stockholm.
|
|
Tuck, tuck, tuck, tuck.
|
|
Faster, good.
|
|
That's the extent to my Swedish.
|
|
More than I knew when I got here.
|
|
Where did you get there from?
|
|
Portugal.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Did you come up for the snow?
|
|
Yeah, I was thinking of emigrating
|
|
to Portugal.
|
|
Why did you leave?
|
|
Just came here for studying and stayed.
|
|
It is a fine country, too.
|
|
I'm a great two.
|
|
I would say I would think.
|
|
I'd like growing things, plants, you know, for food.
|
|
Yeah, that's more difficult than Sweden, I can tell you.
|
|
Where are you in?
|
|
In the UK, Midlands.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
It's fine, really.
|
|
It's just a bit lonely.
|
|
I mean, there are plenty of people, just sometimes you want
|
|
to be with people who have similar interests
|
|
and want to build a place.
|
|
Yeah, another feeling.
|
|
Dressed in my wife is, she is a something that doesn't
|
|
translate into English, but it's amazing how often
|
|
she refers to the need for finding your own community
|
|
and stuff in her work.
|
|
Yeah, you can give to a lot of people,
|
|
or you can sometimes you want to keep going,
|
|
and you want to keep building things.
|
|
But you see how your work kind of just evaporates,
|
|
or it gets cannibalized by, I don't know, enough said.
|
|
Yeah, I have a feeling we're going to head into
|
|
interesting territory over a pint of perhaps,
|
|
or not the entire world, I was listening to it.
|
|
Right, well, like I've mentioned three times
|
|
since last night, I've got audio in the directory,
|
|
but it needs stitching together.
|
|
And it's just, you know, how you're there,
|
|
I guess it's going to be along the lines
|
|
of, I'll probably go by interruption,
|
|
by what cancers of valid interruption to the thing
|
|
that you were doing already, you know,
|
|
and what is that based on?
|
|
Intention, about intention.
|
|
It goes quite well with computing, you know,
|
|
and directives and all of that stuff.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
You're going to do a show on this?
|
|
We'll see what it turns into.
|
|
Before you put it back in, sir.
|
|
I'm recording a correction.
|
|
Right, just as long as it needs to pass,
|
|
you know, it needs to be grammatically consistent.
|
|
Well, now you said, yeah, sure, so I guess it's old now.
|
|
Like I said, there's audio in the directory,
|
|
and I know how to use the, I know how to do it, I think.
|
|
I've got a friend, I've talked to my friend about,
|
|
you know, altering the audio to make sure it's,
|
|
we just put a filter on it or something, he's up for it.
|
|
Yeah, but don't, don't, listen,
|
|
the number of shows that I've lost due to people going,
|
|
oh, I haven't recorded it,
|
|
and I just need to edit it a little bit or whatever.
|
|
Wack it into audacity, truncate silence,
|
|
and send it in, that's all you need to do.
|
|
And if you don't know how to do any of that,
|
|
just upload it.
|
|
This is what HPR is all about.
|
|
You get your first show in,
|
|
and then you can do the perfection later.
|
|
Yeah, no worries.
|
|
I've been encouraged by all of the
|
|
non-perfect versions.
|
|
And it's quite funny.
|
|
Did you say someone used their speaker as a microphone?
|
|
I didn't hear that episode, but I thought that's,
|
|
that's in spite of it.
|
|
That's how I call it, that is.
|
|
Well, it was an excuse for a back in the day,
|
|
because when HPR started, you know, mobile phones didn't exist,
|
|
even mobile phones in the current form,
|
|
you know, super computers in our pockets didn't exist.
|
|
So like people who had, maybe might have had a headset,
|
|
but not a lot more.
|
|
So yeah.
|
|
Yeah, that's cool.
|
|
I did the, I did the yoghurt pots and string.
|
|
I made a, I made a record player out of Makano
|
|
when I was, I don't know how old,
|
|
it was a little sub nine years old.
|
|
And yeah, I used to, I think you remember
|
|
the polystyrene curry pots from the chip shop,
|
|
and a pin.
|
|
And I used one of my parents, a jukebox records,
|
|
and I just wound the thing by hand,
|
|
but it worked.
|
|
Wow, awesome.
|
|
Makano's are really cool, a cool thing.
|
|
I never had enough.
|
|
I preferred Makano over Lego,
|
|
but you can never get, it was really expensive.
|
|
And now the mother inversion of Makano
|
|
was just all plastic and bits.
|
|
I nearly said that very same thing,
|
|
like my dad had a bunch of old, you know,
|
|
there was some bits of Makano, not enough,
|
|
but compared to Legos, no contest really.
|
|
No.
|
|
You just had a lot more freedom with Makano.
|
|
There's some of the Chinese brands
|
|
that still do the, like, metal bits.
|
|
The brand is not Makano itself,
|
|
so whenever I get a chance, I'd buy my son
|
|
some random thing, and then eventually just encourage him
|
|
to, you know, just don't follow the instructions,
|
|
try and, you know,
|
|
create something of your own,
|
|
and he's come up with quite a few good things.
|
|
But personally for me, I just prefer Lego
|
|
when I was small.
|
|
Also a bit of hacking in that,
|
|
because we had the, which is called Lego Technica,
|
|
but then I would take one of the gears
|
|
and glue it onto a little DC motor,
|
|
one of those 1.5-volt motors,
|
|
and then start to make, you know, electric
|
|
or reactive Lego things that I bought.
|
|
Yeah, I mean, that was one of my favorite things today.
|
|
I'm a brother at the technical Lego,
|
|
but I remember him now walking in,
|
|
and he was, he had the main's electricity,
|
|
240 volts plugged into a cactus.
|
|
Oh, that was great.
|
|
But it was dangerous.
|
|
I mean, he must have been what, 10 years old.
|
|
That actually reminds me of one of my first mishaps,
|
|
since at Africa, we've got 220 volts.
|
|
And I've always wanted my own, like, bead lamp
|
|
or night light or whatever,
|
|
and my bearings didn't want that.
|
|
So I said, okay, well, I'm going to bolt my own.
|
|
And I saw, like, I don't know if you guys know
|
|
the bayonet style globe.
|
|
It's got the two little nobbies on the side
|
|
that you push in, and then you give it a twist,
|
|
and then it connects to the sockets.
|
|
It's not the screwing time.
|
|
So I figured, okay, no, go to the garage,
|
|
get a plug, get a piece of wire,
|
|
and then I just wired to those two little knobs,
|
|
because I thought those would be the connection point,
|
|
and wired it up, and connected it to the plug,
|
|
everything sorted.
|
|
It's got, like, I think, probably,
|
|
what, 30 centimeter piece of wire.
|
|
I was seven or eight at the time.
|
|
So I plugged it in, and when I heat that...
|
|
Oh, I want it off, and because you've got
|
|
a small storage, as you're here to tell the story.
|
|
Yeah, but I crap myself.
|
|
And then the light went off the power tripped,
|
|
and I was white.
|
|
I was, like, silent, shaking,
|
|
and my parents just came running into my room,
|
|
and there was still some smoldering bits of carpet,
|
|
and I was just sitting there,
|
|
it's like, what the hell just happened?
|
|
They are.
|
|
My mother, and we call her story now.
|
|
She said, my brother did make a blue light
|
|
in the sewing machine with a screwdriver.
|
|
That's the same...
|
|
That's the same blue light
|
|
that makes the magic smokers come.
|
|
Very, very angry pixels.
|
|
Oh, that's hilarious.
|
|
Big clothes would be proud.
|
|
I did appreciate that HPR episode
|
|
on basic electrical safety.
|
|
And I didn't, because when I go out the house
|
|
in the morning, about four o'clock,
|
|
and I shut off the electricity,
|
|
you know, my switch was slightly loaded.
|
|
Now, I do use the, what you call it,
|
|
the, not the circuit breakers,
|
|
the other things, the RCDs,
|
|
which are more, you meant to test them once in a while,
|
|
but not as often as I was doing.
|
|
So yeah, I do unload my switches now
|
|
before I go out.
|
|
It's good to know.
|
|
They're quite affordable, they...
|
|
You can get them for extension.
|
|
I got one for about 23 euros,
|
|
for an extension, for power tools.
|
|
So it's like an outdoor weatherproof IP60 something.
|
|
Cool thing.
|
|
It's just an extension guard plugs into the socket,
|
|
and then you plug your power tool into that.
|
|
And then, yeah, that's pretty cool.
|
|
I went on the, in the box in the wall,
|
|
which I did fit myself actually.
|
|
Yeah, true enough, true enough, yeah.
|
|
Is it a funny story?
|
|
I might relate that one time.
|
|
I've been showered by molten droplets of copper
|
|
when I moved my own power supply,
|
|
because it's expensive to get that stuff done.
|
|
No, I mean, where the box comes in from the mains.
|
|
Yeah, look, 400, what is it?
|
|
400 volts in your house or a thousand, I can't remember.
|
|
We have to move the meter.
|
|
That's what I mean, that spinning wheel.
|
|
It used to be a spinning wheel now.
|
|
It's a smart meter now, but, yeah.
|
|
We had a metal, an ancient metal fuse box,
|
|
where honestly, you pull out the fuse,
|
|
which is in a bake-alite holder,
|
|
and the bake-alite cracked and snapped
|
|
and left you holding, left me holding the fuse holder
|
|
that I took out.
|
|
But anyway, I was, yeah, when I was,
|
|
I had my insulated pliers and gloves and everything,
|
|
but the end of the pliers,
|
|
it cut through the insulation
|
|
and touched the side of the metal box.
|
|
And yeah, the end of the pliers just disappeared,
|
|
and I was showered with the molten copper
|
|
from the cable.
|
|
So yeah, I nearly died there,
|
|
for sure, I nearly set fire to their cupboard as well.
|
|
Oh, all to beat it, like you definitely don't do that.
|
|
Yeah, now I've had some similar experiences
|
|
where I installed, actually quite recently,
|
|
I think it was about a year ago,
|
|
I installed some extra power points in the garage,
|
|
because every time I had to walk around the corner,
|
|
if I want to plug in a grinder or something like that,
|
|
or use extension leads, just at my workbench,
|
|
I wanted some power points, installed that,
|
|
and I switched off the, on the DB board,
|
|
I switched off the power, so I thought I was safe.
|
|
And somewhere along the line,
|
|
the neutral and live wire was swapped around,
|
|
somewhere in that circuit.
|
|
And then I just gripped with pliers,
|
|
and I was, because it's a solid copper strand,
|
|
and I just wanted to flatten it out
|
|
so that I can get it into that screw hole
|
|
and tighten it down.
|
|
As with full force, I gripped that wire
|
|
and man, that it bit me, it bit me solid.
|
|
So yeah, now be careful.
|
|
I think watch lecture boom
|
|
and just learn from these mistakes.
|
|
Yeah, and yeah, yeah, big cloud does us,
|
|
and there's another chap once again.
|
|
Oh my word, as the electrician,
|
|
I am dying of laughter over here.
|
|
I think a good thing to relate to people,
|
|
because a big strong guy at work, you know,
|
|
and I'm trying to tell him, it's not the,
|
|
it's not that the current needs to knock you over.
|
|
Yeah, it just interferes with your heart, you know,
|
|
it needs to be that less than sub 30 milliamps is it?
|
|
It's like, and it starts,
|
|
it can do damage it less than that.
|
|
You're interested in some of this stuff?
|
|
Yeah, so I think the most important thing is,
|
|
I think the most important thing is,
|
|
it's some very good stuff.
|
|
Yeah, John?
|
|
John Ward, you know the YouTube channel,
|
|
recommended to me by,
|
|
yeah, I'm going to look out for that.
|
|
But I think, yeah, one of the most important things,
|
|
if you work on something that might end up giving you a shock,
|
|
just keep one of your hands behind your back,
|
|
so that it's just one hand getting electrocuted,
|
|
and then you'll find that normally it just goes up
|
|
all the way to maybe your elbow or whatever.
|
|
But the moment that you get shocked
|
|
between your two hands,
|
|
that current is moving straight through your heart,
|
|
and that's not the ideal situation.
|
|
For sure, you were too close if that was your last resort.
|
|
But it's true.
|
|
It's one of those little voltage testers
|
|
that operates off of a counter electromagnetic force
|
|
and detects the EMF field around the wire
|
|
that makes a little BBB is current on.
|
|
Yeah, I have one of those.
|
|
I always go in with a multimeter and test for positive
|
|
and have a reference test as well, you know?
|
|
So, but yeah, for sure, if you can't just turn off
|
|
that one circuit breaker,
|
|
it's being covered in the HPR episode,
|
|
but you don't know who's been in there before you
|
|
and you have to turn all of that power off, don't you?
|
|
And then test, and then test again, really.
|
|
Even then I don't know how to do it.
|
|
Even then I don't know how to make sure your power is off.
|
|
It's to cut the wire.
|
|
Yeah, I think what I do these days is I've got a,
|
|
like a main switch on the outside of the house,
|
|
which is a 60 amp switch
|
|
and that one disconnects both live and neutral.
|
|
So once that's disconnected, then yeah,
|
|
it's basically as co-reset, then it's like the wireless cut.
|
|
And that is the safest way.
|
|
I guess it's when you're in a UPS.
|
|
So he's, do you have a baby backup,
|
|
uninterrupted power supply?
|
|
I've got one connected to my computer,
|
|
one that I modified myself.
|
|
So I've built a, is it 37 amp hour UPS
|
|
with an additional charger,
|
|
just it on my Mac and my screen and maybe the fan.
|
|
And it's good to go for about two and a half hours.
|
|
I just want to put some links to those YouTube power supply.
|
|
Yeah, with an uninterrupted power supply,
|
|
you can turn your breakers off
|
|
and you still have power there.
|
|
But it doesn't feed back into the main circuit.
|
|
So it runs from the main circuit.
|
|
I've plugged it in there and then my Mac and my screen
|
|
is connected to the UPS.
|
|
Okay, so it's a standalone device.
|
|
It's not feeding back into your vinyl.
|
|
Feed back into your panel.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, no, it's standalone.
|
|
But yeah, this actually reminds me of another story.
|
|
So I'm quite into electronics and things like that.
|
|
So I've built my own hi-fi.
|
|
The preamp is a vacuum valve
|
|
and then the power amp is solid states
|
|
based on the, what's it, nap 250 design from Avendale.
|
|
And while I was busy building the power supply boards,
|
|
the caps were charged with about 150 volts DC.
|
|
And I was testing the board
|
|
and making sure I'm safe and everything.
|
|
I disconnected, then I wanted to test the channel
|
|
from the other board.
|
|
And not thinking about these caps,
|
|
I'm sitting in like small running shorts at my desk
|
|
and I placed that fully charged board
|
|
with the pins down on my leg
|
|
with a swing voltage of about 150 volts.
|
|
Man, that left the mark.
|
|
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
|
|
The LX.
|
|
And that was DC, that DC hurts a lot more than AC.
|
|
Yeah, just that current across the interfering
|
|
with your nervous system to stop your heart.
|
|
I mean, you get burns anyway, right?
|
|
But heart attack is bad, it's bad.
|
|
Yeah, so I think this one didn't reach my heart
|
|
and couldn't because it's basically just,
|
|
I placed the board on my legs
|
|
and it was localized in that area.
|
|
But yeah, that gave me a bit of a reminder
|
|
just to think while working.
|
|
And some of these vacuum valves
|
|
can operate up to about 400 volts
|
|
and that will just not be fun.
|
|
Right, I'm quite attracted by high voltage
|
|
and like I'd like to mess around.
|
|
I've studied electronics before.
|
|
And so I've looked into inductance
|
|
and for making switch mode power supplies
|
|
I made a little switch, you know, just using a chip
|
|
and nothing.
|
|
I've looked at the papers, I suppose,
|
|
but not really, I don't understand all the maths.
|
|
But yeah, I can see myself getting
|
|
messing with that stuff again in the future.
|
|
I'm again the other way around.
|
|
So what speaks my interest in this is something
|
|
that I'm probably going to do this year.
|
|
So I want to build my own DC arc welder.
|
|
So basically take a couple of microwave transformers
|
|
to remove the secondary coils
|
|
and then replace that with like eight gauge wire.
|
|
Just to build like a 30, maybe a 40 volt power supply
|
|
but running like 100 or more amps.
|
|
But yeah, I need to think about that one
|
|
because that sounds a little scary.
|
|
Yeah, again, batteries, when you, yeah,
|
|
you know what you're doing enough, you know enough.
|
|
I made a couple of axial flux generators
|
|
for a wind turbine, magnets and coils and three phase
|
|
that kind of stuff.
|
|
And I actually didn't think at all at any point
|
|
during that that I could shock myself, but of course.
|
|
I think for me at this stage,
|
|
I think the easiest for that project of mine
|
|
is I've got an AC arc welder.
|
|
And it will probably be based just to take that
|
|
and modify it and put in some very, very large duty diodes
|
|
to build a rectifier and a massive cap
|
|
to try and flatten it out.
|
|
You know, you'll watch out for the aluminum coils
|
|
in those microwave ovens.
|
|
I didn't realize those were aluminum.
|
|
Some not all, but some it's cheaper than using copper.
|
|
So yeah, there's some aluminum coils out there,
|
|
which would melt more as much as what that do.
|
|
Yeah, you don't want that to vaporize and breathe that.
|
|
I pulled a few of those apart.
|
|
And you know, when I was looking to build
|
|
those flux generators, I think I ended up buying
|
|
a proper wire magnet wire, you know, thicker
|
|
because I needed the current for that.
|
|
I did consider going higher voltage,
|
|
but I thought about using it for attaching it
|
|
to some other thing at a later date
|
|
because it's application was a protest site actually
|
|
for an open cast coal mine.
|
|
And if the wind wasn't blowing,
|
|
we could bring it down and pedal it instead.
|
|
So it went for thicker wire.
|
|
But yeah, I found some aluminum
|
|
and that's what I was a bit disappointed.
|
|
So with playing on the inside of microwaves,
|
|
have you ever had the thought of playing with a magnetron?
|
|
No, I know that little burillion, that pink burillion,
|
|
you don't want to be inhaling that dust.
|
|
And you have, of course, but my brothers told me,
|
|
I told him, oh, went up the top of a hill next to the big
|
|
antenna pole, you know, with the big wires coming down the side
|
|
that you think are holding it up,
|
|
but are actually the antenna.
|
|
And they're saying, don't just don't stand there
|
|
and whatever you do, if you see a state square tube,
|
|
don't look down it because you will go blind.
|
|
So mind out for the waveguides.
|
|
I don't know what you meant about magnetrons.
|
|
Neutrons?
|
|
Yeah, it's that magnetron basically that creates
|
|
that whole thing.
|
|
So I've had this idea, but I don't think there's much use
|
|
for the information of experimenting with this.
|
|
But using that with a custom guide to interfere
|
|
with what's this near-field things and RFC
|
|
and things like that, and to see how that works.
|
|
I think that's a really destructive thing.
|
|
Yeah, research it.
|
|
And because it's good to know you might
|
|
be protecting yourself from some environmental danger
|
|
that you were already exposed to, you know,
|
|
it's worth looking at up.
|
|
Yeah, I'm assuming.
|
|
But for me, it was more about using that particular technology
|
|
to remotely disable NFC and RFC and things like that.
|
|
I'm not going to ask why.
|
|
I mean, like, it's physics, isn't it?
|
|
You find an application for the knowledge you have.
|
|
Are you getting curious?
|
|
I get curious.
|
|
Yeah, we're all curious.
|
|
This is what drives us into this hobby.
|
|
But for me, I mostly, I will go and spend money
|
|
if there's a client willing to pay for it.
|
|
If you want to find vulnerabilities, physical,
|
|
or online, or network, or whatever, that's fine.
|
|
But this is something that I've been wondering about
|
|
and how that can be exploited in different ways.
|
|
But yeah, again, if nobody's going to pay for that,
|
|
then that's sort of pointless to go down that route
|
|
except curiosity.
|
|
There's payment and there's value, isn't there?
|
|
But it's a similar kind of thing.
|
|
You, if you need a thing, then you find ways.
|
|
I think it might make an interesting talk.
|
|
Yeah, in communities like this, or TEDx, or whatever,
|
|
using completely unrelated technologies
|
|
to be malicious-based.
|
|
If it's straightforward enough for someone to do
|
|
in a short period of time, like a week of playing,
|
|
there are people who probably have done it
|
|
in environments where they had nothing else to do
|
|
because they were just in a very deprived environment
|
|
and there's all this junk lying around.
|
|
Yeah, no, most certainly.
|
|
I mean, there's a lot of curious people out there
|
|
and I've done some really crazy experiments in the past.
|
|
OK, so curiosity, just out of my coincidence,
|
|
and the last week of running to twice,
|
|
I think there were separate sources.
|
|
RFC testing, not RFC.
|
|
What is it when you're compliance testing,
|
|
when you make a product and you need to get it tested
|
|
to see that it's not interfering with aeroplanes
|
|
or with medical equipment and how this tests sweet
|
|
in a special place and you pay tabular, you get tested.
|
|
You could learn something from it if you didn't know already.
|
|
You might see some tutorial about that,
|
|
which might relate to waveguides.
|
|
Related waveguides?
|
|
Yeah, I think that that's actually quite interesting.
|
|
I'm pretty sure there must be some papers published on that.
|
|
I've briefly looked to find some, which I haven't been successful,
|
|
but I think if I just go and apply my mind properly,
|
|
then one should be able to find some white papers.
|
|
And then that knowledge.
|
|
So I might not have noticed half of that or other.
|
|
I can listen, say, to electronic engineering podcast.
|
|
And I can understand what they're talking about.
|
|
And it's odd occasionally I recognize
|
|
where I wouldn't know what they were talking about
|
|
if I hadn't read that thing,
|
|
if I hadn't spent half an hour going down that rabbit hole.
|
|
And then you pick up that extra knowledge
|
|
because you had something to attach it to.
|
|
Giana, that is indeed.
|
|
It's always, once you get the context
|
|
then everything else falls in place.
|
|
Right, and I don't feel so bad if I'm reading.
|
|
Occasionally, I've been, my ego has tempted me
|
|
to read about particle physics.
|
|
And whenever I've had a quick try at that,
|
|
it just does nothing in my mind or my day
|
|
to attach that stuff to generally speaking.
|
|
So it means nothing to me.
|
|
I don't retain it.
|
|
It was useless.
|
|
But if I'm building around,
|
|
I have enough trouble trying to,
|
|
when I come back to trying to supply my laptop
|
|
with 20 volts and four and a half amps,
|
|
starting from nothing in the back of a van,
|
|
like I think it shouldn't be this difficult,
|
|
but the fact is things aren't straightforward
|
|
and a little bit of knowledge does go a long way.
|
|
Yeah, I was lucky to have studied in technical school.
|
|
So I had electrical engineering from what age 13.
|
|
I actually wanted to do electronic engineering,
|
|
but if you want to do that,
|
|
you have to have 80% for maths at higher grade,
|
|
which I was just not able to do.
|
|
So they said, well, electronics is not for you,
|
|
but you can go electrical engineering.
|
|
Right, I got qualified as a cis admin for Solaris
|
|
before Oracle got bought by, sorry, Oracle bought Solaris,
|
|
bought what did they got some micro systems,
|
|
but I've never under penny doing that.
|
|
What's my point, electrical engineering?
|
|
Oh, I did hear another podcast.
|
|
They were talking, interestingly,
|
|
about swapping out transformers,
|
|
you know, on the village level,
|
|
on the industrial estate level,
|
|
with is it gallium nitride switching
|
|
to make it more efficient and smaller,
|
|
to make a power go further
|
|
while we reduce oil consumption, that kind of a thing.
|
|
So there's a heck of a lot of money to be made there.
|
|
And I did consider for a minute,
|
|
I'm capable of that, none of this is a risk of death,
|
|
but there is work there.
|
|
Yeah, definitely, but it's not quite interesting,
|
|
how you mentioned you were involved with Solaris.
|
|
I was really disappointed when Oracle stopped making
|
|
the free version of Solaris,
|
|
which was basically a Linux alternative,
|
|
because I think that would, oh yeah, well, that was,
|
|
just simply the base Java development environment
|
|
that you could ask for.
|
|
Yeah, I was just qualifying,
|
|
I passed my certificate for Sysadmin,
|
|
and there's some initials for it, I forget.
|
|
They were gonna give me, you know,
|
|
you get to use their logo on your website and stuff,
|
|
and pretty much as that happened,
|
|
are Oracle Borts and Micros,
|
|
and I was into open Solaris at the time,
|
|
I just got my head around all that,
|
|
the fact that I could package my own DVDs at the time,
|
|
DVDs, with all the, and make it bootable, you know,
|
|
I was stoked, and then I thought,
|
|
oh, there's no way that Oracle, you know,
|
|
they're just, I'm not working for a bank,
|
|
don't wanna do it,
|
|
and now the universities are gonna switch over
|
|
away from Solaris to Linux,
|
|
and yeah, open Solaris,
|
|
I was thinking I'm gonna develop this,
|
|
and then it just kind of felt a bit,
|
|
except for a Lumos project.
|
|
So smart, smart us is still cool,
|
|
or it was, we've never seen it spinning this,
|
|
when it was spinning this.
|
|
Oracle now has what they call Oracle Linux,
|
|
I haven't tried it out yet,
|
|
but I think that may be an alternative
|
|
development platform,
|
|
but yeah, I just need to take some time
|
|
and test it out and see how it goes.
|
|
The way my head works, like I said,
|
|
I've never earned money with the Sysadmin,
|
|
is now, what do you need to do in your day,
|
|
and what's the difference between a microcontroller,
|
|
when you're feeding a microcontroller
|
|
or programming that, or whether you're using,
|
|
what level of code, who was it that you needed to talk to
|
|
when you just tried to send this message
|
|
in this weird code that somebody else developed, you know?
|
|
Have you got enough food?
|
|
From most people in the world.
|
|
The other funny thing is how,
|
|
basically since the beginning of Java,
|
|
it's always been sitting on three billion users,
|
|
and it's never moved for the last decade, at least,
|
|
that on that little screen when you install it.
|
|
Yeah, it's surprising how long that code sits there,
|
|
isn't it?
|
|
If it works.
|
|
Yeah, no, it doesn't.
|
|
But anyways, I need to drop off for a bit,
|
|
I need to take my daughter to the shops,
|
|
so I'll be back probably about an hour, maybe two.
|
|
Enjoy.
|
|
Is this still going to be running in two hours?
|
|
I don't know, I need to talk.
|
|
I need to fix it.
|
|
I'm still going now.
|
|
Well, good day, and I'll hear maybe here
|
|
some of you on HPR.
|
|
Good day.
|
|
Happy New Year and have a good, I think,
|
|
50 and I talked one year for two or three days on this.
|
|
Really?
|
|
I know he was having issues,
|
|
logging in, so gave up.
|
|
So I guess he's not going to be on this years.
|
|
I'm not 50, net minor.
|
|
50's not with us anymore.
|
|
We heard stories about Lord D, but I never talked to him.
|
|
He's the one that got me into all this in the first place.
|
|
I met him face to face at Ohio Linux Fest in 2008 or nine.
|
|
I got to meet 50 at Texas Linux Fest.
|
|
And we met Danny makes.
|
|
Yeah, Danny still comes by my house.
|
|
So is that more than see I heard?
|
|
It is.
|
|
I got plumb to work in early.
|
|
Awesome.
|
|
How have you been, man?
|
|
I was listening on a live stream,
|
|
most of the last day.
|
|
I had family things to do where I would have been on more.
|
|
When are you going to start jumping on tilts more?
|
|
I'll take that as a probably never.
|
|
Oh, I didn't hear a question.
|
|
Oh, no, I asked more than see
|
|
when he was going to start jumping on tilts more.
|
|
I have been non-stop for the last two years in my job.
|
|
It's really difficult to hop on the stream,
|
|
let alone get wake wise running.
|
|
Right, okay.
|
|
But I try to at least listen.
|
|
Yeah, but usually I see you quite often in listening booth.
|
|
Okay, I used to do the show from the office.
|
|
What was that?
|
|
I used to do the show from the office or on the drive home.
|
|
I am so far behind on the Linux lug cast.
|
|
I'm sorry, a mint cast.
|
|
Yeah, we've had some decent shows recently.
|
|
Let's get in board there for a little while.
|
|
This last show was the prediction show,
|
|
but the one before that was
|
|
who were going over Kevin Mitnick's art of invisibility.
|
|
And then I think the episode before that,
|
|
I went through and explained how to set up a secure VM.
|
|
I'll apologize if you're not being more of a talker,
|
|
but my whole family is around here and they're loud.
|
|
Yeah, that happens.
|
|
It was funny here in your daughter, rantup, Joe, about the...
|
|
I'm not sure.
|
|
The streamers that animated the other people's Twitch stream.
|
|
Oh, I'm not Kai, it was, it was Tala talking about that one.
|
|
I'll have to get the RAWs again from,
|
|
I'll have to get the RAWs again from a hockey
|
|
and see if I can cut that out.
|
|
I tried to convince entertaining.
|
|
Yeah, I tried to convince them both to join for a little while,
|
|
but I'm the only person in the house interested in Linux.
|
|
Technology in general, except for my son, but he's 10.
|
|
So give him a little bit more time.
|
|
Well, I'm not really interested in the Linux at all,
|
|
but she'll miss it when it's gone.
|
|
Yeah, everyone will miss it if it goes.
|
|
It won't.
|
|
It really can't.
|
|
Oh, it could, from this house.
|
|
Oh, well, from the house, yeah.
|
|
The only thing my wife would be annoyed about is that we wouldn't have theplex anymore.
|
|
That would be.
|
|
Have you run the jelly fan?
|
|
Yeah, I have not.
|
|
I've been using Plex for a long time.
|
|
And finally, you can get the lifetime and like once a year they'll do their sale where
|
|
they offer their, the price that they first posted for Plex to get the lifetime subscription
|
|
for it, which is like 70 something dollars.
|
|
So I got that and it's not necessarily because I use any of the premium features for it.
|
|
It's because, you know, I like to support the things that I use.
|
|
I wouldn't run jelly fan, but it has troubles with freeBSD, which is what I run Plex on.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
When I completely upgraded my server, I started having issues playing MKVs, and I'm still
|
|
trying to figure out why.
|
|
And I'm getting occasional skipping.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Views are the only thing that work on my server.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
AVI seem laggy.
|
|
I think it's the AVIs that are skipping a little bit and then the MKVs didn't want to load
|
|
it all for a while, but I'll have to go back and double check and see if that's still
|
|
the case.
|
|
It does have an older graphics card in it, and I do want to upgrade that eventually.
|
|
So see if that helps.
|
|
I've had issues with files that are aged to 65.
|
|
You'll have to check that.
|
|
I actively look for that now, and that's usually what the issue is, is that can't be played
|
|
back on my, from my NAS.
|
|
I'm switching to a little mini MD box to run Plex and just using the NAS storage.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Well, no, I've got a, what is it, a Ryzen 5, 3600, and 8 terabyte drive, a 4 terabyte
|
|
drive, and a 2 terabyte drive, a varying ages, and I'm going to have to do some more testing
|
|
to see if it's like read speeds on one of the drives, or if it's just the file types,
|
|
or if it's H265 at this, at this point.
|
|
What's your problem there, bud?
|
|
Some MKVs don't want to play from Plex, and with some AVI files, I get skipping.
|
|
How hard are the AVI files?
|
|
Generally TV show size, so probably 720p, 30 minute videos, although we did see some
|
|
skipping with white Christmas as well, I'll just mount the stuff.
|
|
Does it, does it spawn other things, or just on Plex?
|
|
It's on Plex, because when we started having the problem with white Christmas, I did a
|
|
fuse mount to my laptop and just used VLC to play it, and it worked fine.
|
|
Because I always have Cody set up to play a NFS, and have NFS, that's my backup to Plex.
|
|
You said you were using NFS?
|
|
Yes, NFS 2 Cody, version 3.
|
|
I'm not a big fan of NFS, but SSHFS works really well.
|
|
Well, the NAS that I have, being that it runs, it's an NFS server, what serves everything.
|
|
And Cody is on a separate machine and mounts everything via NFS, so all of my network
|
|
is saturated.
|
|
It works really well with us.
|
|
I'm using the NFS share off my NAS also, and I did the same troubleshooting as you did
|
|
and if I mount it from my laptop and run it in VLC, it's seamless.
|
|
Right, usually I don't use NFS, well, because I don't have a NAS.
|
|
I use SSHFS for basically everything, but with my troubleshooting, that's what I identified
|
|
was that it was H265 files, but weren't playing off the NAS.
|
|
It's probably the same thing and then, other fact, let me mount everything and see what
|
|
white Christmas is.
|
|
If you go to it in Plex, I think you can go to more info on the movie or TV show and
|
|
it'll give you that information.
|
|
That might, I do manage.
|
|
What Christmas?
|
|
It's listed as 720p.
|
|
I'm not seeing H264.
|
|
I do have in two places, so maybe I'll play the other one.
|
|
Yeah, okay.
|
|
The 1080p version that I have is H264 and you said that was what was giving you problems?
|
|
I'd know ones that are H265.
|
|
Do you have hardware decoding for H65?
|
|
I should have hardware decoding for everything, go into my settings, general, no, trans coder,
|
|
it's trans coder is set to automatic background trans coding, what's that?
|
|
I don't see disabled video stream trans coding, disabled trans coding of the video stream
|
|
and trans coder operations with this set, the trans coder may still trans code audio
|
|
as well as remux video.
|
|
I do have use hardware acceleration when available and use hardware accelerated video
|
|
encoding.
|
|
Did anyone want a screaming baby?
|
|
I give them one.
|
|
I've already had three of those, I'm good, I'm too old for that crap, but with MKVs
|
|
I had to start setting up optimized versions.
|
|
Why is that?
|
|
Because they wouldn't play on devices or all devices, does anybody watch anything good
|
|
lately?
|
|
Mandalorian Wonder Woman 1984, what do you think?
|
|
Mandalorian was great, what was that?
|
|
I said Wonder Woman had too many special effects.
|
|
Yeah, I think they were trying to chase too many storylines with it, the special effects
|
|
I didn't think were bad, except for the special effects for the sake of special effects.
|
|
Let's bring in the invisible plane and fly it through the fireworks, red and the good
|
|
books, anybody read, ready player too yet?
|
|
I can read physical books anymore, that's what audio books are for, that's what vacation
|
|
is for, lots of good fiction podcasts I'd listen to, scary, scary tales told in the dark
|
|
and STP archives, things like that, things went up, both seasons in, let me see if I can
|
|
find what it's called, a picture, but I haven't started it yet, like three books to
|
|
it so far, I think sure, a weird West trilogy, so I guess I got all three books.
|
|
I'm curious, why are you using Plex, you're not running a NAS for your storage?
|
|
Well then everybody else can enjoy my movie collection too, because I have a server with
|
|
massive amounts of storage in it.
|
|
Oh, your Plex is that?
|
|
Yeah, yeah, well I call it my server, but it's also my garage computer, so it is hooked
|
|
up to two giant monitors.
|
|
I acquired it.
|
|
I had to be fun.
|
|
My server is the Ryzen 53600 with the B450M motherboard, got an inside it, there is the
|
|
8, the 4 and the 2, and then I have an external enclosure that has a 4 and a 2, but I think
|
|
both of those need were placed.
|
|
Are you running ZFS?
|
|
No.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The only things that are backed up that are on the server is paperwork and pictures.
|
|
Yeah, it's important, you can do a refund the OFAS, entire ZFS snapshot to like S online
|
|
backups.
|
|
How long does it take?
|
|
I have really fast internet support.
|
|
Well, usually with the really cheap backup systems, it's throttled at their end.
|
|
I don't know about S3 specifically.
|
|
How much is S3 costing for backup?
|
|
It's $5 a terabyte with Sobby and it's cost me $5, but it's not something that's
|
|
trusted.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Offsite backup.
|
|
I've actually got some friends that live across the state, so 1,100 miles away, 1,200
|
|
miles away.
|
|
And I was thinking about sending said friend a Raspberry Pi and a couple of external
|
|
drives and using that as a backup, either that or sending them to my dad in Florida.
|
|
What's priority shipping state side these days?
|
|
Second.
|
|
How much does priority shipping um, here to Florida, it would probably depending on the side
|
|
of the package, size of the package, $15 to $17.
|
|
Not bad.
|
|
I can also order some of it through Amazon, have it sent straight to his house.
|
|
No, no, I wouldn't do that because then he'd have to hook something into something else
|
|
and that just wouldn't work.
|
|
The dude still has his Wi-Fi password though, so I could set it all up and say, hey dad,
|
|
just plug this into the wall.
|
|
You don't even need that.
|
|
Oh, well, I guess you'd need the Wi-Fi, but you can set up auto SSHFS backwards and set
|
|
up a reverse tunnel.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, but it would need power, so that's it.
|
|
And um, for something that remote, I don't know if I would do SSHFS, um, not for a long
|
|
term backup.
|
|
I'd rather do something like BT sync and then just have it read only on his side, so any
|
|
changes that I make to the things that I want backed up automatically get changed.
|
|
You could do it old before being around and just run R-Torrent and pass R-Torrent A-Torrent
|
|
about.
|
|
Technically, I could just, you know, code it all with R-Sync too.
|
|
R-Clumb.
|
|
So would BT sync or what I guess it's called as what?
|
|
As R-Clumb style config.
|
|
I'm not sure, uh, BT sync basically, I have it point to two folders, one local, one remote
|
|
and then it uses, um, parenting to keep them in sync.
|
|
And it's called Brazilio Sync now.
|
|
And then it's just a admin web page to set up the new syncs and I can't remember.
|
|
I know I've used R-Clone in the past, but I can't remember the setup for it.
|
|
I swear by R-Clone, very easy and it runs many protocols.
|
|
Okay, I remember.
|
|
I just looked it up.
|
|
Vagely remember setting that up when I was trying to set up, um, Google Drive as a local
|
|
mount.
|
|
I started using R-Clone because I got annoyed, um, a couple of years back because every
|
|
time I found a different way to, um, locally mount things like Google Drive and, um, what
|
|
was it?
|
|
Amazon storage, Amazon cloud, Amazon drive.
|
|
Every time I figure out a way to set it up, they'd, uh, make a change and yeah, you can't
|
|
do that anymore because you used to be able to do Amazon with a fuse mount.
|
|
It's just to help to facilitate their vendor lock-in policies.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I think I actually did an episode of midcast on it.
|
|
So if you were setting up G-Drive, were you trying to use G-Drive and a massive amount
|
|
of storage, um, my Google Drive at the time, I think I had a hundred gig, but yeah, um,
|
|
I was also at the time big into using, um, Windows tablets as Linux tablets and most
|
|
of those, the ace, it was, at the time, it was the ASUS transformer, the T100s and they
|
|
just plain didn't have a lot of storage in them.
|
|
So I wanted to set up cloud storage as local storage and, and use it that way.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Cut that out, start opening your claws on my chair, then at the same time, I also had a
|
|
terabyte on Amazon when they still had those plans and, um, I think I had cloud storage
|
|
with, um, ASUS as well and I know for a while because of getting the different transformer
|
|
devices, if I did the initial setup with Windows, they would give me, it was a hundred gig
|
|
of, um, Dropbox space for a year as well.
|
|
So I had a bunch of them, was it a hundred gig or fifty gig, eh, it's been a while and
|
|
I haven't slept.
|
|
I run, I run.
|
|
What storage?
|
|
I run my own.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
Well, now, you know, hard drive space is also a whole lot cheaper, so yeah, I have an
|
|
eight terabyte hard drive, so yeah, I set up SSHFS on all my devices, um, including
|
|
my, um, what is it, uh, the tablet that I'm using, the Dell, then you, I'm turning enterprise
|
|
SSD.
|
|
Ah, but it's not what I have, but that's, that's what I'm looking for now.
|
|
Yeah, that would be cool, high speed storage that way.
|
|
No, but I got SSH set up with using if up and if down, so whenever I connect to the
|
|
internet using my tablet, it will automatically connect to all the storage on my server.
|
|
And then whenever my internet connection drops, it will cleanly close that all out so
|
|
that it can reopen it when it comes back up.
|
|
Dell Venue 11 Pro 7130 running Linux Mint.
|
|
I, I do like the, uh, free BSD and the ZFS integration.
|
|
Yeah, I've heard good things and I've heard BSD can, is set up to be able to run most
|
|
things that run on Linux.
|
|
Yeah, most it doesn't run the mono very well, which is why I'm still running Plex and
|
|
not jelly fan or imbi.
|
|
I should try jelly fan and see what happens.
|
|
Oh, right now I got 48 terabytes of raw storage, 24 years old, and most of the night I have
|
|
external enclosures.
|
|
Oh, most of that's an in external enclosures?
|
|
Yeah, five, five big external enclosures, uh, external power over USB 0 and one of them
|
|
is 0.1.
|
|
That is cool.
|
|
Now, I'm thinking about getting one or two more eight terabyte drives.
|
|
And if I get two more, then I will pull the four terabyte and the two terabyte that are
|
|
currently in my server and put those into the external and transfer all the data over
|
|
to the eight terabytes and get rid of the other four and two that are going bad.
|
|
Pat?
|
|
I bought 90's, two terabyte, 90's, two terabyte hard drives, or I got a pallet deal, 400
|
|
for all of them.
|
|
Really good.
|
|
Especially if all of them, you know, worked.
|
|
Four were bad.
|
|
Right off the get go.
|
|
But I should rephrase, four failed bad blocks.
|
|
They still mounted, they were still accessible, but they weren't going the last very long.
|
|
All reasonable and died with it.
|
|
Still, the external enclosures aren't cheap either, the, any of the five days.
|
|
I have four of the Oracle and Amazon had, and did you try rennancing right on your, uh,
|
|
failed disc?
|
|
No, I took them apart and put the magnets.
|
|
Yeah, the spin right is good for, you know, recovering data that one last time, but
|
|
then I don't know if I would trust a drive that needed spin right run on it for anything
|
|
long term.
|
|
I brought their swears by it.
|
|
He has repaired several drives for people and they have run flawlessly for years afterwards.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Well, running all my data in a Z pool, even though I lost drives, I never had any downtime
|
|
at all.
|
|
Other than turning it.
|
|
My kitty is calm down finally.
|
|
Now I have a cuddle, buddy.
|
|
I'm routine cabinet.
|
|
I'm expecting my son to be up any minute.
|
|
Immortancy.
|
|
Are you on the, uh, the mid-cast discord for the telegram group?
|
|
Uh, no, I don't know how to use telegram or discord only because I haven't tried.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I assume that's why.
|
|
No, I was going to post a picture of my cat deciding where to post it.
|
|
Telegram it is.
|
|
Imager.
|
|
Anybody worked on any interesting electronics lately?
|
|
I, um, recently got my heliosnast, um, I'm going to be building that.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
lately, it's been PSPs for me.
|
|
It's been what?
|
|
PSPs, PlayStation Portables, buying them in bulk, broken, fixing them and selling them,
|
|
well, fixing them, putting custom firmware on them and then selling them.
|
|
Custom firmware master.
|
|
Um, no, no.
|
|
The custom firmware is to make it so that you, um, don't need the physical games in order
|
|
to play.
|
|
And it allows you to play a lot more retro games as long as you have the game files.
|
|
So I toss about 5,000 games on 64 gigabyte micro SD card and then use, uh, M2 adapter
|
|
and basically, but Neo Geo, um, N64, um, Genesis master system, PS1 Atari, quite a few
|
|
Atari games on there, Game Boy, Game Boy Advance.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I have an end playing regular.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
PlayStation emulation has actually gotten a whole lot better in the last couple of years.
|
|
There used to be, well, at least with, you know, handheld devices, there used to be a
|
|
lot of issues, um, with, uh, any game that required more than one CD and 64 emulation
|
|
still sucks.
|
|
It's not that bad.
|
|
Oh, not on the shield.
|
|
The pretty, it's pretty responsive and very performant.
|
|
The controller, so mapping the controller to have, uh, all the functionality of the
|
|
N64 country is quite different.
|
|
How old does it, um, emulate 007?
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I don't really play any first versions.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Uh, just 007 is one of those ones that I've never really found a system that emulates
|
|
it well.
|
|
I still have my original N64, um, uh, do you want me to try 007 or perfect dark?
|
|
I love perfect dark too, but, um, only the one with the expansion pack for the N64.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I've got the expansion pack too.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Um, are you going to try and run it on your shield?
|
|
That's, that's what I'm asking.
|
|
Like, do you want me to try and run just 007 or try and run perfect dark?
|
|
Just try 007.
|
|
It won't be today.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Um, how do I get in touch with, uh, jb at mccast.org.
|
|
All right.
|
|
I'll drop you.
|
|
Put that here.
|
|
I use retro arch for my setup.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Um, I have, um, have one really old think pad set up with, uh, badass era, and that works
|
|
really well.
|
|
How old is it?
|
|
Is it, uh, x120e?
|
|
I think that's right.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I have an age.
|
|
The x120e is from 2011, but pinning them cover my gold, uh, when I got mine, it didn't
|
|
have a hard drive in it.
|
|
So it has an SSD now.
|
|
Mine still has ingress.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Mine's definitely not original.
|
|
I, I kind of like buying broken things and making them work.
|
|
So I haven't bought headphones in bulk in a little while.
|
|
Less that worked out pretty good.
|
|
I got 10 skull candy, crusher, one of, it was one of the earlier models of the crusher.
|
|
I got eight of them working.
|
|
I think I sold or gave away five of them.
|
|
And I guess I still have a few hash threes left that I haven't finished fixing yet,
|
|
but they're boring to fix because they always break in the same way.
|
|
The hinge breaks.
|
|
Woo.
|
|
Really prints a new hinge, a little bit of cutting fits right in.
|
|
And I'm waiting for a new motherboard for the M song, um, gear S3, but because of the
|
|
holidays, it's taking forever to get here.
|
|
Is it the holidays or just the COVID?
|
|
No, but I'm pretty sure that it's a mixture of not COVID, but, um, something a certain
|
|
person did to the, uh, postal service along with it being the holidays, but it's just
|
|
a test, a test motherboard for me since, um, the pedometer and the heart rate monitor are
|
|
not working on that motherboard and it only costs like 15 bucks instead of the 60 that,
|
|
um, a working motherboard would cost me.
|
|
That'll also mean that I'll have a test motherboard for the next time I get one of the gear
|
|
S3 watches and need to figure out what's wrong with it or what's still working with it.
|
|
So you pick a lot of, um, it's hard work, yeah, it's just a hobby.
|
|
I work in financial technology for the longest time, um, I would pick up a couple of different
|
|
lots of, um, the HBS or the LG HBS 770s or the eight tens or, well, basically anything
|
|
in the line, um, I think I even have some, um, nine tens and a couple of five fifties and
|
|
just, um, fix them.
|
|
I mean, with those, it's almost always the same issue where the, um, board for the headphone
|
|
gets crimped right where it comes out of the, uh, side of the device and all you have to
|
|
do is shorten it up an inch.
|
|
And then so you buy ten of them, you get them for five dollars each and then you can turn
|
|
around and sell the working ones as refurbished for 20 bucks each or you end up giving them
|
|
away as Christmas presents as long as my hobby pays for itself, I'm good with it.
|
|
Well, eating food kind of pays for itself, I also, oh, cool, yeah, I do, so I haven't
|
|
smoked jerky, what was kind of rare, I'm in, uh, we've gotten a bunch of rain this last
|
|
week.
|
|
Yeah, it's where it's coming from.
|
|
Thanks.
|
|
You know what?
|
|
You can have it.
|
|
It's all yours.
|
|
Take it.
|
|
I'd rather have them.
|
|
Like I said, you can have it.
|
|
It makes it difficult to ride your bike when it's 30 degree, well, 38 degrees and, you
|
|
know, pouring rain.
|
|
But at least, you know, that's true, just nearly frozen.
|
|
I guess within what, less than a hundred miles of me, there's some snow cover.
|
|
I mean, it's not Canada's snow cover, but I don't know, I don't know, I used to live
|
|
in Northern Iowa, so we used to get quite a bit of snow there, but I was a lot younger
|
|
and sturdier and acclimatized.
|
|
Having been in Texas for the last 20 years, I have to say, I greatly prefer not snow.
|
|
I'm Georgia, I'm greatly, we're at Georgia, I lived in, uh, I didn't spill for a little
|
|
while.
|
|
What cities are closest?
|
|
When I say I lived there for a little while, I lived there for a little while when I was
|
|
in second grade, third grade, yeah, when we lived there, when we got back from Germany,
|
|
Zeta Air.
|
|
No.
|
|
Ironsville, Georgia, the dad was Army, Fort Stewart, granted, I spent most of my time in Texas
|
|
in El Paso, which is warmer than North Dallas.
|
|
So yeah, the weather here kind of sucks too, but what?
|
|
Dryer.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Once the desert.
|
|
Yeah, the humidity will kill you.
|
|
I know, we get this exact same humidity up here because we're right on the, we get it
|
|
with a cold too and it's just as bad.
|
|
This, that does sound like it would suck.
|
|
Tell me, um, the humidity when it's cold, does it still make you sweat?
|
|
No, it, it just makes you, uh, because the water still plings to you and, yeah, acts
|
|
like sweat.
|
|
Right.
|
|
It has an operation.
|
|
It condens difference.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, I'm good.
|
|
Usually.
|
|
At first, um, I did spend some time in a little, not so little place called Doha.
|
|
And, um, basically, I lived in a tent and we were right next to the ocean and like, I,
|
|
I mean, I literally kind of grown, grown, a rock, a rock, is that more or two?
|
|
Some happen to your audio, some happen to your, uh, to talk to, okay.
|
|
Well, I, I could have thrown a rock into the sea and, um, 140 degrees and that close
|
|
to the ocean.
|
|
It's not really a good mixture.
|
|
The ocean here is a tide hue, the water's slacked, uh, on the other side of the high and
|
|
the low tide when it's more like an hour, but a slacked tide, the water doesn't really
|
|
move.
|
|
And all the rest of, um, and I'm talking like 30, yeah, that, that, that, I think that
|
|
would suck.
|
|
It might make fishing easier.
|
|
Not really.
|
|
Not really on the bottom.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
Like lobster.
|
|
Does it make lobster and easier?
|
|
Does it make what easier?
|
|
Does it make catching lobster easier?
|
|
I don't know any other way.
|
|
So are you talking like industrial, um, lobster fishing or individual lobster fishing?
|
|
Uh, okay.
|
|
I did not know that you can't go out and catch your dinner.
|
|
That is highly illegal.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So you can go out and catch your dinner.
|
|
You just prefer not to get caught doing it.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Don't like that.
|
|
Is there a particular reason it's illegal?
|
|
Be like the out of the tax.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
And it likes to tax everything.
|
|
Well, it's not illegal to smoke a deer out of season.
|
|
It's just illegal, you know, get caught hunting one.
|
|
I think the license that had a balance and well, what if a deer steps in front of your
|
|
car?
|
|
It's not your.
|
|
And it's just supposed to rot on the side of the road.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'm just checking.
|
|
What if a deer fell into my smoker?
|
|
What if a deer jumped out of its skin and jumped into my, uh, smoker?
|
|
That would be a neat trick and I'm gonna see it.
|
|
I've switched over to Moomla.
|
|
Moomla?
|
|
I like Moomla.
|
|
It's not my go-to on Android devices.
|
|
It is or is not?
|
|
It is my go-to.
|
|
I do still have plumble installed, but when I'm on Android anymore, I'm using Moomla.
|
|
That's when my push to talk switched over to, uh, I need to set it back up again.
|
|
Uh, no.
|
|
I understand, you know, poaching, hunting out of season.
|
|
It's illegal for a reason, but there was a time when I was a kid when, you know, my
|
|
family didn't have any money and sometimes it was the only way to eat.
|
|
Problems to trophy.
|
|
Hmm?
|
|
The problem is trophy.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The don't eat.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
You mean those, um, I can't say the word on here, people that, um, bag a deer and all
|
|
they take is the head and leave the rest there?
|
|
That's a poster.
|
|
That's trophy hunting.
|
|
Sink trophy.
|
|
Now, that far north, do you guys, um, do you get pheasant and quail?
|
|
There's a lot of pheasant.
|
|
I haven't seen any quail.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Pheasant's good eating anyway.
|
|
We get pheasant.
|
|
Pheasant?
|
|
I don't think I've done pheasant.
|
|
Like a big pheasant.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how
|
|
easy it really is, HackerPublic Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infonomicon
|
|
Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
|
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
|
|
the website or record a follow-up episode yourself, unless otherwise stated.
|
|
Today's show is released on the Creative Commons' Attribution, Share a Light, 3.0 license.
|