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442 lines
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442 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3865
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Title: HPR3865: When did the Internet get so boring?
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3865/hpr3865.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 06:53:55
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3865 for Friday the 26th of May 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, when did the internet get so boring?
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It is part of the series' information underground.
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It is the 280th show of Klaatu, and is about 32 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is thoughts about the modern worldwide web.
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Hey everybody, this is Klaatu.
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As many of you have probably noticed, the internet is kind of boring now.
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You go to a search engine, you type in a thing, and if there's nothing on that thing, then
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the search engine gives you a bunch of irrelevant responses anyway.
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You go to a search engine, you type in a thing, and there's a bunch of stuff on that
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thing.
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Your search engine gives you all of the things that have been paid for by some big company
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to put information about that thing in your head.
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That is possibly what you want.
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Sometimes you just want to go to a web page for a thing that you want information on,
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and if someone's paid for it to be there, then that's fine.
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Other times you actually just kind of want other people's views on a thing.
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You want a person to tell you their thoughts about something, and while you can buy that
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sort of thing, if you're a big company, you can sponsor that.
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You can give a home for those kinds of content.
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You can do that.
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You can try to get people to contribute to that entity.
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I'm thinking in terms of, for instance, good reads, a site, it's a website, and people
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contribute to good reads by writing reviews of books for good reads, and most reviews usually
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read like real people who have actually read a book, not all the reviews, but some of
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the reviews kind of read like actual authentic thoughts about a thing, and that's kind of
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refreshing, and in a way that's why I'm on the internet.
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That's a big part of why I'm attracted to the internet because I can get people's thoughts
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about a thing, and ideally they're informed thoughts that come from a place of actual experience.
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I was using good reads as an example, and I kind of left it as it's a pretty good site,
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and I didn't mean to leave it there, actually, because good reads actually isn't a very good
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site.
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I used to be on it.
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I'm not on it anymore, or maybe I am on it, but I'm not active on it.
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I don't remember if I was able to close my account or whatever, but I think I read somewhere,
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and this is as spurious, this could be, who knows.
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I think I kind of read somewhere that, speaking of coming from a place of experience and information,
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but I think I read somewhere that good reads had been bought by Amazon, which is probably
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true because everything's been bought by Amazon or Disney, so whatever.
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Let's say it is true, but let's say it's not true.
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Either way, Amazon is probably scraping good reads for reviews to put on to Amazon.com for
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books, because at one point in time, Amazon primarily was a bookseller, I think.
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The point is that even something like good reads, and again, I'm using it as this weird
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example as if, though, it's like this thing of purity that has been corrupted.
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I don't know anything about good reads, it's something that came to my mind.
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Good reads existed, and you kind of realize at some point, while you're putting in your
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reviews for books and keeping track of the books that you've read and the ones that you
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want to read, you realize at some point that, oh my gosh, I'm feeding into a machine
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that I don't even own, like, why am I doing this?
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I'm essentially working for this company for free, and then, you know, the counterpoint
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to that valid counterpoint is, well, that company is providing, some company is providing
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a service to you.
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It's got a server, it's got a platform, it's got a little CMS, it's got a thing that
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you can put data into, and you can keep track of the books that you've read, or the books
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that you want to read, and the additions that you've read, and your thoughts on those
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books.
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And that is legitimately a useful service, like, that's why I originally signed up to
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good reads, because I thought, you know what, I can't remember what I've read from week
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to week, much less from year to year, so I need a place to keep track of that.
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Oh, here's a website here, I'll just sign up for it and use that.
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And for a long time, for a couple of years, like, that was a very, that worked for me,
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that was great, that was useful for me.
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But again, at some point, at some time, during my usage of that, I realized I was actually
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populating someone else's database, and I didn't know who that someone else was, I
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didn't know what they were going to do with the information that I was putting in as frivolous
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as it may be.
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I just, you just don't know, and it's not that I think that they have anything nefarious
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in mind, I just happen to think that I don't know who it is.
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I don't know these people, I don't know why I would be using their service, when I could
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instead just, I don't know, enter my thoughts into a text file.
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But you know what, the problem with a text file is that it lives on your computer, and
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that's as far as it goes.
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Not that it needs to go any farther, necessarily, but then again, when it comes to book reviews,
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I mean, it's kind of fun to tell people what you thought of a book.
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That's kind of the idea of like a book club, or just pop culture commentary, really.
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And so then I thought, well, okay, maybe I should put that text file onto a server.
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Well, I ended up doing that long story short, and I just have a bunch of text files that
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I review, random stuff, and I put it on a server, I put a slap to a static file, static
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site generator in front of it, and I commit my thoughts via Git, and it triggers the static
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site generator to turn those text files into a web page and bang, it's on a server.
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I don't know if anyone can ever find that server, it's not very well indexed, it's probably
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not even very well taxonomyed to be frank, but it's there, it's online.
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I feel like, hey, I'm sharing my thoughts with the world.
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Great.
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Pat on the back, feeling connected.
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That's the thing about a network, right?
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A network, in computer sense, we probably, possibly, all know what that means, and if
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we don't, we could go back, we could watch, we could listen to hacker public radio episodes
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about networking and things like that and figure it out.
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But let's assume for the moment that we understand what a computer network is.
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One computer's here, one computer's there, they're able to talk to each other, they
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will listen to each other.
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That's actually what a people network is, too, as it turns out, and I don't know which
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term came first.
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I don't know if network is a computing term that got adopted for people, or if it's a
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people term that got adopted for computers, I don't know the etymology of, is that the
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study of insects or words I forget?
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But anyway, I don't know what network means or where it came from, but let's just say
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that the network, you need two things.
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You need to be able to speak, and you need to be able to listen.
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Those are the two things about networking that matter.
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In modern internet speak, I think we call that engagement.
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So a network, a network of people, it kind of in order to be satisfying, I think it needs
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engagement.
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It needs, you need to be able to speak and feel like you are being heard.
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And then also, I think most people in a network also want to hear other people's thoughts.
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And I'm not saying like everyone, I'm not saying statistically everyone, I'm saying everyone
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I want to interact with are those kinds of people who want to both speak and listen.
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It's a thing about conversations.
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It's just that's a good conversationalist, right?
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You can speak a little, you can listen a little.
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Do a little bit of both in more or less equal amounts, or maybe you could listen a
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little bit more than you speak.
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And people love you.
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It's just, that's how conversations tend to work.
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It's pretty good.
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So that's what a network is.
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And I feel like the modern internet, and I think a lot of people in certain circles agree
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with this feeling, I think the modern internet is starting to lean towards that space of talking
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a lot and not listening a whole lot.
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Now I'm not saying like, oh, not enough internet websites have comment boxes.
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I don't, I don't, comments aren't what I'm talking about.
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I think that was a corporate sort of understanding of, oh, a conversation needs to happen quick.
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Let's populate everything with comment boxes so that people can give their thoughts
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right now, instantly online.
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And that'll be a conversation, right?
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Well, not necessarily.
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I mean, you could, you can have a conversation with someone through a glass pane where you
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can't actually hear each other, or they can hear you, but you can't hear them.
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You could say, I'd love to know your thoughts.
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And then you could just let people shout, you know, without sound at you.
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And you could claim that that was a conversation, hey, they could hear me.
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And I asked for their feedback and they gave me my feedback.
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Never mind that I, I couldn't hear them.
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And that's, I think essentially what a comment section on a website tends to be, I mean,
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at a certain point you get that sort of mass capacity of comments where it just starts
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to be a noise generator.
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You can't possibly process all of that feedback.
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And so it becomes, it becomes functionally meaningless.
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It's, it's people talking back at you, but you're not hearing it because there's just
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too much of it.
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And that's what the internet tends to in, in the comment fields, at least that's kind
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of what it encourages.
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It's just like quick, spit out some words and never come back to follow up on that.
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Just, just dump your thoughts here and then go away.
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And that's not a meaningful conversation.
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So the internet, I think, leans towards being able to speak a lot.
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It, it, the, the companies that own websites are speaking at you because I mean, they want
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to sell stuff to you.
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So they're going to speak at you.
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They might pay people to write articles for them or to, to post content for them, to create
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content for them.
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And, and that, that works okay.
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And I guess eventually they might use AI to generate that content.
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So you really, really feel like you're being spoken to.
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And then you're told, hey, you can speak to because here's a comment field.
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Please comment.
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Let's share your thoughts, smash the like button, share your thoughts.
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And so you do that.
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You type in a bunch of thoughts.
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And so now you've spoken.
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So two people have spoken.
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Has a conversation happened?
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No.
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Because there was never any act of listening.
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And you could even take the same, or the same process to like those chat bots on a lot
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of websites.
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Now, look, you can even speak like to a real chat field and, and it will talk back to you.
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And sometimes it's, you know, it's obviously an automated thing and it kind of self-identifies
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as that.
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Other times it's, it's this sort of entity that you're not really sure.
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Like is it just a really well performing chat bot that continually thanks you for your
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patience and assures you that it is eager to help you?
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Or is it a person reading a script that tells, that tells the person to type in this phrase
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and then that phrase?
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You, you can't really tell and functionally there's no difference.
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The point is there's no conversation happening there.
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Little while ago people used to say things like, oh, the internet is being destroyed, the
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the great places like geocities are being taken offline and what a travesty.
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And I always got confused by that because I was never really a geocities fan.
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I thought, yeah, okay.
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So a bunch of sites that are coded really poorly and that are probably abandoned after
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like the first five posts is going away.
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Like big deal.
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Why does that matter?
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And there are other places too that people kind of pine over, longingly and, and, and
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wistfully thinking, oh, I can't believe that's going away.
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And in retrospect now, and I'm talking about retrospect like a year ago, because that's
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when people were complaining about it or maybe two years ago, I realized that what they
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were actually saying, what they were actually lamenting wasn't the, the website itself.
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It's not geocities.whatever it was that they are lamenting going away.
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They were lamenting.
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I mean, whether they knew it or not, I think they were lamenting the loss of that, that
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true interactivity, that true sense of conversation where you could go to someone's little fan
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site on some random thing that you thought you were the only person in the universe who
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knew about.
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And there's this fan site with like all these screenshots from that thing and, and a
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episode listing of all the different episodes.
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Sorry.
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Now I'm starting to go down my own little imaginary site that on, on Lex for the record.
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But anyway, you know, there were, there were these places on, on the internet and you
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just thought, this is crazy.
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Like who is this person?
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And maybe you couldn't respond directly to them.
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Maybe you, maybe you could, maybe they had an email address or something.
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But maybe you couldn't.
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And so your method of conversation was to, to spin up your own website about this, a
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similar subject or that encompasses that subject.
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And, and so now you're partaking in a conversation in this kind of roundabout way, but you're also
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forming these like little clusters.
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And of course, I mean, the more that happened, the more things like web rings happened where
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people with similar interests would just link to each other's websites.
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Just, here you go.
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There's a link.
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If you, if you liked my site on this subject, click the web ring, you'll go to another site
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on the same subject.
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That sort of thing.
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So in a weird way, it was less of a conversation than what we have now.
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I guess by letter of the law and yet, and yet in spirit, it is so much more of a conversation.
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And it's also a lot more participatory and interactive.
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So I've been thinking about this a lot lately because the modern internet doesn't seem to
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understand that real conversations don't consist of just shouting at a wall.
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So what's left?
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What's online right now where there are conversations happening, like meaningful conversations?
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I really badly want to say like mastodon.
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I kind of want to say, oh, there's mastodon.
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It's federated.
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It's so cool.
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Look, mastodon is federated.
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It is really cool.
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It's, it's, it's a great piece of technology and the community is a community of people.
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So there's a lot of different kinds of people there.
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And you can go on to mastodon and you can talk.
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You can talk to people directly.
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You can have real conversations about real topics.
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I just got a bunch of help about little plastic miniatures, how to glue them together properly
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because I was, I bought, I bought four different kinds of glues and I'm just not sure which one
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is the right one.
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So I just asked mastodon and I got a bunch of responses back and they were really, really
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useful and I still can't glue things together.
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I mean, it was really useful.
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I made contacts.
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I, I, I, I, my paths crossed with people.
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I would not have otherwise encountered.
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So that was a very cool experience.
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But it is, it does have a sense of kind of being very ephemeral.
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So I don't know how, how, how unique that is on, on the internet.
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I mean, it is unique and it's important and it's significant and, and I don't want to
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undersell the power of sort of communal chat.
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And I think that that can be what mastodon is, mastodon and, and matrix.
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These in a way and a sense for me, they're the new IRC.
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They're that kind of place where you'll have some really good interactions, but it, it
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might be ships passing in the night to borrow a phrase about IRC.
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It might be something that, you know, you, that, that happens and then you move on.
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And that's fine.
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I mean, that's a legitimate form of connection, right?
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I mean, we, we, we, many of us experience that kind of thing at technical conferences or
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game conferences or whatever group activity you go to, you might meet someone, you might
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interact and then you part ways and you never think about each other again, much less
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talk to each other again.
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And that's okay.
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Or maybe you do think of that person, but you don't know how to contact them.
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All of that stuff.
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That's, that's fine.
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That's okay.
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That's totally legitimate.
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But I'm thinking more about community, I guess, like permanent, you know, semi permanent
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type communities that are building on top of each other and sort of expanding with one
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another.
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So, I mean, hacker public radio is a really great example of a thriving conversational community.
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Not all the conversations are great.
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Not all of them are easy, but they're being had and people are making connections and people
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have made friends.
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And I know a lot of hosts by name, only by name, but, but I feel super close to them because
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I listen to their content and I hear the weird things that they do in their shows or the
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cool things that they do in their shows and, and that's cool.
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And I can respond to them in a roundabout way again.
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And well, actually I can respond to them directly through comments, but I, I feel like the
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more valuable way to, to respond to people for my money is to just record a show that,
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sort of iterates on an idea heard in another show or, or that maybe it doesn't even iterate.
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Maybe it's just for, for no good reason your show about that bass fishing made me think
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about the time that I built a bookshelf for myself.
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Let's record a show about that.
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So there's, there's lots of opportunity, I think, in hacker public radio to not capture
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but preserve the original, or, I don't know if it's the original intent of the internet,
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but, but the internet that I know and love, the weird thing about it I guess, if, if, if
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there's not enough weirdness on HBR, it is that it's, it's audio based and that I don't
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really associate all that much with the internet.
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I mean, I do because podcasting is a thing I, I quite like podcasting, but in terms of
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like the internet, you think of it as, at least I think of it as a website, your website
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that you go to, you visit, you experience that website and then like I say, maybe you
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go off and write a blog post or something of your own.
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But I mean, I think that is kind of just my filter, right?
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Because I think of, I very much tend to think in terms of long form, quote unquote, articles
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or blog posts.
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I mean, that's just kind of like the way that I, that, that's what I find value in because
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I like, you know, opening a web browser and, and finding a cool article to read in
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an afternoon or, or while waiting for my order at the cafe or whatever.
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So that's just maybe my filter.
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So anyway, Hacker Public Radio, really good.
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Mastered on nice, nice little IRC replacement, matrix, nice little IRC replacement.
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And then there's two others that I've been using a lot more lately.
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And I say using by, meaning I've been trying and those are go for and Gemini.
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So if you don't know what go for is, it actually whether or not you know what go for is,
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it is an early internet protocol or I guess I should say an early protocol, I don't know
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if it technically like predates what we know as the internet.
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I don't know.
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I was never really in to go for, you know, back when go for was actually like the thing.
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But apparently go for, you know, for people who were much more technical at that point
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than I was.
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Hacker was kind of a competitor to HTML or it was trying to solve the same, I guess problem
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or feel the same need as HTML was or should I say HTTP.
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And that would be that someone has a server and wants to share content in a read only way
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to a bunch of people.
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Go for was one way you could do that.
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HTTP is also a way you could do that.
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And those are basically answering the exact same equations.
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Now obviously HTML has gone off in a direction very much all its own.
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And go for has very much stayed as far as I can tell exactly the same.
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Like again, I don't know because I wasn't there.
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But go for doesn't seem to have progressed a whole lot.
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Go for I have found to be really clunky and really, really frustrating, frankly.
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I think a lot of people enjoy Go for partly for the nostalgia.
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And I don't know if everyone enjoys it for the nostalgia of, oh, I remember when Go
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for was was the protocol that I used.
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But I do think some people see Go for and think now that is beautiful because it's really
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simple and clunky and computing is supposed to be beautiful and clunky.
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And so let's go let's go experience that again.
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Now I don't really love clunky and beautiful computing.
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I like easy and beautiful computing.
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So Go for to me is I'm not in love with Go for but I do appreciate what it delivers which
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is an experience that you can you can share stuff that you have on a server in a read-only
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way to people relatively simply and I say relatively because I mean it's got Go for
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uses a Go for map that is what it uses well that's what it can use by default to describe
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the files on a computer now you can also just point it at a directory and say look there's
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a bunch of files in this directory go read all of them you can do that.
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But but if you don't want to do that then you can use a Go for map file.
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And the Go for map file has a really really particular syntax it uses tabs as delimitors
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and it has to be a tab character if it's not a tab character it will break.
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And so it it's super frustrating it really is it is it is one of the most frustrating
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syntaxes that I can imagine it's just it's the worst it is the absolute worst and I hate
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the Go for map file.
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The sooner I can get out of the Go for map file the better the to make it even worse like
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not only do you have tab only delimiting but you've got these stupid prefixes that you
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have to put in front of the file types.
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So if you're pointing to a file you have to put like a one but if you're pointing to
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a directory then it's a zero but if it's an HTML file then it's like I don't know a
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seven or something it's just it's the stupidest the worst just the absolute worst syntax.
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I can't imagine a worst way to construct a map to a bunch of files on a server.
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I don't know historically why you needed all that information I don't know historically
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why they chose only a tab and not just a white space or some other character but that's
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what we have with Go for and Go for is kind of cool I mean despite my problems that
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I have with the Go for map file it really there there's a lot of nice stuff there.
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You can create you can put a bunch of text files or a bunch of files for that matter PDFs
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whatever other kinds of files there are in the world probably what images I guess there
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are images probably audio files all of those things you can put onto a server you can
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then grant access to the world to that directory through Go for and they can user could open
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up a terminal launch a go for browser and go to your server and and they'll see all of
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your files and they'll be able to download them or read them in the terminal if they're
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just text files and so on so it is really really nice it's a relatively quick and easy way
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to kind of get that middle ground between like I don't know like an FTP read only account
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and and a full blown HTTP let's do a whole internet browser session that kind of thing
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so so Go for is is is a really nice way to share a bunch of stuff on a server without without
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all the the bloat I guess of HTTP or the administration nightmares of FTP for instance
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on port 70 there are different browsers that can look at go for and it's not really easy
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to look at go for through a web browser I mean it's possible you can go to proxies you
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can install I think some plugins I haven't really tried lately I just use links LY in X works
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great but I mean that's in a terminal but I think that's kind of a weird benefit to go
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for because the it's I'm not sure how much I want my content to contribute to the internet
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these days I mean I'm not like philosophically opposed to it I'm just saying I'm not sure that
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I have that need all that much I mean I obviously do because I have websites on HTTP but in terms
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of also posting to go for I don't know that that's the kind of I don't know that I care about
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the the intersection of go for and HTTP I might I might at some point and you might because you
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might want to read you might want to have one source of of truth as it were and then have
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different avenues to look at it and that is possible like I say there are there are sites that
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that translate from go for to HTTP there are ways that you could dynamically translate files from
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one to the other you know on on your server like when you're posting and so on so I mean it's
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a it's it's an avenue that you could take the the modern take I guess on go for is Gemini and
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Gemini is also fairly annoying honestly Gemini has an index dot GMI file and it has its own special
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markup because of course it does why would it do something like just reuse mark it down
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no it takes mark down and then insists on certain conventions and it will refuse to display text
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files that are not in GM in whatever they call it gym markup or gym markdown or whatever that can
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be a little bit difficult sometimes that can cause you a little bit of trouble because you'll
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you'll have a bunch of files and they're they're in markdown or they're an ASCII dock and you just
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want to put them on your server and walk away nope you can't do that you have to convert them to
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Gemini text or Gemini markdown rather and I have tried and I mean it could be the server that I'm
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using or yeah it would have to be the server right that I was using but but I I just cannot get
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Gemini to display like plain text for instance it just won't it just doesn't seem to want to do
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that at least on whatever I'm running which I don't know what I'm running I'm just using whatever
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SDF.org is using I haven't looked into it that much probably not a great idea to go public with my
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critique of the thing not knowing even what Gemini server I'm running but there you go Gemini
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has has a syntax thing that admittedly is a little bit awkward sometimes however of course
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there's open source solutions to everything Gemini is open source you can get a markdown to Gemini
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converter on if there's a project on GitHub you can get it from pip Python 3-m pip install MD2
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the letter 2 MD2 Gemini and that'll convert your markdown files to Gemini text it is remarkably
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similar and that's why I think that's what's that's what's so annoying is that the similarities are
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just so so it's just so silly that one isn't the same as the other so that that's probably my actual
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complaint Gemini on in every other way is it's pretty darn cool I mean it's a little bit
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inconvenient because I can't figure out yet how to do a directory listing in Gemini it might not
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be possible I don't know so I I'm having to add my every file that I want to be visible to the
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|
viewer into and a dot GMI kind of index file so you know it's like I would rather just be able to
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point directory and say there's all my text files go read them but that's just not something that
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I as far as I can tell that's not something Gemini wants to do at least yet it's early days to be
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fair so I don't know I mean Gemini I think is a little bit more slick than Gofer but it does have
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its quirks and it's got a certain amount of self-imposed limitations because it doesn't want to be
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|
or become like HTTP which I mean I can respect that so Gofer and Gemini are two solutions for
|
|
sharing things on a big network that that are not super likely to be taken over by sort of
|
|
corporate interests anytime soon or at least that's the hope and it's a great way I think to
|
|
motivate yourself to get off of HTTP onto some backwards networking groups that maybe just
|
|
don't really necessarily belong in the HTTP space or the WWW space anymore and that's refreshing
|
|
I mean it's just I don't want to reiterate the first 30 minutes of this show but I just have to
|
|
point out that the internet is really boring now it's just a it's a frightfully sort of dull place
|
|
whereas Gofer and Gemini and hacker public radio and some other places are really doing a lot of
|
|
heavy lifting to keep content sort of unique and not perfectly manicured I want to say independent
|
|
but I don't know what that really means so just it's it's something that's that's I don't know
|
|
made of people and that's refreshing I'm tired of of reading the AI blog posts or the blog posts
|
|
that may as well have been written by an AI that's depressing to me I want real thoughts I want
|
|
people talking about what they think that's what I find interesting and I think that
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|
the worldwide web doesn't necessarily provide that as much as it used to I'm not saying it's not
|
|
on the WW at all I'm just saying it's not quite there in the in the amount that it used to be
|
|
I'm not saying that Gemini and Gofer spaces are a wealth of insightful and exciting information
|
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I'm just saying that they exist and that they're being generated by weird people who have time
|
|
to explore alternate protocols that doesn't make any of us saints or it doesn't mean that we're
|
|
suddenly interesting or that we're that we're putting out quality content it just means that there
|
|
are alternate protocols out there that some people are using and it's fun you should check it out
|
|
if you haven't already and if you want to get involved in some other way you could always
|
|
record a show on Hacker Public Radio and continue with the conversation remember what I said
|
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about conversations earlier it's a callback thanks for listening talk to you next time
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work
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