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460 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3872
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Title: HPR3872: Sgoti update with replies.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3872/hpr3872.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:02:40
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3872 for Tuesday the 6th of June 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Scoti Update with Replies.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 29 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Scoti talks about the oh no news and replies to a few HPR shows.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host, some guy on the internet.
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First things first, quick announcement, I've had to pause the oh no news because of minor
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issues.
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It was brought to my attention that quoting news articles may cause an issue in some areas
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of the world, areas where fair use may not apply.
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The show is going to see some restructuring because of that to comply with the HPR rules as
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well.
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There was also a mention of syndication which was used as an example to explain something
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else but it was misunderstood by me.
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So the syndication thing does not apply but I still made my feelings very clear on
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that subject.
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So I'm still going to wait on the community's response to the mailing list before I continue
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with that and depending on what folks have to say about it, we'll probably just bury
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it or we'll continue with it depending on how it goes but that's it for the oh no news
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for now.
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I'll update you as we learn more.
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I just want to say as well, you might hear some loud noises in the background.
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I can't help it.
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It's motorcycle season and not only that.
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We got these guys with these loud cars that have, you know, really loud mufflers and
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stuff and they're all out there revving up and being silly.
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So if you do hear like weird noises in the background, that's what that is.
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Okay, now then to the meat of this show.
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I want to, this is going to be like a reply show.
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I wanted to first reply to a hookah who has been doing wonderful shows covering the civilization
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game.
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I didn't know it at the time but I really like hearing about these strategy games.
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And I would like to hear more about certain strategies that were used like the meta as
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we call it today, the most effective technique available.
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That's what meta stands for in games.
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I would like to hear more about what techniques that you use and how you like to beat these
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games because he mentioned that there were certain strat, two main strategies of beating
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the game, either wipe out all the other countries or make it to space first.
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I think was the other one.
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I like to know what strategy he chose and why he chose it and to keep the shows coming.
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I enjoyed very much hearing about it.
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I'd also like to point out some of the background information is really nice to know as well
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because I always see like that Sid Myers in front and I'm thinking like, okay, is this
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a company or is it like an actual guy that actually created all these games or how's
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that work?
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And I like having that background information that he pointed out that Sid actually took
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a back seat and allow other developers to write using his name.
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So I mean, all of that was beneficial.
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I especially like the sources that were given in the show as well where you can go and
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try some of these games online.
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So if you didn't have much space on your system, you could just play in the browser or the
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information about how the games drivers were unique to a certain error and how if you attempted
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to play the game on newer operating systems, you may run into an issue.
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And I'm wondering if snap packages would work for something like this if you could like
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snap up all those old drivers and everything and kind of just run them today on a modern
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system.
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I don't know.
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I mean, that's worth looking into.
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Maybe somebody's already done it.
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I don't know.
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But I mean, I'm just bringing it up because it was really cool to hear about it.
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And I thank him for putting those shows out now on to the next show.
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I just want to say that if I don't call your show out here, it's not that I didn't listen
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to it.
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These are just ones that really kind of peaked my interest.
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But Andrew Conway did a show on yesterday.
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I saw a solar flare.
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Let me just say that I enjoyed this show hearing about the different instruments that are used
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as well as the record.
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I guess it would be like the disclaimer or whatever.
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You know, we buy new pair of shoes that little packet of a silicate that comes with the
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shoes that do not eat packet.
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I love that he has to make clear.
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Do not use a telescope like an off the shelf telescope and go stare at the sun.
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Ah, yeah, that was good.
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I enjoyed hearing the show.
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I like, I don't know if this is astronomy or astrology.
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To me, it's all just space stuff and I like space stuff.
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I remember when I was very young and I learned for the first time that the sun was actually
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a star and that the star wasn't like this big fireball in the sky, right?
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I remember thinking like, what?
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You mean the sun's not made out of fire?
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It feels like fire if you stand in the log and stuff, right?
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I remember when they told me that the sun wasn't made out of fire, but the person who told
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me that couldn't or didn't take the time, I would say, to explain what it really was.
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Maybe that was beneficial because of my curiosity led me to, you know, if it made out of fire,
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why does it burn?
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So I wanted to figure that out and I eventually found out, but this was again many years ago
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and I don't think all the information was provided to me or maybe I just could not understand
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it at the time.
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But as the years go on fast forward to modern times, you know where you can actually buy a
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hard drive in the terabyte, so I'll say it as modern times, whereas back then when
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I was learning, I mean, a four gigabyte hard drive will cost you a fortune and that was
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a lot of space back then.
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But then you, well, to cost you a fortune if you were on the type of budget I was on anyways,
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but either way, when I finally took the time to say, okay, I'm going to figure this out.
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I'm going to figure out what the sun really is and it took me down this massive rabbit
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hole into space stuff.
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So I began learning like it's not a giant trash pile per se, but a star really is just
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a collection of material, which could be mostly gas, you know, as Andrew pointed out, like
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75% of it was hydrogen and of course, there's going to be like rock, you know, silicate
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and whatever else that's lying around because when, when this gravity well begins, anything
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that's nearby gets pulled in.
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So it's going to be a ton of material.
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And I remember learning that Jupiter was a failed star.
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So Jupiter was on its way to becoming a star, but it wasn't enough material.
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Maybe Jupiter was the leftover remains after our sun had achieved nuclear fusion.
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So the leftover material just got kind of blown away and regrouped into a new gravity
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well, which became Jupiter, you know, learning that a bunch of just material in space can
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just clump together and once it achieves a certain mass, it begins generating friction
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within that mass and that friction just like we rub your hands together to get warm
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in the middle there, that friction creates a ton of heat with the pressure from the outside
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gravity, which causes the material in a center that hydrogen to begin to heat up and fuse
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and it begins to shed electrons and that fusion is what we call a nuclear fusion.
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And once the star achieves nuclear fusion, you know, once it has enough mass and there's
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enough heat and pressure, it will achieve nuclear fusion and ignite becoming a star.
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Now another thing that was really cool about, you know, learning all of this, I also learned
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that a lot of that hydrogen also takes on metallic properties because it becomes a plasma
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once it is introduced to the right conditions.
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So you'll have what was it called metallic liquid hydrogen or liquid metallic hydrogen, which
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is like a huge percentage of Jupiter-type planets, you know, gas giants, I guess they're
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called and it's like the mantle of these things is made up of this plasma and I'm just
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like, whoa, you know, they're totally blown away by learning all this, you mean this
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hydrogen begins to act as a liquid, becomes a plasma and then it will eventually ignite
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at some point if it reaches the threshold to ignite to achieve nuclear fusion and become
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a star.
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So I was wondering like, what happens with all that plasma?
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Does it change over into something different?
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So when we learn about the mantle of stars and a lot of that internal plasma that's
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down and the mantle of the star, because the stars are actually multiple different layers,
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one of the things that happens is there's an electrical current in there as well and
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sometimes that current pushes its way out to the surface or at least this is the way
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I understand it.
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That current will push its way up to the surface and sometimes it will arc and when these
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arc concurrence, you know, when this happens, I'm sure I'm butchering the whole explanation
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but, you know, it'll cause a solar flare basically.
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Also I also learned that's how sunspots cause as well because that current carries that
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internal plasma out to the surface of the sun and that plasma will then cool on the
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surface of the sun.
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Now because it's super heated from, you know, the mantle, the middle of the star, when
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it lands on the surface of the star, it gets darker as it cools and that's the sunspot.
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That's the plasma from within the star like the juice in the star, you'll get me some
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star juice.
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And you know, every time I hear a little bit more about space stuff, I'm very interested
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in it because years ago when I first tried to figure this out, it was like either that
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again, either I wasn't as interested in it back then or maybe I just could not fathom
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it because when I first was able to sit down and understand things on cosmic scale, it
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was all mind blowing.
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Like black holes fascinated me because I thought it was like, you know, you take a sheet of paper
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and then you take a pencil and you punch a hole in the paper.
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To me, that was a black hole, you know, like something just punched a hole in it.
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Now as time went by and I began to understand more and more about how these things happened
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and how stars fuse material, what happens once the star begins to fuse, was it fiat iron,
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which is a cosmic ash that marks the beginning of the end of the star when it begins to fuse
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iron.
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And I began wondering like, okay, so, you know, you have a black hole, which is like the
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leftovers from a supernova, what sort of material would that be because we know that all the
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complex material beyond iron is created when the supernova happens, right?
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You know, that's how you get uranium gold and all the other things, they get fused during
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that explosion and then kind of cast outward into the universe to be used in planets and
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whatever else out there.
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But what sort of material was so heavy once fused could not be projected outward during
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this mass of explosion because iron is pretty heavy and absorbent and it gets cast out.
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So what other material on the elemental chart got fused and could not be expelled yet had
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enough density to compact into the object that we refer to as black hole.
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And these are cool things I'd like to talk about once I begin to understand more about
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how it all works, but Andrew, he's one of his guys that puts that spark out there for
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people like me to actually go and investigate these kinds of things, you know, talking about
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the different filters and things you're going to need.
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If you want to go look at the at the sun, well, you know, with the proper equipment, don't
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go out there and blind yourself using by using on professional equipment to view the sun.
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And images that he posted were also wonderful.
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I like looking at these images as well.
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So I thank him very much for putting this show out here and I look forward to more in
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the future.
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Great show.
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Oh, look at that.
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I got so carried away talking about space stuff on me because it's very exciting stuff
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when you, when you finally sit down and start looking at it, or at least it was from
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me anyways, it was kind of stupid until actually, you know, I thought, well, who in the world
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would want to, you know, last time I checked, there was no air in space.
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Why would you want to go there?
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That's how I used to feel about it.
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But yeah, see here I am again, getting carried away.
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Andrew, I got a couple questions for you.
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And I understand you may not want to speak professionally on these topics.
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And I also want to point out that I don't know anywhere near how about these topics as
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you do.
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So if you would like to entertain my questions, that'd be great question one.
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How long do you think we have before the star that our, our son goes red giant?
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I understand you may not have an answer for that.
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I understand a lot of people may not have an answer for that.
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But if you had a imaginative backed by education, guess, if you could just throw that out there
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with anonymity, you know, nobody's going to hold you to it and try to catch that check.
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But we just, you know, conversation here.
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If you could guess X amount of years or whatever, what would you think that number would be?
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Also how long does the process take to achieve red giant?
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I imagine it's not like one day regular star, the next day red giant, you know, this process
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probably happens over, I don't know, a thousand years or something.
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Yeah.
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Another question.
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Do you really think mankind is trying to settle on Mars?
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I don't.
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I personally don't think we're trying to settle, you know, build a settlement on Mars.
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I think we probably learned a lot about the other planets that are out there.
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And we're using Mars as like our nearest playground to, I don't know, terraforming, dealing
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with radiation and things that that nature from, if you have to leave this planet and go
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to another one, radiation is one of one of the things you're going to find and there's
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very plentiful in space.
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So my guess is getting a little bit closer and on a planet with less atmosphere, how would
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one survive and such a heavily toxic and just, it just seems like death all around.
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No atmosphere, tons of radiation, almost no water, at least none that we can find.
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And if we do manage to find water, maybe that technique will apply elsewhere in the universe.
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Yeah.
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So I mean, do you think we're actually trying to settle on Mars because I don't, especially
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with the whole red giant thing looming?
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And I'd also like to ask you, you know, with all the talk of global warming and things
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and I get it, this kind of hits that political bell for a lot of people, you know, ding,
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ding, ding.
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He's talking ball of text.
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No, I'm talking space stuff, right?
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I'm not going to call it science because I don't have enough knowledge to do science,
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but I can do space stuff.
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That's an official term, by the way, coined here on the HBR.
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Do you think that when the change begins to happen, the government or the governing bodies,
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the scientists and everyone else who, who monitor the change, you think they'll tell
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it true?
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I mean, you think they'll actually put the information out there that no, you're not
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causing this change because you revved up your car in extra five minutes, but because,
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you know, this is natural.
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All stars will eventually undergo some change and this is what our star will do.
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As a result of that, it's going to get warm and it's going to continue to get warm
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or murr.
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And well, you know, the result of red giant, so you think they'll tell it true.
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I have to honestly wonder about it these days because I look at all these billionaires
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building their ships, trying to quickly build a rocket that could lift up all of the planet,
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go into space and then return.
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It's though they're trying to carry as much of their junk in the space and get it somewhere
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safe as fast as possible.
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You know what I mean?
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Meanwhile, everybody will be talking all this bunch of, you know, it's politics, hey,
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and it's politics there and all of that.
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And meanwhile, the sun's just doing its thing over there.
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It's eventually going to, you know, change a little more over time.
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And there'll be people here on the planet with instruments looking up at it.
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You think they'll be allowed to tell it?
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You think they'll be allowed to just, you know, flat out says this is stage one of red giant.
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We can expect these changes to happen to the ocean, to the trees, et cetera, et cetera.
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Hopefully I don't.
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Yeah, I don't think they'll tell us what's actually happening.
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I mean, for those who want to find out, you possibly can find out, but I don't think
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you'll have all of the information so much of the, how long do we have, you know, to count
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down, that will be kept on, on Hush Hush and anyone who tries to release it.
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There'll be some sort of penalty for that in my opinion.
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And I would like to know your opinion on the things that I've brought up.
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That's enough on space stuff.
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Great show.
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I really enjoy space stuff.
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All right.
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So next, next show I want to talk about here.
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This is a reply to Archer 72.
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He did a show on the Firefox extensions.
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Another great show.
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Ken Fallon did a show on the Firefox extensions as well.
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I love hearing about what people are using out there.
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I'm a little too paranoid to use Firefox extensions.
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I would, I'm finally making the transition away from the one I do use.
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And that's the multi account container tabs or whatever it's called.
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It's made by Firefox, but, you know, I'll talk more about that in the future.
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I don't want to bore you too much with my crap, but hearing about these things, I think
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it's fantastic, especially at the Archer 81, I've tested that in the past.
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And I found it to be interesting.
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And I want to know, especially today, 2023, why is it more sites don't have just dark
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mode?
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I mean, it's, it's made pretty clear that a lot of people use dark mode, a lot of people
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like dark mode.
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And I think that if, I don't know, if you wanted someone to subscribe to your material,
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one of the things you could offer is a dark mode for subscribers, right?
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Or you could just implement a dark mode because why not, you know, better for your eyes,
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a lot of people love dark mode.
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And it doesn't seem to be a very difficult thing to implement.
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But then again, I'm not a web dev, a web dev or any of that.
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So, you know, speculations galore.
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And I want to know, do you, do you use the, what's your call now?
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It's not, it's not the master pass thing.
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It's a primary password on Firefox.
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I know you mentioned that you do use the bit warden with the bit warden extension.
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So I'm assuming you don't store any passwords actually in Firefox.
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And I didn't, this I will offer as a recommendation for people do not store passwords in your web
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browser.
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I'm not saying that all the bad things will happen because you do that.
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I'm just saying if you want to be a little bit safer, I would avoid storing passwords
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in your web browser.
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The web browsers like Chrome and Firefox give you the option to save your passwords there.
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But I wouldn't do it.
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I mean, there's been shady behavior in the past with this kind of stuff.
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And I just, I just would not do it.
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Not to mention if you are sharing a PC in your household or whatever, like with your kids
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or whomever by saving those passwords in your web browser.
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That means when a person goes, you know, the person you also share that PC with, if you
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don't have accounts separated, you know, where you log out and then allow them to log
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it into a guest account.
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If you just hand over your laptop with you logged in as the administrator with your web browser
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that has all of your passwords stored within it, you know what I mean, if you just hand
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that over, I mean, that's bad.
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You don't want to do that.
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But here I am.
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I'm going off on all sorts of stuff again.
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Good show Archer.
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Wonderful show.
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And I like hearing about what technology other people are using.
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How are you utilizing technology?
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Again, I'll just mention here really quickly.
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I've listened to pretty much every show out that comes out because I listen to a lot of
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podcasts and audio books.
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That's what I do most of the time, I rarely watch any TV.
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If I watch anything, it'll be YouTube.
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But these are just the shows that really kind of peak my interest here that I'm bringing
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up.
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I too went to the two shows that I want to bring up one depending toy figurines.
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I think it was something like that, but I thought that was pretty cool.
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I honestly thought that this was like different colors of plastic as well.
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You know, like in a 3D printer or something, you just print with the blue plastic here
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then the red plastic there and whatever else.
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You know, that's what I thought it was.
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I did not know like a human actually sat there and painted a figurine.
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So this was interesting to learn.
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Now doing it as a hobby, it sounds fun.
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I like hearing about class 2 doing it and I like hearing about his reasons for doing it.
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That was very interesting.
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He likes finding things away from the computer.
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So I guess if you work with a computer for most of your life, you try to find a way away
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from the computer, whereas with me, I'm behind the wheel.
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So I try to get closer to the computer when I can.
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So it's unique to hear how we all either move toward or away from it.
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I like hearing his reasons for painting the figurines and that the skateboarding thing
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was interesting as well.
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This is skating or skateboarding.
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It was something like that that he did a show on the past, which was pretty nice.
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I like hearing about these activities.
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And also I didn't know that painting, well, now that I think about it because he did
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mention that there are different types of paint you can get, the acrylic paints that
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you can get like the cheaper ones that you would make yourself.
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But apparently this can be an expensive thing.
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Because especially if you're doing like Dungeons and Dragons, I remember watching a video
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on the past where this guy had his own custom Dungeons and Dragons kind of bored with him
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and all his friends get together and play.
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And he had rules where they weren't allowed to touch the figurines and now I kind of get
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it.
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And I actually sit there and paint all of it as by hand.
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These become like labors of love.
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You don't want people just kind of thumbing all over it.
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There's no telling what finger oils and all, you know, if they're eating snacks and they
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have greasy fingers, put all that junk all over the figurine, you know, so I kind of understand
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it more now.
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Not to mention if somebody's a little bit childish, want to play around with it and they break
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the figurine out of the pool.
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Yeah, so good show there.
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Also the other one he did with when did the internet become boring.
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I thought that was very interesting from the title.
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I thought that he was going to go more into the whole, you know, chat GPT thing with
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people using what they like to call AI and air quotes to generate all of this bunch
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of false feedback.
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And I thought that's what he was going to, you know, be the primary thing, but it was
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very interesting because he broke down the speaking versus listening and how the listening
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is only there partially, you know, one person will say something and just poof go away.
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And then when people reply to that, I mean, they do the exact same thing.
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They're not there to listen and gain from what is being contributed.
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They just want to react to something and just disappear.
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I thought that was pretty cool because I feel that way as well, but hearing him articulated,
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he gave voice to what I was feeling and I'm very thankful for that show.
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I mean, I felt that way when I, you know, back when I was using Facebook, part of the
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reason that I left was there was less and less human engagement, you know, everybody
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just wanted to spam memes or just yell and then poof go away, you know, say something
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|
crazy and disappear.
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Same thing with Reddit, like the up vote, down vote thing.
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I thought it was supposed to serve a purpose, but it gets misused so often, you know, often
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people will not even explain why they like something or dislike something.
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It's just that cheap little I downvote them and keep moving and then it starts to snowball
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|
effect.
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Other people just downvote just because the downvoting had occurred may not even read
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|
the statement really is like, okay, it's already got about 20 downvotes.
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Some yet another engagement just gets lost and I remember the old days on the internet.
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It was the Wild West as well and I'm not going to pretend like it was perfect.
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|
You got your head chewed off royally back then.
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There were rooms back back then I used to be on a Yahoo messenger as well.
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|
There were rooms called the fight rooms in Yahoo messenger and this was all a voice chat
|
|
by the way, where people literally went just to string together, profane insults toward
|
|
each other, but it and believe it or not, it was not done out of hatred.
|
|
It was like people went to blow off steam and they knew they had an audience.
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|
Afterward, many of the people who were just cussing each other out would leave going
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|
to another room and then start talking about things they like.
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|
I'm not kidding.
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|
Now I went there just to get a good laugh.
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|
That's where I've got my degree in swearing.
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|
Listen to all of these people just cuss each other out the whole time.
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|
So it was interesting and funny.
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|
That's where I also formed the opinion that the English are better cussed swears.
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|
I don't know what title you'll give someone for swearing, other than being vulgar.
|
|
If you had to have a title for it as in receiving a trophy, I think would they call it silver
|
|
tongue or something like that, but whatever, the English used to swear up a storm and
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|
it would be funny because the accent just sort of added like 10% more humor to it when
|
|
they would swear.
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|
Plus they would use funny words like the English slang and whatever else that there were
|
|
you.
|
|
And I had a good time.
|
|
I'm not going to repeat any of it here, but I had a great time listening to it.
|
|
But yeah, those, I mean, there was a lot of engagement back then.
|
|
You wanted to talk to somebody you would speak to them.
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|
They would reply to you.
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|
Now again, it was the Wild West.
|
|
So sometimes that reply you got was, you know, abrasive, but you got it today a lot of
|
|
the times.
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|
I mean, there's no, I'm hearing more and more about how you get this AI generated crap.
|
|
So not a big fan of it, even down to the reviews.
|
|
I love reviews like when I'm looking for products, even if I have no intention of purchasing
|
|
that product, a lot of the times the reviews are pretty interesting learning how people
|
|
use the product and what they want to share about the product is just nice to read.
|
|
And when you learn that there's, you know, basically they're using AI to generate a bunch
|
|
of fake reviews.
|
|
And now you got to sift through all of that and just, you know, it really kills the joy
|
|
on a lot of things.
|
|
So that, I like hanging out in matrix because I kind of know I'm going to be talking to
|
|
a human being there or here on Hacker Public Radio like I know we're going to be dealing
|
|
with human beings here.
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|
And squiles.
|
|
Don't forget the squiles.
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|
Let me mask the dawn.
|
|
You can kind of include them to it.
|
|
And I'm not talking about the bots that just kind of, you know, they have like the Fetty
|
|
Verse bot, even HPR has their bot to kind of not talking about those bots, but I mean, human
|
|
interaction and engagement online really feels like it's, it's not going to, it's not
|
|
going away, but it's changing for the worse.
|
|
So thank you for that show club too.
|
|
I think it's a fantastic show.
|
|
And that's all of my replies.
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|
I've rambled for a long time and my mouth is becoming super dry.
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|
So hopefully I'm not making too many mouth noises here.
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|
And I'll get back to you guys with more shows in the future.
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|
Thank you for making HPR shows.
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I love them all.
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|
They are great.
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|
And this is my reply to just a few of them.
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Take it easy.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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