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147 lines
6.6 KiB
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147 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 760
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Title: HPR0760: /dev/Rob0 of maintainer of the SlackBuilds.org mailing list
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0760/hpr0760.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:01:11
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---
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Hi everyone, this is Pat too. I am at the South Houston Express sitting here with Rob.
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I know Rob Zero in IRC, is that what generally would you go by?
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Rob McGee.
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Rob McGee.
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How did you become a dev? What happened there? Is that like a howl, a hiccup or something?
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In 19, I believe it was 99 and I was a slackwear beginner. I was posting on the slackwear forms
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when Pat had the web forms at the time. I was posting as just playing Rob and well some
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other, just playing Rob kind of robbed me of that.
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And so it just seemed like a cute little way to be distinct.
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Yeah, exactly. Cool. So this year at South Houston Express, is this your first South
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Houston Express?
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Yes it is.
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Okay, so this year you are giving a presentation actually on Post-Fix and what like spam
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control?
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Right. Post-screen is what Dr. Venima calls a triage demon which protects the real SMTP
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demon from the hundreds and thousands of spam zombies that are constantly bombarding us.
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So Post-Fix first of all is a male server?
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Correct.
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A male transfer agent.
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A male transfer agent, okay. And so this would be something, you don't have to be running
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your own male server to take advantage of what you're going to be talking about or actually
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I think that I doubt it would have a whole lot of interest for people who don't.
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Because this isn't stuff, this isn't who's or front ends like spam assassins.
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Not at all.
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This is more like...
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Not at all. But it might make you think twice about what you're doing with spam assassins.
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Okay, all right, interesting.
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So who would want to, who is this talk aimed at like advanced users?
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Yeah, male administrators, primarily administrators.
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System administrators who, considering taking on male hosting for themselves.
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Gotcha, okay.
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So what do you do in the real world, are you?
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Oh my goodness.
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I am so desperately unemployed at the moment.
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Oh, nice, okay.
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I've been doing a few interviews and trying to find employment, but it's not easy in my
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field.
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I haven't been working in the IT world recently.
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And where did you get all this knowledge, just, I mean, obviously right now.
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Well, I've been the postmaster for Slack builds.
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And I've been doing that for a few years back in, I guess, in 2005, while I was working
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as a IT, I was working for an IT consultant and also picking up some jobs on my own.
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I took on hosting for a heavily spammed, very small business domain with only two real
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users, but well over 95% of what they got was spammed, wow, that's crazy.
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And I, frankly, for geek type people, it's usually not that big of a problem because
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we're careful about making sure our email addresses don't get harvested.
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Those of us who have the ability to do so run, use tagged email addresses so that what
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we give out in one place is going to be, that address is going to identify who it's
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given to.
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And then if we find that it's getting spammed, we can shut it off.
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Well, anyway, these people hadn't been very careful at all and did not know what they
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were doing.
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But within a week, I had them down to probably 5% spam instead of 95%.
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Which did an amazing amount of improvement of the productivity of the perceptionist
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in that business.
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And then within a couple of weeks, I think I had it down to probably 1%.
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Cool.
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Okay, so we're talking about email.
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What's your male user age in a choice?
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Personally, I've been using mutt-lake, I love it.
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It can do anything, but it takes a little more work to set it out.
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I do, I have used K-mailer in the past.
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And I do, frankly, I do like having a gooey for my male because I might start a reply on
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something and think, oh, I want to go back and look at this other message, well, in my,
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that's not easy to do.
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Yeah, you have to quit.
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Then you postpone this message, yes.
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And then you go back.
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Yeah, I don't know what you mean.
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So what about, like, on broader subject, away from the talk itself?
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You're a Slackware guy, or you're obviously the Ministry of Slackware.
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I started in Slackware and yeah, what's the story?
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99 or 98, I don't remember exactly when that was.
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And I was fortunate to be starting on a computer that was not very good for running Linux,
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even.
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It was a 386 with an RLL controller, hard drive controller, if you familiar with those.
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Prior to IDE and the Linux kernel does support those, but you have to know that's what you
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need.
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Because it's a brand new beginner, I didn't have any online help to turn to.
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So I worked pretty hard to try a red hat that I got from a book.
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And then I looked at Zip Slack, which was only 30 megabytes, which I could probably download
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that on my 14-4 modem in maybe eight hours or so, if I can get my wife to stay offline
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for that amount of time.
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So that's what I did.
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I downloaded Zip Slack, and it's not supposed to be unzipped from a 16-bit DOS, but I managed
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to do that anyway.
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Oh, cool.
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Nice.
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It broke something.
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Accidentally, or?
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Well, I ran into errors trying to unzip it, but I figured out how to work around those
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errors.
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And the files that had passed it in too long, it just wasn't able to do that, which turned
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out to be most of the pearl package, and it didn't really hurt me, because I wasn't going
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to do anything with pearl on Zip Slack anyway.
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And while I tried to beat the Zip Slack and found I ran into the same issue I had with
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a red hat that it just wasn't booted.
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Well, then I got the idea, swap out hardware, and when I put in a real IDE controller,
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suddenly, it worked.
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And later, around December of 99, my Windows computer went belly up, and since then I've
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been strictly on Linux, and almost all that time has been slapped.
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If you count SLAMD 64, which I did for a short time, then it's been pretty much all
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slapped.
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And SLAMD, of course, was the 64-bit version of the port of Slackware unofficial at the
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time.
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Right.
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Yeah.
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Why Slackware do you think is it a big philosophical thing, or are you just comfortable
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there?
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Or are you just like what?
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I was lucky.
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Yes, I'm a perfect Slackware user.
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It worked perfectly for me, but I was just lucky that I happened to stumble onto that.
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That's right.
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Yeah.
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But now that I understand things better, I wouldn't change.
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Yeah.
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Cool.
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May need it.
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Well, thanks for all your work on Slackwolds.
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I mean, that's...
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Thank you for your support, and...
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Yeah.
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So, thanks a lot for the interview, and I guess we're headed off to the sports bar or something
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for our pre-party, so 299.
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299.
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So, I'll see you over there.
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Okay.
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Thanks a lot.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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For more information on the show and how to contribute your own shows, visit HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Bye.
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