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615 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
615 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3021
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Title: HPR3021: HPR Community News for February 2020
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3021/hpr3021.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 15:19:00
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,021 for Monday 2 March 2020.
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Today's show is entitled HPR Community News for February 2020.
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And as part of the series, HPR Community News, it is hosted by HPR volunteers
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and is about 55 minutes long
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and carries an explicit flag. The summer is.
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Call for shows is open.
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Ken and eventually Dave discussed the shows.
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Media and development plans.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today, HPR15 News for February 2020.
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Before we begin, I want to tell you that there is a call for shows at the moment.
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The queue is very low and we need people to send in shows.
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As you may or may not know, Hacker Public Radio is a community podcast network
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and even though you hear familiar voices from time to time,
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that doesn't mean that you're not supposed to be sending in shows.
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You are, in fact, your supposed to be becoming a familiar voice here on the network.
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If you have never sent in a show at all,
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now would be an excellent time for you to introduce yourself to the community
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so that we know who you are and that we can fill up the queue.
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So, unfortunately, Dave is around,
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but he's having some connecting issues
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and therefore I am going to do this myself.
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At this point, Dave would normally introduce the new host.
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So, there is a new host this month and that is Mono Chromic
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and we would welcome you to our network.
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Thank you very much.
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So, this, as I said, is the community in NewShow
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where we give you a summary of the things that we've been getting up to in the last month.
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And we take, use this as an opportunity to go back and have a look at all the shows
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so that all the shows get some room and we can go through the comments.
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So, the first show that we're going to be talking about is 3,001,
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which was the community news for January 2020.
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And we must have said anything very important
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because there was no comments in that show.
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The final, the next day was the World of Commodore Episode 8, a vote of thanks.
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And Windigo says,
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thanks for the series found all of the world of Commodore episodes you submitted to be very enjoyable.
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I don't have much experience with Commodore's or that era of computing.
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And hearing that community is currently able to achieve is fascinating.
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Thanks for a wonderful series.
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And I think that echoes my sentiments as well on that show.
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And so, speaking of series, the following was community news or sorry,
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the New Year show part before put up by Kevin Wischer.
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And in this one, we had, yeah, you ran them taking over.
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And a pathetic explanation as to where our missing episode is from the book club,
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not looking at you.
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And full key wrote dark reader.
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Thanks for the recommendation for dark reader.
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It's really great.
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I just wish I could work on it.
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Sorry, I just wish it would work on all the about pages to really shocking
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when you suddenly get hit by brightness.
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So what is referring to there is one of the tips they had where you can theme every web page.
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And dark reader was one of those things.
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So the next day was our own Dave.
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Dave Morris fixing simple audio problems with a dusty.
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And this is actually a interesting one.
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It isn't as ever, Dave has nice show notes and they're complete all show notes.
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But he basically does noise reduction, high pass filter amplification and truncated silence.
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Basically, if you're doing this on an audacity, you're pretty much doing 99% of hot
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the mere mortals here on hprd.
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So this is a very good one to listen to.
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So I hooker continued the following day with is activity pub paving the way to web 3.0.
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And this is the conference that he's reviewing held in Prague.
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And yeah, I caught this was this quite interesting from a this whole semantic web point of view.
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So that was pretty pretty cool.
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And I am enjoying the series as ever.
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The following day was operator with a show that hijacking the auxiliary input of your car.
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Very complicated and complicated show.
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Well, it was really great to listen to taking back ownership of your car and basically how to wire in.
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I don't know.
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I don't have a car.
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So I did in days of your, but no, not anymore.
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But I can completely understand how something could be extremely frustrating.
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But he's had a good.
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This is the true sense of hacking a system to make it do what you want.
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So shout out to him, no comments on that episode either.
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And also no comments on photography 101, the following day by Paul cork, where Paul.
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Sorry, a bit of a cuff and Paul goes through the, yeah, really basics of photography.
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And I found this fascinating to listen to.
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And not not just from from the point of view of explaining basic things like what focal length is and ep stops and stuff like that are.
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But also giving tips on, you know, as a starter, if you're starting off in the hobby, this is basically all you need to do.
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Set it like this and then you can develop from there.
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So great, great episode.
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And there are more of these.
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And I am looking forward to more of them.
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You might think it a bit odd to be doing photography on a radio, essentially an audio medium like HPR, but no, it works.
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And episode five of the new year show and is lots of war stories and North says these two guys should get together more often.
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What fun wondering conversation from two interesting people.
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So when she gets these two together on a regular basis, are they could start their own HPR series?
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Interesting listening.
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I could not agree more.
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And there's a HPR channel of mumble details are on the HPR website as to how you're going to do that.
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So if you two guys want to get together, I personally would enjoy listening to even more of this great stuff.
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I must say I really enjoyed the topics on the new year show this year was very little repetition of the same stuff and interesting topics the whole way great stuff.
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Then we had Linux in laws season one episode one.
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It's a podcast about on topics on free and open source software.
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So there's a there's mail list discussions about this.
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But I had the comments, which we'll discuss later.
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I put in the comment they mentioned about setting up a mobile server.
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And as I just wanted to point out again that we have a mobile server.
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HPR has a mobile server for the greater podcasting community.
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And it's on ch1.teamspeak.cc and port 64747.
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So ch1.teamspeak.cc port 64747.
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And in there you can simply create your own room and record your own shows.
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So making this a lot, a lot easier all around.
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Peter Mortison said the predecessor Linux in laws.
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Ha ha ha ha.
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The successor to Linux outlaws 2017 to 2014.
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And end dot Wikipedia dot org Linux, which is Linux underscore outlaws.
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How many will get that reference nearly six years later?
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All the listeners for which the closing of Linux outlaws left a gaping hole in the podcast landscape.
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And then Chris says Linux in laws at Peter all will be revealed in a future episode soon.
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Stay tuned.
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Then the following day was a show by Andrew Conway.
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Fast and first impressions, which I found interesting not just from the point of view that.
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Andrew and I were there together, but it was his first.
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It reminded me of my first impressions to fast and.
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And it was a very good episode.
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I'm going to send this on to the fast and organizers so that they can.
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Have a listen to this operator again.
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This time, Linux is hard a rant with Intel graphics where he's gone over his.
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Some very good tips about GPU and CPU information.
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Not 100% sure how much.
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Uses would be but stuff like HDD temperature will tell you the temperature of your drives.
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The different types of system info that you can have LSPCI basically he's got a whole range of.
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Useful debugging information.
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That people are going to be wanting to know, have you tried this?
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Have you tried this?
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When you're debugging hardware issues actually.
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So the following day, we have a sample episode from some people I met at.
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Weakipedia button, which is a Swedish language podcast about Wikipedia.
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They've they occasionally do English language summaries.
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I spoke to them about getting some, you know, basically putting them on to the free culture podcast page and they have done that.
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So that's flash tips 21 environmental variables.
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And I see Dave here has gone back and unrenamed it from flash a NATO.
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So I'm amazed that that survived as long as it did.
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And this one was environmental variables and Dave seemed to think that environmental variables are a thing of the past.
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But as it turns out, they're exceptionally hip and trendy now in the Docker and Kubernetes sort of arena.
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So that is how you're supposed to pass in all your variables.
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So CRBS right.
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And so that's how you should bang after all these years.
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I finally understood how you write your best scripts.
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Thank you.
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Dave replied writing ox scripts.
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Sorry on how you write an ox script.
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Dave replied writing ox scripts.
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Glad the episode was useful in case you missed it.
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There's a series called learning.
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And HPR which you can find it.
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There series 94.
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This has been restructured from for publication and open source.com of those.
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The next day was another popular one kind of struck an old there was a headless raspberry pi streaming server.
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For playing music under John's pillow word about disturbing his better half and basically jungles to the steps of doing that.
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Be easy said that he's going to be trying this tonight.
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Thanks for the show.
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I will be trying out MPEG123 on one of my pies tonight.
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John replies still streaming with URL update.
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Thanks for the comment.
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I hope the pi plus MP3 MPEG123 suits your needs.
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Mine is working perfectly after about a month, though I had to update the URL of one of the streams.
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I love my pie review.
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Dave, I can, Dave.
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Dave has just joined the channel.
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That just took me forever to set my damn laptop up to do this because my desktop is not playing board at all tonight.
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I'm not 100% sure Dave that I've pressed push to talk for each of these segments.
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So there may be some that we have skipped over.
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Do you know what I've done this?
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When I've recorded on my own I've forgotten to do this now to go back and start over again.
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It's not just me being the silly old part.
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That's good.
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No.
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No.
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Okay.
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Well, um, do you want to, do you want to continue?
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Whereabouts are you?
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I'm at John Colbe's episode 3014 and I'm reading, uh, I've just done comment two.
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Is this the laptop that you want that I'll come?
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It is, it is.
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But it's only got one screen.
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Why didn't I get one with two screens?
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I'm not used to.
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I usually got two monitors and I've got some stuff on one or some stuff on the other.
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I'm having a hell of a job jumping around and finding where everything is.
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So I don't even know where John Colbe's episode is.
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I sent you a letter.
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Okay.
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I know I'll continue reading on.
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Beezy says there's an issue with MPG123.
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I tried MPG123 with remote stream and found the following problem on Ubuntu 1910.
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URL must start with HTTP and not HTTPS.
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Or else it looks to play a local file and you get an error.
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File access error code 22.
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If the stream redirects HTTP to HTTPS, your stream should play.
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If it doesn't, you may be out of luck.
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For instance, I pick a random podcast on iTunes and it fails to redirect on the other hand using a file from HPR works just fine.
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Okay.
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I'm caught up.
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I think.
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Yes.
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So John says HTTP not HTTPS.
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You're right.
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I found the same thing but got to mention it in either the recording or the show notes.
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So far all of the streams I've listened to work with the HTTP prefix though.
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I seem to call the command line VLC, CVLC, can play streams with HTTPS but I may be wrong.
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I'm on my phone at the moment and can't verify.
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So that was that.
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And then the following day we have activity pub conference.
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The schematical social network.
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I've just mixed up the comments for the shows here cause I was saying.
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His previous activity bubble was the semantic web on which I am a particular fan of the semantic web app.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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As usual with the hookers things I really need to go and dig deeper.
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I just got so many brilliant links here and I keep.
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I leave.
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I listen to them.
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I leave them and think.
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Oh yeah.
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I was going to check.
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And of course I don't.
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I want to go and dig deeper.
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I want to dig deeper.
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I want to go.
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Okay.
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I will make a mixy tube, cluck and friends again, operator coming in saving the day and they look like a very nice little.
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Kid to put together not one that I would recommend for starters.
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But any stretch of the nation because.
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These things require some fairly serious votes just to get them to work.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, it looks beautiful thing, but 40 something bans.
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but of course it's USA only to ship it to the UK would be astronomically expensive.
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But wow, I was drooling when I saw this. It looks really funny too.
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Very, very. It looks really old-school stuff. I really like this.
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He was lucky to have somebody local who could help them out with troubleshooting the issues as well.
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It's definitely not a thing to learn on this, as you said.
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And the whole business about lead-free solder.
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We don't know. That has spread the word that lead-free is the thing to use.
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I know people again won't tell about the lead, but it's such lead-free stuff.
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It's so dreadful. It doesn't flow. It doesn't stick. It's an awful product.
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I had some through it away.
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So the following day was a second in what probably will be a series on photography by Paul,
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developing black and white film. This was more a soundscape than anything else,
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but it was really interesting to following it. Follow along.
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Yes, yes. I like the way he did this with all the ambient sounds and stuff.
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That was great. I thought I was tracking along with him there.
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And he's using one of these Patterson film tanks, which it's got a spiral in it that you feed
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film into in the dark, and then it ratchets and moves the film around.
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I have one, though, unlike Paul, I must admit that I bought it and I never used it.
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I was going to try and develop a colour slide film, what do you call that,
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a reversal, which is very, very hard to do. I was always too nervous to do it,
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so I never got to it. I did lots of practice with film loading and all that stuff.
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He was saying that he wished he'd bought a typical changing bag. It's a black fabric bag with two
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sleeves in it, which you unzip and put the film and everything in, and then you put your arms
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down in the sleeves. So you can work in ordinary light and then do everything inside this bag.
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I have one of these. It's one rather wonderful thing, and I've practiced with it so many times,
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I've never actually developed it, so I'm in awe of what Paul's doing this.
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Some of those photos are very good at this site, though.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah. Next one. This is a great series, if that's what it's going to turn into.
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So the following day, we had encrypted edit by Plattu, who does password store,
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and there's some scripts to use G new privacy card to take some files and basically decrypt them to
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RAM. I thought this was interesting, but I'm wondering why you just just need something like
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Kipass X or Kipass XC, which I've taken to use it. Well, yeah, I know I do this. I use Kipass X
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for everything and sharing the database between systems is the thing you should really do. I haven't
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quite got myself coordinated enough with it, but yeah, I know I was intrigued just why he was where
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he was. I think you may have explained it way back when he did the first and these for the
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count of the life of the number five. I did like his explanation of doing this encryption decryption
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editing stuff and potentially leaving debris all over the place, which would be traceable if anybody
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got all of your machine and did forensics on it, which you know, that's a very significant
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thought if you are, you know, take me laptop through customs and people are wanting to
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put around with it and stuff. Yeah, and I was kind of wondering why, why then would you roll your
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own solution? Because, you know, if you get a solution from guys who are developing us, you know,
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with more experience and more eyes, developing your own solution would not be the best approach.
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I know, I know, intriguing though. I, um, yeah, very, I went from listening to this to
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quick look to see if there was a bin plug-in. I know Clatter would be discussed with, of course,
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me here's a bin to do this, I probably will. But there is, there's a bin GNU PG and it's a plug-in
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but where you can edit the file and encrypt it, create a file and encrypt it through it or open
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up an already encrypted one, and you can encrypt it in multiple keys so you can make a list of who
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you want it to be fuelable by. So, um, so that, that seemed to me quite a nice thing. I probably
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actually used that from time to time. I'm going to need to share files with you, however. Yeah,
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actually, but don't be a bad idea. Yeah, it looks, looks, it looks like good. It's not the most
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wonderfully put together plug-in. It's a little bit clunky but, uh, so it seems to do the job.
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Okay, um, move along. The following day we had Linux in laws episode two, uh, rundown from foster
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and there were no comments on that one. Yeah, so validating data in Haskell for the hard core
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out there. There were a few, um, Haskell people around, uh, foster and I made sure to drop this series
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to anybody I met. So, you took a different approach in the show basically rather than going to
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to in depth into their, uh, code itself. Uh, he basically gave us some, uh, explanations around us.
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So that's pretty cool. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I thought that was good. I, um, didn't do what I
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used to do and listen while reading his notes because his notes were always very comprehensive.
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So I'm a little bit, uh, at the loss with this one at the moment, but I'm gonna catch up. So, uh,
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other comments that we missed, uh, whereas, uh, on Daniel Pearson's show, sqrl, secure, quick,
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reliable login. And in the community news, we had asked Ahuka to give us some feedback and he
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has done so saying, thanks for a very good presentation on this exciting protocol. I hope this does
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guess taken up by major sites. The old username, password stuff is not nearly secure enough
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that this could be a major upgrade. Yeah, cool. Um, Paul Quirk did a show, did show 3000 for us with
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the show plan three project. And uh, Ahuka commented on this. Um, he said, I love this. I previously
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supported a similar effort by Kimiko issues, Ahuka to record royalty free versions of Bach.
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We need more of this free, we need more free culture. Can't, can't, can't, but agree with that.
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And McNallu also agrees. Gréish Sussi. Excellent show. Well, love Chopin. I don't know what sort of
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accident that was supposed to be. You must have been studying the way the man speaks at both
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them. That's all I can say. I mean, getting it wrong. Sorry. And then it's very,
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indeed. So let's move to the mailing list. It's been a busy little week. Um, I sent off the,
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I love free software. Somebody spam me. Um, but it's fine. This one was about sending off a letter
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of thanks to developers on Valentine's Day, which is kind of pretty cool. And if you missed it,
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don't worry. You can continue. You can fire off an email. It's something you should do from time
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to time. So there was a fair amount of activity on that subject on the Fediverse, I noticed,
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on mass done. And so it was, it didn't go. It wasn't ignored in general. Well, that's a great idea.
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So I want to read the next one. It was about HBUR 2009, which was a low-fellow members of HBUR
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community. I'm writing today because I'm concerned about episode three thousand and nine,
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which seems to me like a clear case of syndication. First, in the title in ex-outlaw season one,
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episode one, and the fact that there's no mention of HBUR at all in the show. I had a discussion
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with this, with Ken about this, and I understand that the circumstances to justify the presence
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of the show on HBUR, but I am concerned that this kind of episode doesn't really belong,
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at least in this form here. With another title, I'm properly acknowledged in the recording.
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It would be fine. I'm curious to know what the rest of the community thinks. As I'm pretty sure,
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I cannot be the only one who feels this way. I replied to that saying,
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Yali, first, thanks for getting in touch, and then sending this to the list for review,
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because I'd ask you to do that. It is important that our community questions the decisions of the
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generators, HBUR is entirely community-driven, policy decisions, and proposals are discussed
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in the mainly list, so I put a link into there. At the time, I checked their site, which was empty,
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and I also checked the license, which is Creative Commons. Therefore, it was safe to post it as a
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sample show. I also sent them the email below, which I asked them about. Are you planning
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and hosting your own podcast and stuff? When I was at this stand-up boss, Chris, I spoke to Chris,
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and it became clear that their website and feed was not active, so they're posting them exclusively
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on HBUR, so we're bootstrapping the show for them. Once they have everything ready, they will move
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onto their own feeds and become fellow show members of pre-culture podcast. Preestence for this
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was Mix in the Shell, and Sigflop with Uberly Hacker Force Radio, which actually was a spoof
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if I recall, and it falls under dedicated sharing knowledge. So, Honki replied, saying as a person
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whose podcast in the next podcast had several appearances on HBUR, I am all for using HBUR as a
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springboard to spread the word about other podcasts, and believe that as long as the subject matter
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of the podcast is of interest to hackers, it meets the criteria. Yannick says, I guess I
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expected a little bit more recognition towards HBUR for the help in launching the project HBUR
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is about sharing, and I feel there's more about using the sharing because if, as long as the
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subject matter is of interest to hackers is enough, then why not do plain syndication of stuff
|
|
that's of interest. And that one went, ah yes, to which I replied, back in, we covered this back
|
|
in 2012, November of another time, we had one day dedicated to a syndicated show, syndicated
|
|
Thursdays, as you might remember, Dave. Then stuff started to pick up, and then we didn't have
|
|
any more slots available, and we were basically posting syndicated content, and basically we
|
|
kind of got a lot of grief from people because why are you posting their shows when you're not
|
|
posting my shows and stuff like that. So, basically we then went to, we're only producing stuff
|
|
for HBUR, and if it's creative common stuff, we will publish it, and we'll put it in a sample
|
|
episode, so that's pretty much how it goes. I'm not really sure what the Linux in laws are going
|
|
to do. I thought that they had said that they were going to move to the raw and feeds, but
|
|
their website is now up, but it seems like they're going to continue posting them on HBUR.
|
|
I'm not really sure. No, no, they did seem to imply that in the second show that they would like
|
|
to continue posting my HBUR, but I'm not quite sure that they appreciate the means and
|
|
acts of that decision. Yeah, from a physical point of view, they won't be able to determine when
|
|
the shows come out, because as I put out the call for shows already, everybody listening to this
|
|
episode will be busy uploading shows, and we will have a flood of shows for the next three months
|
|
people. I'm looking at you. Yes. And therefore, I'm simply being able to pick a day two weeks
|
|
time, and then expecting a show to come out, might not work. So there you go. Shall I read what
|
|
Taj said? I share, or do you want to read what Taj said? Yeah, sure, sure. Taj says I share the
|
|
same ideas as several of the previous posters. There's someone who is definitely bootstrap to
|
|
podcast from HPR, and it's, I think, some amount of syndication is a valuable tool. More than a
|
|
couple of the three culture podcasts, podcasts out there have done the same thing to either get
|
|
established or get some promotions. As far as syndicating episodes of another podcast, I
|
|
also don't really mind it. I do think there should be at least some limits the number of episodes
|
|
over a period of time. In the past, I think this has been handled well. If a podcast is wanting to post
|
|
episodes more regularly and establish time limit, we as a community should help them establish
|
|
their own hosting fee. For example, Urandoms, and my podcast site and feed costs less than
|
|
one US dollar a month, but I'm sure we're more than happy to help anyone set up the same
|
|
situation. I think there's a way to support new podcasts being initially created using HPR
|
|
and then using the community to help them become self-sufficient. The word incubator just
|
|
says me talking sort of came into my head as I was reading that. Anyway, back to the email,
|
|
as far as attributing and acknowledging HPR, while I think it's a nice gesture that's appreciated,
|
|
I would not categorize it as necessary just in my two cents. Nigel Beza said, obviously,
|
|
there are no prizes for guessing the inspiration of this new podcast viewed in isolation. I'm
|
|
quite happy to give this new podcast on this and as a means of getting its existence publicized HPR
|
|
is probably above the medium. The fact that we are discussing it now proves that the principal
|
|
works all the same. I think the correct method would be to use the HPR show as a container
|
|
with introductory content by the producers in addition to the podcasts itself. It seems to
|
|
recall at least one precedent for this approach. I would not object to HPR being used this way for
|
|
first editions of new tech-related podcasts. However, if the same approach is attempted for future
|
|
episodes, then I think it should be resisted. Otherwise, HPR will run the risk of becoming
|
|
hijacked as a distribution medium and that actually ends. Thank you, Nigel Beza, and that is actually
|
|
what I'm concerned about most. Yeah, yeah, good point. Because if four or five people, if five
|
|
people do that, 10 people decide to release the shows and do that and release every two weeks,
|
|
then that's the cue is full. I think we then would be better moving people to HPR media
|
|
and they had the podcasting to be at Beza.org at one stage, which was exactly this to help people
|
|
get their podcasts up around. I'll fire off an email and see what the guys intend to do.
|
|
Do you want to finish off with Ben or Brian? Was that the one you mean?
|
|
Yeah, that's the one, Brian. Yep. I do not feel a need to mention HPR within an episode.
|
|
There is an intro and outro. As Ken pointed out, it was exclusive and created common.
|
|
So it does definitely meet the rules, but my concern with it is not necessarily that
|
|
the posting and stuff. It might generate bad feeling among other podcasters who would feel like
|
|
if they had released their own shows via HPR, they would have got an instant audience of
|
|
a few thousand people rather than having to grow your own. And having to deal with that here as
|
|
admin or as the janitor is, is the issue that I'm a little bit concerned with. So I think the
|
|
approach of if there's creative comments podcast, new creative comments podcast absolutely we want
|
|
to hear about them and you post them. And then between the HPR or intro and outro, you hear their
|
|
podcasts. That's it. We have had Linux in the shell in the past, but truth be told, Dan
|
|
and I did discuss that with us here at HPR prior to that and it was discussed on the mail list
|
|
and it was a community decision if I recall. I can't remember correctly, but Dan definitely
|
|
had posted lots of shows to HPR and was a founding member of Hackabock Radio from the Linux
|
|
stuff net anyway. So he, him and his daughter were even hosting their, Josh had their own domain name
|
|
was run on the HPR server, so that was a little bit different. But yeah, okay. We'll see how it
|
|
pans out. So we had HPR and social media. Shall I read it? Highsables. I wrote it. I'll read it.
|
|
Hi, all. At first, then we put a chat group together to more effectively communicate with
|
|
the participants there. The group then expanded to come to cover some who are following along at home.
|
|
Say hello, Dave. It was great. It was almost like I was there. It was actually quite cool because
|
|
we were asking Dave was busy over there. It was, yeah, yeah. I think I might have watched more
|
|
the time that things were going on. I was watching more talks and stuff than you guys,
|
|
because I was hopping about through the streams and watching things. And I did actually see
|
|
there was one, the end of one talk, saw people standing up to leave. And there was JWP
|
|
heading out. So it felt like I was there, you know. So you didn't wait.
|
|
Well, you saw more of the shows than I did. So I'll talk to you later.
|
|
So I'll continue. Since there's been a discussion as to a more free type of communication channel.
|
|
So a hook is episode one zero. So a hook is series one zero eight. Sorry about this. I'm all
|
|
off. Are almost host Marshall almost put up a snicket server? Is that how you plan to start?
|
|
Yeah. And some of the other foster members are testing a HPR general chat channel there.
|
|
It is a new XMPP server based off the Prodacy code. And the main benefit is right now it's
|
|
ability to work across multiple devices and start to chat with your phone and the sync to
|
|
cross all clients that are signed in the account. Registration is on FOS, is closed chat.
|
|
Very good. FOS ch.ad. See what you did there is currently closed at the moment, but you can
|
|
connect to general groups dot chat. FOS chat using your XMPP ID while we figure out how to do
|
|
registration. And I go and say your thoughts on this in particular and HPR on social media in
|
|
general will appreciate you want to take the next by John Springs. Yeah, yeah, it just takes me
|
|
while to click through. Come on Dave. Yeah, this laptop is so slow. So sad I bought it now.
|
|
John Springs said before hosting something new, have you considered using matrix dot? It's an
|
|
IM project which is managed and maintained was recently adopted by Mizzoula to replace their IR
|
|
scene network and previously was adopted by the KDE project and the French government.
|
|
They were all camp as well. I spoke to them. They were just close to us. They don't need to be
|
|
out there. I've interviewed them, Dave. Yeah, you go to see your pen attention. Yeah, what about
|
|
after this channel called HPR? Yeah, I remembered my conversation. If people want to
|
|
self-host their own home server, they can access the rooms via federation service and they're
|
|
also bridges into many IR scene network if that's a desirable option too. Also, the fun and giggle's
|
|
matrix was developed by a telecom provider to sort off a place sit and search you can then
|
|
voice the video calls including VR video calls over matrix two. It's actually very cool.
|
|
There was a talk at I'll camp about not the last one, one before the scheduled one. I think
|
|
it's quite a great presentation about it which got a lot of people very interesting.
|
|
And Brian says there is a matrix room HPR call on matrix.org as it happened to which I replied,
|
|
give an ugly link to it. Thursday, December the 7th, 2017, tattoo created and configured this
|
|
room. Nice for the tattoo. Do you want to read tags as well? Yeah, it takes me a while to
|
|
find the thing. Be, move my mouse and secondly, get my brain in gear. Anyway, tags says just by two
|
|
cents as far as social media. Really, the only two requirements I have for joining any social media
|
|
moving forward are that it is false and that it's decentralized. As long as something checks those
|
|
boxes, I'd be all for trying anything. I know a lot of my interactions on masters are now essentially
|
|
just interactions with HPR books. So something more centralized might be nicer people,
|
|
you just want a place to hang kind of like old cars. The planet was back in the day. I was not
|
|
aware there was a matrix room for HPR and I'll definitely be checking it out. I've only had limited
|
|
experiences with matrix books, the experiences I have had have been good. I'm not heard of
|
|
snickered before today. I do miss xmpp though. And Gorbato says, I run privacy myself. Looks like
|
|
I'll be migrating over to snickered. I also wasn't aware of their matrix room. Are there plans to
|
|
make a page with this information memory at the top bar at community button? I see on cast plan
|
|
if mentioned, has there been discussion on ways to follow users over to there? I think at the
|
|
bottom of the page, we drink to Alcast plan on registered, which is not very useful for someone
|
|
new to IRC. I've been on the Binreb IRC servers for years. Do they still run their own IRC
|
|
servers with HPR channel? So the Alcast plan on registered, if you don't log in or not authenticate
|
|
it, you get put into this unregistered thing, which I agree is not very helpful. And I think
|
|
there's a lot of people on other social media things that are not on IRC, but the matrix has the
|
|
ability to, the matrix science is the ability to go to IRC on free node. And I wasn't even aware
|
|
that Binreb had their own IRC server or that there was a HPR channel there. So, there you go.
|
|
So, Snicket. Snicket's quite good, but I was using Gajin, I've known GAJM to connect to
|
|
Snicket because I had used that years ago to connect to Google Talk. And that was okay.
|
|
And I can't remember what else I was using, but yeah, but matrix, I was using Riot on my phone and on
|
|
the web client on my desktop. And it's got a lot of good features and it's obviously being
|
|
developed quite rapidly. So, certainly, yeah, certainly seems pretty good. I ended up wanting to have
|
|
less places to talk, but now I'll end it up with more places to talk. Yeah, yeah. I felt that it's
|
|
probably worth checking these out in anticipation of there being a process of even migrating to the
|
|
one that was best. And there does seem to have been a little bit about people being moving away from
|
|
Snicket to some degree. And I think Andrew McNallow joined Matrix a day or two back saying,
|
|
I noticed everybody had disappeared from Snicket. So, here I am. Well, something to that, but
|
|
so, no, imagine that's going to be the future, but it's hard to predict. I don't know, evolution
|
|
is going on. Yeah, I did like the Snicket more because of the freedom of the clients. There's more
|
|
XMPP clients, but on the other hand, everything has moved now to a web API, which Matrix is using.
|
|
So, possibly Matrix will be able to bridge the two, or will be cool as if there was a way to have
|
|
a matrix bridging to both and that way you get everything in the one that will be that's
|
|
basically what I want. Yeah, I don't know the answer to that, but I've seen discussions with people
|
|
said, how does it bridge to X? And the answer seems to be, oh yes, there does seem to be either
|
|
something already or something being worked on, but we'll do that. So, to look to have potential.
|
|
So, there was a call for shows. We're very low. We have a few from Mahooka sitting there in the
|
|
queue, but that's submitted some series. And we need shows. We've got enough for next week,
|
|
but after that we're out. Yes. And just to remind everybody, if there are no shows, we are going to
|
|
shut down the network. That is the promise that I made. There are no shows in HPR, then the project
|
|
has ceased, and we shut it down. Yeah, there's no point in syndicating other people to hand their
|
|
content and trying to keep it going. People are supposed to submit shows. That's the plan.
|
|
So, submit your shows. Thank you. And if you don't know what to submit, the first show is
|
|
Hi, I am Rachel. And this has been listening to the HPR for years. Never thought I should send
|
|
in the show, but now here I am. And here's my tech history. And then we will definitely ask you
|
|
for more shows. That's how it works. It's not a burden sending in shows. Is it Dave? I don't think
|
|
it is. I don't know. Well, well, tomorrow is episode is the exception. Well, yes, it's not.
|
|
It's you pick up a recorder. You say what you have to say, and you press send. And then you go,
|
|
oh my god, it sounded my own boys. Yes, we all do. But yeah, come on, get over. Yeah.
|
|
Okay. Kevin Mischer said that the audio quality is a better version, but I didn't see the
|
|
version. I asked him about it. Yeah. Yeah. I think he's he's developed a better version, but I'm
|
|
not sure where where it is. Yeah. Okay. Well, we need to ask him that. Kevin, send us a link.
|
|
I did want to mention in one of the discussions on one of the social medias. And this is there's
|
|
now a bit of a problem because I know and they on the HPR channels and we need to bring
|
|
commons or basically discussions from there into this community news show. That's a whole point
|
|
to the community news show. So there has been a lot of discussions and one of the most interesting
|
|
that related to the community was I was putting out the idea there. Should we when somebody
|
|
posts a comment to the HPR website, should we post that to our Twitter feed like we do for when
|
|
shows get submitted to the feed. Should we say there's a new comment, you know, Dave has left a
|
|
comment on this episode or Bob has left a comment on this episode. And I never for a moment thought that
|
|
that would be an issue, but some people floated the idea that comments are not public in the same
|
|
way that something on a web page is public. What do you feel about that Dave? Well, the
|
|
the comments on HPR are as public as the shows, aren't they? Exactly. They're attached to the shows.
|
|
I don't know. I mean, the fact that a comment has been posted rather than the actual contents of
|
|
the comment would be, I mean, because if you're not posting the shows, it's just posting the fact
|
|
that there is a show and it's got a title and it's over there. In fairness, I think the point
|
|
was about posting it directly to Twitter. So putting it into our Twitter feeds, putting it
|
|
out to our RSS feeds for Twitter and Fediverse and all those places, hey, there's a new comment on HPR.
|
|
For one thing, I think it will, right now if you follow the HPR feed, it's a bit like a, it looks
|
|
like a bot is releasing it and it doesn't seem to be alive. Like it's one post today and
|
|
you show has been released and this is the show, whereas getting feedback in comments might be
|
|
something that people would like to have coming out to their Twitter feed or their Fediverse feed or
|
|
whatever that there's something trending on that they might actually want to comment about. I don't
|
|
know. But if there's privacy issues associated with that, then yeah, I'd like to, I'd like to hear
|
|
about it. What the things he's feeling is on that whole topic. The comments are not particularly
|
|
identifiable, are they? I mean, you can put it completely wrong. But a comment to a show
|
|
on the show, on the same page as the show, is a different entity than a comment, an entire comment
|
|
about a show that on Twitter, that nobody's actually knows anything about because it's not on
|
|
Twitter, but links to it are. So I don't know whether that's a, that's a particularly valuable
|
|
Twitter thing. Yeah, no, no, no, that's just, just random chitchat from me, that's all.
|
|
And some other stuff we have, yesterday, there's been some activity, Yannick and the love
|
|
Dave, Dave, the junior, have helped us to set permissions and stuff on, on the development sites
|
|
that are at GitLab.ananasthals.com. And if you're interested in the development of the new,
|
|
the new, more distributed version of the HBO web presence, then feel free to come and join
|
|
in the form that is to be had there. Yeah, whether we want to be sort of doing a quick summary
|
|
on these community news shows, I don't know, depends. Well, I have things moved forward, I guess,
|
|
but it might be worth something, it might be worth considering. Absolutely, dot nore if there
|
|
is a whole loss to say as yet. No, we just did some stuff, but maybe as we get further down the road,
|
|
something about the stuff we did would be, would be an interest. Yeah, there's no code up there,
|
|
as yes, it's just, we've met two repels, HBO front end and the HBO back end. And the, well,
|
|
the whole thing about this is I don't really know where to start, but what I've decided to do is,
|
|
I'm going to, in the HBO front end, I'm going to manually put in the HBO website as it's rendered
|
|
now. So basically a, a mirror of what you would get, both instead of using the database that
|
|
each of the pages would be in slash episode slash, if you're one, two, three, four, or whatever.
|
|
And then the backend stuff will be where the postgres database is and the tools necessary
|
|
to interact with the postgres database in order to, and the templates that would be
|
|
form the HTML webpages. And then when that's running, the backend would push to the front end
|
|
and the front end, you point a web server to it and then you've got the HBO website. Yeah.
|
|
Now both the backend and the front end will be totally open to anybody to be able to get
|
|
pulled and pull it down. So if you're interested in the, in just getting it up today,
|
|
local copy of the HBO website, you just do a get pull every day and the modified files
|
|
better on the HBO website would be down on your get repository. And you can just point a,
|
|
a web server to that and you've got yourself a copy of the site. And if you want to
|
|
act as one of the worker nodes in a janitor nodes, janitor nodes, then you pull down the backend one.
|
|
And then if you've got credentials to push up to a hbr website or you wanted to run your own
|
|
mirror of a hbr website, you could do that as well. Yeah. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. I'm sure there's
|
|
there's going to be interesting issues to consider along the way, but the principle of it sounds
|
|
so pretty good. Yep. Okay. By anything else, Steve? Do you want to talk about the tags? Yeah.
|
|
We had a, we had a flurry of tags this month. Gordon Miranda, who committed in public to
|
|
add the tags to his shows, so he didn't have them having been hassled by tags, tags, that's wonderful.
|
|
Just go around the recipes and have some of it. He did contribute his, the said tags.
|
|
And when to go who likes to listen to older shows and add tags, which for which we're eternally
|
|
grateful. And some geese are called diverse in total. Sixteen shows this month. We're
|
|
gradually moving forward. We're just under six hundred or about to go under six hundred
|
|
needing attention. So slow. Excellent. Well done, Dave. Well done. And of course, the whole point of
|
|
this front end back thing is that you could check out the one of the pages and then submit fixes
|
|
and stuff and edit your own tags and edit your own shows and push them back. Don't know exactly
|
|
how that's going to work, but the ability to fix things on your own show notes, I think it would be
|
|
very, very, very popular. I think people have asked for any tags over the time I've been involved
|
|
with HBO. And it's, I mean, I'm quite happy to fix them for them, you know, gives you something to
|
|
do. Yeah, sit here in these endless hours of being returned and stuff. But Robert did, which
|
|
for you laptop. But yeah, it would be great if you could go and do that sort of stuff. Whether,
|
|
whether you want to go and edit somebody else's show, it's time to get into some some territory
|
|
that's to get a little bit more complex, but still the ability to have. Yeah, there's also the
|
|
question, should you be able to edit your own show, you've released it under the Creative Commons,
|
|
that version is now out there. And yes, you can take a coffee and modify it, but should
|
|
you be able to go back and edit it? It would be a religious question. There would be a history that
|
|
said a really, you said, you know, it was black. Now you said it's white. So, you know, which is true,
|
|
but it's more of the case of you've made some, some silly mistake in a bit of COVID you've
|
|
submitted and I really need to fix that because it looks so stupid like that. And also this
|
|
doing this in GIT gives you the first complete blame history for what has happened on the page.
|
|
So, exactly, yes, yes. Potentially we could even get to a day where, you know, somebody
|
|
submits a show via a GIT push. Anywho, that is, that's the plan. Whether we get time to do it or not,
|
|
this is not the question. A lot of busy people are involved, busy doing other things, not from me.
|
|
Let's see, anything happening on the scale 18s coming up, two weeks time on the 8th,
|
|
open source 101, IDI 2020, never heard of it. Postgres Kampf 2020, and the Susa Kahn was on
|
|
open Susa Summit, that's at the end of next month. And QKahn and CloudNate of Kahn EU on
|
|
the 30th, that might be interesting indeed. Okay, are we done, dude? I think we're done. Okay, cool.
|
|
And apologies to anybody if I missed your show. I'll make an order while I'm listening to
|
|
us and if I missed anybody's show, apologies and we'll cover it next month. Yep, yep. So to
|
|
leave you in the lurch running, running, running, running Debian testing seems like a good idea
|
|
one time, but there's a sort of process where Debian seed crops are operating system and then
|
|
gradually things get them, so get cleaned up again. But during the, you know, the Crap Don stage,
|
|
thanks. Merci, I'm afraid. Anyway, okay, cool. Dear, I'll edit this and send it on our
|
|
pauses. All right. Okay, great. Tune in tomorrow for actually, well, we'll be an exciting
|
|
episode because I spent long enough editing of Hacker Public Radio. All right, bye. Okay, cheers.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org. We are a community
|
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