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825 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3281
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Title: HPR3281: HPR Community News for February 2021
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3281/hpr3281.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:08:33
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3281 for Monday 1 March 2021.
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Today's show is entitled HBR Community News for February 2021, and is part of the series,
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HBR Community News, it is hosted by HBR volunteers, and is about 69 minutes long, and carries an
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explicit flag.
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The summary is, HBR volunteers talk about shows released, and comment posted in February
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2021.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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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 Falon, and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public
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Radio.
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Today, this is HBR Community News for February 2021, and joining me today is, hello, it's
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Dave Morris.
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It's usually this, you know, that's a bit of a bad news.
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Yes, anybody else cared to join, then we'd be very welcome.
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Exactly, and this is the HBR Community News show for February, and in the community news,
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we look back at the shows of the previous month, make sure everyone's get a mention, and
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that's about that.
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So as we normally do, Dave, would you like to welcome in the new hosts?
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Yes, we have two new hosts, which is quite a turn up for the books, and wonderful to
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see.
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And I check with how the first person says their name, and it's O9L, is the pronounciation.
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O9L?
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Yeah, yeah.
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So, and the second person is some guy on the internet, which is an app brand new to
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them.
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Yes.
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So, the first show of last months just happens to be the community news for last month,
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which is episode two, three, six, one, and we had zero comments, but Dave, we're not
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being controversial enough.
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No, no.
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So, before I'll say it again.
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We tried last time.
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We tried to.
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Yeah, bad things.
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Nobody cares.
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Bad bad things, but nobody cares, as you say.
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Um, Swift 110.
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My thoughts on diversity in Linux and open source, where he gives some background to
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the story and certain frustrations he experienced in life loads of comments.
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First by Norris, storyteller, thank you, Swift 110 for the episode.
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You have a gift for storytelling telling, I hope you continue.
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This is an important issue.
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I don't know how to help, except for more stories like this, I look forward to hearing
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from Swift one time again.
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Excellent.
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And Bill N1VUX, probably is pronounced differently, says, well said.
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I agree with Norris, if one tends, quite the story teller.
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I could tell you where a man of taste when I saw the Thinkpad, your prior EPS listing.
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T420 is a great Linux platform, especially sweet if bought refurbished, smiley face.
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What it's worth, Wikipedia says, Langston terraces were a second federally funded projects
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in the nation.
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Yeah, that's a illusion to the discussion in the show.
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You're asking good questions, he says, one of the newest housing projects in Boston has
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a technology center within the campus, co-sponsored by MIT, southendtexcenter.org.
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And a bunch of local teams were disestablished.
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Some of the core volunteers here moved there.
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Very good.
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Kevin Oberlin says, part of the discussion.
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I thought this show was timely, and I would welcome part of the discussion.
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Free software and open technology create possibilities, but they are guaranteed if people don't
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take the necessary actions.
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Excellent.
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Blizzak.
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Oh.
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What's going on?
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What Dave?
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Blizzak.
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Yes.
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Yes, he did the maximum length of the comment.
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I did a part one or two.
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Oh, indeed, indeed.
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Yes.
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I did notice that having proved them and stuff, but yeah, it's, I hadn't really tweaked
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that.
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I just do the mechanics of this.
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I really think.
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Do we read the comments or do we narrators for a separate show?
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Two important discussion, not to read this, Dave.
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I vote for reading personally, yes, yes.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Please send in a show because it's a show.
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Amazing stuff.
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We have a comment bloomed.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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So as Blizzak says, systematically kept out part one.
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Obviously got to hit them, had to go back and do change the title.
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I enjoy hearing stories about African American experiences like this.
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There was, as you mentioned, a great black migration that happened in the States.
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It sounds as though you've done quite well for yourself and you have a strong community
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around that cares about you getting ahead in life.
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That's awesome.
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And we all need something like this in our lives.
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Thanks for sharing your backstory about you and your family.
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I do appreciate someone talking about something else than their newest laptop, or the latest
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distro of their favorite operating system.
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This is a podcast, and like most podcasts, there's lots of rambling and lots of pundits.
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I think you're making some broad generalization about people of color, POC in America, even
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though you're a member of that community.
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I know you've stated this from your experience.
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For instance, you feel that people of color are not vocal in the floss community is because
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they're somehow afraid.
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I don't believe this at all.
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I think many people of color are unaware of many floss technological tools, but so
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a lot of other people who are not black, brown, or women, being ignorant or unaware of
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something does not make you afraid, or sure your family was apprehensive being part of
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that great migration, but they did it.
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So did millions of other African Americans, and he cites the Wikipedia page about that
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subject.
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POC consume a lot of technical information just like other folks in America.
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They use computers, cell phones, tablets, etc.
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Additionally, they spend lots of money on tech-related items.
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Tech companies want POC communities, all communities, so that matter to consume their products.
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They have no interest in these communities participating in its implementation.
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For instance, are we to believe that Apple couldn't hire a POC as part of their QA team
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for their watches?
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He cites an issue about Apple watches and against darker skin than maybe some people
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have.
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And yeah, that's the end of part one.
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Do you want to do part two?
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No, because then people would be comparing our narration to the same thing with each other.
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All right, all right.
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Systemically kept out part two from Blizzak.
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I think the main reason you don't see people of color in the Flash community is the
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same reason you don't see lots of Black folks in lots of other industries.
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People of color have been purposefully kept out of tech jobs in America.
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It's the same reason you don't see women in many of these places as well.
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I would post you like that many of the people who contribute to Flash also work in tech
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in some way or another.
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Notice the word many, not awe, or most.
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So you know, I'm a Black man, US citizen who lives in New York city.
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Sorry.
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I work as a software engineer and I'm also interested in Floss.
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And that's Blizzak.com.
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Now if there are not more shows from that, I don't know what absolutely, absolutely.
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Absolutely.
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Okay.
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I'm just kidding.
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Yes, please, please, please.
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And also excellent article.
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I was not aware of this.
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I will browse it later or better yet.
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If Blizzak or anybody else wants to do a show on the Great Migration, please do so.
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Yeah.
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Well, I agree with that.
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I have to say that my ignorance on that subject was stunning when I discovered that I had
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it.
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I don't think, you know, the sort of teaching that I'd had in my lifetime not really covered
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this subject to anywhere near enough.
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Yeah.
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It's and as I said before on this, on this, on this episode on this podcast show, whatever
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thing we're doing here, this, that's in Ireland, the essential history.
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If it didn't involve being oppressed by the English, then there's also covered.
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So yeah.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Well, as many, many people pointed out the English were fairly busy oppressing their own
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people at the same time.
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So yeah.
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There's lots of lots of nastiness going on over the place.
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Right.
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Next day, on 9L, my beginnings in tech are rambling about how I got into technology.
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Hiya.
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There aren't many links for anything here, putting something in this tool node seems
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important.
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Yes, it does.
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I feel a bit barricade because I barged into doing this show, but it was also an excellent
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introduction.
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Yeah.
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So keep in coming.
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Yeah, yeah.
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It's good to hear.
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It's always good to hear somebody making their first steps into being an HPR host and all
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that sort of stuff.
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So yeah.
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It's a good.
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Congratulations.
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Well done.
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The following day, 9L and there is something I haven't heard about in a while.
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Introduce some basic 9L and walks and walk through, setting it up by Norris just.
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So this was actually quite a nice one and kind of useful, even on a small network, I
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imagine.
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Yeah.
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We serenaded work.
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I was not indirectly involved in doing so, but yeah, it was, it did prove to be very,
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very useful in a small university environment.
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So I've always been tempted to do it myself, but I've never got ran to it, but yeah, good
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good show and some superb notes.
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Not so you love it.
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Exactly.
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Yes, it's one of these ones where you've got, I know for sure, I heard that on some podcast
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somewhere.
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So yes.
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My Chromebook experience, which is turning out to be a little bit of a series now, following
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St. Floater is two episodes.
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This is Hooker's Joining the Frey about his experience with Chromebooks.
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So pretty cool.
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yeah, it does sound pretty useful thing to have if it suits your needs.
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The thing about stop receiving updates in 2024 and it being sort of fairly, fairly useless
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thereafter was something.
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I mean, did I get that right?
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Yeah.
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It updates stop and then it's effectively junk.
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I'm not sure it isn't in the hands of somebody who could repurpose it, but that, that
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upsets me.
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I don't like to hear that sort of stuff, you know, things that would build up to lessons.
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But yeah, but they are bottom of the range laptops.
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So not just a finite day, good Lord, no, they are bottom of the range laptops and I really
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noticed here when my kids have had laptops and they would argue that, yeah, they hate
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it when I put Linux on them that really hate it.
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They much prefer the Chromebook experience largely because they're used to it.
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But that said, the laptops when you put Linux on them are just unusable now, you know,
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when they're out of date, they're really just unusable.
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They can't open web pages now with so much crud on web pages and stuff that they're
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just going to hold.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So yeah, it's a, it has a limited lifespan for all sorts of reasons.
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Some of which are deliberate, but yeah, yeah, I would not buy one personally, but that's
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just me.
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Yeah.
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And the keyboard drives me absolutely not not having, you know, the proper F1 keys and
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control keys and they, the keyboard has like the power off key up where you have the
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delete key.
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So great.
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The delete key is the power off key.
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So you press the delete button and your laptop turns off.
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Yes, I know you can turn that off at all, but still it's monumentally frustrating.
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Yes.
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Anyway, moving on.
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I've been trying to get her to do show about this particularly because it would be good
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in that series, but not, not interested, just the way I'm afraid, yeah, and you can
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lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink upgrading Debian on my raspberry
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pie.
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And it's where mistrex covers the process of upgrading Debian from GSEA to stretch 9 on
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this raspberry pie.
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Backing up in case things were wrong, oh, yes, what a good idea.
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Yeah.
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Usually two nanoseconds after you should have realized, yeah, whoops, yes, I wrote down
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it as a torture tale, it has sounded quite painful, but it's, it's, it's glad, I'm glad
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you got it, got it work in in the end, that was excellent.
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And it was entertaining to listen to and knowing that it was going to be a happy ending
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as well.
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Yeah.
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Very good.
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Yeah.
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Good stuff.
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It's a ripping media in 2021, this operator, and this is how to use YouTube DL script on
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Windows.
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It's actually quite, quite complicated, I mean, it reminds me very much of how difficult it
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was by Linux back in the day when you simply download this, patch the kernel, put this
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in some of these flags.
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I think this stuff, and you can upload your monitor up and all those good things, yes,
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it's, yeah, it, I couldn't, I mean, I have a strange viewpoint on these things because
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I'm really not interested in doing this, because I don't care about the stuff that, that
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you can get in this way, mostly, because it's, to my mind, it's junk, but that's just
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me.
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I'm old and probably walked in my opinion, but yeah, it does send a lot of pain to achieve
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what you want to achieve.
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I watched a lot of YouTube stuff on the big clive and stuff like that, and electronic
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stuff.
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It's educational, but it kind of would help that those producers wouldn't care if it was
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YouTube or some peer-to-peer network that would distribute their videos, peer-to-peer
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or something.
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So you know, because they're getting the money to pay to you on anyway, so why would they
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necessarily care?
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Yeah, anyway, yeah, next day, what do we have?
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Video game review, ARC Survival Evolved OnSpy Enigma, I've never heard of this one, did
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you?
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No, no, it's a, it's a close book as far as I'm concerned.
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It sounded like fun, actually, it does sound quite entertaining, but I can't see me running
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out about it, to be honest, but it seems something my son would be very much into, which is why
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I'd be very, very quiet.
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I imagine my kids would be, would be a lot more interested in it, I know, yeah.
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Sorry Enigma, just following day, Linux in laws, the first year of the five-year plan,
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comrades, yes, we bring you the five-year plan, and there's one comment, Claudio, thanks
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for the invite.
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I'll have my agent contact you later, winky-do-wink, they're number one fan.
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So, the following day, in this gimp episode, we had an example, use of layers, creating
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new header image for my WordPress site, using layers in gimp, quite nice, and as always,
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detailed references in the show notes, even to where he's getting the clip art from.
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Yes, yes, yes.
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I thought this one was getting on into the more practical aspects of things, you know,
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in terms of something that I could actually see myself doing, would go back and look
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at the resources here when I needed to do it.
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So, yeah, I mean, obviously you've got to do the set scene before you can do something
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like this, but it's a lot of fun.
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Yeah, yeah, really, really interesting stuff, as with everything that a hooker, he starts
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at the beginning and works his way through to the end.
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Absolutely.
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It heals to me very much, yeah.
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And there might be a free-doss series in the offing, whoop, whoop, whoop, word on the
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mastodon is.
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Then following up so that I think had to be my favorite one, sorry, everybody else thought
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an interview with a six-year-old, it's got to be awesome.
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So, the zopper anchor as well, brilliant, I love this.
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And there's a comment from Lovebug who says, love this, knowing how difficult it can be
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to engage a small child in front of a microphone without them going all shy or grabbing hold
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of it and making farting noises.
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This was amazing to listen to, to use the entertainment as the voice of experience,
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and that is right there, brilliant stuff.
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Oh yeah, I forgot to say about the other episode, their effempake on Mara's now.
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Awesome.
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Oh really?
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Oh wow.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Yeah, yeah.
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The next one.
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The next one much, has something.
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Yeah, the images are pre-processed before they're sent back.
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Oh, cool.
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Excellent.
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And some reference to the fact that the planet's got the most Linux on it, or something
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to that.
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I did make it all out.
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Oh, yeah.
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Yeah.
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Very good.
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Next episode.
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In GNU Linux, there is no other diversity.
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We're all just data.
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How I experience GNU Linux and the topics of diversity, some guy on the internet.
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I'm just some guy on the internet.
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This was another one of those comments, let's book one, so that's welcome.
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Hearing your Linux journey was like hearing somebody read mine out loud, although my journey
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started a few years before years.
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The Windows 98 ME migration was my knowledge to look into alternative operating systems.
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Like you, most of the communities I have encountered have been very friendly and helpful.
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I've not dealt into the art world, but have encountered that type of attitude elsewhere.
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Eliteism exists everywhere.
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How we react to it is up to us.
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That side, you're welcome to one of the best communities on the web.
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There you go.
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That's very cool.
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Yes, yes.
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Yeah, you find eliteism in all sorts of places.
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Yes.
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I've encountered it as a programmer way back in the day on various operating systems.
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You go on a news net and ask questions and you get a range of things.
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Some people would tell you to f off and some people would be very helpful and give you
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answers.
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You've got a whole range of stuff like that.
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I've never understood the mentality myself, why?
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I'm more than happy to point to somebody.
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Here is the manual.
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The section you're looking for is this page and it's here and this is the paragraph that
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you're looking for.
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Oh, I didn't even know it was manual.
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I can understand the art community might be tempted to suggest people to go there because
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they're wiki is excellent by an art and just as in general, if you have any Linux issues,
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if you end up in the art wiki, you're usually finding out what your GUI tool is doing
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in the background.
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So it gives you insight that way.
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Yeah, yeah.
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It's a great resource.
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But yeah, to be arrogant about it seems ridiculous really because to be proud of it and should
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be pushing it forward to people who get something from it, you know, it might be you, but
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there you go.
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Thankfully, it's diminished a lot and I think Ubuntu has gone some way into encouraging
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that nice behavior on the internet.
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Yeah.
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Critical credit is due.
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Embrace Firefox Dave, that's our browser.
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Some guy on the internet out there and I cannot disagree with them.
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What's Mozilla doing?
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Well, I don't even know what he was referring to and what they were doing in the show, but
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I really think Mozilla could do it focusing on producing Firefox and Thunderbird and
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yeah.
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Yeah.
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They seem to be becoming abandoned in some way or turned into something that we're not
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going to want.
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Probably.
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Yeah.
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Very, very strange.
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It was nicely, nicely explained and recent, I thought, okay.
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My custom DWM setup, me talking about how I've customized DWM, added and moved patches
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and written various scripts.
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This is RRF tab.
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Yes.
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Comment is of me or you, who's turn it?
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It's my turn, it's my turn.
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You threw me with that name there because it's our fab.
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I was trying to work it with you, you found it, and a tea.
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Where did you get the tea from?
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I don't know.
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No, no, no, yes, it's a bit like a tea, I bet, I bet a quick glance would be easy to do.
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These things just throw me into a spiral, sorry, it's my dyslexia, Dave, there you go.
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I know, I know, but yeah, my brain just, it's probably got something wrong with it.
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It's too old to go into spirals, when it shouldn't, anyway, and then for that, which I have,
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Magnalo says in his comment, might return to DWM, enjoyed this episode, which I began
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listening to and then switched over to the video version.
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I used DWM as my main desktop many years ago, because perhaps eight to eight or so, and
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it brought my rather underpowered laptop alive.
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In the end, I abandoned DWM because I had to use netbeams every day, and for reasons
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I'd never understood, it wouldn't work with DWM.
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Back with KDE again for now, yes, I like extremes, but you've noticed me into giving DWM
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another word, his phone is edited DWM to down, I would imagine.
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So, yes, he's going to have a shot of DWM.
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Yeah, cool.
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I did watch the video and it was great, it's a sort of thing that where a video really does
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help, admittedly, audio is great and all, but I didn't fully understand, I've never
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used DWM, but it gave me a better insight into what it is, what you can do with that
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and stuff.
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Yeah, it wasn't too bad, there were a few hears and see there in the episode that I was
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able to extract the majority of it, because I was hoovering at the time, so I didn't have
|
|
the option to go in front of a computer, but there are one or two points and that's always
|
|
a risk when you're doing a video, forced to do the audio and then record the video.
|
|
Yes, yes, yes, it's quite nice to have video as an enhancement to the audio though, that's
|
|
definitely a good thing, but I'm sorry, but there's no way I'm ever going to run DWM.
|
|
KDE is where I'm happy with KDE these days, so I'm going to stay there, I think.
|
|
I am loving Alex Cutie, just simple guitar, you've got all the niceness of KDE, all the
|
|
configurability and that's small and light, that's all I need.
|
|
Yeah, KDE's come along a lot since I used it way back in the earlier days on Fedora,
|
|
I think it was way back when.
|
|
So yeah, for me it's perfect, my kids say, why are you using all that stuff down and I
|
|
say I like all the ability to tune it and change it in the middle of it, but why, why would
|
|
you want to do that?
|
|
Yeah, because I want it to be the way I want it, because I can, yes, yes, yes, so there's
|
|
a similar drive in our fab's discussion, he sees tune things to the umpteenth degree and
|
|
make it for him.
|
|
Next day, D1 mini closed lid to scan thing and the hours, this thing has saved me and
|
|
I'm sure it's very, very specific to give you an idea, it was a use Weemos to monitor
|
|
when a lid is open or closed and the network scanner, so, you know, it's basically just
|
|
a read switch, which is a magnetic switch, magnet comes in, then a JSON file turns, yes,
|
|
you know, or open to closed or something, but it could equally be burglar alarm, triggered
|
|
or gays door or garage door open or whatever you want to do with it, this is that's basically
|
|
very, very simple thing.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, very nice, I like this.
|
|
I did play with the read switches during my student days, making little gadgets that
|
|
animals were supposed to operate and push and whatever.
|
|
So yeah, it's a very nice technology, but yeah, the Weemos made what I was using, it's
|
|
just fantastic thing.
|
|
It's like having a little Arduino, you can program it in an Arduino as well and put sensors
|
|
and all sorts and, you know, you can have like this thing somewhere and feed it with five
|
|
volts and, you know, I intend to get some to monitor MQTT and semi outside temperatures
|
|
and, you know, vibration and stuff like that, whatever, I don't know, what do you like
|
|
time?
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely, lots of, lots of possibilities, a lot of people are doing
|
|
this stuff.
|
|
I'm still looking over the fence at them doing it, haven't done much yet, though, I do
|
|
have Pi, Pico here waiting to be used for something or other and those sorts of things.
|
|
And if you give the ESP8666 and stuff, yeah, we've asked this cool because it just got
|
|
the Wi-Fi built in, so, you know, there's no messing around with anything, you just give
|
|
your Wi-Fi credentials and it's a computer on the network, but yeah, perfect, perfect.
|
|
Following day, taking advantage of a little known feature we do here in Haka Public Radio,
|
|
the narration, Deepkey sent in a script to Klatu who read it, and if you're going to
|
|
have somebody read it, why not have one of the best voices on HPR?
|
|
Read it for you.
|
|
There you go.
|
|
Indeed.
|
|
Interesting that HD Radio is a thing.
|
|
Actually, I didn't know much about this at all, it did prompt me to go and look at the
|
|
Wikipedia entries about it and compare it with the European, what's it called, DAB?
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
It both seemed to suffer from similar issues that greedy organisations try and force the
|
|
transmissions down to the minimum bandwidth, so you get crappy audio at the end of it and
|
|
certainly DAB is a nightmare in terms of that.
|
|
Very, very, very poor radio signals or quality of audio on most channels, yeah, I don't
|
|
always like in Europe.
|
|
I don't actually know why anybody would listen to the radio anymore.
|
|
No, no.
|
|
So my question is more fundamental than that, like, listen to the radio, either way.
|
|
Well, it's this thing about having radios in cars and stuff, I mean I've got DAB radio
|
|
in my car and so I don't actually listen to it very much, but on occasion for a long
|
|
ish drive I might switch the radio on, but there's not usually much I want to listen to,
|
|
so I just put a podcast on the phone or something like that, but yeah, yeah, but there's occasions
|
|
where you want to use it, but the DAB is not that brilliant, the quality of it, even though
|
|
the speakers in my car are not bad, some of the channels sound just awfully sound worse
|
|
than old shortwave or stuff that I used to get when I was a kid, you know, this interradio
|
|
Luxembourg from a little transistor radio, it sounds like that in some cases, not quite
|
|
as bad.
|
|
It doesn't keep fading in and out and stuff like that, like it used to, but yeah, it's still
|
|
pretty grim.
|
|
Microsoft in my Debian repo, this is by Archer72, who Raspberry Pi added the BS called
|
|
repo to the Raspberry OS, which is formerly known as Raspberry, and people were annoyed, and
|
|
this is how you get rid of it.
|
|
Yes, yes, excellent, there's been some great responses to this.
|
|
I think the Raspberry Pi foundation were stunned, either by the response, they hadn't appreciated
|
|
what the way people would take it, but I think a lot of people with less of a purist, just
|
|
judging from what my son said, he said, oh, BS code's great, I use it all the time.
|
|
So it sounds like a good idea to me, but then he's in the mode of, I need to think to
|
|
get the job that I have to do done, and there's a thing, and it's available, and I can use
|
|
that.
|
|
So, you know, the finer points passing by, personally, I agree with the people who are
|
|
objecting to it, just to put my cards on the table, sorry, you were going to say.
|
|
Yeah, I think that people, you know, there's the whole concept that free software is one,
|
|
blah, blah, blah, but I actually think we've lost, because, A, I've been a lockdown and
|
|
I'm very depressed, but B, because people are using the software, but they don't understand
|
|
why the software is there in the first place, and I'm seeing, yeah, there's great support
|
|
for Linux, but now they're supporting proprietary applications that are just don't care what
|
|
operating system they're running on.
|
|
It's just a matter of convenience, it's standardized blob that they have there.
|
|
So, they've just, we haven't won, we've just been used in a worse, yes, yes, yes,
|
|
that's a lot of truth in that, yeah, yeah, however, I can completely understand the devils
|
|
I've got here, I can understand why they will put it in the repo, and it doesn't come
|
|
as any surprise to me that the Raspberry Pi Foundation would put it in this repo, I think
|
|
the Raspberry Pi Foundation never met a secret of the fact that their, that their goal is
|
|
not free LibreOpens or software, it's to get something to run, get technology into
|
|
everyone's hands, and that just happens to be easiest used in free LibreOpens or software,
|
|
they've got lots of proprietary bundles on their, on the thing, and this is just another
|
|
piece of proprietary code.
|
|
People should not be surprised about it.
|
|
It shows a certain lack of sensitivity for the, for a quite large proportion of the
|
|
audience, was my thing, well, not really, Microsoft, you know, Microsoft says that they are
|
|
a big fan of free software, yeah, the hatred for Microsoft is something that many people
|
|
certainly will have in spades probably, and for, for very good reasons, you know, do you
|
|
trust the, the, the, the X-Murderide, it's a big stream, but I mean, do you trust somebody
|
|
who has shown that at some point in there, in their existence, they want to, to destroy
|
|
you, you then say, oh, okay, they're actually nice now, so we'll just trust them and let
|
|
them do an early one, yeah, and that's a, it's a difficult one, yeah, and the actions and
|
|
people say, yeah, yeah, but they're, they're open source now, and that you have to trust
|
|
them, but guys, their business model has had been, and always was, embrace, extend, and
|
|
extinguish, so, what protects us from that was the free LibreOpens or licenses, and that's
|
|
the only thing that's protecting us from that, it's not to say that there are not, Microsoft
|
|
may have changed, that's fine, so let's wait the number of years that they've been hostile
|
|
to Linux, let's wait that equal amount of time that they're not hostile to Linux and see
|
|
after that, then make the judgment call, not just two years down the road, and I've, I've
|
|
known that as far as trust goes, you know, the, come across some articles and discussions
|
|
here in the house, when trust is broken, how long it takes to recover that trust in somebody,
|
|
so if you lose trust in somebody, you need seven actions, seven good actions before you
|
|
start trusting that person again, so equally, you could say the, the art stick for Microsoft
|
|
as to whether they're good guys versus bad guys, whether they've changed is that we need
|
|
to wait seven times the length of time that they were hostile to Linux to see if they've
|
|
changed.
|
|
That sounds reasonable to me, I have to say, no, it would be reasonable as waiting seven
|
|
times the length that they were hostile to us, when they're in a position where they
|
|
could extinguish us to see what they do, then, anyway, Dave, if that doesn't get controversy
|
|
in this show, I don't know what will, why get quite a lot of agreement, yes, yes,
|
|
anyway, yes, yes, but again, on the record, I think there are some good people over there
|
|
and they're doing, they're going in the right direction, I will not accept they, oh,
|
|
they've submitted more codes to the Linux kernel and the last blah, blah, blah, that is
|
|
not an argument, that was a matter of convenience, business interest, because there, as your cloud
|
|
was getting killed because they weren't able to run Linux efficiently, so they had no
|
|
choice but to develop that code, so outside of that code, take that code away and then show
|
|
me stuff, visual studio, yeah, okay, but is that really something that we want to be
|
|
depending on?
|
|
Yep, so, yeah, any who, God, I don't know where all that, all that came out of it, there's
|
|
a lot of it around it, actually, I thought it was purely agnostic on this whole thing,
|
|
yeah, well, what did you expect from the Raspberry Pi Foundation, there are the ones who
|
|
include Minecraft on the thing, which is a closed application, yeah, true, true, true,
|
|
anyway, did we do a minor victory against designing observables, secular people, we should,
|
|
think we should, extracting a bit more life out of the device that Apple will rather have
|
|
you dump, oh gosh, this is a recurring theme, theme this month, but there's a great show
|
|
by Beezer, I'm liking it, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I don't know what
|
|
it is about people like over there, Beezer seems to be getting iPads reigned upon them,
|
|
and, oh, I'm a blank, embarrassing, you know, forgotten, matchbox renovation seems to be
|
|
getting, oh, like, Tony Hughes, Tony Hughes, all these IBM laptops throwing it away,
|
|
oh, why does nobody have me stuff, I guess old HP laptops that were dead 15 years ago brought
|
|
in here, can you use this, yes, that's a boot crop, perhaps, what's a boot day, yes, yes,
|
|
oh, no, no, it's the same here, I don't have access to a lot of goodies, in fact, I've
|
|
just been clearing out some of the old computers, you know, the sort of baseball style things
|
|
that I acquired from work, when they were, they would use, take them out of student areas
|
|
and then say, right, I only want them, but they went in the skip, I brought several of them
|
|
but they're on the way, way out, but, yeah, they were rubbish, all too rubbish,
|
|
as a guy said to me, the other one time, when I went looking for a replacement disc for
|
|
the original iPod, I wanted to buy one for Myezer Aspire, they happen to have the same
|
|
hard disk, and he was charging like 150, 200 quid for it, what the hell, there he goes,
|
|
yeah, it's a collector's item, it doesn't even work, dude, right, yeah, okay, minor victory
|
|
against built-in obsolescence, love this old, yeah, good, yeah, yeah, absolutely, it's
|
|
the sort of thing that's good to hear about, nicely, nicely put, nicely explained, excellent,
|
|
and designed in obsolescence is a disgusting thing, especially in the context of a planet
|
|
that is going downhill fast, and yeah, I've just been listening to a climate change podcast
|
|
who say, don't be so negative, but it's hard not to be, and that sort of attitude is
|
|
a major contributor to the problems, yeah, the right to repair initiative, and I mean,
|
|
one of the reasons I wanted to get into electronics tape was, was basically cause the kids break
|
|
something, you know, something electronic, a CD player or something, and I just know that
|
|
I, you know, just feel it in a water, that there's something in there broken, that's probably
|
|
worth $0.05 shipped, you know, and since then, the amount of stuff that I've fixed has
|
|
been amazing, actually, with just pastors busted or connectors have soldered free or, you
|
|
know, don't be afraid as the AV blog says, guys, if it's already broken, you can't get
|
|
only more broken. That's true, actually, that's true, yes. I had a, I have a second hand,
|
|
or how have you call it, a remainder switch, a managed switch that I got from, from where
|
|
I used to work, and I had a power outage problem, we got two back, and I think that killed
|
|
it, and it's really useful things, 24 ports, one gigabit switch, which is, which was intended
|
|
to be and was becoming the heart of my house network, but really liked to fix it. And there's
|
|
hardly anything in it, it's mostly fresh air inside the case when you look inside.
|
|
Have you got a, have you got a bulb meter, a DVM? Yeah, yeah, I've got the, the NY Bill recommended
|
|
altimeter-y thing, yeah. Open the thing up and start tracing the voltages. You can't,
|
|
you can, or thing number one, have a look around, is there anything black burnt?
|
|
Well, yes, I've done that, and I've looked for popped electrolytic capacitors as well, which
|
|
is sometimes a sign, but there's probably stuff that's died without it, without showing any,
|
|
any signs, particularly, but it always ended off to NY Bill, and he could use it as an excuse
|
|
to get an electro-scaling microscope or something. Yes, indeed, indeed, I'd like to see that.
|
|
It's quite large though, it cost a fair, fair fee, quick descent.
|
|
This, I'm holding in my hand the component tester, which was 16 books, and I assembled one of the HPR
|
|
New Year's shows, and I soldered the floating, and I sent it off to NY Bill and he fixed it,
|
|
but in the process of fixing it, he bought a microscope with a class six grand or something.
|
|
Yes, yes, yeah, a microscope would be a fun thing to have, but not a bad price, yeah.
|
|
USB one, which is actually not bad, you know, one of those other people things,
|
|
the new Raspberry Pi camera, there's a microscope attachment for that, and so it's not cheap,
|
|
but I think you get a pretty reasonable USB microscope from that, actually, so
|
|
something to put on my Christmas list for Santa too. My wife is getting three cuddles out there,
|
|
and I'm not. It's annoying. Okay, fine. How can you tell we're in the middle of a lockdown?
|
|
Anyway, where are we? Linux, in laws, legacy programming, and languages. This was a good overview
|
|
of Cobal. Reminds me of the scour, not Cobal, but just different types of languages and where they
|
|
came from, etc, etc, etc. But who was it that was telling me about Cobal? Remember a conversation
|
|
was with McDalu on the way back from Fostem that they're actually paid, oh no, that there,
|
|
if you wanted to be a Cobal programmer in the morning, you could start, and they'll pay your
|
|
exams to learners, and they'll you be guaranteed a job, and etc, etc, etc. There's so much Cobal
|
|
out there. Oh, yeah, yeah, nobody interested in learning it. It's a weird language. I have played
|
|
back in the day. We had a Cobal compiler on one of the machines I was managing,
|
|
and just to see if I could, I decided to write some code for it in Cobal, and it's great for doing
|
|
stuff where you've got nicely defined record structures. You can say, read that line in and slice
|
|
it up this way, and you show a picture effectively of how it's to be sliced, and it does that
|
|
really, really smoothly. But soon, you want to do anything more complicated. I found it a little
|
|
bit difficult to get my head around, having been an alcohol programmer before that. So anyway,
|
|
yeah, yeah, wouldn't fancy being a Cobal programmer for rest of my life. I have to say, well,
|
|
better rather than stuff and chickens do. True, true, true. Yeah, yeah. I don't think I'd
|
|
convince my son on that subject, but yeah. But you're right. Yeah, I've certainly heard of
|
|
there being a big demand for Cobal programmers. So yeah. But yeah, the show itself was great. I did
|
|
enjoy this. Yeah, exactly. The, I find myself sympathizing with Martin's view of alcohol and
|
|
Pascal and modular two and stuff. Never used modular two, but definitely out of Pascal.
|
|
Say, why so? Well, his view was these are structured programming languages versus object oriented
|
|
stuff, which he wasn't quite as keen on, which I tend to think, although I use object oriented
|
|
stuff quite a lot, it seems to me to be a model that's unnecessary in many cases of time.
|
|
Yeah, I couldn't agree more. It's a glorified function for the case where you sometimes think
|
|
you might want it, but guarantee by the time you need to come and reuse that object, your needs
|
|
will have changed. So yeah. Yeah, I knew. It was, it was an interesting look at these things.
|
|
So I only found it to be quite, quite a good, good reference to these things. And I knew a lot
|
|
of these older programming languages, so I didn't cover all the ones that they didn't cover the more.
|
|
But they did a good job of thing. Never used small tools, I'm sure you've got something to play with.
|
|
Yeah. Only who? Next day. Well, we need for the activity problem network. This keynote addresses,
|
|
address looks as where the federators social media can go if we make it work. And it was Evan
|
|
from Rudro Mo. Thank you for not buttering that. I don't equal opportunity name butcher.
|
|
Yeah, it was, it was a very interesting overview of the talk actually. It was a whole subject area
|
|
that I don't have a huge of knowledge and I do use federated social media a bit,
|
|
but looking at it from a sort of design point of view is quite an interesting thing to be doing.
|
|
So yeah. Yeah. I must say I'm enjoying a mastodon a lot more than I thought I would.
|
|
And HPR is on mastodon. Our email address is our email address contact, blah, whatever it is,
|
|
our handle is at HPR at bots in dot space. Yes, well chosen, well chosen.
|
|
You know, because I was looking for somewhere to go and then come across somebody mentioned,
|
|
I can't remember who hands up. Thank you very much bots in space. It's exactly
|
|
freely available in source place and it's exactly the sort of thing, you know, just bots coming in.
|
|
So they can completely black us, black us if you want.
|
|
Mm-hmm. Yep, yep, yep. No, it's good. It's good. My son's homework in his MSC recently was to
|
|
write a telegram bot which he said was the task was right about the wood you would use in a coffee shop.
|
|
So it would not quite sure to say you'd finished making a cup of coffee or something,
|
|
I'm not quite sure what it was, but it's remarkably easy to do. And the whole thing is very
|
|
I'm sure there is a joke in there about coffee shops, but okay.
|
|
Yes, yes, I don't know. Well, I don't know the other two. I don't know quite where the, yeah,
|
|
the plan to set all these students on doing that particular thing came from, but it seems
|
|
to think it was quite a fun thing to do. Okay, was that it? I believe that was it. That's all the
|
|
shows. Indeed, it's all the shows. We just got comments to deal with. So we missed a comment
|
|
last month because it came in after we finished recording, yeah, and that was a comment to
|
|
Swift 110's Apple products I've owned episode. And it came from Windigo who said, Ipad screen.
|
|
I've yet to crack a screen on any of my devices, not on wood, but hearing the story of your iPad
|
|
made me winces if I had. As a silver lining, it made a very enjoyable episode. Thanks.
|
|
Very good, very good. Do you want to do the next one? There's all and I'll reply to my own one.
|
|
Okay, don't. So yes, there was a comment on show 2356 going back to 2017, which was Ken show about
|
|
to enabling SSH on the Razbian image as it was in those days. And the comment came from Leo B who says,
|
|
do yourself a favor and run this guy's fork of the script, this being Ken script. And he refers to
|
|
the GitHub repo run by Steve Sainer who is a host, I believe, is he not?
|
|
Who, yeah, who's done some work on this. I think he, I had a quick look, didn't dig deeply.
|
|
And I think he thought what the work that a guy called Sesame Mochow had done on your original
|
|
code just just by the by. Anyway, that's not the comment. Going back to the comment,
|
|
it removes some of the checks, some complexities and other things that confuse the original setup.
|
|
Great episode and lots of good management tools through this approach.
|
|
And I replied, yes, absolutely, please use Steve's script. But since Boston, the show, I've done
|
|
a follow up show, 31 73. And I'm maintaining my own version on my own GitHub repo. And the reason
|
|
I'm doing that, I'm still encouraging people to use Steve's one, but yeah, just somewhere for
|
|
my own script, because it's particular to me. Yeah, so I updated the link in the in the episode as
|
|
well. Cool. Okay, I'll do the next one. Nourst says, on Nourst's show about Ansible for Dynamic
|
|
Host Configuration Protocol, Windigo says, it's an interesting approach. I'm currently battling
|
|
with splitterized and DNS and DHCP on my local land using PiHole and the underlying DNS mask server.
|
|
I'm very happy to have this episode as a plan B. It's a very clear way to roll your own
|
|
network services without having to worry about manual configs and fragile setups. Thanks for
|
|
the great episode. Yes, it's always good to have a plan B.
|
|
Cool, cool, cool. Next is a comment on show 3241, which is a community news in January.
|
|
That's why we've had no comments, Steve, because people are amongst behind in their podcast,
|
|
what can we do? I don't know. We're in trouble now with all the feedback we've got to get in the show
|
|
in about four months, too. It's from Clackair, who's entitled, is it NoSQL and Redis? Dave said,
|
|
this preceded NoSQL, I imagine, and he was referring to key value stores in general, I believe,
|
|
which are indeed older than relational databases and are a layer on top of which relational databases
|
|
are built. When I initially heard it, I thought it referred to Redis specifically, and thought,
|
|
no way, Redis came out in the middle of NoSQL boom. I was wrong by two days, my face.
|
|
Redis came out on 2009-0510, and the term NoSQL in the current sense was coined on the 12th of
|
|
that same month, and he refers to the Wikipedia entry, and on Redis and also on NoSQL, NoSQL,
|
|
had people pronounce that. Anyway, whatever. So yeah, you're going to do the next one, and I'll do
|
|
my... I was just looking at that days, and, oh, this is HFIR started back then, and is it all
|
|
already been running for nearly four years? I'll look back to have a look at one of those
|
|
technological where we started in the whole technological boom and stuff. We started before,
|
|
I like a good idea. If somebody could point me to a good place where known dates within
|
|
at least free software, realm started, or technology realm, you know, iPhone commotion this day,
|
|
they Nokia sold so many phones on this day, you know, that's sort of thing. Anywho,
|
|
Jackie, annunciation to Redis, pronunciation, most people pronounce Redis. Not Redis, we just... Redis.
|
|
Why am I doing this on Dave? Why am I doing this on Dave? It's often used as a cash
|
|
to avoid expensive database lookups, much like one would use, for example, Memcash. And I've always
|
|
interpreted the name to hint at, I don't need to make that heavy multiple table of joins because
|
|
I already read this just a moment ago, but not his, that's mine. I never looked up what the official
|
|
story of the name is. Wouldn't be bad, actually, Redis. Yeah, I don't understand that actually,
|
|
yeah, yeah. So I said, because it was something I'd said on that show, as I answered,
|
|
Claire Kaye, back key value storage. What I couldn't recall at the time was the name Berkeley DB,
|
|
which was the sort of grandfather of the internet, I think, that's all, yeah. I used this for a while
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when it was owned by a company called Sleepcat. Later, it was bought by Oracle. We were open,
|
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held up, users at the university I worked at, and this ran on top of Berkeley DB files. I failed
|
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to remember all of this in the show itself, of course, it's my face. Archer 72, I had a comment
|
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to next cloud these way, which I was joking about, that he put it in, because I have one
|
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called next cloud, the hard way, and it's coming towards show name. Yes, Ken, the show name was
|
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somewhat intentional. This was only after I saw your future show on the internet archive,
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where while I was preparing show notes, and I thought it would be a nice play on words.
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Love it. Look at that.
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Yep, yep, yep. Missing tags, Dave. Do you want to look at the mailing list first, or do I have to?
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You do. Well, yeah, 21 shots on Tuesday, which we missed, unfortunately.
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Ah, had intended to join, but there was a mix-up, and then there was a thread from
|
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started by Kevin about the Raspberry Pi thing, which prompted the show that we were just
|
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commenting about. Should I go through them? Yeah, it was basically just a conversation about it.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think it's it's it's watering the bridge really, isn't it? I mean,
|
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there's some interesting comments there, but I'm sure people can go and read them.
|
|
Okay, RPG Club. Herey, herey, herey. During the month of March, the HPR, RRPG,
|
|
role-paying game club is going to play Starfinder, a science fiction fantasy game set in the
|
|
far future, based on D&D rules, the D20 system. No purchases necessary. No experiences required.
|
|
We're an inclusive group whose main goal is to have fun and to make friends. If you want to join us,
|
|
let us know, and I will send you further details or discuss any questions you might have resources
|
|
include. Link in the show knows. Pre-generate characters are available. I, so we play at 1600
|
|
UTC on Sundays on the HPR mumble server. So that is CH1, teamspeak.cc, port 647,
|
|
477 information on the HPR website. Again, 1600 UTC on Sundays starting on the 7th of March,
|
|
7th of March. And guess who has been roped into creating a character for Starfinder, Dave?
|
|
Hmm, I wonder, I wonder. But his son, I still don't know how he managed to get me to do it,
|
|
but I now find myself looking forward to four evenings of doing maths cleverly disguised as a
|
|
science fiction game. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You think I could have pronounced names just with
|
|
the Cmitwender add-up dice rules. I do it this heavily into D&D stuff, but she has,
|
|
she's part of a group that plays over some one of these systems that I can't remember the name of.
|
|
But yeah, so she's completely self-sustaining that I don't need to be involved at all.
|
|
So I'm really happy about that. I genuinely, genuinely know nothing about this,
|
|
other than I got conned into creating a character, just get him to show up, and then
|
|
I'm now kind of involved with this character, and I want to see what happens. But in
|
|
40 years later, the present, and now we're talking to Ken Fallon, the president of the Starfinder D&D
|
|
so I could have him, I could have him. Yeah. Anywho, wherever you have anything else interesting,
|
|
yes, HPR bots in space, we just come to that Kevin O'Brien set. If you're a master done and if
|
|
you're not, why aren't you, make sure you follow HPR and boost the suits just for just one
|
|
a day for the daily offering. Yeah, I've started doing that myself as well.
|
|
Mm-hmm. Yep. I do, and I remember consistently yet.
|
|
Open Bug Bounty was a question we got anything else to say? No, no, we're also on Twitter as well,
|
|
so I'll do it over there as well. And the Open Bug Bounty, we got a random person sent on the
|
|
same bug thing, and it's looked very much like spam, to be honest, but it turned out to be genuine,
|
|
and we fixed the issue, which was I had PHP info in a file called php.php.php. Yes, I'm a moron. Thank you.
|
|
So yeah, that's quite useful then. Yep. March RPG Club. First Sunday of March 1700. Yes,
|
|
I'm going to be running a tabletop role-playing game called Starfinder. If you're reading this,
|
|
then you're invited to join. No experiences required that you can imagine, come,
|
|
contributors to an ethical podcast like HPR, we're eager to teach new players.
|
|
It tries every hook. If you don't own a copy of Starfinder yourself, please download the
|
|
pre-generated character sheet from Blah, the game will last weekly until early April. Early April?
|
|
I don't know, it's just March. But we do not need to commit to playing every week. We consider
|
|
two people core and we play for two hours on Mumbai details we've already given you.
|
|
Cool. Is that it? That's all. On the mailing list, we can talk about tags and summaries.
|
|
Please, you wish. Yes, some Giza called Dave Morris added 10 well updated 10 shows with tags and
|
|
all summaries has needed. So there you go. You will come up from a long slumber and manage to do
|
|
some fully backed slipkinn. Only 414 left. Only 400. Yeah, yeah, it started putting the
|
|
that number in which I shall continue with because it's quite nice to see that to the number
|
|
going down. You didn't look at the page that's reference, of course, but just thought it'd be fun.
|
|
It really does help finding shows because I've used that an awful lot lately. Looking back
|
|
for things. Yeah, yeah, I'm famous of using it quite a lot as well. It's quite fun.
|
|
Okay, that's it. That's all I have to say. I could go on, but who wants to listen to me?
|
|
And there's no events. It took pretty much to the end of the match. So there's no point in doing it.
|
|
We did a post. Oh, we did a post. Yes, yes, yes. That was the thing I was going to comment on. Yes,
|
|
indeed. It was fun. Yeah. I think all of the videos are now available. When I looked at some of
|
|
the ones I was interested in, they were available. I wasn't sure the entirety was now on the site,
|
|
but I imagine they are. So yeah, you could watch the videos in real time,
|
|
well, at the point at which they were meant to be available, they were available, and you could
|
|
watch them stream at that point. But then you had to record it though. They had been recorded.
|
|
They were all recorded before the event and then just put out at the time. Yeah, which was a great
|
|
way of doing things. I thought it worked really, really well. And there were tons and tons
|
|
and tons of stuff as you might expect. And it was some really good things to attend to.
|
|
Then after the presentation was done, then the presenter was in the matrix chat. And I was
|
|
blown away by the technology, by element, how seamless that was. Within an IRC chat has
|
|
gone on underneath and people are asking questions in the room. And then the videos run on
|
|
there in the top corner. And it was just absolutely seamless. Right down to the annoying people
|
|
turning off the mics on one people. And then you could go to the whole way chat. So a link would come
|
|
up and then you could go out to the hall and talk to the presenters and whoever else was interested
|
|
in that topic for ages. So very, very good. Excellent, excellent. Yeah. I was just looking at
|
|
stuff on the website because element wasn't behaving all that well for me. But yeah, so I still
|
|
got a lot out of it. It was really good. I got to see more stuff there than I did by going
|
|
a couple of years. I've been five years maybe. I've never I only slid the language picking.
|
|
I normally only ever walked into the first, you know, the opening intro thing and then
|
|
started doing the recordings. But this is the first time I was the whole day going from
|
|
talk to talk to talk because at least you could get in, you know. Well, exactly. Yeah, I used to
|
|
going there physically, I used to make a timetable of what I wanted to go and see and stuff.
|
|
But the problem was you'd come out of one thing and the next thing would be the other side of
|
|
the campus and you'd get there and there was vast cues and they said, no, sorry, we're full
|
|
go away. So and in the early days, you couldn't watch it, watch the streamed version of it either.
|
|
You know, it seemed just have to wait until it came out. I didn't always come out as a video because
|
|
they had problems with recording them. So yeah, this was this was a different legal together.
|
|
For the there were people who went to a particular track of the day and then just stayed in the room
|
|
and did not, you know, didn't go to the toilet for the entire day. I did try that. So yeah,
|
|
actually I did go and sit in the pole room and listen to everything that came up, which was good,
|
|
which is quite fun. It's kind of what I ended up doing anyway because I followed like the
|
|
main track I didn't jump from one thing to the next. So that was kind of cool. Yeah, it was good
|
|
time. I was listening to a lot about Pearl Six, which has now been renamed as Raku. It's an amazing
|
|
language but very, very, very strange. Yes, it was fun. Yeah, there's lots to be seen. There's
|
|
still lots to be seen. Just go on the archive site and you'll find links to all of the videos
|
|
that are available and you can spend a huge amount of time looking at them if you're so minded.
|
|
I really enjoyed the new radio stuff. Yeah, really some good stuff there in the track.
|
|
Didn't miss the whole thing with the stands. I didn't feel like the stand experience was well
|
|
replicated, but hard to do though, I guess. Yeah, the stands were really something
|
|
that I'll suddenly go and sort of chat to somebody about whatever they're talking about then.
|
|
I imagine for some people, if you go to the, if you go to Fastam, just as a guest of somebody who's
|
|
there and then you go over to a booth like Debian or Postgres SQL and the only thing they seem
|
|
to be doing is selling t-shirts cause. That's all anybody's interested in. They're coming up to
|
|
the guy's door. Yeah, do you have this size t-shirt? That's all the things to be doing too
|
|
enough, too enough. I don't have to stick it. Stick it all out. Stick on due dads, fluffy things with
|
|
eyes. You can stick on the back of your laptop and all that. Pretty cool. Okay, shall we wrap this up?
|
|
I'll add this and we'll send it up to the mothership. Yep, yep, yep. Sounds good. Okay,
|
|
tune in tomorrow for a little exciting episode of The Hacker. Public radio. Join us now. Don't
|
|
join us now. Don't share this. Do share this offer, but keep it up. Keep the viruses to yourself.
|
|
Keep the viruses to yourself. All right, thanks to you. Bye. Okay, bye-bye, man.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
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founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary
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leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself, unless otherwise
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