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Episode: 3449
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Title: HPR3449: Linux Inlaws S01E41: The Halloween Documents
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3449/hpr3449.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 23:42:22
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 34494 Thursday, 21 October 2021.
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To its show is entitled, Linux in Los S0141, The Halloween Documents and is part of the series Linux
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in Los It is hosted by Monocromic and is about 66 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is The Halloween Documents.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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This is Linux in Los, a podcast on topics around free and open source software,
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any associated contraband, communism, the revolution in general and whatever fence is your
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article. Please note that this and other episodes may contain strong language, offensive
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humor and other certainly not politically correct language you have been warned.
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Our parents insisted on this disclaimer. Happy mom?
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Thus, the content is not suitable for consumption in the workplace, especially when
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played back in an open plan office or similar environments. Any minors under the age of 35 or
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any pets including fluffy little killer bunnies, you trust the guide dog unless on speed
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and QT rexes or other associated dinosaurs. This is season 1 episode 41 of something called
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Linux in Los, the 2021 Halloween Special. Martin, good evening heartings.
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Good evening Chris, things are interesting, say the least?
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I see, it's Halloween, right? Almost. Is the Halloween already? Oh, damn.
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Yes, it's it's the end of October.
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No, it isn't. And what it is?
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The end of September.
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Oh, no, no, no, no, no, when the episode with this episode will be aired, of course.
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Okay, well, I can't tell you if things are interesting about the end of October.
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This is this is down to the fact that you cannot bend time space because if you could,
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you would be knowing that actually the end of October is always interesting because there's
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something called Halloween, which goes back, I think, to an Irish patient festival.
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It seems to me mainly celebrated, is that the word in in America, no?
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Is it? I don't know. It is.
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Hey, no, it wasn't that you would hope that originally it was invented by British postcard
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by the factory. It's a great department of pictures to something.
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No, but I think this one, America, it's like Coca-Cola invented the Christmas tree.
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Okay. That's what I know what it is.
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Yes, but why is Halloween important in an open-source context?
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Any guesses?
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Well, before we move on to that, how are you?
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Well, do you have any pet, any pet, or you can send over?
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Any beer? Any any any horridrivers?
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Yes.
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And see a change in career.
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What is closure? We are recording this episode during the cause of the year 2021,
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2022 and 2023.
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Great Britain has what's what I'm up for?
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Degenerated in a third more country worse than Namibia around the turn of the last century.
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So I know that.
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I think the Libyons is it.
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No electricity.
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I think we have to.
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And much more to add, add these super market shelves.
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And so are the shelves?
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Yes.
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Well, it's in Germany.
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No, in Great Britain.
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No, the cheaper market shelves are fine.
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And not the way I see it.
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I saw it the other day, because
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No, no, no, no, no, no, no, this is why we have webcams inside stores.
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And of course, webcams, you can compromise if you know what to do.
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Yeah, you have too much free time on there.
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So a friend of mine actually sent me some interesting pictures.
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Because I do not compromise webcams.
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It is to say it goes without saying, especially not in foreign market.
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So that correlates with the exactly with the with the reports that I'm reading in various
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media outlets that actually super market shelves are emptying with Britain and food supplies
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are running low.
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Yeah, it's fine.
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When did you last go to a supermarket?
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Well, we have stuff for that.
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As in the Mrs.
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does the shopping.
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When did that Mrs.
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buy what was it was able to buy anything in supermarket last month?
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Then I spent the day actually.
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And bought what matches?
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No, it's what's sold out.
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Possibly rolls a breadstick.
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What else some sambal, some ketchup.
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Probably something else as well.
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And then the supermarket was clearly sold out.
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That's why it was not there.
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Anyway, I hear that too many.
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It also has a shortage of lobby drivers.
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I wouldn't know.
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You wouldn't know.
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You don't speak to lobby drivers.
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Lorry drivers are species soon to be extinct because we use we use trains for this.
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And there is other eco-friendly transport devices.
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See.
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Excellent.
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Boats maybe.
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So Martin, any plans for the UK to re-join Europe after putting some
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sort of some serious mule on the table to make up for the expenses?
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Well, I did consider taking a politics, but it sounded a bit too serious.
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So probably not as the answer.
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People you heard it here first.
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Kids, there was a time when Great Britain was indeed great about 200 years ago.
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Maybe 250, but now it's just this Britain.
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As a matter of fact, there was a documentary in the 90s.
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Actually, by that name, which actually gave a hint.
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It's very amusing indeed.
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It's well worth of watch.
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Indeed.
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I details with the show notes, of course.
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Okay.
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This is not a political podcast for you.
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Could have fooled anyone, but indeed.
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But we have much more serious issues to talk about.
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Namely, the historical, what's going on before incident called the Halloween Papers?
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Because it is now Halloween.
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And for the few listeners who are probably too young to know the Halloween Papers,
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referred to, when was it, late 90s, right?
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Early 90s?
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No, no, late 90s, then.
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Late 90s.
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When a company called Microsoft actually,
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copied under the fact that it's proprietary business model, namely selling licenses
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of close or software,
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was seriously
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in the process of being
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eroded, it's probably the right word,
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by something called the Linux operating system.
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Or Richard, if you're listening,
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they're going to lose them monopoly.
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Or Richard, if you're listening,
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the GNU is slash Linux operating system.
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I just to squeeze that in.
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Okay.
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You want to give us an overview, Martin?
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Or do you want me to do this?
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Well, we can start.
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So, yeah, why do they call the Halloween Papers?
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Because they were leaked on the end of October.
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They're not mistaken.
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But yeah, they are so in short, Microsoft saw that.
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Open source operating systems were on the rise and thought, hey,
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I mean, this is not good for our bottom line.
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So, let's do something about it.
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And so, they wrote a variety of documents
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that how to combat open source software, not mistaken.
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Which at the time were marked as, I think, even classified,
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or at least for internal use only, but somebody leaked them.
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And a guy called Eric Raymond,
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probably known as the author of something they call the cathedral and the Bazaar.
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One of the probably more popular pieces of literature and open source
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had a feel to it, taking them apart.
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There are 10, they're actually 11 of them.
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But it's probably worth noting that
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the first couple of them reveal
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or actually lift the veil of what was then, Microsoft,
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as in a proprietary closed shop source software,
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with the clear aim of not only maintaining the stronghold on the server,
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on both the server and the desktop market,
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but also expanding this.
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So, these documents clearly laid out a marketing strategy
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to ensure that by using something called FAT,
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fear, uncertainty, and doubt that this monopoly was there to stay.
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And we'll expand in the future.
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And also reveal certain techniques for one of a better world,
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how to combat open source.
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For example, by...
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What's the word I'm looking for?
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Not instrumenting, but rather...
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Coming up?
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No.
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It's drawing.
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Yeah.
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Manufacturing, yes, by manufacturing a total cost of ownership calculation,
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that clearly said that Windows,
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as in the proprietary administration, sorry,
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the administration of this proprietary ecosystem,
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is cheaper, including licenses on that,
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never might manpower, than something called Linux.
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And it's open source ecosystem.
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Clearly, an interesting perspective, given the fact...
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Go ahead, Martin.
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Well, you could argue this case, as they did right now.
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As we know, for example,
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Linux Oreo takes many manhours.
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If you are a corporate organization, what would you run?
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Microsoft Teams, Zoom, or a big blue button,
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or a number, or, you know, these kind of things?
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So, this is the basis of their argument, right?
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I think.
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Indeed, but...
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Going a little bit further, then just this wicked audio example.
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No, I mean, proprietary...
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It's close to our reach.
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Yes, indeed.
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But proprietary operating system, which is close source,
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has this advantage, namely the fact that the open...
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that the source code is not available.
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So, this, in addition to the fact,
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that the desktop was a stronghold of Windows,
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and to some extent, it's a list.
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Needless to say,
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Windows systems were the prime target of virus developers.
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Because the source code wasn't available,
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virus developers, and I love you, and other worms are just an example,
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had a field day of infiltrating desktop systems.
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The thing is, because the source code wasn't available,
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there was no antidote available immediately to remedy this.
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Well, it's not a start, it's also that
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being close source, the vulnerabilities weren't clearly visible,
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apart from the people in Microsoft, right?
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So, where's with an open source operating system,
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and many people will be looking at the code for that exact reason?
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Exactly.
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The beautiful open source is basically,
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everybody can take a look at the source code,
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and take it apart, and put it back together again,
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and come up with pull requests, ideas,
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how to remedy the situation,
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and that sort of thing, which is of course impossible,
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if the source code is not available.
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Plus, the prohibitive license cost of some close source systems,
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Microsoft comes to mind, or came to mind,
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rather, about 20 years ago, or more than 20 years ago,
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when Microsoft's software was productive,
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at least in the commercial environment,
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where operating systems were only subsidized to some extent,
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by the hardware manufacturers, who added, of course,
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the Microsoft text in the vertical mass,
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onto any hardware that the sold.
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Laptops and desktops come to mind,
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that hadn't implied,
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Windows text slapped upon them once you bought them.
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Yeah, I think nowadays it's less of an cost issue.
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If you buy a piece of hardware, it tends to come with Windows,
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unless it's an Apple, of course, but...
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And if you specified option, don't have Windows,
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what are you saving, right?
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It's less than $100,
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something on those lines, I think.
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So the price difference has come down quite a lot,
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so you can't...
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Making the choice is less financially impactful,
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than it used to be, as you mentioned.
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Yeah, but this is 25 years ago.
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Microsoft really perceived this as a threat,
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because essentially,
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about, oh, just over 20 years ago,
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actually less than 20, around 20 years ago,
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they acquired a stake in something called SCO Unix,
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if that rings by Martin.
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Yeah, there's something to do with IBM, you know?
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Indeed.
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Details, of course, will be in the show notes.
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Suffice it to say,
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SCO had then acquired to kind of love story short,
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and don't quote me on the people, don't quote me on the details,
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because it's a very long and tedious
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legal work to, so to speak.
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And as I said, details and references will be in the show notes,
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to kind of very long story short,
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SCO was once the proprietary...
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the proprietor of the Unix trademark that they had acquired through various ways
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and meals from AT&T through long history of acquisitions.
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And we're then essentially trying to maintain the foothold or their foothold rather
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on the server market of systems running on Runny Unix, right?
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IBM had already identified the notes as the main alternative to their
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then mainframe operating systems.
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Some IBM staff had ported Linux to the series in 1997, 1998.
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And IBM saw Linux as one of the strategic operating systems going forward
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to maintain stronghold in the server business line.
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Let's believe this way.
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And SCO in dire need of money identified IBM as the main target for a lawsuit
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to make some money.
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Because they thought that for some reason Linux would contain the proprietary portions,
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sorry, would contain portions of the proprietary Linux code.
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And they are going back to the original Linux code and we are not talking about BSD here,
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but rather we are talking about system 5 and system 7 as in proprietary AT&T code
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where Unix originally came from. So they took IBM in front of
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to court and claimed damages for set theft of intellectual property.
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And Microsoft had nothing else to do with them to fund SCO for this lawsuit.
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Eventually this lawsuit was wrapped up.
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I think it's still a lingo because SCO went bankrupt in the meantime or the rest of it
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as I said, details will be in the show notes. But to kind of long story short,
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that was a futile attempt of course by Microsoft to again preempt Linux from the marketplace.
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Now what is pretty interesting that around 20 years ago, some worker bees
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in contrast to the official company mainline discovered actually that open sources of
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wireless technology. This really was accelerated after the demise of Steve Barmer,
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who's one set about 20 years ago, that links up pretty much compared with the cancer.
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Because he couldn't make any money from it. And it would spread like this disease.
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And eventually it would prove to be fatal.
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But thank God before this could happen, he gave away the rain and somebody else called
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the time of the last step in about six years ago, maybe seven years ago,
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who clearly saw the advantages of open source. At that time, many, many, many people in
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Microsoft had already come down to the fact that open source was there to stay.
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And it's interesting because after satire took rain at Microsoft and already to some extent before,
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Microsoft became one of the main contributors, maybe even close to Google or some other companies,
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open the open source movement. For example, if you take a look at the kernel contributions
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around 10 years ago, that was just before satire took rain, you would notice that actually,
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Microsoft contributed a lot to the Linux kernel. In hindsight, of course, to power the Azure
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platform, because the cloud was just going around growing Microsoft. But at the end of the day,
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because the kernel is still GPLs, they had to convert any changes back to the code base.
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This is basically how satire basically turned around the corporation as such.
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Well, you say turn around, but they're not exactly the biggest cloud out there on the Azure.
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Well, the fastest growing cloud, that's for sure. If the numbers are anything to go by,
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well, yeah, if you start with one and double it, then you've got to double it.
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But in absolute numbers, I don't think there.
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Market share is, I think, as you're on GCP together on the same site,
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either of yes or something.
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But yeah, fair enough. And clearly, they have
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realized, as you say, that open source has this beneficial for them as well.
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I don't know if you remember the Microsoft Loves Linux campaign or whatever,
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they initiative, they started a few years ago. They were certainly embracing many different
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open source technologies, not just Linux, right?
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So it left right in the center, yes. One of the core Python developers has a matter of fact
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works for Microsoft. Gido, if you're listening, smart move, if you ask me, sorry,
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yeah, for the few people in the audience who do not know this, Gido from Rossum,
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who actually invented Python about 30 plus years ago, now works for Microsoft.
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But even before that, one of the key developers for the reference
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implementation called C Python was already working for Microsoft then. And Microsoft over the years
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has contributed a lot to the open source code base. Yeah, it's also the projects, right?
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Visual Studio code comes to mind. The open source major portions of ASP,
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same goes for dot net, which is no known as I think monocore. GitHub of course comes to mind.
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Which is partly based on open source. It is buying GitHub. Yeah, but I think there's two
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contributed, some changes back. And eventually, they also open source some window, some,
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believe it or not, some Windows components, which at the time were about 25 years old, or 20 years
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or something. Not sure, there were lots of people taking up contributing to that.
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And of course, for so inclined people, types, types group is from Microsoft,
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goes without saying F sharp, including the reference compiler is from Microsoft,
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PowerShell by the way, which has been ported to Linux is also from Microsoft,
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and all the rest of it. So I'm that sure that at some stage, maybe Gido Satayah
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had would have taken a look at the market capitalization of two companies alone. We're recording
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this end of end of September. So about a month before it's released. And the market cap
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of Microsoft is 2.21 trillion dollars. And the market cap of a company called Alphabet is
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1.88 trillion dollars. So if Google would adopt more open source in terms of giving it back,
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I'm sure that they could improve their market cap too. So yes, it ever turned around, but
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so any any thoughts Martin where Microsoft is going?
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Well, I think we've talked about before in terms of, I don't actually, I don't have
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looked at their sources of income, but in terms of desktop operating systems, they clearly still
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leaving that. For how long? That's a good question. That doesn't seem to be much,
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I think as I said, we've discussed it before as a home user that is not that interested in
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the ins and outs of a operating system that just wanted to work and been able to visit their
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favorite websites of stick insects. Microsoft will do, right? So it's, I don't see that changing hugely
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in terms of, you know, the, the desktop market, clearly the server side is as long on Linux.
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No, it's interesting because you see more, more, more people even move into the cloud with
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the desktops. If for example, the, the figures, the sales figures of something called Chromebooks
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and anything to go by, because more and more people apparently are moving away from the,
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from the digital, well, desktop systems, running Windows are not at and then moving to Chromebooks,
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which are just hooked on the cloud environment, more likely than not provided by Google these days.
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Yeah, yeah. I mean, the AWS have their virtual desktops as well.
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Come on, we don't know if it workspaces or something, but yeah, many, many people will offer you
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that kind of service, but that only has a certain amount of purpose, right? It's, if you're a,
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occasional writing a letter or emailing kind of computer user, then that will do.
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If you plan to do anything more than that, then clearly that's not some way forward.
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Indeed, no. And you only need a pretty, pretty dumb device, because all you need is essentially
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a, a GUI as an browser running on a minimal, minimalistic operating system. And that's
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exactly what a Chromebook is. So if you're listening, Sataya surfaces are probably the way to go,
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just get Azure in order so that you don't need a half an hour to deploy a virtual machine,
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never mind other software components, but that's besides point. But I'm sure that somebody in
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the Azure line of businesses are working on improving deployment times. I would have a couple of
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ideas how to improve this, but so Microsoft, if you're listening, the email address is feedback at
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Linux. It looks at the looks. You mentioned the sponsorship. Yes, Microsoft, Sataya, and if you're
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listening and want to have a even more favorable appearance on one of the future shows, the address
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is sponsored and it looks a lot to you. You heard it here first. And that concludes our short
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episode on the Halloween papers. But before we go, we have some time, we have some final portion of
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feedback, right? I believe so. I couldn't read the email since someone's email server was down
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apparently, but why don't you visit that place? Yeah, I think Martin, as usual, if you fire IT
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supports, there's nobody there to take a look at the server administration. So no surprises there.
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Okay, it's not the fact that they decided to do enough great with it. No, not at all.
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Not at all. Okay, Ryan posted a comment on the HVIA website on the 23rd of September.
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And this is Clinton Roy. Just the usual complaint, Martin's volume is again still way too low.
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It's a pita, which I think is a Greek brat or something. Sorry, it's pita, right?
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Yes, whatever. Yes. To change the volume when speakers change. Now, I'm wondering what a Greek
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brat has to do with the volume settings. Maybe a secret setting we don't know about.
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Maybe, maybe Clinton Roy is just referring to a pain in the ass.
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Yes. Of course, Roy or Clinton or whatever. Yeah, why didn't the Greeks call that?
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Hey, I'm in the Greeks. Okay, let's not go there. Martin, let's not go there. No, no, yes, but okay, I'm not
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to show if it's if it's Clinton or if it's Roy because I'm not to show what you're
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first in it. Let's go, but it's all my Clinton for one offer better.
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I guess there's of course a simple reason for this. Martin in his infinite wisdom decided to
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have a close call Chris. No, decided to fire as he does with Martin departments or the rest of it
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also post-production. Now, the trouble, of course, with good post-production with good post-production
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cruises actually have to put you have to put them through a test. So Martin deviously
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modulated his his his his smartphone volume all over the place. And for some reason,
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the post-production crew simply didn't cop on to the fact that this was actually happening and
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there were actually that this is part of the that this was part of the interview process.
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Unfortunately, because Martin had never found it. Exactly, this is a Martin also had fired
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quality issues subsequent to these post-production crews. What Martin also does for quite quite
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frequently is also far the HR department. So it's just a mess. Yes, it stops us from hiring more
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users. So people, if you're listening for the job and if you are on the Master Chief,
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|
Master Christian side, the email address is HR at LinusinLost.eu.
|
|
If you're just longing for prolonged interviews, forget about Google with 12
|
|
funds of interviews. We Martin does about 24, but be prepared that this is only
|
|
temporary because you will be fired about two weeks. Martin actually holds I think the
|
|
fourth marketing department actually holds a record. I think it lost with four weeks of existence
|
|
before Martin before Martin fired the ones again. Very good. Very good.
|
|
But we have to do something about this. The investors are already complaining about hiring costs.
|
|
Yes, that's not good.
|
|
It's going on here. The people who payroll disjoint. They do? Yeah, they do. Why do I not know about this?
|
|
Because you just fired finance once again or accounts or whatever it's called these days.
|
|
Martin, if you wouldn't keep firing people, you would have the information that you need.
|
|
I wouldn't call it firing, but it's one I could suggest to them a different career mode.
|
|
I'm fed. It's missing? Fair enough.
|
|
Okay, people, if you look for a sales job, do not send me to HR at LinusinLost.eu.
|
|
Let me let me modify this email address first so that doesn't drop it.
|
|
It's a child waste of your time.
|
|
So it doesn't drop directly into Martin's inbox?
|
|
Well, I have no inbox since I see.
|
|
If you hadn't fired, Martin, you would still have many access.
|
|
But Martin, we do have initial feedback, don't we?
|
|
I believe we do. We have something from someone called Beacon.
|
|
Want to read it out? I don't know, I feel free.
|
|
Again, a wonderful podcast episode. Really enjoyed the interview with Ken Fallon on the history of HDR.
|
|
How about doing a little tutorial in your next podcast on Gitaire?
|
|
It will be wonderful. You guys from the UK, right?
|
|
I came across this unique campaign undergoing in UK, and of course the link
|
|
and that mail will be up in the show notes.
|
|
It's about a red dragon giving permanent, it's about a campaign for giving the
|
|
Red Welch Dragon a permanent penis. As I said, this has been the show notes.
|
|
And the most important thing is, of course, to remark, keep up the good work.
|
|
Do you conquer Martin? Should we keep up the good work?
|
|
I think you should keep up the good work. Perfect.
|
|
Any other thoughts on this?
|
|
I'm not on the specific campaign.
|
|
I mean, people, it was, it was okay to get to the camera.
|
|
Okay, yes, and there will of course be an episode next year.
|
|
As discussed on how to set up a version of how to set up a static,
|
|
static generator website with in connection with a version control system.
|
|
Like I mentioned this on the show, like we've done this for the local luck that I'm helping out with.
|
|
So stay tuned, all will be revealed in the, in the episode next year.
|
|
And if I start this correctly, HBR is or at least Ken Fallon is thinking along the same lines.
|
|
I also need to say if you have any thoughts on this campaign for the Welch Dragon to get a
|
|
permanent penis, please get in touch, the email versus feedback at linuxinlaws.eu.
|
|
And with that Martin, it's probably now a good idea to announce the Halloween episode of
|
|
3010 won.
|
|
Yes, Martin, but as usual, as it is the long-standing tradition with linuxinlaws, we do have a special sketch with.
|
|
Ah, yes.
|
|
I'll be proud of this cue cause. Excellent.
|
|
Yes, it's, no, no, no, yes, it's, I know, but if you wouldn't keep
|
|
firing your PAs, you wouldn't have to look up at the cue cause yourself. You'll see.
|
|
And without further ado, people, here is the Halloween episode sketch of 2021 from the
|
|
Dark Side and over to the Dark Side.
|
|
This is Captain Dark Side from the USS Space Festival and the surprise. How may I redirect your call?
|
|
This is Ladesa from the planet Transylvania.
|
|
Hi, on. I thought Transylvania was a galaxy and the planet was
|
|
tan-sexual. Are you sure your facts are okay?
|
|
Yes, I'm very positive about this.
|
|
So, no vaccinations for you then. You just sit down and wait.
|
|
World Health Organization, local governments, please do get in touch about sponsorship.
|
|
If you want to increase the amount of people get the jab, the mail addresses sponsor at linuxinlaws.eu.
|
|
After all, this is rapidly becoming the most popular open source,
|
|
never my lifestyle, podcast on the planet. If, in the key of every search engine here,
|
|
analytics are anything to go by.
|
|
I'm confused. Are people sent out a distress signal and we are looking for help?
|
|
Look, there's no time for any of these rocky horror pictures shown nonsense.
|
|
I've got work to, what? You said distress signal?
|
|
Yes, our people are in dire need of supplies, especially food is running out rapidly
|
|
after the recent change in the local executive.
|
|
So, how can we be of assistance?
|
|
We need about 10 tons of blood within the next 24 hours so that my people can avoid starvation to that.
|
|
Blood? What do we blood? Normally species live on simple things,
|
|
like complex carbohydrates, sugar, alcohol, maybe the odd dash of cannabis,
|
|
or similar recreational drugs, you know, to build spaceships,
|
|
manage bending of time and space, after sport drives proved to be the sub-optimal efficiency,
|
|
of course, and generally having a good time.
|
|
I'm afraid that people are somewhat different in that regard.
|
|
Perhaps you can send us the Federation's nutritional code so that our science officer
|
|
can get you what you need. It should be part of Form 42-Smash 0-815-666
|
|
of your Federation membership's welcome package.
|
|
This is Smok, the USS and the surprise science officer.
|
|
The Federation of Planets is an intergalactic group of planets and people ensuring peace
|
|
and well-being across the galaxy. The nutritional code is an essential guide to the feeding
|
|
and thus well-being of species across the universe. We do observe susceptibility.
|
|
Are you mocking me, Mr. Mock? I always want this food for our people so that they can survive.
|
|
I'm afraid it is not that simple. As you don't seem to be a member of the Federation
|
|
according to my records, let's start with the analysis of the physical composition of your bodies.
|
|
Please send a cross example of your genetic structure so that we can compose a sustainable nutrition
|
|
that exactly fits your needs. And how do we do this?
|
|
Normally, a sample of bodily fluids is sufficient, perhaps accompanied by an issue's
|
|
sample of something similar. Don't make it overly complicated, Mock. Just piss in a cup or
|
|
drain a vein and send the stuff across so we can get you the stuff you want.
|
|
Drain a vein? Are you mad?
|
|
Exactly this food is in a really short supply.
|
|
Not sure that I completely follow. Your main source of nutrition is a mixture of plasma and blood
|
|
cells. In that case, I recommend just a square inch of your upper epidermis, which should be a good
|
|
enough basis for this analysis. Best extracted in full daylight to ensure proper metabolism
|
|
example of structure.
|
|
Oh no, crap. Not again, Ahora. Reestablished communication as soon as possible.
|
|
Sir, may I remind you of the fact that today is Christopher Street Day,
|
|
according to the Federation calendar and all members of the LGBTQ community,
|
|
of which Officer Ahora is an outstanding member, if I may say so.
|
|
Myself are entitled to a day of leave to commemorate this event.
|
|
LGTBQB. Mock, what are you on about?
|
|
As I'm sure you're aware of LGBTQ refers to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer
|
|
community, a subset of society that does not subscribe to the traditional binary gender patterns
|
|
and thus deserve our full respect not only in that regard.
|
|
And why are you working then?
|
|
Captain?
|
|
Never mind. Why were we disconnected?
|
|
It seems that our Zoom subscription just experienced a glitch to use the technical term,
|
|
a termination of set subscription to be precise.
|
|
Then try something else. What about teams?
|
|
May I remind you of the fact that Lieutenant Commander Scott cancelled our
|
|
two subscriptions in a fit of rage, starting that no fricking close-source communication junk
|
|
ever will be ever used on this joke of a ship to which you concurred righty already.
|
|
Intoxicating substances may have been involved at the time, Captain.
|
|
Ah yes, I do seem to recall now. What are our options then?
|
|
Go to the meeting, WebEx, even Google Meet?
|
|
According to the ship's logs, you stated that from now on, only open-source communication tools
|
|
will be used at least on my watch. Approximately 20.75 seconds after the prior response
|
|
to Lieutenant Commander Scott's statement, which leaves us with a choice of big blue button,
|
|
jizimit and open meetings or similar open-source tools.
|
|
We're doomed indeed, as Starfleet's record's running to go by.
|
|
So Mock, what is the status with any of these tools? Are they in a shape to be used?
|
|
Our quantum-based AI has spent the equivalent of approximately 10.2302202 million years
|
|
in the deterministic time on trying to configure jizimit for production deployment without success.
|
|
Unfortunately, similar metrics have to be applied to big blue button,
|
|
although the artificial intelligence is confident that with another 1.02 million years of
|
|
de-time equivalent, it may arrive at a solution which is ready for prime time, if I may say so.
|
|
And I'm afraid that the situation with open meetings is even more sub-optimal
|
|
if the community efforts across the fleet of approximately 10.2302 star vessels
|
|
of the end-of-surprise class are of any relevance, which leaves us with only one option.
|
|
You cannot be serious. Mumble, really?
|
|
I'm afraid so, but given the fact that this can be used in subspace as well,
|
|
we have a chance to establish a reliable communication channel with Transylvania.
|
|
With the probability of approximately 45%, if my calculations are correct.
|
|
So you're really saying it's hidden, miss? Oh well, just give it a try then.
|
|
Please go ahead, Mock, and let's see what you can do.
|
|
This is the Federation Starship end-of-surprise, calling the plan of Transylvania to re-establish
|
|
communication. Okay, Mock, this is no use. Have you double-checked sampling rate,
|
|
bitrate, quantum modulation and all that other crap?
|
|
Captain, as I'm sure you are aware, the negotiation of these parameters are part of the
|
|
protocol handshake of the communication setup while establishing the channel.
|
|
But another thought just crossed my mind. Are you still wearing the implant?
|
|
What implant? The one you obtained on Star 9 in the beta-goose system,
|
|
supposedly enhancing your performance with the, and I quote,
|
|
female type of any species across the galaxy. At least, that is the explanation you gave me when
|
|
I inquired about an unusual source of radiation emanating from the quarters right after you had
|
|
acquired it. Yes, I do remember it now, Ish. But what does that continue with this?
|
|
As my cursory analysis of the power source of said device revealed,
|
|
it is powered by a small nuclear reactor whose specifications are significantly outside
|
|
the federation standard with the potential of causing all types of interference,
|
|
including the subspace mumble signal. Do you think there might be the remote possibility
|
|
of you disabling the device temporarily, of course?
|
|
Yeah, I suppose so. Let me check. Yes, that seems to be an option.
|
|
Done. Yes, according to the ship's readings, the source of radiation has disappeared.
|
|
Trying once again. This is the federation's startup and a surprise calling the
|
|
plant-crenned surveyor to reestablish communication.
|
|
And the surprise? Are you still there?
|
|
But that's a, is that you? Sorry, we seem to have been cut off due to technical difficulties.
|
|
You were explaining about your main source of nutrition before the communication broke down,
|
|
if I recall correctly. Yes, yes. We need about 10 tons of blood if we want to sustain our people.
|
|
Not sure we have that many donors aboard. Never mind blood samples stashed in sick bay.
|
|
But I'm not talking about a few millimeters from samples. We need about 10,000 liters right now.
|
|
Why? You don't have that many endemic among your people?
|
|
I don't really do. Blood is our main source of nutrition.
|
|
Blood is what? Perhaps I can be of assistance, Captain. Transylvania is actually
|
|
according to ancient lore, a part of what was then Eastern Europe on your home planet on
|
|
Earth, if I'm not completely mistaken. There was, in ancient times, a legend of a species known
|
|
as vampires, which solely survived on drinking human blood. This disease, as it was then known,
|
|
as it contaminated the victims of these vampires also to become one of that species,
|
|
quickly spread around that part of the continent until they mysteriously vanished about a thousand
|
|
years after the initial occurrence of the disease, from the surface of the planet after which
|
|
the legend became part of common lore. People then thought that improved in medical technology
|
|
and synthetic arland to be a common vampire repellent to believe at the time and prolonged sunlight
|
|
exposure due to phenomenon known as global overheating made them eventually disappear.
|
|
But it may have been the case that similar to now nutrition resources were running low and the
|
|
vampire has decided to leave the planet for some other of more vampire-friendly habitats.
|
|
That is it, so all you need is a vast amount of blood.
|
|
Unfortunately, blood alone will not be sufficient, we prefer the blood in a packaging known as humans.
|
|
Only this rapper will deliver a true consumer experience which my people try more.
|
|
As usual, the first bite is with the eye, quite literally in this case.
|
|
Hmm, so you actually need people to extract their blood from?
|
|
Indeed, but look at the bright side. All donations will receive eternal life,
|
|
excellent medical cover as they can't get ill anyway unless bitten by a werewolf.
|
|
But we made sure that this competitive species became extinct right after our arrival in this planet
|
|
and under benefits right after their conversion.
|
|
This will not.
|
|
What is it now, Mock?
|
|
There are quite a few options that come to mind for satisfying this request, Captain.
|
|
Would it all?
|
|
For one, there's the planet populated by QAnon after left Earth.
|
|
What's QAnon?
|
|
If Federation archives are a leveled source of truth, QAnon were a group of human reptiloids
|
|
which were behind one of the major conspiracy theories,
|
|
trying to explain the origins of a pandemic disease known as corona,
|
|
that held a stronghold on almost all countries in the first part of the 21st century on Earth.
|
|
A diseased name now, Turbia.
|
|
Have you been smoking one of your Vulcan recreational substances once again, Mock?
|
|
Quite on the contrary, Captain.
|
|
Corona was a highly infectious disease, affecting significant portions of the country's population
|
|
across the planet with an associated death toll attached to this disease.
|
|
And where did this disease come from?
|
|
Theories range from improper food handling on the local market in a country known
|
|
than as China, right up to a seriously misconfigured genetic experiment,
|
|
when a few insufficiently trained scientists tried the hand at interspecies breeding
|
|
and made the wrong decisions at the wrong time on a molecular level, resulting in a virus
|
|
capable of migrating between species instead of a highly optimized bad milk production,
|
|
which was then the original motivation behind the experiment in the first place.
|
|
As the milk of female bats was considered to be quite a culinary delicacy in said country at the time.
|
|
But my favorite theory, if I may say so, is a warp-draft experiment ahead of its time and its consequences.
|
|
What do you mean?
|
|
There is a school of thought suggesting that sea from Cochrane was not the original
|
|
inventor of the warp drive when he performed this apparent first warp jump in 2063
|
|
when the Vulcans, who had been observing Earth for quite some time, noticed the trail
|
|
and established intergalactic communication, which eventually led to the federation of planets
|
|
as we know it today. Instead, the warp drive was first discovered on Earth by a female member
|
|
of your species, known as Angela Merkel, who used to be a political leader of a country and
|
|
central Europe known as Germany. After the decline of a political career in the early 20s of the 21st
|
|
century, being a trained physicist, she decided once again to dedicate her life to physics, thus
|
|
creating an initial version of the warp drive. Unfortunately, this version was highly flawed,
|
|
creating a temporary wormhole through which a harmless flu virus managed to travel into parallel
|
|
universe, where it met a class of trans-dimensional beings, not unlike the terminator type robots
|
|
of Earth's 20th century amardad, which found it highly humorous to slightly modify some of its
|
|
spike proteins just for effect. Fortunately, this created the type of crowd intelligence among the
|
|
viruses, which eventually managed to escape back through the wormhole where it came from. Unfortunately,
|
|
this process changed once again some of its surface proteins, resulting in somewhat deadly virus,
|
|
named after the shape of its surface proteins. But Merkel's setup was so flawed that it also caused
|
|
to send the virus back to 2013 when she was still in power as Germany's chancellor at.
|
|
In essence, she had to deal with the consequences of an event which only took place in the future,
|
|
a very interesting aspect of time travel, if I may add. Enough of this gibberish mock.
|
|
What test this got to do with the test's food problem? As part of the resulting pandemic,
|
|
quite a few groups formed trying to explain the origins of this pandemic futile attempts,
|
|
of course, due to lack of underlying facts at the time. One of these groups called QAnon,
|
|
believed that the earth was ruled by a shadow cabinet of satanic, the zero equivalent of a binary
|
|
divine system preventing at the time of earth, pedophiles, aimed at maintaining this world order
|
|
and causing a massive planet-wide cover-up in the shape of set pandemic to deflect the tension
|
|
from their wrongdoings. One positive side effect Merkel's quantum debacle was a parallel minor wormhole
|
|
which opened a conduit into a media outlet, a scientific content distribution network to be
|
|
precise, in the year 2002, focusing on earth's history in the 20th century and 21st century.
|
|
Curiously, they had just finished a feature on reptiloids and came to the conclusion that
|
|
reptiloids rather than ruling the planet as a shadow cabinet had in fact undermined QAnon
|
|
using these conspiracy theories to confuse the masses. By sheer coincidence, this story was
|
|
adopted by a reporter of a major news outlet and quickly spread around something called social media,
|
|
a phenomenon where on earth where people could share information independent of its quality almost
|
|
instantly. Thus forcing the reptiloids to leave the planet nearly instantly and the rest of
|
|
three to quote an ancient earth proverb, which proves of course that history not only
|
|
repeats itself but actually can be a head of its time. Facilitated of course by bending of time
|
|
as it takes place in one house. QAnon's members then found a new home on the planet in the
|
|
nearby star system which then still populate according to Federation's archives. I am confident
|
|
that with some minor genetic engineering removing the reptilian strains, we can turn these into
|
|
proper food source for Vladessa and her people. Are you quite mad, Mock? We are not going to sacrifice
|
|
any human life forms on my watch, reptiloids or not. Okay, but what about even lower life forms
|
|
captain dark side? Like other conspiracy theories or even what's the word just one second captain?
|
|
QAnon's members then found a new home on the planet in the nearby star system.
|
|
Oh yes, or even politician? Sorry, no dice. The only option we can offer you is synthetically produced
|
|
blood from our replicators. But where's the blood? That sounds like soy burgers. We want the real
|
|
thing and no substitutes. QAnon's members then found a new home on the planet in the nearby star system.
|
|
Well, the deal soy or starvation you call. And this was the foundation of Transylvania's
|
|
transformation from a bloodlusting people, only accepting the purest human life forms, politicians
|
|
or not, as their main source of nutrition to one of the most peace-loving vegan races in the galaxy.
|
|
Eventually surviving solely on a diet of organically produced soy milk, a bait of calm and color
|
|
for effect, which eventually traveled back in history, another side effect of Merkel's
|
|
futile dabbling in transport traveling to Earth's early 1900th century to form a party in an
|
|
abandoned English colony, originally named after some Italian explorer, called Amerigo Vespucci.
|
|
This party was later to become the Democrats, a political denomination striving for almost
|
|
communist ideals, including free speech, software and love. But that's surely a story for
|
|
another episode of your favorite pecs of art show.
|
|
All right, all right, all right, OK. Picks. Yes.
|
|
All your boxes. Yes, boxes. Boxes. Boxes. Boxes. Yes, picks of the weeks.
|
|
Yes, picks of the week. Yes.
|
|
Leads. Any picks? Any pockets? I do have one. I just need to find the name again, because
|
|
well, I forgot it. Why don't you go with yours first?
|
|
I was just trying to make one up when you...
|
|
Illuded. Illuded?
|
|
Well, polluted? Whatever.
|
|
Diverted? Digressed?
|
|
Yeah, no. So, OK, I can tell you. I can't tell you the name of the movie until I look it up, but
|
|
this is a movie about a organization who builds, let's say, a military robots and they send them
|
|
on a... What I think is a test mission to a South American country, which has then been overtaken
|
|
by some government agency to use them to remove some drug cartels in the local
|
|
area. This is quite interesting, but clearly the good guys are in at the end, and they destroy
|
|
all the robots, but the name is... The name? Of the movie. Ah, yes, that's to be confirmed.
|
|
I forgot the name of the book. OK. I'm sure that Martin will remember that at some stage.
|
|
Which... Medication or not?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
They'll come to me. They'll come to me.
|
|
And the details may be in the show notes.
|
|
Maybe not.
|
|
Yes, yes, they may be.
|
|
My pox of the week is a TV series called The Breeders, or Breeders simply without the article.
|
|
It's about...
|
|
Oh, I don't even know how many. Monsters of man.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
You're welcome.
|
|
It's a TV show called Breeders.
|
|
It's about an English couple living in London for fun enough, and it describes the challenges
|
|
of bringing up little kids, and despite the circumstances, it tends to be quite funny.
|
|
Let's put it this way.
|
|
The term trials and tribulations come to mind.
|
|
OK.
|
|
And where does one find this?
|
|
I'm sure that YouTube and streaming services are like Netflix.
|
|
I think it depends on Netflix first or something, or Amazon Prime, I can't remember.
|
|
But I'm sure you'll find it somewhere in a media outlet of your choice.
|
|
The IMDB link will be in the show notes.
|
|
Excellent.
|
|
And with that, we are done for the Halloween episode of 2021.
|
|
Time flies, doesn't it?
|
|
We are now more than one and a half years in existence, Martin.
|
|
This morning, yeah.
|
|
We'll do in our second news episode soon.
|
|
Very soon, yes.
|
|
At the end of the year, yes.
|
|
Yeah, well, that's not far right now.
|
|
If we're still around, it's over in the months.
|
|
Yes, because Martin, as we, as I just explained, Martin keeps firing staff.
|
|
So at the end of the day, we just
|
|
we may run out of energy by then, so we may not be here.
|
|
So, so it's a power to power any of us.
|
|
So at the end of the day, we, Jim, we may be just down to two people,
|
|
like we were in the beginning running this podcast.
|
|
You never know.
|
|
Yes, excellent.
|
|
And no, Martin, not.
|
|
Oh, no.
|
|
You sure?
|
|
Positive.
|
|
Well, how many some better people next time then?
|
|
Well, I'll be good.
|
|
The first part of call is actually too high to re-higher HR department once again.
|
|
Unless you want to do the hiring all by yourself.
|
|
As in everything.
|
|
Well, it can't be any worse, right?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
People, if you're implying, we should not do not ask, do not ask about the
|
|
Trishner.
|
|
Just don't do it.
|
|
Forget about it.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
No, said enough.
|
|
Before the law is get back, I'll get back onto us.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
That has been more than wonderful.
|
|
As always, as usual, exactly.
|
|
And with that, goodbye and see you soon.
|
|
This is The Linux Enloss.
|
|
You come for the knowledge.
|
|
But stay for the madness.
|
|
Thank you for listening.
|
|
This episode of Linux Enloss is proud and sponsored by Digital Research Inc.
|
|
Tired of overloaded windowing systems, especially done by the Redmond outfit,
|
|
copper desktop environments, and open-source shenanigans such as GNOME Plasma or Enlightenment.
|
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Then we have just the ticket for you.
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Since its inception in 1974, the proprietary control program for microcomputers,
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also affectionately known as CPM, has been delivering the true consort experience
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to generations of system administrators and developers alike.
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When we designed the system almost 50 years ago,
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we had a single aim to make your life easier, simplicity.
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And no nonsense approach, focusing on the essentials rather than software bloat
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that makes life in front of a terminal breeze.
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No complex shell, like bash or fish to get used to,
|
|
strange scripting languages like Python or Perl or other Malaki to learn,
|
|
the simplicity of the console command processor is just breathtaking.
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|
Even today's hipsters, with their fancy,
|
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multiple architectures comprising many CPUs, are looked after.
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MPM got you covered. Capable of supporting up to 4 CPUs,
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this is all what you need to make up to 4 consoles really fly.
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Technofields wanting even more cores should stick to their fold or tablet if they really have to.
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We all know that real computers do not have more than a handful of CPUs anyway.
|
|
And please do not believe any of the lies on Wikipedia
|
|
that we died in 1991. We are just taking a break.
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|
Just a very long one. For more details, please visit
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|
excellencesoftwareneverdice.com.
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|
CPM
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Delivering the real console experience since 1974.
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|
Also available in color since 1995.
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|
Linux and LANs are not responsible for the truth of the messages from our sponsors.
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|
In particular, we cannot be held idle for any resulting actions of listening to such messages,
|
|
including loss of sanity, bad taste and software, man, women, dubbers, or the use of the wrong
|
|
operating system. Neverminds of their license. This podcast is license under the latest version
|
|
of the creative commons license. Tap attribution share like. Credits for the entry music
|
|
go to bluesy roosters, for the song Salud Margot, to twin flames, for their peace call the flow,
|
|
used for the segment intros, and finally to the lesser ground for the songs we just
|
|
is used by the dark side. You find these and other duties licensed under creative commons
|
|
at tremendous. The website dedicated to liberate the music industry from choking corporate
|
|
legislation and other crap concepts.
|
|
So I'm on firefox at least. Firefox, choice. I'm on edge at the moment.
|
|
Wow. Brave. No, brave. Brave is a different browser, Martin, don't worry.
|
|
Because I kind of, I thought I heard of my own echo, but no problem. This is Martin's gear.
|
|
Also known as CRAP. Custom, custom research and the allocation pool, I think it stands for.
|
|
Anyway, it doesn't matter.
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|
By the way, have you watched any of his original Star Trek episodes as preparation for this episode, Martin?
|
|
Oh, yes, many years ago. Okay. That answers the next question.
|
|
And you know that that Kirk has a certain verif to his voice.
|
|
Wow, it's not called Kirk, because he's called DS.
|
|
Ah, Martin, please.
|
|
Is this an option dark side?
|
|
Kirk, let me remind myself.
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|
Oh, no, not again. Oh, Hora, please reestablish communication as soon as possible.
|
|
You may want to do this again.
|
|
And all members of the LB shit.
|
|
I can't see it now.
|
|
Which Sully survived on drinking?
|
|
Sully.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
There was in ancient times a legend of a species known as Vampires, which Sully survived on drinking
|
|
Sully survived.
|
|
No, Martin, I need to keep going.
|
|
Sully, Sully?
|
|
Okay, well, it's okay. Sully, Sully, okay.
|
|
This will not...
|
|
May I interrupt Captain?
|
|
Okay.
|
|
What is it now?
|
|
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, oh, oh, by the Empire, Mark, you may interrupt.
|
|
Okay, I was waiting for you. There was too much of a pause.
|
|
Okay, let's do that again.
|
|
Yeah, let's start with this one now.
|
|
As the milk of female bats was considered to be a culinary disease in said country at the time.
|
|
No, I can't write.
|
|
That's right, that's me.
|
|
Okay, let me do this once again.
|
|
Listen to the voices.
|
|
Linnos, innos, innos, innos, innos, innos, innos, innos.
|
|
Preferably ours.
|
|
Happy Halloween!
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing
|
|
to find out how easy it really is.
|
|
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
|
|
and is part of the Binary Revolution at BingRef.com.
|
|
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
|
|
Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
|
Unless otherwise status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
|
|
Attribution, ShareLight, free dot org license.
|