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Plaintext
Episode: 4153
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Title: HPR4153: Steading as she goes!
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4153/hpr4153.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 20:28:31
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4153 for Wednesday the 3rd of July 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Steeding As She Goes.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 60 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, the Edinburgh HP are hosts meet and chat again.
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Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radioians. My name is Mr X. This is usually how I start my
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shows, but this isn't one of my usual shows. It's because I'm here joined with somebody else.
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We are in the recording studio C, our usual haunt, me and...
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Hello, it's Dave Morris. Yes, we're in studio C, which is my car.
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That's right, that's right. So, yes. So, I don't know, do you want to start the ball?
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Yeah, okay. We've got a list of various things, far more than we've got time for.
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We're going to try and be selective, but I had suggested I start by talking about
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YouTube channels because I've done that in the past. So, that's what I'm going to do.
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So, I've got three channels. We're in the car park, so you'll hear the sands of other cars
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and people coming out of the pub and you'll see too many people talking to someone in the car park.
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Of course, studio in there. Some funny people live in Edinburgh.
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Ken thinks this is hilarious that we do.
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Wow. Anyway, we should get into joining us on time.
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Anyway, I was going to talk about three YouTube channels, and I just choose various things that
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I watch and I think might be of interest. And the first one of my lists, the channel name,
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is A.T. Restoration. It's made by a guy called A.T., who comes from Estonia,
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and he's a fan of your restaurant. He doesn't talk on these things. He puts up English
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messages, not subtitles, even. Other than that, there's ambience and so he puts a little bit of
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music in at the end when he's finishing, just to tell you this time to wind up.
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But basically, he's doing some amazing furniture restoration. Usually, his clients are giving him
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ancient things like chests of drawers and wardrobes and that type of thing.
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And then he's repairing them. And the episode I've referred to is not the latest one, but it was
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extant at the time. I did it. And he's restoring a 150-year-old chair or armchair.
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If you're interested in this type of thing, the way in which he disassembles and then reassembles
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and puts all the seat padding and that stuff in, I suppose we find that quite fascinating.
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Yeah. Yeah. I could do with somebody like that. But I've got another patio all day,
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dining room table. So we'll scuff the mat. And I'm not because you want to do with it,
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but it needs some TLC. Yeah. This happens because things can have rough lives and they get battered.
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I think it kind of got damaged and then it got worse and then it got to play with the wall.
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What's it matter? So then people are even less careful when it's sort of thing.
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Yeah. Yeah. I'm going to miss his ex. She'd watch some home and she'd clapped up with it and
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although to be fair it was me the first. So you see what was it? It was I could use that.
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I could have antibacterial thing. You can use that and we'd take the family's off.
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That was the first thing. And then I took one of these plug-in air freshener things and I was
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policing it and I didn't realise that we walked and somehow I took it out and it spilled a little
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of the table and they'd call a cut-knife and that was it. It's never gonna keep me.
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Yes. Yes. I've got one of those too. Watch it for that. A pine. Not the air freshener,
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but the table is just had a had a reflect. Yeah. It's had all manner of stuff including a family
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eating at it or doing that. Yeah. Look at it and it's all bashed. So I don't know what you do.
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But I could have it there and put something else. I don't know. Well, in my case,
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with digressing a bit I know, but in my case I
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years ago took it out into the back garden, into the garage and I got a belt sander and I
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belt-sanded the whole thing and then put it all beautiful to the pine table and then I've
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vanished it. But I bought varnish which was a floor varnish thinking that's gonna be as tough
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as now. Yeah. It was not. It was awful. It spilled off consistently ever since. Wow. So at one point
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I'm gonna redo it. Yeah. And you use some really, really, really good varnish it.
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Yeah. So it's amazed me. My mother's got a table and she got it from, I can't believe she actually
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and that's for a number of years and it's been fine. But now it seems, it's almost like the
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and we were just talking about this actually where we were having a meal. I wonder if the varnish
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has been designed to disintegrate at a certain age because now you can just generally rub your
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nail across it and the varnish just falls off. So she's been very careful with her table and
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you can see all these v marks where, you know, they're touching the floor. It's amazing.
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I was taught to do sort of finishing of wood when I was doing woodwork at school. We did
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like French polishing which I think it's largely the, what's it called? The scales from insects
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or something what is it called? I've gotten the words to escape me too. Yeah. But you basically put
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layer upon layer upon layer with this stuff on. And then you can actually put a finishing varnish
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like polyurethane varnish at the top of that I think. But yeah, there are ways and means but obviously
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isn't either right one. Anyway, yes, I guess. And the second YouTube is the channel is called
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Phil Vandela, he's the name of the channel owner. And he's obviously an engineer of a
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machinist and he has a thing about building his own bikes from many cases from a cannibalized
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other bikes which he's then put together. So this particular one, building a cargo bike,
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is the first of the cargo bikes he makes. And he also makes other things like furniture and
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it made a beautiful desk. But this cargo bike thing is, we'll take quite a lot of capacity in the
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front and he's got the front wheel is a small wheel and it's way out front. And he's got an amazing
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steering arrangement. What is another name for the, for the, we are a clean on a bike? What would you
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call it? Oh, yeah, yeah. Is that kind of thing? No, it's not a reclining bike. It's a straight
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time bike. But it is, but it's very long. Right. And but he's made it really stable. It's all made
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out of other bikes that have been cannibalized. And some aluminum tube for the, for the weight. Right.
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And and and he's milling these and he's welding them too. And he's very skillful,
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tick-molder. So welding aluminum, I was told it was not impossible to imagine. He says not.
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So yeah, there's two versions of this, of this particular video that I've referenced here,
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which is a sort of short version and then there's the full, the full version. If you're
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anything like me, you like to watch the full one. But I think you need to dedicate a bit of time to
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yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, it's just, I just love watching highly skilled people doing things. Yeah.
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Yeah, well, I've got, I'm rubbish about what we sort of things in the hands. It's a, I
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come out as a screwdriver and it's a, yeah, it's a bit soldering. I mean, my people can do that,
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you know. It's funny. I don't know if I mentioned it. I remember school doing
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we were working such, I was just rubbish at that. And I think I did mention, I'm sure a minute,
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and I apologize to the listeners if I didn't repeat myself, but we had all had a project to do
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and some coffee tables with in-lays, not beautiful stuff. And I thought, actually,
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I'm an organ stand, you know, because I could have a keyboard and I thought, I could have
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had four blocks of wood, you know, and it was like something like Frankenstein's monster,
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ugly as hell, and you stand it wobbled, you know, and I was just rubbish, you know.
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Yes. So that was terrible. My father-in-law, when we moved into the house,
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he helped us to fit a shelfing and stuff. And I learned a lot of tips from him. For example,
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yeah, I thought we were going to cut a shelf, I would make it fit exactly. And then it wouldn't
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fit, it would jam. So you need to leave a surprising amount of room, so you measure the distance,
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you see, well, I don't have to have to ensure I'm in trouble. So I think that's way too much.
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But you've got to remember that you can divide that from either side. So although it seems
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like quite a large gap, when you have it either side, it's not that much, but it's quite small.
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So there's that. And then the other thing is when you screw in two bits of wood together with
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a screw through it, the one above, you want to have a clearance hole so that the screw drops through.
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Otherwise, pull it towards other ones and split it. I've done that, I've done that, yeah, yeah.
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So that's took my while to learn that way. Yes, he does.
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I actually built myself a chair when I was working at Lancaster, because I lived in an upstairs
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apartment over a shop. And the shop immediately below me was a chemist. But the other side was
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was a DIY shop. So I used to buy wood from there. So I had quite a lot, I bought all the wood I needed.
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And I made this thing, which was a wooden frame chair, which had webbing, elastic webbing
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between them. It came out of a magazine. And it was all joined together with dowels. There was not
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a screw in it. All right, it was all dowled together. I think there was nails holding the
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thing, the webbing on. And then it got a foam and then the foam was covered in fabric. And
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it lasted me a fair number of years. It was very, very uncool, because it was a magazine that was
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several years old. So it was sort of, it was what people did years and years ago. But I could
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sit on that and watch the deli. It was fantastic. And you were able to, did you do the fabric and
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everything yourself? Yeah, I bought the fabric and learned how to sew it and sew it. And I also
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had to do things like, if you've got a cushion, you know, put buttons on it. You need this huge long
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needle that's about, I don't know, two foot long or something. It's got a hole in each end.
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No, only with the one end, the one end anyway. And you could thread through the cushion,
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grow and then sew the button in and tie it off with the thing on the other side of the cushion.
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I never knew that. So yeah, yeah. So that sounds like I'm boasting, but I was amazed. When you
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took the cut, when I eventually threw it away, to all the covering reading off and stuff,
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God, the woodwork was awful. It was all done by hand, with bracing bit and I didn't have any
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electric tools. No. So yeah, but my woodwork exists, but it's not good. Anyway,
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this is a digression time today. I guess you could teach yourself to do all sorts of
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other things. I suppose these videos, they don't, well, there's not speaking in them. So they're
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not necessarily teaching you, they're just giving you an idea, but in the end, you could find
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videos that would give you a structure. As I complete the version, but some sort of thing,
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my father-in-law had the stomach. And the wife said, oh yeah, it's not a spin-in properly.
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All right, okay. So I plugged it in and I pulled the lever and spun and found nothing wrong with it.
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So I looked at it and the strings look a bit short. And did it not move in the case it's not,
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the strings are not, the thread's not coming out properly. It might be that, yeah. Okay,
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so I had to be look. And there's like notches on the side of the reel for this, for the string,
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and there were, one of the, one of the cords was underneath it and I thought, well, how can it,
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it can't rotate out? Because because the end of the reel is in one of these notches,
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so it can't, unreal, it can't possibly work. So he's fiddled with us.
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What's going on? So I had no idea how to spool one of these things on. And I had a,
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I was like, what was he saying? Your wife said, you could check YouTube, you could find something
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on YouTube. Oh, that's an idea. So I had to be looking on YouTube and she ran off,
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how to spool a stomach and you get the two strings. And it's really easy.
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Two holes in the spool and the middle, you bolt the string around and there's an arrow that
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shows you what's direction to wind into, to wind it up. So you just wind that way until it's all
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complete. And the notches on the side, we think to pass him through it. Nope. What those are for,
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and catch it, I'm not going to catch everybody out, is so that you can put this string into those,
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so that when you bring it towards the string, it doesn't, so it's just a temporary line. So before you
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put it through, yeah, and hook it from the string, you know, and did that. And it worked
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perfectly. So he was, he was, I was like, what do you think? That's amazing. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
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YouTube. I've struggled with those things myself quite. Yeah, and it's actually very easy.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But man,
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you've been an instruction, I bet if you were looking at a structure in leafland,
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I don't know some ways, because I know, I know, and yes, I've done that and you look at it and
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it's like, if, did you ever look at heinous, just like that, where, where you get these amazing
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diagrams, if you know what it is, you're doing, the fact that it's exploded the entire gearbox
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and they all, the gears are in every direction. That's really, really useful. If you take it apart,
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and you think, oh, where, where did that go? You get the answer by looking at it. But if you want
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to understand how it all works, it's useless, it's useless. And that's what those, the sort of things
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you get with you, with your strimmer, which is a string trimmer, I think, in the state. But yeah,
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yeah, yeah, I know, I've been down that road. I have two, one of which work, no, I've got three.
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One works, okay, but it doesn't feed. I don't know why. One, the other one works, but all of the
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string feeding mechanism is destroyed and it's so old you can't get a basement, but I've worked
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out how to make it have a permanent piece of plastic in there. That does the job of
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a client. The third one is just junk. It's one of these things. I'm up on my father-in-law.
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It was a draftsman and he's very good at working with wooden stuff, so he's very mechanically
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minded and yet he can't seem to grasp. How these strimmers work is that it needs to be
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rotating a fast speed in order to cut the grass. If it's just going slow, it's not going to cut the
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grass and yet he spends most of him pumping it off the ground so that it's more times on the ground
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than it is actually on the grass, so it's not even going to get quarter of the RPM that it should be.
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So don't bump off the ground, you're supposed to float on the top, you know, that's fine. I've told
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that. It's quite a skill. Yeah, some of them you have to bump to make the string
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stand. But they only do that when you extend it. Yes, of course it is. You can see the string is
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now shortened itself. Now you do that and it's more poppy. This one not all feeds when you pull
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the trigger, so when you pull it, you hear it in a net going smoothly. Of course I was telling my
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way because I'm not to start and stop it because everything does have a bit of strength,
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so you'll go through it very quickly. Yeah, so you've got a knife inside the thing that chops off
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the excess. Yeah, so you end up with lots of bits or other places. Yeah, I've done that and I
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didn't get the spool stringing in right. I vaguely remember it, it may be what some string and a
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shock somewhere. That's good. That's good. That's good. You'll have a bit of wind at all unless
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what has happened. I had a guy come and cut my lawn. I've got a lawn at the back of my house
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and it got totally out of control. I've not managed to do it and it was full of
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thistles and all sorts of docks and heavy things. And the weed string trimmer thing,
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just stroked it and moved on. It did nothing. I had this guy come in and he brought his
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strimmer, but it brought down and I said, oh, well, I've got one, but the string on it's so feeble.
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I could solve that for you. So he went to his van and came back with heavy duty spool and put
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that on the thing. So it's the string and the string of the motor. So it's funny, and I might
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say it was light. I've got the cheapest summer you could get and it was a very weak battery.
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And I thought it would be rubbish, but it's actually been very good. I mean, it's like
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going to long it. It's only for doing it really up to doing it. It's a measly brush kind of
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type thing. So it's fun. Yeah. I don't know how to get to that. I could chat on this thing.
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This is the trouble where we're class A digress. So I've got one more YouTube
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and this one is different and this is called the Ocean Conservation Namibia. This is along the
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coast of Namibia, which is there's lots of desert along that coast. I think that will be the
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the west coast of Southern Africa. And there are Cape Fur seals, which are which are
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really chunky. Well, actually very large. They grow too in terms of the male seals,
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but they have a fur, not just a smooth skin. But picture that. Yeah, they're beautiful creatures.
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You have to watch them. But these guys spotted. I think they were travel guides originally or
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had kayaking groups that they would take out in that time. They saw these seals. In many cases,
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I'd got all manner of stuff around them. So they had things like one of the classic ones. It appears
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to be, you know, the plastic straps you get on packages, which you're supposed to
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start one on top of the other. You're supposed to sharp and they're sharp. You're supposed to rip
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them off and then chuck them. But many people just pull them off and leave them as a ring.
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And the seals tend to play with them in the water, especially the youngsters. And they get the heads
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in it. And they get this thing. And then it cuts them. It cuts right through the skin. And into
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the muscle in many cases, and that fishing line, the commercial fishing line was a hell of a thick
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stuff, like, you know, ultra spaghetti type thing. And that also cuts like how gill nets, which is
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very, very, very fine. But it's the mesh. And anyway, it's so much. And just general garbage,
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shopping bags, clean film, roughly. So what these guys have set up is this ocean conservation
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in Namibia group, where there's several of them, four or five of them, who get involved. And they
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go, they make periodic visits to the seal colonies. And they have they've got nets, so they catch
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the seals. And then the nets got zip on the side so they can open it up, but they're getting bitten,
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because those guys got big teeth. They cut all this stuff off and free them.
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Yeah, it's so saddened. And I mean, the thing is, you think, well, it's so good that they're doing
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this, you know, but it's almost like fighting a, you know, a billiard, a bath, a tea coffee,
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absolutely. It's just, it's just, I mean, what are they going to do? It's just, I know, I know, it's,
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it's, they've made a film about it. I think I'm not sure where you can see the film. I had a
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team coming down to film what they were doing. So the message is being spread, but not that well.
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Yeah, I mean, I'm sure a, there's been countless battles and use about, about the plastic
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enotions and all that, you know, and it's spreading. And it goes into smaller and smaller particles,
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well, and getting food, you know, that is. And I think we sure are, you know, the point
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being being made that some of these companies that make all these plastics and whatnot are like
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any business are there to make a profit. And they want, and they're there to make a bigger profit.
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So they're expecting to find more and more ingenious ways of making more and more of this
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plastic stuff to spread around around the world. It seems to be the case. Yeah, yeah. I think I've
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never seen that the BBC was talking about the, which is broadcasting cooperation, I think it's
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written with the nose. They were talking about the history of plastic and all that. And it was
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seen as a revolutionary way of stopping pollution. And it was actually seen to be a tidier way of
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doing things. I was thinking of that. I think it's disastrous. It has been, yeah, yeah, I don't
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think it was, because in my early years, there was quite a lot of biker light that was available as
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plastic. And when you didn't get containers made of it, it's very, very brittle. And it was
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made, it was like handles of knives or, you know, things. Yeah, absolutely. Yes. So it was
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that sort of thing. But then when the things like nylon and polyethylene came along,
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this is all seen as being much better. I think it was not RCA. I think they made the first
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because it was used in radios, you know, receivers. Yeah. And it was the RCA, Victor RCA. I think it was
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of some of our personnel watching that. And they, they're the first unbreakable of a radio. And
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as they were talking about his deep 37, all that, they were bashing it on the counter, showing how
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strong it was. Yeah, they're the biker, they just splinter into pieces, you know. Yeah, yeah. So that
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was quite fragile in its way. I think someone in my attic, I've got my grandmother's old or a
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valve radio, which I, I'm not sure where it is. And it's, I think the case is made of biker light.
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It's a fairly chunky thing you'd have on a dresser or a table or something. I don't think it's
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worm. Yeah. So you've done very nervous plugging in the piece that we're in back.
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Yeah, imagine all the valves are well gone. And the thing where the knob you turn to tune it is
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piece of string. Yes. It's a string moment. And it's also operating in the variable
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capacitors. That's right. Yeah. Because it's also thin and fresh with one another. Yeah.
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And we're watching it when these repeat, there's a program on TV where they repair things,
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my chap brought in a, and it was a, oh no, what was it now? It was from a foreign country,
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I can't remember where it was. And it was in there. It might have been in there. And they got it
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delivered, hooked, it backed it to Britain. And it's, oh, it's, oh, it's, oh, yeah. It's,
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I can't remember my childhood sort of thing. When they opened up, it was broken into pieces and all
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that. And I thought, well, I know that I had this beautiful glass plated front that had the,
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obviously, because they used to have really intricate displays on these readers to look at fancy.
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They'd have, have Luxembourg and Morgan on it. So it's a beautiful coloured display,
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you know, how they're going to do that. And I couldn't believe when there was, the chap couldn't
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believe it. It's the same video, you know, they rebuilt the case and they've got the glass and,
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and the, the masters, using a computer, they were able to regenerate the front plate and glass.
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It's beautiful. And the slot was beautiful. And the sort of fonts and lettering.
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Got all that, yeah. It was, it was like a metal sheet, which has then been enameled.
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And then presumably the, the, the lines of the different white bands and stuff were drawn
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and then all of the markers. So they already drew all that and it was beautiful.
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It was beautiful. Yeah, I couldn't believe it when I saw the, I just thought,
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I've never, but it appeared like that. I can't believe how they fixed the casing,
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who they used glue was like, I'm not quite sure, but they, they were able to, and I thought
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they'll never be, it was, it was amazing. Yeah, yeah. So that's going to be a popular one, yeah.
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Things like that being being brought back to life again.
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The show I've pointed to for the ocean conservation in Namibia is one of the entire 34 seals
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race you in one day. So, yeah, absolutely exhausting. Yeah.
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In many cases, they're running after these, these seals and battling with them.
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Yeah. And if they stand still too long, seals run past them and bite them in their leg.
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Get away. I remember, and I may have missed this before, but we were at,
|
|
it was, we had a, it was actually during our, our wedding, we went to, it was,
|
|
I don't know if we were supposed to know, oh, God, that's sustainable.
|
|
So obviously it was, it was Las Vegas, but then we went to San Francisco. That was in San
|
|
Francisco. Okay. And in San Francisco, see, there was, it was all these wooden,
|
|
wooden decades, with it peers, yeah, with it, with it, we're all lying across.
|
|
I said, I said, look, look over there, I said, oh, they've slaughtered them all.
|
|
I said, when you mean slaughtered them, just, just, I said, the next thing,
|
|
you thought they killed them all? Because I think that the cannery placed nearby,
|
|
you know, and you thought the, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, they're not dead.
|
|
No, no, no, no, they're good. Yeah, I know I've seen that. There's, there's a lot of
|
|
wild life there, or there's sea lines, I think, in those cases, I think, so, and comrades,
|
|
they have as well. Right, right. So yeah, it's, yeah, it's, yeah, it's amazing.
|
|
You don't want to mess with them, guys. No, no, no, they've got some, some good teeth on them.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, cool. So, do we, if we want to go from there, do we want to talk about,
|
|
so I think I had that section here about the, the computers I've had over the years,
|
|
and it's hard to remember. I'm not terrible at memory. And I've got to not say that, and basically,
|
|
when I went, I was, when I was growing up, I was more interested in, and, and computers, it's not
|
|
going to, and electronics and, and can amateur radio, so that was really my, my, my main focus.
|
|
So I, I kind of missed the, the, the, the start of, of the computer revolution and all that.
|
|
So I think to use computers, just, just for amateur radio use. And, and I think my first computer,
|
|
there's maybe a, a single spectrum, which, and I think actually, I got, I ended up getting a,
|
|
a fancy, because I keep, the single spectrum came with these, I think the, the scribe is, like,
|
|
like, dead fish keyboards, and it's like, squeegee buttons. Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
Yeah. Yeah. Was it not a membrane? Yeah. Yeah.
|
|
A membrane, that's what it was. Yeah. Well, they were, they came like, I just picked some 80s.
|
|
Okay. Oh, 40 or what it was. I never, I never had a spectrum. Yeah. So it's not the very,
|
|
not the, not the simple as an X8 and one, it was after that. Okay. There's, there's,
|
|
any moments, it was the ones with the memories you're talking about. And so they improved these
|
|
squeegee rubber buttons, like, like, like, poking bits of dead meat, sort of. That's what I'm like. So,
|
|
it's a bit like the buttons you're getting remote control, I guess, really. Yeah. It's a bit bigger.
|
|
Yeah. It's only bigger. Yeah. So that's it. So that, that, so I think I, there was a kit you could get
|
|
where you can get a proper clacky keyboard, which you could see, put your spectrum into it.
|
|
And so I think I used that. And the idea was that, well, I used the spectrum for,
|
|
and I was, yeah, it was for decoding Morse code and the slow, slow scan television.
|
|
And so there was, you basically got a, you could build a reinterface card with a seven full one
|
|
op amp, op amp amplifier, basically. And it would, it would sense, it would switch between a
|
|
logic one and zero and depending on whether, whether it was a higher low tone or whatever.
|
|
And now you've got a scanning line when slow scan television, scan across the screen and build
|
|
up the picture slower. And I thought it was quite interesting. And it could also decode more
|
|
code as well. So that, that was the first, first one. And then I think, I see my memories a bit,
|
|
a bit sketchy, but I think I think it was a dragon 32. That was a, that was a Wales computer
|
|
Yes, we are. I do, I remember the name dragon 30, was it, it was a case for one, wasn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
I think I had a similar, similar type to the Sinclair in terms of, at that point,
|
|
in terms of all kinds of British built computers, but on that team, I think I had a
|
|
Sintonic interface on the side. And I actually got, I just remembered that one of the,
|
|
radio shows I was at, there was a, a pen plotting mini printer that I got, I mean,
|
|
printers were very expensive at the time. And I had, over the years, I got, I had various ones as
|
|
ones that, that, that heated up a silver foil. And then I got one that, actually heated up,
|
|
was the paper, I think I actually, the special, I remember in thermal paper, I remember,
|
|
was might be, I'm not sure. And then when I got this platter worth, oh, this is what I want now,
|
|
even those colors you can pick the thing, pins, and all that, but I'd never had a pen plotting
|
|
printer before. And it draws out the letters, so it takes forever's, it's so it's not really
|
|
designed for, for, for typing text, you know, so it's fun to watch. It's not a raster. It's not
|
|
drawing and I think you're holding the pen.
|
|
Yeah, we can also squeaky loses as well.
|
|
So it was quite very funny to watch.
|
|
So I mean that was cheap but useless really.
|
|
I loved to play that.
|
|
I know it was fun.
|
|
We had pen plots at work.
|
|
We had sort of flat bed ones which had a,
|
|
you switch them on and there was a vacuum underneath
|
|
so we'd pull the paper down and lay it nice and flat.
|
|
The last thing you wanted was
|
|
if you'd paint a catch on the paper.
|
|
But these were for student nuisance stuff.
|
|
We also had drumplotters at work.
|
|
Oh yeah, drumplotters.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The drum was back in the width of this car.
|
|
So you'd remember the, you know, sort of an A0 size.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
A print of work.
|
|
So what graph?
|
|
So I was sort of A4.
|
|
You know what people know about this type of an A4 paper.
|
|
It's A3 twice the size of an A4.
|
|
And A3 twice the size of an A2.
|
|
It's a very, very thick, yeah.
|
|
And they would have multiple pens.
|
|
Yeah, but they'd roll the paper up and down
|
|
and then the pen would run across on the carrot.
|
|
But yeah, but that was,
|
|
that was the expensive stuff that universities had for drawing.
|
|
I know at my work they have that,
|
|
we've got giant big printers
|
|
that they've got an ink cap
|
|
that they'll put you call them ink,
|
|
jet things.
|
|
They've got it from one to the other.
|
|
And they've got like this beautiful colour.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Obviously.
|
|
I always wish I could have grabbed one of those
|
|
when they were still available.
|
|
Anything big like that.
|
|
But I only live in a little high,
|
|
so that would have been insane.
|
|
You put the thing out, I can't remember.
|
|
It might have been Epson.
|
|
Oh really?
|
|
But it was tiny, it was only a wee.
|
|
I'm not even sure with the A4 piece of paper
|
|
with that texture.
|
|
I can't remember where that's actually been,
|
|
but it was small.
|
|
Really, really, really slow.
|
|
I don't know how long I'll take to that.
|
|
I'll say it into a bit further as well.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like a sort of etching.
|
|
Yeah. It's like a sketch.
|
|
It's like a sketch.
|
|
So I think,
|
|
so I could run
|
|
a packet video programme.
|
|
And I think it's a little bit vague,
|
|
but I think there was a promo
|
|
on the side and it pushed up
|
|
into the packet programme.
|
|
Okay. So which was quite neat.
|
|
There was quite a few machines at that era
|
|
that were where you could plug a
|
|
plug a prom into
|
|
for the sort of software
|
|
and maybe had an operating system
|
|
in Rome.
|
|
And then you could plug something else.
|
|
It made it very, very easy
|
|
because you just basically turned it on
|
|
and popped the dedicated packet programme.
|
|
So because the packet was
|
|
sort of a modified version of X25
|
|
called AX25 Amateur X25
|
|
and it's designed to be used
|
|
over the radio network
|
|
and it switches it.
|
|
You get bursts of packet.
|
|
You could actually listen to it over
|
|
if you listen to another video
|
|
which I got.
|
|
And stop and listen for the other
|
|
spores.
|
|
But it was very slow.
|
|
You could send a message
|
|
to the other side of the country
|
|
and also download binary files
|
|
and you got the back and the main
|
|
and all that.
|
|
So yeah, we got all the fun.
|
|
I tend to not do that.
|
|
That wasn't so much for there.
|
|
That wasn't so much for the
|
|
Diagon Thet 2.
|
|
Was the Dragon 6502
|
|
based machine?
|
|
I can't remember. I think it was.
|
|
I think I vaguely remember that as being one.
|
|
Because the spectrum was a Z
|
|
Z-18.
|
|
The chip was a Z-18.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
|
|
So yeah, yeah.
|
|
Anyway, that was...
|
|
I do remember...
|
|
Did you ever come across the thing
|
|
called the NASCOM-1?
|
|
That was one of the very, very earliest.
|
|
I think it was a Z-80.
|
|
And you're just a bare board.
|
|
No, I don't remember that thing.
|
|
I think you may be getting the electronics magazine
|
|
when you build your own computer.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know how you bought it.
|
|
I never had one.
|
|
It was cool going down there in a delegation
|
|
to see this wonderful machine
|
|
leaving our mainframe behind.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
Wow, it does what...
|
|
I mean, it does what is Dini.
|
|
You were just...
|
|
I don't know if it was true or not,
|
|
but you were saying about your...
|
|
I guess you're completely...
|
|
you're talking about the...
|
|
the back system that you had.
|
|
And I said it was huge and no less of it.
|
|
But it was really weak and...
|
|
I would not be surprised.
|
|
I mean, I'm guessing...
|
|
Yeah, I would guess.
|
|
I imagine a Raspberry Pi 5
|
|
would kick there.
|
|
I remember someone saying that
|
|
was it the...
|
|
if you take out something like
|
|
a credit card that's not a CPU
|
|
and a credit card that's more powerful
|
|
than the NASIC computer that took into space
|
|
I think it was actually...
|
|
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised.
|
|
You don't realise how things have changed
|
|
until you make those components.
|
|
I think I've touched this before,
|
|
but the...
|
|
the problem of talking about the Ganges
|
|
computer and I have gotten to that.
|
|
But the Ganges computer
|
|
took me to the moon and all that.
|
|
The...
|
|
trying to get...
|
|
trying to shoehorn that computer
|
|
into the...
|
|
the...
|
|
the rocket was so difficult
|
|
and I think they had something like...
|
|
a two teams one was something like
|
|
whoever it was, the other team
|
|
where...
|
|
the team that...
|
|
the first one...
|
|
ended up in the size of a room sort of thing.
|
|
And the other one managed to get down to the size of a...
|
|
a big...
|
|
a whole...
|
|
a whole...
|
|
cupboard sort of thing.
|
|
And the conclusion was that all the way they could possibly do it was using
|
|
integrated circuits and of course
|
|
they were not certified for space use.
|
|
And it was so cutting-edge.
|
|
And they basically had to either...
|
|
well you do it this way or you can't do it at all
|
|
was the final conclusion.
|
|
And they were so...
|
|
they were so nervous about using something like
|
|
ICs for...
|
|
space travel.
|
|
And what they did is they...
|
|
they sort of...
|
|
I'm just...
|
|
I'm just...
|
|
they had these...
|
|
ICs and
|
|
the...
|
|
they were so...
|
|
if there was a tiny screen perfection, they would say...
|
|
fail, fail, fail, fail, fail.
|
|
Each of these ICs cost...
|
|
huge...
|
|
unbelievable amount of money.
|
|
And so what they did was they had...
|
|
only tiny amount in the past.
|
|
And the only...
|
|
the purest best one would be used for the...
|
|
for the mission.
|
|
And so then...
|
|
and each one cost...
|
|
an...
|
|
to waste.
|
|
So what NASA did is they said, right...
|
|
for every bit of equipment you bought from now on...
|
|
you must...
|
|
if you can at all...
|
|
you use that IC because they cost them...
|
|
bloody thoughts and they're not going to waste them.
|
|
So all the engines were forced to use these ICs
|
|
and every...
|
|
and of course these engineers then went...
|
|
oh, this actually did very useful.
|
|
And they went off into industry the next thing
|
|
and explored enough of people wanting to use these ICs.
|
|
So they hadn't been for that...
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
But the way things change over the years is quite a matter.
|
|
It's...
|
|
there was some functionality been not enough...
|
|
for the job in hand.
|
|
Yeah. They would still...
|
|
they would still manage to do...
|
|
to use it just to sort of...
|
|
things that you put into it.
|
|
Because it's so expensive and you can't waste that sort of thing.
|
|
And of course all that knowledge that these engineers had...
|
|
went off into industries as they moved on.
|
|
And then...
|
|
I don't tell the people in the air that that was...
|
|
that was a salad at all.
|
|
So my next computer...
|
|
now I go back to where I was talking about.
|
|
Ah, this is too much.
|
|
Amiga...
|
|
Amiga for Ohio.
|
|
I think...
|
|
I've finally feeling it was a...
|
|
a dedicated EX25 program you could run.
|
|
It was quite sophisticated.
|
|
I think...
|
|
Amiga just about struggled to run it on its own sort of thing.
|
|
It was quite an advanced...
|
|
was that a 68,000 or something?
|
|
Yeah, it was quite advanced.
|
|
And it also had...
|
|
what do they call it?
|
|
Bit blitting and stuff like that.
|
|
Yeah, it built into it.
|
|
So that was quite sophisticated.
|
|
I remember reading about it at the time.
|
|
I never had one.
|
|
But yeah, it had some quite sophisticated and advanced features in it.
|
|
I wonder if the Dragon 32 had some sort of modium that did some of the extra work.
|
|
I can't remember.
|
|
But I seem to remember that...
|
|
I was introduced to the packet video on it on Amiga.
|
|
And I'm sure it was all done in software.
|
|
And I think maybe that's...
|
|
it was quite a...
|
|
and I was like multiple windows all working at the same time.
|
|
And doing stuff that was same.
|
|
Or maybe it was like a mailbox.
|
|
I can't remember that.
|
|
Maybe that's what it was.
|
|
I can't remember that.
|
|
But I was working in like a university at the time.
|
|
And that was in the era when inter-university data communications was...
|
|
I think it was pre-X25.
|
|
Maybe X25 was coming along.
|
|
It was all another protocol called HDLC at that time.
|
|
Which later on, X25 ran over HDLC.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
For, you know, wire style communications.
|
|
But...
|
|
Yeah. I can't remember what my friend used to do his...
|
|
his...
|
|
packet radio,
|
|
X25.
|
|
I don't know what the...
|
|
the differences are between X and AX.
|
|
But it was to do with the different packet sizes.
|
|
And more robustness because it's obviously over a real link.
|
|
But...
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And I think...
|
|
I said my memory is a bit hazy.
|
|
My PC was a 386.
|
|
And my keyboard just popped up again here.
|
|
A 386 DX.
|
|
What was that 386?
|
|
A DX32, I think it was.
|
|
Running Windows 3.1 if you all remember that.
|
|
I remember that.
|
|
Yeah. Absolutely.
|
|
That was when you need to run startup doors.
|
|
And then...
|
|
I changed into...
|
|
config.cs.
|
|
And I would have access to all of them.
|
|
And it did CD drivers and memory,
|
|
we all thought that was...
|
|
We all thought PO's PCs were nonsense.
|
|
I mean, I say we or...
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, the people who worked on mind frames looked at it and said,
|
|
that's just a toy.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Just shows how you can predict the torture.
|
|
No, that's...
|
|
We thought it was rubbish.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So the...
|
|
Whether fax is slow scan television,
|
|
most code and...
|
|
and packet radio.
|
|
And it had a basic mailbox system it as well.
|
|
And you could turn your computer off and leave this thing running.
|
|
I think you could also turn it off.
|
|
And it would remember the messages in your mailbox as well.
|
|
I'm a wee bit hazy about that.
|
|
But I had that for a while.
|
|
I think I ran that with my...
|
|
A 386 DX32 thing.
|
|
So you could...
|
|
To keep the memory.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It was basically...
|
|
I went through a CDL link to the...
|
|
to the MoDM.
|
|
And I was like...
|
|
I had a fancy DOS emulator program.
|
|
And I thought it was custom like...
|
|
Packed out of packet or something like that.
|
|
I couldn't find a reference to it anyway.
|
|
There was a strange DOS program which was...
|
|
And it was quite...
|
|
It was got a lot of options to it.
|
|
And there was a huge manual came with it.
|
|
When you go and look back in that era.
|
|
That particular slot of time which was sort of 1970s.
|
|
Maybe in maybe early 80s.
|
|
There's nothing very, very little on the web.
|
|
Because I assume that it's all in paper somewhere other.
|
|
Nobody's ever transcribed it.
|
|
Or maybe they are transcribing it in the archive.
|
|
But a lot of the papers go.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
It just shows how lucky we are.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But there is stuff going back to...
|
|
maybe after that time.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
That particular year.
|
|
I went back looking to see...
|
|
How did universities do networking in the 1970s?
|
|
And there's nothing.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
We...
|
|
I think I remember using...
|
|
What was it called then?
|
|
Oh, it was for DOS.
|
|
What was it called now?
|
|
No, I can't remember what it was called now.
|
|
What did it do?
|
|
It was a networking on DOS.
|
|
It was a DOS thing.
|
|
It wasn't Net Beauty or something.
|
|
Keeps something like that.
|
|
It was a DOS program in Iran.
|
|
It was something that REN Windows used it.
|
|
I don't remember much about it.
|
|
No, we used that at one point.
|
|
And I think I mentioned before that we used a network using...
|
|
...quacial cables.
|
|
And you would link them all together.
|
|
Clicking to make the link and Google it.
|
|
She's like, tums a focus on it.
|
|
Can I just click that.
|
|
You want to click that and make a hole.
|
|
That was quite funny.
|
|
It reminds me of...
|
|
When I moved to Edinburgh,
|
|
was working at the University of Indonesia,
|
|
eventually retired from her at Wart University.
|
|
We had a boroughs mainframe.
|
|
Which I never...
|
|
I think about boroughs because they're quite big companies.
|
|
And we've come to that place.
|
|
Yes, and it had, its terminals were run, we had set things up such that there were lots of
|
|
simple RS232 terminals around the campus running over three, three wire systems.
|
|
But the real way you're supposed to interface with these things, if you had the money,
|
|
and these are commercial machines that you expect to be a big business and spend a lot of money
|
|
was to use their addressable screen terminal thingies. They were monochrome, but they worked on
|
|
the principle, but each one had a two BNC connectors in the back, one of which was upstream,
|
|
and the other one was downstream. Rather than a TPC, I don't know, yes, without a TPCS.
|
|
No, it wasn't that sort of networking, you actually need to have all the machines on
|
|
for the guy right at the end to get anything. Everybody in the media had to be on it.
|
|
But that's the same network I'm talking about, because how you do it is you use a TPCS,
|
|
and you have one cable into the input, one cable in the output, and the third one would go into
|
|
the socket, but your terminal basically had a TPCS in that. And as you see, if somebody broke
|
|
that link and it had a terminal in the end, if you have a terminal in there and have a
|
|
thing that echoed stuff by a guy who did the right, the balance, the whole thing.
|
|
Yeah, because you could tell I had one, and other people down the corridor in other offices had
|
|
them, and you could tell that the guy upstream had unplugged his or had switched it off us,
|
|
and when everybody else has went down and said, Charlie, you turned to you, yeah, sorry.
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Oh, then with the day.
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Oh, what? It was such crap.
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Kind of like you thought it was a business or something?
|
|
Well, yeah, yeah, when we heard of Ethernet, when you just had this long bus with TPCS in it,
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and on all the same traffic, well, same principle, but we're just wide up different.
|
|
How's it you're saying?
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I think my final thing about my current PC is a Dell OptiPlex X business machine,
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runs a Ubuntu 18 LTS, where it's a 5-year-old, I go 18.
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|
And I've got Windows 7 as well, which I need, because in order to program some of that,
|
|
I'm actually going to get that I've got, it's got 4GB RAM, and a Pentium dual-core E5500 CPU,
|
|
apparently, clocked at 2.8GHz, that means anything to me, particularly, but I know it's slow,
|
|
I turned it on and got a couple of key come back, and it's booted up, that sort of thing.
|
|
But it's amazing what you can do, actually, it's not, I don't think it's slow.
|
|
Well, to be fair, I think Ubuntu gets, I think that, obviously, that latest Ubuntu 18 that I had at the time
|
|
is a bit slower than the previous ones. Every time I'm forced to upgrade, it gets a bit slower because of it.
|
|
But considering, unlike, isn't running like a bag of nails, it runs perfectly fine,
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|
it's just a bit slow booting, really. And I can't believe how long I've been to support,
|
|
Ubuntu 18, that's quite impressive. And I can still get the repositories and
|
|
download software, it's okay, we'll be the latest stuff, but it's still working, and it's still,
|
|
and you get software patches occasionally and all that, so it's pretty good.
|
|
And I've been able to do a bit of video editing on it, and it was surprising,
|
|
and, although I said, we know here that it terrifies me, the thought of, well, I can't get to do
|
|
anything anyway, but the thought of having to replace the PC gets on point, and do
|
|
them with a new, what's it called, the secured boot, and all that stuff. I don't like any of that
|
|
works. I'm a BIOS man, so I don't know how many of you. Of course, you've beat yourself.
|
|
I recently bought a state of the album, I don't know how to state it out, but it's
|
|
hell of a lot faster than what I had before. So, mind of Ryzen, AMD, Box, lots of memory and
|
|
a big beefy graphics card and stuff. So, yeah, but it's still sat on the floor waiting for me to
|
|
have fun the time to turn your scenes out. So, you see, you've not installed this software,
|
|
right? It comes with software. I bought it from Tuxedo, computers in Germany, and it comes with
|
|
something they call Tuxedo, or this, I'm not sure what it is. But is it Linux? Yeah, oh, yeah,
|
|
oh, yeah, Linux, Linux, built specifically for running Linux. So, yeah, it's pretty good.
|
|
It's a desktop machine, so it's in a big, big case with fans and all that sort of stuff.
|
|
Although, it's just, you can actually want to cool it.
|
|
Fountains of Versailles and my desk and stuff. I think I'll probably give that one a minute,
|
|
wow. But yes, it's, but yeah, I can't say much about it other than it. The box is black.
|
|
It's got a computer in it. And I'm looking for it at some point in the future. I'm going to
|
|
just not be so busy on HPR things and set it up.
|
|
You're a bit like me, my Raspberry Pi, I can't get like done either, and I'm looking at my,
|
|
I've got an old Raspberry Pi that I use as a server up and up in the room, and it's, I think,
|
|
I know about 90% full LSD card, something like that. So, I need to, a plan was to,
|
|
to sort of get this other one up and running before I run out of space.
|
|
Yeah, yeah. I've got, yeah, my, my Raspberry Pi development gets bogged down, so
|
|
easy. I've got two pi-4s that I set up after Christmas, running pi-hole. One's running pi-hole.
|
|
I'm going to put the pi-hole on, but it's the plan, but it, all the other plans to do so.
|
|
And I've got a lot of other pi's lurking about, no more fours, but I've got five. I think I said
|
|
to do this before when we were chatting, but trying to work at how's best to set up a pi-5.
|
|
I've got all these din rails with, with pies on them. Right. And you know, the sort of rails that
|
|
you get in electrical housings and that type of thing. And so, I wanted to try and mount the pi-5
|
|
on the din rails, but it means I really need to invent a carrier for it, which I haven't done yet.
|
|
I was going to screw it to a bit of a hard board, like, or Mason, is that called it?
|
|
Are you going to print yourself one, are you?
|
|
Well, probably in ultimately, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Back in, yeah. Of course, I've all got my own 3D printer, of course.
|
|
It would be fun to, I do have a 3D printer.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
As I've said before, but yeah, yeah, yeah. I did rebuild the enclosure for it.
|
|
It still needs some, some work to my enclosure.
|
|
You're pretending recently, yeah.
|
|
No, I haven't. I haven't. It's, yeah, I really need to come up with a Raspberry Pi 5 case design,
|
|
or there are ones out there that I could use. But, yeah.
|
|
It's still a bit new to five, isn't it?
|
|
Yeah, although there's a lot, I've got a 5 with the card underneath it, which holds NVMe
|
|
M2, is that called an SSD?
|
|
Yeah, it's like, I can't remember what size it is.
|
|
Nothing huge, 500 gig or something, but getting something that will hold that and also keep
|
|
a bit of a dust off and be convenient. I've got my Raspberry Pi's up on a high shelf
|
|
near my desktop machines, so I want to do something similar.
|
|
And, yeah, it's all things that I'll be doing that soon, but then soon doesn't come.
|
|
Oh, absolutely, I don't know what to do.
|
|
Probably, I'll get off something I'll fall over and I'll have a little fair-faiting
|
|
6-man Raspberry Pi on my PC, or maybe both at the same time you don't know that.
|
|
Yes, I had a, I wasn't going to talk about this, but I did have a thing recently with,
|
|
it was in April, my current desktop machine suddenly failed on me, and it was because I had to apply,
|
|
I tried to apply an update, and somehow rather the update, it got itself, it might be something
|
|
to do with the Debian change over, because Debian versions are changed within that period,
|
|
or not that precise period, but just before where the updates are decided,
|
|
well, you do actually need all this software here, I'm just going to chuck it out,
|
|
usually it says, this is all going to go, but we've got all these lovely new ones to replace,
|
|
so we didn't do the replace bit, it ended up with a machine that was more and less dead,
|
|
because of the update, so.
|
|
Would a Debian, the thing was, I don't know, did Debian beast, what was it?
|
|
No, it's a Debian testing, which you might say is my own fault, I deserve everything.
|
|
No one, it took me the whole weekend, maybe four days in total,
|
|
you were just on a point in place to start on your PC, and then this all hell broke loose.
|
|
I did manage to repair it by a voucher of going into the console, it wouldn't boot up,
|
|
but it would go into some sort of state where if you did Control Alt F1,
|
|
yeah, actually, the quantity you can get into the console, so I've done that for three years.
|
|
Then you've got a console, a globalness route, and then I could try
|
|
repairing it by using app to install things,
|
|
granted I managed to bring back KDE to a point where it would actually log in again,
|
|
wow, and then there was quite a lot missing. Why when I click on this icon, does it not start up?
|
|
You know, thingy, well, because it got deleted, but the icon didn't.
|
|
Yeah, it sounds absolutely like me.
|
|
But, well, yeah, that was my own stupid fault, not doing proper upgrades, I think.
|
|
Right, I got a summer situation, I was, my last brief pie, was it my pie?
|
|
It was something I upgrade, I think it was, yeah, it must have been the pie,
|
|
and it was my server, the one I'm still using, and I upgraded it once before,
|
|
and it was successful, that's asked for a number of years, and then I upgraded it again,
|
|
and next time it failed, and just, just, exactly, I just gave up as well.
|
|
Because I think I, because I think I managed to have it shrunk it down, I was able to
|
|
repeat it back on the SD, so roll back basically, and just give up.
|
|
So it's not about the date, but, yeah, which is why I need to get a new pie,
|
|
yeah, but yeah, I did, my laptop also, the laptop I had was running KDE neon,
|
|
I hadn't, I don't use the laptop very often, but is there as a sort of fallback,
|
|
if things go bad? And I tried KDE neon, and it was basically telling me, well,
|
|
you've left this so long that you can't update anymore, because the, the, the,
|
|
the repositories with the next stuff you need to move to, to get to where you want to be.
|
|
It's gone, it's gone, there's nothing there anymore, so, so I went, oh,
|
|
curse words, yeah, and I just blasted Linux mint on it, just, just, get it going.
|
|
Linux Mint looks really nice, is there's not played with it for years?
|
|
No, it needs a lot, so I'm quite looking forward to, to getting that, to figure out.
|
|
Yeah, it's a trouble with, you know, this lovely process and everything,
|
|
people just, I'm guessing the, well, I don't know what to do with it, but when does
|
|
the, just, just chuck the laptop being getting you when I suppose people do, yeah, yeah,
|
|
but like, well, that's an i3, so it's fairly weedy, but it's still, yeah, very useful,
|
|
with the Linux, with the Linux version of it, it's still usable for all manner of things,
|
|
so yeah, it's useful to have something that you can, I was going to bring it with me today,
|
|
but I haven't got it set up yet, but maybe next time we meet, I'll bring it.
|
|
I still use my, well, it's only related to, to log into my server, but I still use my
|
|
triple EPC, as I use that, it's very, very useful for that sort of thing, you know.
|
|
Yeah, mine is still, still alive, but it's just a good deal.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I think plugged in all the team, but that's all right.
|
|
Yeah, it's, yeah, it was, it was a lovely machine, I used that a lot at one time.
|
|
Yeah, which makes off crushed.
|
|
Yeah, I think more or less.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I know, I was very sad, yeah.
|
|
I managed to get the, the anti-modus of discount when I bought it, I think, I think I said,
|
|
right, I'm going to remove my windows off here, because it wasn't the one that you got with,
|
|
with the version of Linux.
|
|
All right, I've just missed that, and it came with windows, and I said, I'm not going to use
|
|
windows, I'm going to blitz it, so can I get a discount please?
|
|
Yeah, and they said, it sort of looks like, wow, god, we're going to have those.
|
|
Yeah, but I got, I got a, got a 50 quinoff, it wasn't that bad.
|
|
So, I felt like one something anyway, even if it wasn't.
|
|
Wait, wait, wow.
|
|
Is that one with this, the bigger screen actually, because I think I've got this,
|
|
I've got this, I've got this, I've got this, the seven of them was a small one, a small screen,
|
|
I think.
|
|
Yeah, it was just something like a 1,000, something like that.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that was, that was a nice, neat little machine, yeah.
|
|
So, we're at, we're at an hour.
|
|
No, no, no, I think I spoke very good.
|
|
An hour.
|
|
Yeah, wow, hit that ham.
|
|
Yeah, I don't know, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, yeah.
|
|
I mean, we get, get to talking.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
After having spent a good,
|
|
Lee time having lunch together and, yeah, and then talking as well.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Oh, well, I hope, I hope there's been some interesting comments in there,
|
|
people will not switch off immediately.
|
|
So, so it's good.
|
|
Yeah, thank you very much.
|
|
I, I'm, I'm, yeah, I want to be back at the some point I'm shooting the future.
|
|
So, yeah, yeah, yeah.
|
|
Bye for now, everybody.
|
|
Bye to everybody.
|
|
Bye.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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