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(2355,2514,'2018-03-22 07:24:04','thelovebug','Blind faith','I haven\'t even listened to the episode yet, but I\'ve just ordered myself one of those calculator kits from Amazon!','2018-03-22 09:24:12'),
(2356,2514,'2018-03-22 19:46:26','NYbill','Enjoy the kit, Dave.','I warn about a few small pitfalls I ran into while building it. Hope it saves you the same trouble.','2018-03-22 20:12:51'),
(2357,2508,'2018-03-23 07:44:35','clacke','You\'re right to worry, but ...','Musk isn\'t the only one. He\'s the one who got the furthest, and who has the grandest master plan. But don\'t forget about Bezos and Branson and their space ventures.\r\n\r\nSo, I don\'t think we\'re pinning our hopes on one man. But my answer reveals something else. We\'re still pinning our hopes on Great Men (as in the Great Man theory of history). Musk, Bezos and Branson aren\'t geniuses in the sense that they are sciencing and engineering all this stuff when nobody else could, they\'re just hiring the people who do.\r\n\r\nStill, I think people fawning over Musk is awesome, because it means people are pinning their hopes on research, engineering and entrepreneurship, because that\'s what he symbolizes. And hustling the money and funneling it in the right direction isn\'t nothing either.\r\n\r\nIt\'s far better than people admiring people who literally don\'t contribute anything, or are contributing negatively, to furthering the knowledge and power of the human race, like David Avocado Wolfe, Dr. Oz or Gwyneth Paltrow.\r\n\r\nOk, so we\'re not at the mercy at a single man, but we are at the mercy of three men? No. Don\'t forget about China and India, and old spacer-travelers Japan and ESA, and even Russia! They\'re also further into space than Bezos or Branson, and on some axes further than Musk.\r\n\r\nI\'m not overly worried. Humanity will get our eggs in a second basket before the century is over.','2018-03-23 08:24:41'),
(2358,2514,'2018-03-24 23:57:21','thelovebug','Done and dusted','Bought it, built it! Surprisingly straight forward, thanks a) to your advice nybill, and b) the link you couldn\'t get to worked first time for me had a pretty detailed picture guide.\r\n\r\n\"It\'s a bit clicky,\" says the wife, so all the more reason to use it.\r\n\r\nSo, here is a PG-13 picture of the calculator in action:\r\nhttps://next.thelovebug.org/index.php/s/apL8pxrX7Spd6Bc\r\n\r\n(I managed to break my GMG instance without even knowing about it! My next project, perhaps?)','2018-03-25 09:10:46'),
(2359,2505,'2018-03-25 16:56:39','Dave Morriss','Thanks for the comments','Thanks Jan, Clinton Roy and clacke.\r\n\r\nI\'m glad you are finding the series useful.\r\n\r\nI had known of Readline\'s existence for years, and that there were some features that might be useful, but had never spent the time to find out what it could do. I am most surprised at the amount of work that has gone into this library and the great features it offers.\r\n\r\nI expect to be able to get another couple of shows from it before I\'m finished, and there\'s scope for others to contribute too if they work out cool things to do with it!','2018-03-25 16:58:18'),
(2360,2508,'2018-03-26 19:20:28','Lostnbronx','I Agree With You, But...','I think China is our biggest chance for competition, in the long run, but they aren\'t moving quickly. That may change. I hope it does.\r\n\r\nI also believe that the commercialization of space is the only real future it can possibly have. If people can\'t at least hope for a better life out there, they won\'t bother. China may be a big player here too, since it has no problem sponsoring large-scale commercial ventures.\r\n\r\nLooked at from that point-of-view, though, business people like Musk and the others may turn out to be our last best hope for humanity, after all. I sure wouldn\'t mind being wrong!','2018-03-26 19:28:01'),
(2361,2516,'2018-03-27 01:17:50','Mike Ray','Intro to git','Great podcast.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been using git for a few years now but there is something new even for a seasoned git user in this series.\r\n\r\nIt\'s a subject that needs clarity, because a lot of the online stuff about git is complex and confusing.\r\n\r\nMore please. And more about this kind of DevOps related stuff, and more server config and admin','2018-03-27 06:53:42'),
(2362,2515,'2018-03-27 08:10:58','clacke','Markdown shownotes','klaatu and Ken were discussing the merits on Markdown and the horribleness of the multitude of markdown flavors.\r\n\r\nHere\'s what I do for shownotes: I write on hashify.me.\r\n\r\nMarkdown on the left, live rendered text on the right so you can easily Ctrl-click links to check them etc. Then I mark the text on the right, right-click and choose \"View selection source\" (this is on Firefox). It opens a new tab with the source almost correctly marked. I mark it, copy and then paste into the show notes textbox and choose HTML5 as text type.','2018-03-27 08:14:15'),
(2363,2508,'2018-03-28 10:48:12','Ken Fallon','Wendover Productions video','Interesting \"Space: The Next Trillion Dollar Industry\"\r\n\r\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiRBQxHrxNw','2018-03-28 11:10:23'),
(2364,2537,'2018-03-29 01:17:37','clacke','An update','When uploading the other shows I noticed that they had some weird clicks and jumps in them. Apparently I had turned on \"skip silence\" when I played with the settings. My recommendation is: don\'t.','2018-03-29 07:50:14'),
(2365,2453,'2018-03-31 19:52:18','Hipstre','GNU Readline 2','Enjoying the series. I am doing a tutorial on creating a LisP in C (which I heard about on HPR) and it uses Readline. So I came back to listen to this series. I always learn something. There\'s always an \"Aha!\" moment. Thanks!','2018-03-31 20:05:42'),
(2366,2518,'2018-04-01 01:02:47','mongo','Good tutorial','Steve Saner gives a good tutorial on a way to add Windows to a Linux computer. I found the part about getting data from his old encrypted drive most interesting, as I have been a bit afraid of encrypting a drive for fear of finding myself locked out.\r\n\r\nI am glad that he was able to use some information from my HPR show from last year on the subject of adding dual boot to my laptop.\r\n\r\nAlso, very good show notes for someone following his lead.','2018-04-01 06:28:55'),
(2367,2521,'2018-04-02 14:37:25','the_remora','Handle Origin','I pulled the name the_remora from Glenn Cook\'s Garrett PI series of novels. The Remora is a nickname of a tertiary character from the later books in the series.','2018-04-02 14:46:38'),
(2368,2515,'2018-04-04 01:35:03','clacke','ASCIIDoc shownotes','If you like ASCIIDoc, you can type your shownotes on https://asciidoclive.com/ and then do the same thing as I described above with hashify.me.\r\n\r\nJust like hashify, asciidoclive allows you to type on the left, see the result on the right.','2018-04-04 07:15:23'),
(2369,2515,'2018-04-04 12:00:53','Dave Morriss','Markdown/ASCIIDoc','Hi clacke,\r\n\r\nA couple of interesting finds. I use both Markdown (Pandoc flavour mostly) and ASCIIDoc (via Asciidoctor).\r\n\r\nI write all my HPR shownotes with Markdown, using Vim on one monitor and a browser on the other, building the output with Pandoc via Make, using Vim\'s \'make\' interface to do it.\r\n\r\nI also like to write a journal per project and use ASCIIDoc for that because I can generate much more interesting documents with colour, side notes, icons, good tables and so on. Again Vim lets me type the document with syntax highlighting, build it with \'make\' and display it on my right-hand monitor using a dedicated browser (I like QupZilla at the moment).\r\n\r\nMy solution is probably massively over-engineered but I like it :-)','2018-04-04 12:03:04'),
@@ -986,15 +998,3 @@
(3352,3525,'2022-02-10 22:21:57','wynaut','thanks!','I learnt something new here, will listen to the other episodes in this series too.','2022-02-10 23:37:11'),
(3353,3525,'2022-02-11 10:22:12','Dave Morriss','Re: processes','Hi dnt,\r\n\r\nI am also reluctant to listen to people floundering about with these apparently random singulars and plurals. After all there are some amazingly good resources on the internet that explain unusual words and where they came from.\r\n\r\nHowever, I suppose you need some sort of incentive to look.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:19'),
(3354,3525,'2022-02-11 10:26:08','Dave Morriss','Hope you find the episodes useful, wynaut','Hi,\r\n\r\nThanks for the comment. I hope you find the whole set of episodes useful.\r\n\r\nDave','2022-02-11 20:27:20'),
(3355,3315,'2022-02-13 14:56:47','Ken Fallon','Yet another one','Load memory ....','2022-02-13 20:51:47'),
(3356,3286,'2022-02-13 17:25:47','timttmy','Me too!','Glad at least two of us find it useful.\r\nJust setting up a new (to me) gen 2 thinkpad x1 yoga and needed to remind myself how to create client keys :)','2022-02-13 20:51:47'),
(3491,3644,'2022-07-16 10:23:47','Archer72','Pinball machines and English','That was interesting. I remember working at a place that assembled the lighting backplanes for these machines. I would get to play on the machines at lunch. Two of the memorable ones were Star Wars, The Adams Family and Last Action Hero.\r\n\r\nOh, and your English is just fine, and you might find Dave Morris\' series on English idiosyncrasies a good listen, starting with \r\nhpr2558 :: Battling with English - part 1','2022-07-16 18:35:37'),
(3357,3527,'2022-02-15 18:41:04','Windigo','PATA and Netbooks','My Dell Mini 9 has the same PATA interface, so it seems like it was all the rage during the netbook days.\r\n\r\nBetween that and 32-bit Atom processors, I\'m afraid mine is reaching the limit of its usefulness. Mine\'s relegated to console and framebuffer apps. Kudos on getting yours running Chromium!','2022-02-15 19:34:23'),
(3358,3533,'2022-02-16 07:55:18','tuturto','interesting','Porridge is one of those things that many people probably find very mundane. But when you start digging into details, you\'ll discover a lot of interesting tidbits. Like what kind of grains are for animals and what are for humans varies from culture to culture and from time period to other.','2022-02-16 20:01:18'),
(3359,3533,'2022-02-16 15:10:20','Trey','Steel Cut Oats','Thank you for sharing. I absolutely LOVE steel cut oats. Much better than rolled, IMHO.\r\n\r\nLooking forward to your next podcast topic.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
(3360,3531,'2022-02-16 15:14:26','Trey','Old school KVMs','Thank you for sharing. I remember taking apart old, mechanical KVM switches to clean the contacts for more reliable operation. \r\nI still have several electronic KVMs floating around, but haven\'s had the need in quite some time. I definitely need to look into using Barrier.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work.','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
(3361,3526,'2022-02-16 15:19:05','Trey','Comments','It was sad that there were no comments on the December Community News episode, so I had to leave a comment for this one.\r\n\r\nYou all do an amazing job ensuring that every podcast for the month receives discussion. As a (infrequent) HPR contributor, I enjoy comments on my podcasts and hearing your thoughts. Surely others feel the same.\r\n\r\nKeep up the great work!','2022-02-16 20:01:19'),
(3362,3533,'2022-02-16 15:32:48','Dave Morriss','Great show topic, excellent show','Hi,\r\n\r\nI was listening to this while making porridge for my breakfast. I have some steel cut oats - I live in Scotland after all - but I tend to prefer rolled oats, probably because it\'s what I was brought up on (in England mind you). In Scotland steel cut oats are called pin head oatmeal.\r\n\r\nMy porridge gets salt and a teaspoon of honey. I\'m diabetic so I avoid sugar, but only recently found that honey has a low glycaemic index (about 50 probably) so is not going to give me a sugar high like sugar would - at least not a teaspoon of it!\r\n\r\nI used to visit the Far East each year many years ago, and I became quite keen on rice porridge - congee. It\'s very bland but is eaten with lots of added stuff like pickles and roasted peanuts, and was pretty good for breakfast.\r\n\r\nGreat show. I enjoyed the ambient sound aspects a lot.\r\n','2022-02-16 12:09:46'),
(3363,3472,'2022-02-17 21:23:34','Stache_AF','Thank you','Your podcast gave me the idea to do the same for my state\'s daily COVID updates. I was able to find the API info and break it out so I could extract my state\'s, county\'s, and zip code\'s respective numbers so I don\'t have to click through several interactive maps.','2022-02-17 21:25:30'),
(3364,3534,'2022-02-18 18:34:53','Aaronb','At 66 Years old. . . .','I bought one about 4 years ago. I\'m surprised how much I use it. Here is a nice youtube video that show how even cheap ebay versions of electronic ones are great.','2022-02-18 20:33:57'),
(3365,3534,'2022-02-18 18:36:35','Aaronb','sorry forgot the Link','https://youtu.be/fKSSY1gzCEs','2022-02-18 20:33:57'),