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(322,818,'2011-10-26 15:13:39','pokey','Thanks for the feedback guys','Those are all great suggestions. I may need to use the velcro one, as i broke the clip off of my clip. \r\n\r\nThe lock screen function is a new one to me. I\'ll have to try it.\r\n\r\nYes you can charge the Clip without it booting into the stock firmware if it\'s powered on in Rockbox. That\'s how I charge it.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(323,820,'2011-09-24 03:50:08','DeepGeek','A Big-Name server you may not have considered','Hi, Klaatu,\r\nLoved the podcast. Your idea of urging listeners to try different servers was great, but your choices of nginx, apache, and lighttpd seemed to indicate an interest in \"big name\" webservers.\r\nI thought you might want to consider something else \"big name.\" Did you know that the webserver that powers AOL, aolserver4, is an open-source project? Check out aolserver.com. They boast not of some obscure benchmark, but rather of extreme scalability and a huge number of languages embedded and multiple API\'s, and multiple database platform support.\r\nI haven\'t tired it myself, but I thought you\'d like to know...\r\n---\r\nDeepGeek','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(324,820,'2011-09-26 02:43:53','klaatu','aolserver','well let\'s wait for AOL to prove themselves before we go jumping to adopt their server. I\'ve personally not heard of them but I\'ll keep an eye out.','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(325,820,'2011-10-04 12:34:23','klaatu','ADDENDUM','It was brought to my attention that I say something like \"it\'s better to have your server doing things like DHCP than to let your router handle it\"\r\n\r\nWhat I meant to say was...\r\n\"it\'s better FOR ME to have my server to DHCP and stuff than to let some little under-powered router do it\" -- but of course your network will be different from mine, with different needs and different loads and all that...so for you, it might make sense for you to just let your router handle DHCP.\r\n\r\nIf you have questions of course you can always email me and I\'ll answer whatever I can. klaatu-at-goListenToGnuWorldOrderOggcastForMyEmailAddress.com','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(326,820,'2011-10-05 21:14:50','Philip Durbin','sites-enabled, sites-available','Being a Red Hat guy, I hadn\'t heard of Debian\'s sites-enabled, sites-available convention, but I found some more about it here: https://www.control-escape.com/web/configuring-apache2-debian.html\r\n\r\nOn Red Hat systems, you could keep your VirtualHost config in /etc/httpd/conf.d/com_mysite_www.conf and disable it by changing the name to /etc/httpd/conf.d/com_mysite_www.conf.disabled. *.conf files in /etc/httpd/conf.d are included by default, as described here: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-disable-apache-modules-under-linux-unix/','2022-02-14 13:15:35'),
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(327,820,'2011-10-06 13:07:52','klaatu','nice tip','Thanks for the tip. It has just so happened that I haven\'t really run that many web servers on RHEL or Fedora. I\'d like to do more but as long as I keep inheriting powerPC boxen I imagine it will continue to be Debian-based servers (thank you Debian!)\r\n\r\nBut I like this tip, so thanks.\r\n\r\nBTW if anyone is messing around with Drupal on a Fedora server, there\'s a nifty rpm, i think called drupal7, which centralizes the core drupal stuff into /usr/shared/ and allows you to symlink stuff in /var/www to point to the drupal sites. Really fun stuff.\r\n\r\n\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(328,821,'2011-09-26 21:16:28','TheL0grus','','This has to be one of the worst reviews I have ever heard. I am typing this on my Acre a500 tablet. I spent a lot of time researching the tablet I wanted before I purchased one which the reviewer clearly didn\'t do. My first choice is this one ','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(329,821,'2011-09-28 16:46:37','Brad','Amazon Kindle Fire','I\'m excited to say that Amazon has their \'Android\' Kindle Fire tablet available for pre-order. I found out about it while listening to your tablet rant, and thought it would make a good update. \r\n\r\nThanks for all the content Mr. Gadget, keep up the good work!','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(330,821,'2011-09-29 02:09:27','John','I agree... ','This is a copy of a post I made a while back about Android stuff...\r\nJohn Zimm - Aug 22, 2011 - Limited\r\n\"This is my response to Bryan on LAS and his ideas on HP and Linux ect.. I am a newbie to Linux. I have completely switched over to it. So, here I am enjoying my old HP desktop with Pentium 4. Then I learn about the bearded dude, and I loved what he is saying about GNU. So I started to feel like this whole Linux thing isn’t fake and is not lying to me. That is important. For example, I got made when I heard new ideas were formulated and High schools did not teach me these new things because they were not what we had been taught in the past… no flexibility, no courage and no respect for us to change the school books to reflect how history really looked or what led up to it. Or how we are animals ect. ect. You get the picture. So, now, after watching LAS and listening to other shows, I am interested in paying the data plan (for the first time) and getting a smart phone. So, I was really confused when I heard everyone talk about Android this and Android that. I don’t give a shit about a cheap knock-off of Linux, or something that runs Linux in the background, or how ever you say it. I wanted to stick with what I just learned… LINUX. Everyone was talking about how flexible and scalable Linux is, but I can’t have it on my phone? So, I moved on. I started to get interested in tablets… HOLLY SHIT, THOSE RUN THAT STUPID ANDROID, FAKE LINUX TOO. Remember, I am a newbie, so I don’t have a sense of where things in Linux came from or started, or how great Android is. Sorry if I don’t appreciate Android. But let\'s get real, The big company Google, didn\'t fit into my new found ideals. But, I want my Mint 11 on a tablet. Is that to much to ask for. I hate that I am not smart. I am just a geek-wanna-be. I hate that I can’t pick one device at a time, (phone or tablet) and make Mint 11 run on it, then upload an iso for everyone to use. So, when I heard Bryan say that about how we should not be relying on other OSs that can be pulled after 46 days… I am totally , totally totally, on board. I do have other skills, and maybe I can help in some way. Let’s get this BITCH rolling. When I used to daydream about this, I came up with naming the device that I was going to invent… wait for it… “L”. And after watching the LAS show, I came up with calling the distro, “GLD”, for GNU Linux Debian. PS,as I am about to hit share, I see a post below my,that says, \"Touchdroid, Android for HP Touchpad Project Started\". Why not Linux, for HP Touchpad project??????????????????????????\"','2017-09-09 07:41:22'),
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(1316,1881,'2015-10-19 20:24:03','Fin','Music fail','Why did the default theme play at the end, when clacke\'s a capella version was so good!\r\n\r\nInteresting journey BTW. The audio wasn\'t that bad.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1317,1881,'2015-10-23 16:00:35','Dave Morriss','Great episode','This was a very interesting show. I knew very little of what you spoke about, never having had an Amiga, nor having used dial-up with Linux. Thanks for the insight.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1318,1881,'2015-10-26 11:35:10','clacke','Thanks','Cool! Glad I added something new. I was worried that yet another Linux backstory might be redundant, but I guess everyone comes from their own direction.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1319,1884,'2015-10-27 19:07:10','Frank','','Thank you, Dave. A very nice piece of work.\r\n\r\nI\'ve been trying to understand regular expressions (I guess because I like puzzles). In addition to giving me a better understanding of bash, the examples you gave show similarity with some regular expression syntax, which in turn gives some context to regular expression syntax, so that it does not seem to be quite so foreign a language.\r\n','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1320,1884,'2015-10-27 19:49:37','Dave Morriss','Thanks Frank, glad you enjoyed it','The regular expression subject is a complex one. I\'ve been wondering whether I should try and pass on what I know about it. \r\n\r\nStrictly this brace expansion topic is in the area of using patterns to match filenames. Confusingly this is similar but not the same as regular expressions. In later episodes in this (not-)series I want to talk more about filename matching then look at regular expressions in the context of Bash.\r\n\r\nReally, the regular expression subject could (should?) be stand-alone and should look at what\'s available in Bash, grep, sed, awk, etc. I use Perl regular expresions the most but I hesitate to go too deep there because they are mind-blowing :-)','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1321,1884,'2015-10-28 22:01:14','Frank','','Indeed regular expressions are complex. They make my brain hurt.\r\n\r\nSeeing some kinship with shell commands--some indication that whoever perpetrated regex did not just make it up from the whole cloth--is somehow comforting.\r\n\r\nI recently stumbled over a great *beginner\'s* tutorial.\r\nhttps://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/using-grep-regular-expressions-to-search-for-text-patterns-in-linux#basic-usage\r\n\r\nWhat makes it so good is that it uses the GPL text found on every Linux computer for the exercises, so you can practice the examples and try different options as you read along.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1322,1884,'2015-10-29 11:44:38','Dave Morriss','Regular expressions','I skimmed through that tutorial, and it looks very good. Thanks for the pointer.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1323,1887,'2015-11-08 21:50:51','Bob Jonkman','Aerating boiling water','Hi JustMe: You mention that boiling the water will aerate it. Actually, just the opposite is true: Heating the water drives out the dissolved air, since gases are more soluble in cold liquid than hot liquid. Think of a carbonated soda, which is bubbly when it comes out of the fridge, but goes flat as it warms up.\r\n\r\nThe bubbles you see in water at a roiling boil is actually water vapour, the water itself turned to gas. If this gas cools it just becomes liquid water again. When you let boiled water cool down to drinking temperature it has a peculiar flat taste, which I think is because it has less dissolved air than fresh water from a mountain stream. If you vigorously stir previously boiled water with a whisk it\'ll re-aerate it, and remove some of that peculiar flat taste.\r\n\r\nThanx for the episode!\r\n\r\n--Bob, who needs to record his own HPR episode','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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(1324,1889,'2015-10-30 05:48:08','GNULinuxRTM','Execellent Episode.','Just listened while walking the Dog, on a cloudy, spooky night days before Halloween.\r\n\r\nLoved the delivery and working in all the HPR references.\r\n\r\nNow I gotta learn more about the meegopad T-02.','2017-09-09 07:41:28'),
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