Hacker Public Radio

The Hacker Public Radio Old Microphone Logo

https://hackerpublicradio.org/about.html

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 17m. Bisher sind 4084 Folge(n) erschienen. Dies ist ein täglich erscheinender Podcast.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 4 days 23 minutes

subscribe
share






HPR0664: A Little Bit of Python: Episode 13


A Little Bit of Python is an occasional podcast on all things Python. The four protagonists on the show are all core Python developers and members of the Python Software Foundation. They are: Michael Foord (author of IronPython in Action and maintainer of unittest), Andrew Kuchling (creator of PyCrypto and one of the python.org webmasters), Steve Holden (PSF chairman), Dr. Brett Cannon (author of importlib amongst other things) and Jesse Noller (maintainer of multiprocessing)...


share








 February 17, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0663: What is on your mp3 player


errata and clarifications I use hpodder to catch podcasts. Great podcast client for hackers IMO; Easy to script and make it do what you want. I run it from a cronjob nightly. links Planet Money: https://goo.gl/KC7Fb rockbox: https://www.rockbox...


share








 February 16, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0662: DD-WRT


Apologies for the bad quality. I really was installing DD-WRT whilst recording, for the first time! I tried to tidy it up but it’s still fairly rough! Go the the DD-WRT website. Go to Router Database. Search for your Router (or one you might want to buy), in my case the Linksys WRT54GL from NewEgg (note: NOT a sponsored link and other shops are available)...


share








 February 15, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0661: War walking with smart phone


War walking with smart phone quvmoh@gmail.com https://webword.com/moving/warchalking.html https://code.google.com/p/wardrive-android/ https://wigle.net/


share








 February 14, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0660: An argument against emulators when retrocomputing


I was moved by Ken Fallon's cry for submissions, so here's my first podcast: An argument against using emulators when retrocomputing. In short, there are some semi-intangible things you can't get from an emulator that you can only get from the real hardware, so use real hardware when you can. Examples contained within. Mentioned or hinted at on the show: Andrew Jenner's proposal to rewrite the CRTC emulation for MESS: https://www.reenigne...


share








 February 11, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0659: 10 Buck Review - Serenity


Step into the verse where the signal can’t be stopped. https://tenbuckreview.net/2009/episode-5-serenity/


share








 February 10, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0658: Music Management Consoles


Degrees of Freedom is a podcast about Free-Libre Open Source Software brought to you by Courtney Schauer and me. We're still exploring goals and dreams for the show (in other words, the degrees of freedom are high) but we do know that the show will be bi-monthly (in the fortnight way, not the every two months way) and will start with reviews of different applications for GNU/Linux. Rhythmbox Songbird Gnome Music Project Banshee Amarok Miro Guayadeque Muine


share








 February 9, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0657: HPR Video Proposal


Myself and others would like to release video shows to acompany regular HPR shows. I am propsing this to the HPR audience and am looking for comments.


share








 February 8, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0656: My first steps in recovering pictures


This is my first podcast ever and I show you how easy it is to recover pictures from a dying disk. It's not high-tech as I found out (using the commands anyway). Links to the used tools and PartedMagic: Photorec (recover pictures and other files on havily dammaged filesystem) https://www.cgsecurity...


share








 February 7, 2011  n/a
 
 

HPR0655: Read 'n Code - 2 Camus's The Plague and Reddit.com


In this podcast I review the comments I received for the first one as well as bring the good news of the website being complete. Also, I go over a few quotes from The Plague by Albert Camus and compare it to the popular hacker news website, Reddit.com. More time is spent on the Read part than the Code part, but maybe that will even out in the future. It's easier to cover book quotes than code snippets from Erlang on a podcast.


share








 February 4, 2011  n/a