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Hacker Public Radio is an podcast that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Our shows are produced by the community (you) and can be on any topic that are of interest to hackers and hobbyists.
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HPR4120: South Carolina to Home
We finish our South Carolina visit touring a plantation, and then go
to see a magnificent live oak tree. After that, it is time for us to
head back home.
Links
https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjAvW57
https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjAvWaN
https://www.palain.com/travel/rv-trip-2022-2023-southeast-us/south-carolina-to-home/ -
HPR4119: Cov's Jams 003
Welcome to the third episode of Cov's jams.
We'll start with a couple electronica pieces from Arkadii Kaplan:
Corporate Success and Chasing the Shadow. I also featured Kaplan in the
second episode of Cov's Jams, way back in 2016. I'm glad to be back.
Next up are two dubstep selections: Time to Army by Muciojad and
Sweet Nothing by K4MMERER.
Daniel Bautista's Symphony Number 5 will close out the episode.
Daniel Bautista wins at Free, Libre, and Open Source. Not only is he
playing public domain Beethoven, but he recorded and mixed the album (in
May and June of 2008) on a Gentoo
Linux box. Gentoo is how I really learned Linux. He's still
releasing libre licensed albums and his newer releases have video
recordings which he edits in kdenlive.
The first four tracks are under the Creative Commons
Attribution-Share Alike license: Corporate Success and Chasing the
Shadow by Arkadii Kaplan, Time to Army by Muciojad, and Sweet Nothing by
K4MMERER. Daniel Bautista's Symphony Number 5 is licensed Creative
Commons Attribution.
Thank you for listening to this third episode of Cov's Jams. I hope
we can enjoy some new tunes together soon!
Links:
Arkadii
Kaplan - Corporate Success
Arkadii
Kaplan - Chasing the Shadow
Muciojad -
Time to Army
K4MMERER -
Sweet Nothing
Daniel
Bautista - Symphony Number 5 -
HPR4118: Toil versus Livelihood
This is sort of a response to hpr4097 :: Will they take our jobs? Of course they will. by dodddummy, and also the latest community news show, and other shows about the topic.
References:
Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren, John Maynard Keynes
Domenico de Masi, O Ócio Criativo, book was never released in English, I think.
In Praise of Idleness, Bertrand Russell -
HPR4117: JAMBOREE !
https://github.com/freeload101/Java-Android-Magisk-Burp-Objection-Root-Emulator-Easy
Java Android Magisk Burp Objection Root Emulator Easy
(JAMBOREE)
Get a working portable Python/Git/Java environment on Windows in SECONDS
without having local administrator, regardless of your broken Python or
other environment variables. Our open-source script downloads directly
from proper sources without any binaries. While the code may not be
perfect, it includes many useful PowerShell tricks.
Run Android apps and pentest without the adware and malware of
BlueStacks or NOX.
Features / Request
Core Status
RMS:Runtime Mobile Security ✔️
Brida, Burp to Frida bridge ❌
SaftyNet+ Bypass ❌
Burp Suite Pro / CloudFlare UserAgent Workaround-ish ✔️
ZAP Using Burp ✔️
Google Play ✔️
Java ✔️
Android 11 API 30 ✔️
Magisk ✔️
Burp ✔️
Objection ✔️
Root ✔️
Python ✔️
Frida ✔️
Certs ✔️
AUTOMATIC1111 ✔️
AutoGPT ✔️
Bloodhound ✔️
PyCharm ✔️
OracleLinux WSL ✔️
Ubuntu/Olamma WSL ✔️
Postgres No admin ✔️
SillyTavern ✔️
Volatility 3 ✔️
Arduino IDE / Duck2Spark ✔️
Youtube Downloader Yt-dlp ✔️
How it works:
Temporarily resets your windows $PATH environment variable to fix any
issues with existing python/java installation
Build a working Python environment in seconds using a tiny 16 meg
nuget.org Python binary and portable PortableGit. Our solution doesn't
require a package manager like Anaconda. I would like to make it even
easier to use but I don't want to spend more time developing it if
nobody is going to use it! Please let me know if you like it and open
bugs/suggestions/feature request etc! You can contact me at https://rmccurdy.com !
Installation/Requirements ( For Android AVD Emulator) :
Local admin just to install Android AVD Driver:
HAXM Intel driver ( https://github.com/intel/haxm )
OR
AMD ( https://github.com/google/android-emulator-hypervisor-driver-for-amd-processors
)
Usage:
Put ps1 file in a folder
Rightclick Run with PowerShell
OR
From command prompt
powershell -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command
"[scriptblock]::Create((Invoke-WebRequest "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/freeload101/Java-Android-Magisk-Burp-Objection-Root-Emulator-Easy/main/JAMBOREE.ps1").Content).Invoke();"
More infomation on bypass Root Detection and SafeNet https://www.droidwin.com/how-to-hide-root-from-apps-via-magisk-denylist/
( Watch the Video Tutorial below it's a 3-5 min process. You only
have to setup once. After that it's start burp then start AVD )
Burp/Android Emulator (Video Tutorial )
Update Video with 7minsec Podcast!
https://youtu.be/XdXleap0BiM
name
(Video Tutorial)
https://youtu.be/pYv4UwP3BaU
name
USB Rubber Ducky Scripts & Payloads Python 3 Arduino
DigiSpark
http -
HPR4116: Response to 4109: Building community without SEO
I was inspired by Knightwise's
episode
4109 on future-proofing HPR.
I agree with many of your criticisms, but I'm not sure that a marketing
strategy is the best way forward. Many of the most successful and
sustainable businesses and organizations have been built on
word-of-mouth.
For example I heard of Google, Zoom, Gmail, Facebook, Slack, Twitter,
Discord, etc from my IRL friends and coworkers rather than from a
marketing message. And most of the open source communities I'm a part of
(Linux, Python, Firefox, Hugging Face, etc) are successful precisely
because their success is not subject to a BigTech algorithm or
exploitative terms-and-conditions.
Most open source projects are able to build community much by actively
resisting the temptation to create a marketing message or social media
campaign and instead focusing on the authenticity and quality of their
"product" and catering to their contributors' and users niche needs and
sensibilities.
Points of agreement (Rapoport Rule
#2)
I share Knightwise's love and concern for the HPR community
I agree the intro theme song and voiceover could be accelerated and
improved
I whole-heartedly agree the comments interface could be made easier
to use
I agree that the HPR community feels like a monastery or convent.
Perhaps faith in FOSS is a kind of religious belief or value that
supersedes normal human instincts and drives.
I 100% support hackers that evangelize for HPR on their favorite
bigtech social media platforms.
My FOSS podcatcher Antennapod,
automatically skips the intro. I had to rewind in order to hear the
episode number and host username in order to compose my reply.
And I have trouble engaging with the comments interface on the HPR
site.
I wasn't even aware of comments on my previous episodes and once I did
learn of it I found it easier to reply on Mastodon rather than on the
HPR website.
As a community, I think we take it on faith that there is a place in the
world for people like us that just want to share ideas, unmediated by
shadow-banning, rug-pulling corporations and attention-hacking
algorithms. I want to have a conversation with thoughtful people. I
don't want to be engaged or monetized or exploited
A young person that is turned off after 3 seconds of retro-sounding
audio is likely to not enjoy the "sound of
woodwork (2442)" or "overlanding"
audio journals (4037) of semi-retired geeks.
Many of us know that what we do in life cannot be measured in
dollars or like button
clicks, but rather by the quality of our friendships and the
collective ideas that we share.
Zombies on Facebook, Twitter, Discord and Slack must eventually "see
the light" for themselves and come flocking to "the small
web" as they did during Xitter's decline.
HPR has been a significant positive force in my life and I would
hate to sully its openness and authenticity with SEO or other marketing
strategies (I know this is not what you proposed)
I think the enshittified
Discord network is the wrong business to entrust with our community, for
one thing, its app doesn't work on Linux
Marketing and SEO are effective tools for growth-seeking businesses,
but ill-suited for an open source community
Anyone interested in business str -
HPR4115: Tagging music with Beets
References
Beets documentation
Album art in Funkwhale (after recording I noticed it can also look up album art during import, using the musicbrainz ID. Not 100% sure beets adds it, but I might assume so)
Recommended opus bitrates
Pronunciation of the word "archivist"
MusicBrainz
Everything you need to know about Funkwhale