Hacker Public Radio Hacker Public Radio
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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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HPR4110: Playing Civilization III, Part 2
This starts our look at the details of playing Civilization III. In
this episode we look at the Early game, which sets the stage for
everything that follows. Then we look at Revenue and Resources.
Links:
https://civilization.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_resources_in_Civ3
https://www.palain.com/gaming/civilization-iii/playing-civilization-iii-part-2/ -
HPR4109: The future of HPR
This will probably be one I'll get a lot of comments on, but I've
looked at the marketing proposition of HPR in light of some of the
challenges we face. To prevent us dipping into the reserve queue and
seeing a slow but steady decline in both audience and hosts.. Maybe its
time to give HPR a bit of a makeover. -
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HPR4107: Response to HPR #4065
Shout out to Noodles thanks again for responding to my previous post
#4045 it was awesome to get feedback.
Being able to upgrade my 2010 Macbook which is an Apple device and
how impressive that was. Sadly that upgradability is a thing of the
past. -
HPR4106: My tribute to feeds
I will talk about information feeds from web sites delivered to my
computer device. I use the term feeds and by that I mean both RSS feeds
and Atom feeds, the two feed protocols which are very similar.
I believe it is very likely you as listener to Hacker Public Radio
know about feeds. Not unlikely you even know the technical details far
better than I do.
Nowadays many of us use feeds very often without thinking of them as
feeds, when we subscribe to podcasts.
But feeds have been around for many years. Back in the days, I used
feeds for websites I was interested in. But somehow I forgot about it
and web browsers stopped to support feed subscriptions.
A year or two ago I started my new journey into feeds. Although it is
not so much talk about feeds nowadays, very many web sites have support
for feed subscriptions.
To start, at my own personal web site (https://www.hemrin.com/)
many of the pages have feeds, typically those that are blog-like pages,
and you can subscribe to several feeds on my site.
From Hacker Public Radio I subscribe to a feed for all show comments.
So when you write a comment regarding my show today, I will get notified
in my feed manager.
I primarily use Thunderbird to manage my feeds. I do not need my
feeds to be synced to other devices. I use Thunderbird daily for e-mails
and it is therefore very practical and natural for me to use it also for
feeds. In addition I use the Feeder app on my Android-based phone for
some feeds.
I do not use feeds for web sites I anyway will visit often or that
have a lot of news. I would be overwhelmed of feeds. Instead I use feeds
for web sites which are not updated so frequently but are sites I want
to keep an eye on. But some are updated daily, like from the
parliament.
In some cases, feeds are an alternative to subscribe to e-mail
notifications and e-mail newsletters.
The beauty with feeds is that I am in charge and without giving out
e-mail or anything - the site owner do not know I subscribe.
Subscription starts so simple as I type the feed-url into my Thunderbird
feed manager. And when I want to end a subscription, I simply delete
it.
Furthermore I subscribe to Status pages. I get notifications for
example from my internet service provider for their planned and
unplanned maintenance.
Several authorities have interesting feeds.
I have feeds from some companies and organizations.
I have feeds from many software developers, for example Thunderbird
and Linux Mint.
I have feeds from some journalists and politicians and alike.
I have feeds from persons with competence in various areas I am
interested in. And other persons who are interesting for the persons
they are and their thoughts.
So, this show is to tell you that I have rediscovered feeds and found
them useful for me. Maybe you already use feeds. Maybe this show will
inspire you to have a look into feeds as a useful tool for your personal
or professional life. -
HPR4105: My story how I found a cure for my obesity
I have been struggling with my body weight since I was 35, and I’m
now 60.
I know that not all listeners are familiar with the kilogram as unit of
measurement, but we can use the BMI (Body Mass Index) formula to discuss
this. It should be somewhere between 22 and 25 and mine has been 33 for
a long time. A very long time. No matter what I tried.
Yes, I tried some diets but they only work if you keep doing them. So
if something does not become normal or easy than at some inevitable
point you will stop and gain weight again.
Yes, they talk about changing your life style but any change that is too
drastic is bound to fail in the end.
And then recently I read this book. This absolutely changed my life
and that is why I am so motivated to tell you all about it.
Book obesity code, Jason Fung, a Canadian nephrologist (kidney
specialist).
He is also a functional medicine advocate who promotes a
low-carbohydrate high-fat diet and intermittent fasting. But we come
back to that later.
Not another diet hype. That is an industry on its own.
This is scientific stuff. With lots of links to research papers.
With large groups and thoroughly peer reviewed.
And this does not mean that this story is for everyone.
There exist other medical reasons why people gain weight.
But, assuming most people start out in life being healthy, then most
people gaining weight are not ill.
So, if you gain weight, consult your doctor first to rule out any
medical reasons.
Jason Fung noticed that practice didn't match with theory.
Everybody who is given insulin gains weight.
Even diabetes type 2 people.
There are even several scientific studies that proves this. Give people
insulin and they will gain weight.
So what if insulin is the culprit for gaining weight?
Insulin is a hormone. Its job is to send signals through the body.
Its use is to allow body cells to absorb nutrients in the blood
stream.
Every time you eat the insulin peaks and subsides normally three
times a day.
Body process called gluconeogenesis. Making fat in the liver for one
day storage.
If you eat the body makes insulin. That is normal.
If you eat more, the body makes more insulin.
Body cells adjust to the higher level and become tone deaf to insulin:
Insulin resistant.
This means next time the insulin level needs to be higher.
And higher levels of insulin mean you will gain weight.
If you eat sugar, it is so easy to break down that it goes
immediately into storage, e.g. body fat.
The thing is, wheat is chemically a long string of sugars. So the
body will break it down into sugar and send that too to storage.
And almost any food we buy these days contains sugar.
Except unprocessed foods like vegetables.
How to lose weight? Well, the body needs to access the fat in
storage. So we need to extend not eating until the liver has run dry of
the daily dose of liver fat.
This is very easy. Just extend the daily period that you do not
eat.
When do you not eat? When you sleep. So, skip breakfast. The name says
it all, you are breaking your fast.
Drink some coffee (no sugar of course), or tea, or water and try to
start eating later in the day.
And another word for not eating is fasting. But it is a voluntary
fast!
So I tried this for one day. Skip breakfast and try to eat it at
noon. I mean, what could possibly go wrong, right? The next day I had
lost some weight. And it was sooo easy! I could say 300 grams but again,
your mileage may vary or you have no clue what one gram is, let alone
300. But that is not the point. The point is that I lost weight! And to
me this has been super easy.
So the solution turns out to be:
extend the time your insulin levels are low. 16, 24 or 36
hours.
eat as little sugar as possible.
Which b
Customer Reviews
Love this idea
Keep it up
This is real Open Source
With a different host every day, you get people's once every few month bit of tech awesomeness every day, not oh no we have to do a show, let's throw something together. Great job on this show community. Way to go open source podcasting.
Mixed bag, at best
Some of it is moderately interesting from time to time. But after just listening to a guy (probably drunkenly,) ramble about installing an SSD and 16 gigs of RAM into a decade old MacBook for 18 minutes straight, I can't recommend. (Real hacker stuff, that...) There's plenty of better podcasts that are more consistent and technology-focused out there.