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[2678.30 --> 2683.30] They also support simple login and non-addy and Firefox relay email services.
[2683.30 --> 2692.34] So essentially you can mask your real email address from these services automatically as part of the Bitwarden generation.
[2692.54 --> 2699.64] And it interfaces with the Fastmail API to actually add that alias into your email kind of universe within Fastmail,
[2699.78 --> 2701.78] which I just thought is amazing.
[2701.78 --> 2704.02] I hear so many good things about Fastmail too.
[2704.38 --> 2705.96] So many good things from the audience.
[2706.44 --> 2708.94] Ahanaga sent 5,000 sats.
[2709.52 --> 2712.34] Frozer also sent in 5,000 sats.
[2712.72 --> 2717.02] Just wanted to mention Podverse is great, but I wish Podverse had sats streaming.
[2717.66 --> 2719.62] It's a more fair way to give value for value.
[2719.86 --> 2725.08] I wanted to give Podverse a plug here on the show because I think the self-hosted audience might be really interested in it.
[2725.08 --> 2733.66] It is a slick cross-platform web, Android, and iOS podcast player, and it syncs between all of them.
[2734.04 --> 2739.22] I love that because it means I can listen to something and then finish it at my desk using the web player.
[2739.70 --> 2744.46] And it also means that when I have my flings with Android, I have all my podcasts on there.
[2744.64 --> 2749.20] The other thing I really like about Podverse and why I wanted to mention it on here is because it's GPL.
[2749.92 --> 2751.80] And you can embed it on your website.
[2751.92 --> 2753.34] We've done it on Jupyter Broadcasting.
[2753.34 --> 2756.88] And I've talked to the lead dev, Mitch, several times.
[2756.98 --> 2758.50] In fact, he's messaging me right now as we're recording.
[2759.04 --> 2762.78] And they're working on all kinds of stuff, including sats streaming.
[2763.12 --> 2766.64] So you can just send the sats as you listen and we'll receive them.
[2766.90 --> 2777.20] It also supports a bunch of the other podcasting tuner features like live streaming, chapters, transcripts, host information, and a bunch of other things.
[2778.56 --> 2782.10] They've also been really great collaborators on our new website as well.
[2782.10 --> 2782.50] Yeah.
[2782.50 --> 2788.08] We solved a lot of issues on both ends with adding their player embedded on our website.
[2788.42 --> 2793.86] And it was really neat because we had found a few bugs in their player and they were happy to fix them pretty quickly.
[2794.10 --> 2796.80] And it's been great to see those two communities come together.
[2797.10 --> 2797.24] Yeah.
[2797.30 --> 2802.94] That's one of the really neat things that Mitch told me is now that some of their best contributors to Podverse are Jupyter Broadcasting listeners.
[2803.40 --> 2804.48] That's so cool.
[2804.60 --> 2804.80] Yeah.
[2804.86 --> 2805.66] It is really neat.
[2805.66 --> 2808.54] So check out Podverse if you haven't, podverse.fm.
[2808.82 --> 2816.02] Also, shout out to Prozac, who sent us a row of ducks just thanking us for the pragmatic cloud discussion in episode 79.
[2816.56 --> 2824.28] And a young dookie who just got a house and is looking to build a full home assistant setup going all in.
[2824.36 --> 2825.48] It's such an exciting time.
[2825.48 --> 2827.38] So congratulations, young dookie.
[2827.44 --> 2828.74] Keep us posted on that.
[2829.20 --> 2831.56] And then Shim, what do you think there, Brent?
[2832.42 --> 2832.82] Schmidsfeld.
[2833.26 --> 2838.10] Schmidsfeld sent two sats just to see if it was possible to send two sats across the internet.
[2838.32 --> 2838.88] And it was.
[2840.14 --> 2840.66] Love it.
[2841.06 --> 2841.30] Yeah.
[2841.36 --> 2843.50] And then we got 10,000 sats from Silver Snake.
[2843.58 --> 2844.02] No message.
[2844.22 --> 2845.44] Just send it into the show.
[2845.82 --> 2851.98] And I just want to give a special hello to Main Hippo, who sent their very first boost this week into the show.
[2852.16 --> 2852.56] Amazing.
[2852.56 --> 2860.24] You know, I think my favorite thing about boosts is the fact that we're kind of rekindling the bizarreness of the IRC, Nick, and all these names.
[2860.34 --> 2860.90] It's fantastic.
[2861.42 --> 2863.48] Yeah, it's a strugs for me to read some of these.
[2864.02 --> 2865.12] That's my favorite part.
[2865.20 --> 2866.48] When I get it right, it's a win.
[2866.58 --> 2869.08] And when I don't get it right, they can boost in again and tell me I got it wrong.
[2869.16 --> 2869.88] It's also a win.
[2870.64 --> 2870.98] Yeah.
[2871.06 --> 2872.72] So go check out a new podcast app.
[2872.80 --> 2876.26] Go to newpodcastapps.com and grab one that works for you.
[2876.42 --> 2878.70] Or grab Breeze if you don't want to switch.
[2878.76 --> 2879.50] Or Boost CLI.
[2879.84 --> 2882.30] Or, you know, try a podverse.
[2882.94 --> 2883.92] I think it's pretty great.
[2884.86 --> 2890.40] A little bit of self, I don't know, promotion isn't the right word, but you know what I mean.
[2890.58 --> 2893.28] I'm looking to sell my old Dual Xeon motherboard.
[2893.52 --> 2896.96] It's a Gigabyte GA7 PESH2.
[2897.24 --> 2900.92] It's the Dual Xeon LGA 2011 board.
[2901.06 --> 2905.20] There's a pair of E5-2690 V2 CPUs in there.
[2905.20 --> 2910.20] I've also got 128 gigabytes of DDR3 ECC memory in that system.
[2910.54 --> 2911.98] I just don't use it anymore.
[2912.16 --> 2914.24] And I figure it should go to a good home.
[2914.80 --> 2919.94] There's a couple of 10 gig NICs on the board, which have been a little flaky recently.
[2919.94 --> 2923.58] So I've been using an Intel NIC card to go in there.
[2923.96 --> 2926.96] So just be aware of that if you're interested in the board.
[2927.20 --> 2930.30] Let me know via Discord or Twitter if you would like it.
[2930.50 --> 2933.42] And we'll come to some arrangement about how to get it to you.
[2933.42 --> 2936.80] Maybe it'd be a good start for somebody to build a home lab box.
[2936.96 --> 2938.84] 128 gigs of RAM in those CPUs.
[2938.88 --> 2939.96] You could run some VMs.
[2940.32 --> 2941.42] That would do the job.
[2941.92 --> 2947.14] I paid $250 for those CPUs four years ago, and they're worth about $20 now.
[2947.26 --> 2949.68] But they still crunch, man.
[2949.74 --> 2950.40] They still crunch.
[2950.60 --> 2952.28] I'm impressed by the old Xeons.
[2952.40 --> 2953.00] I have to say.
[2953.12 --> 2954.74] I mean, I have that old Super Micro box.
[2954.82 --> 2956.18] It's like seven, eight years old.
[2956.68 --> 2959.40] And I threw PhotoPRISM on there the other day.
[2959.78 --> 2961.62] And yeah, it lit up every single core.
[2961.62 --> 2965.96] But sure enough, it did the face detection, and it did the object recognition at a pretty
[2965.96 --> 2968.38] reasonable pace on an old box.
[2968.54 --> 2970.44] So, you know, you never know.
[2970.52 --> 2972.98] And those CPUs are slower than what you're talking about.
[2973.28 --> 2973.94] So you never know.
[2974.14 --> 2975.48] You could get quite a bit out of that stuff.
[2976.14 --> 2980.76] 10 cores and 20 threads per CPU is quite the thing to observe in HTOP, let me tell you.
[2981.28 --> 2982.28] Yes, it is.
[2982.68 --> 2983.10] You know what?
[2983.12 --> 2984.48] I'd say it's a thing of beauty, Alex.
[2984.66 --> 2986.18] That's a thing of beauty.