Episode 459 - “Old Tech, New Tricks: Ham Radios, Drones & Data Recovery!" - podcast episode cover

Episode 459 - “Old Tech, New Tricks: Ham Radios, Drones & Data Recovery!"

Oct 30, 202552 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

This Week's TechtalkRadio Show kicks off with Shawn and Andy looking back on last weeks show and discussing a couple of Web Distractions such as TV.Garden only to find out from some viewers to the Social Media Video Post also had a site to share, Radio.Garden. This Site features Radio stations from around the globe, now including KGVY. Shawn adds WebSDR.org for listening to live amateur radio signals worldwide. That rolls into a hands-on ham segment: GMRS nostalgia, the FCC’s clamp-down on internet-linked repeaters. Shawn points to ARRL for licensing paths and local clubs, plus practical directories like RepeaterBook, RadioReference, and HamStudy to get started.

Andy dusts off the DJI Mini 3 to shoot footage of classic control-line airplanes for a friends project and decides it is time to take a look at the Part 107 study options, and but realizes  licensing delays amid the federal shutdown discussion. Then it’s OS philosophies—Windows 11’s Copilot and bloat vs. the “clean” feel of Linux—before a deep dive on data recovery: Shawn resurrects photos from a 2007 Toshiba drive using free TestDisk/PhotoRec, while Andy revisits using OnTrack in past recoveries and budget-friendlier EaseUS. A wild case study: investigators recovered images from the OceanGate submersible camera’s SanDisk memory.

Shawn tells us about a site he found which first we remind of caution -  OldVersion.com for legacy software. This tied in nicely with Andy's daughter asking for a Windows XP rig with the old games installed. A possible alternative could be the website Good Old Games for classic game purchases. For video editing without subscriptions, DaVinci Resolve shines for Andy’s 4K drone footage, and OpenShot gets a nod as a friendly, open-source starter. Quick creative helpers include Remove.bg for instant background cuts and a reminder to support open-source tools that earn a spot in the toolbox.

A Listener wants to know about silencing Spam Calls. Andy shares the recommendation to use Do Not Disturb with “contacts only,” Silence Unknown Callers on iPhone, and accept that voicemail may still catch strays. Security talk covers the rumored Gmail credential chatter and a practical audit with HaveIBeenPwned, followed by password hygiene best practices: unique, long passwords and strong picks like Apple Passwords or 1Password—optionally paired with hardware keys for the ultra-cautious. The show wraps with a family-friendly pick—Scholastic’s new free streaming app (Clifford, Goosebumps, Magic School Bus)—and a quick note that Fedora is formally embracing AI-assisted contributions on the development side, signaling how open-source projects are adapting behind the scenes.

Got a question for the show? Email techguys@techtalkradio.com, and catch more at techtalkradio.com.


Please Share, Listen, Subscribe to the Show on Spotify, Spreaker, iHeartRadio, YouTube and Our YouTube Page. Also Available on KGVY AM/FM, Amazon Music, PodBean and other Delivery Networks!

Transcript

Speaker 1

The following program is produced by the Tech Talk Radio Network. Hey guys, this is Al Petrelli from the Transient Orchestra.

Speaker 2

Normally I'm not a nerd, but I am a tech talk radio god bless, stay safe.

Speaker 1

Welcome to another episode of tech Talk Radio. I'm Andy Taylor, I'm Sean de Weird. We have got a lot of tech to talk about today. There's a lot going on.

Speaker 2

There's just a lot.

Speaker 1

Yeah. We Now we always get together like before the show and we talk about like some of the things that all what interested you and what was said, and we were like going over going, well, I got this, Oh, you got this, I got this, you got this, I got this, you got this one.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I mean I felt like we had a lot last week.

Speaker 1

We did. Actually, I gotta tell you. Last week we gave out a website address. And the website address I thought that was kind of interesting. It was cool, right, you were looking at it on the air and you were kind of surprised by it. I had already, you know, taken a glance at it and was looking through it, and I was also impressed by it. That of course was TV dot Garden and TV dot Garden In case you missed last week's show or you haven't caught up

on a yet. Is a website where you can go and there's a globe and you could point anywhere on the globe you want, So if you point to the United States, it'll show you pretty much every streaming television channel that is available for you to watch online. Now I know there's more than what they actually had, but it still was cool. The only one I could find a twoson was k Gun. K Gun nine was one

of those streaming options. But if you want to find obscure channels, there are small mini channels that have been launching out, low power TV whatnot. But also you could find channels from around the world, so it was cool. I posted that on social media and a lot of people were loving it. Matter of fact, it's the highest view count of any of the videos we had done. But then somebody had commented in there and I didn't

know it. There's a Radio Garden as well, and Radio dot Garden, and if you go there, it's the same premise. You can listen to any radio station around the world. I listened to stations from England, from India, from Spain, from Italy, from the United States and matter of fact, KGVY, the station we broadcast on, has just been added because I found it and added our station to it by suggesting that we be on there, and sure enough it

was added earlier this week. So you can listen to streaming channels or listen.

Speaker 2

To another place. You can listen to us.

Speaker 1

Yes, Radio dot Radio.

Speaker 2

That's awesome. And so we talked about like the TV Garden the radio garden rate. There's I'm gonna pitch in one of my other another really great radio website, which is WebSDR dot org, which is is a ham radio. It's it's a website for ham radio people that have built these web SDRs basically software defined radios that you can have listened to Ham radio signals from around the world. You can tune men, you can listen to him, so you could from your computer listen to Ham radio signals

from around the world. It's pretty it's pretty cool. If you're into amateur radio at all, at any capacity, or if you're interested in it, dial this up. Webstdr out of org. Find a webstr somewhere, even if it's in your region or if it's in the if you want to listen to something overseas, or it's just really cool to tune in and hear Ham radio stuff around the world.

Speaker 1

Well, it's kind of cool because I have a friend named Fu that's from Myanmar, from Burma, and I mentioned that last week of the show. She has been studying in England and she has a boyfriend, and her boyfriend is into picking up the radios now and doing the shortwave radio. So if I found out when he was going to be on, I'd be able to actually tune in and listen.

Speaker 2

Depending on where he's broadcasting from, you would have to find something probably close ish to him, depending on when he's broadcasting and how much power is put now, but you could probably listen in and he'd pick him up. Yeah.

Speaker 1

Wow. We have an amateur radio club here in Green Valley and I know where the show is and I've thought about going in because honestly, I haven't had that much time with my radio and I really want to. I want to do it more because it just seems like it's a lot of fun.

Speaker 2

Well, I mean, you remember about two years ago on the show, we all got our GMRS licenses right, and and we were participating in the MYGMRS dot net, which had the Internet connected repeaters all around the country. Well, just over a year ago, the FCC put a kebash on Internet connected repeaters because it violated the use like that.

There was some some legal ease they put in there that said, you basically can't have a repeater connect to the Internet because it violates the redistribution of the signal or something something. So that really cut my GMRS use out. Nobody here locally outside of like two people were talking on the gm RS repeater. So the guy that I was talking to every day while I was driving do it from work or traveling, you know, from where we

go camping. They were all connected so I could just keep talking to them, just picking up different repeaters along the way. That just cut my amateur radio stuff in half, which was a bummer.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

And then that the people locally to me, there was one lady that was just kind of got crappy and just kind of like ruined it for everybody, and the owner of the repeater said, nah, I'm done, I'm not dealing with this anymore and shut the repeater down.

Speaker 1

Man.

Speaker 2

So outside of two meter, the two meter repeaters in town and some simplex stuff like I don't do a whole lot of ham radio stuff every day. I still do some HF stuff and some listen. I do a lot of listening.

Speaker 1

But it was kind of cool because one of the things I remember you did, and this was a special event. I don't know if they're still doing it, and there was somebody who was on the space station flying overhead and you were able to communicate or at least listen the way.

Speaker 2

So that happens all the time, right, So the space issue goes over all the time, right during the daytime when you can't see it, but you can pick up and listen to the VHF UHF repeater that's on the space station. And so I bought an arrow high game yaggy antenna so that I can have my radio set to a frequency because it's UHF up and VHF down. I'd have to look at the sheet to remember off the top of my head. Can transmit on my radio to talk to the repeater and then listen to the

to the other frequency on the down link. Here myself bounce off of that repeater and then other people hear it and can respond to me off that UHF repeater. Now there's a schedule that when some of the astronauts up there have their hand radio licenses, they will listen in and can actually respond to those calls from the space stations. There are specific times you can do it to get to get on board the space station and

get actual contact from the space station. But yeah, I've got QSOs from you know, because when you think about it, think about it, right, it's it's way up. So when it's really low on the horizon and i'm i can, I can hit it with my antenna and talk to it. Those signals are being bounced over the visible curve of the Earth that I can see to the western part of the country or the eastern part, depending on which direction it's traveling. Right, So, yeah, I've got QSOs from

all over the West coast and other places. I'd have to look at my log.

Speaker 1

But to anybody listening right now that has never thought about doing it or never, it's not an expensive hobby, is that? I mean? The radios they aren't too bad.

Speaker 2

Getting into HF can be expensive getting getting getting into the the HF bands can be a little bit prohibitive to new users. If you don't have a radio or have an antenna setup. You can really just build your own antennas, really, but each of radios. It's fun. I recommend listening for a while. First, right go to WebSDR just pull it up and see what you can tune in. Start it. You know, you have to get a license to do. You know, there's three different tiers of licensee

of technician, general, an extra. I'm a general, so I'm the the second tier of the three, and that gives me enough privileges to do what I feel comfortable doing. But it's fun. You get to experiment, you get to play with it, and you know, you throw up a random piece of wire and now you're talking across the country. It's pretty wild.

Speaker 1

It's pretty cool. What would be a good website to go to to get more inful? If if somebody is like listening to this and I want to get into this. I mean, obviously, like I said, the Green Valley Amateur Radio Club, they've got one. They do all kinds of events. But if they want to go to a web is there a website for this?

Speaker 2

So aid Rlso the Amateur Radio Relay League, which is like the kind of the catch all for the ham radio world. They're kind of the governing arm of Ham radio outside of the SEC, but find a local club. To be honest, a lot of times your local clubs are gonna be the ones they are gonna be. They usually have monthly meetings, weekly meetings, et cetera. You'd be surprised how many repeaters are actually around you. So rl

dot org. If you already have a radio and you want to listen, go to repeater book dot com to find repeaters around you. It'll give you put in your location. It gives you a radius of repeaters around you with their pl tones and whatever. Radio reference is another good one. That one will give you frequencies that you can listen to. So like it gives you your local municipality, It gives you your fire ems emergency stuff. It gives you local repeaters.

It gives you other stuff like the university's public service stuff is on their school you know, the different schools board. You know the different school corporations have their stuff on there. The airport frequencies are on there. A lot of what

I have fun doing with Ham radio stuff is just listening. Right, You can do a lot of listening, but you can get into it relatively inexpensively for two meter and seventy centimeters two meter which is UHF or VHF Yeah, VHF and UHF two meter, seventy centimeter which is gm RS, and then the lower tier of the HAM radio bands. But yeah, I mean it's fun. You gotta study a little bit if you're interested in taking the test, or

you're thinking about taking the test. Hamstudy dot org. They have an app you can deleraate your phone take practice tests, is what I did.

Speaker 1

Yep.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it's it's not completely hard to get into. It takes a little bit of effort, just like any hobby to get experience on. But if you find a local club, you can go and ask questions, join their Facebook group, you know.

Speaker 1

Yeah, well here's something to think about too. And we're speaking about hobbies, so we got to mention this one. I went out this week buddy of mine, Chuck Taylor. No relation is into radio. It's it's not radio controlled. It's control line airplanes model airplanes. So they have they sit in the circle. They stand in a circle and basically these airplanes with motors they go around. I mean they fuel him up and everything and then they go

and they can make do effects with him. And I mean it's one of the oldest clubs in America, and he asked, I go out there, you know, and just shoot some drone footage, and I thought, wow, I haven't taken out the drone in months. So I went ahead and I said, yeah, I'll do it. So I charged up the batteries and everything, made sure I had all the cards, made sure the firmware was updated. I've got the DJI Mini three, and I went out there and it was a lot of fun, which then got me thinking.

Somebody the other day asked me about shooting a birthday party a video going in video video graphing, you know, as a paid service. Can I come out do videos, take photos? And I yeah, sure, I've done that kind of thing before. And then he wanted drone footage. And it's like it's uncomfortable because they say, well, I can't do the drone because if I'm charging you because I have I don't have a Part one oh seven license.

So I started going online and looking at some of these courses where they say, hey, we can help get you part one o seven. We've got all the study manuals and everything else. And then I thought of something. I I after looking at this ready to sign up right now. And I don't know if we never know when it's going to end, but right now, the government isn't shutdown, let's face it, right, So I looked it up. Not doing any drone certifications right now, matter of fact anything.

When it comes to licensing, you got.

Speaker 2

Hamber Ham radio licensing too, right, So you can't even get an FRN number. You can't get you can't apply for your license, et cetera. So until the shutdown gets taken care of, yeah, you.

Speaker 1

Can't even you can't even add your phone number to a do not call registry radio license, drone license, you can't do that. So you might as well wait until we see when this blows over, and then you know, all the agencies are back together and however long that takes.

Speaker 2

Yeah, So Jennifer, you ended up flying I intered flying U and it was good.

Speaker 1

It was a lot of fun. It was at a park open. There was somebody though that had that came out and brought their drones too, and they had the little mini drones. But they were sitting in their car like they weren't standing like I'm standing there with the remote control. They're sitting in their car. They're wearing a headset, so they've got the I guess they call them FPV Yeah, FPV drones, and they make a lot of noise, those

little guys. But yet they moved pretty fast, and I thought that that would be kind of cool to check out as well. But I was just having fun with the controller, but it was you know, it's funny. I don't know about you. With a hobby. You start doing it and then you want to just go more into it, you know, you wanted to like do more of it.

Speaker 2

You guys have seen my basement. How many hobbies do you think I have?

Speaker 1

You have question?

Speaker 2

I have too many. And I get super invested in one hobby for like eight months, nine months, twelve year, and then I'm just like, eh, yeah, next, and then I get supervolved in the next hobby, and then I cycle back and then into the next the other hobby again for a long time. Yeah. No, it's uh yeah, I have a problem.

Speaker 1

All right. I'll get into some tech stuff. Kind of interesting because I have seen a lot of people now that are talking about and you know, some people it took their their steps to get into chat, GPT, and then they're trying out some of the other AI services now. But now a lot of people are talking about Copilot, which of course you know a big part of Windows eleven and you know, they're really trying to get a lot of people to use it and one of the

newest features of course voice chat on Copilot. Some people have compared it to if you think about it in your home, maybe you have an Alexa device, or you have Siri, or you have you know, Google device, And people are saying, well, you can actually have conversations. You could have it do stuff for you, and you could do it now if you wanted your microphone to always be listening for you know, you to be able to ask it something, it can do that, or you could

turn off and there's shortcuts. But again you could be sitting in your computer just hit a button and now have response from Copilot. But some people are saying, well, Copilot is a lot different than with shat, GPT or some of the other AI services out there. Just I still have not come to the idea of running it on my system. Have you had a chance to experiment with it all?

Speaker 2

It's immediately it turned off for me. The Windows a lot I just can't wrap my head around integrating an AI into my machine. I just don't. I just don't. I don't know. It's weird to think about it. I understand AI's purpose, I understand it's a tool. I don't know if I want it on my machine. What benefit is it going to do on my machine that I haven't used it? So maybe I don't know yet, But I just don't foresee myself. Like anything I'm doing on my computer, I already know what I want to do now.

Speaker 1

For our listeners that don't want to have this, it can be stopped or removed. It's not yeah, or you have it. It's like one drive. If you don't want to use one drive, you don't have to. I have one computer that uses well, two computers that use one drive, and the rest of them don't.

Speaker 2

Yeah, you can't. You can't completely delete copile from your computer, but you can disable it and prevent it from running, so it is possible to at least quickly. That's to say a lot of people are just wanting to disable it.

Speaker 1

It's just like I.

Speaker 2

Wish again, I wish Windows would just give us a clean version, no bloat.

Speaker 1

Yeah, they give us without the bloat, without the having to do this, having to do that. Just here, this is what it can do to get stuff done. But then that's when people will say, well, that's why you have Linux.

Speaker 2

Right, which is outside of So I've got this rig that I'm on now which has Windows on it, which is my gaming rig and my streaming ring. I have a Mac which runs Mac os Tahoe now and I've just been installing Linux and everything else. It's just just easier to use, Easier, faster to get up and running, faster to install things, faster to do stuff, easier to

quickly do things. I just put it on a I have an Aceus Rock laptop that I got from a friend of mine who was getting a new one and put Linux on it and it runs amazing on there. And I've been using it for hard drive moving content off hard drives into my mass and it's super quick. And Linux doesn't care what file format your drives are. It'll read NFS, it'll read or NTFS, it'll read x FAT, it'll read whatever. So I can copy stuff quickly that way and look at drives and format them, and I

just did. I was on a mission last night trying to find I got my old this is going to be a little bit, a little bit of a throwback. This is kind of what I was getting at with why I want a clean version of Windows eleven. My mom gave me back a laptop that I had given her for just used around the house, probably in two thousand and seven. Right, it was the first laptop that I had bought with my own money. I bought it with my high school graduation money from when I went to college.

Speaker 1

That's cool.

Speaker 2

It was a Toshiba Latitude or Toshiba Satellite, sorry, Toshiba Satellite, single core petty and four running three point four gigaherts. And so she gave that back to me, and I pulled the hard drive out of it, and I was wondering, you know what this is when I first started playing World of Warcraft on I wonder if I can recover any of my old screenshots.

Speaker 1

But that's kind of cool. Yeah, So of.

Speaker 2

Course, like I had deleted stuff, but I never formatted the hard drive.

Speaker 1

Well, even if you formatted you might still be able to get something.

Speaker 2

So what I did, and I haven't gone through all the photos yet, is I ran I looked at I just looked it up, but I got to look at. Make sure I tell you guys to rate the right software that I used for it was. I used the a data recovery utility that's free. It's called PhotoRec Photo Recovery.

Speaker 1

Wow, that's cool.

Speaker 2

Via another open source service called test disc, which is kind of there's a data hoarders subreddit and a data recovery subrendit that I'm on just for curiosity, which is this is highly recommended in there. It took me two

minutes to install it. Hold the followed the instructions on their website and let it scan this old hard drive which was an ide A two point five inch IDE drive, which I have a USB to IDE adapter, so I just plugged it in, plugged it in a USB, let it read it saw that it was an eighty eighty gig hard drive and let it rip and it found I told it, just find any media images you can find and just let it let it spin for took an hour and a half to do it. And now I've got you know this program if free?

Speaker 1

Yeah?

Speaker 2

Just wow, sudo pseudo app to get discy too. Whatever. This is. This is what I use chatty bt for.

Speaker 1

Right.

Speaker 2

It's like, here's this program, I want, how do I install in? How do I run it? One of the best, one of the best ways to run the software, and chatty bt does a does a really great job of kind of it's not always accurate, which is unfortunate. But this is what I like about Linux is that it's all community based, right, so I can just go to forums and look and search and find uh ways to run this. I was up and running on this software in a matter of minutes.

Speaker 1

So I've used for data recovery the first time, and I've been doing data recovery for years. I've recorded recovered drives that you know, they were formatted the whole bit. The first one I ever used was super powerful, and that was for a company called Kroll. It was held on track and it was a very expensive program, and we had them on the show and they gave me a license to use and it was amazing at number one, the speed and how it was able to recover files

on the whole bit. And then you know that it's been years, so it kind of degraded a little and at this point I didn't want to pay for another license. I found another one called easy Us and they make all kinds of they make backup software, they make security software, the partition software, and of course they have a data recovery software and that one works really well as well. That one's not too expensive. Wasn't that bad, wasn't like the other ones. But easy us works really good as well.

And again it'll do that whole bit. It'll look for files that have been deleted on your current partition, even look for files that have been that have just gone and it will find them.

Speaker 2

Yeah, this scan the whole drive, right, I told it, I don't care about the petition, just scan the whole drive bit for bit and tell me what you find. So I was going through it now. My mom had added a lot of photos to it, so it found a lot of the photos my moment, but it found some stuff that I even remember right from so I'm

still got you know. It ended up being like fifty two folders worth of images or from different sectors on the drives, and I went through about twenty of them last night before I was like, oh, it's one o'clock in the morning, I should probably go to bed, and so I got to go through some more tonight after the show. But it's really cool because it made it

really easy to back up content. Right this fall, we just had a yard sale where I went through I yard saled a ton of my old computers, a ton of my old laptops that you know, had been given to me from fam by family members, friends, my sister in law, my wife, laptops that used in college that they didn't care about anymore, pulled out the hard drives,

just sold the machines for petties on the dollar. But then I was like, you know what, let's just back up all these you know, maybe they want the pictures that are on here, and or maybe they want Hey, Laura, and my sister in law, Lauren, she went to Michigan State and it pulled. I was able to pull stuff from when she was in colleague back in two thousand and five, two thousand and six, when she was in college. So it's it's cool how easy it was to do.

Just pop the drive into this little reader and no lix, Linux just sees it. I can mount it, I can pull the copies over and.

Speaker 1

If you're a if you're a Windows user, you can you can find the same kind of hardware. I used Kingwin that's one of them I've used.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I don't want to confuse people to say you can only do this on Linux, right. I could have easily have just done this on my computer with the same USB drive and stuff. It's just I was having issues getting it to read some of the older drives that may have not been Linux does a little bit a better job of reading drives that may be corrupt or may have issues in different file formats and stuff. So I was just playing with Linux anyways. So it was just a piece to play with.

Speaker 1

So I know that sand Disk. They put out a drive and actually gave me a recovery software that came with the drive when I bought it, and ISD.

Speaker 2

Yeah, they had a big promotion for a long time where it was like, by the way, you buy your your SD card, here's some photo recovery software. Now it's either could be two things. Either they really want you to have the software, or you're buying a bad batch and you need the software. So here's here's the drive. By the way, here's the recovery software you're gonna need six months down of the road in the drive fails. Boy, which if you said SanDisk.

Speaker 1

Right, yeah, So do you remember Ocean Gate, Yes, yeah.

Speaker 2

The Titan submercible that that imploded.

Speaker 1

Oh, I'll tell you what. We are up against the clock. So we got to take a break. You've got more info on this uce gate and this is recent, so we come back. We will talk more about that with tech talk Radio. I'm Andy Taylor.

Speaker 2

I'm sean to weird. Find us on your favorite podcasting platform and give us a like, subscribe, give us a comment, review us. We'd love to hear from you. Check us out on YouTube shorts.

Speaker 1

And with that you can also email us. Eat tech guys at tech talk radio dot com Again te h g u y s at tech talk radio dot com. Now back to tech talk Radio.

Speaker 2

Right before the break, we were talking about sand disk and some file recovery software and stuff. Well, I think this tops the list in terms of photo recovery.

Speaker 1

All right, photo recovery, and it has something to do with Oceangate. If for our listeners don't remember, do you want to explain with that?

Speaker 2

Yeah, So ocean Gate is the is the submersible that the billionaire from overseas built and kept going to the Titanic and took a bunch of people down and then it imploded and killed the people on board.

Speaker 1

Stuff everybody.

Speaker 2

Yeah, at the depth of the ocean, right at that depth, it's like this ridiculous pressure and all stuff. So they ended up finding some They found the wreckage right by going down with robotics submersibles and finding it, and they found that one of their underwater cameras was discovered largely intact, and it contained a sand disc memory card that they were able to recover twelve stills and nine videos from my so if you go, if you just go to a tech tech spot has this on there on their blog.

But there's this whole investigation's happening, so it's all being very very thoroughly investigated, and there's a really good write up on here's what the camera was, Here's what they did to clean it, Here's what they found, really detailed images of the circuit board and the memory card and like the actual camera that was damaged, and it's pretty oppressive, but that's pretty cool for them to be able to

get down in there. The card was still encrypted, so it must have been a proprietary camera platform they were using. But like they were able to be able to they were able to remove the env ramchip and copy it to a surrogate card it was crazy what they had to do, but it's suppressive that this little piece of flash memory survived.

Speaker 1

And we're talking it's been underwater for a while. I mean yeah, almost two years ago and we're just hearing about that. I don't know if they recovered it right away or if they just recovered it recently, but wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 2

Yeah. None of none of the photos or videos were from from the final dive, unfortunately, well fortunately, I guess I don't want to stand fortunately, but.

Speaker 1

Yeah, yeah, so be interesting though, maybe if it'll give them any insight as to what really happened, what was the situation that could have caused it. I think they know anyways, but it's still that could be something else. Wowty crazy SD cards still forget it's.

Speaker 2

A pretty good uh pr for sand disk.

Speaker 1

Yeah. I like their I like their backup drives of use there there. I have had a couple of thumb drives go south and where suddenly you can't write to them anymore. That's happened.

Speaker 2

But other than that, no, I mean they have a pretty cool PRK now, right, there's nothing more crushing than losing your memories.

Speaker 1

Yeah that's true, right, It's true. Man, boy, are you. We were talking about something else too that you want. You wanted to mention this website that I thought was actually kind of cool. I've got another one for you to mention as well that you want to check out.

Speaker 2

So I thought about this the other night because I was going through that old hard drive, right, and because I still had the Windows the Windows file structure, I was able to see some of the older software that I had on there, like Ventrillo and team Speak, Wow and MSN Messenger and Yahoo Messenger and the software that I used in college, which to this would have been two thousand and five, two thousand and six, two thousand

and seven. And so then I was like, man, where I where can I even I even get these files, these softwares anymore? And I was like, there's this website that I remember, so I just google it during the break. It's called old version dot com because new wor's not always better old rights, right. So we were just talking about how Andy was editing the show and his drive footage in premiere and was having issues with the four K footage having the wrong codec. He wasn't playing right,

ended up putting it into black Magic. DaVinci Resolve, which is free for their base version.

Speaker 1

And completely handled it.

Speaker 2

And it completely handled it a problem. So what is he getting out of premiere? He couldn't because he only had this. He would have to pay for the newest version. He would have to pay for the subscription. So sometimes new work isn't always better because to pay for that subscription before. It's like if you wanted an older version of something, like if you upgraded to a new version of a messenger platform or something, how do you go backwards? Because a lot of places don't want you to go

backwards because they're updating bugs, security issues, et cetera. But you can go back and there's just tons of different I mean, there's hundreds of softwares on here that you can go back and find.

Speaker 1

You actually a download these and use them.

Speaker 2

They have they have the old versions of them still if you wanted to go all the way back, like MSN Messenger probably the number one messaging platform that I used since I started using the internet. I MEANAI it's a well messenger, right, you can go and they it looks like they have I don't know, they've got a ton they have seven different builds. It looks like that you can go all the way back. It doesn't tell me when they were built, right, MSID Messenger seven point five.

Speaker 1

Will you have to be careful though about where you're getting these from.

Speaker 2

Oh, I'm sure everybody take this with a grain of salt. Don't go here and just start downloading old files and start installing them, right, do little research. This is just me saying I like the site because I found one old version of a software that I needed one time. I haven't gone on here and downloaded a ton of these. They could be malicious. They could have torrents, they could have trojans whatever.

Speaker 1

Practice safe browsing, yeah, exactly, use common sense.

Speaker 2

Don't just click because like this is gonna be one of those websites that you click on the download link. It's gonna pop up and say click this to download now, right, But it really is the link to pages down that you need to click on to download it. It's they

try and trick you. But if you are in search of an old version of software that you know you had or you know you need because you're running Windows X, if you're running a legacy system that's running Windows ninety eight, Windows XP, whatever, offline, I hope go here old old version dot com, play out with it, see what works for you. Maybe you can find the version of software you're looking for.

Speaker 1

My daughter asked me the other day, the one that lives in Phoenix that likes she likes you remembers the old school video games. And I know that there's you know what, what is it galic? Is it Galaxy at Games or gog?

Speaker 2

Yeah, Good old games.

Speaker 1

Good Old Games is a website where you can find some of the older games, whether it be tomb Raider or Pack or whatever. You could find these tigns. And she was asking if I could build a Windows an old Windows computer, an xpeak computer with need for Speed road Rash, the one with the motorcycles that you would raise Redneck gram Page some of those games she would play because I had them on my machine. And I'm like, I think maybe it could happen. Just don't connect it

to the net. I wouldn't recommend that, but you could have fun playing the local games yourself. That would be something that would be kind of cool, and then maybe have some fun with these these programs as well. Yeah.

Speaker 2

Yah, there's a there's always going to be a community built around vintage gaming, classic gaming. There's a great suburb that's just called Windows XP or wind XP. It's all about building machines that are xpeak kept compatible and it's fun because that community. What they do is they push the boundaries of what Windows XP can run. So there's a running list of what's the current generation of something that Windows XP can run on. And I think they're up into like some core to duo stuff. You can

run a GTX six sixty. There's very specific hardware requirements for Windows XP that they're pushing the boundaries on for custom drivers that are made for nvidio cards or AmfD cards or certain hardware to push the boundaries of what can be run on Windows XP, which is pretty cool.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that is really cool. All right, I've got a website to mention now. We already mentioned radio dot Garden. You can find radio stations from around the country. But were just talking about video editing. I want to make a point. While I have not been wanting to, I've been upset because Adobe of course went the route of

subscription based. Heather row local reporter had commented. She showed a picture She said, I wish I missed the days of being able to own software that you could download or you could you know, install and run on your computer. And it was a picture of Creative Suite five to five, which is the suite that I've had as well in the past. And you know, the thing is, the new

Adobe software is powerful. Don't get me wrong. While I maybe have not the idea of spending seventy dollars a month on software that I may be able to use, you know, at this point, it's just not beneficial for me to eat that subscription costs. I am familiar with the older software. It does what I needed to do, you know, except in the case of the drone footage where it couldn't handle the higher resolutions. But the new

software from Adobe is great. They can do some things in Photoshop and stuff in Premiere after Effects that it's just mind boggling. Right, Well, there's another site. While I'm using Da Vinci Resolve now and I love it. I'm now getting the flow of it. Oh, here's how you do a fade. And I'm finding a lot of extras that are a part of it that weren't a part of the suite that I had with Premiere pro So Graphics and some other effects. I'm like okay, cool, I'm

finding these out. But there's another one. It's called OpenShot now. OpenShot dot org is a website for open shot. It's a open source video editor that could be used for Linux, mac Os, and Windows. It can be it's really designed for you if you're like a beginner and you're getting into it that you could do trimming, scaling, You could do transitions, so if you have a couple of scenes back to back, you can have you know, a wipe or a fade or dissolve. It also could do audio mixing.

You could download it from their website safely. Also offers a cloud API if you want to integrate video editing and your own application. But again it's open source and it's free, so again you can take a look at OpenShot dot org and see if something that maybe could work for you.

Speaker 2

I mean, you gotta remember open source stuff. It gets built by the community, it get supported by the community, it gets great ideas from the community. So it's like, you got it. You can take a risk and try it and it's not gonna hurt anything. And it's if it does what you need to do are the open source community.

Speaker 1

Absolutely, it's certainly worth it. All right, I'll tell you what we have listener questions standing by. Let me this is this. This is one of the questions that we got. So I have an Android device and I'm sick of the spam calls. Trust me, I feel that pain. I get him too. Uh, she's some Sometimes I block them and the next day, different number, same recorded message. How can I block these? All right, So we're gonna give

a solution to you. If you've been looking to try and block spam calls on your smartphone, It's actually not that difficult to do. You'll still have to deal with voicemail, but we'll do that when we come back. I'm Andy Taylor, I'm Shonda Ward.

Speaker 2

Find us on the web at TikTok radio dot com.

Speaker 1

Hold you rebec and now back to tech Talk Radio. So spam a lot of people get them. Whether you're getting spam mail, that's one thing, but if you're getting spam voice calls and voice messages, it could be really frustrating. I've talked to other business owners that tell me they get the same thing, whether it be somebody saying we need to verify your Yelp account and they get two or three of those A day, or they get them that hey we're finalizing the loan deal. You feel like

you haven't applied for a loan or anything. So if you want to block calls, you just don't want to have to deal with them. Here's one of the things you do. You could set your phone to ring only for people on your contact lists. Now, that could be difficult if you're running a business. However, it will allow people to leave a message, and of course the spam calls can still leave a message, but you don't have

to deal with it interrupting your day. So if you have an Android phone, one of the things you could do is use the do not disturb mode. Then you could set an exception to allow calls from contacts only, or even just favorite contacts like finally want to let Sean get you know in touch or you know Gloria or my boss. Those are the only three that can get through. Everybody else goes to voicemail. It'll do the same for messages as well, so somebody wants to text you,

it's not going to bother you. On an iPhone, Now you go to settings, your phone enables silence unknown colors. You can also use do not Disturb and set it to allow calls only from your contacts.

Speaker 2

So I've got I've got mindset to silence unknown callers, right. But I was just telling Andy during the break we were talking about this segment. I got one that it just came up. They can spoof the iOS contact cards, so it just said healthcare and then the phone number underneath, so it looked like a contact was calling me, but it's AID Healthcare. And I was like, I don't even have a contact called healthcare. So they were able to

spoof a contact card and it just had Healthcare. So it's like a little freaked out of all that.

Speaker 1

But yeah, you know, and somebody, somebody said, we'll just change your number.

Speaker 2

Okay, because that's a paid of the rear end, and then.

Speaker 1

You might change it to a number that's been getting spam, so you know, that's that's one of the things. It's really weird though, because we move moved a number that we had originally as our Skype number, we moved it to the iPhone. We never got spam ever on the Skype number, but we do on the iPhone now, and it's the same YELP calls that's not really Yelp.

Speaker 2

The listener that said, just change your phone number like that, think about it twenty years ago, twenty years ago. All right, that's I've had that same phone number twenty years I think thirty years ago. Just back a over for there, every ala line you could couldn't change your number without paying a big fee.

Speaker 1

Right.

Speaker 2

And then even then, when you got a cell phone number, it was still kind of a pain in the around to change it because you had to tell you had to tell everybody to get rid of your own contact phone number, new phone who dis right? So the question is how long have you had your current phone number. I've had the same phone number the entirety of my

cell phone existence. And it's interesting to think back. Okay, well we got those phones because I had to share a phone with my brother when I was in high school. This would have been two thousand and two thousand and one maybe, and we were on US Cellular. US Cellular got bought by all Tel, all Tail, God Bob by.

Speaker 1

Veracids, right, all of it. And the thing about it the numbers floating around there. When there's a hack your numbers out there, you know the number has.

Speaker 2

Been out there for who knows how long now, But you know, there's some protections for consumers in place, but it's still it just feels like it comes in waves. Right, It'll be no spam calls for a while, and then something will change in the law or somebody will figure something out, and then all of a sudden, you're just

getting inundated with phone calls. And it's interesting because if you're at work and you start getting spam calls, it's kind of freaky when other people around you also get spam calls at the same time, at the stay or around the same time, or within the same time period. They're like, oh, I'm getting a spam call. Five minutes say hey, I'm geting a spam call. It's like they're in some sort of algorithm that's like tracking us down.

Speaker 1

I'm wondering if forwarding your your call, if you you know, have you have a Google Voice number, just forward everything to a Google Voice number. But you're still dealing with the same thing.

Speaker 2

Yeah, you're so screening your calls.

Speaker 1

Speaking of hacks, and there's a big story about Gmail passwords about one hundred and eighty three million accounts apparently could have been leaked. And while Google is saying that it's really not. You know, that's not it's not a big issue. It's not as it's inaccurate. Others are saying, no, it is. And there's a website. If you've never checked the website, have I been poned? It is one to take a look at. Uh, and it's have I Been pw nd D? Is it dot com or dot or

dot com? Yeah? Dot com. So if you go to that, you can enter your information safely. Don't do a password, but you could do your email and it will tell you if your email is flowing out there in the wild as being one that was recently leaked, and could even tell you if your password could be one of those that piece of information that's out there.

Speaker 2

So my Gmail's fine. There are two breaches, one from December of twenty eighteen and one from August of twenty thirteen. So my Gmail, my Gmail counts pretty good. Let's see. Let's see my hotmail.

Speaker 1

It's my hot mail been okay, Yeah, you still use hotmail.

Speaker 2

That's my primary I've had that. Yeah, I still Yeah, so I everybody, everybody, They they keep trying so hard. Microsoft, just trying so hard to get me to switch it to an outlook.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

But I'm like, nah, this is I created this. I don't know why I decided to just pick Sean de Weird at hotmail dot com back back. But this is the same email address I've had, literally as I've had an email address.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

Yeah, so that would have been nineteen ninety eight, maybe even earlier. It's like, I can't get it up. Sorry, doesn't even exist. Yeah, twenty one.

Speaker 1

Data breaches for hot mil oh ouch ouch. Alright, So hot Topic advanced, autoparts, hot topictt.

Speaker 2

Park, Mobile, Drive, sure Start, Tribune, zinga Store, Envy World, twenty fifty, p X, live Journal, God live Journal.

Speaker 1

Oh yeah, they're got.

Speaker 2

Split Adobe, Tumblr, Dropbox, there's a there's a couple of the.

Speaker 1

You know, they got more techie as as the years from hot Topic to Dropbox. Yes, that's buddy, all right.

Speaker 2

I went through I don't want to call it like a EMO phase. I I bought man. Well, so hot Topic was the only place like this is back when you actually had to go to stores to buy stuff. For those people who are listening that don't buy stuff from actually brick and more stores anymore. They were the only place that was a legitimate place to buy gaming

T shirts. Right, because like you couldn't buy I bought. Yeah, they were kind of like the off the cuff store, the the rebellious store, right, so you could go buy your Halo two T shirts or you know, your gaming T shirts that were a little more violent than what Jac Pennies would sell. Now you can just buy it

all online, right whatever. But hot topic was where I bought a lot of my T shirts because I liked you know, I had a super Mario Brothers T shirt, I had a duck On T shirt, and I had a bunch of retro gaming T shirts that you couldn't get anywhere else. Success hot topic.

Speaker 1

Yeah, yeah, that's pretty cool though. Yeah, hot topic. That brings back some memories though. All right, so you can look this stuff up yourself. Have I been pooned? Ponned, p a w poned p A p w just PWND So have I been pwn d? Dot com? You can type in that email address and see if that has been the subject of a data More than more than likely it had. But it gives you something to be concerned with when that information is out there, what other

information goes along with it? Now, for anybody who has Gmail, Okay, you want to be safe, change your password and use a password manager. Don't use the same password. We see this too often where somebody just says, I'll just use the same password, use the same password for this and that and that and that, and a lot of the people out there that want to get into your accounts and want to see what you they know that and if they're able to hack one, they could possibly hack the elbow.

Speaker 2

And that question comes up too, right. We've talked about this on the show with Justin and Matt too. It's like password managers, are they worth it? Yes, they are, just there's one specific one I would highly tell you to avoid, and this Last Pass, right because they got hacked more than once and it's just been a nightmare for Last Pass and if you go to their website you would never know they got hacked, and it's just

kind of a shady thing. But the Apple pastor Manager and one Pass are my two recommendations for people if you're on a Mac and you want to stay in the macworld. The Apple password manager across all your iclod accounts that are super easy to.

Speaker 1

Use, haven't they They've just updated that too with the new iOS, haven't they.

Speaker 2

I believe. So I don't use it. It's just recommend it because it's part of the Apple ecosystem and becomes highly recommended across the Mac platform.

Speaker 1

One pass is phenomenal.

Speaker 2

One pass is phenomenal. I use it personally and then we use it at the enterprise level at work, and it's just it's it's great. It's super easy to use.

Speaker 1

Uh.

Speaker 2

Caitlin and I have both have it on your phones. You can sync it to your biometrics. You can use it for your face ID, so if you have passwords staved in it, you can set one password to do face ID. You can have it to use the fingerprint scanner like on my MacBook or you know. So it's one password is by far, I think the best, the best password manager that is out there right now.

Speaker 1

What do you think of the bio keys, Like I have a Ubi key and you know, you plug it into the USB port and your thumb can then set like a biometrics can do that.

Speaker 2

So you're talking like a biometrics two factor Yeah. I mean, if you're really concerned about security, sure, I think an actual physical biometric security could be beneficial. I don't think

it's necessary. I think if you're if you're practicing and using safe passwords and not using duplicates and not you know, using your dog's name is your password or password one two, three, four five or password or yeah, or filling out a survey at Facebook that's the top ten targets for password fishing is like what streets you grew up a what was your first car? What was your pet's name? Every survey that I ever filled out as a teenager on the internet.

Speaker 1

Yeah, the when's your birthday? I've seen?

Speaker 2

Yeah, So I mean, yeah, I think if you're just being safe and you're not and you're using good passwords with a capital letter, a symbol, well you know, more than twelve characters, et cetera, you're gonna be just fine.

Speaker 1

All right, I've got another website link to share with you. I showed this on television this past week and I thought it was pretty cool. It's called remove dot BG,

which stands for remove background. If you've scanned photos in and you have a background you don't like and you think that I want to change that, or maybe it's like your old school photo that had that canvas background that didn't look that good, you can upload your photo to remove dot B you could change, you could choose your background, or you could just use one of the predetermined ones that they have and you know, have a little fun with your photos. It's fun to do anyways,

It's fun to upload, take a look at it. It's safe, you know, and then you can even download the photo in like low resolution. If you want to pay for a higher resolution you can. But it's one of the many tools that are out there that if you want to have some fun, it's remove dot BG. And it's super easy to use, right because you.

Speaker 2

Can get it. You can downlo as p andgs, you can donald with JPEGs. It's it's very easy to use. I used it for when my d D player would create minis right for using in our virtual tabletop. They would just send it to me. I would just drop it in room and beg and then it's perfect, and then I have an actual, an actual mini looking token on our virtual tabletop platform. Is very easy to use.

Speaker 1

All right, we go to take another quick break. We come back with more of tech Talk Radio. I'm Andy Taylor, I'm Seanda Weird and now fact to tech Talk Radio. If you're a parent, you know, sometimes finding the right programming for your kid to watch or for you to watch with them can be a challenge. Scholastic has launched its first branded streaming app featuring Clifford, Goosebumps and other kinds of shows, Big Red, The Magic school Bus.

Speaker 2

Uh, Miss Frezzo Man, that was my jam back to.

Speaker 1

The Magic school Bus. Did you like that? Well?

Speaker 2

I loved that show. It actually is probably one of the like the most engaging video games ever played was the Magic school Bus video game.

Speaker 1

It was cool and a lot of kids will look at you know, you want you want your kids to have good stuff. Miss Rachel is great. You know, there's Lucas is great, but this is for kids two through twelve and their families can watch along with them. They got four hundred hours of premium content and it's free, which is that makes it That makes it even better. You can watch it on Roku devices if you've got

a Roku Amazon fire Stick. But you want to look for Scholastic and you know, we've trusted them with some of their content for years, and some of this video content.

Speaker 2

And I always loved going to the Scholastic book fairs growing up. Well yeah, and you know, coming home with a sheet and begging my parents to spend one hundred dollars on books.

Speaker 1

Well, do you remember there? Didn't they put out highlights? Was that Scholastic?

Speaker 2

Yes?

Speaker 1

I think it was because I if you go to the doctor's office, so we don't us.

Speaker 2

First Galantis, Goophus and Glantis or whatever it's called, always love that stuff.

Speaker 1

They also have like Barney and Friends, Garfield, this something to watch. So again look for that scholastic and you know whether the grand kids coming over, the kids they can enjoy that. And you you got something a little more technical though you want to share.

Speaker 2

So we talked a little bit about AI, and I was struggling to find an article that I had read recently about AI and Linux, but I did end up finding it. So Fedora, which is one of the leading distributions of Linux for the for a kernel level, they the Fedora's Governing Council, so they have an overarching government council on how the development of Linux goes forward. They've approved it an AI Assistant Contributions Policy, which officially allowing

responsible use of AI tools and project development. Supporters are saying that it's going to keep Fedora relevant in a rapidly shifting landscape acknowledging that AI is now a core part of Linux development.

Speaker 1

But don't you think like some people are moving away from some of the other OS's and going to, you know, something like Linux because it doesn't have the AI. They're getting away from it.

Speaker 2

But that's part of the reason why I was going away from it to get rid of the blow. This isn't necessarily meaning that AI is going to be used in your face, right, It's just meaning they're going to be using it to help develop Linux on the back end. That this is my take on it, right, they're going to use AI to help develop tools to make Linux better.

Speaker 1

We'll see you can talk more about it next week on this show. In the meantime, you can reach out to us tech guys at tech talk radio dot com. Drop us an email. That's it for this week's tech Talk Radio. I'm Ady Taylor, I'm Seanda Weird.

Speaker 2

Find us on your favorite podcasting platform, Apple, Spotify, Spreaker.

Speaker 1

You name it.

Speaker 2

Find us, like us, subscribe us, and drop us along. We'll get you over there.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android