This is HACO Public Radio episode 3,089 for Thursday the 4th of June 2020. Today's show is entitled for my entertainment. It is hosted by Archer 72 and is about 7 minutes long and carries a clean flag. The summer is how I have my file server and media center put together. This episode of HPR is brought to you by Analysthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15. Better web hosting that's on us than fair at Analysthost.com. Hi, this is Archer 72 and I'd like to thank HPR for providing the service to record too. Welcome to HACO Public Radio. I'm calling this one for my entertainment. I have a file server that's running Slackware, current version on platform. I wanted to make movies and TV shows. It's the accessible and the TV without using DVD or Blu-ray. It would give my wife and I in chance to sit and watch a show without much fuss. The latest show we are on is Sutama's FBI. The main character, Sue, has been deaf in about the age of four years. She is now a depth of reading lips and learning to speak. He's spiked being deaf, so that gets from the FBI and gets her a smirk. The worst part is the hardware. The pipe too is enclosed and stripped out power supply that had died on me as at one point. The fan still works, so I waited into the pipe on the 50 line, so it runs about half the speed it was designed for. That then makes it almost silent. These things added in days around 30-35 Celsius when I don't. Not working, I have both pies connected via Ethernet. One is on 192.168.2.5 with a gateway of 192.168.2.6. With the other just swapped the opposite, so it's essentially a cross over network. The reason for this is running Codion PIE4, I had tried in a jumpy video, but it is better running video coding, so I linked it to the PIE3 running Codion PIE4. I found out that I could use OSMC, which is open source media center for the Codion interface. It was a lot more stable on the PIE3, and it booted right in the Codion interface, which is something I was looking for. I'll leave a link to download the image in the show notes. They did LSBLK, which lists block devices, and DD with data sequels progress, with the input file of the image output file of what you saw on the block device. It's all in slackware, it's a little bit more complex, but not too much. It made a slack-arm mount point, and mounted the device that had the slackware sources onto that mount point, and CD into it. Then there's a command that's shown on the website about doing on our sink to get the sources from the FTP site, and the site is called FedDog, which says don't forget the period at the end of the arcing command or wallwork. I also made a directory called extras under this slack-arm that I just put the new sources into, and that's under that slack-arm directory. But I put in that directory for the extras was the system packages that are shown on the show notes. After getting all my sources and extras, then I can boot up the mini route with an extra SD card, which is what I intend to put slackware onto, and after mounting that second SD card listed by the LSBLK command again. And in most cases, it should show dev MMCBLK zero as the partition that you want to run the CFDIS kind. Mine particular ran about the P1 portion of a partition of it. I had put 150 mags, because I had a 4K RAM. I put the partition 2 as 4 gigs. And then after I exit it out of CFDISk, I run in a makeffs.bfat on the partition 1 to get a FedDog partition and make swap Mk's SWAP on the partition 2. From there, it's just a matter of running the installer and picking where you want to swap to be. And where you want the what partition do you want the SWAP slackware put onto. And then. And then there, just let it run its course, and it takes an hour or two. So you just want to go get a coffee and then configure ensemble later. I put a few, a little bit of an example of how I did it. And with that particular OSMC, I had problems with it staying connected to the Wi-Fi network. Or automatically connected when it booted. So I ran, brought a mini little script to connect it to the network and then wrote a system D file to start it automatically and boot. That's about all I did. This has been Archer 72. Thank you for listening. Remember to support free software. Thank you. Right. You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio and Hecker Public Radio.org. We are a community podcast network that release the shows every week day Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. 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