<div dir="ltr">Those books were donated by Al Sweigart, the author, I'm just the conduit. He wouldn't even<div>accept money for the shipping. The books were: _The_Recursive_Book_of_Recursion_ and</div><div>_Beyond_the_Basic_Stuff_with_Python_. Thanks all go to Al, I just used them to confuse</div><div>the heck out of Jim when I dropped them off at his house.</div><div><br></div><div>Sean</div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote gmail_quote_container"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Tue, Mar 11, 2025 at 7:32 PM Bob Proulx <<a href="mailto:bob@proulx.com">bob@proulx.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">j dewitt wrote:<br>
> What: Tuesday March 11th, 2024 NCLUG Meeting<br>
<br>
I just had a routine eye exam, which due to my retina tear (all good<br>
now), requires dilation. I can almost see something. Somewhat.<br>
Almost. So notes are going to be touch typed without much review for<br>
syntax, gramar, spelling, or sanity.<br>
<br>
We had a good turnout of people at tonight's meet. Which for us means<br>
that we filled both of the workbench tables in the creator hub meeting<br>
area. Pretty good for us was just short of 20 people. Awesome!<br>
<br>
Aaron was first in time with a talk announcement putting him first in<br>
line to talk at the meeting! The topic was an open WiFi<br>
demonstration. Aaron brought a handful of Aruba Networks IAP Instant<br>
Access Point. They are now very available on the used market from<br>
eBay. They now run OpenWRT making them very desirable devices.<br>
<br>
Stacked with that was a 48-port high performance enterprise network<br>
switch. Loud! Dual power supplies. 40Gbps interconnect. POE ports.<br>
Loud! Much quieter after it boots up fully. The only purpose of this<br>
switch over a small consumer switch is that Aaron pretty much only has<br>
full size enterprise equipment and this was his spare equipment.<br>
<br>
The plan was to live demo show loading OpenWRT onto a factory firmware<br>
Aruba WiFi device. We lost focus a little bit because it takes so<br>
long to boot the network switch and then to boot the Aruba IAP WiFi<br>
device. We also had multiple comments about Aaron using the perfectly<br>
valid Kermit utility for serial interfacing. Kermit is perfectly<br>
valid!<br>
<br>
Stephen demonstrated a new Android thing. The latest Android has a<br>
built in GNU/Linux container feature. The first time it runs it will<br>
download about 500MB of system to create the container. And then on<br>
the phone you have what appears to be a full featured GNU/Linux system<br>
in minimal install. Which then will want to download maybe a Gig more<br>
in order to install enough for it to be useful to do something serious<br>
with it.<br>
<br>
Set up the container. Install sshd. Then ssh *into the phone* and<br>
there is a full GNU/Linux system running as a virtual machine on the<br>
phone. The phone's file system is not fully available but the phone's<br>
Download directory is shared allowing a drop area. Stephen<br>
demonstrated compiling GNU bash as an example of being able to do<br>
pretty much anything on this virtual machine.<br>
<br>
This is similar to Termux but whereas that is an Android app and<br>
interacts like an Android app this is either a container or a virtual<br>
machine and is not limited by the Android API. It is limited by<br>
running in the virtual machine environment and can't access most of<br>
the phone's file system it can do everything else in a perfectly<br>
normal system way. It loads up Debian 12 Bookworm which is current.<br>
<br>
James brought in three nice Python books that were donated by Sean.<br>
Those were given away to people who were interested in them. I didn't<br>
catch the three titles but they were three nice Python books from<br>
Sean. From No Starch Press. Autographed by the author. Thanks Sean!<br>
</blockquote></div>