166 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
166 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1298
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Title: HPR1298: Recording for HPR using Audacity
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1298/hpr1298.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:09:53
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---
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Do you enjoy your wonderful 12th house in colour?
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My pleasure!
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Hello and welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Nido Media and I'm here to talk a bit about recording episodes.
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Recently we've had the case that we had so few episodes that we had to resort to the backup
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episodes, which also was the moment we found out we had just about six backup episodes.
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So there's talk about getting rid of the idea of the backup episodes all the way because
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well there really weren't any and even that all put aside there are very few shows now
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and we really do need them to continue so I decided to make an episode about a recording
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an episode using Audacity. If all goes well it is really not that hard. You download
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a blessed tea using your package manager and you install it and then you find this icon
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with this wave looking thingy with the headphones which says Audacity and you start it up.
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Then you get a program and there's on the top there's this pick round button together with all
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kinds of other buttons but this one is special because it's round and it's red and if you hover
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above it it will say record. So if you want to record something and everything goes well you press
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that button and you're in business. It starts recording you get a big line going over the screen
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and however many tracks you are recording and when you are talking then the display goes make a
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little waveform and if you play it back then you hear yourself talk and you probably think hey
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I don't really sound like that unfortunately you do but you sound like that to other people anyway
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so don't worry about that. So the first problem you may have is that everything is working except for
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the fact that you speak into your microphone and nothing is happening on the screen. It still gives
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it that single line in the middle and it doesn't move up or down no matter how hard you shout into
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the microphone nothing works. There are a few things which can be wrong in this case it's either
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a connection between your microphone and your computer which is not really matching up so
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check whether it's really plugged in. If it's not that then there may be something wrong inside
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in a software connection or maybe you need to put up a volume slider in order to hear actually hear
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hear your voice but maybe you have multiple sound cards in your computer because you have your
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normal sound card which you use for your gaming and your listening to music and whatever
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which is a separate sound card which you bought from the sound card which is on the motor board
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or maybe you don't have any extra sound card inside but you just used your USB microphone and
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you plugged it in your computer. Technically that's a different sound card so the first thing you
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want to look up in Audacity is whether the settings are correct and in the menu above the five
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six buttons I told you about earlier there's this menu called Edit and all the way down there's
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a menu called Preferences which has a it has a shortcut control P so you can just press control P and
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get Preferences menu. In this on the left side you have all kinds of options you can choose from
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wait with going towards the recording option in this list and stick with the devices first because
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that's the thing we are nearly the thing where you need to look at first. When you look in the right
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part of the menu you have a subframe called Interface from this you have a menu in which you can
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choose your host under my system I can choose between Alsah or a jack audio connection kit I've
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both installed and running at the moment so I can choose either of those options. Most likely
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yours only has the choice Alsah. After choosing it it will say using and then whatever it is actually
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using in order to make that connection which is in my case port audio and it can connect to any of
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those hosts. Anyway it's not important. Next is the playback device the device is different in
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the host that the host is basically the language it talks to your sound device and the device is the
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actual device which it uses. Well actual device also not per se. If you look in the possible options
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for playback and you have an Alsah host and Fedora 17 or some other Linux system and a lot of
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sound cards then you get a big list. These are basically the Alsah devices which can play back
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usually default works if you usually have sound then playing back in a desiti under the default
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device will work without a problem. So let's skip that part let's go to the recording device which
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is another one of them sub taps and well there's the choice of the device which is usually set on
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default and then there's also the option of sys default which for all intensive purposes now
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is basically the same and I also have here the option pulse which is to say use the pulse audio
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device and then there's in my case also the option for the various actual connections on the
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card is here the HDA and Vidia VT107O8S analog and then there's between brackets HW0,0 close
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bracket and it's there's like rear mc1 front mc1 0 line 0 and stereo mix are 0 and having used a
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lot of different audio devices under different Linux systems I can say that these descriptions
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aren't necessarily corresponding what is happening in the actual world so if you have your
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device connected to your front connection maybe you still need to select the rear microphone
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these are values which are extracted from the from the firmware which is installed on the audio
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device and it is not always correct so just try them all try to record something see if you can
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actually make some noise and see what happens then once you have chosen a device you have
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still have the option for multiple channels there's an option for Mona and there's an option for
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stereo for most normal devices sometimes when you have a specialized audio card you may have access
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to as much as 18 channels at the same time and it may not necessarily be channel 1 to which your
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microphone is connected so in the interest of getting something recorded as fast as possible just
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choose the biggest number of channels you can choose record all 18 tracks at the same time
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and remove the redundant tracks once you're done recording okay say you've tried all these
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different audio devices and you still can't really get anything or you're not really sure which one
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of these devices and which one of these hosts you should pick one other thing which you can
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look at is your sound menu at the moment i'm using fedora 18 and it's using i think no tree
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and at the top in this case there's this little volume looking thingy icon and from that i have
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something called sound settings and it brings me to some system default sound settings
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you can look here and try and find something like input and see if you can boost some
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input volume and this may or this may not work one other thing you can look at which is the
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tool which i usually use in order to set my volumes is i go down to the terminal and i start
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i use program called ulsa mixer you can run it basically by calling the command ulsa mixer
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and it will give you a graphical interface and it tells you which card it is working on which
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chip it's working on and it gives you a list of views which is playback capture or all by pressing
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f4 you can go to the capture list and by pressing f5 you can get ul which is the playback and the
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capture list f3 is only the playback list and it tells you which item you are working on you can move
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left and right you can move left and right using the keyboard left and right and you can either increase
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or decrease the volume of the current slider you're working on by pressing the up and down button
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if at the bottom of the volume slider there's this little 000 which is either green or it says
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mm in blue letters you can press the m button which is mapped to mute to either turn it on or off
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in the case you are having no reaction from your sound card but you're still trying to
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shout in it as hard as you can but the program isn't picking it up i suggest going to the capture
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menu using f4 putting all the sliders way up into 100% and unmuting every single button you can
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find. On most current Linux systems if you run ulcer mixer and you do not give it any arguments
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then it will give you the default card which in most Linux systems nowadays is Pills Audio in this
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case you only have one little slider and you can only move it up and down from 0 to 100 but
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this is not any one of the actual sound cards in your system you can tell ulcer mixer to use
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one of the sound cards by running it with an argument if you run ulcer mixer and you give them
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the argument minus c which stands for cards and let's say zero card number zero it will give you
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the information on your on one of the actual sound cards in the system now be aware that meddling
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with the settings in Pills Audio will actually change the settings within the sound card itself
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so after you've changed settings within here and then ulter the settings within Pills Audio they
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may affect what is happening on your sound card be aware of this anyway in here you can also go
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to your capture menu using the button f4 and most of the time there's the capture there's a capture
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one and some other named sliders which don't really say you anything and there's an input source
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and there's a boost or a mic boost or a front mic boost or whatever these boosts go in
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little in big steps and you want to put them all up in order to get any signal out in the first
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try so you know for sure that there isn't any problem if you turn these all up and try to record
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again and actually have signal then it is time first try to reduce the boosts and after you've
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turned the boost all the way down only then start to actually decrease the capture volume
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so you are sure you have the best quality anyway and say you have tried your first sound card
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using the argument to also make sure that c zero and maybe you use another card in the example
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of an external microphone and USB microphone most certainly that will not be the first sound card
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sound card your system have sound that will probably be the second card so you can use say give
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the command also mixer dash c one it will it's the same also mixer as before so it will work
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exactly the same sometimes if you have a specific midi device which has no audio options
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itself it will still pop up in your also mixer only it doesn't really it says this sound device does
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not have any playback or capture controls but try device number two try device number three
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and by the time you don't have you have enumerated all the devices by the time you get to
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invalid device it will say invalid the card index whichever the argument was and it will not
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start also mixer so once you've turned all the volumes up on all the sound cards you're pretty sure
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you actually turn them all up by this time if you're actually going through the to audacity and
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press the big magic red record button it should actually start recording and give you a waveform
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little display of the waveform it is showing down there by the time you'll actually say something
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into the microphone if it not try again you looking by edit going through preferences and under
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device try every interface and under recording try every device use the maximum number of channels
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press record and find your microphone problem number two you actually have a working setup only
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you don't know anything you want to you would like to talk about if you go to hackerpublicradio.org
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in the menu there's a button called contribute and it will bring you to hackerpublicradio.org
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dash contribute that php and in this list next to also a few guides on how to get
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recording going there's also a list called requested topics these are topics that anyone
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there are people who actually put effort into requesting this information about this topic if
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you know anything about the topic at all you are here by qualified to make a recording if there
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isn't any subject in this list at all to which you say I have any knowledge about the subject then
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I want to ask you how can you not know what is in your bag because one of the issues on the list
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is what's in your bag tell us what your tool gear stuff you use and keep close at hand anyway this
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was we with another episode and I hope you enjoyed it I hope you will record something as well
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because we really do need it we really do at the moment of recording we have for recordings for
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nine days which is roughly which is roughly two weeks one and a half weeks something about that size
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still we need shows all right now let's pretend you have recorded your recording and you're happy
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with everything you said and the quality is decent enough if it's not just play around with some
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of the effects and for example there is a noise removal effect which really helps for background
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noise basically just record a few seconds of silence only background noise tell the noise
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removal tool do to to analyze it and then to do the noise removal on the whole sound and nine
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out of ten times it sounds a lot better one thing you really should do at the end is use the effect
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normalize and normalize the maximum amplitude to zero dB or perhaps if you're a bit careful
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minus 0.1 dB after you've done that it will normalize the audio so it will use all the bandwidth
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within the signal that is available after you've done that you're done you can go to file
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export I assume you already saved your project in between recordings and editing so you go to
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exports you export it as a flag file when you go to options when you go to options put the level
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at eight or best set the bit depth to 24 press okay and give the episode a title
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if you have some time make some show notes I'm going to include some links to some information
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about show notes in my own and then it's time to publish it to hacker public radio sent an
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email to admin at hacker public radio dot org and he will help you get your show on the air so
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get your gear in order get your subject ready and record an episode for hacker public radio
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you have been listening to hacker public radio at hacker public radio dot org we are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our
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shows was contributed by a hbr listener like yourself if you ever consider recording a podcast
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then visit our website to find out how easy it really is hacker public radio was found
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by the digital dot pound and the economical computer cloud hbr is funded by the binary revolution
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at binref dot com all binref projects are crowd- Exponsored by lunar pages from shared hosting
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to custom private clouds go to lunar pages dot com for all your hosting needs unless otherwise
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today's show is released under a creative commons attribution share a line
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we're also on license
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