224 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
224 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 767
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Title: HPR0767: Maddog and "super dumb terminals"
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0767/hpr0767.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:06:34
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---
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Hey everyone, this is Claire too, and I met this Southeast Linux Fest 2011 talking
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with John Matidog, Paul, hey John, how's it going?
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It's going very well, thank you.
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So you're giving a talk, the keynote talk this year, do we have a title for that yet?
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A hint?
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I can't remember the actual title, but what the talk is about is making money with free
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software, but talking about how to create local jobs and doing that.
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Okay, well actually that, it sounds like it might have actually stemmed from something
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that you spoke about last year, I think, both itself and OLF, I think I saw your talk,
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Project Kawa.
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Kawa?
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Okay.
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And this was, I mean, obviously people should hunt this talk down because it would be a
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lot more clear than us just reiterating it, but it struck me after I saw your talk that
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this was almost maybe sort of the way computing was supposed to be, that rather than having
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that ubiquitous computer in every home where people don't really understand what they're
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doing maybe or don't really want to manage all this heavy duty systems stuff, maybe
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a sort of dumb terminal in every home might be sort of what computing was actually modeled
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for.
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Well, it's kind of a super dumb terminal, it gives you the graphics you need, it gives
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you the processing power you need, it's on all the time so that it can do the things
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you wanted to do, including things like be your telephone, be your TV, be your radio,
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and alarm clock, be your security system, things like that.
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I find that most people that can actually use a computer, because in particular, things
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that they do every day, the problem is that the things that they don't do every day, the
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things which really trick them, things like installing new software or doing backups
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or getting rid of viruses and spam, these are things that people really don't know how
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to do and they shouldn't have to do.
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Now in large companies you have systems administrators to do all this type of stuff, but small companies
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and the average person really can't, they can't afford that, but if you were to share
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a systems administrator amongst all these people and each one of these people was to give
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just a few dollars every month to this person for doing this work, you might be able to
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find out that sure they can sit down, they can browse the web, they can edit simple documents,
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they can do all the things that they want to do, and not have to worry about the stuff
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that they can't do.
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I have to tell you, after I saw your talk last year, the more I thought about it, the
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more actually brilliant, it started to sound, do you have any status update on that idea
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or that project?
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I know it sounded like it kind of got started when you talked about it last year.
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Well, we were having problems last year because we wanted to start this project down in
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Brazil, the economics of Brazil and the economics of a systems administrator just works out very,
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very nicely.
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In Latin America, about 83% of the people live in an urban environment which means tall
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office buildings and tall apartment buildings is a very dense environment.
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In the United States, not as many people live in that type of an environment and the wages
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for a systems administrator tend to be a little bit higher.
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So we wanted to do this, start this off in Brazil and Latin America.
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And unfortunately, just about the time we were starting it up, President Lula was coming
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the end of his second term and President Duma hadn't been elected yet and everybody just
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came to a branding halt.
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But now Duma is in, she's following a lot of the same policies that Lula was following,
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everything is starting back up again.
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In addition, some of the people I've been working with have figured out a way of delivering
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portion of Project Cawa and getting it started.
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So we're actually going to be launching this in early July at the Feastley Conference
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in Porto Alegra.
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That's great.
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Now we're not launching the full Project Cawa project because that's really very complex.
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But we are launching a portion of it and we're going to be demonstrating to people that
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a lot of the principles behind Project Cawa actually work.
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That geeks really can be salespeople, they really can be their own boss, they really
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can sell these things.
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And if they start selling them, then improving this concept, then we think that the government
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and other bodies that would help us do the full Project Cawa would then come in line
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and continue.
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So we're going to be, like I said, launching this at Feastley Conference in Porto Alegra,
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July, late June, early July.
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And we're going to keep going through various conferences in Brazil, extending it each time,
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doing more training and things like that, building it up, and engaging the community to do
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this.
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So we'll be showing the community, they'll be able to follow along, step by step to see
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what's happening.
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Everything's going to be published, everything's going to be out in the open.
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It is going to be a community project, it's not going to be a project of some company
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who wants to do this.
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It's going to be the community driving it forward.
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And I and the other people in the board of directors will be guides and will be catalysts
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to having it happen.
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But we want this to be a community project.
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OK, so it's obviously being centered or it's starting, I guess, in Brazil.
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Do you, in your grand vision, do you even think it's possible for it to spread outside
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of Brazil into a, I don't know, North America?
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Absolutely.
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And one of the things we're doing by publishing everything on the server, making it all
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available, is if people in other geographic regions want to do this, they can at any
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time.
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So I would recommend to people that they lag behind a little bit because we want to pilot
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things, we want to test things, we want to change, get them into shape, we want to apply
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what we learn back again in a redundant type of way, not redundant, but a self-healing type
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of way.
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But then in a certain period of time, we'll translate everything into Spanish.
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And now we will go up through Latin America and other Spanish-speaking countries.
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At that point, I think it would be safe for people to say, well, let's make sure it's
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in German or English or, you know, some of the other languages.
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And let's see where it would be applicable.
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So for example, in the United States, I could see it very applicable to a large shopping
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mall.
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We have a whole bunch of little stores in there.
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They can't afford their own systems of administrator.
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Let's put a nice, highly available server in there.
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All the stores now have thin clients as their point of sale terminals, their accounting
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systems, and things like that.
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You can make an open ERP available to them.
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And because Open ERP is a very complex package, the systems administrator could offer an additional
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service of teaching them how to use Open ERP or helping them configure Open ERP for their
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services.
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So this is the way that the systems administrator can make even more money by providing these
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base services to the people in the shopping mall.
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That's a very cool example.
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So is this, do you see this being very modular?
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I mean, so you guys are doing your thing down in Brazil and then someone does decide, hey,
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I'm this is sad.
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Or I'm a person who can bring this kind of model to a shopping mall or to my local neighborhood.
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And then someone else says, I can do it in my neighborhood.
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Is it something that can happen in little pockets like that and then be absolutely, absolutely.
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We call this the hamburger model where what we're doing is on the server, we will show everybody
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how to make a hamburger stand or lemonade stand.
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You don't need, you don't need to have a PhD to be able to set up a hamburger stand
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or that.
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And we'll show people and we'll have documents that people can then take in tailor so that
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brochures that they could show to their end user customers, this is why you should be
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buying the service.
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We're also going to have brochures that they could take to the bank and say, this is,
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this is how this thing works, you know, so that the bank can understand that their loan
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will be safe.
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Now, what might take a little bit longer and one of the things that we have to do in Brazil
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is that we want to set up an underwriting service for the banks that are going to be
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loading the money for these people to create their businesses.
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We want to have an underwriting service so that if any one of the loans is not paid back,
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the bank doesn't lose any money.
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One of the reasons why banks don't give out loans, or if they give out a loan, the
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interest rate is very high, is because of the risk factor of the loan.
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But if you have an underwriting program that assures the bank, they're never going to
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lose their money, then the bank says, whoa, you know, the only thing now is do we get more
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money by lending it to this person or do we get more money by lending it to that person?
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And if you've lowered the risk considerably, then that means that you, you know, even
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though you're paying a lower interest rate, you may actually get the loan over a higher
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interest rate because they have to figure a risk factor into that particular loan.
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So these are things that we want to set up and it's going to take a little bit of time.
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We also want to make sure that all the people that are doing this are at least certified
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in LPI certification or some certification program because we want to make sure that
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the people have the knowledge to be able to do this type of work.
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And if they have the knowledge and they've gone out and they've signed up a number of
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potential customers, then they should be able to approach the bank and say, hi, I'm
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part of this program, you understand what this program is about.
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Here's my list of potential customers, here's my certification, I'm licensed by the
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government, I will go out and get insurance bondage to, you know, to make sure that if
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I screw up somehow that my customers are covered and loan me the money.
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And the bank will look at all over us, you know, reason not to lend them the money and
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we could also have tax incentives in the government to help this go forward to say to the bank,
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you know, we've seen this program, we like it, we think it'll help.
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And it'll move people from being unemployed to being taxpayers.
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We're also targeting people who are perhaps single parents because they would be able
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to do this job from their own apartment house.
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Right.
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We're targeting people who have physical handicaps, physical challenges because it's no
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reason why a person who is in a wheelchair or otherwise, you know, we blind person, the
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reason why a blind person couldn't do this job.
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So we're doing this and if we set it upright, we believe that this job could be done,
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say you have 300 thing clients on your server, the base part of the job could probably
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be done in about 10 hours a week.
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So that leaves 30 hours a week for people to do other things like design websites, do
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simple programming jobs, give classes that end users can use a computer system better.
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I mean, what do you think about perhaps, you know, going down to the basement of your
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building and once a week having a course that would say, here's how to use open office
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better.
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Here's how to use the web, you know, your web browser better.
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And you pay, you know, equivalent of five bucks to attend the course for three or four
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hours, you know.
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I mean, there's types of things or things that we could offer and we want to offer to
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make computing better and more efficient.
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It's great.
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It's a great idea.
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I really, I'm really digging it more.
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I think about it.
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Where can people find out more information about it?
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www.projectcawa.pojectcaua.org.
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Right now, we're in the process of redoing our website, we were using one CMS system.
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That was a very good CMS system, but it didn't have all the facilities we really needed.
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So we're in the process of redoing the website for that and we probably should, we'll be
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finished that about the first week of July.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Maybe a little bit earlier.
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And once we've done our initial prototype launch, we want to be able to get feedback from
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people.
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So what types of things do you like about the prototype?
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What types of things would you change?
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And then, you know, what do you want to do for version 1.0 of projectcawa?
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You know, what types of things you need for home automation, things like that.
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So it really will be a back and forth between the community and the people who are kind of
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guiding bunch of cawa forward.
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And we want to have a lot of input from the community as to what they would like.
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And for my viewpoint, this helps out not only projectcawa and Latin America, but this
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helps out Linux itself and free software.
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Because if you took it to its extreme, we're going to develop about two million new servers
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with about a million and a half systems administrators who are all dealing with free software.
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We may have about, we may have close to 400 million than clients that we're talking about
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that can be manufactured by any number of manufacturing companies.
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The design will be open.
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And when you're talking about that many systems, then magically things start to happen like
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open device drivers and open this and open that because the companies that make these
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things will no longer be able to ignore the marketplace.
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Thank you so much for talking to me.
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I'm glad you could make it.
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Is this your third self in a row or did you bring it here on the first one?
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I wasn't here on the first one.
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I think this is my second one.
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Cool.
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Well, welcome back and I look forward to your keynote.
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Well, and I'm looking forward to your presentation on a video and anything.
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Cool.
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All right.
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See you there.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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For more information on the show and how to contribute your own shows visit HackerPublicRadio.org
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