244 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
244 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1208
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Title: HPR1208: Northeast Linux Fest 2013 p1-3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1208/hpr1208.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 21:39:05
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---
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Hey everybody, it's Bogey and N.Y. Bill and we're here at the Northeast Gnu Linux
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Fest and we wish you were here but since you're not, we're going to talk to some people
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so you can see kind of what's going on and we're here with the hammer. What's up
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hammer? How are you doing? Hey, I'm doing well. I'm enjoying this the third annual
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Northeast Linux Fest and at a new location at Harvard and it's pretty good. Have you been
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having fun here so far? So far so good. There's been a few presentations and the vendors
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have a lot of interesting things to look at. What were the presentations you've enjoyed
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so far? Well, I've been looking at the human side of using a computer. Nice. Okay, that
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I haven't had just a CD of the track so I'm of our time would follow up questions here but
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yeah, it's cool. I mean, what are people missing here? The human side? Yeah, it was just showing
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how geeks will often miss a human element where we tend to project well here. You should do this
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and instead it teaches us how to be more responsive to the people's needs and look at that side
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of the equation. Awesome. Awesome. And I remember seeing you here the first two years so you've been
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back. You always liked it enough to come back. So I'm going to say to the folks who aren't here
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that should be incentive enough to make it. If you're close enough that you could have been here
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and aren't here, you should try next year. You really should. All right. Hey, thanks a lot for your
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time, Amber. All right. Thank you much. I take it easy. We're absolutely going to go bomb
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bar. Yeah, we should say what we're doing. I just plugged my microphone into the e and we're
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going to record and just go up to people. Can found style. Could we say that? We're going to
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say that. All right. Come on, Kazzie, interview.
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Someone else. Okay. What?
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What? It's hard to yell about the human side. No, I don't know. Okay. I just want to make sure.
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You know, I, human sides, I want, I want people to think I think everybody is cold. There's
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some light in the industry. You know, everybody is. That's why we have these to work people up.
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Yeah, this is a great pleasure. Yeah, put the microphone in your face. Okay, we just recorded all that.
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I think this is a directional mic. I think it doesn't pick me up this way and it'll pick me up
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this way. Nice. I like a directional mic. How's it going? It's going well. What's your name? My name is
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Paul. Paul, you are wearing a Northeast Gnu Linux Fest official shirt. Are you an official here?
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No, I'm just a volunteer, but I wanted to sponsor the event. So I paid $30. It's got nice
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official looking t-shirt. Right on. I work here at Harvard. Right on. Thank you very much for helping
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us out. What kind of volunteer work have you been doing here so far? Directing people to where
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the various rooms are, helping set up the folding programs, handing them out, and running and
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grabbing lunch for some of the other volunteers. Okay, so folks, he is officially running the conference.
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This is what he's doing here. Don't believe a word about him not doing it. This guy's running the
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show. Are you having fun with our little community here? Yeah, this is great. I'm an IT manager on
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campus, and so I used to doing with Harvard IT people, and here I'm meeting a whole different crowd
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of people of, you know, a good group of good group of people. Awesome. Awesome. Have you been?
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Very knowledgeable. Have you been to other IT conferences before? Oh, yes. You know,
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the usual Microsoft stuff, and I'm a Fomaker developer, so Fomaker conference is a database.
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And how does this compare to a Microsoft or a database conference? It's a shoestring budget.
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A shoestring budget, but dedicated people. For sure, for sure, and how about how does it compare
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smiles per dollar? What would you say? Oh, definitely, definitely. You're getting the maximum value,
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maximum value. Right on, right on. Thank you so much for your time. Is there anything else you
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wanted to say about the fast while we're here? No, just we're here tomorrow, so come on down.
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There's still some great talks to be had. Right on. website and the program. Right on. Thank you so
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much for your time. Don't let us interrupt. We are patient. We just loom. Nothing, nothing's going
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on here. I know your voice. Who are you? I'm Russ Winder from the Techie Geek podcast.
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This deserves a high five. Okay. Great to meet you, Russ. Cool. Yes, sir. And NY Bill is the
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minute. Yeah, I'm recording the recording. Folks, sorry. We have a very directional mic here.
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Folks, it has to swing around. People are people are and we're clipping it. We're terribly. I'm
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terribly unprofessional holding a mic. I'm sorry. Yeah, great. Thanks. So how you doing the
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fest? I'm loving it. It's my first time at the Northeast Linux Fest and it's been great.
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Awesome. Awesome. What's what are you doing? That's fun here.
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Everything I've been going to talks and stopping by all the tables and just geeking out with my friends.
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It's been great. Nice, nice favorite talk so far. I think I just came out of a call at like the
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last 10 minutes of a talk on tour. And it was really interesting. So I'm looking forward to
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listening to the full recording later. Awesome. And favorite friends so far? You know I'm kidding.
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Okay. Well, I'm actually staying in the same hotel with Jonathan Nado and Steve McLaughlin,
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the door-to-door geek and super coop, Cody Cooper. So we had fun last night. We went out the
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dinner, drank too much of course, but it's been fun. Loving it. I'm so jealous. I just couldn't
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make it down here in time last night. I really, you guys invited me down and I really wanted to be
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here for it and I blew it, but it's my own fault. But thanks for inviting me and I'm thrilled that
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you guys are having a good time. Yeah, I went back to the room at 11 and they they went back out
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after I went to bed. So I'm rested, but I was surprised they went back out, but they had a good time.
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And I'll ask you about my own personal conference favorite. Any board gaming coming up,
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anything on the radar that you've heard of? Board gaming? No, I haven't heard of that.
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Okay. I like board gaming, but come on, friends, dudes, after out. What's your favorite board game?
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The only thing I've ever played, and it was not actually a board game, it was a card game last year,
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NJ, I'm Irfan NJ, had brought a game called Jungle Speed, which was incredibly easy to learn,
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15 people sitting around the table, smashing knuckles, trying to grab the totems.
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Yeah, my son and his friends got us playing a game called Settlers of Catan. Yes, Settlers of Catan.
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Yeah, so I played that. That is addictive and a lot of fun too. That is the entry level drug of
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board gaming. It's the perfect one to start with. Oh, awesome. That's good to know. Awesome.
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Thank you so much for your time. Was there anything else you wanted to say about the Fest or
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2HPR? Just, if you can get here next year, do it. This is awesome venue at Harvard University.
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It's a growing conference, and it's wonderful, so hope to see you next year.
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Yeah, same here. Awesome. Thanks so much for your time, Russ.
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Hey everybody, it's Pokey. And we are here with? I don't really have a cool name.
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You can use your real name if you want to. Oh, you can call you flashy devil, your
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girl, devil horn girl from Google. No devil horns, just Mary from Google.
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Mary from Google. And we wanted to get you on record. As earlier, we put words in your mouth,
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and we said that HPR is bigger than Google and you didn't deny it. Is that true?
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It is true. I want to go on record and say that absolutely HPR is more influential, bigger,
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and better. And explain what you meant by that, because clearly HPR is not bigger than Google,
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but what did you mean by that? Because it was kind of cool. I don't remember because we had a
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better table than you and HPR sent more stuff than Google sent to you, even though you had better
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looking people at your table. Let me rephrase that our table is very, very sad looking. Hacker
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public radio table is super swanky, cool logos, cool table cloth. You have better swag. We
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have stickers and stuff, but you have coffee cozies and pens and luggage handle cushions. Those
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are actually pretty cool. We got stickers, but we have more people contributing. Yes, yes,
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you do. I've had a lot of questions about these luggage handles. Someone thought it was a pen
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cozy, and I said that's brilliant. It wouldn't make a magic marker cozy. You couldn't fit a pen,
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you couldn't find a pen in that size. No, you could not. So, you know, we were just talking earlier
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and you were telling me you were excited to do a Hacker public radio show with some Google folks.
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Yes, we can't wait to talk about all our different programs, Google Summer of Code, Google Code
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in, all our different open source initiatives. We got all sorts of things that we could talk about.
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Cool. And were you talking about paid Google people? Are these volunteers and enthusiasts?
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Volunteers and enthusiasts. We won't pay anyone to do this. We love that about. They're just going to
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love it. Awesome. Awesome. I won't ask you to tip your hand. I probably haven't even given any
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thought, but what do you think of the Northeast New Linux Fest so far? Awesome. So far,
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lots of great questions, lots of great people. We're proud to be a part of it. Awesome. Thank you
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very much. Have you, I lost my question. You say something? One thing I really need to do is
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go see more of the sessions. I've only got to see the keynote part of the keynote this morning. So
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next time I'm bringing a partner in crime so that we can switch off a little bit.
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That actually helps. But I'll tell you, it doesn't help enough because I've had help every year
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and I've still had so much fun out in the hallway. I've been here three years and I've never seen a talk.
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Three years. Never seen a talk. Three years. I've never seen a talk in person. Time to put down the
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microphone and... This sends up being like a bit of a lug for us people that just hang out in
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IRC's all the time. So it's nice to see face to face and we end up in the hallway just hanging out
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all the time. Yeah, the talks are usually recorded and I can catch them on a recording or something.
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I don't know if they're being recorded this year. I really need to find out, but they usually are,
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but I can't record people and see them later. So I usually just talk to people.
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That's true. And the coolest people do hang out in the hallway behind tables, so.
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You are not... Well, not even just... Sure, the coolest people are behind tables, but the second
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coolest people are in front of tables. I'll say that. Yeah, so one with the big 80s microphone for...
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The game show microphone. I'm almost sad that you insulted Bill's microphone because it's
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the best mic I've ever used and it's already my favorite. This is a microphone from about 1986
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when I used to play in bands. So yes, this came out of a basement. How did you know?
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If I can give you a visual, imagine Bob Barker with GoTis beers, lots of stickers and a big microphone.
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And I can tell you from talking to this woman before, she probably was not...
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Maybe a lot. She probably alive, but not conscious yet in the 80s, because she thought she invented and
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knowing was half the battle. I never claimed to invent the phrase, but I did not know it was from G.I. Joe.
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As a child of the 80s, that makes me very upset, but half the battle is knowing. So I'm halfway there.
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Yeah, this is just the kind of awesome stuff that happens at the Northeast Linux Fest.
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And you guys should be here. You should really be here next year. Did you have anything else you
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wanted to say on behalf of Google or yourself or about the Fest? Thank you for having us again.
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We're really proud to be here. We'll be back next year. Awesome. Thank you so much for your time.
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Thank you guys. Enjoy the rest of the conference. I'm going to listen to the podcast.
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And Matt Lee of all people just wandered by with a bag full of lollipops and
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other dumb dumb. Are you calling me a dumb dumb? No, I'm calling myself a dumb dumb.
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Right on. How you been Matt? I'm good. Yeah, I'm really good.
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Cool. How are you enjoying the Fest this year? It's great. Third time. Third time speaking. So I should
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get some kind of, you know, trophy at this point, I think, but I hear by present you with a questionable
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dumb dumb. That's great flavor, I think. Mystery flavor. That's why it's questionable. It's got
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question marks on. Well, that's what I meant by questionable. There's your trophy. Thank you very
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much. You don't have a free hand there. So what's what's what's fun here for you today?
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Well, I came. I want to hear Mad Dog Talk. I just had John Sullivan talk before lunch. I'm looking
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forward to the talks, but also looking forward to the after party tonight. So I had been
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dubiously given the honor of having to run that this year from being quite into the last two.
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Now here in Boston or in Cambridge, I'm going to be running that tonight. So right on, where's
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everybody going? It's Buck or JJ Foley's bar and grill downtown crossing in Boston on Kingston
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Street 7 p.m. till late. Open bar. Open open, but I did not know that. I may have to make my son
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wait in the car because they said he say free bar. I don't know that point, you know. Yeah, yeah,
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no, I, well, this won't go up until after the event's done. So don't worry about it anyway, but
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they said I called them yesterday and they said my son can't come in at that time. So I won't be
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there, but I may make him wait in the car. I would do that. Yeah. I take advantage of a free bar
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and run up maybe five or six of them before I drive home. I think it should be my plan.
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Do not drive home drunk. What? Oh, this is a public service announcement on behalf of the
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free stuff of community. They're not drive drunk, listeners.
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Matt Lee, respectable upright citizen. There you have it folks. It's time your son learned how to drive.
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Good point. The boys 13. It's about time. Are you 13? Yes, we're driving already. Come on. He's
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probably smoking already. I mean, come on. You're now you're making me nervous. I gotta go take
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care. You talk to Matt. I'm talking to my son. So anything, anything personal you've been doing
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lately? I want to talk about it. I know you're a pretty big presence on the web. Yeah. So I left
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the FSF about seven months ago now. Now I'm doing my own thing under under good terms. I hope
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under good terms, under great terms. It's why me and John were here together, like you're not
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fighting or anything. Under good terms, yeah. And I'm now working full-time as a developer.
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More like in-house sort of bespoke stuff, but I'm also you know, I'm also developing again full-time.
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So I'm looking back through my old code, my old like KUNFM code, and I'm wondering what the hell
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I did, why, why did things that way the first time around. So I'm getting better as a developer,
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which is, you know, I guess it's good for free software right at some point.
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Where if you don't mind me asking, you can tell me you mind me asking, but how does the money come
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in developing for yourself here? Well, I'm not developing for myself. I'm actually working for
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a company. I'll tell you a full-time job. So yeah, I wish I was, you know, I mean like maybe at some
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point I can be doing the thing for myself, but right now it's definitely like it's an agency model.
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So it's like, you know, it's working with a lot of like marketing and like other departments and
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stuff, but it's fun. Okay. All right. Well, and they're not handing out software. So they're not
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necessarily handing out code. It's not a moral for the most part. And everything is developed with
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free software. I'm using free software. I'm just up in the office. Of course. Of course, you know,
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I'm the only person doing that, but I'm doing that. And so yeah, it's good. Awesome. Awesome.
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Awesome. Glad to hear things going well for you. Anything else you wanted to say about the
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conference or anything or anything that you're doing? Not really. I would say that this is a fantastic
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event. And if you can't come today, you know, here's today, come next time. Hopefully it's going to
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be here in Cambridge again for years to come. This is definitely a much better location than it is in
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Worcester. And hopefully if Bruce and Jonathan configure this out again next year, it'll be great.
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I want to see HPR here again next year. You know, we've got enough people here this year that I feel
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confident, you know, guaranteeing that at least one guy, at least one person to come back.
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Where is my HPR tote bag coming? Your HPR tote bag is that's at the $350 contribution level.
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And you donated 345. That's why you got the that's why you got the pencil from Google.
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I should have said, these dolly pops were actually $5 each. So I didn't take one.
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Oh, you guys took like eight of them down there on that table.
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Right on. Okay. We'll see about we'll see about getting you one of the tote bags.
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Excellent. Thank you. Thanks a lot, Matt. You have a great day.
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Thanks.
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Thanks.
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We're sticking Mike in your face.
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When you don't chew on a lollipop.
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Right. Oh, you want to talk in an hour?
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Cool. All right.
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Hey folks, it's Poke here again. And there's a dude with a Ubuntu shirt and some
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devil's horns that we're flashing once they're not now. He looks like a conference goer to me.
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So are you a conference goer?
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I am a conference goer.
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Are you enjoying going your conference?
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I am enjoying the conference.
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What are you liking about it?
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Mostly getting together with other people, you know, like myself.
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And seeing all of the aspects of the community that I'm not usually familiar with.
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Folks sitting at home listening to this right now, it's funny how often that's the answer
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that people give to that question, isn't it?
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Used to people putting microphones in people's faces.
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No, no, no, I'm completely ambushing people. Someone's going to punch me in my face pretty soon.
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But I'm not going to say yes, but I'm really too slow to stop.
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Yeah.
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Have you seen any talks?
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Yeah, I've been to a few of them.
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What's your favorite so far?
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So far, oh, Cooper's has been my favorite one in terms of dealing with people
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on how to, you know, get them to use clinics.
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Nice, nice, nice.
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And when you looked at the schedule at first, what talks on there that you said,
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that's the one I cannot miss?
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Making my way through there, just the dealing with people, working with people.
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You know, although I'm a Linux sort of person and a hardware sort of person,
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my background is in, you know, in people in behavioral science.
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Awesome, awesome, awesome. Are you going to the after party tonight?
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No, there's another party, a private party that I'm going to that I got invited to.
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No, it's just as good. I can totally understand that.
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If it wasn't for that, I'd definitely be there.
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Nice. Is there anything else you'd like to say to the hacker public radio audience about your
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own personal stuff going on or about the conference?
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Sure. What are you doing there? You should be here.
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Right on. Thank you so much for your time. What was your name by the way? Did you want to give
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you a name out? I'm John.
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John, nice to meet you, John. Thank you so much for your time.
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Because I've had trouble with the e running out of, you want to save it?
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio and Hacker Public Radio, does our.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on
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Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener
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like yourself. If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out
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how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
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infonomicum computer cloud. HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
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All binref projects are crowd-responsive by linear pages.
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From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs.
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Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons,
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attribution, share a line, free those own license.
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