156 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
156 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1792
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Title: HPR1792: An Interview with Andrea Frost
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1792/hpr1792.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:22:20
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---
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This is HPR episode 1,792 entitled, An Interview with Andrea Frost.
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It is hosted by David Whitman and is about 10 minutes long.
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The summary is, David Whitman Interview, Andrea Frost, your English test northwest.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hey David Whitman here. I'm at Linux Fest Northwest and I'm talking to somebody and I'm going to have her introduce yourself so I get it correct.
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I'm Andrea Frost and I'm a student at Western Washington University, getting a Master's in computer science.
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I'm an active member of the Association for Women in Computing and I also have a startup to open a code school in Bellingham, Washington.
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A startup?
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Yes, a startup.
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Very good. I want to jump back to the Women in Computing. Can you explain to the hacker public radio audience what that is?
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Well, we're a club at Western Washington University within the computer science department and it's mainly focused on diversity and networking professional development.
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Company talks, going to companies and seeing them, doing like salary negotiation or resume workshops or hosting an open-source day next week and we have hackathons and just a plethora of events all built around community and computer science.
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Okay, what year are you in school?
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I'm getting a Master's in computer science.
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You're five? Is that right?
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No, I actually have a German degree. My bachelor was in German 10 some years ago.
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So I'm a returning student and I meant to get a math degree but I took computer science as my prerequisite for the math program, my first quarter back in school.
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And I've been hooked ever since. I didn't really know what computer science was before that.
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So now I've been doing computer science for three years and I'm one year away from getting a Master's.
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Wow, so you've been busy.
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Very busy.
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You know German fairly well, huh?
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Yeah, both.
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Can you say hacker public radio in German?
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I mean, it's probably just hacker public radio.
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I want the German listeners to check that out and let us know whether that's okay.
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So the open-source part of your interest, can you explain a little bit about that?
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Well, I really believe that it's important to share and build community and I think that open-source contribution in general is where you can work together with the team on whatever project you want.
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And there's so many options and the community for open-source tends to be very inviting and open and just like we've met yesterday.
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You know, and we're having this conversation now.
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It's just a very interesting group of people and there are so many ways to be involved that you can actually choose what level you'd like to be at.
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And we really wanted to bring that experience of what it's like to work with open-source to the students at Western.
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So this is our first time ever doing an open-source day and it's on May 9th and we're pretty excited.
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So who's invited to the open-source day and what kind of projects are you focusing on there?
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So it's our primary audience as students, Western students, Western Washington University students,
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belling at technical college, walk community college, Northwest Indian college, high schools, middle schools, or anyone from schools basically anywhere in our area.
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And then it's open to the public as well and so we're basically just trying to create an opportunity for people to learn if you want to know what open-source is and figure out how to get involved.
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Here's a workshop to help you get started.
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Okay, do you have vendors that are coming then for presentations there or having table set up for fair or how is it organized?
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So it's not like a job fair at all in the morning.
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We have a keynote speaker who is mainly a dreadful developer and he's going to speak about what open-source is, like why do we care about it?
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And we're going to do a Git tutorial, so an interactive Git tutorial for the morning.
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The lunchtime will be a panel discussion on diversity, ethics, and history of open-source.
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And then the entire afternoon session will all be focused on finding a project and contributing in some way with the help of mentors that are present in the room.
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Is there going to be a website for the open-source day where people can check out what's going on and what's happening?
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Oh yes, absolutely. Hand me that flyer.
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That's what are we looking at.
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The green one.
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Okay.
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You're good at giving orders, and I like that.
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Okay, so it's www.sqsmewwww.ww.edu slash eMarket slash open-source day.
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And you can find information about that also by looking up the Association for Women in Computing at Western Washington University.
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That's the www.sqsmewwww.
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That's kind of a mouthful, but I will get the websites and put them in the show notes so people can come to them.
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Great, great, great.
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Yeah, so we are currently looking for financial sponsors for the event.
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We've had a really hard time getting any supporters.
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So we've got mentors, which is great, but it takes a lot of money to put on events.
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We got hackathons and things like that tend to be an easy sell for companies.
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And it was really surprising, actually, to find out that the open-source community was a little less likely to donate to our cause.
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But we are doing our best to bring open-source to the community here at Western Washington University.
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No, that was the money I gave yesterday was going for that.
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That's right.
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Because I was asked for a donation yesterday and I gave because I really like the project here.
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I think I offered a check and there was some shrinking back.
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Do you know what a check is?
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I have a checkbook, I rent checks.
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Well, there's also one of the organizers of the event.
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So I think the person you talked to yesterday didn't know who to make the check out too.
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That's fine.
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I just find that interesting because of my age checks or my primary source of paying bills.
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I still use checkbooks all the time.
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And if anyone wants to donate to contribute to our event and be a sponsor,
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they can also contact the computer science department at Western Washington University.
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So we have a lot going on at your table and you have a little bit, what is this called?
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Oh, well, so little bits is the company that basically does really accessible circuitry.
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So you can just clip magnetic piece, color-coded magnetic pieces together.
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This particular kit is the synth kit.
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So it's a music kit.
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You can make music with it.
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On the other end of the table, we have the deluxe kit, which is kind of like a deluxe starter kit.
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But then you can also buy individual pieces.
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If your kid is missing a piece that you want, you can actually go and buy that individual piece.
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And we love them.
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We use them for an outreach program we do in Bellingham School District,
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which is called the Creators and Innovators Club for Girls.
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And it was our pilot program this year, first time ever giving it a go.
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And instead of 15 or 20 girls, we ended up with 60 girls.
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So it's been an interesting challenge trying to find robots for 60 girls.
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But little bits have been a really great introduction for them to thinking about how circuits work.
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And just in general, I'm getting excited about technology in a really accessible way.
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And with that club, we've also done sewable circuits.
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So we use conductive thread and LED lights and actually sew them into, you know, some clothing.
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And certainly NXT robots.
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They're also great, great fun for kids.
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And yeah, and so next year we're expanding that program from one school to four schools.
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So are you going for your PhD then so that you'll be around?
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Well, I would love to get a PhD, but I also really want to live here in Bellingham.
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So it presents an interesting challenge of having to move for five years or so.
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So I'm very much like to get a PhD, so I just need to figure out where might be a good fit for that.
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So you have a really interesting table.
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I'm just going to point out that little bits is pink and that's for the girls, correct?
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They kind of like the pink.
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Oh, so I'm going to stop you right there because I am not a fan of the pink is for girls and blue is for boys.
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So little bits actually has, there's blue, pink, green, and orange pieces.
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Blue is for power, pink is for input, green is for output, and orange is just basically an extender piece or a loop or something like that.
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And then you can hook Arduino's into them and stuff like that.
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But the pink is really just another color in the array of colors to distinguish one piece from another,
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but I would not say that it's focused on girls.
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What's your favorite color?
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Well, as you can see from my hat, I like all colors.
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Yeah, I wish since we don't have a picture, it's nice, though, very colorful hat.
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I don't want to take all of your time today, but thank you for sharing with us.
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And how can people get a hold of you if they want to find out more?
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And they want to leverage your expertise and your involvement in the projects?
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Well, my servers turned off on my website right now, so I'll just go ahead and give my email,
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which is Andrea Frost at hotmail.com.
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And you can always find me through the Association for Women in Computing at Western Washington University as well.
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Thank you very much for speaking.
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You'll be able to find your episode on hackerbubbigradio.org.
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Oh, great.
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And one last thing I totally forgot.
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Okay.
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I am opening a code school, so you can also find me through code.ly.education, spelled all the way out.
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Okay.
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And I might ask you what's your favorite text editor?
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Text editor? Sublime text.
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Love it.
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Yeah.
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I love Sublime.
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Yep.
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Okay.
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Well, thank you, Andrea, and your episode will be posted around 20 days out right now.
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All right.
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Well, thank you.
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Thank you for the interview.
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You've been listening to hackerbubbigradio.org.
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