374 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
374 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2008
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Title: HPR2008: HPR needs shows to survive.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2008/hpr2008.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 13:15:36
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---
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This in HPR episode 2008 entitled HPR Needle Shown to Survive.
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It is posted by Ken Fallon and in about 20 minutes long.
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The summary is do not listen to this show record one instead.
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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.
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That's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another possibly one of the last episodes of Hacker Public Radio.
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We're very low on shows at the moment.
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So much so that we're down to two.
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So much so that the show that I have planned to do today I felt the need to record the show and make sure it gets out.
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So much so that instead of listening to today's show I actually want you to go and record your own show.
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If you have been listening to podcasts at all you've got to have had the thought at one time or another to record a podcast and that is what HPR is all about.
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That is what we've been bringing to you, bringing to you for the last 10 years, six months and seven days.
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Yeah that's what we've been doing for the last.
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Let me see 2,307 episodes.
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If you have not recorded the show and you've listened to any of these episodes please consider contributing to HPR.
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I'll read you a segment from the HPR about page.
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What to further and see at HPR from other podcasts is that the shows are produced by the community.
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Fellow listeners like you.
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You listen to other podcasts, other professionally produced podcasts or other amateur podcasts.
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They're produced by a small team of people.
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These shows are not the produced by you, the community.
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The fact that a few people bubble to the surface from time to time and take up the slack has been a feature of HPR.
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Last year was excellent in so far as I didn't have to worry about the Q because there were four possibly five people contributing shows on a continuous regular basis throughout the year.
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The problem with that of course is that everybody else sits back, relaxes and enjoys the shows.
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Well it's a community thing about this project.
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Well I have always said that when I took over the admin of HPR, the initial email that I put out was after a period of time where no shows were being released.
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At the time I thought the project was worth saving and indeed in that intervening time we have not missed a single day where somebody has not subscribed to the show.
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I've always said that as far as it goes, should we stop HPR yes or no?
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It all depends on the input of people.
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You don't have a say on the mailing list.
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You don't have a say on the website.
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The only say you have is if you record the show and you submit it.
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That is how you get a vote in whether HPR continues or not.
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Very very simple.
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By the way, you shouldn't even be listening to this.
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You should be recording a show right now if you agree with this whole concept.
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Right now looking at the Q, we have two days.
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There's two shows, one show left in the Q.
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I'll probably be able to script together a show for Friday.
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And then we are down to basically having two or three two shows, three four shows in the Q.
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So we will start using our emergency shows.
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We have eight of them left.
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And after those are all done, then we're shutting up shop and we're closing down the RSS feed.
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Now somebody else can come along and take it over.
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That's absolutely fine with that.
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But as far as it goes, we need to have shows.
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Okay, enough preaching.
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Let me walk you through how easy this is.
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The whole point of HPR is to make it easy for you to record a show.
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The whole point of it.
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There are people who will edit the shows for you.
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The people who post the shows for you.
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There's people who pay for the website hosting.
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There's people who do the RSS feed.
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There's people who put the shows up in archive.org.
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There's people who make sure that it gets sent out to Twitter.
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There's people who listen to the shows.
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You don't have to do anything except press record and that recorder.
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Whatever you're listening to on this now, you probably has a recording function.
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Press record, talk and submit the show.
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Couldn't be simpler.
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Right, here's how you do it.
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Go to hack a public radio forward slash contribute.php.
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If you can't find that, it's under the, you have a menu, home, get shows,
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which has got the RSS feed complete episode guide in depth series.
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So you can have a look at what all the people have done.
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And the give a show section.
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If you go down to contribute, there's a general page.
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If you click on that, you'll get.
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So you wanted to do a podcast.
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Here you are.
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The stuff you need to do.
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Hey, and first line right there.
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HPR will stop as a project if there are not enough shows.
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Now we're not going to syndicate shows that are not produced by HPR.
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We have other feeds for that.
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And there are other people doing that stuff.
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So the whole point of HPR is one show every day, every week day, Monday to Friday.
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Produced by somebody.
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You're agreeing to the show been licensed by creative commons by attribution share alike.
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You're also agreeing that you have permission to redistribute the show in its entirety.
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That means if there's backing music, you have permission to do that.
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We will not moderate your show.
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We will not even listen to your show until it's posted.
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It will be signaled as explicit content unless you do, if you, unless you decide it otherwise,
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which you can do in the upload form.
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You determine when the show released.
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Basically comes on the first commons, first serve basis.
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You pick the time.
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And some technical stuff.
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We use UTF-8, N10, supporting wide range of international characters.
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Your show will be heard by an international audience.
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So bear that in mind.
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We always need emergency shows.
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And after you post a show, you will no longer be able to edit the hacker public radio page on Wikipedia.
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Okay, so what do you need to do?
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First thing you need to do is select a topic.
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Now we have a whole goal of topics on our requested topic page.
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Let's have a look over there.
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How did you get into podcasting links or geekdom?
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What podcasts do you listen to?
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What would you recommend?
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What's in your bag?
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Favorite Android?
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Desktop browser applications?
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Introduction to Wireshark.
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Choosing artistic design for websites, business card, etc.
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Music theory.
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Installing VPN for your home network.
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In a D and System D.
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LPI.
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Series.
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Audio series.
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Hack and touch computers.
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Grub2.
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FM transmitters.
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Accessible computing.
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Knitting.
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How to build a house.
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Bitcoin.
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Soldering.
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Weldering.
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How to fix a car.
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Streaming software.
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Ripping software.
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Gnu-plot.
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Nachios.
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GPG.
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OpenPGP.
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What do you do with a Raspberry Pi?
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It broke.
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I fixed it.
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How does core boot work?
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Introduction to ham radio.
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I've moved.
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And they do it like this here.
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How to record a tag team tutorial on the topic.
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OpenStripMap Editor.
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Entomology.
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Functions versus procedural versus object programming.
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SaidOk and Grip.
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Setting up a 9Map SMTB Gmail in the command line-in-fieldsmail program.
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IRSSI.
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Your view on the future.
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Alternative use of Byzantine email classifiers.
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How to use a multimeter and other basic electronic components like a 555 timer.
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How does Hubble remain fixed on a spot in space while in orbit in the Earth?
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Gnu Automake.
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What's the deal with IPv6?
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Why can't we just nas at the ISP level?
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Are there privacy issues in having your MAC address as part of your IP address?
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Network like a pro.
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Network to treat your home network like a corporate server farm.
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What tools and hardware would it entail to treat your home network like a security professional?
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What do you need for firewall and what are the protection prevention technologies that we could be implementing?
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Beyond the firewall and IDS, IPS.
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What do I need?
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I've started listening to Security Weekly, Weekly starting last December.
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And at some point, the suggestion suggested a secondary IDS behind the firewall to record what the primary defense is missed.
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Where and how do I set that up?
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Beyond the firewall and IDS, what other tools should I be running?
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Where should they be on the network?
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How many physical boxes are we talking about?
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Emphasis should be on low power devices and free as in beer tools.
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Now that Security's in place, how to read the logs, formulate a response to an intrusion.
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What I've learned from Security Weekly is that you can't prevent an intrusion.
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It's how to respond when you are compromised.
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Again, according to Security Weekly, the security managed job is to detect the intrusion inside 48 hours rather than 48 months.
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How can you prevent your proprietary data and customer?
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How can you protect your proprietary data and customer database?
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What are the answers I need to the questions I don't know enough to ask?
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IPFS and don't leave out IPNS.
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I'd really like to get a better understanding of their practical use of this.
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Okay, how to record a show?
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You can record a show using a regular old telephone.
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The phone numbers are in the U.S. 470-222-4257.
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That's 470-222-4257.
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Or if you're calling from the UK, 0203-432-5879.
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That's 0203-432-5879.
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Listen to the introduction.
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Introduce yourself, giving your email and the show number.
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So when you call up, you will be told,
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Hi, this is Joe Bob.
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I'm recording this show for HPR blah, blah, blah.
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My email address is clearly, slowly and clearly.
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You have to give your email address so we can contact you.
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Then record your show and press the hash sign when you're finished.
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Another way to do it is using a portable media player.
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Like the one you're probably using now.
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It will have a record function.
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Try and set it to WAV or FLAC if you can.
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We will take whatever you have.
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Don't worry about that.
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If you have a computer, you can use Audacity.
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There's a big red button on the main menu.
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When you open Audacity, there are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 buttons.
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The 6th one is record.
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Press the record and talk.
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When you start seeing blue stuff appearing, then that is you recording.
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You can record your show that way.
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Interviews with the phone.
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You can use Skype and use Skype call recorder to record the call.
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Or if there's going to be a few of you, there is a mumble chat.
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There's links to this in the show notes under hackerpublicradio.org for such recording.php.
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Recording a round table discussion.
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You can connect to CH1.TeamSpeak.cc.
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That's CH1.TeamSpeak.cc.
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On port 64747, that's 64747.
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In there you'll find a hackerpublicradio room.
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Feel free to walk in there and record your show.
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Again, if you can avoid bedding or background music.
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Try and keep it as simple as possible.
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We also mix down to mono.
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And there's also no need to add any metadata to your file.
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That's how you can record a show.
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Once you have your show recorded, you can go to the calendar page.
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Which is, again, under give shows calendar.
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And basically you're presented with a whole list of dates for the next two months.
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Showing something like Tuesday, 2016-04-12HPR2087.
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Mine you lapped up by Dave Morris.
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And then tomorrow's show is my show.
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So we have a free slot on Friday this week.
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In two more days, we have a free slot.
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And once you click there, it says available up node now.
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You click on that button and then you'll be able to pick your slot.
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It'll be pre-picked for yourself and type in your email address.
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Make sure to use an email address that will be available publicly.
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If you don't want your email address to be displayed publicly,
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contact admin at hackerpublicradio.
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And we'll set up a hackerpublicradio.org alias for you.
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So that when any email address is sent to your username at hackerpublicradio,
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it'll get forwarded to your email alias.
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Otherwise you can go and get an account from Gmail or something.
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Once you do that, you will be greeted with a thank you message.
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Within 15 minutes, you should have had an email come in.
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In my case, it's already come in.
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Confirmation to request or request to reserve slot.
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And it gives me a link, upload.php, question mark, key equals and a big long random key.
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I take that and I go back into the exact same browser page that has thank you.
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And then I do paste and go into the language bar.
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I'm greeted with a screen that says uploading hackerpublicradio for release on 2016-04-19.
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I will clean this out once I'm finished.
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You can upload an image or if the email address you have associated with it has an email and gravatar,
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you can include it there.
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The only thing you have to provide is a name or handle.
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You can select a default license for all your shows by default.
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It will be CC by essay.
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And under profile, you can put in HTML comments or text comments, Twitter handle,
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where your blog is, that sort of thing.
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And you can fill in information about the episode.
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Anything marked with an asterisk is required fields.
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We don't have that many of them, so just have a look.
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The first one is the title.
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This is a short description of your show.
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Today's show will be, for instance,
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HPR need shows.
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And the summary, right underneath it,
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should be a short, Twitter friendly summary.
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Can record the show asking people to record shows?
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Or HPR urgently need shows.
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Please record some.
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You get the idea.
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Underneath that, there's some information that helps me know whether you've added an intro or not.
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Select notice and upsets because most people don't do that.
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Include that.
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That's the text to speech bit at the front.
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If you have not added an intro or an outro,
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just simply select no to all of those three.
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If your show doesn't have any bad words,
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or is not an issue to anybody, not offensive to anybody in the world,
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just is you should all explicit, select no.
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And if it is, select yes, or just leave it as yes.
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Again, you can pick the license for your entire, for this show,
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by using the drop down list.
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By default, it's CC by essay.
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More information is given on a link.
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And then you can add some show notes, links, and that sort of thing.
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If you wish, you can go very detailed.
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And if you want to go detailed, that's fine.
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We can deal with that later on.
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But right now, give us some links and tell us a little bit about what it is that's in your show.
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The more information that you can provide, the better.
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But if you find that,
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that is causing you not to upload the show, then just please put,
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there are no show notes or something.
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I would prefer, if you did add show notes,
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but otherwise, please add a show,
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and somebody else, a volunteer, will do that for you.
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If it's part of a series, then you can pick the series that is part of right there.
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If not, we'll add it.
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If you like to add a list of comma-separated tags, you can do so right there.
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Then you have three options and how to,
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four options and how to send us a show, three, actually.
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Option one is to choose files.
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You can select one or more files to upload.
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You can provide us a URL where we can get them from your server.
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Or you can simply leave a blank and then you'll be sent information on how to upload them via FTP,
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or how you can, the dial-in numbers that I've given you earlier on.
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Those will be explained.
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Once you press submit, your browser will start uploading the file.
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If it's a large file, a flag file, that might take a considerable amount of time.
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So if you do this, you should probably do it in Chrome,
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which by default shows you the percentage of uploads speed.
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If you're not doing it in Chrome, then just be prepared for a wait.
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If you are more comfortable seeing progress, then probably just press submit without choosing files
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and then upload via FTP when you can.
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Once you do that, you will be sent an email saying thank you for uploading your show.
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So as your upload goes, you can just wait and this will continue to upload a show for you.
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If you have any questions, please contact admin at hackerpublicradio.org
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and that will come through to myself, Dave and my bill and some other folks.
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If you want to chat to somebody at any time, go on to augcastplanet,
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hash augcastplanet on freenode.net.
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It's all in the link forward slash contribute.php.
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Or you can send us a tweet at hpr on Twitter.
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Thing to remember is lots and lots of people have contributed to the show.
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It's really tough doing the first one again. It's a lot easier.
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And gets to a point where your whole life becomes your thinking of shows and how you can structure shows.
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I'd like more people to be in that mode if possible.
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If you haven't done a show in a while, please reconsider getting back in.
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It's a great way to stay in touch with the community.
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If you've never done a show, please just introduce yourself.
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Even if you don't think it's of interest, we love hearing some of the,
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we love hearing shows from people around the world.
|
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There's nothing like hearing somebody else's experience with technology.
|
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It really is some of the shows that we get the best feedback on.
|
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So do that.
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For muscles, any audio is better than no audio and any topic that is of interest hackers.
|
||
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And Dave and I, as if you listen to the community news show, qualify as two hackers.
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I think you, I hope you agree.
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And including yourself on that list, that makes three.
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That's one over the quarter.
|
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|
So guys, there you go.
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If you have listened to this and you have not recorded a show,
|
||
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why did you listen to this when you could have been recording a show?
|
||
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Seriously, I just want to make it again quite clear that HPR is a project
|
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|
who requires people to send in shows.
|
||
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If we don't send in shows, we're not just going to leave the whole project
|
||
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|
dwindle away and post shows sometime here and sometime there.
|
||
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And then people on subscribe and then it just dies.
|
||
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The project itself is worthy of a start beginning start, middle and end.
|
||
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And that's what we're going to do.
|
||
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Okay, if you don't want to tend, it will end at some time.
|
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Yes, it will.
|
||
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If you don't want to tend, though, here's your way to do it.
|
||
|
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You have a say.
|
||
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|
You do have a say in this.
|
||
|
|
And that is by recording a show and sending it in.
|
||
|
|
Okay, tune in tomorrow for one more show, which is going to be,
|
||
|
|
it's been processed at the minute.
|
||
|
|
Don't know what it's going to be and I don't know what's going to be on Friday.
|
||
|
|
So there you go.
|
||
|
|
Exciting times, exciting time folks.
|
||
|
|
Junient tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
||
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
|
||
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
|
||
|
|
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
|
||
|
|
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||
|
|
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
|
||
|
|
Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself,
|
||
|
|
unless otherwise stated.
|
||
|
|
Today's show is released on the creative comments,
|
||
|
|
attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
|