131 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4242
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Title: HPR4242: Interview with Lorenzo 'kelset' Sciandra
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4242/hpr4242.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:55:13
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4242 for Tuesday the 5th of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Interview with Lorenzo Calzacchandra.
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It is part of the series interviews.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Ken tracks down a Lorenzo to talk about his presentations at Arcamp.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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A few days ago or weeks now, I did a coverage from Arcamp 2024 and during that time it was
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absolutely chaotic busy, so I missed quite a lot of people.
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One of the people that was at the event and I wanted to catch up with
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and agree to do a call after the event was, is here with me now.
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Can you introduce yourself, Lorenzo?
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Who are you and why were you at Arcamp?
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Yes, so I'm Lorenzo Chandra, I'm currently working as a technologist for the Saurantek Fund.
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Basically, what that means is they work with this German organization to give
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money to open source.
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That's very nice, why did they do that?
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Basically, our mission is to support the critical digital infrastructure in the public interest,
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so in a way it's because we recognize, let's say a quote-unquote task force,
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basically, we are a company that has been off of one of the ministries and
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through the work of some of the core members of our city and the CEO,
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what happened is that they raised awareness about, like, hey, the digital infrastructure
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allows everyone to do a lot, so we need all to take care of it.
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It kind of goes back a bit to, you know, Nadia Zagbal, Rodsen Bridges,
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uh, work for the Ford Foundation, and also, I think, the keystone of our work is kind of like
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this concept of digital sovereignty, so basically, the fact that everyone, so companies, individuals,
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and the state can use a whatever digital tool they need to achieve what they want.
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Like, they're not stuck in a monopoly, they have the freedom, and we believe that, basically,
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that is the enabler for, you know, democratic processes, and also a stable economic situation,
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so that's kind of like the, let's say, the mission statement and a bit of the vision behind it.
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And where, where's this company based?
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In Germany, so it's a spin-off of the Ministry for Economic Affairs,
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uh, B.M. LeKa, I think it's in, but we're based in Berlin.
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Okay. Um, are you a nonprofit organization? How do you get your funding?
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We get the funding directly from the Ministry, like, these are all public money, so we need to follow,
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you know, all the public money procedures. Uh, I don't remember exactly our nomination,
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and I think there's some change that will happen soon around that, so I'll,
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I'll have to sidetrack slightly, uh, like, the, yeah, no, that's a shame that we have because I'm
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not entirely sure. And links to your organization and websites will be in the show notes for this
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episode. Um, so what had you over at our camp? Our camp last time I checked wasn't part, Manchester
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wasn't part of Germany. Might be part of the violin, but might not. So, uh, yeah.
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Great question. So first off, um, what brought me there is, of course, the fact that
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open source is everywhere, like, we are not, for example, bound to fund all the open source in
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Germany, right? We found open source wherever it is. So in a way, yes, we are based in Germany,
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but interaction with the maintainers and developers and the open source ecosystem can
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happen everywhere, because in the end, also one of our side goals in a way is to, you know,
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be in the spotlight so that other states can copy us. So for example, uh, at all camp, I managed to
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do, uh, talk about as we, as the F and the work that we do. And to me, the best outcome is that
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people in the room were like, I love this. I want this for the UK and maybe in the UK in a few
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years, there's going to be something similar. Like, we can now expand outside of our boundaries
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of Germany. We can just hope that people will clone us basically into their own country.
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Very good. Very good. So in many ways, you're benefiting open source in general anyway.
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Yeah. Because if you touch us, it crosses borders, but you're also inspiring people to, uh,
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to do similar thing as well. Very good. Uh, was that what your first time as an old camp?
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Yeah. And actually, it's because by sheer coincidence in March, I was doing a different conference
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Qcon and I met Andy Piper. And then Andy turns out to be one of the organizers and he posted about
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he was like, Hey, I'm doing this again. I was like, Oh my god. If Andy's involved, I need to be
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there. And the fact that I, I was able to also, you know, uh, do we talk about this? The F was kind of
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like a nice good to have on top of that in a way. Like, I just knew that if Andy was involved,
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he was going to be good. So I was just like, Okay, perfect. I need to be where open source is.
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I'm going to just jump into it. Fantastic. Um, was that the only talk that you gave, uh, during the
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event? No, I got a bit trigger at P when I saw the board with like all the options and, you know,
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you could. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I've done talks for the past five, six years. So, uh, luckily,
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I had like a repertoire ready of slides that I could just like tweak slightly. And basically,
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aside from doing an SDF talk, which is kind of like, you know, because I want to create this awareness
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and especially to, you know, maybe talk with the people that usually don't see like the corporate
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conferences, which is something that I super loved about. But yeah, on day two, I kind of like
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took a bit of a, let's say a personal twist and did a talk about an argument I'm very passionate
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about, which is mental health. So I did a talk about mental health intact. Mm-hmm. Well, we have
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we have mental health series here on HPR. So can you give us a rundown of what you covered?
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Just. Yeah. So the talk in particular was about the concept of burnout. So we started from the,
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you know, the world, the health organization definition from there. And then I described a bit
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why it might happen. So for example, you know, when you're involved in open source and you deal with
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a lot of people that don't give you any award for your work, but also treat you as customer support,
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like that create a very important situation. For example, and I talked a bit about my personal
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experience with burnout. I've been an open source maintainer for I started being an open source
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maintainer in 2017. And basically I dealt with a couple of burnouts. So I talked a bit about my
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story to kind of like also ground a bit the things I was talking about. And then I shared some
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of the techniques I've been using over the years, some of the things that I've heard from other
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people because I've also started making a project like a podcast where I do a monthly episode
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where I talk with someone as in talk about their journey mental health. So I tried to parse some
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of the learnings from those conversations plus my own experience and like create a series of bullet
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points that people could just like take home with them to, you know, maybe slightly improve their
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mental health. Yeah, fantastic. Do you have these slides available? Are they on the
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yeah, they're online. I use speaker that usually for my slides. So there is a little bit.
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So we'll pop those into the show notes for this episode. That's absolutely fantastic. So
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for a short time, what do you think? What's what you like? I think that there was a
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a two from day one where a person really said that this conference really shows the open source is
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not only everywhere, but also like it's not just about the code. And I truly think that
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these events is really something that I wish more people experienced in a sense because
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especially when you start looking at open source in a more corporate sense, when you start going to
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I don't know, literally two weeks before I was a bit before I was in Vienna for the Linux
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Foundation open source summit. So that's like kind of the complete opposite. It's like the
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biggest one, the most corporate one, you know, you're a Linux store on a stage with like a keynote
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and like a thousand people in the room like. So I think that sometimes we try and to really like
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not see open sources, something that enables people to be creative and be empowered to do.
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And these events, I think, it actually manifested that. Like it's, I think it's a very good
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reminder that open source is actually in the real world and people are doing things. It's not just
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about PRs and repositories. It's about like, thanks to this piezo software that is available to
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everyone, I was able to build something out of it. Like, of course, the maximum example was the
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Pete, the pigeon, like the shiny pigeon. Yeah. But yeah, in general, I think like a lot of people
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created great talks and presentations about, you know, all these different aspects that
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usually we don't think about and I absolutely love that. I always think it to myself.
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Well, when looking back at all the outcomes, I had this, once I saw that shiny pigeon,
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disco ball pigeon, I was thinking, was that the one with the disco ball pigeon? Yeah, that was
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a, that's where I met you. So forever, two thousand and I'll come 24 will be the stolen
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pigeon. Yeah. And if you don't know what we're on about, just go on to master them and search for
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hashtag on cam 24 and you'll see a picture of the pigeon there.
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Was there anything else that we should have talked about that we didn't get around to?
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I mean, now the fellowship for maintainers is not up and anymore on the STF website, but
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if you're interested in seeing different ways of funding open source, we have this new program that
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is starting in January. So if you rise on that, that basically we're going to pay four up to five
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maintainers for a year to just do maintenance work. Like, and yeah, that's going to be an interesting
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experiment for us. Well, fantastic. Great stuff. Listen, thanks very much for taking the time.
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Sorry, it took so long to organize this after the event, but it's been a bit a, a chaotic when
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with the IA going down and everything. And yeah, and folks tune in tomorrow for another exciting
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episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
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otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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