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350 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2170
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Title: HPR2170: soundtrap.io
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2170/hpr2170.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 15:14:55
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,170 entitled SoundTrap.io and is part of the series' inter-news.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallen and is about 33 minutes long.
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The summer is a low-cost open source acoustic logger for my own diversity and environmental monitoring.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.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 AnanasThost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallen and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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A while back I put a blog post up on my website asking for an open source mosquito-locator.
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One of the people put me in touch with David Zilli and from the Hobbog project.
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And that was released as HPR1894 back in 2015.
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As part of that, David recommended that I call it contact Alex Rodgers, who is basically Alex.
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Can you tell us what you're doing?
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Yeah, so I'm a professor of computer science at University of Oxford and I'm interested in acoustic monitoring
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for some more biodiversity and environmental monitoring.
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And one of the things we've been doing is building an open source acoustic logger.
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So a device that you can put in the environment that will record sounds.
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And the clever thing is we want to try and put some intelligence on the device.
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So have the device make decisions as to whether a particular sound is interesting and only make
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a recording if it is interesting.
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What was the project called again?
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The project is called soundtrack.io.
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And what's interesting by your definition?
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So it depends on the application. So we've been doing some trial deployments this year looking
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for the new forest cicada. So that's a very rare insect, which only lives in the new forest
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in the UK. And it sings at 15 kHz, which is probably outside of the range of most adults hearing.
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Children can still hear it, but the insect is actually very loud, but the challenge is that most
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people can't hear it. So what we've been doing is making devices that can automatically detect
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that frequency, recognize it as the song of the cicada and make a recording if they hear that.
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And you have made an open source hardware device.
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Why did you decide to do that and not just go with a smartphone or something?
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Yeah, so we did a for the previous two or three years, we've done a citizen science survey
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trying to get people to use smartphones. That has some challenges you need people to go to
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particular areas at particular times. So I'm a big fan of using some citizen science and
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smartphones, but there are some applications where you'd like to be able to deploy things and
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record maybe overnight. So if you look at the bats recording overnight, if you're doing a long
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term survey, you want to collect regular recordings from a particular place. So there's sort of a gap
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for a low-cost device that you can deploy and then come back and collect later on and collect the
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data from. So commercial devices in this space cost about £1,000, typically because it's just a
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very small market. So we wanted to make an open source, open hardware device so that we can
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exploit an online maker, so PCB assembly and enable people to forward these devices, assemble
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them and use them themselves. So there's a picture of this on your website. I want to give you
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us a quick rundown of what it looks like. Yeah, it's about the size of a credit card.
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It's got the moment we power them with three AAA batteries. So that's about the size of the
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device. So it's a basically a single-sided printed circuit board that sits on top of a battery mount.
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We use a very small smartphone microphone, which is very sensitive, and we record to a micro SD card
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and then the whole device is ran by a very low power microcontroller. So there are a few
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sort of ralsy pie-based approaches, but a microcontroller allows you to be much more energy-efficient
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and have the device lasting much longer with with very small battery pack. How long will that last?
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So for the secada deployment, we have the device waking up every five seconds. It listens for
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about 200 milliseconds, analyzes that sound, decides whether it wants to make a recording,
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and if it does it then makes a 30-second recording. And the devices we deploy it, we allow them to
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make up to 50 recordings a day. And then with the three AAA batteries, that device would last
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probably about 10 weeks. Okay, that's actually pretty good. I've seen here on your website that
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you put in a plastic bag and just cable-tighted to a tree. Yeah, so the challenge with sort of
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small, low volume manufacturing tends to be the enclosure. So it's typically very easy to
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outsource PCB manufacturing. So you can have PCB manufactured. You can have PCBs assembled.
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So there are lots of online companies which will take your plans, take your bill and materials,
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and just supply you back with completely assembled printed circuit boards. The challenge is
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typically how to get a low-cost enclosure. So in this case, we needed a waterproof enclosure,
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but also we needed sounds to be able to travel through the enclosure. And it turns out that a cheap
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plastic bag is the easiest way to do that. Can you tell me roughly what the cost of this would be?
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Yes, we're going through some different emissions and each revision we sort of try and take out some
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of the cost. But at the moment, if you ordered 100 at a time, you could probably have them assembled
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for probably about £20 each. So why would that be better than a pie zero, which is like a tenor?
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So the challenge for the pie zero is really the power. So as soon as you're running an operating
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system, you're very limited in what you can do in terms of stopping the processor and going to sleep.
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So these microcontrollers allow you to at any point in time stop the processor, change the clock
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frequency of the processor. And also you can do lots of processing whilst you're actually asleep.
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So the processor stops, but we can still take samples from the microphone and pass them into
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memory even with the processor clock actually stopped. So these microcontrollers are very much
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more energy efficient. So we're down to operating power is milliwatts. And then when you do include all
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duty cycles, your average consumption is less than 1 milliwatts. Oh, that is quite impressive actually.
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Yeah, so that's really the challenge. So a battery power device, the amount of energy you have
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in a battery is very limited, which is sort of why we have to charge our mobile phones every day.
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So if you want something that you can deploy, you really need something that can
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operate on a very low duty cycle, just power down completely and then just wake up when it has to
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do something. And that's the challenge with any embedded system with an operating system,
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because you've got to maybe you've got to wake your arse with high-goot each time.
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All right, Devils advocate here. If I go down to the pound shop, I can buy one of these LED
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outdoor lights for a pound or so. Could you not just have a solar panel and a battery,
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just power up something like a pi-zero one and go all that way? That would be cheaper.
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Yeah, so when you look at the cost of a commercial, a printed circuit board, having
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that assembled with a PV panel attached and a charger, all those components add up.
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It's often quite deceptive, you know, if you're going to be building something in runs of sort of
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a hundred or a thousand, your costs are significantly more than a small Chinese manufacturer,
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which is turning out millions of solar power LED lights. So it's often sort of quite deceptive
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as the cost of something that you can just fire on the street and something that you're going
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to have assembled with a particular application. And the key thing is we don't want, if you're going
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to deploy a hundred of them, you don't want to be spending a lot of time assembling them yourself,
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because that's a huge cost, you know, you can save a little bit of cost on the material,
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if each one takes you half a day to put together, that's a huge cost that you have to bear.
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So the idea is that we're trying to look at solutions, which you can just order,
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they come assembled, they're single PCBs, but that means that you're doing it in typically
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sort of small volume. So you have to be careful about the components that you can put on the device.
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Yeah, I guess as all the pi doesn't have a microphone, nor does it have, you still have the
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power supply, are they keeping them dry? Yeah, when the power supply is cheap, because they
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make 10 million of them. So you get good prices if you're going to build that many devices.
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True or no? So do you need to set up beforehand when you're recording this, what the type of species
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it is that you're going to want to listen to, or will this just work out of the box for anything?
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So what we're looking at is sort of making it configurable. So the source code will be open,
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so anyone can you can do what you like with it. We want to try and provide some basic tools,
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because many sort of ecologists and conservation biologists aren't going to be happy writing,
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firmware for a device in C. So we're going to provide a sort of a basic configuration script,
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which allows you to determine things like the sampling rate, what frequency you want to sample,
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what frequency you're particularly looking for in order to trigger the device. And we've been
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doing experiments with BAPS, so for this recorder, we sample at 48,000 samples a second,
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which is sort of like a CD quality recording. You need to record BAPS, you need to be able to
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detect audio frequencies up to 80 kilohertz, so you need to sample much faster.
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So all of that needs to be sort of configurable, and that depends on what type of
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species you're looking for. And then the recordings, what do you do with those?
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So there's a growing sort of community sort of looking at doing automatic species recognition
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from audio recordings. So that means if you collect a recording, it can you then once you've
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got that data back, use more processing power to try and automatically label the recording,
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detect what birds are singing, what insects are singing. So that's quite a powerful way of
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deploying a device that can maybe wake up, record the dawn chorus, and then provide you with
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automatic analysis of what birds are singing. There's also a lot of interest in trying to
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measure more general things about the environment. So these are people developing acoustic indices.
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So these are sort of measures of the complexity of the sound, which might not tell you what
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species of bird is singing, but it will tell you, okay, there's birds on. And that would allow you
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to deploy these devices and get some measure of the biodiversity in the environment. And there's
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sort of interest in that space for things like monitoring the green roof. So many building regulations
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now stipulate that you should do something for biodiversity, and that often means having a green
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roof on the top of your building, having plants on the top. But there's no real sort of ongoing
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way of actually measuring whether that's having any impact on birds and insects actually coming
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and using that space. So this would provide a very low cost way of monitoring that type of deployment
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and seeing whether it's actually having any impact.
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What made you decide to do this open source?
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So it's really as soon as you try and do something commercially in this space, because it's such a
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small marketplace, selling devices becomes very expensive. So if you look at the commercial
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devices that people sell, you know, they're perfectly competent electronics engineers and the
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firmware is great and the software support is great. But all of that development and support comes
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at a cost. And that typically means that any commercial device you sell in that space is going
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to be very expensive. So we're particularly interested in users who don't have the funding or don't
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have the capacity to go off and buy, you know, several tens of thousand pound commercial loggers.
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So we've been doing some work with some scientists in Kenya where they can their electrical engineers,
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they can assemble these things, but they don't have access to the funding that would enable them
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to go and buy the equivalent number of commercial devices. So it's really sort of exploitable to
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that sort of online maker community, all the stuff around sort of as we pie is an Arduino's
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to try and enable people to build their own devices.
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And how do you, where are they? Under what licenses is the first start?
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So this would just be completely open. So we're probably, what we're doing at the moment is where
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we're on our sort of final revision of the hardware that we so far kept closed because we don't want
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to, we don't want to be changing things too quickly and having to having people using
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versions that we've decided we don't want to take forward. So the trial version that we're sort of
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finalizing at the moment, that will be just as an MIT license and, you know, we don't mind what
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people use it for. Not very good. And the idea would be I could make this like on a
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PCB, get the print of myself or make it on a breadboard or something.
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Yeah, so assembling yourself is a little bit challenging, probably just because of the
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the MEMS microphones that we use. I mean, it's perfectly possible. So I typically have
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all the PCBs and then I have a little pizza oven at home that I can use to as a
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reflow oven to solder the devices on. That tends to get a little bit crudely and if you're
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assembling a lot of them it's often not worth it because a lot of PCB manufacturers will offer
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assembly services as well. So you basically you send them the the Gerber files which is sort of
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the standard for describing a printed circuit board. You send them your bill and materials which
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are just the list of components and they send you back the printed circuit board with all the
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components on it. And there's a number of sort of online services so circuit hub is a very
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interesting one where you can post your bill and materials and your your Gerber files and then
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anyone can go to circuit hub and order those devices and then connect it to circuit hub. There's
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another thing called group gets which allows you to specify maybe you want a batch of 100 devices
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and at that point it becomes quite cheap but you can't find individual people who want
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to buy 100 of them but group gets allows a group of people to come together a bit like Kickstarter
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where everyone orders a certain number and when you get to that threshold then the order is
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is sent to circuit hub and group gets will deal with the distribution. These are really good ways
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of enabling individuals to get their devices out there without them actually having to be in the
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loop of ordering them and posting them off to people. Okay now the question you've been dreading
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when has it got to be released? Yeah so we're now we've got a final version that we're just sort of
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we've gone through a couple of iterations on the printed circuit board at the moment we change
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the processor so we've gone for a slightly more powerful processor which we hope will give people
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a little bit more flexibility and we've also increased the memory capacity of the device
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from the version that we've been using now. So our aim is probably for sort of January or
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February to to have all of that up there so that you can go to group gets and order it or you can
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go to you can download all the files yourself and just assemble them yourself if that's what you
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want to do. Fantastic. So then you have this thing you put it in your garden, your record
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in my case I want to record mosquitoes. Is there any way of getting the data off in a real-time
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fashion if that was what I wanted to do or would it be better off just using the microphone?
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Yeah so we've been sort of that's a thing that we'd like to try and address. It's challenging
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because audio files tend to be very big so the minute of audio, run, compressed, wave file is
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probably about six megabytes which is for a wireless network you're going to use quite a lot of
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power trying to transmit that off the device but it would be possible so we have looked at maybe
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using Wi-Fi modules and having a device that you could put into your garden which would stream the
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audio back and I think if you're clever about making decisions about what data you actually want
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to transmit then you can do it and have a reasonable energy consumption so that you don't need
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too big a battery pack to do that. There's some interesting internet of things, radio protocols
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which are low power but they tend to be very low bandwidth as well. So audio has this challenge
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that the file size is tend to be quite big and that's often a challenge for ecologists and
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conservation biologists who are trying to do acoustic surveys in the sense that they deploy these
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existing devices and they end up with terabytes of data and there's a challenge. There's a
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challenge for developing some tools there to enable you to look through terabytes of audio data
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and look for interesting signals within all of that data. Yeah they've done some work
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enough for the graviton stuff. Yeah and so it's sort of a well we're quite interested in maybe
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doing some sort of garden, citizen science type surveys where people could upload the data,
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send it back to us. When we've looked at doing that you begin to worry about people's upload speeds
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even from their broadband network so often a SD card in the post is a very negative way of transmitting
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data. Yeah IP over pigeon. Yeah so there's also the whole physical thing of if you're doing this
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in a forest you need to go around and gather these cards and update them and change the battery
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so it's like that sort of management function as well I guess. Yeah so when we do this
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to card a survey we deploy them and then come back after a month, check they're still running,
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take out the data and have a look at the data. That's there's no that is a challenge. So one of
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the things that we're a parallel project that we're looking at is this is for forestry sort of
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protection in tropical countries so we're working with some colleagues in Belize looking at can we
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detect gunshots and chainsaws in real time using acoustic sensors and there what they need is some
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sort of a lurking system so there's a range of station and what they'd like to have is a real
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time alert that okay there's some gunshots there seems to be some hunting happening in this part
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of the protected area. So there you can use these low power forward spectrum radio networks
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sort of the sort of emerging the internet at things type applications because there you're not
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really trying to send back all of the audio you're just trying to send back a alert that I care
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of detected something and I I think it was a gunshot so I think it was a chainsaw.
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Very good like an ideal one for all one of those interdata things mesh wireless networks as all.
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Yes yes so then so if you look at things like Laura you know they which is sort of a sort of
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emerging low bandwidth but long range low power network in a tropical forest we're going to try and
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do some trials next next spring but we'd expect to be able to transmit you know at least sort of
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five or six miles maybe more so it so that allows you to sort of form quite an effective network
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without having too many too many base stations or too many sort of booster stations.
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Yeah that's pretty impressive. I can imagine in that sort of case a some sort of seismic
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sensor or something might be also useful for you know bulldozers going past through that sort of
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thing how easy is it to add and modify the board itself. Yeah so one of the things that we're
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sort of quite interested in doing is looking at how we can make the acoustic sensor into something
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that would sort of plug into a more modular type of sensing board so you can there are a few sort
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of internet of things sensing boards available which are designed maybe they provide a temperature
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measurement or an air quality measurement. What we'd like to try and do is sort of take the some
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of the technology that we've developed on this board and actually turn it into a sort of a modular
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board that you could plug into some environmental sensing board so then we'd we'd make our our device
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do all of its clever energy management so deciding on when it should wake up when it should be
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sleeping but then actually just provide an alert back to this other board that maybe there's
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some interesting data that needs to be uploaded or maybe there's just an alert that needs to be passed
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on so that's the thing that we really keen to do and certainly for the tropical forest setting
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you know we don't need to reinvent the wheel by doing all of the radio network and all the
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all the charging circuitry if we have solar panels on there you know there are existing sort
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of environmental sensor boards but what we'd like to be able to do is make our acoustics an add-on
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for that type of device and what makes you your board acoustic wise so different from just having
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a regular on microphone and gone like that so it's really just the fact that the audio goes
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straight into a microcontroller and then sample by sample we can analyse the sound at that level
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so when we're looking for the cicada basically we we use a thing called the Gertz allow rhythm
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which allows us to do a bit like a discrete fast barrier transform but rather than looking at
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every frequency we can just measure the energy in a particular frequency band so every time we get
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a sample from the microphone so 48,000 times a second we do a small calculation we keep track
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of how much energy we've seen in that 14 kilohertz band and then after a certain number of windows
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we stop and say okay well looking at that 200 milliseconds of sound that we've processed
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do you think there was something interesting in that and should we make a recording or is
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do we think that there's nothing of interest at the moment so we can go back to sleep for another
|
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five seconds and then wake up and have a look a bit later so the key thing is that because we've
|
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|
got this sort of microcontroller that's right down at the very low level sample by sample we can
|
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|
|
begin to make decisions as to whether the sound is interesting or whether we should recall it or
|
||
|
|
whether it's something that we should raise and alert about so that and that's the sort of thing
|
||
|
|
that you want to be able to do on your very low power device rather than sending all of that
|
||
|
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audio to a Raspberry Pi and having to power up the Raspberry Pi to make that decision.
|
||
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Yeah and that will be an awful lot of data gone through all the time 24, 7 listening for
|
||
|
|
everything and then having to process that. Yeah and it's tend to be surprising things that take
|
||
|
|
power so writing to SD cards in our device is the most power-consuming activity so the less we
|
||
|
|
write to the SD card the longer the battery is lost so listening and doing some computation
|
||
|
|
is much more energy efficient than recording sound to an SD card basically just because the
|
||
|
|
current it takes to write to an SD card so surprising things tend to use the energy and as soon as
|
||
|
|
you put a Wi-Fi network on there typically it's the radio network that then uses all the power.
|
||
|
|
But in order to repurpose the device or in order to use the device you would need to know beforehand
|
||
|
|
what it is your target species or you know chins always. Yeah yeah so I mean there is some scope
|
||
|
|
for sort of doing reconfigurable hardware and that's sort of a that's a really sort of emerging
|
||
|
|
area that's very interesting so actually using an FPGA so feel programmable device so that you can
|
||
|
|
change the hardware to look for a particular device. So there's some really interesting sort of
|
||
|
|
hobbyist boards emerging in that space so there's a device called MyStorm which allows you to
|
||
|
|
connect a Raspberry Pi up to this field program or Gatorade and then you can program the device
|
||
|
|
so you're programming the hardware and so you could program the hardware to look for a particular
|
||
|
|
frequency and then have the hardware very energy efficient hardware doing that as opposed to your
|
||
|
|
microprocessor doing that. So how then do you set the frequencies that you were interested in on
|
||
|
|
your devices that is that set one time and done? So it's in the firmware of the device so it's
|
||
|
|
all software on the microcontroller so basically the microcontroller determines what the frequency
|
||
|
|
rate that you sample from the microphone is and then the code that we write that runs on them
|
||
|
|
on the microcontroller does the analysis and makes that decision so that's all changeable but
|
||
|
|
you need to be able to if you wanted to make radical changes to that beyond the the configurable
|
||
|
|
stuff that we put into the existing firmware you need to be able to you need to be comfortable writing
|
||
|
|
C and changing the firmware on the device but that's not a you know the people who are playing with
|
||
|
|
Arduino's are doing that type of coding all the time you're writing C that's going to run on
|
||
|
|
a microcontroller. Yeah but I'm thinking for a forest if this year they're interested in one
|
||
|
|
thing that they can gather up the devices at the end of the year reprogram them and redeploy them
|
||
|
|
next year for some other project. Yeah so the key thing is that you don't have to change the hardware
|
||
|
|
it's just it's just be flashing them updating the software and you can do that through the USB port
|
||
|
|
so they all have all these devices typically have a bootloader so the device has a USB port
|
||
|
|
that we use to configure it to tell it what the time is when it should be making recordings
|
||
|
|
but you can also use that port to update the software on the on the microcontroller.
|
||
|
|
Okay very cool. Did you actually find any stickers this year? No we didn't so but that doesn't mean
|
||
|
|
it's not there so we've been looking for sort of four four years now so it is the only site in the UK
|
||
|
|
where it's ever been recorded and no one has recorded or there's been no confirmed sighting since
|
||
|
|
about 1992 so there was a possibility of a sighting around 2000 but it has disappeared for
|
||
|
|
significant amounts of time in the past as well so last time it was sort of rediscovered around
|
||
|
|
the 60s it hadn't been seen for 40 years so it's the the best sort of advice is that it's likely
|
||
|
|
to be there are likely to be colonies somewhere in the New Forest but we just don't know where they
|
||
|
|
are yet. Very good. And what other projects are in the pipeline for this? So bats are very
|
||
|
|
interesting so we're keen to try and produce a device hopefully just using the standard device
|
||
|
|
that we've got that can be used for a sort of a citizen science bat survey so we've been talking
|
||
|
|
with a colleague professor Kate Jones at UCL he's probably the leading person in terms of using
|
||
|
|
devices for for monitoring bat populations and we're working with her to sort of try and sort of
|
||
|
|
see what we'd need to do a large scale citizen science bat survey using these types of devices.
|
||
|
|
And what would the plan be their ship that devices out to people or? Yeah so one of the interesting
|
||
|
|
things I've in previous projects I've used the mayor as well of distributing devices so you
|
||
|
|
people sign up on a web page they are they are sent the device by post they can typically they
|
||
|
|
can deploy it for a certain amount of time and then just send the device back to you and that allows
|
||
|
|
you to recycle the devices and with a with a limited number of devices do quite a lot of
|
||
|
|
a large scale deployment so that's sort of quite an interesting model that we that we probably
|
||
|
|
want to try and sort of exploit in this case. And also get over the data. Yeah so so what we haven't
|
||
|
|
so what we haven't really tried yet is sort of what would be the typical sort of
|
||
|
|
amount of data that we'd end up with from a useful survey so there's some work to do to sort of
|
||
|
|
figure out where you'd want to do these surveys what would be a useful amount of time to get some
|
||
|
|
meaningful data and then look at how much how much how many gigabytes of data that is and then
|
||
|
|
sort of see okay well how how willing would people be to use their home for band to upload that
|
||
|
|
much data and how long would it take because no typically we we get these sort of 10 mega mega
|
||
|
|
bit per second deals but that's download and the the upload speed is very much less than that.
|
||
|
|
So may well be that post and just sending your SD card back with the device by post is
|
||
|
|
not only easier for people but faster as well. Yeah more efficient and less chance of the
|
||
|
|
breaking halfway through. Yeah I mean certainly sort of you know if it's going to take you a
|
||
|
|
day to upload the data that you're you know a desktop or laptop tied up for the day
|
||
|
|
so compared to just putting it in an envelope and posting it back it may well be that may
|
||
|
|
well be the least time consuming thing to do. Yeah there's quite a lot of limits on the UK so
|
||
|
|
as well most people have bandwidth limits. Yes so it's sort of it I mean it's quite sort of a
|
||
|
|
is it disappointing in this world of digital technology that actually mailing SD cards turns out
|
||
|
|
to be the most efficient way of sending data back to boards but that maybe how it is for well.
|
||
|
|
Yeah true for you. So any other stuff that we missed on the interview or that we should be
|
||
|
|
covered? No I think that was that was pretty comprehensive. So what's your plan when you release the
|
||
|
|
the devices themselves are you going to update the web page where's the best place that we can
|
||
|
|
keep track of what's going on? Yeah so if you keep track of the the sound track.io website
|
||
|
|
and what we do is we'll obviously refresh our website when that when we release the device but
|
||
|
|
then we'll also sort of link to get hub where we're host all the code and circuit hub where you'll
|
||
|
|
be able to order devices from and who gets as well. So that will be the sort of first place to
|
||
|
|
look but we will then link off to these sort of standard places where people can access all of the
|
||
|
|
the extra information. So will you be also supplying the firmware? You know this is the back
|
||
|
|
firmware this is the Bosque firmware this is this. Yeah so we're we'll the first version of the
|
||
|
|
firmware will be a scheduled recorder so with with the option of triggering on particular
|
||
|
|
frequencies. So by default you'll be able to configure your device to wake up at 6am every morning
|
||
|
|
and record for three hours if you want to say to capture the the dawn chorus or you wanted to
|
||
|
|
deploy it at night and only make recordings if it detects a significant signal at 860 kilohertz
|
||
|
|
something like that. Yes. Okay so that is that's pretty much it from me. What we will do is we will
|
||
|
|
keep an eye on the website here and as soon as you're going live we'll make an announcement on
|
||
|
|
the community news for all the shows that we do once a month alerting our listeners to the device
|
||
|
|
being on board. Okay that's great. Perfect thank you very much for taking the time sorry it
|
||
|
|
took so long to organize and good luck with the with the project in the future. Okay great thank you.
|
||
|
|
Okay folks tune in tomorrow for another exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
||
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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||
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show like all our shows
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was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
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||
|
|
founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary
|
||
|
|
revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave
|
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|
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|
||
|
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show is released on the creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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