349 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
349 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1399
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Title: HPR1399: Interview with Ben Everard https://www.linuxvoice.com
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1399/hpr1399.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:49:20
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---
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Well, wait, that's not the right music.
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In September of this year, on the TuX Radar Podcast, which was the corresponding podcast
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to the Linux format magazine, a few of the hosts announced at the end of the show their
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departure from Linux format.
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This was sadly the end of the TuX Radar Podcast as well.
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However, much to my relief, a new podcast and crowdfunding campaign was launched.
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The campaign, which you can contribute to through Indiegogo, is for a new magazine called
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Linux Voice.
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And the new podcast, which is currently underway, you can find at linuxvoys.com.
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And tonight I have with me one of the founders and contributors of Linux Voice, Ben Everard.
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Ben, how are you doing?
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Hi, I'm good thanks for having me.
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Yeah, no problem.
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Thank you for coming.
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So if you don't mind, can you give us a little bit of background as to what you did at
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Linux format?
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Sure.
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When I first started, I was the digital media editor, which is a fancy way of saying I created
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the DVD that came on the front of the magazine each month.
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But then I became a technical editor, which meant that somebody else did the DVD and I did
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more of the writing and just sort of reading through everything to make sure it was all
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technically OK.
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Very good.
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And so what is your role within Linux Voice when you start to move over to that?
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And it would be pretty much the same?
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Yeah, pretty much.
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We'll have more sort of flexible roles.
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Initially, we'll probably have to do a lot of writing ourselves.
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So it'll be mostly doing that and working with the other guys, obviously, it'll be
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sort of chief cook and bottle washer.
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Everything needs to be done.
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One of us will have to do.
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So as far as Linux Voice goes, the actual magazine, can you kind of describe to us what
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the difference is between Linux Voice and the other Linux magazines that might be on
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the market today?
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Sure.
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Linux Voice, if you've read Linux format before, the same sort of structural carry-through
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to Linux Voice.
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So it'll be a mix of tutorials, features, interviews and some news and all of stuff that
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we think will be interesting to most average Linux users.
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The biggest difference, really, between us and most other Linux magazines is we're trying
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to get the community involved and to support them as well.
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So it will not only be written by Linux users for Linux users, that'll be the only people
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at the matter.
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We won't have management and shareholders or whatever trying to dictate anything.
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It'll be purely down to us and the readers.
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What goes into it?
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All right, all right.
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So as far as the giving back part to the community, of course, that's a big thing with Linux users.
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They love giving back to the community and stuff.
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And so in that process, how are you going to determine where that money goes back to?
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There's going to be a few ways we're going to give back.
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Just publicly, we've pledged to give 50% of our profits to free software causes, whatever
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they may be, whether they're software projects that need money for hosting or whatever,
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whether it's bug bounties, we'll let the readers decide that.
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And the second thing is we'll be making all of our content available under a Creative
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Commons license nine months after it's published.
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So that work will be there for other people to take, to build upon and to use however
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they like.
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Oh, very good.
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So besides you, and I think there's Andrew Gregory and Mike Saunders as well, is there
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anybody else that's actually going to be on the magazine so far?
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Yeah, it's me, Mike and Andrew at the moment.
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Some listeners may know Graham Morrison also left at the same time.
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He's bound by a no compete clause at the moment.
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So he can't join us.
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That'll be running out later on in December.
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And we're hoping I'll decide to join us then.
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There's certainly the offer there for him, but he can't take it at the moment.
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That'd be great.
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It would be great.
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So I know that I mean, starting up a new project like this and a crowdfunding project,
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and you know, just going through the whole thing of just picking up and just dropping
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your job and starting a project like this has had to be kind of nerve-wracking.
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So what kind of challenges besides the initial impact of it all that you've find starting
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a project?
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It's a good question.
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It's the biggest one, personally, it's been incredibly stressful to do a crowdfunding
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campaign.
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The first week, particularly, we're all just glued to our computers, pressing F5,
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just seeing how OK, you know, if there's an hour gap between funders, we'll be sweating
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and we've got an IRC channel and we'll be talking what's going on, what's going on.
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And it'd be really easy to underestimate how difficult that was for us.
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We'll pass the worst of it now and we'll sort of relax a little bit.
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We hear the challenges.
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We're quite a disbursed team, both in the UK and Mike's in Austria, so there's been
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this sort of communication and logistical challenges there, but nothing too serious.
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Other than that, everything's gone worryingly straightforwardly, I think we're still waiting
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to find out the biggest challenges, but I'm sure up to them.
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The content that will be free after a maximum of nine months, it's going to be a digital subscription
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as well as a paper subscription.
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Yeah, yeah, you can get digital subscriptions on the Indiegogo site as well, so yeah, whichever
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you prefer.
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All right, so that's going to be straight through the Linux Voice website as far as,
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I mean, all right, now it's through the Indiegogo site, but is it going to be any like Google
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Play or any other type of format that way as far as submitting the, getting the subscriptions
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or is it just going to be like a PDF download?
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To start with, there will be a PDF download from our website.
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We will be looking into it with a format, so I know people have been asking for ePurban
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and I don't think we'll have too many issues getting those out.
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In the longer term, we do want to get into iTunes and Google Play, but they won't even
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talk to us until we've got a magazine on the shelf, so I don't think it'll be a problem,
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but there might be a slightly delay in getting onto those places.
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So you're a pretty busy guy, besides doing the podcast for Linux Voice as well as
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working on getting the magazine up and running.
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You also wrote a book, learning Python with Raspberry Pi.
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Can you tell us a little bit about that?
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Yeah, I can, actually, I just sent in the manuscript yesterday, so even my editor doesn't
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know I finished it, she doesn't check emails over the weekend, but yeah, it's just completed.
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It's broadly speaking, it's an introduction into everything you can do with the Raspberry
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Pi using Python, so it's not a traditional learned program using Python book that's
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just sort of thrown on the Raspberry Pi as a buzzword, it's very much about the sort of
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unique features of the Raspberry Pi.
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So we look at things like using the Raspberry Pi Cam module, using the GPIOs, and sort
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of general things we think will be interesting to Raspberry Pi users, say there's sections
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on games, on using OpenGLES, and that sort of thing.
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It's a very wide-ranging book, like I say, it's covering almost everything you can do
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with the Raspberry Pi and Python, almost everything.
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So is there a specific place that you're aiming the book at?
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I mean, is there a book aimed at a certain group of people, or is it just anybody that's
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interested type of thing?
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I think I've always had, in my mind, the average reader is the sort of person who's interested
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in computers, doesn't have a background in program, but they brought the Raspberry Pi, saying
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it's a cool project, and they like the idea, and they're sort of stuck for what to do
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with it.
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They like the idea, but they don't know exactly how to use it, and this sort of takes you
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by the hand.
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It doesn't require any programming knowledge to start with, although a little would probably
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be helpful.
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You'd certainly be able to follow the book if you hadn't programmed before.
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Yeah, anyone with the Raspberry Pi, I guess.
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Right, right.
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So you've done a lot of work with the Raspberry Pi?
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Yeah.
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Obviously.
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So what do you find that's so appealing about the Raspberry Pi?
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It's the form factor, I mean, I hear a lot of people talk about it, and it's an almost
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describe it, just like it's a regular computer, but cheaper, but it's nice.
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For me, the power of it is the shape, the low power requirements, the access to things
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like the GPIOs, so you can use it in a much wider range that you could a regular computer.
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You can embed it in stuff, whether that's the back of your TV, there's a media player,
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whether that's in the middle of a robot, buzzing around the place.
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And the fact that cheap enough, just to mess around with, is quite important.
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I mean, when you sort of wiring up the back, GPIOs off the back, I've done that with
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regular computers, and there's always this like thing, all, you know, if I touched the
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wrong thing, I could trash my computer.
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With the Raspberry Pi, well, you know, it's 30 quid, I'll get over it, I'll buy a new
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one.
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Right.
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And it is that, and the low power as well, which means you can just power it off a couple
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of batteries, or a solar panel or whatever, there's so many applications where that makes
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a huge difference.
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Yeah.
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I could imagine.
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So is there a particular reason why you chose Python to learn to, you know, learn Python
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with Raspberry Pi as opposed to a different language?
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To be perfectly honest, the decision was made before I got on board.
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I got asked it.
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Yeah, I got asked by the publishers if I wanted to write this book, I didn't decide on
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the book.
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However, having said that, Python probably would have been my choice anyway.
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Surely, because it's, it's a nice medium of, it's a powerful language, you can get,
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you can do so much with it with, you know, with all the modules and everything.
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But at the same time, it's an easy language to learn and to pick up.
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And yeah, you could have done it in plenty of other languages.
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But Python just, it's hard to say exactly why it just feels about white for a new programmer
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on the Raspberry Pi.
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Good.
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All right.
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So in talking about just Linux and general, how long have you been using Linux itself?
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Um, it's quite an easy question to answer, actually.
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I started because I've got, just before I went to uni, we got a sort of letter through telling
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us how to prepare for the course.
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And one of them was a suggestion that we started using Linux.
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Or we've got just got familiar with it.
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And that would have been June 2000, so I can give you the month and, yeah, it's taking
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a computer and it needed everything reinstalling.
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So I thought, wow, it's all just throw Linux on it, rather than Windows, get familiar with
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it.
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And I've been using it as my main desktop ever since.
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Wow.
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So is that what kind of brought you to open source and Linux is that you just were handed
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something and said, go for it?
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Yeah.
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I've heard of open source before, but I'd never really had much to do with it.
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And I do remember a couple of years before I got a Slackware CD, I think it came on the
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front of the magazine or something, but I've never even got it to boot to be honest, I
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spent about a day, but yeah, that was, I don't know why, it just struck me as a good idea
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at the time.
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And then I started using Linux then.
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Right.
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So what do you find that probably the most appealing aspect of Linux and open source
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software?
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So I think I'm a born tinkerer.
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I like sort of poking about inside of things, seeing how they work and sort of making
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modifications to what happens.
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And I think even if you're not a kernel programmer, the fact that, you know, everything's open
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from the kernel app is, it just makes me feel better using it.
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And the fact that, you know, it's all broken up, so you've got different, you know, you've
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got X windows and you can use it or not, you've got different window managers.
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That just all appeals to the tinkerer and me.
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Right.
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I could.
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I'm right there with you on that one, so.
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But so is there something about Linux itself, everything that encompasses it that you
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feel probably needs a little bit more polished or more concentrated on?
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There's a lot of things that certainly could be polished and tidied up.
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But I think if it was all fixed, it wouldn't be Linux.
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And I don't mean that in a bad way.
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I mean, there's certain things that are tidy.
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I mean, he's Kramer S's Android, which take Linux as the base and and tidy them up in
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a way that's right for certain class of users.
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But the fact that it is all sort of cobbled together for one of a better word is part of
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what, what makes Linux Linux, if it was perfect, it would attract a different class of
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people and the sort of tinkress like myself would probably move on to something else.
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Right.
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Yeah.
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So is there something in that's happening right now within Linux and maybe even open
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source software or, you know, and floss or anything like that that has that you find
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real exciting and something that's happening right now?
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I mean, for Linux in general, I think the most exciting thing is what Valve are doing with
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Steam.
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I know it's not open source, but I think it will, I think it will be a massive, massive
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impacts on the desktop while in the general stage of the software in general.
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But personally, I'm not actually a gamer, so it doesn't really affect me.
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It's something I'm sitting back and watching, right.
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The things that have really excited me recently, even though, well, they're not necessarily
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that new, is the more hackable hardware, the open hardware, things like the Arduino.
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I only got into the Arduino this year, really.
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And I'm loving it.
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So, you know, just playing about with hardware and, well, yeah, and building up the little
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circuits and the same with the GPIOs and the Raspberry Pi.
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And it's that, I mean, the cool word for its physical computing, but that's what I'm
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enjoying at the moment.
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Yeah.
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Sounds good.
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I really need to learn more about the Raspberry Pi and the Arduino really get into that
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loop, where I think it's be a whole lot of fun.
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I could see myself spending a lot of hours doing that.
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So during your employment of at Linux format and writing for them, what was it that was
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probably the most exciting thing that you got to write about?
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Wow.
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That's quite a good question.
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I think the thing that I think that I enjoyed the most was the hacking, where some people
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think we should call it cracking the sort of malicious, but not necessarily, she was breaking
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into computing and sort of attacking servers.
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And we did, we did some articles on maths, sort of going through things like MetaSploit
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and in a fairly straightforward stuff, but probing computers for weaknesses and looking
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at how to exploit those.
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And it was quite a good fun just to set up a little test lab and see what we could do.
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Yeah.
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Oh yeah.
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That does sound like fun.
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So going from here into the future, what would you like to see open source go?
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What kind of adventures?
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I think there's a few sort of big things.
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For me, open standards are almost as important, possibly more important than open software.
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And I'd really like to see open standards on things like Office software become much,
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much more prevalent.
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And if that means people using Microsoft Office, but saving it in a format that's compatible,
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we're completely compatible with LibreOffice, then that's fine.
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Provided that they use that open standard as a format.
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Particularly in public institutions, where it's our money that's being paid to lock it
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away in proprietary formats, that really annoys me.
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Yeah.
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Beyond that, I mean, just greater level of adoption really, I mean, open source, so Linux
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desktop is really my sort of area, that's what I enjoy using.
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And I'd love to see that become more popular.
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Hopefully, the Steam Box or Steam OS will help us get there.
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Yeah.
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I'm in the same boat that you're, I'm not a gamer, but I think that having Steam come along
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is going to be a really good benefit, just to get some more people that's interested
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in the programming and the supporting of Linux and that kind of format.
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Yeah.
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And just to have Valve behind it, I mean, there are obviously these companies like IBM
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and Google already behind it, but it's just another massive company that's sort of backing
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Linux.
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It just sort of, it makes me think that this is definitely, it's not going to stop.
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It's the ball just sort of keeps picking up speed and rolling faster and faster.
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Yeah.
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I agree.
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So it's really thing else that you'd like to tell us about the magazine, the campaign,
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podcast, your book.
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Well, the magazine's going to be awesome.
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Check out Linux Voice.com or there's links there to the Indiegogo campaign.
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We really do all the support we can get because if we don't reach the goal, we won't make
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the magazine.
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It's as simple as that.
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This isn't, you know, plan A with plan B and plan C. This is just the only plan.
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And we'd really want, because we think the community would really benefit from having
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this sort of, the magazine to support it, the community supports magazine, the magazine
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supports community.
|
||
|
|
It's a natural reinforcing each other.
|
||
|
|
And we think it's going to be great.
|
||
|
|
The book should be out February, hopefully February might not be out till March.
|
||
|
|
And if you're interested in the Raspberry Pi and Python, please check it out.
|
||
|
|
Right.
|
||
|
|
So where can we find the book, where can we order the book from?
|
||
|
|
But the moment it's available from pre-order on Amazon, it's being published by Wiley.
|
||
|
|
So there should have it in all good bookshops.
|
||
|
|
Very good.
|
||
|
|
Very good.
|
||
|
|
So what we need to do is go over to Linux Voice.com and click on the big button that says
|
||
|
|
support our Indiegogo campaign, chip in some bucks and get the, get the goal reached
|
||
|
|
right now.
|
||
|
|
We got 22 days left at the time of this recording.
|
||
|
|
And you're making a good progress, but there's still a little bit of area there that we need
|
||
|
|
to fill up.
|
||
|
|
So hopefully some of the listeners will jump on over and make a nice contribution to help
|
||
|
|
the cause.
|
||
|
|
I hope so.
|
||
|
|
Yeah.
|
||
|
|
Yeah.
|
||
|
|
And I greatly appreciate you taking the time out of your day to stop by and talk and love
|
||
|
|
to have you.
|
||
|
|
Oh, thanks for having me here.
|
||
|
|
It's been good fun.
|
||
|
|
Yeah.
|
||
|
|
Hopefully, and we'll talk to you soon.
|
||
|
|
Bye.
|
||
|
|
At time of recording in this show on December 1st, there were 22 days left at the Linux Voice
|
||
|
|
crowdfunding campaign.
|
||
|
|
And by the time that it does go public, there will probably be maybe 10 to 11 days left
|
||
|
|
of their campaign.
|
||
|
|
So if you would please go over to their website, links voice.com, click on the support
|
||
|
|
our IndigoGo campaign or you can go to indigoGo.com slash projects slash Linux, dash voice.
|
||
|
|
Thanks a lot.
|
||
|
|
Bye.
|
||
|
|
Bye.
|
||
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
|
||
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
||
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
||
|
|
If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
|
||
|
|
it really is.
|
||
|
|
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital.Pound and the Infonomicom Computer Club.
|
||
|
|
HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
|
||
|
|
All binref projects are crowd- Exponsored by lunar pages.
|
||
|
|
From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting
|
||
|
|
needs.
|
||
|
|
On list, otherwise stasis, today's show is released on the rare creative commons,
|
||
|
|
attribution, share a life, lead us our lives, it's welcome.
|