165 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2493
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Title: HPR2493: YouTube Subscriptions - update
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2493/hpr2493.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 04:06:35
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2493 entitled YouTube Subscription Update.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 15 minutes long and can in the next visit flag.
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The summary is some of the YouTube channel I have subscribed to in the last year.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, everybody. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio. My name is Dave Morris.
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And I'm doing a show about YouTube Subscriptions today.
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I did one in January 2017 about my YouTube Subscriptions concentrating mainly
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on the makers that I like to follow on YouTube. Since then, I've added a few more channels,
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some of which are related to making and that sort of stuff.
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In fact, probably most of them are, but there's a few others as well.
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I thought I would just give you a quick rundown of those in case they're of interest to you.
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So what I've done is I've listed more. There's a short list in the main notes,
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just links to the channels and then the longer notes.
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There's a list including some descriptive text that I've got from the about page
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of each of the channels. When there is anything, a few people don't have anything at all.
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And I've also added some of my own notes about what I think about the channel,
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why I'm following them and so on.
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So I've got an alphabetical list. It's just start the beginning and go through them.
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First one is a channel called Anne of All Trades. It's a new channel I've recently
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subscribed to. I don't know much about Anne's history, but she seems to be quite talented
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in making stuff and is on a quest, apparently, to learn new skills and so forth.
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Of the more old-fashioned, I suppose you'd say, manual making without too much in the way of
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electrical equipment and so forth. There are not very many episodes yet, but I thought it was
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worth bringing in the channel to your attention because it seemed like it has great potential.
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Bigclive.com is the second one and this is a guy who Scottish guy, I think, from Glasgow
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originally. He lives currently on the Isle of Man. I think he works in electronics in his day-time
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work, not precisely shown, he does. He certainly knows a lot about electronics and
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soldering and all that sort of stuff and he's always got some weird and wonderful gadget,
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often a cheap nasty thing from China or something. He's bought from a pound store and he's
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tearing them down, looking at how they work, how they whether they're safe or not. He does a lot
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of sorts of weird and wonderful things. He does a lot of videos, how he has the time to do so many
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per week, I don't know, but they're really entertaining. Next is computer file and their
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description says videos all about computer science and computer stuff, which seems to cover it all.
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There's some fascinating episodes on here. You need to be interested in programming and
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computer science, I guess, to get most of it, though there has been a series of interviews with
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Professor Brian Kernigan, who's one of the co-creators of Ork, which Be Easy and I doing series
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on, as you hopefully know. And he's a really interesting idol, isn't he? And some of the decisions
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made about the design of Ork are interesting to hear about. Some computer history stuff as well
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where they tear apart old computers and talk about them and that type of thing. David Welder is
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the fourth one. He's a sort of general maker and woodworker. He says, make things from all kinds
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materials. The channel is pretty organic, I shoot things, I like and find interesting. So
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it's not just making, it's all sorts of stuff. His father seems to be a maker as well and sometimes
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they work together. He's pretty interesting. He has been on hideous for a while, but his
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output seems to be increasing again now. You might like to give him a look anyway. He's an
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entertaining sort of guy. He also fairly recently subscribed to number five, which is channel called
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Evan and Caitlin. And the hosts are, of course, Evan and Caitlin. They married a couple,
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they made a lot of stuff together. There's it says in their description, I'm not going to read
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these all out. You can do that yourself, I'm sure. But they're projects often quite clever.
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They're sometimes quite simple, but just have an interesting twist to them. And their
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relaxed and friendly style is great, I enjoy it. Next is explaining computers. This is a guy
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called Christopher Barnett, who's been teaching computing in future studies at the University of
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Nottingham. And has written a lot of books, 13. He's taken a break from writing books, I think he
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said. But his channel is fascinating. I wasn't sure about it when I first encountered it. It has
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quite an old-fashioned style to it. Somebody says it's like, if you're British, you'll know the
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Open University and the way in which at one point they used to put out all of their output
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on the television at weird times of the day. So you could, if you wished, watch all manner of
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lectures on stuff. And he seems to come across as a bit like those guys, which, to me, it's
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perfect. I like it very much. He's been talking a lot about single-board computers lately,
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comparing Raspberry Pi with the O-Droid and various others, Tinkerboard, etc. Check it out and
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see if you're interested in those things. And he's done some interesting explanations of stuff
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like quantum computing, blockchain in relation to Bitcoin, but not only. He's a good explainer.
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And he does pretty regular one a once-week video rate. The next one is called Homemade Modern,
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7th one in my list. That's a guy who's a designer and he sometimes works with his sister
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who's, and they both do some really interesting designs and clever projects. He build himself a
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spiral staircase, for example, which I think is quite amazing piece of work, but he has a very
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interesting take on stuff. Quite likes to make domestic things out of concrete, which is concrete
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in various molds, which is an interesting approach. Easy swan is number eight, and somebody he
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commented on him and the last show, so I thought I'd include him. I don't watch him that often,
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to be honest, but he has some very interesting ideas. He seems to make invent or manner of gadgets
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and things out of, often out of wood. He's quite an innovator, an inventor and innovator, as well as
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a maker. Number nine is Jackman Works. This guy Paul Jackman is a woodworker and he tends to make
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stuff out of recycled material. He's got a sort of name for collecting pallets and breaking them
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down and making stuff out of them. His work benches are made out of them and so forth. But he has a
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really lovely style of making videos, which with loads of jokes in them, very subtle to my way,
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thinking anyway, and often, well apart from the fart jokes that he occasionally puts in.
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Yeah, it mueses me. He's one of my favorites to be honest. I do enjoy his output. And his one that's
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completely unexpected, maybe. I've got a cat. There's a cat set on the windows, it'll just
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across from me. And my kids and I enjoy cats, we like looking at cat-related things. So this
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one is a Japanese channel. Mugu Mugu is the channel name. I think that's the sort of alias of the
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channel owner and the cat owner. And her catch has two cats. One is called Maru, which I mean
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something I've forgotten in Japanese. He's a big Scottish fold cat, very, very strange and
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idiosyncratic. I do enjoy watching what he does. And she's brilliant at making videos of him.
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Number 11 is a guy called Neil. His name is not PASC, but he calls himself PASC. PASC makes.
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And he is a British guy who seems to have emigrated to Australia. I've been watching him for about a
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year. I've thought, yeah, yeah, mildly interesting stuff. But the more I've watched what he does,
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the clever I find his output. He does some really amazingly interesting and clever things,
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making stuff like a workbench and a vice and clamps and things like this, all his own sort of design
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and build. He's a really clever maker, I believe. This is one of my favourites, I have to say.
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I do really look forward to his output. Next is the channel called Phil Pinsky Productions.
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Phil Pinsky is a Canadian, a hobbyist woodworker and maker, another reclaimed materials user.
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Not a huge lot of videos on the channel, but some quite interesting stuff that he does.
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I mentioned a podcast called Reclaimed Audio Podcast in my last show, and he's one of the hosts
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on that. That's why I have anyway, I've included him and why I watch his output. I would really like
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to learn to weld. Never had any lessons or anything, but there's a channel called Retro World,
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who, this guy's obviously a metal worker with lots of experience, and he does some really
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interesting work in metal and welding of all sorts of ways. There are many different ways in
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which you can weld, and it's a fascinating one to watch. Not a very high rate of output,
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but some really quality stuff. Number 14 is Thomas San Laura, not sure I quite pronounced that
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right. I think he's German, so I might have got the pronunciation wrong. He's very much into 3D
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printing, and I'd quite like to get myself one at some point. It's a great source of 3D
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print information. There's loads of channels on 3D printing. I just happened to have latched
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this one because he does some very comprehensive surveys and stuff, so yeah, it's good. I'm not
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sure it's strongly recommended, but if you're into 3D printing, you could certainly start with him
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and see where you go from there. Tim Sways, the next one. He's another reclaimed materials maker,
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and he does this for a living, and he makes some really interesting stuff out of all manner of
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reclaimed stuff. He does, on occasion, use bought material, but a lot of it is reclaimed,
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but more manner of sources. It's amazing where he can get stuff from. He's based in the
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Eastern USA. He's another host on the reclaimed audio podcast, and I do find his
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his approach to making stuff very interesting. He'd learn a lot from him. I could anyway.
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Unemployed Redneck Hillbilly Creations. It's the name of the next channel. This is a strange title.
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The guy found himself unemployed, I believe, because his work was, he effectively became
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redundant, I guess. I hope I'm not putting words in his mouth, and he's become more or less
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self-sufficient. He won't be a very young man. He'll be in his early 60s, and I would guess.
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He's a very skilled engineer. He's obviously been an engineer for a lot of his life. Makes and
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repairs and enhances a lot of his own stuff. He has a lot of land, which he cultivates,
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built his own CNC, sort of task, that you have to be pretty sophisticated to do. He's also made
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a CNC plasma cutter. The thing that you can drive in the XY direction, so he can easily cut up
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bits of metal and make bits for just tractors and his mowers and this type of thing. Very
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interesting guy. I'm surprised how much I enjoy his output. He talks about his garden quite a lot,
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and also about cooking and stuff, but that appeals to me, so you might like to check him out,
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but don't be put off by the strange title, because he's certainly not a Hillbilly nor a Redneck.
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William Loots is the penultimate channel. He's another one of the reclaimed audio hosts,
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and he makes reclaimed materials more or less as a hobby, I think, but he's an interesting
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make. Finally, and this one is quite a bit different from the others. Vintergattan is a Swedish
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band, and one of the guys in the band, Martin, is something of a maker. He certainly
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turns his hand to building all manner of weird and wonderful stuff, and he created, I think it's
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pretty much his own creation, a thing he called the marble machine, and the original one was made
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of plywood, and it used steel-large ball bearing type things, marbles, onto a vibraphone, onto
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various percussion things, and onto the strings of a guitar, and it was all programmable through
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a big cylinder with lego-technic pegs stuck in it, and you basically turned a handle,
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and the marbles moved through it and played music. You should really see it play, but it suffered
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from, as a Wikipedia article, by the way, it suffered from the fact that building stuff out of wood,
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precision stuff out of wood, and also doing it with fairly basic tool, ended up with something
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where all the tolerances gave all manner of problems, and it didn't really function beyond once or twice.
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You can actually see it being played, and I think it ended up certainly visited a museum
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in the Netherlands, where they have all manner of mechanical musical thing. Not sure if it's
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there permanently, but anyway, he's building a new one, which is going to be metal framed with
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wooden parts, all manner of gears and strange things, but the whole design of it is
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considerably improved. He's got a big, big CNC that he's cutting things up with, and watching him
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build this is fascinating, and of course I actually enjoy the band's music quite a lot as well.
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I have strange, probably strange tastes for somebody with my age anyway, I enjoy their music, so
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you might like to at least go and have a look at his marble machine videos to see, see what the
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original one did and looked like and stuff, is a really clever concept I thought, and he's also
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made other musical devices. So that's really it, that's my list of 18, and check it out and see
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see if you find anything in there that's at all interesting, and I'm going to leave it there.
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Hope you enjoyed it, bye-bye!
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You've been listening to HecopobliGradio at HecopobliGradio.org. We are a community podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. HecopobliGradio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer club, and it's part of the binaryrevolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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