124 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
124 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2341
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Title: HPR2341: Liverpool Makefest 2017 Show 3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2341/hpr2341.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:28:58
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,341 entitled Liverpool Makefast 2017 Show 3, and is part of the series
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Interview.
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It is hosted by Tony Huma, Tony H1, 212, and in about 6 minutes long, and Karina Cleanflag.
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The summer is a short series of interviews that Liverpool Makefast 2017.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair, at An honest host.com.
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Hello, this is Tony Hughes for Hacker Public Radio.
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This is the third in a series of short interviews that I did at Liverpool Makefast 2017 on the
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24th of June this year.
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Enjoy.
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Hello, this is Tony Hughes from Hacker Public Radio.
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Still at Liverpool Makefast 2017, and I've got with me.
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David Giverd.
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David, would you like to tell me what you're displaying here today?
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What we're displaying is furniture made by the students at Studio of Days in Waveretry.
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We're a new school for the 15 to 18 range of students.
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We make furniture as an extension project.
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We're an engineering college.
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This is a work experience programme that we've got going for students.
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They make furniture from recycled materials.
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I can sit in front of me.
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I've got a couple of little stools, some benches and various things.
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They're all looking very attractive, actually.
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These all started life as bunk beds.
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That's quite interesting.
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The large furniture which we all, they also made, is made from the old beams of derelict houses and scaffolding boards.
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That's a really good way of recycling things.
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It introduced them to traditional woodwork skills.
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Yes, and the opportunity to take pride and responsibility for what they're doing.
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Just excuse as well, there's a public announcement.
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When I was at school, we used to do things like metalwork and woodwork and things like that.
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But that seems to be going off the national curriculum these days.
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Is your school kind of an answer to that?
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Well, we're an engineering college and fashion and textiles.
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We're promoting engineering skills and design and technology woodwork, product design.
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These are just some of the projects that the students have taken on.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you for telling me a little bit about the project.
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If you go to the first floor, you can see some of the full range of furniture made from the beams
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and recycled wood.
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Thank you.
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This is Tony Hughes at Liverpool Make a Vest.
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And I've got with me Laura.
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And Laura is doing plant synth kits.
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Would you tell us a little bit about what it is?
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Yes, so I made these kits that use, it's a really simple circuit using a 555 timer to make an oscillator
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so that kids can build a circuit using copper tape and materials that don't need soldering.
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And then they can attach it to plants and it makes sort of squealy sounds.
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And then if you attach a leaf, it makes a different sort of clicky sound.
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How about the kids who really love that?
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Yeah, they do.
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I think it's a tangible way of exploring conductivity.
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But it's also a bit silly.
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Have you done anything like using bananas and fruit to do a piano?
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Yeah, with a makey makey and with a berthens it to touch forward.
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My technology is a bit more basic, but you can still get a sound out of banana,
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but it wouldn't matter if they're any maker of piano.
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So, have you got your own website?
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I have, it's a tumbler and it's called tactile electronics.
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Okay, well thank you very much.
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Thank you.
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Hello, this is Tony Hughes at Liverpool Make a Vest.
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I'm on the Girl Geeks stand and I've got with me.
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Amelia, Beth.
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Amelia and Beth, would you like to tell us a little bit about what you do with Girl Geeks?
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Well, we were from the first Girl Geeks academy and we learnt to build websites.
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So, we both built websites each and we went into a competition, which my website won.
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I've got someone who's quite shy here.
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He's not really shy, he just said they'll get a good inspiration.
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It was really interesting to learn how to make websites because it was something that I'd always been interested in,
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but I hadn't really done it before.
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So, to look at the technical side of it as well and coding and just general,
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it was really cool and fun.
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So, what was your website that you designed?
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I made a website on how not to make a website because I thought it would be useful to use the advice that we'd been given
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and put it in a website to help other people as well.
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That sounds really cool actually.
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A website on how not to do it.
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So, is this website available that people can look at?
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It is, but I haven't really updated it much recently.
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Do we have any address?
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Well, my astronomy website, I use on a frequent basis.
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So, my website is majortim.space and it's all about astronomy and astrophysics because I'm absolutely mad about it.
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Right, so is that what you want to do when you go to university to do astronomy?
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Astrophysics.
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Oh, that sounds cool.
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So, I'm just going to walk over here and I'm going to talk to Chelsea.
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And Chelsea's going to tell me a little bit more about Girl Geeks.
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Yeah, so Liverpool Girl Geeks.
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We started in 2013 because we wanted to inspire more women to get into technology.
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So, we worked with teenagers and adults on a various amount of programs.
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We've got the Girl Geek Academy, the Girl Geek Bootcamp.
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We've got tech routines.
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And they're basically like a range of amazing courses for young girls to inspire them.
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So, we do coding, 3D printing, robotics.
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We've got a makeup academy coming up.
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It's just really exciting.
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And we love working with these girls.
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So, have you got your own website?
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Yeah, it's www.littlegirlgeeks.co.uk
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Thank you very much, Chelsea.
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And it's really good that you're doing all this great work.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you.
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Thanks.
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