125 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2716
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Title: HPR2716: Really Simple YouTube
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2716/hpr2716.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 08:03:33
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---
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This in HPR episode 2007-116 entitled, Really Simple YouTube.
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It is hosted by Ajara and in about 7 minutes long, and Karina Cleanflag.
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The summary is Ajax claims how he makes YouTube come to him using RSS feeds.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello folks, Kay Wisher here to remind you that it's that time of year again.
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Time for the Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve Show.
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For those who don't know, on New Year's Eve, December 31, 2018, at 10am UTC,
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that is 5am Eastern Standard Time, we will have a recording going on the HPR Mumble Server
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for anyone to come on and say Happy New Year and talk about whatever they want.
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We will leave the recording going until January 1, 2019 12am UTC,
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that will be 7am Eastern Standard Time, or until the conversation stops.
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Please visit hackerpublicradio.org to find all the details and links
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about how to set up the PC Mumble client, your favorite mobile app, the mobile server connection details.
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Our Etherpad show notes and the live audio stream if you only prefer to listen in on the lively banter.
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So please stop and say hi and maybe join in the conversation with other HPR listeners and contributors.
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It's always a good time.
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Let's go to hackerpublicradio, this is Taj, and I'm just going to make a quick episode about something that I do personally.
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I thought everybody had kind of at least thought about it, figured out at this point,
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but I had mentioned it recently to a couple of people that I think are pretty intelligent,
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and they both had sort of the same reaction to what I said.
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They were like, oh, I never thought of doing that.
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So I figured I would go ahead and just make an episode.
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Maybe some other people feel the same way.
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There's been a few episodes recently about YouTube and how people consume YouTube
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and how that's a big thing for them.
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And this is going to kind of play into that.
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Like most of the people listening to this, a lot of my entertainment, and frankly at this point in education,
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is coming from watching YouTube.
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That I think is awesome that we have this collective space to put all this knowledge.
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The downside of it to me is specifically the YouTube site itself.
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And I'm sure I'm not the only person who has fallen down the YouTube recommendations hole.
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The algorithms that YouTube create for those recommendations are just specifically designed to create, you know,
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quote, unquote, engagement, which, you know, for them or views equals more advertising equals more money for Google.
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And I'm not against them making money for their product.
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I don't want this to come off that way.
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But I know myself and I know that I will fall into that and waste a lot of time that I could use to be productive for other things.
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So the way that I do this is I pull it to me.
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I don't go to the YouTube site. I bring YouTube to me.
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Now I'm saying this as I also pay for YouTube TV and Google music at this point.
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So I feel like I'm giving Google the money that I would make for watching ads.
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And actually if I go to the site, I don't watch ads anyways.
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So for me, I don't have any moral issues with doing what I'm doing.
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I'm sure some people may, but you know, that's up to each individual on how to do it.
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So how do I fix this problem?
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So I love RSS.
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RSS does everything for me.
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I get my news through RSS. I get my podcasts through RSS.
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And it probably gets that I get my YouTube videos through RSS.
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Now my setup revolves around using tiny, tiny RSS,
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which if you don't know what tiny, tiny RSS is, it's a self-hosted RSS feed reader.
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I spun this up on my home server basically once Google Reader went away.
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I was a big fan of Google Reader.
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And when that collapsed, actually tiny, tiny RSS is why I started running a home server.
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I was to be able to have a way to control my RSS feeds for me.
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And I wanted to sink it across multiple devices.
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So having it on its own server was beneficial.
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Now the stuff I'm going to talk about is sort of specific to tiny, tiny RSS.
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But you can probably replicate this in any other feed reader you want to use.
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One of the things that I've thought about and have never tried is trying this with a podcast,
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like a pod catcher, to see if it would pull this down.
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Like I said, I haven't tried that yet.
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If you do, mileage may vary.
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So the first thing to do is to find the channels that you want to watch.
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Usually, I'm sure at this point most people have subscriptions on YouTube.
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But on the back end, Google actually organizes these things by RSS feeds.
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So you just have to find out what that RSS feed is.
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And it's actually pretty easy.
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In the show notes, I'm going to link two sites.
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The first site is just going to be a really quick hack if you just want to add a single channel.
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So you can go to the channel page on YouTube and then go to View Source
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and then pull out the code that will lead you straight to the RSS feed.
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So that's a really good way of doing it for just one channel.
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So at this point, if I add something to my subscriptions or want to follow something,
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I usually use this method because it's the easiest.
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The other one is actually from Google itself.
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And it shows you how to export your YouTube subscriptions list as an opml file.
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And an opml file is just an XML file.
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And they're really easy to parse.
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So you can go in and actually get the URLs for the RSS feeds that you want to use.
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So once you have those, you put them in your feed reader.
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I, in my feed reader, I make a category that is specifically YouTube videos.
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So I can make that category.
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And then when I click it, it lists all the videos that have been published since the last time I looked.
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And I can mark them red just like anything else.
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The nice thing about Tiny Tiny RSS specifically is that it has a plug-in that will actually embed the video player inside the article.
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So when I click on it, it just presents the player to me.
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So I can just watch it right there.
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I never have to leave Tiny Tiny RSS, which is fantastic.
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Like I said, you may not get that functionality in another feed reader, but it's worth playing around with them.
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I'm assuming.
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Another thing, kind of a bonus tip.
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I've started to use PeerTube a lot to try to find another way to consume media just because I really like the federated model.
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PeerTube is kind of a YouTube replacement that's built on activity pub, which is a standard that mastered on uses and a few other of these federated services.
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They even make it easier. You can actually go to any channel in PeerTube.
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And it has a link to subscribe to the RSS feed.
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So right underneath my YouTube, I have a PeerTube listing that has the channels I follow on PeerTube, which is kind of nice.
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So I can watch those.
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Now, the only problem with that is it doesn't do the embed like the YouTube does.
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So I do have to go to the site.
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But for me, that site's not as is egregious because I don't get sucked into any recommendations because they really don't do recommendations.
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They're just sort of what's new. And I typically don't look at that. So it's not a distraction.
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So really, that's it. That's that's how I watch all of my videos without ever having to go to the YouTube site.
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I also do something similar on my Android devices.
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And I would tell you about it.
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But I'm pretty sure Ken Fallon would be a lot happier if I just make that a second show.
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So this is a cliffhanger.
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You've been listening to HackerPublic Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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HackerPublicRadio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club.
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And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly.
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Leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
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attribution, share a live 3.0 license.
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