201 lines
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Plaintext
201 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2275
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Title: HPR2275: Penguicon 2017
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2275/hpr2275.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:43:56
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,275 entitled, Penguin 2017, and is part of the series, Penguin.
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It is hosted by a huker, and in about 19 minutes long, and carrying a clean flag.
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The summer is a look at the lineup for the 2017 event.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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It 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 honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is a huker, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio, and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing discussions.
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What I want to do is talk a little bit about Penguin 2017, which is coming up.
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In fact, it is going to be the end of this month, April 28th through 30th, in Southfield,
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Michigan at the Western Hotel, which is where we've been the last few years.
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I have the honor of being for the 4th, but final time, the head of the technology track,
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which is a very important part, because the name Penguin Part comes from Linux and open
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source, and we're looking at all sorts of open source technologies.
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We've even started looking at some open hardware stuff, and we've got guests of honor and
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all sorts of good stuff, and the other thing about Penguin is that it's also a science
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fiction convention, and there can be some overlap there.
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Every year we bring in guests of honor, and we've got a number of them this year.
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The first one I want to mention is Ada Palmer.
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Now Ada Palmer is a professor of history at the University of Chicago, among other things,
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and she has also written her first book, A Novel, that just came out a couple of days
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ago that it was nominated for a Hugo Award, so that's pretty darn good.
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So I think that's definitely an interesting guest of honor.
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Then the next one I want to mention is Cory Doctorow, and I would hope I don't really
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have to tell the hacker public radio audience that much about it, but I'm going to talk
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about him a little bit anyway.
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He's co-editor of the Boeing Boeing weblog, Consultant of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
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He's a visiting professor at the Open University in the UK, MIT Media Lab activist in residence.
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He's a novelist and has written a number of very successful novels, and in fact is on
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a book tour for the latest right now.
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One of the nice things about Cory is that he walks the walk.
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He's a great believer in getting rid of some of the copyright nonsense, so he has always
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made his books available to people really free of charge.
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You can go to his website and download an electronic copy of his book if you want, and it
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prints perfectly legal.
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He says, yes, if that's what you want to do, go ahead and do it.
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In fact on his website, he says, if you really want to give me some money, the way to do
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it is if you like the book, buy a physical copy and donate it to your library, something
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like that.
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Yet he does very well commercially, because I think many of us understand that if an artist
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is giving you something of value, you want to be able to give something back to them.
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He's also very much an activist in privacy, in defending yourself against an overreaching
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state, and I'm really glad to have him as a guest of honor.
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Then another guest of honor I want to mention is Sumana Hari Haraswara.
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She's an open source contributor and has involved with Genome, Media Wiki, Genu Mailman,
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and a number of other open source projects.
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I think she's a very interesting person.
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She's also a stand-up comedian, and she has co-edited the Thought Crime Experiments Enthology
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in 2009, written for a number of online sources, so I think she's going to be a fun person
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to have.
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Then another guest of honor is Coraline Ada Emke, and Coraline is a speaker, writer,
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open source advocate and technologist, and has 20 years experience in developing apps
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for the web.
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She is involved in promoting diversity and inclusivity and open source in the tech industry,
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and was recognized for her work with a Ruby Hero Award in 2016.
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She's the creator of the contributor covenant, the most popular open source code of conduct
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in the world, with over 15,000 adoptions, so that's pretty good.
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Then we've got a guy named Kevin MacLeod, who is a composer and copyright activist.
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He offers royalty-free music through Creative Commons license on his site and compotec.com.
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He believes that copyright is fundamentally broken and no longer serves the needs of
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artists, creators, or audiences.
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So he is an interesting fellow there, and you can see that we're really looking at people
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who are challenging some of these notions of what copyright should be.
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Then we've got Tommy Edison and Ben Churchill.
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Now Tommy Edison is interesting, he has been blind since birth, and has a website called
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Blind Film Critic, where he reviews movies.
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Now think about that for a second.
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He has obviously a very different perspective on what movies are, and has a great sense
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of humor, as you might guess, from having a site called Blind Film Critic.
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He's worked in radio for 25 years as a disc jockey, and he's also being joined by Ben
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Churchill, who produces his shows and is a documentary filmmaker.
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So we actually get two for the price of one there.
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Then our hack of honor, and I assume hack or public radio will be interested in this,
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the Tri-Corder Project.
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So this is a project that is aiming to develop a handheld device.
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Of course we all know the Tri-Corder is famous from Star Trek, and it was a medical device.
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So this is an attempt to build something that is portable, accessible, and is going to
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let us get this kind of information.
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So I think it's a very interesting kind of project.
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Then we have what are called featured guests.
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So we have some in gaming, that's another one of the things we talked about, Angie Rush
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and Les Orchard, are going to be talking about some gaming things.
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We've got a food track, that's an interesting one, and we have a professor from Wayne State
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who is interested in the evolution of the human diet, and is going to be, I think, serving
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insects to people.
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So if you've ever had an urge to find out what insects taste like, come to PenguinCon.
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Then we've got a science track featured guest, which is a fellow named Greg Les.
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He's a lab manager at UMEI Battery Fabrication, and he has a doctorate in chemistry from
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the University of Michigan, and his work was featured on a recent episode of NOVA.
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Of course we're in Michigan, so it's not surprising that we draw on the university faculties
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from this area.
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So those were some of the special guests.
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Now I also mentioned that I'm in charge of the technology track, and you might wonder,
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well, what are some of the things going on there?
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What did you accept as proposals here, and it's a very interesting bunch of things?
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First of all, one of the interesting signs of where life is going is I had a number of
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proposals given to me by people from Microsoft.
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Now, you might not think Microsoft is particularly known for open source.
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This first came up back in 2015, as we were preparing for the PenguinCon that year.
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I got an email from a lady who lives in the area, a woman named Jennifer Marsman.
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A very nice email said, you know, I know that you're probably not used to dealing with
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people from Microsoft, but would you be open to considering a talk, because Microsoft
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is doing some things, and that your audience might be interested in, and we corresponded,
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and I said, Jennifer, if you are going to be talking about open source as part of what
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you're doing, you know, how Microsoft is working with open source, something like that,
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then absolutely.
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I'd be delighted to have you do that presentation.
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So she came and did one about Microsoft's Azure Online Cloud environment, and for an
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hour, went through all of the open source technology that has already set up to work in
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that environment, a number of different Linux discos, programming languages, software of
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various kinds.
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So it was really, it was very interesting, and we had, in fact, one of the fellow named
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Mark Ram from Canonical, the Ubuntu people, was there, and said that they really appreciated
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working with Microsoft on this stuff, that they were a good partner.
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So we're going to have Jennifer back, and apparently some of her colleagues found out
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about it.
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So we're going to have, we've got to, I think, three people from Microsoft who are doing
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something on open source game development.
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So I think that is going to be, you know, a lot of fun.
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We're going to do, we have a talk on the future of net neutrality from a fellow Ed Platte
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who's been here a number of years and is very much involved in, you know, citizen privacy
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and things like that.
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We're going to have a presentation called Late Night Tales, as a couple of people who,
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if you're familiar with tales, it is a Linux distro that is oriented towards privacy
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and security, particularly.
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And so they're going to do kind of a late night workshop on that, which I think is going
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to be absolutely fascinating.
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We're going to have an introduction to deep learning with Google Tensor Flow.
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We're going to have build your own satellite.
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That should be absolutely fascinating, okay?
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And you know, we're going to have, and this is, this is from Jennifer Marsman, a dance
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with intelligent dragon drones.
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So I think that should be absolutely fascinating.
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We're going to have a few open BSD and BSD related things.
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Michael Lucas, who literally has written the book, and if you've ever listened to Sunday
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Morning Linux review, and oh, by the way, they're going to be here as they are every year
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doing their program live.
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But you may recall some discussion of Lucas's BSD book on there.
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So he's doing a couple of talks, and that's, and we've got someone else doing a BSD thing.
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We've got a senior Cicidmin panel, several people, Cicidmin's talking about, I guess we'll
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see what they're going to talk about, that's the thing about panels.
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We've got, do it yourself, internet of things.
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And so this is an interesting, it's, it's a two-parter, starts with an hour presentation,
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and then followed up with a workshop where you can put some of these things to use.
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And that's going to be in the computer lab, and that's one of the things.
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We now have a computer lab with a whole bunch of netbook computers, and we're able to
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use that to help a lot of these presenters.
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We've got someone from Microsoft talking about Bash, Ubuntu Bash on Windows.
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So we're going to see about that.
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Then we've got a group called Grand Circus, which is a local training place, and they
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are coming in to do intro to coding workshops, they're going to do a couple of them, each
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two hours long, great opportunity to learn about coding if you're new to it.
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We're going to have a key signing session, that's going to be, you know, if you want to
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get your public-private key pair signed by people, that's a good opportunity to do that.
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We're going to have a thing on educational robotics, and that is going to be, again, it's
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a demonstration, first of all, a demonstration, and a little presentation about it, followed
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by a workshop, three hour long workshop, you can put some of this stuff into practice.
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We've got more building a file server with Raspberry Pi, that should be fun.
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Let's see, some of these others, industrial robotics the next 10 years, you know, Detroit
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is a manufacturing place, there's a lot of robotics activity with the auto companies.
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So you shouldn't be surprised that the industrial robotics is a big thing in this area.
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I think a lot of people are going to find that an attractive presentation.
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Scientific Linux, so we're going to have a couple of people come in and do a presentation
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on what scientific Linux is, and I think that's going to be really good.
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Having open source beyond the developer-centric solutions model, all right, I think that should
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be a lot of fun, because that's one of the things I often think about is that, you know,
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sometimes some of the people in the open source movement, I think it's entirely about
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liberating programmers, and I don't always think about the people who need to use the software.
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We're going to have a presentation open source hardware and Libre silicon, so I think
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that's going to be a lot of fun, test-driven programming, and that should be good.
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Network firewalls for fun and profit, and that's going to be by Tony Beamus from Sunday
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Morning Linux Review, I think that should be good.
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Python informatics to everyone by a professor at the University of Michigan, and we're going
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to have a systems infrastructure as code, continuous delivery with octopus deploy, all right,
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one on own your OS, and so this is about, you know, making sure you have a freedom-respecting
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operating system. Freedom box, the Libre personal server, presentation on wearables, and let's
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see, hacking the MK2 badge, and then software configuration management at the National Cancer
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Institute. So, that's just, and that wasn't all of them. I was, you know, just pulling
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out highlights as I went through the list, because I've got 91 hours of technology programming
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without counting any of those guests of honor, and I know that, you know, Corey and the others
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are going to be involved in that. So, that's a lot of stuff, and I'm really excited about it.
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Now, I will, as I always do, give you a rundown of what I actually experienced after the fact,
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but I think I can get this into the feed before the event and just kind of tantalize you into
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making a little trip to Southeastern Michigan. So, I'm going to sign off for Hacker Public Radio,
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and as always, remind you to support free software. Bye-bye.
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Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org. We are a community podcast network that
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releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed
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contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital
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Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club, 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, leave a comment on the website
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or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on
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the Creative Commons, Attribution, Share a Light, 3.0 license.
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