169 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2206
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Title: HPR2206: Podcasts I Listen To
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2206/hpr2206.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 15:43:58
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,206 entitled, podcast-cilycental, and in part on the series, podcast-recommendations.
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It is hosted by first-time post-reader and in about 16 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is, current podcast-cilycental on my Android devices.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 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, my name is Ridge, and I'm going to do a podcast.
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This is HBR, about the podcast I'm currently listening to, no particular order or category.
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So let's start off right now.
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First one is SystemA U. It's a couple of guys from Australia, Nick and Dan, talking
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about Linux, Linux news, distros, whatever, involves Linux, and their trials and tribulations
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are trying to use Linux in Australia.
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They also play some music from Australia bands.
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These guys, I like them, they seem to take a mantle up from the Linux outlaw guys after
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their podcasts ended.
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They're very funny, they're irreverent, but I like them.
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Next podcast is the accidental tech podcast.
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It's three guys mostly talking about Apple stuff, but it's Marco Armett, Casey Liss, and
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John Syracusa.
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You probably heard of Marco Armett from Tumblr fame, he also does a lot of big apps for
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the iOS device, John Syracusa, he used to do intensive articles on the Macintosh computers.
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They're all computer programmers, they know what they're talking about.
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I don't particularly own any Apple products, but they're interesting, and they just tell
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you what they think about Apple.
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It's not one of those love fests with Apple.
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They don't like it, they'll tell you about it, but they're interesting people.
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Next podcast I listen to is Android Central.
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It's from the Android Central website.
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Three guys giving you their opinions about Android software and Android devices, cell phones,
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tablets, watches, whatever, whatever they happen to be using at the moment.
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Bleed TV is the next podcast, it's Jake, Cash, Zach, and Larissa, I call them the good
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old boys and the lady, from Texas and Louisiana.
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They talk about their favorite shows, currently they've reviewed Game of Thrones, Westworld,
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Walking Dead, Vikings, Mr. Robot, or whatever is hot, and they like it.
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This one is common sense with Dan Carlin, and the Dan Carlin Hardcore history.
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I like this podcast, these two podcasts, especially the Hardcore history, because Dan Carlin
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takes a deep dive into a subject and time and place in history, and he'll give you all
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kinds of information.
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But the thing you must be warned about is his Hardcore history podcast can be up to five
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hours long.
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His common sense podcast, he talks about current topics that affect the world.
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You might not like his opinions, but it's informative.
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And the next podcast is the HPR, wouldn't be here without him, so when for HPR I wouldn't
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be doing this, so hats off to HPR.
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Podcast is not very politically correct, I can't believe this shit, it shouldn't curse,
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so I can't believe this shit, let's say that.
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It's re-tept, a big deed just sitting around and BS about whatever comes to their mind.
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Like I said, it's not politically correct, I call it two cave men having a laugh and
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a beer.
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The next podcast is a sports podcast called Jalen and Jacobi.
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Jalen Rose, he's a former NBA player, and former member of the Fab5 University of Michigan
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basketball team.
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I don't know if anybody remembers him from the early 1990s, well, they went to the NCAA basketball
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finals twice, but then it was found out that members of the team were taking kickbacks
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from alumni.
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And Jalen Rose eventually went on to be an NBA player for 12, 13 years, he wasn't bad,
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he was a good player, he played for four or five different teams.
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And the other host is David Chikobi.
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And they just talk about the current sports topics, they also have a show on ESPN.
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Another show is Last Men on Earth, it's another one of those cave men's shows, not politically
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correct either.
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It's two goos sitting around in a restaurant drinking beer and shooting a bull, it's Lex
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Jurgen and Matt Ralston.
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One of my favorites is Lennox Luddites.
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I call them three cranky old dudes that are stuck in their Lennox ways.
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They dish out good Lennox info, what they're using, what they've tried.
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It's Joe Patti and Jesse.
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And of course, you can't forget, we got to have no agenda with Adam Carey and John
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C. DuVorek.
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They say they dissect the news twice per week, but a lot of people say they're just crazy,
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two crazy dudes trying to find a conspiracy and everything.
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Next podcast is PTI, Tony Cornheiser and Michael Wilbaugh, they're from ESPN, they have
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a show, PTI, it's been on ESPN for almost 15, 16 years and they take a point counterpoint
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type of attitude towards their views on the daily happenings in sports, it's pretty
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good.
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I listen to the podcast when I can't watch the show on ESPN.
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Here's another history podcast I listen to, I like it very much, it's stuff you missed
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in history class.
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There's two ladies, Tracy Wilson and Holly Fri, they work for How Stuff Works as a writer
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and editor and they give short history lessons on historical occurrence, on a specific
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small historical occurrence.
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They don't do a deep dive like Dan Carlin, it's about 20 or 30 minutes and that's it,
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give it to you quick and fast.
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Another TV podcast I like a lot is TV, talking TV with Ryan and Ryan, it's two hosts or
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Marine Ryan, she's a TV critic from Variety Magazine and Ryan McGee, who is a freelance
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TV critic and they talk about the current state of affairs and TV and Hollywood and entertainment
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topics.
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It's about 60 minutes long and they do it once every week or once every other week.
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Another show, another podcast I like is Television Zombies, it's about four friends from the
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DC area, Washington DC area, husband and wife for a couple of their friends, talking
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about mostly science fiction and fantasy TV, it's about hour long.
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We can't forget the Linux League tech show, they've been around a long time, one of the
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longest, I've been listening to them for years and years, four friends from the Midwest and
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then they have rich flying rich down in Florida or wherever he's working at the moment and
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a couple of other guys and they tell you what they've been up to after work, they all
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work in computers and Linux and Microsoft, systems admins, you might get a topic from
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Dan each week where he talks about what he's doing at his work and he'll tell you exactly
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what he had to do to get a job completed, a project done and they're just interesting.
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They talk about Linux, this current state of affairs with computing, what they like and
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if they don't want to talk about computing, they talk about hunting and fishing and shooting
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and flying and anything else, but they're all Linux professionals and they're just
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hanging out, just a couple of few guys just hanging out every week, it's amazing how
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long they've been doing this.
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Now I have another Apple Century show, it's the talk show with John Gruber, you might know
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of him from the daring fireball.
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He talks about Apple as a guest, he's a podcast run about two to and a half hours and
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what he doesn't want to talk about Apple or iOS devices or anything, he talks about baseball,
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Star Wars and Star Trek.
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Like I said, I don't have any Apple devices but it's just an interesting podcast, if you
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like anything about computers, you should like daring fireball with John Gruber.
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Then Tony Cornheiser is back, Tony Cornheiser, when he wasn't doing ESPN with Michael Wilbaugh,
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he was also been a sports writer, he started in the early 70s in New York writing, he worked
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for the New York Times, this was sports writer, then he moved down to DC and worked for the
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Washington Post, there's a sports writer, then he got a radio show in the early 1990s
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on a local radio station.
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Earlier this year he decided he wanted to be in control of what he does and so he decided
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to end his radio show and he became a podcaster.
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He's all cranky dude, he doesn't know anything about technology, he relies on his son, Michael
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to keep him up to date, tell him about stuff with computers and his Apple devices that he
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uses but they talk about sports and life topics, films, they get film reviews, politics, news
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of the weird and just whatever Tony Cornheiser is interested in.
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Lechee's are all you little's out there, then I have another TV podcast called TV Campfire
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podcast, it's four or five people out in California, they're TV bloggers or I think one of them
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is a professor at a small college in LA and he teaches stuff about TV industry in Hollywood.
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Another one, the main host, she's a film editor and she has worked on a lot of the shows
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that are currently on TV now and in the past and they just talk about their favorite shows
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for about 30 minutes and what they've seen, what they thought about it, you know just
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the general breakdown, just four or five people just sitting around talking and then we
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have TV talk machine, TV talk machine is with Tim Goodman, he's a critic from the Hollywood
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reporter, very informative, knows a lot about the business, been in the business a long
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time and his co-host is Jason Snell, you probably know Jason Snell from Macworld and MacUser
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magazine and websites but they don't talk computers, they talk about TV and the current
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topics in the TV industry, very interesting and it's only about 30 minutes also and the
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last podcast I listen to, the last couple of podcasts I listen to I should say and what
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is TV times three podcasts and it's with three TV bloggers and any guests they could bring
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along and drag you in and they talk about their favorite shows from the previous weeks and
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they give recommendations of what you can watch DVDs you might want to buy or whatever
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but they come out every week once a week and finally we can't forget the Boutu podcast
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it used to be called in Boutu UK podcast you know all the gang we all you hear a lot of them
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from other podcasts and they're in the UK and there's nothing else I can say. Everybody might
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think that's a lot of podcasts for one person to listen to well it is a lot of podcasts for one
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person to consume but I'm retired, been retired for 20 years I live by myself I do what I want
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and so I got plenty of time on my hands but I'm not watching Netflix or Acorn TV or Hulu or
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Amazon I'm listening to podcasts or reading a book and so I got plenty of time and a lot of
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the podcasts I listen to I listen to them when I get ready to go to sleep and when I'm sleeping I
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might not remember the next day what I had playing while I was sleeping and so I get up and replay
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those but that's how I do it and the Android app I use to listen to all these podcasts is Podkicker Pro
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you can find it in the Google Play Store it costs about $3 but they do have a free version
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but the free version comes with ads I don't know why in particular I picked that podcast years ago
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that Podkicker app years ago it's just something that I've been using and I paid the $3 because I
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didn't want to see the ads and I just keep transferring it from device device it does what I need
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what more can you say if you like something you use it so that's it those are the podcasts I
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listen to everybody have a good one and let's choose a read you've been listening to Hacker
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Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org we are a community podcast network that release
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the shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by
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an HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our
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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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dog 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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creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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