192 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
192 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3760
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Title: HPR3760: Bookwyrm
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3760/hpr3760.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:03:59
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,760 for Friday the 30th of December 2022.
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Today's show is entitled Bookworm.
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It is part of the series' social media.
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It is hosted by Aoka and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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This episode looks at a relatively new, but promising alternative to Goodreads that
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is firmly in day.
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Hello.
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This is Aoka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode.
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This time in our Better Social Media series.
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And what I want to do this time is talk about an application that I'm very interested
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in called Bookworm, and it's spelled B-O-O-K-W-Y-R-M.
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Now this is a competitor, I think, to Goodreads, and I've talked about that before.
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I use Goodreads.
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It does certain things for me in terms of managing what is actually a fairly large library, mostly
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of e-books.
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And it's okay, but it's owned by Amazon, so there's some incentive there to start looking
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for alternatives.
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And particularly, something that's in the Fediverse is always attractive to me, and that's where
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Bookworm comes in.
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This is a, you know, as part of the Fediverse, it's completely decentralized.
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It uses the ActivityPub API and Protocol, and the reason that matters is that any application
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that uses ActivityPub can communicate with any other application that uses ActivityPub.
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So ActivityPub, so you could arrange to post things in Bookworm, and someone could follow
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them and mast it on, or Pluroma, and they could see your posts there.
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They could reply to them.
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They could share them, you know, all of the kinds of things that you would want to do.
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So there's a lot to like here.
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So to get started, you go to joinbookworm.com, and I've put the link in the show notes
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for you, and click the join bookworm button.
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Now as with all federated media, you have to pick an instance to get hosted on.
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Remember that the virtue of federation is that there is not a centralized server that
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everyone is on, but instead a whole lot of servers that communicate with each other.
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And that is what the ActivityPub Protocol facilitates.
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So your first decision will be to pick an instance.
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There are several of these.
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Some of these are in languages other than English.
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I saw one in Lithuanian, which I think is wonderful.
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I don't speak Lithuanian, I probably never will.
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I'm still all I can do to learn Spanish.
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I saw one that was private, and you had to request an invitation.
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OK, let a thousand flowers bloom as far as I'm concerned.
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And again, being decentralized means you can have all kinds of options without causing problems.
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Also, like all federated media, each instance can have its own set of policies.
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These mostly can be summed up as act like a jerk and we kill your account.
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Which doesn't bother me particularly.
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But you might want to look for what they have as a written code of conduct.
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Most fediverse instances have one.
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Although some of them might just say, hey, we don't care what you do.
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So to each their own.
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Now to see what each instance requires, click the learn more button for that instance
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when you are on the instances page.
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Now right now, honestly, there are not a lot of instances.
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This is still a fairly young project.
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But it looks promising to me.
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One thing I noticed was several highlighted instances.
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They don't guarantee anything in terms of uptime.
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And that it is up to you to back up your data.
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Now personally, when I write a review of a book I have read, I also posted on a blog on my website.
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And that is my backup.
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Now I'm a strong believer in having my own website and controlling my content that way
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instead of relying on a social media site to do it.
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Now for some of the technical details.
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The bookworm project is hosted on GitHub and I've put a link there.
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I use some pretty standard technologies like Django, PostgreSQL and of course ActivityPub
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on the back end.
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And Doctor and EngineX for the server.
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It also connects to OpenLibrary for book information.
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Now, OpenLibrary is itself a project at the Internet Archive that aims to be a library
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catalog that includes building towards a web page for every book ever published.
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Note that the OpenLibrary also lends out electronic copies of books, although that has been
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a subject of controversy with the author's guilds suing them claiming it is nothing
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more than a flagrant violation of copyright law.
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Now the use of ActivityPub means you can post a book review on your bookworm instance
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and have it floaty or mastodon feed.
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Then someone who follows you on mastodon can read and post a response that flows back
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to bookworm.
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And of course if you're on one instance and you have a friend on a different instance
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you can follow each other, read, respond and so on.
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Now right now as I write this it looks like there are about 11 contributors to the project.
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So as I said it's still pretty early but that means you could if you wish get involved
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and help shape the direction of the project.
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Now how do you join?
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Get on a server or set up your own.
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All right if you are sufficiently capable technically and things like Django and
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EngineX and Docker are things you're thoroughly familiar with you would probably be easy
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for you to set up your own server if you wished.
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I'm not actually that technically capable.
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So what I did was I went looking for an instance to join.
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So I went to the site and bookworm.social looked like it was the largest instance and it was
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self described as the flagship instance.
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So I decided I would try that because I figured that would give me the best look at how it
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works.
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Just click a join button, put in a username, email address, password and submit them and
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then you get an email back with a link to confirm your email address, very, very standard
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kinds of stuff.
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Now once you've confirmed your email address and logged in you are invited to create
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a profile, add some books and find people to connect with.
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Since this is a federated application using activity pub they don't even have to be
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on bookworm.
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I could just add some of my friends from mastodon or pixel fed, which are two other activity
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public applications I am using, however this might just result in seeing everything twice.
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I found that when I added my mastodon friends to pixel fed I saw all of their photos on
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mastodon and again on pixel fed.
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Of course there may be a setting that I've missed that would make that a little easier
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to deal with.
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In any case I decided to try a slightly different approach.
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First I posted on mastodon looking for anyone I know there who may be on bookworm.
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Then I noticed when I added the book I am currently reading that had been reviewed and
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rated by another bookworm user.
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So I clicked on their profile and requested an ad.
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Yeah, I might make a new friend or two this way.
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I also posted about this on diaspora which I also used though it is not an activity pub
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application unfortunately.
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I wish it was but you know it is what it is for the moment.
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Now adding content and that's the first step.
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I added the book that I am currently reading which is called Hero of Two Worlds by Mike
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Duncan.
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Yeah, if you're curious about what I read but I have a bunch of books I have already
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read that are on good reads and I can copy that content.
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Now this is where I have to prepare by creating some shelves.
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Now shelves is used metaphorically of course because we are used to putting physical books
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on physical shelves and really what we're talking about are tags or labels.
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Any book can have multiple of these shelves.
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So the three default shelves are want to read, reading and read and that's okay.
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But I've used custom shelves for a variety of other things and good reads.
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First I have ebooks from multiple sources.
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Some I've bought from places like Google Books, Amazon, Kobo and Nook and I do have a few
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physical books still.
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Some others I got as ebooks like directly from the author such as Michael W. Lucas' books
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or from a story bundle or a Kickstarter.
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Then I also like to indicate the genre.
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I have lots of books in history, science, science fiction, music, politics and so on.
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Those happen to be my main interests.
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So to meet my needs I really have to have those custom shelves.
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It is now easy to do.
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There's a button on your homepage to do this.
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Just months ago when I first looked at Bookworm it was not easy to do.
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This is a good thing because as I'm saying this is an actively developed project.
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If you don't see something you want right now you can ask for it or maybe in a few months
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it will just show up.
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Now the next thing the Bookworm offers is to import from a CSV file and that happens
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to be how you can export from Goodreads so if you wanted to switch you could.
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Why would you want to switch?
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Well as I said Goodreads is now owned by Amazon and now that can be good if all or most
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of your content is on a Kindle as it allows for pretty good integration.
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But I suspect that for some people at least Amazon is a dirty word and not using Amazon
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is important so you do have a path to switch.
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That said at the time I'm writing this which is in April of 2022 and yes I work a lot
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ahead on these things so it's coming out on Hacker Public Radio a lot later than when
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I first wrote it.
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But at that point the import function still had some issues maybe by the time this comes
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out they'll have solved those issues and that can add to the work of moving things.
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Now I have to point out I have a ridiculous number of books on my Goodreads account which
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may contribute to the problem but when I tried to import my entire collection was about
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1800 books about 60 failed to import for some reason.
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In many cases I'm not quite sure why Bookworm offered the Fellowship of the Ring as an
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alternative to the book I actually had.
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Why that one I don't know but there are at least 15 different books for which Bookworm
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suggested Fellowship of the Ring.
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So when Bookworm doesn't have a book listed you have to add it.
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Now I've run into this because some of the books I like come from smaller publishers
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like as I mentioned I buy books from Michael W. Lucas who self-publishes all of his stuff
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and sometimes Bookworm will have the book but not the particular edition.
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Now when I run into that I try to be a good citizen and add the information but then
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my wife says I was meant to be a librarian and given her track record I'm going to think
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she's probably correct, she usually is.
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Now overall what's my impression, Bookworm is not quite mature enough at this moment
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to replace Goodreads for my uses but as I said it's being actively developed I've seen
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major features added over the last six months or so.
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So what I did is I made a small cash donation to the developer and I'll keep following
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this project and I'd encourage all of you to check it out as well.
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So this is Hookah for Hacker Public Radio signing off and encouraging everyone to support
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free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive and
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our sings.net.
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On this advice status today's show is released on our Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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