110 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
110 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1642
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Title: HPR1642: Frist Time at Oggcamp
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1642/hpr1642.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:14:11
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---
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It's Tuesday 18th of November 2014.
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This is HPR Episodewing 642 in Idoled First Time at Bug Camp.
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And as part of the series on Camp, it is hosted by First Time host Al and is about 14 minutes
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long.
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Feedback can be sent to Al at signadminandminpodcast.co.uk or by leaving a comment on this episode.
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The summary is join Al and Jerry where we discuss our first visit to Bug Camp.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hi, I'm Al, I'm Jerry.
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And we met at Oddcamp.
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We decided that we wanted to come and do an episode on HPR to tell people about Oddcamp.
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This is my first year at Oddcamp and it was Jerry's first one as well, wasn't it?
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It was, yeah, it was really fun, I had a lot of fun, drank a lot of beer, went to a lot
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of talks and generally had a really good time, met lots of nice people as well, let's not
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forget that bit.
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Yeah, it was really good, I don't know where to start really, well I mean start with the
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pub on the first night which is where we met already, isn't it?
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This is my first kind of open source event I went to and I was a bit nervous about going
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because I don't really know that many people in the open source community and I was really
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surprised and I got there, I kind of heard a couple of voices that I knew on the pod, on
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different podcasts, fab from the next outdoors I heard, yeah and we then kind of met the
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people from Linux Luddites.
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Yeah, we got to meet our podcasting heroes and they've actually ended up talking to the
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Linux, Linux Luddites lot from most of the evening I seem to remember, yeah it was interesting
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definitely and I don't know, I don't often get to talk to people about Linux really because
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well I talk to people at work about it obviously because I work with a group of Linux admins
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but not really that sort of open source free culture side just how to get the blinking
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thing working, you know, that's side things, yeah, so that was interesting as well.
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I was surprised how everyone was so friendly when we kind of, you didn't want to just
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wanted to talk, you started talking to you, they started talking back to, really.
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Yeah, yeah, I mean I do a bit of freelance work as I was saying and I go to this
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I'll do it, I'll put in a quick plug for the farm in Brighton there sort of group of freelancers
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and when a lot of people, especially you know techy people get together and they're all there
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for a reason either to sort of tap their wares as a freelancer or just talk about techy stuff
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then it turns into a very friendly evening generally and I think that was a really good way
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to start the first dog camp, I mean, yeah, yeah, it was good.
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Then the next day obviously it was the actual dog camp and then I went to, we didn't know
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what to expect kind of, I knew that people had, there was talks and stuff and there was
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meant to be like a website that you could go to, wasn't there?
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That campfire manager there is, yeah, I did go to it, it did seem to be working for
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me but it didn't seem to be working for the majority of people there.
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I think someone had, it was something to do with DNS records on the server or something
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so yeah, it was down to low tech posted notes on the board and everyone voting for their
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talks that way.
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I went to my first one was one again with the Stuart, he was about wanting to do a projector
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for his mobile phone so you don't have to take it laptop when he went to the kind of talks
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and it was really interesting it was like people coming up with ideas of how to solve
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this problem.
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Yeah, I mean that's how I was sort of open source, ideology I suppose but one of the talks
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I wanted, I wish I'd gone to now was the evolution of social coding I think it was called
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which it's been, the title's been intriguing me ever since up camp because I've never
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been much of a coder but I can see with things like GitHub how that could be social coding
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could be a really useful thing, not actually done any sort of social coding if you like
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myself, it's something that interests me as I sort of do more and more coding I suppose.
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It is a shame that you can't go to all the talks at the same time because I was one about
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cacking thermostats for your radiators which I'd really like to go and see if I went
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to talk to the guy in the section where they had all the coding machine and then printed
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it out, the teletyping machine. Yeah, you sent a tweet to this someone's account and it
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prints it out on this ancient teletype, yeah, it's really good. Yeah, so yeah there's loads of
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different talks you go, I was really surprised at the diversity of talks, I mean the best one I
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went to is one about a guy who was how you can equip stuff in Vi but it was really the encryption
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which flawed and the guide showed you how you could how it worked. Yeah, maybe it was wrong,
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like I was saying just before we went on air and I'd forgotten all about that too, maybe it's
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just the state of the hangover or whatever, when I saw it, I did find it interesting at the time
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definitely, you must have a look at it, it's actually doing that. One of the talks that I found
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that I found really interesting was a guy had made a hydrogen powered Raspberry Pi
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using, well I think it was basically available as a kit but yeah, just an interesting thing to
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sort of hack together in your spare time, so using a fuel cell to power a Raspberry Pi rather than
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pairing off the grid and I think I don't know, I think this whole sort of hardware hacking,
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open source sharing of ideas things could be going to be really useful in the future when we come
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to having to do, it might be necessary for people to do this kind of thing for themselves and
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if people can be connected and share ideas like that over the internet and come up with ideas
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like that, it might lead to a better world for everyone, maybe I don't know. Yeah, I mean,
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as I could talk, Popey did a talk on his Ubuntu phone, which is quite interesting, I think that
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is one of the most went to talk, there's quite a lot of people crammed and doing one that was
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a small room, wasn't it, they're probably the best attended talk of the weekend, the smallest room,
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but yeah, it was about the Ubuntu phone, wasn't it, yeah. Things you could listen to, I mean I
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I definitely recommend anyone who's thinking about going if there's one to be one next year to
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definitely go. Yeah, I'm planning to go next year if there is one, I mean they, I think all they
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say is they don't rule it out and I think they, but by the time it gets to about sort of, I don't know,
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Easter next year, they kind of got a venue in mind and then they, well, the podcast that we
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tend to listen to will kind of advertise it, usually Ubuntu UK, the, well, seem to be deceased
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Linux out of us, with sort of advertise it and yeah. Yeah, I mean, I'm definitely thinking if someone
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is out there listening to podcasts and it's worried about that I won't know anyone, don't worry,
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you've meet other people, everyone was in the same boat at some point, everyone was, you can just
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like we did just randomly just talking the pub together. Yeah, well I was like, yeah, I went
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there on my own, didn't know anyone and you know, you just get talking to people, don't you,
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and here we are, we're still talking. Yeah, so yeah, it's good. Yeah, if you want to catch us,
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Jerry actually has come and kind of co-host on the podcast, which I do, which is a kind of
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Windows, Linux, system admin podcast, if you want to find out more, just go to www.abranabranpodcast.co.uk.
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Yeah, it's been a month or first, I think, my first ever podcast, first ever Rob Camp,
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first ever HBR, so yeah, long way to continue. Okay, well, thank you for listening.
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