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Episode: 1379
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Title: HPR1379: Day two of interviews from OGGcamp 13.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1379/hpr1379.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:29:30
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---
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This is the start of day two at camp 13 and honorary HPR member Pete Cannon is going
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to do an interview for us.
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Morning Pete.
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All right, now we're doing okay.
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Oh no, you can do it now, we're talking now, do you want to sit down and you can sit
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down here, I guess you're down.
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So we're recording right right now, there you go, there you go.
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So Vicki, yes, it's on.
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Do you want to say hi to the listeners?
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Hello everybody.
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And I believe, what are you going to talk to us about?
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Because I believe you've got quite a few subjects that you'd like to talk about.
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Now you say to your head.
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Let's talk about the girl guiding.
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You're going to talk about a girl guiding.
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Now you want to talk about, I think they might let you hear about your ideas for our camp
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next year or was it a kid's op camp, I believe?
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I was going to say junior op camp, but they came up with a bit and then op camp for the
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future.
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Because they add the future, the kids add the future.
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I mean, all the kids might like that better than junior op camp, it sounds a bit childish.
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I like that idea.
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So what would you like to see at that sort of movement?
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I'd like to see more craft inside as well as the technical side, but maybe if they could
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mix the two together because the girl needs to have mixed the two together, they put
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craft and the technical side together.
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But I'd like to see what the kids could do with, maybe if we started a project and
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they could expand on it and maybe they could give some talks as well.
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Yeah.
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And maybe a junior podcast.
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Cool.
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I mean, I take it that obviously you want to be inclusive with both boys' angles.
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Yeah.
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And I don't know about you, just.
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Okay.
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But I mean, what age would you really like to be targeting with a specific age group or
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you're just not bothered?
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Well, just seven.
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And I'd say that you can pretty much do more stuff, sort of seven and a book, maybe?
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Good.
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Good.
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And I mean, obviously I would take it that you would like some assistance in that maybe
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some people could bring equipment, that sort of thing.
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It'd be nice if anybody knew or could get sponsors.
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Yeah.
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If we knew anybody knew about, you know, interested in getting kids into technology that
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have been nice because it'd be nice if we could subsidise the stuff, you know, the projects
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and, you know, maybe whatever anybody wanted to do there.
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Maybe we can get some big companies like Siemens or something like that to give you some
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money.
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Yeah, I love to come and get the kids into coding and into the future.
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Yeah.
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And that'd be good.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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But about field guide and it's about, if anybody wants to help at any point, then that
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would be nice because, you know, my husband's helped us because we're going to get the
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brownies building robots.
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That's great.
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If anybody wants help for just an hour a week, then they're too much.
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And what kind of things go on at these girl-guys, because I mean, obviously I don't know.
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My children never went, unfortunately.
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Right, it's about, it's about just getting the kids involved in anything and everything.
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We've done all sorts of stuff.
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We went on a bat walk a couple of weeks back and we are building the robots.
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We're doing an entertainer's badge at the moment, so they're getting all involved in the theatre and everything.
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So it's about these girls, but it's about getting girls involved in anything and everything.
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We're doing a county vehicle, like the British Bear Cup Challenge.
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Okay. I mean, in my day, I don't know, perhaps you're hoping you couldn't enlighten me and see if this has changed.
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You should be sort of heavily church involved, especially in the cubs and whatever.
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Has that changed, or is it still the case now?
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No. Because of different religions, you're not allowed to enforce that people say
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I have to go to church because it is different religions, but we do explore everything
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and the work God has been taking out for promised money.
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||||
Okay. We do go to church, but we don't say that you have to, but it's a nice part of it.
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I enjoy it anyhow. I enjoy that part of it, so.
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And so it is an act of fact now. It is a multi-face organisation.
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Having for a while. That's cool.
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Anybody, if anybody wants to like the idea for next year, I hope.
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Maybe.
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Well, I certainly really keen on that.
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Again, that's one of those projects that's close to my heart, so I'm really keen to assist if I can.
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It would be cool.
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Yeah, it would be really cool.
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I think that would be cool. I think that would be cool.
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I've had a little room where they could do talks.
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Of course, now that you mention that idea, well, you are going to probably fall to organising that.
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So, there you go.
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After the brown is away for weekend before now, it's not the organising bit.
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Excellent.
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Well, thank you, Vicki.
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And thank you, Hacker Public Radio, for letting me take over for a short spell.
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Yeah.
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That's it for now.
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Did you have any contact details if people want to get hold of you to help out with your project?
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Not us.
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Yeah, I am not on the big contact.
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Michael Remikens, and he can tell me that's my husband.
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If you're interested in guild guiding, it's them.
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It's www.gildguiding.co.uk
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you.
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Hello, this is Dave Morris, for Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm here at Ogcamp 13, and I'm sitting and talking to a friend I made at the last Ogcamp,
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whose name is Caddy Ranja.
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Is that right, Caddy?
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That's right.
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I can read your badge, obviously.
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So, I just wanted to know how you found this Ogcamp.
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What stood out for you this time round?
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I think what stands out for me every single time I've come to an Ogcamp all twice a week
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is the friendliness and the inclusiveness in the community.
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Because I'm not a 20-year-old woman, I feel quite on the sidelines very often.
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And it's nice that there is such a feeling of inclusivity among generations.
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We've got children here, we've got a baby here.
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It's odd luck.
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And we've got people up to quite a vast years, really, I think.
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So, I'm not the always by a long show.
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But I've been made to feel very welcome both times.
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And I'm not heavily into coding.
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I'm not a developer.
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But I've been included, and I've learnt so much.
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It's really good.
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Is there anything particular that you've seen or session you've attended that stood out for you?
|
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I missed the session I really wanted to go to yesterday.
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||||
But I did go to the open podcast yesterday with...
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I think it was six people on the panel.
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||||
And I learnt a lot from that.
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There was a lot of news and a lot of stories that I want to pick up on.
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||||
You get headlines and you think, oh, I need to look into that.
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||||
And I also went to something called UEFI,
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which is a system of locking the boots, boot sectors.
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||||
And that scared them.
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It scared me, Whitler, so I really did.
|
||||
I just bought my mother, a new PC, which we've sourced,
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||||
and I've just gone out and sourced that.
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||||
And I didn't check it because I didn't know whether it's got...
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||||
No, it's an easy track to pull.
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It is.
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||||
Was the outcome of that talk positive or...?
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||||
It wasn't as positive as I'd hoped.
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||||
It left a lot of questions and I said,
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not because they hadn't done the research,
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||||
but because there is no clear answer yet about how we're going to get around this.
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There's a lot of suggestions and I think one of the key things is,
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outcome is a place where we decide what we're going to do as a community.
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We make people aware of issues and collectively,
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and come up with collective answers.
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We spread the word about these things.
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UEFI, we need to spread the word that certain organisations,
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||||
like Samsung and Dell, are locking their machines
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and we will not be able to put Linux on them.
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||||
And that is really worried.
|
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It's scary for us as open source advocates.
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How is it that they're allowed to do that here in the current world?
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Who stops them?
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This is a problem.
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Yes, we should, yes.
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And I think our camp is part of building our collective consciousness.
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As an old feminist, we used to have consciousness raising groups,
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which usually descended into which was the best soap powder.
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It was dreadful.
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But this is our consciousness raising thing.
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And it raises our consciousness as consumers of technology
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to argue about what we need to put forward.
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And to act together as a community to fight it.
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||||
It's activism in world.
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Is it just deciding that they have control over what we would consume?
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Can I come do it?
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Yes, we can.
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Yes, we can get out there and fight.
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Yes, let's get out there and fight.
|
||||
We are activists.
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||||
In coming here, we are activists.
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And it's not about a political party.
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And some of us might be conservatives on them.
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And some of us might be, well, on the left-hand side.
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And some of us might be anarchists.
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That's where I've been sitting.
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But we are activists for certain things.
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And it crosses all boundaries.
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||||
Yes.
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||||
Thank you.
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Well, you've got a lot ahead of this.
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I have done.
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Yes.
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And a lot of friendship.
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||||
Yeah.
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||||
And a lot of contacts.
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||||
And a lot of new leads to learn further.
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So each time I come back to welcome, I've learnt something new.
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And to share and to question.
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It's, I've come last year that got me thinking about learning programming.
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Because up until then, I haven't really considered that I can do it.
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Now I'm on a programming course.
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Next year, I will be coming back saying, right, I've got this program to do this.
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||||
And I've already worked out what the program is going to do.
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I've forgotten what it was.
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||||
I thought, oh, I can do that.
|
||||
I've got to know it a bit somewhere.
|
||||
And the sun knows.
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||||
I am indeed.
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
And I'm also going to do one on the...
|
||||
Well, I'm saying this.
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I know I'm going to uncommitted myself.
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||||
I haven't tried to minute me into this.
|
||||
Of course you haven't.
|
||||
But I'm also going to do one comparing points to under Agile.
|
||||
Because I've found Agile project management to be very interesting.
|
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I've heard bits of it mentioned in various bits.
|
||||
And in talks with other geeks while I've been here.
|
||||
And I had a long discussion about Agile with another attender.
|
||||
And I'm really interested.
|
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I should go away and look at that as well.
|
||||
Thank you very much.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
See you next year.
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Yes.
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Okay.
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Are you ready right now?
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It goes that quick.
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Hello.
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Hello, this is NY Bill.
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And I'm with...
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Stacey Driver at Ragworm, UK.
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And it looks like you guys make circuit boards.
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Yeah.
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We developed a new service to make prototype in circuit boards in the UK more accessible to the wider market.
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So stripped back minimum quantities, minimum order values, made it all an online process
|
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where you simply upload files and dimensions and pay via PayPal.
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Oh, good.
|
||||
And is there a...
|
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Is there a certain limit or a quantity you have to buy or it can be a one-off?
|
||||
No, it can be a small as a one-off.
|
||||
So if you've got a very small circuit board, it might end up costing about a pound.
|
||||
And you can just buy that one board.
|
||||
So there's no tie in, there's no minimum value that you have to do at all.
|
||||
And making it really accessible for anyone to go and buy a professional board.
|
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Very nice.
|
||||
But now I'm from New York.
|
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Can I order from you guys in the centre?
|
||||
Certainly, can.
|
||||
Yeah, push it to anywhere in the world.
|
||||
The site is actually a dot EU site.
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||||
We wanted to make it.
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So although we're champion in UK, manufacturing, we wanted to make it a service that was accessible to anyone anywhere.
|
||||
So no matter where you are, you can go on the site, all of your boards, and we'll send them out to you.
|
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Oh, that's pretty cool.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So you want to give out a URL or?
|
||||
Yeah, but it's www.ragworm.edu.
|
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And you can go on there if you google orange boards or search orange boards.
|
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Orange PCBs will come up as well.
|
||||
Oh, very good.
|
||||
Thanks for talking with us.
|
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Thank you very much.
|
||||
Let's see you going to watch.
|
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You going to talk?
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Yeah.
|
||||
Oh, I'm here with the chief.
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Oh, really?
|
||||
How are you, Les?
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I'm fine, yeah.
|
||||
So how's it going?
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Really well.
|
||||
Really good turnout this year.
|
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Lots of people, lots of things going on.
|
||||
Did you guys ever think we'd get to 5?
|
||||
I mean, way back when in that little...
|
||||
Back in Wolverhampton.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
90 people in the Conor Hotel in Wolverhampton.
|
||||
It's a day after a little radio live, yeah.
|
||||
It's growing and growing and growing.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
450 people signed up this year.
|
||||
That's amazing.
|
||||
It's great fun.
|
||||
So you're running around with the earpiece in.
|
||||
Yeah, amazing.
|
||||
You're getting everything.
|
||||
Agent Smith getting everything coordinated.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Crue of fantastic this year.
|
||||
As we are every year.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
All that to say this morning is, you're here, you're there.
|
||||
And that's it.
|
||||
They've run with it.
|
||||
No more instruction needed.
|
||||
And with so many crue that I've got, I can rotate them around.
|
||||
So no one's stuck in a room being bored of it.
|
||||
They can go out and enjoy themselves.
|
||||
That's good, yeah.
|
||||
You're sending them out with walkie talkies.
|
||||
Walkie talkies?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
A few harsh words as well.
|
||||
You got to keep them in line.
|
||||
Oh, yeah.
|
||||
Definitely.
|
||||
They get a free t-shirt out of it, though.
|
||||
Free t-shirt?
|
||||
Oh, payment.
|
||||
I'm a muck as well.
|
||||
The stainless steel travel muckie.
|
||||
You can't beat that.
|
||||
Hey.
|
||||
You haven't got one.
|
||||
No.
|
||||
I didn't pick a bag at the same order.
|
||||
Let's see what I can do.
|
||||
And then for about a £10 note, you'll turn to blind eye
|
||||
when we throw sparks at certain tables.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
That's impressive.
|
||||
The electrical duties you perform this morning.
|
||||
We'll say there will be a picture somewhere, but we were stepping
|
||||
on an electrical cord and sparks went and the whole table went down
|
||||
and we fixed it with a leatherman knife.
|
||||
That's the way you should be.
|
||||
And you didn't.
|
||||
You just turned the other way.
|
||||
As long as there was no fatalities.
|
||||
It was very inconspicuous how you had four people stood around the socket
|
||||
with their backs supposed to be the leatherman cutting the wire.
|
||||
And they're asking me an electrician how to fix it.
|
||||
And all your plugs look different.
|
||||
And all your wire colors are different.
|
||||
Like you guys take your own guess.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
No incidents.
|
||||
You've got a one in three jumps.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Thanks for talking to us.
|
||||
No problem Bill.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
So we're here at the does Liverpool table and got a cool looking stuff here.
|
||||
I'm with a chap called Paul.
|
||||
And hopefully he's going to tell me a bit more what this stuff does.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So does Liverpool is a makerspace and co-working space in the half of Liverpool.
|
||||
And so on our table today we've got, and probably you know,
|
||||
who is a internet of things character who connects to the internet.
|
||||
And at the moment every time somebody talks about,
|
||||
I'll camp.
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
He will blow balls on Twitter.
|
||||
On Twitter.
|
||||
On Twitter.
|
||||
He listens on Twitter.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
And he'll blow balls.
|
||||
He's been blowing positive balls.
|
||||
He's been blowing positive balls.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And we also have the map me out where dial.
|
||||
Which is a location reporting device.
|
||||
So we've got a couple of hit one, which is probably showing where John is.
|
||||
One, which is showing where the ferry's at.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
So the big one here with the ferry is at the moment.
|
||||
You can see the ferry down in open water.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
When it knocks up.
|
||||
It will move out to whichever.
|
||||
And that's the curry.
|
||||
Obviously it comes in deliverable.
|
||||
But.
|
||||
So it goes into Liverpool.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Go over the water to the way well.
|
||||
And all the way down.
|
||||
Oh, if it hits more to the pebbles.
|
||||
We can just get it together.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
I think that's when it's in Manchester.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
So how many people attend your hack spaces?
|
||||
I've heard Dan talk about it.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
We've got a lot.
|
||||
We don't really have a sort of a calm membership.
|
||||
But we have probably, I think, on our books of people who come, we've got about 120 people.
|
||||
That's quite a few then.
|
||||
And then we have people who work out of there.
|
||||
We've got about 12, 13 people who work there on a full-time basis.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
And we're going to also, I think, who are in at least once a month.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
Kind of sort of hot desk and basis.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And we've got a mix of people who are in freelancers or people sort of in working for large companies
|
||||
as well, who just need a base in Liverpool.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And then in the workshop, we have mostly artists actually making use of the laser cutter.
|
||||
It's a big, big draw there.
|
||||
We've got a lot of people who were put inside their designs into sort of multiple forms.
|
||||
No, there's a video of that happening over here.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Is that a laser cutter?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I'll have to get some photographs and put along with this link to it.
|
||||
And what have you enjoyed about our camp so far?
|
||||
It's just actually more just going around talk to different people.
|
||||
That's right.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So it's a good opportunity to sort of bump into people who don't know from other events.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Sort of catch up with people.
|
||||
And I'll just see what sort of projects people are working on.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So it's always a good event.
|
||||
I'm kind of relying on the talks being put up, so listen to your lady.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Well, it's nice to meet you.
|
||||
Thanks for showing us around.
|
||||
No problem.
|
||||
Cheers.
|
||||
Bye.
|
||||
Hello, I'm here with.
|
||||
Amy Mother.
|
||||
And you're doing a talk today?
|
||||
No, I did a talk yesterday somewhere else.
|
||||
Oh.
|
||||
What was your talk about?
|
||||
I was talking with someone from the Raspberry Pi Foundation at Wired's next generation.
|
||||
Oh, very cool.
|
||||
I just got my Raspberry Pi.
|
||||
So what can I do with it?
|
||||
What can you do with it?
|
||||
You can do whatever you can imagine.
|
||||
You can make robots.
|
||||
You can watch television on it.
|
||||
You can do whatever you really feel like doing.
|
||||
Very cool.
|
||||
So now you did do a talk.
|
||||
Did you say yesterday?
|
||||
Yes, yesterday.
|
||||
Yes, but not here.
|
||||
But not here.
|
||||
Is there anywhere we can see that?
|
||||
Is it going to be online?
|
||||
And there's lots of videos of me talking online if you'd like to see them.
|
||||
Do you have a URL or a concert?
|
||||
I think there's a tiny URL, Amy Mother, I think.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
That's got one of them on it.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
We'll try and put it in the show notes.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Oh, I'm running out of battery.
|
||||
Hello.
|
||||
This is NY Bill.
|
||||
And I had Marshall.
|
||||
And we're here at a booth where someone just told me my make my own Arduino kit.
|
||||
So, let's try.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You tell Hyperbubble to put a grado above this.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Well, any electronics engineer would know how to replicate an Arduino.
|
||||
But typically in education, it's too difficult to understand data sheets and to figure out how to create your own Arduino yourself.
|
||||
So, we're trying to curate some of the knowledge that's needed, providing supporting kind of graphical material,
|
||||
walk through tutorials and so on, so that kids and schools can put together their own Arduino compatible projects.
|
||||
It's really important for educators, obviously, that themselves may not be electronics engineers,
|
||||
but building stuff from components on breadboards, not only cheaper, but it's more educational,
|
||||
because you figure out some of the fundamentals of what you're building.
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
So, you have some different kids here that give out the URL in a bit.
|
||||
Can you walk us through the kids quick?
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Well, you've got the core components that you need in any Arduino compatible.
|
||||
So, that's just the computer, the chip, the microchip at the center, and it's supporting components.
|
||||
You need to stick it onto some kind of substrate like breadboard or stripboard or solder it.
|
||||
So, we've got various options here today, including some expansion packs, which come with their own breadboards,
|
||||
but are designed to deliver a particular project.
|
||||
This one paints text and icons in the air using just 8 LEDs.
|
||||
It's an extremely simple build that can be done in something like 40, 45 minutes in a typical workshop.
|
||||
This is a more complex build, which makes a Simon game from the 70s.
|
||||
You can hear it here.
|
||||
I don't know if you put that.
|
||||
Oh, it's the same sound, too.
|
||||
Yes, that just actually brought me back, too.
|
||||
So, that kicks off with a little tune, and then you have to remember the kind of sequence.
|
||||
We had the big, huge one that the original took 4D batteries.
|
||||
And so, at this point, I might make a mistake, and then I'll do it.
|
||||
It's just a bunch of back with LEDs, essentially, a beeper and some custom code,
|
||||
which obviously, in the process of building it, you see how the things put together.
|
||||
You see the code when you've uploaded it.
|
||||
When we encourage people to adopt certain tasks like changing the text that paints in the air,
|
||||
on the persistence of vision, we're changing the tunes that are played.
|
||||
They're Nokia ringtone tunes, so it's dead easy to dive into the code and change them.
|
||||
But, at that point, of course, you've subtly started to get familiar with.
|
||||
There's code.
|
||||
There's this development environment.
|
||||
I wonder what happens if I change that number.
|
||||
That's the end of the game.
|
||||
Well, this would fit right in with the Hacker Public Radio crowd.
|
||||
So, if you want to give the URL, did I ask you your name?
|
||||
My name's Kevin.
|
||||
Kevin, I'm sorry about that.
|
||||
It's called Shrimping It.
|
||||
We're available online at Shrimping.it or at Shrimping It on Twitter.
|
||||
So, get in touch.
|
||||
Any way we can help people.
|
||||
All of the material that we share freely for people to replicate.
|
||||
Very good.
|
||||
Did you have a question?
|
||||
No, it's awesome.
|
||||
I'm going to check out the website and...
|
||||
If you stick around too long, you'll get, you've got, what, £7 through the out of me.
|
||||
Oh, yeah, yeah.
|
||||
One thing I would like to say, which is quite important.
|
||||
What we're doing is open design.
|
||||
So, if somebody wants to replicate the projects that we provide,
|
||||
we sell them here at twice our wholesale costs.
|
||||
But if you're a hack space or a classroom, and you need to make 50 of them,
|
||||
you should buy them to do it from the wholesaler.
|
||||
And so, on the URLs on all our kits, if you go there online,
|
||||
you'll find all of the information of where we buy it and what it costs us
|
||||
to source all of those parts.
|
||||
And if you want to scale up to 50 or 100 people, you've got the basic,
|
||||
the bare bones of costs and all of the freedom that you need to experiment and explore that.
|
||||
Very good.
|
||||
All right, pretty awesome.
|
||||
Thank you for your passion.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, where Hacker Public Radio does our work.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dark Pound and the Infonomicom Computer Club.
|
||||
HPR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
|
||||
All binref projects are crowd-responsive by linear pages.
|
||||
From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons,
|
||||
attribution, share a life, lead us our lives.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user