Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 1490
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Title: HPR1490: HPR at NELF 2014 Part1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1490/hpr1490.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 04:08:33
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---
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Oooop.
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This is in my bill and yes, and now you are in this episode, say hello HPR, hello HPR.
|
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You're official now, so I'm here with X1-101, yeah, X1-101, it's not safe, I'm used to
|
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typing it.
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Yeah, so am I, I have a hard time saying it, it's a visual thing, not a spoken one.
|
||||
The whole family's name, something along those lines, yeah, the new one is 1-1-1-1, because
|
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what I did with the way handle I sent it for my wife was 0-0-1-0, which for anyone not
|
||||
looking at it, it's the bit compliment of 1-1-0-1, combining those is 1-1-1-1.
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Are you a geek, sir?
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Yes, sir, I am.
|
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You had a long trip in, yeah, say how you got here.
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My trip started, I'm already at work, Pokey, I'm at work.
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My trip started, leaving my house at 6am to get to the bus station in Portland, Maine
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at about 7am to take the 730 bus to the bus station in Boston, and then the subway over.
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So this is like an overnight thing?
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No, doing the same thing in reverse tonight.
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But what time did you get on start, traffic leaving from Maine?
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6am.
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6am.
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Okay, that's not so bad.
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So I actually slept in today, I didn't get up till 5.30.
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Okay.
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You have a newborn, you sleep at all.
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Actually, my daughter sleeps really, really well.
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Down at 6 o'clock most nights and not up till 5.30, 6 o'clock the next day.
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Pokey, you've met X-1-1-1.
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No, I've seen each other online.
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Yeah, I know.
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Back when we were up in, what's it's not?
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Worcester, Worcester, yeah.
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Yeah, I was the first event.
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Yeah, I remember seeing you there.
|
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Oh, I have a tear, guys.
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It's like a little reunion.
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You ever in Portland?
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I'm actually about an hour north of Portland.
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He's up at the canis his way.
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Yeah.
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We were trying to figure out if they live near each other,
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but was he coming this time?
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I don't know, I didn't.
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Because I think he's even further in Maine, which, you know,
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I feel like I'm far up in Maine, but then Maine just keeps going.
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And then you think there's, this has got to be Canada by now,
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but nope, it's still Maine.
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Yeah, there's hundreds of miles of, of just woods, woods,
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and wood.
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Yeah, just, and nothing.
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Actually, it was almost two years ago,
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went up to Fort Kent, which is, like,
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I could have thrown stones at Canada from there.
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Don't do that there.
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No, very militant people.
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No, no, no, no, that would be the other way.
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If I was in Canada, I'd throw it in the war, people.
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There's another story there.
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The kids could slow down.
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Throw rocks at us, eh?
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And that was when I have my gallbladder attack.
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OK.
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See, the people did that.
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No, no, my diet did that, all right.
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24 years of eating like, well, like a geek is not good.
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Someone who's got a history of gallbladder issues.
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You showed up and disappointed me.
|
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I have to say you pulled out a MacBook.
|
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Better explain this.
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That case shows up in any pictures.
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Yeah, that MacBook was my sister.
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She bought it in 2007.
|
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She bought a new one month or so ago.
|
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And I coerced her into giving this one to me.
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I'm like, hey, I'm letting you live in my house.
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Can I have your discarded computer
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that you were going to donate to charity?
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||||
Can the charity be me?
|
||||
But you saved it with Arch Linux.
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Of course, everybody should put Arch Linux on a Mac.
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||||
On everything.
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||||
I'm running it on my toaster.
|
||||
I'm running it on my desktop.
|
||||
I'm running it on my netbook.
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||||
I'm running on my Raspberry Pi.
|
||||
And now I'm running it on my MacBook.
|
||||
So did you look at the schedule?
|
||||
You got some.
|
||||
Oh, briefly.
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||||
You don't have to do it.
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Wow, we're talking.
|
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Oh, what's all later?
|
||||
Ah, briefly.
|
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I will catch you after some talks.
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||||
I'll talk more.
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||||
Yeah.
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OK.
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Hey, how's it going?
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Good.
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How are you?
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Good.
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Do you wish any please?
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Phil Durbin.
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Phil, how are you liking NELF 2014 so far?
|
||||
It's really good.
|
||||
I went to that first talk that was about identity management.
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||||
They talked a lot about SSD.
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||||
I think that's the right number of S's.
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That's a piece of open source software
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that Red Hat seems to be working on.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
And that was the only talk you've been to so far?
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Yep, that was the first talk.
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||||
Cool.
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||||
Now, do you work in the IT field at all?
|
||||
Yeah, I do.
|
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I work on an open source application called Dataverse.
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It's mostly for academics.
|
||||
It's a place for them to upload data.
|
||||
Often, these professors have a place.
|
||||
They know exactly where to put their paper.
|
||||
But then they'll have data associated with the paper.
|
||||
And they think, well, should I put it on my website?
|
||||
Where should I put this thing?
|
||||
And so this is a way to archive the data.
|
||||
And you get a unique identifier for the data.
|
||||
So that people can cite the data, remix the data, things
|
||||
like that.
|
||||
Excellent, excellent.
|
||||
How long have you been working on that?
|
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I've been working on the team for a little over a year.
|
||||
But the product itself, under the name Dataverse,
|
||||
goes back to 2006.
|
||||
Before that, it was called Virtual Data Center.
|
||||
And before that, it had different names.
|
||||
So it's probably has about 20 years of thought
|
||||
going into what this thing is.
|
||||
Wow, it's pretty incredible that you
|
||||
must be on version 120 by now.
|
||||
It was like something like that.
|
||||
Yeah, it's interesting.
|
||||
We're actually in the middle of a big rewrite.
|
||||
We're calling this new version Dataverse 4.0.
|
||||
Awesome, awesome.
|
||||
And you were here last year.
|
||||
I remember seeing you here last year.
|
||||
And we talked last year and had some beers.
|
||||
Right, yeah.
|
||||
Last year was the first milk I went to.
|
||||
And yeah, it's funny.
|
||||
I think I mentioned a little bit ago
|
||||
that after the conference, I noticed
|
||||
there's a channel on free node called Northeast Linux Fest.
|
||||
And I popped in.
|
||||
I didn't start the channel, but I'm like, oh, this is cool.
|
||||
And I sent my little logging bot in there
|
||||
and started logging it.
|
||||
And a couple people showed up.
|
||||
And I have been chatting with them now again.
|
||||
But I've been logging that channel for about a year now.
|
||||
It's just kind of on the side.
|
||||
It doesn't bother me.
|
||||
It just sort of sits there.
|
||||
But it'd be cool to get some more community input
|
||||
around this festival, some kind of forum or a mailing list
|
||||
or something.
|
||||
I think that's kind of one thing I'm looking for
|
||||
is a way for all of us to connect when it's not
|
||||
the actual fest going on.
|
||||
Little more community in our community.
|
||||
Yeah, I like a little community in my community, sure.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||||
And you also suggested, which I thought was a great suggestion,
|
||||
that we might want to rewrite just a little bit
|
||||
of the HPR outro and remind people
|
||||
that head to the comments section for each of the episodes,
|
||||
too.
|
||||
I thought that was a great idea.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
Well, I had mentioned that I listened to that episode
|
||||
where you talk to John O'Anneck.
|
||||
And you mentioned that.
|
||||
Oh, there are a lot of comments on that episode.
|
||||
And I'm like, comments, what do you mean comments?
|
||||
I didn't even realize.
|
||||
Because I just didn't my pod catcher
|
||||
downloading episodes.
|
||||
I never really go to the HPR website.
|
||||
So I didn't realize that comments were going on there.
|
||||
But you were saying that maybe there
|
||||
could be a place not specific to an individual episode
|
||||
more about HPR in general, a place where people could talk.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah, I've asked for a forum for years.
|
||||
And I just don't, I mean, if I could write one, I would.
|
||||
If I was a cis admin, I just add it and do it.
|
||||
Because we're pretty much, it seems like at HPR,
|
||||
if you want to do something, just go ahead and do it.
|
||||
And if I could, I would.
|
||||
And I don't feel it's, I think it's
|
||||
too important a place for me to go experimenting
|
||||
and learn to do my first one there.
|
||||
But yeah, I absolutely would love a forum, but yeah.
|
||||
Well, at least we have the comments for now.
|
||||
This seems like a good outlet for a lot of people.
|
||||
Yeah, it is for sure.
|
||||
So you're going to have a good day.
|
||||
What talks are you looking forward to?
|
||||
I'm not even sure.
|
||||
That one I was really interested in because I'm working a lot
|
||||
in this sort of identity management space right now.
|
||||
Oh, I know what there's one about Docker
|
||||
that I definitely want to check out.
|
||||
I've been using Vagrant for a couple of years.
|
||||
And I like that a lot.
|
||||
But people keep telling me about Docker.
|
||||
And that's the one I want to check out next.
|
||||
What's the use case for those?
|
||||
So Vagrant is great for managing.
|
||||
For me, I use a virtual box.
|
||||
Managing virtual machines on your laptop.
|
||||
You want to spin up a virtual machine that
|
||||
has certain software installed and configured in a certain way.
|
||||
So I just set this up.
|
||||
I mentioned Dataverse as a software I work on.
|
||||
Just set up a Vagrant environment for Dataverse
|
||||
so that it installs all the dependencies
|
||||
that I need to run the application.
|
||||
It's a Java-based application.
|
||||
And we run it on top of Glassfish,
|
||||
using Solar, and they're, too.
|
||||
So the idea is that you just type Vagrant space up.
|
||||
And then you get this VM, I'm using CentOS.
|
||||
And all the stuff's already installed.
|
||||
And then you can just go to a high port
|
||||
and just see the app running right there in the VM
|
||||
on your laptop.
|
||||
Oh, that's cool.
|
||||
So that's Vagrant.
|
||||
And then Docker, I guess, takes it to the next level somehow.
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
I've got people yelling at me, like,
|
||||
why aren't you not using Docker yet?
|
||||
But it's new.
|
||||
And I don't know.
|
||||
I'm here to learn about things like Docker.
|
||||
Right, right, right.
|
||||
Yeah, right now I'm getting my job done.
|
||||
And I totally get it.
|
||||
No, that sounds cool, though.
|
||||
And that's great.
|
||||
As far as conference is going and checking out
|
||||
the cool new thing that you'd only be able to learn
|
||||
by trial and error and maybe have a problem with it.
|
||||
So you go to their forum and it takes a day and a half
|
||||
to get an answer.
|
||||
When you're here, you get to talk to someone who
|
||||
knows what they're doing.
|
||||
And you go, OK, hey, my use case, I need X, Y, Z.
|
||||
What can I do for that?
|
||||
And you always get great feedback.
|
||||
And it's fun, too, to watch when the presenter gets a question
|
||||
that he wasn't expecting.
|
||||
He's got to figure it out on the fly.
|
||||
You may get a new feature in the next rev of the software
|
||||
for it.
|
||||
It's always fun to see something like that happen.
|
||||
Yeah, I don't want to say that I was trolling the speaker
|
||||
of that first talk I went to.
|
||||
I wanted to.
|
||||
He was a great guy and I got his business card.
|
||||
He works for Red Hat.
|
||||
And I do feel like I was getting information that was fresh
|
||||
that I hadn't heard before.
|
||||
And specifically, I'm working in this Shibleth space.
|
||||
And everyone talks about this Apache module called ModShib.
|
||||
But he's saying, oh, Red Hat, look at that.
|
||||
But they're instead shipping a different Apache module
|
||||
called ModOffMellon.
|
||||
And I had never even heard of this thing.
|
||||
So it was great to be at the talk, get this kind of information.
|
||||
I probably wouldn't have stumped across quickly, otherwise.
|
||||
Now I have his business cards.
|
||||
I'll go harass him a little more offline.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
All right, man, we'll enjoy the conference.
|
||||
Thank you for talking with us.
|
||||
Oh, thanks.
|
||||
Great talking to you.
|
||||
Yeah, was there anything else you wanted to pimp here?
|
||||
Well, you're here, a website you want to promote or anything?
|
||||
I guess if you do want to check out Dataverse,
|
||||
that's the project I work on.
|
||||
Our website is TheData.org.
|
||||
We're also on GitHub.
|
||||
It's from IQSS.
|
||||
So it's github.com slash IQSS.
|
||||
That's the Institute for Quantitative Social Science.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
Thanks a lot, man.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
Hello, I'm Manuel Abil, and I'm here with Mark.
|
||||
Do you have a Nick online?
|
||||
MK Coles.
|
||||
OK, because I recall you.
|
||||
You said three years now, and I guess you won't end.
|
||||
I remember this guy.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So any talks you're here to see or something?
|
||||
I just come every year and figured out when I get here.
|
||||
Yeah, are you close to here?
|
||||
I was closer, and now I used to live in Massachusetts
|
||||
and I'm up in New Hampshire.
|
||||
So it's a little bit of a drive, but did you make it
|
||||
to the Worcester ones?
|
||||
So you've been to the five?
|
||||
Yes, I went to the one in Worcester,
|
||||
and then the one in Harvard last year, the two days
|
||||
in Harvard last year.
|
||||
OK, that was last year.
|
||||
See?
|
||||
I asked you if you didn't HPR, and now you just did one.
|
||||
OK, you're on the board.
|
||||
And if it keeps going, next year I'll be back again.
|
||||
OK, and then I'll interview.
|
||||
Or you should do an episode in between then, and now,
|
||||
I think, if I find a good topic, I will try to do one.
|
||||
No pressure, I'll just give it your time.
|
||||
I know, man.
|
||||
All right, good to talk to you.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
Hey, it's Poki at the Northeast Linux Fest again,
|
||||
and I am here with beautiful cabbage, Spaceman.
|
||||
Spaceman, nice name.
|
||||
Nice to meet you, Pete.
|
||||
How are you enjoying the Fest so far?
|
||||
It's great so far, man.
|
||||
Everyone seems really, really nice.
|
||||
Talks are interesting, and you've pretty well organized
|
||||
so far.
|
||||
Excellent, excellent.
|
||||
What talks have you been to?
|
||||
I checked out the open source licensing one, Track One,
|
||||
and also the integrating Linux with Active Directory
|
||||
by Dimitri, also on Track One.
|
||||
Right on, right on.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Doggy paddled through that one.
|
||||
I don't know much about Active Directory,
|
||||
I try and chew off things bigger than my head, so.
|
||||
That's actually a good plan.
|
||||
And what about the licensing track?
|
||||
Now, I didn't even look at the program,
|
||||
and now I'm sad to have missed that one.
|
||||
How did that go?
|
||||
It was good.
|
||||
There was actually a guy from Red Hat, too,
|
||||
that gave a lot of good information from the crowd.
|
||||
It was interesting.
|
||||
I didn't know much about licensing,
|
||||
but it seems like, at this point in time,
|
||||
the licensing development is matured to a point where almost
|
||||
everything seems to be covered by one license or another one,
|
||||
and I find some really good resources on how to walk yourself
|
||||
through picking which one is right for you,
|
||||
and integrating it into your own project.
|
||||
Right, right.
|
||||
Was it mostly about software licensing?
|
||||
Or was there creative common stuff, too?
|
||||
They did a little bit on creative commons,
|
||||
but it's basically just like a general overview of how
|
||||
to decide which license is best for you,
|
||||
depending on what your project needs are, what your goals are,
|
||||
and what your plans are for the next few years.
|
||||
Excellent, excellent.
|
||||
Do you work in the IT field?
|
||||
Not yet.
|
||||
I'm a woodworker.
|
||||
Trying to change careers.
|
||||
Some of the school right now with UMass online.
|
||||
Right on.
|
||||
Are you a Finnish carpenter?
|
||||
Yeah, we do a lot of doors and windows.
|
||||
And it's been interesting for the last 10 years,
|
||||
but I'm ready for a change.
|
||||
And I've been playing around with computers for so long
|
||||
that figure, why don't I just go into this?
|
||||
Seems really interesting.
|
||||
Right on.
|
||||
And you said you're new to Linux?
|
||||
About two years ago, I started tinkering with Linux.
|
||||
And it's been fantastic.
|
||||
The community has just completely blown me away
|
||||
with how friendly they are and how open they are.
|
||||
So it's been awesome, yeah.
|
||||
Yeah, I think I got involved with Linux,
|
||||
maybe starting in early 07 or maybe in late 07.
|
||||
And I thought the same thing.
|
||||
But a lot of the old school guys
|
||||
talk about how unfriendly the community, at least used to be.
|
||||
Maybe it used to be, and I've never really experienced that.
|
||||
So it's interesting that you say that too.
|
||||
Are you still distro-hopping?
|
||||
Or have you settled down on a distro you like?
|
||||
For the last year, I've pretty much stuck to crunching.
|
||||
It's light.
|
||||
It's easy.
|
||||
I was using an old laptop for a while,
|
||||
and it couldn't really run many to heavier ones for a while.
|
||||
But I don't know.
|
||||
I always have my foot outside of the wheel.
|
||||
I heard crunch bang.
|
||||
He's came right from Kornomano.
|
||||
Sorry.
|
||||
Sticks to get on the beat.
|
||||
Yeah, I've been in my bill online, so I didn't mean to button.
|
||||
Is this a joint we're having a contest?
|
||||
We can two interviews to five, is it?
|
||||
No, this one's mine.
|
||||
All right, I'll get out of it.
|
||||
It's two to five.
|
||||
Yeah, no, it's going to say we know Kornomano
|
||||
and Bill's got the crunch bang stickers.
|
||||
It's going right on my laptop, man.
|
||||
Yeah, right on.
|
||||
And we've got some HPR stickers if you're interested in those, too.
|
||||
Definitely, definitely.
|
||||
Sorry, my brain's still working off of three hours of sleep
|
||||
and not enough coffee, so.
|
||||
Yeah, me, too.
|
||||
Are you involved with anything online with open source?
|
||||
Yeah, I'm still in programming.
|
||||
I'm still in programming.
|
||||
I just finished a survey course in Pearl, PHP, and Python,
|
||||
and my skills are minimal at best right now.
|
||||
So I'd love to.
|
||||
As soon as I get some chops, I'd like
|
||||
to join some open source project just to keep learning.
|
||||
I mean, everyone seems to be like, for your accept,
|
||||
I just need to find the right program to dive into and join up.
|
||||
Yeah, what do you have any idea like what you're looking for?
|
||||
What kind of software you'd like to work on?
|
||||
I mean, I've taken a handful of computer site courses
|
||||
that are just kind of broad range
|
||||
and to kind of figure out what I feel more comfortable with.
|
||||
So I really don't know right now.
|
||||
It was my first time actually meeting people from the online
|
||||
world in podcasts and forums and things like that.
|
||||
So I figure as a like develop relationship,
|
||||
so I'll find good people to work with.
|
||||
And that'll lead me towards certain projects I figure, you know?
|
||||
Yeah, definitely.
|
||||
There's good people everywhere.
|
||||
It sure is.
|
||||
Is there anything else in the conference
|
||||
that you're looking forward to, any tracks
|
||||
or anybody you're looking to meet or anything?
|
||||
You know what, I'm going to draw on a blank right now.
|
||||
There's definitely a bunch of things.
|
||||
So I figure I'll just see how the day goes.
|
||||
Right on.
|
||||
Well, I like the attitude.
|
||||
Definitely go to positive attitude going at it.
|
||||
It's great so far.
|
||||
It's been fantastic.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
Well, thanks so much for talking.
|
||||
Is there anything you wanted to plug while you're here
|
||||
or anything you're excited about?
|
||||
I was hoping to have my website like up and running
|
||||
with at least like one project live,
|
||||
but I just couldn't get it done this week.
|
||||
Well, this may not go up for a week or two,
|
||||
and it'll be around forever.
|
||||
So as long as you've registered with me
|
||||
and go ahead and plug your website.
|
||||
SpacemanDev.com.
|
||||
And you should have something up within a week or so.
|
||||
Right on.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
Well, thanks for your time.
|
||||
Have a great conference.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
Hello, it's NYU Bill, and I'm here with Bruce
|
||||
who helped organize NELF.
|
||||
Yes, actually, as much of it as we possibly could.
|
||||
I mean, did it go smooth?
|
||||
Oh, my God.
|
||||
You know, it was the tale of, whoa.
|
||||
All right, well, basically, John and I,
|
||||
Johnathan and I've been working on venues.
|
||||
And for the last couple of years,
|
||||
we've tried to make a couple of places
|
||||
our permanent home.
|
||||
And like anything else to tell you the truth,
|
||||
I wasn't sure we'd get this one off the ground this year
|
||||
because we had venues changed three times on us.
|
||||
We'd been working with the fine folks
|
||||
over at the Boston Linux users.
|
||||
And you know, they've been at MIT for years, years.
|
||||
I mean, probably 30 plus years.
|
||||
And so, you know, they said, you know,
|
||||
why don't you guys store the fest here?
|
||||
And we thought, oh, this is an ideal place for it.
|
||||
We can certainly make that happen.
|
||||
So anyway, time had gone on.
|
||||
And so, you know, around September,
|
||||
Johnathan goes, you know, we do as an April,
|
||||
maybe we should start saying, you know,
|
||||
what's going on, let's check in on it.
|
||||
So they go, oh, we sub into the talk.
|
||||
So it's like, all right, the next round, you know,
|
||||
we're getting into October.
|
||||
Now, I've got other things I'm doing right now,
|
||||
but I figured you might have been deep
|
||||
into fixing your house.
|
||||
Oh, my God.
|
||||
So you must have been busy.
|
||||
Oh, big time.
|
||||
So anyway, so after that rolled around,
|
||||
I said, you know, let's check in on these guys and see again.
|
||||
And so they go, yeah, you know, we sub into all this,
|
||||
but I think we're good to go.
|
||||
So Johnathan started to work on the speakers.
|
||||
And then November rolls around is like the same deal.
|
||||
You know, we've submitted the paperwork,
|
||||
submitted the paperwork.
|
||||
December, they say, well, we've had a problem,
|
||||
but I think we can work our way around it.
|
||||
It's like, okay, fine.
|
||||
So January is on us, and we're now just four months away.
|
||||
And so bottom line is that they wait until the very end
|
||||
of January to say, well, we were denied,
|
||||
but we're going to try something else,
|
||||
and that was the last we heard of it.
|
||||
This is MIT.
|
||||
MIT.
|
||||
Oh, goodness.
|
||||
Yeah, so anyway, sorry we're shutting the door.
|
||||
Yeah, you guys can walk that way.
|
||||
And then so we ended up at Harvard next to see if maybe,
|
||||
I mean, it's my own backyard.
|
||||
So I figured this should be an easy one.
|
||||
Was there last year that worked out good?
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
And so anyway, bottom line is we go in there.
|
||||
You know, I made the, you know, the verbal contract,
|
||||
and you know, they told us everything
|
||||
that we were good to go with.
|
||||
And then we find out that the cost started coming in,
|
||||
the person I've been working with, they've been fired.
|
||||
Oh, no.
|
||||
And so not only was he fired, but it seems
|
||||
that maybe he made some deals that probably shouldn't
|
||||
have happened.
|
||||
But I can't go any further than that
|
||||
because there's some other issues around that as well.
|
||||
We're about hackers.
|
||||
We can figure that out.
|
||||
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
|
||||
So bottom line is that, you know, they gave us
|
||||
the new updated bill, which was twice the amount
|
||||
that we thought it was going to be.
|
||||
And as soon as I told Jonathan that,
|
||||
he goes, yeah, I plan B.
|
||||
Oh, they pretty sure.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So anyway, bottom line is that he found out
|
||||
that the place that, you know, was providing the hotel space
|
||||
for the Linux space actually had conference rooms.
|
||||
So at the very last minute, he made that happen
|
||||
and we started to get people in.
|
||||
We actually have a good turnout today.
|
||||
So it's much better than what I expected,
|
||||
but watching from the outside, I'm wondering,
|
||||
is it going to happen?
|
||||
So it sounds like it was happening on the inside,
|
||||
a little bit like that.
|
||||
Oh, you know, hanging by your nails.
|
||||
Well, you know, it was a lot of gnashing of teeth
|
||||
and things that didn't have to happen.
|
||||
And I think the bottom line is that, given the fact
|
||||
that we're dedicated, after this event is done,
|
||||
we're going to find a permanent home because this is
|
||||
for the birds, you know, just getting
|
||||
people to, you know, go by the seat of their pants on this
|
||||
and, you know, it just, it doesn't do anybody,
|
||||
any favors, you know.
|
||||
And I'm really excited that people showed up today,
|
||||
but I wouldn't have held it against them if they didn't.
|
||||
It was, it was a tough go.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
It's, but there is demand for it.
|
||||
They did show up here.
|
||||
Yeah, we all are.
|
||||
So yeah.
|
||||
In fact, Mad Dog was here almost right away.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
He's a regular.
|
||||
I've seen him every year.
|
||||
So he's a fun guy.
|
||||
I'm excited about that, you know.
|
||||
And it's good to see people coming from all over, you know?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You know, the door made the trip up from Maryland, you know,
|
||||
traces here this year from Texas.
|
||||
I mean, you know, we're really excited.
|
||||
I'm glad they could make the trip up, you know?
|
||||
But, you know, all things aside, you know, I think, you know,
|
||||
permanent home is our only goal after this year.
|
||||
Nice.
|
||||
Because, yeah, this stuff is for the birds.
|
||||
And, you know, it sucks not having a permanent home.
|
||||
Bottom line, bottom line.
|
||||
So, you know, so we'll hope for the best.
|
||||
So I'll see you next year.
|
||||
And the permanent home.
|
||||
Exactly.
|
||||
Thanks for explaining it.
|
||||
Because like I was just clicking on the web page every week, you know,
|
||||
and what is going on?
|
||||
What is going on?
|
||||
I ended up in a hotel at Harvard Square.
|
||||
And I'm like, what?
|
||||
I was just getting on the subway.
|
||||
Pop up, pop out.
|
||||
So it didn't work out too bad.
|
||||
So I'm like, well, I think that's the other thing that, you know,
|
||||
we want to address this, make it a lot easier for everybody next year too.
|
||||
So, you know, I'm glad that everybody showed up.
|
||||
And, you know, like I said, permanent home next year.
|
||||
That's our goal, you know?
|
||||
That's very cool.
|
||||
And I'm glad you guys make it here every year too, you know?
|
||||
I'll be here next year too.
|
||||
Nice.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
Bye, Bill.
|
||||
Thanks.
|
||||
Perfect.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every week day and Monday through Friday.
|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user