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>
This commit is contained in:
172
hpr_transcripts/hpr1644.txt
Normal file
172
hpr_transcripts/hpr1644.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,172 @@
|
||||
Episode: 1644
|
||||
Title: HPR1644: Opensource.com: Benetech, OpenStack and Kumusha
|
||||
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1644/hpr1644.mp3
|
||||
Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:15:28
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
its first May 20th of November 2014. This is an HBR episode 1644 entitled Open Source.com,
|
||||
Manatech, OpenStack, and CumaShirt, and is part of the series' newscast. It is hosted
|
||||
by semiotic robotic, and is about 22 minutes long. Feedback can be sent to Brian at semiotic
|
||||
robotic.net or not leaving a comment on this episode. The summary is, Manatech CEO OpenSup,
|
||||
a Challenge of OpenStack product management, and CumaShirt takes wicked.
|
||||
This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting
|
||||
with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
|
||||
Hey there Hacker Public Radio. This is semiotic robotic bringing you another OpenSource news break
|
||||
from OpenSource.com. Joining me today to provide their invaluable insight and experience are
|
||||
OpenSource.com content manager Jen White. Straight up. And OpenStack aficionado Jason Baker.
|
||||
Hello. Here are a few stories. The OpenSource.com community has been discussing lately.
|
||||
Well, first let's talk about Jen's recent interview with Jim Frickerman, who's CEO of Benatech,
|
||||
a nonprofit that develops technology for the social good. Of course, they prefer developing
|
||||
applications the OpenSource way. Frickerman notes that Benatech's Go Read, an OpenSource
|
||||
e-reader for Android optimizes texts for visually impaired readers, is built in the popular
|
||||
and also OpenFB reader. Another Benatech-backed tool, Poet, is a web-based tool for crowdsourcing
|
||||
descriptions of images and audio books that uses the daisy standard. Frickerman explains how it
|
||||
reduces the cost of both producing image descriptions for content creators as well as the
|
||||
delivery time of the described images for end users. Benatech discovered OpenSource thinking in
|
||||
the 1990s when it was building affordable reading systems for people who were blind. We stumbled
|
||||
onto OpenSource without even knowing the meaning of the term Frickerman told Jen. We didn't know
|
||||
about OpenSource licensing. We just shared the code to be helpful. And so helpful it has been.
|
||||
Yeah, that's a great quote. I love that. Yeah, it's a great quote. It was a fun interview to do
|
||||
and we had some good feedback from our readers on this one. Particularly, we have a quote or a
|
||||
comment actually on the article from David Goldfield and I was just going to read it for you guys.
|
||||
That's great. I'm a visually impaired user of Bookshare and I was so thrilled to read this
|
||||
excellent interview. By the way, I'm wondering if OpenSource.com has ever had an article about the
|
||||
OpenSource in VDA screen reader for Windows, which has been a real game changer for blind people,
|
||||
making Windows computers accessible to individuals who otherwise wouldn't be able to afford the
|
||||
expensive cost of other screen readers. If it hasn't been written, I'd be happy to assist if anyone
|
||||
is interested. So of course, I jumped on that. Please share your story with us and so I did
|
||||
reach out to David and he got back to me and we've been having some good back and forth on
|
||||
this potential article but also on, you know, the different products that are out there,
|
||||
the different OpenSource and free projects that are out there for visually and auditorily
|
||||
impaired folks. Right. And so I think that, you know, we're going to try to cover some more
|
||||
articles on this topic because it's definitely the absolutely. We've gotten a good sort of study
|
||||
in flux of assistive technology, OpenSource assistive technology, stories lately, have we not?
|
||||
I mean, it seems to me like that's picked up a little bit. It has picked up a little bit. A few,
|
||||
every few months. I mean, thinking back to the Enable articles. I mean, those were really
|
||||
impressed and, you know, we got to see those in person and it seems like the assistive technology
|
||||
stuff has just been, I don't want to say more in the news, but certainly a lot more on everyone's
|
||||
radar in recent weeks and months. And I think that's a great thing. It's great
|
||||
for OpenSource to be able to help that community. Absolutely. Definitely.
|
||||
So in your discussion with the commenter, have you hit on an angle for the upcoming article?
|
||||
Is he going to write for us? Have you? I think he's going to cover the NVDA app.
|
||||
Fantastic. Well, that's what we like to see at OpenSource.com. Stories that help people,
|
||||
draws people out and helps them tell their OpenSource story too. Yeah, I mean, I think a big part
|
||||
of what we do, too, is how can other people who maybe aren't the status quo get involved?
|
||||
Right. Right. And so we're seeing a lot more of that in general with women and minorities and
|
||||
transgender getting them into OpenSource and coding and software in general. And so this is just
|
||||
kind of like another area where we can help people get involved. Sure. Sure.
|
||||
Next, we should bring to your attention in recent piece by Cloud Technology Consultant Jim
|
||||
Hasselmeyer who wrestles with the role of the product management function in the OpenStack
|
||||
development process. Hasselmeyer says OpenStack has reached an inflection point.
|
||||
Its developer base has achieved a kind of critical mass and non-developer parties are
|
||||
interested in using it for day-to-day operations. But how can the OpenStack project manage the
|
||||
relationship between these parties, particularly in light of the fact that it's an OpenSource project?
|
||||
Would product management for OpenStack be wise or foolish? Hasselmeyer asks.
|
||||
Actually, he concludes, it's both. No single person should have de facto decision-making capability,
|
||||
but the project does need some go between to relay customer needs to the development community.
|
||||
Yeah, I really enjoyed working with Jim on this piece. For those of you out there in
|
||||
Listerland who might not be familiar with OpenStack, OpenStack is a sort of set of software tools
|
||||
that help you build and manage cloud infrastructure. It's sort of the OpenSource equivalent of
|
||||
Amazon Web Services or Google Cloud or some other public providers who, while you can certainly use
|
||||
their infrastructure as running non-open software. And so the OpenSource community starting with
|
||||
RAC space and NASA working together created this project and released it out to the world and
|
||||
since grown immensely. But one of the downsides of working with an immense project and something
|
||||
of this scale is that it's hard to find direction and something like that. OpenStack is now
|
||||
grown to the point where it gets as many commits a month as the Linux kernel, for example. They're
|
||||
actually comparable in community sizes at this point. And I think what Jim's getting at here is
|
||||
the users of this type of software are largely large corporations or other entities who come to
|
||||
providers and ask for a certain set of requirements. They might go to their contact and say,
|
||||
hey, we'd love to use OpenStack, but we need it to do X. And the difficulty is in getting that
|
||||
information from the product managers at the companies who are working on this over to the
|
||||
developers and making just true that chain of communication works for the project of this scale.
|
||||
Yeah, because I guess a somewhat standard line and some OpenSource.com. Some OpenSource communities
|
||||
is, well, if the feature is not there, the beauty of OpenSource is that you can code it yourself.
|
||||
But what if you are a large enterprise whose business is not software, who doesn't have that kind
|
||||
of talent in the pool, who is not interested in investing resources in enhancing the tool,
|
||||
but wants to deploy it, what do you tell that person? How do you get that person's
|
||||
request to the people who can actually fulfill it? Because now, I guess that's what he means by
|
||||
the by OpenStack reaching and flexion point, right? There's enough people that are interested in
|
||||
this, that it's becoming large enough, it's becoming significant enough for folks who aren't even,
|
||||
you know, who aren't developers, who aren't part of the developer community, etc.
|
||||
I'd say that's fairly accurate. You know, the growth and the flexion point that Jim's talking about,
|
||||
we really have seen, I think it was really evident when I visited the OpenStack Summit in Atlanta
|
||||
last May. The user community is finally there, you know, for months and months and years even,
|
||||
people have been talking about this OpenStack project, the commentators in the tech media were saying,
|
||||
okay, but where are the users? Well, they're here now. And I think that what we're seeing from them
|
||||
is that they're enjoying the project and they're asking for new features and we just need to make
|
||||
sure that the community continues to work in a way that those can communicate to the right people.
|
||||
Thanks Jason. And finally, we bring you an article by Francois Xavier Adah,
|
||||
contributor to the online publication Rising Voices, who writes about the Camuscia Takes Wiki project,
|
||||
which works to give underrepresented sub-Saharan African communities a voice online.
|
||||
This digital divide means some African communities are underrepresented on the web,
|
||||
without a well-developed online presence, misinformation about them can spread relatively
|
||||
unchallenged. Camuscia Takes Wiki mobilizes various Wikipedians in residence to help communities
|
||||
contribute and edit Wikipedia entries about their local environments and their heritage.
|
||||
The word Camuscia comes from the show, the show, the language of Zimbabwe and means, quote,
|
||||
the place where one comes from. Camuscia Takes Wiki is part of the Wiki Africa initiative,
|
||||
which, quote, encourages individuals and organizations to create, expand, and enhance online content
|
||||
about Africa, its history, its people, its innovations, and its many contemporary realities
|
||||
on the world's most-used encyclopedia Wikipedia. So I like this piece a lot. Adah really
|
||||
does a good job of laying out sort of why it's important to put editing power in the hands of the
|
||||
people who need to control the way that people see them, right? And I think that seems to me to be,
|
||||
if it's not already coded into sort of our language for how we talk about social justice,
|
||||
I mean, to have control over the means, to have control over the tools that people use to
|
||||
represent you seems to me to be right up there on the agenda today. So I really like the way
|
||||
this project takes Wikipedia as its sort of home base and begins from there and tries to help
|
||||
these folks learn how they can have a hand in the way that they represent it online.
|
||||
It's really important because I sort of think of the situation for some of the third-world
|
||||
countries as sort of being the chicken in the exendrum, especially for folks who, you know,
|
||||
in a lot of these countries speak languages which are not a predominant language or Wikipedia.
|
||||
You know, so what if you have access to internet through a global device or something if there's
|
||||
no content there for you to consume, no way to be able to use it and no way to understand what's
|
||||
already been written about, you know, yourself and your own people. So, you know, this really
|
||||
struck me as an interesting article because it sort of creates that incentive for a lot of people
|
||||
to try to take the next step and to do what's necessary to be able to get online and to have
|
||||
something to do when they get there. And I think that sort of back and forth is really great.
|
||||
Yeah, I think that's a really good point. Also, the page online is really well laid out.
|
||||
There's four different languages to choose from to work on the project and then there are
|
||||
several different tabs to walk you through the project and get you started. So, it does seem
|
||||
like they put a lot of work into making this easy to use and hopefully there'll be a lot of new
|
||||
knowledge that gets added every day. A couple weeks ago on the podcast, we talked about another
|
||||
project that we featured on opensource.com called Wiki Project Med. And it's a similar situation.
|
||||
Jenna, I think you shepherded that one through that was from Shawna Gordon McKeon if I'm not mistaken.
|
||||
That's right. Who was writing about this project, Wiki Project Med, which does something similar
|
||||
for medical information online, right? So, how can we connect doctors with sort of with
|
||||
capidians in residence or how can doctors become more aware of the way that certain medical
|
||||
information is presented online and is explained online so that folks who use Wiki
|
||||
to Google their symptoms actually find relevant, accurate information about what they're experiencing.
|
||||
And I'll say it about this project, Komisha takes Wiki, the same thing I said about
|
||||
about Wiki Project Med. And that is, I really like the idea that these projects are sort of
|
||||
meeting people where they are. It's not creating, we're going to do something that's better than
|
||||
Wiki Pedia. We're going to create another space because this space isn't serving us.
|
||||
No, they're taking, they're going to where people are. And as it says, it's the world's most
|
||||
used in cyclopedia as a dollar reminds us. And so instead of just creating something different
|
||||
and coordinating that stuff off, forming those stories off in their own little sector of the internet,
|
||||
they're going straight to the world's largest, most used electronic in cyclopedia, Wiki Pedia,
|
||||
and trying to change that. And the same goes for Wiki Project Med, right? Instead of creating
|
||||
our own little gateway medical and cyclopedia online, we're going to Wiki Pedia,
|
||||
going to where people already are and helping them there. How can we pull the knowledge out of the
|
||||
community onto the internet, onto Wiki Pedia, where people are already looking for this information?
|
||||
That's right, that's right. And then free access to it. That's right, absolutely.
|
||||
And the infrastructure too, I mean, large projects aren't probably difficult to host.
|
||||
So, you know, it's great to be able to kind of plug into some of these existing projects,
|
||||
to take advantage of some of the resources, you know, and of course something like Wiki Pedia
|
||||
is funded by people all over the world. But it allows them to take some of the funding that's
|
||||
probably largely comes from some of the more developed Western nations and really bring it back
|
||||
home without having to find a new funding source. That's a great point. Excellent point.
|
||||
Yep. Well folks, that brings us to the end of another open source news break from opensource.com.
|
||||
Don't forget, you can get your daily dose of open source news from opensource.com.
|
||||
And of course, you can also find us on various social media, including Facebook and Twitter,
|
||||
where we can be found at open source play. Finally, we'd love to hear your open source story,
|
||||
share with us at opensource.com slash participate. Until next time, Hacker Public Radio,
|
||||
this is semiotic robotic, wishing you peace, love, and open source.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing,
|
||||
to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dog
|
||||
Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club, and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
|
||||
or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released under
|
||||
Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLife, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user