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Episode: 1689
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Title: HPR1689: Linux Voice magazine at OggCamp
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1689/hpr1689.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 07:44:45
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---
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This is HPR episode 1689 entitled Linux Voice Magazine at Otcamp and is part of the series Otcamp.
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It is hosted by Benny and is about 11 minutes long. The summary is another interview from Otcamp
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with the guys from Linux Voice. This episode of HPR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio. This is Benny with yet another interview from Otcamp this year.
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This is to one interview coronaminal and I did together. We walked up to the stand of the Linux
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Voice Magazine and asked them some questions. As you might know the Linux Voice Magazine is quite a
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young magazine. It was just founded one year ago. So we were interested why you would found the
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magazine in a time like this and why they were motivated to start something new. So here we go.
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Enjoy the interview. I'm Benny for Hacker Public Radio and I'm talking to Linux Voice Magazine.
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I'm Ben Everard. Yeah and I'm Mike Saunders. Right and why do we see you with a table at Otcamp?
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Well we're sponsoring Otcamp actually. We are one of the platinum sponsors of Gold Sponsors.
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Yeah so we're here to meet people to see what's going on to sell some magazines as well. We've
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got a stand here with various issues and I've been challenging people at Super Mario Kart,
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the SNES version. So far only some kids have played me so yeah I'm not really kicking as much
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ass as I hoped but yeah. So you're better than the kids? Then the kids yes but of course most of the
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kids weren't even born and this game was made so yeah that's I do have the distinct advantage there
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that I was alive. Yeah yeah we've got some t-shirts as well and we got some mugs with
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Grace Hopper on it yeah. So in case there's anybody out there that doesn't know what is
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Linux Voice? Linux Voice is a print and digital magazine about
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the newest last Linux free software. We crowdfunded it at the end of last year on Indiegogo.
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We raised £127,000 to start our own print magazine. We all used to work on a magazine called
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Linux format and we all wanted to create something new and independent and the unique thing about
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our magazine is that we get 50% of our profits back to the community. So like Free Software Foundation,
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EFF readers can choose this and after nine months all of our content becomes creative commons
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licensed so free for everyone to share. So we want to make a magazine actually gives back in this
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part of the community and not just making money by selling things to people. What was your recent
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to found a new magazine? I mean magazines it's not a growing market at the moment and
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everything goes digital. It's not a growing market but I think the bad days are over yeah.
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Print magazines did suffer quite a big slump in the 2000s because a lot of people get information
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off the internet so we're different. We don't have a big news section for instance because obviously
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magazines are quite old by the time they get to people's hands so we don't focus on things
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like news. We have a lot of tutorials written by experts and the well researched and so yeah
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we see the magazine as many books that come out regularly so projects people to do and things
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like that. They're sort of slightly different approach to it. So what issue are you up to at the
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moment then? I'm Benfield. We've just sent issue 9 to the printers so that should be out in
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a couple of weeks. Ah, issue 9. So you say all your content become available? Do you say creative
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comments after nine months? So the first issue will be fairly soon. Yes, I don't know for top
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my head but it's something to look forward to. Yeah, yeah. We'll be released pretty soon.
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And how's the so that's nine months? Your initial funding you say $120,000?
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Was that for the first, did you plan that out for a lot like the first year or is it?
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Basically the problem with the magazine industry is all about cash flow because it takes
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a whole huge amount of time to get the money back from the magazine from news agents. You can take
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nine months to a year. Oh really? Yeah, particularly if the one sold overseas. So when you start
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your magazine that's a huge problem. Once you're running you get the money every month. It's just
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for an older issue. So really that money needed to get us through the time until we were starting
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to get the money from the news agents. And that's starting to happen now. So we're more or less
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great than even moving into a profit. It should be noted as well, our crowd in our crowdfunding
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campaign people bought subscriptions. So we sold over 2,000 subscriptions in that crowdfunding campaign
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alone. So it gave us the funding, it gave us exposure as well and now people are getting the
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magazines. So we can expect to see limits of what's around for years to come. Well, hopefully
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yeah, I mean we are in double eight smiths, we are in Sainsbury's, we'll soon be in Tesco.
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And it's a noble in America and various ones around the world. Yeah, we're in Australia, New
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Zealand, on New Stans. So yeah, there is life in the industry I'd say. Even though it's a niche,
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it's a niche within a niche. So one thing about your magazine I read is that you use
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proprietary software to produce it. So are there any plans to change this? Well, let's
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one part, one part of the production the layout is done in Adobe InDesign because we are all rubbish
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at graphics software. And to find someone who's well trained in Scribus and who wants to do that
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as a full-time job is difficult. So our art editor uses InDesign. We all use purely free software
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to make the magazine to write the articles. I use GIMP to do my screenshots and so forth.
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I use BIM. But yeah, Scribus, I think next issue we are looking at doing a section of the magazine
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in it. There are some limitations with Scribus, but one of our ideas is to use some of our money
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to fund the development of features that we need. So we would like to move towards it. It's a
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more complicated job than just suddenly switching. It's part of our workflow, but it is something
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we're looking to do long-term. So let's say in like five years or two years or whatever,
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you're only free software. Well, it could be sooner than that, but yes, we're going to do this
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experiment, aren't we, with? Yeah, I mean, we can't really commit to anything. It's definitely
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in terms of moving all over. We are, yeah, we're starting to experiment with it and as we say,
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we'll see what we can do. Is that going to be like a bounty type system where you offer a
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certain amount of cash for a certain feature? That's the idea. It's not concrete. Yes,
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it's an idea. It's an idea we've had. We're going to investigate. See if there's something
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missing in Scribus that we really need and then consider funding its development to be our
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paying developer to work on it. So then everybody benefits. Yeah, that's great to me. It's
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so much a good plan. So I think you guys don't fab work. It's a great magazine. Thank you.
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I really like the art direction as well. You know, it's got a solid theme running through it. So
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it's, you know, the articles are good. It's, you know, it's all good. It's good stuff. If you've
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not, you know, if the listeners have not got a subscription, they should definitely subscribe.
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Thank you. Shop.linuxvoice.com. And listen to our podcast as well. We've got a podcast
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about it. It's, yes, linux voice podcast. It's fairly irreverent linux stuff. Just a bit of fun,
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really? Yeah, lots of discoveries about beer and, and, and 1980s video games.
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That's great stuff. Thanks for talking to us today. Good luck with the magazine. I hope you
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continue to do good things. Cheers. Thanks a lot. Thanks guys. This was Benny for Hacker Public Radio.
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Thank you for listening. If you try to reach me, I'm on SDF via email, Benny, B-E-N-I at SDF
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or on KnewSocial on micro.fract.f.com as Navigil. Okay. Thank you. And goodbye.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club, and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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released on the create of comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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