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hpr_transcripts/hpr1742.txt
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Episode: 1742
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Title: HPR1742: How to Get Yourself On an Open Source Podcast - Presentation for Kansas Linux Fest, 22 March 2015
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1742/hpr1742.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:37:39
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---
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This is HBR episode 1,742 entitled How to Get Yourself on an Open Source Podcast
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Presentation for Canvas Linux Fest, 22 March 2015, it is hosted by 5150 and is about 30 minutes long.
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The summary is, re-recording of a presentation for KLF that went unrecorded.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Howdy folks, this is 5150 for Hacker Public Radio. What you are about to hear is a presentation titled,
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How to Get Yourself on an Open Source Podcast that I first delivered at Canvas Linux Fest on 22 March 2015.
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Since it was not recorded, I was told SD card on the camera was full,
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there has been interest expressed by my follow-up podcasters. I thought it might be worth re-recording.
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I'm afraid Mike Tupont was not satisfied with any of the video from KLF 2015.
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This may be the only talk from that event that you get to hear.
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However, show notes from the other talks are extensive and can be found at Lanier.com slash 2015 slash KLF15 slash schedule.
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All I can tell you is three out of the four audience members that showed up seem to enjoy my presentation.
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I shall deliver the rest of this podcast as if you general, general listeners were my live audience, but before I do that,
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I have to tell you I did record this the other night and I was kind of in my boozy mode and I'm not sure
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I gave the best presentation. I may well wake up in the morning and listen to this and the side
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it's not good enough either, but if you're hearing this, I guess I decided it was good enough to
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put out on HPR. Before I go ahead, I've decided with the amount of beers stacking up in my refrigerator,
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I'm going to do even my serious podcast as a beer review in the Spirit of Sourcecast, the long and
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limited and gone sourcecast. So tonight I want to bring you a culto which I could not resist because
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on the label you have a skull right out of the day of the dead. And it is described as blue agave
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infused with beer blended and aged on tequila's barrel stable steves, steves, a 6.0 alcohol by volume.
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So it's kind of got it's very, very watery. It's kind of got a melonish flavor to me. It takes several
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sips out of the bottle before it becomes sweet with the agave. Of course, agave is the plant that tequila
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is derived from. However, if you're familiar with Spanish food, there are some agave based sweeteners
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and I had some agave syrup and tried it and at length I discovered that while I coordinated,
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every time I tried the agave in anything that the next day I had a very unsettled stomach so I
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am drinking this beer kind of sparingly. But like I said, it would be, it's very watery so it would be
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very thirst-quenching on a hot day and if you get about halfway down through the beer, it's got
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sort of a sweet flavor. I'm not sure how else to describe it. I'm not a big fan. I wouldn't buy this
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again. But that's why I'm here to instruct you folks on what you might or may not like.
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Another beer I tried this week was from Red's Apple Ale. It's her mango version and like the
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earlier strawberry version, they're not fooling anybody. It's made with apples. Come on.
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You can taste that. But there is a sweetness and a tartness that have been added afterwards. I'm
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not sure if that's actually from mango juice or if it's from artificial sweeteners. I had this
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candy a couple of years ago. It was kind of like gummy bears and various fruit flavors and I
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looked at the label and on Green's essentially everything was artificial and it was just
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how they balanced out corn syrup versus citric acid in each various flavors. So I guess any kind
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of fruit can be simulated by chemicals. But as far as the beer goes, I mean, if you like the
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Red's Ale, I think you'll really like the mango version. It goes down smooth and good and it's
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tasty and it's sweet. You know, I can't really complain. It just all seems a little artificial.
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Okay. Now comes on for a couple that just recently appeared from the Kona Brewing Company
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from Hawaii. And the first one is the Big Wave Golden Ale.
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I'm not a particular fan of that either. It's, you know, you can tell it's nailed. That's about
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all. It doesn't really stand out from for the same price. I could recommend several dozen
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beers that I prefer. So, you know, I can't really recommend the Kona Brewing Company's Big Wave.
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Now, on the other hand, it's not great, but it's not bad. Kona Brewing Company's the Longboard
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Island Logger. And it's a little sweet. You know, it doesn't have a lot of flavor. It's a little sweet,
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a little bread-y and what I would say, you know, if you wanted a liquid version of the sweet
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King's Rolls from Hawaii, this would be it. So, if you're going to do that, then grab Longboard
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from the Kona Brewing Company Island Logger. Okay. Well, that dispenses with nearly a six pack
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of beers for this broadcast. So, let us get into the meat of what I wanted to talk about. And
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as I said, the rest of this podcast will be presented as if you were my audience at Candice Linux
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Fest 2015 because the SD card on the camera that was provided was full. And I'm obviously an idiot
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because I had the HPR's Zoom H1 in my pocket and why I did not take it out, started up,
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and started recording on the desk in front of me. I do not know. That just only occurred to me this week.
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So, I'm afraid you'll have to bear with the recycled rendition that I'm doing here for my desktop.
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So, let's start off. Howdy folks. My name is Don Greer. I'm an IT consultant and farmer from South
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Central Kansas. I am also a podcaster. You may recognize my voice from such podcasts as Hacker
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Public Radio, the Colonel Panicogcast, or the Linux Logcast, where I used the handle 5150.
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When fellow Hacker Public Radio host, my two-pont told me KLF would be a reality. I struggled to
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find a topic that I knew well enough to talk about. It was almost ingest that I said I could talk
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about how to get yourself under an open-source podcast. Actually, since that was as far as my
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proposal went, I was shocked and honored to find myself on the same roster with so many other
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speakers with impressive credentials and technical topics. This afternoon, I hope not only
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to chronicle my personal history with Linux and open-source-related podcasts, but to show you why
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I believe podcasting can be as an important part of giving back to the community as contributing code
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or documentation or even cash. Linux podcasts bind the community by providing education
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both as basic as lunch reality or as specific as the New World Order.
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Podcasts announce new innovations and tell us of free and open-source software adoption
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as well as opposition by corporations and governments. Podcasts Harold Community Advanced
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like this one and provide a little humor at the end of a long day. Some of you may wonder why I'm
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using old-school technology to organize my notes at a high-tech conference. At this point,
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if 5150 holds up several stapled sheets of paper and large print and weighs them around,
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the plain and simple truth is that I can't read my phone or tablet with my classes on.
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I'm already using Bifocals. It just seems that every time I get new classes to the
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lower lenses work for about two weeks and then I have to take them off to see the phone again.
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For this last time, I figured I'd outsmart the system and just order single-focus lenses.
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And I was congratulating myself on my thriftiness when I put my new glasses on,
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sat down to computer and realized I couldn't read the keyboard.
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Before I talk about myself as a podcaster, I think I should tell you my history of Linux.
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My first experience with Linux was a box set of Mandrake 7.2 around 2002.
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I always maintain at least a second running system in the house in case the primary machine
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coughs up a hair ball so I'd be able to access the internet and figure out what's wrong.
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I'd always been a geek to alternative OSs and I wanted a tertiary machine on my network that
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wouldn't be affected by the propagation of Windows viruses.
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Now I installed the Mandrake easily enough but there wasn't much flash to Linux apps in those days.
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I recall it was not impressed by whichever browser shipped with Mandrake.
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I don't recall why I knew about installing additional applications from repositories
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but in any case at that time I was still on dial-up.
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The Pentium 1's I installed Mandrake on had both the modem and the Ethernet card.
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The installer always asked which one I used to read the internet and would only set up one of the two devices.
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This annoyed me as I planned to use some Linux boxes a gateway to see if that would save a few CPU
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cycles from the P4 I was using as a Windows gaming machine back then.
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I really wouldn't have known where to go on the internet for help and I expect help would not
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have been as force coming 13 years ago.
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My next experience with Linux came around 2007.
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The school I consulted for had several Windows 98 machines not compatible with the software
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they wanted to run. Even though the machines were Pentium 4's we determined the cost of XP
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plus memory upgrades could be better applied to new machines.
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As a result I was able to bring several of the machines home. Over time I boosted their
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memory with used sticks for me bay and even the odd faster processor. As a noob I installed
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feisty fawn on a system out in the machine shed and spent a lot of that winter hacking on that box
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when I should have been overhauling tractors. Just as I was developing into NDIS wrappers
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gutsy came along and brought support for my Gigabyte wireless card which combined with the
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double fork ice-threading power box gave me reasonable certainty that the box out in the shed
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was safe from lightning stores. About six months later I rescued a refugee from a major meteorological
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event and set it up in my house running mint. For the first time I didn't have to leave the house
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to get my Linux on. Just before I set up that first Linux box we finally got broadband out to
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the farm and I discovered podcasts. I figured there must be Linux podcasts go along with the
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general tack and computing podcasts I followed as well as a fondly remembered sci-fi weekly review
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show that started out as a Sunday afternoon show in Wichita radio which was canceled twice
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and then re-emerged as a semi-weekly podcast only to disappear forever a couple months after I
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started listening in but not before I downloaded all the episodes that I'd missed.
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In my initial search for Linux-related content all I came up with were four drunk scots discussing
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minutia of Ruby on rails while I really like to format I lacked the commitment to become a
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Ruby programmer just so I could understand the show. A few days after that I came across the techie geek
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Russ winner mixed tutorials with reviews of new applications and upcoming events
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better yet he introduced me to a world of other Linux podcasts. Through the techie geek I learned
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of the irreverent banter of the Linux outlaws the sedubed serious studiousness of what was then called
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the bad apples the contained chaos of the Linux cranks the classroom like atmosphere of the Linux
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basement during Chad's Drupal tutorial period tech hints and movie reviews delivered at speed
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of 75 miles per hour by Dave Yates of Lotta Linux links the auditory dissonance of the Linux
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tech show and the constant daily variety of hacker public radio in 2010 I made my first contribution
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to hacker public radio. The great thing about HPR is there's no there's no vetting process
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we only ask your audio to be intelligible not polished not even good we just have to be able to
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understand you and let the topic be of interest to geeks if you consider yourself a geek any topic
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that interest you is welcome there's no maximum or minimum one time just to get the show uploaded
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on time while topics 10 the concern open source this is daughter requirement I believe by second
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HPR concerned how to migrate Windows wireless connection profiles between systems I'd spend a
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few hours figuring out one day for a customer and I thought I should consolidate what I'd learn in
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one place HPR provides a podcasting platform at no cost to the podcaster it serves as both a
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venue for broadcasters without the resources to host their own site or without the time to commit
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to a regular schedule it can also serve as an incubator for hosts trying to find their own audience
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it's never been easier to become a podcast with HPR I would start with an email introduction as
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a courtesy to add bin at hacker public radio dot org next record your audio when you have a file
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ready to upload select an open slot in the calendar page and follow the instructions be prepared
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to paste in your show notes I also credit HPR forgetting me my first invite to participate in my
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first podcast with multiple hosts once a month hacker public radio records a community news podcast
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recorded on the first Saturday afternoon after the end of the previous months exact times
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in server details will be published in the newsletter all HPR hosts and indeed listeners are
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invited to participate it is just asked that you have listened to most of the past months shows
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so you can participate in the discussion like many multi-host audio podcasts HPR uses a mumble
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record shows including the annual New Year's Eve show which has dozens of participants
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there's a mumble tutorial on linuxlubcast.com to help you get started
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a few months after recording my first hacker public radio podcast I started to take part in the
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community news I did it because I wanted to take a greater part in HPR not because I considered
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it in an edition but it is a good way to show other people as you can politely and intelligently
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participate in a group discussion actually I still have a tendency to wander off in the tangents
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and and unintentionally dominate the topic something I always struggle with
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another way to join in around table discussion HPR is participate in the hacker public radio
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book club once a month we take an audio book that is freely available on the internet and share
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our opinions. Recording schedules and the next book to be reviewed are available in HPR newsletter
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I believe taking part in one or more community news with Patrick daily also known as Polky
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and influenced him to invite me into the cast of dev random the semi-weekly dev random
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record on the saturday's kernel panic didn't we sometimes accidentally talked about tech and open
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source but we always saved the most disturbing things we'd see on the internet in the previous
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two weeks for discussion on the show the things that honestly could not be discussed on other podcasts
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the spite rumors to the contrary dev random is not dead only resting and shall one day rise
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again to shock and discuss new discussed new generations of listeners sometimes you just have
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to be in the right place at the right time I won't insult the kernel panic odd cast by calling
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a sister show to dev random it just happens to be recorded on opposite Saturday's and had some
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of the same cast members in common anyway I've been participating in the kpo forum for a while
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suggesting topics from false stories I'd come across in social media during the week
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I was idling in hash odd cast planet on free node one day when Peter Cross asked for people from
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the channel to jump into the show on a day when only a couple of the regular cast members had shown
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up since dev random used the same mumble server I used my existing credentials to take Peter up on
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his offer and for better or worse I've been a kpo cast member ever since while we're on the topic
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having a presence on free node IRC is a great way to get your name or handle known in a podcasting
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world many podcasts have their own channel set up so that listeners might participate during
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live streaming podcasts saying something helpful or more likely smart allocate during the podcast
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might get you mentioned on the show and make your name familiar to the show's audience
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I've seen several individuals move from regular forum or chat participants to the hosts of
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their own show or contributor stage PR from my own experience after spending several weeks
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as silent participants in pod brewers listening to the stream and commenting in the chat
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read the war from myself were invited to bring our own beers and join the cast
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while many podcasts still have their own IRC channels other than providing a conduit between
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the hosts they are most active during live broadcasts between shows many of the podcasters I
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listen to gravitate to hang around in free nodes hash augcast planet channel since podcasters
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typically have a client open during week and leisure hours you'll usually find them hanging
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around in fact at kpo we use hash augcast planet as our primary communications channel during live
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streaming I still recall the day monster b in peter 64 asked me about the origin of my handle
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given it's similar to their colleague 330 I'd heard both these gentlemen on podcasters I
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followed and frankly that evening I felt like I was talking to rock stars now that I'm a podcast
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for my own right with my own presence on hash augcast planet I try to make a point to say hello
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when I see an unfamiliar handle in the channel I expect to sam spam bots consider me the nicest
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guy in IRC as it happens IRC was also responsible for my involvement in the linux lug cast
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LLC was conceived after reimagining and final demise of seven gofftons project linux basics
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Kevin washer chatter nunkimagoo wanted to do a show along the same lines while incorporating
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the spirit of the unrecorded online lug that always preceded linux basics on the mumble server
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I was brought along by the simple expediency of never having closed the hash linux basis
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channel in my chat client we've been going for a little more than a year and how attracted
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to following but frankly we have not found a listener participation we were looking for
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this was meant to be a true online lug for people who couldn't travel to a local linux user
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group so far it's usually been the same four or five guys talking about what linux projects
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has exceeded which have failed and what we're going to try next I've learned a lot in the past
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year and I expect the listeners have as well but we're always hoping to get more live participation
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rural areas like the midwest are our target audience the details of the mumble connection are
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posted at linuxlugcast.com and we always monitor the freeno.org IRC channel hash linux lugcast while
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recording and the feedback link as well as the stream is posted on the website thank you for your
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time and attention this afternoon especially considering the caliber of talks running in the other
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two channels I can be contacted at 5150 at linuxbasement.com are there any questions
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today show like all our shows
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was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
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and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomican 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 creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
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