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Episode: 2235
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Title: HPR2235: linux.conf.au 2017: First timers interviews
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2235/hpr2235.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 16:20:15
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,235 entitled Linux.com.0 2017, first time an interview and in part
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on the series, Interview. It is posted by Clinton Roy and in about 37 minutes long and
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Karina Cleanflag. The summary is, Clinton speaks to 3 Linux.com.0 first time.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared
|
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hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15. Better web hosting that's honest and
|
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fair at An honesthost.com.
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Here we are at the afternoon tee session of the final day of Linuxulf.0.0.0.0.0 prosecutors
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This is the final chance that I have, to talk with someone. All my previous interviews
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have been with old hands at Linuxulf.0.0, alright. So I thought it would be really good
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get a try and get the opinion of someone who hasn't been to Linux for a year before.
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Well, that is in fact the case, yes, my first Linux comp file.
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So I'm joined by York, who's actually sharing some accommodation with back at the student dorms.
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So just to try and get a little bit of context, have you been to other conferences before?
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No, I don't think I've been to a while, essentially any conference.
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Certainly not professionally oriented up.
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Well, as much as Linux is...
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Well, there's a component of professional, I guess.
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It's also a component of hobbyist, which is the ticket I'm here under.
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Cool.
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So how are you finding it?
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It's been quite enjoyable.
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I mean, also a bit intense. It's been two days at least.
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I've gone, I actually have to go back and have a nap sort of thing.
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Right.
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Used up all of the brain power.
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It's not even, that's even after getting plenty of sleep, because I'm pretty insistent getting my sleep.
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So I can say with fair confidence that it is actually pretty draining.
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Yes, yes.
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Only five days.
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And I think it depends on how deeply dove into these things where if you go to talks that are outside of your wheelhouse,
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which is frankly most of them, it's very easy to go to a lot of talks that are very detailed
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on a topic that you're doing nothing about.
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And because you're not comfortable in that area, you just end up spending a lot more brain power trying to catch up to it.
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Well, as much as I can, of course, there's a lot of blanks to be like,
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I actually have no reference in to my head and I can't really go and look it up right now.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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You can do it when you're in a private space and you're going to get the computer in front of you,
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but when you get the talk in front of you, you have neither the time nor really the classes to do that,
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unless you want to miss the talk.
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So did you manage the company, the entire company?
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So I think you've...
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Yeah.
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Yeah, I was.
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Cool.
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So both the mini-conferences and the main part of the event.
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I mean, well, actually, to be honest, I think I found out even possible with some more value on the mini-comps and the main ones to be honest.
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Okay.
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Maybe because the mini-comps are a little bit more experimental, I guess.
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Yep.
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The main conferences did have quite a lot of technical detail, which I wasn't really able to grasp.
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Right.
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Okay.
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So I particularly enjoyed the first one I went to, which was the one on...
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How do you deal with machines that are on the customer's site, but it's your job to administer?
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Right.
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That was all called the opposite to cloud.
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The on-premise solution is the other buzzword that we use for that sort of thing.
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So what made you sort of decide to come to the mini-comp for you?
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And that expectation and that reason for joining, has that been... has that been mentioned?
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Well, I had been meaning to go to the mini-comp for the last two years or so and didn't get around to it.
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I think that actually took me over.
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It's the fact that it's in Tasmania.
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I have family here.
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I love Tasmania.
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It's nice and cool.
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It's very hot.
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I have not the case here, especially considering the rain and the cloud outside.
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Yep.
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Well, it hasn't been like that all this week, but yep.
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Yep.
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You know, it looks like the final day, so...
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Right.
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There's hope up.
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Yeah.
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I come from Brisbane.
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So it is very rare for the conference to be anywhere where the weather is hotter and worse.
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So I do see Linuxcon for you in January.
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It's a very good way of escaping some of the worst, the hottest muggiest weather, for sure.
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And a lot of people, like a lot of people, use Linuxcon for use is a bit of a trip.
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If they're coming from overseas, it's a long way, so they'll whack on a few days beforehand and after hand to add out a bit of a trip.
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So...
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Yeah.
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So how have you been enjoying the talks?
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I mean, the method in which I've been enjoying, I can't.
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I don't know.
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I've mostly just listened, looked at the slides, thought about it a bit, you know.
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It's kind of not really a thing that you can sort of do anything else because you just try to talk to your neighbor.
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That's a rude to the person up front B.
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You're not going to be able to hear what they're saying until you go and become some reference material.
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It's the same sort of do, well, maybe not distracting, but...
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Yeah.
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You can't really hear what's going on.
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Yeah.
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Over the years, I've sort of gone through a few different phases, like I would try to take notes on the laptop.
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And then I was the first couple, but then after that, I'm like, I can't bother.
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Yeah.
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I ended up teaching the laptop and I just used pencil and paper.
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Oh.
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And I would just take one or two sort of powerful notes, like if there was something that I definitely wanted to go back and look up later.
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And it'd just be a particular project name or URL or something like that.
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Yes.
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But I do still find that some talks I get into and then it's like, yeah, there's no part of this talk that I'm going to be able to use.
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It's interesting.
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Yeah.
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Well, I think I found that a lot too.
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I get first three, like on the Monday, I started taking notes after that, very much reduced.
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Did it actually, though, yesterday afternoon sort of sat down and thought to myself, okay, so what did I actually listen to?
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And so I went through the list, go, I went to that and then wrote like a very quick one, two, maybe three cents in summary to myself.
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Yeah.
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I picked up there.
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Yep.
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For sure.
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You know, hopefully so that if I go over, I can sort of job my memory a bit more about some of the other contents of it.
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Yes.
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For sure.
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And, like, I have no idea what you're doing to trade.
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So are you working or studying?
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I'm working.
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I have worked at the same company.
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It's a little company.
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So it was worked at all involved.
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It's any use?
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I did mention it too.
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One of the guys asked, oh, yeah, if you possibly get to work, much.
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I didn't really want to follow it up, but at that point, I'd actually already bought a ticket.
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And, you know, the whole Tasmania thing and I thought it's new for me.
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Yep.
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I thought there was more for myself than for my company.
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Yep.
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Yeah, sure.
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I thought I'd let it go.
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Maybe next time I'll consider it more seriously going through the company, but.
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Yep.
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Yeah, sure.
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So you also mentioned you did a little bit of volunteering before?
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Yeah.
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So I was a speaker in that last session.
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I would not say speaker, no, I didn't need speaker.
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I was a session chair.
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A much less intensive thing.
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I don't think coming as a speaker is necessarily something you'd want to do on your very first floor.
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Yeah.
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So session chair, so you're introducing the speaker, keeping them to time and handling the Q&A part after the tour.
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Yeah.
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Well, the first one didn't really get a lot of Q&A, we got one.
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The rule, you know, the rule is always here for comments, here for questions.
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Yes.
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So the first guy I woke up to immediately goes and gives a comment and I'm like, that's not a question.
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We actually have time for one question, which is the original premise.
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So the second one at least was a question.
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Cool.
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So.
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Yeah, no.
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Thank you very much for volunteering, for doing that session chair.
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I was probably also mentioned, I don't feel I did it very well.
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It's like a sort of broken up speech, a bit stuttery, because it really has time to prepare, because it'll be totally fine.
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The most important thing is keeping the speaker to time and not letting the speaker run over time.
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So that's the main thing.
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Yeah.
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So, have any talks really grabbed you in a particular way, like things that you definitely want to go back and have a look at the particular project?
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Yeah, it was actually one that was a bit more of a human one, but that's actually not so much for their human aspect more
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because I'm sort of interested in doing it myself.
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There was a pair from New Zealand who came around with, how do we make the humanity and temperature sensor really cheap,
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where we can deploy it in people's houses where mold is a constant problem.
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So, I myself, in my case, the sort of the opposite I think gets too hot, I wouldn't mind knowing, you know, how hot it actually gets and the humanity, etc.
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And so, I don't know, they did actually register as a charity, I'm thinking maybe they do a two for one, like a one for the purchaser, one for the human and give it away.
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Yeah, then I'd probably get into that, but yeah, so it was actually what it was, it was intended to be one for every room, not just for the house.
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So, that was really where they're targeting cheap, and that's the reason.
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Yeah, because they were finding that there was actually quite a bit of difference, some rooms were more seriously more effective,
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but not like the main speaker she was saying that her daughter was getting fairly serious asthma.
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All right. She started monitoring this and noticing that the guest room was actually much better, so she ended up moving to the guest room.
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So, is that like a post-earth plate thing, or is it just an old building sort of thing?
|
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Well, yeah, there was a lot of old buildings, they said that there was a standard in 2007, but of course the majority is the long tail.
|
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Yeah, all the buildings for that, it wasn't just very old ones, it was ones that still even just up to that cheap construction and all that.
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There's nothing to do with the earth, like it's just New Zealand is cold and damp.
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All right, okay. Much like Tasmania, which someone else mentioned.
|
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Yeah, yeah, in Russia, yeah.
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Coming from a hot climate, we don't suffer a lot of cold issues, so we don't really know.
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I'm from Madeleine, which both warm and dry.
|
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Yeah, right. So, yeah, there's a lot of these things we just don't really think about.
|
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There's a lot of house renovation shows and stuff from the States and the UK,
|
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and they're dealing with literally freezing conditions.
|
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So, they've got to, you know, they've got to insulate their pipes and all that sort of stuff to stop and fraying,
|
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and all of those things are completely out into this.
|
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So, I'm very much in favour of insulation for housing.
|
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Yeah, I'm sort of thinking to myself, if I do ever get into the property market, I want to build my own,
|
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because I want to control all those aspects to make sure it's all insulated properly.
|
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Yep, yep.
|
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Of course, I think one of the things I was also mentioned at the same talk is that which is not measured,
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is not maintained.
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Yep.
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||||
And so, of course, I intend to also put in very smart home features.
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Yep.
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Monitoring.
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Yep, for sure, very much.
|
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So, like overall, have you liked your conference experience?
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Would you be thinking of, would you like to return in future?
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Yes, I would like to return in future.
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It's been intense, but it only happens every now and then,
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so you kind of have to be.
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Yeah.
|
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And is there anything that you think we could improve on?
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I haven't thought that far ahead yet.
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Maybe, after a second go, I might have a better idea,
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and have a more critical mind once I've sort of had some expectations at some time to think about it.
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Yeah, for sure.
|
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And I mean, the conference does change every year,
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because it's in a different city every year.
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It's a different organising team every year.
|
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Yeah.
|
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So, you know, all of the details change from year to year.
|
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So, little things that you might like this year,
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they might not be around next year,
|
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and there might be, you know, one year,
|
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there might be something really interesting that happens,
|
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but it only happens in that year.
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Yeah.
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For a bit.
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And all the pens on the particular venues that they get
|
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and a particular circumstances that come across this.
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Oh, yeah.
|
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Wonderful.
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We actually ate on that this year,
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and I thought that was kind of cool,
|
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but now you mentioned that I'm thinking,
|
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that's probably not something that's often the case this.
|
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Do they also get good insight?
|
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Yeah.
|
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So, aren't it, aren't it has been a long-time sponsor?
|
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Sort of historically, Linux.com.au has been held at or near universities.
|
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Yeah.
|
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So, we've had really strong links to academia,
|
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and through that, through the internet network.
|
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Okay.
|
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So, they have actually been able to keep it up.
|
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
|
||||
I suppose it's just as well,
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especially these days, streaming them live.
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Yeah.
|
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I did actually, they set up the start,
|
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it's not stream-wise here.
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And I didn't actually bond,
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I had to go away quickly.
|
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So, as I put the bus service using my mobile internet,
|
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streaming the keynote.
|
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Cool?
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Yeah.
|
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Or at least part of it.
|
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Yeah.
|
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Yeah, I guess that's it.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And I think, I don't know anymore.
|
||||
Like, I think it's a really nice thing that we've got all of the videos recorded.
|
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And I think, based on what I see from videos from a lot of other conferences,
|
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I do think our recordings are actually quite good.
|
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Like, we have a hardware set up so that the slides are actually captured.
|
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Like, it's not just a camera looking at the slides.
|
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The slides are actually captured in midstream.
|
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So, I think our recordings are actually really quite top-notch.
|
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And I think that it makes it an interesting archive of information later on.
|
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Yeah.
|
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There were a couple that I missed that I wanted to go to,
|
||||
but due to the concurrency issues and also,
|
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there was one I wanted to see that I was chairing for a different one.
|
||||
So, I definitely will be utilizing those resources.
|
||||
Yep, excellent.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Is there anything else you'd like to talk about?
|
||||
Not especially.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
No, that's fine.
|
||||
Just that I've discovered that Wargaming Sydney is not in fact a tabletop thing,
|
||||
but in fact, they do actually development,
|
||||
and we're involved in software for the world of tanks.
|
||||
Oh, okay.
|
||||
It's so surprised.
|
||||
So, our coffee sponsor for this conference is Wargaming.net.
|
||||
So, I'm really expecting to be like tabletop sort of Wargaming style.
|
||||
I mentioned that, they're like, no, no, no, we didn't do that.
|
||||
That's like, ah, sorry.
|
||||
I haven't seen anyone win any of the prizes that they've been putting on offer.
|
||||
So, I don't actually know what the prizes are.
|
||||
So, I'll be very curious to find out what's going on there.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Well, I'm glad that you enjoyed your first LCA.
|
||||
I hope that, and thank you for volunteering.
|
||||
I hope that in future that you come back and you get more and more involved.
|
||||
The many conferences are a big way of beginning to become a speaker.
|
||||
And, you know, in a few years' time, you might be speaking.
|
||||
You might be by the subject.
|
||||
You might be helping to organise a conference in a few years' time.
|
||||
So, you never know.
|
||||
So, thank you very much.
|
||||
Thanks for having me.
|
||||
So, here we are again for what will probably be the final interview for Lenny's Coffee U.
|
||||
For Hacker Public Radio this year.
|
||||
It is a very noisy afternoon tea time.
|
||||
And, straight after this, we'll go into our closing ceremony.
|
||||
And, I'm here with Kat, who has been involved with the conference before.
|
||||
But, this is at first time attending as a regular attendee.
|
||||
Hi, Clinton. How are you going?
|
||||
I'm going quite well.
|
||||
So, I've done a number of interviews with a lot of old hands for the conference.
|
||||
But, I thought it would be...
|
||||
It sort of, I hope, me to do a couple of interviews with first-timers or...
|
||||
Oilier people.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Because, I think, you know, we're...
|
||||
You know, this is my 16th.
|
||||
So, you know, I'm quite used to how things run.
|
||||
And, there are probably a lot of rough edges that I'm quite used to.
|
||||
And, I think, sometimes the only way to realize, to get an objective view of something
|
||||
and figure out if somethings can be improved is to get an outside view.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
So, I guess, briefly, give us a little bit of backstory of how you have been involved with the conference before.
|
||||
Okay, so, my partner has been involved with LCA's and Lenny's.
|
||||
Since the very beginning, I think.
|
||||
And, we started coming to the conference together in 2010.
|
||||
And, in 2010, I came on the partners program.
|
||||
And then, I think, 2012 and 2013, I volunteered.
|
||||
And then, in 2015, again, I went on the partners program.
|
||||
But this year, there was no partners program.
|
||||
And, I've always kind of struggled that, you know, should I be on the partners program
|
||||
or should I actually be, like, attending the conference?
|
||||
So, I looked at the program this year, and I thought,
|
||||
there's quite a few talks that I'd be interested in.
|
||||
So, maybe I'll just come along and student it, because I'm studying a science degree.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
So, that's why I'm here.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
So, the partners program is something that has been won a number of years.
|
||||
And, the idea is that, if a speaker and a whole family is coming,
|
||||
make it an easy list of things to do for the partner to do,
|
||||
while the speaker is at the conference.
|
||||
So, generally, generally, there are a bunch of checklist,
|
||||
touristy items that you kind of have to do when you're visiting a place.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
And, yeah, you're right.
|
||||
Like, I think, certainly a place like Hobart doesn't really need,
|
||||
that sort of partners program, because most things are,
|
||||
like, there's a lot of touristy things close to the city.
|
||||
So, yeah, they just didn't think to run the partners program.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
But, they are running child-lining programs and stuff.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So, we haven't abandoned the families at all.
|
||||
I think it's just changing situations and thought about it.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
So, what were some of the talks that sort of enticed you to get overline
|
||||
and become a delegate?
|
||||
So, I am a biologist and I use R a lot.
|
||||
So, there was a talk on R here,
|
||||
so that was directly relevant to stuff that I do.
|
||||
So, that was kind of like the first thing that I thought was applicable to me.
|
||||
And then, as I started browsing the program,
|
||||
I actually realised that, like, the open-knowledge type of stuff and the open data,
|
||||
that's all stuff I'm really interested in.
|
||||
Again, relevant to me as a scientist who needs to use data.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
So, that doesn't want to have to pay through the teeth for data that the public has already paid for once before.
|
||||
Exactly.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
So, how have you found it?
|
||||
I've really, really enjoyed my week here.
|
||||
It's been great.
|
||||
There's been very few sessions where I haven't found something to go through.
|
||||
Even if it's not directly relevant to what I'm studying or what I'm working on.
|
||||
It's still interesting stuff that I can go and see.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
So, do you think you've come across anything that you'll be able to take back into your regular work
|
||||
and maybe you've found a project on our live or something like that
|
||||
that you want to look at later on?
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
Probably not, but it doesn't mean that it has kind of exposed my thinking to different ways of looking at stuff.
|
||||
And have you been happy with your conference experiences that is there anything that you haven't liked
|
||||
that something that we should look at quickly in the future or anything like that?
|
||||
No, I've really enjoyed everything I've done here.
|
||||
It was even a time at one of the breaks we had where I was just talking to some random people that we hear
|
||||
and without getting into too much detail.
|
||||
One of the implementations of other agencies at GUI,
|
||||
and so I was explaining to them that I used this thing called RStudio, which is a GUI.
|
||||
They didn't make fun of me, so...
|
||||
Oh, right.
|
||||
Yeah, yeah.
|
||||
Okay, yeah.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
Because we're all hardcore, manline.
|
||||
Yeah, right.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
So, do you think you'll be thinking about attending again in future?
|
||||
Yeah, quite possibly.
|
||||
If the situation sort of line up?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
So, are remarks you want to make about the conference?
|
||||
Or, yeah.
|
||||
Just to say thank you to all the organizers and all the staff here.
|
||||
It's been fabulous.
|
||||
Like, we've been doing it without them.
|
||||
Yeah, everything's run really smoothly.
|
||||
You know, there's always stuff that goes on behind the scenes and they are dealing with issues and problems that come up.
|
||||
But, you know, this year I'm a regular attendee.
|
||||
I don't have any behind the screen knowledge.
|
||||
And, I do have a little bit of grumbles about the lightning talks set up, but that's the only thing.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Apart from that, I haven't noticed any problems or issues.
|
||||
So, yeah.
|
||||
It's been really good to see it.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
Well, thank you very much for the chat.
|
||||
No, thanks.
|
||||
Thank you, Clinton.
|
||||
So, here I am for another afternoon teacher just before the closing session of Linux.conf.au.
|
||||
I'm here with Nearage.
|
||||
It's Nearage.
|
||||
It's the first time at Linux.conf.au as well.
|
||||
So, tell me a little bit about yourself and how you came to come with the confidence.
|
||||
Yeah, sure.
|
||||
So, hello.
|
||||
I'm Nearage.
|
||||
I come from Seek Limited.
|
||||
Seek is an online business where we connect candidates with HiRos and we have a global search platform.
|
||||
I came here because we started using a bunch of Linux and the tools and started with the Unix philosophy in my team.
|
||||
One of my colleagues who is actually a user of Unix programming who used to be here before and he said he suggested last year that we should go.
|
||||
And I'm very fortunate to be here.
|
||||
So, work is up to you again here?
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
Yes, cool.
|
||||
So, were you interested in a particular talk or anything like that?
|
||||
Were you looking forward to a particular speaker?
|
||||
No.
|
||||
To be honest, I just didn't know what to expect.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
Since it was my first time, I knew that from the previous talk with my colleague, he mentioned that, you know, it's just a bunch of people, humble people, talking about things.
|
||||
It's not a sales conference or anything, which I really can see now.
|
||||
Yeah, it was more to do with what people are doing on, what they're hacking on.
|
||||
It's just, you know, projects and pubics and pieces from kernel, things like that.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Fundamentally, Linux software has always been a technical conference.
|
||||
And we really do frown on talks that edge to the marketing side of things like we.
|
||||
You always, like, you always get some talks that have a little bit of marketing in them.
|
||||
But we tend to frown on that.
|
||||
So, have you been to a lot of other conferences prior to this?
|
||||
Or was this sort of your first conference experience?
|
||||
No, this probably would be my third conference experience.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
So, I've been to a few from Elasticsearch and a YAL conference.
|
||||
Yep, that's it.
|
||||
Yep, yep.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
So, how have you found a fan Linux on for you?
|
||||
Fantastic.
|
||||
Like, I'm just terrified looking at what's going on outside my little world.
|
||||
Right.
|
||||
So, the whole talk about open source and open data and whatnot.
|
||||
That just opened my mind.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
On the keynote to act quite good.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
So, the thing that I look for at LCA is to try to come away with a few projects or libraries
|
||||
or languages or toolkits that I can incorporate with my daily work.
|
||||
Do you think you've come across a couple of things?
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
I definitely have.
|
||||
Yeah, one of the talks I went to was more to do with data and open data.
|
||||
And I did not know about that.
|
||||
So, I did a bunch of research on how a student government is giving away,
|
||||
not giving away, but opening up all these data assets.
|
||||
And, like, I came across this hack go, which is...
|
||||
Go hack, yep.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
So, I was just doing some research on there.
|
||||
And I think I have an idea where can I use the data for barbecues and try to overlay on a map
|
||||
using all the open source records I can just to see what I can do with it.
|
||||
So, for our international listeners, Go hack is sort of similar to the coding for America initiative.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
So, they have a fairly similar goal where governments or city councils have spent the money
|
||||
to collect a certain amount of data and they're trying to make it available in an open format
|
||||
so that external organisations, they can be profit driven or community driven
|
||||
to reuse that data and get more value out of it.
|
||||
And because it's either a government or a city council has paid for it,
|
||||
it's like the public already owns it in a certain sense,
|
||||
because it's our rate for our taxes is already paid for it.
|
||||
Yep.
|
||||
So, in Australia, we've got the Go hack competition, which is a yearly competition,
|
||||
where all the councils and state governments around Australia
|
||||
they will highlight the new data sets that they've made available during the year
|
||||
and they run a weekend hacking competition to over a weekend or three or four days
|
||||
come up with an app or a website that makes use of that data.
|
||||
And some of these are just for community good and some of these are actually trying to come up with business models
|
||||
and business plans around that.
|
||||
So, Go hack was started by a peer war who gave the second keynote here.
|
||||
And she started that which was working for the Australian government at federal level.
|
||||
So, that's been run for a number of years and now Go hack has been sort of like it's run under the auspices of Linux Australia.
|
||||
So, that has been sort of transferred from government to Linux Australia.
|
||||
So, Go hack is run like it's a conference run under Linux Australia.
|
||||
I don't understand the details exactly, but the same umbrella organisation that makes Linux not by you
|
||||
and hikon are you run?
|
||||
Yeah, also runs Go hack.
|
||||
Oh, OK.
|
||||
So, that's good to know.
|
||||
There's a continuity of oversight there.
|
||||
Yeah, I mean, it's just one of the projects that I think that, you know, inspired me.
|
||||
There are like, my hit right now is just exploding.
|
||||
Yeah, especially with today's keynote, I just go ahead.
|
||||
OK, well, I'm going to have to watch that one at like half speed, I think.
|
||||
Yeah, and just to digest the information in that talk.
|
||||
Yeah, I just have to do that.
|
||||
Like, even the internet of things I never found myself interacting with electronics for some reason before.
|
||||
And all of a sudden, I'm so much interested that I started.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I got already bought Raspberry Pi, it's sitting at my office desk now.
|
||||
And, yeah, the whole internet of things and the small hardware devices or the small things, they're just inspiring.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I've got a couple of ideas around them.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
A couple of ideas to work to implement.
|
||||
I'm very glad to hear that you've been inspired.
|
||||
Like that.
|
||||
So, has there been any parts of the conference that you haven't enjoyed or that you think could you could use them improving?
|
||||
To be honest, I enjoyed most part of it, but there were times where I couldn't find something that impressed me.
|
||||
I think that's just normal, you know, not everything would impress you.
|
||||
Although I pushed myself out of my comfort zone and I ended up going to CPU architectures and kernels,
|
||||
which is a core part of Linux, anyway.
|
||||
So, I ended up going there and again, there was an inspiration there where I was thinking to start contributing in freeBSD.
|
||||
Like, just to see what's out there, how does it work with the kernel?
|
||||
I don't know about kernel, but just to contribute and see how the merges and what it is for maintenance.
|
||||
What does it mean for them?
|
||||
How hard it is or how simple it is and things like that.
|
||||
Because most of the talks were concentrated enough on maintenance and they don't scale and those sort of things.
|
||||
So, yeah, I just want to understand more of them.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
I mean, overall, the conference is probably managed.
|
||||
Yeah, I can't see any clause clearly.
|
||||
Excellent. Cool.
|
||||
Well, it sounds like you'll be interested in coming back in future years.
|
||||
Definitely.
|
||||
Excellent.
|
||||
Definitely.
|
||||
Cool. Well, what I would suggest to you is you're inspired now.
|
||||
I would work on some projects and think about submitting a talk for next year.
|
||||
You might not feel that you're confident enough to try and submit a talk to the main part of the conference.
|
||||
But we've got the many conferences that can be easy to get a talk into.
|
||||
So, take that inspiration that you're feeling now.
|
||||
See if you can turn that into a presentation for next year and submit a talk for next year.
|
||||
Definitely. I'd probably do that. Excellent.
|
||||
Cool.
|
||||
Is there anything else that you'd like to add?
|
||||
No, cool.
|
||||
Okay. Well, hopefully I'll see you next year.
|
||||
Thank you very much.
|
||||
You will.
|
||||
Cheers.
|
||||
Cheers.
|
||||
Cheers.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hecker Public Radio at HeckerPublicRadio.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 HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hecker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.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 on the creative comments,
|
||||
attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user